What Occurred In Kessab Is Signal To International Community – Armen

WHAT OCCURRED IN KESSAB IS SIGNAL TO INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY – ARMENIA PARLIAMENT VICE CHAIR

March 25, 2014 | 13:11

YEREVAN. – The attack on Armenian-populated Kessab is a strong signal
not solely to Armenia and the countries in the region, but to the UN,
international organizations and the international community, which
deal with human rights issues.

Armenia National Assembly Vice-Speaker, ruling Republican Party
Press Secretary Eduard Sharmazanov told the aforesaid to Armenian
News-NEWS.am.

Sharmazanov commented on the latest developments occurring in Syria’s
predominantly Armenian-populated town of Kessab.

In his view, such attacks are unacceptable in the 21st century,
and President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan has clearly stated this.

“It does not matter what objectives the terrorists pursue. One thing
is important: man is the greatest value in the 21st century.

“Everyone must understand that national minorities are subject to
protection under the UN regulations and, in this case, all relevant
institutions have things to do,” Eduard Sharmazanov stressed.

In the early morning on March 21, armed militants from the Jabhat
al-Nusra Islamic terrorist group infiltrated into northern Syria’s
Latakia Governorate, which is predominantly inhabited by Armenians and
Alawites. Two large groups of terrorists had launched the attack from
Turkey. Numerous displaced Kessab Armenians are currently sheltered
in Latakia city. On March 23, Turkish fighter planes downed a Syrian
military aircraft that was conducting a mission against the Islamic
terrorists in Kessab. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had promised
Catholicos Aram I of the Great House of Cilicia of the Armenian
Apostolic Church to do everything possible to protect the Armenians
in Kessab.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

La Production De Bijoux En Armenie S’eleve A 18,4 Milliards De Drams

LA PRODUCTION DE BIJOUX EN ARMENIE S’ELEVE A 18,4 MILLIARDS DE DRAMS

ARMENIE

La production de bijoux en Armenie entre janvier et novembre 2013
s’est eleve a 18,4 milliards de drams, soit une augmentation de 18
pour cent par rapport a la meme periode de 2012, selon le Service
national de la statistique.

915,2 kg de bijoux a ete produit dans les 11 premiers mois de 2013,
contre 812,8 kg pour la meme periode de 2012 (la croissance etait
de 12,6%).

La production de diamants s’est eleve a 78 871 carats, soit une
augmentation de 47,9% par rapport a Janvier-Novembre 2012.

mardi 25 mars 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Le Fonds Hayastan Construit Une Maternelle A Sasunik

LE FONDS HAYASTAN CONSTRUIT UNE MATERNELLE A SASUNIK

ARMENIE

Avec le soutien financier de sa filiale britannique, le Fonds Hayastan
a commence la construction d’une ecole maternelle de deux etages dans
le village de Sasunik, un village dans la region d’Aragatsotn. Le
projet est co-parraine par la municipalite de Sasunik.

Actuellement les equipes jettent les bases de l’ecole maternelle qui
pourra accueillir jusqu’a 90 enfants. La vieille ecole maternelle
delabre de Sasunik est reste ferme depuis 1998, obligeant certains
residents a envisager d’envoyer leurs enfants a Ashtarak. Pourtant,
meme cette option n’est pas possible pour un grand nombre. > a declare le
maire de Sasunik Arman Margaryan.

mardi 25 mars 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Syrie : Quand Meme Les " Terroristes " Reconnaissent Leurs Crimes

SYRIE : QUAND MÊME LES > RECONNAISSENT LEURS CRIMES

SYRIE

Au cours des trois dernières annees , les Syriens ont ete terrorises
par le conflit en cours entre le gouvernement et les differentes
factions de l’opposition . Les destructions sont enormes : 150 000
morts , 9 millions de personnes deplacees (refugies et personnes
deplacees ) , 3 millions de foyers endommages , et la moitie des
infrastructures du pays detruites .

Le 8 Mars , les martyrs de la Brigade Badr ont lance une offensive
dans le quartier Meedan d’Alep . Plus tard, dans la soiree , la brigade
a poste une video sur Youtube montrant les details de l’operation .

La grande majorite des habitants des quartiers Meedan et Suleymaniyeh
sont Armeniens . Sans surprise, les attaques du 8 mars ont endommagees
les maisons des Armeniens a Alep . >, a reagi une civile armenienne sur les medias sociaux .

Elle a dit plus tard que sa maison avait ete detruite dans les
attaques.

Quelques jours plus tard , la direction de Lewaa Ahfad al – Moursaleen
, un autre groupe rebelle luttant contre le regime Assad , a envoye
une lettre d’excuses a la direction armenienne a Alep .

La lettre indiquait :

> .

mardi 25 mars 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From Estonia to Azerbaijan: American Strategy After Ukraine

>From Estonia to Azerbaijan: American Strategy After Ukraine
by George Friedman
Tuesday, 25 March 2014 09:24

As I discussed last week, the fundamental problem that Ukraine poses
for Russia, beyond a long-term geographical threat, is a crisis in
internal legitimacy. Russian President Vladimir Putin has spent his
time in power rebuilding the authority of the Russian state within
Russia and the authority of Russia within the former Soviet Union.
The events in Ukraine undermine the second strategy and potentially
the first. If Putin cannot maintain at least Ukrainian neutrality,
then the world’s perception of him as a master strategist is
shattered, and the legitimacy and authority he has built for the
Russian state is, at best, shaken.

Whatever the origins of the events in Ukraine, the United States is
now engaged in a confrontation with Russia. The Russians believe that
the United States was the prime mover behind regime change in
Ukraine. At the very least, the Russians intend to reverse events in
Ukraine. At most, the Russians have reached the conclusion that the
United States intends to undermine Russia’s power. They will resist.
The United States has the option of declining confrontation, engaging
in meaningless sanctions against individuals and allowing events to
take their course. Alternatively, the United States can choose to
engage and confront the Russians.

A failure to engage at this point would cause countries around
Russia’s periphery, from Estonia to Azerbaijan, to conclude that with
the United States withdrawn and Europe fragmented, they must reach an
accommodation with Russia. This will expand Russian power and open
the door to Russian influence spreading on the European Peninsula
itself. The United States has fought three wars (World War I, World
War II and the Cold War) to prevent hegemonic domination of the
region. Failure to engage would be a reversal of a century-old
strategy.

The American dilemma is how to address the strategic context in a
global setting in which it is less involved in the Middle East and is
continuing to work toward a “pivot to Asia.” Nor can the United
States simply allow events to take their course. The United States
needs a strategy that is economical and coherent militarily,
politically and financially. It has two advantages. Some of the
countries on Russia’s periphery do not want to be dominated by her.
Russia, in spite of some strengths, is inherently weak and does not
require U.S. exertion on the order of the two World Wars, the Cold War
or even the Middle East engagements of the past decade.

The Russian and U.S. Positions

I discussed Russian options on Ukraine last week. Putin is now in a
position where, in order to retain with confidence his domestic
authority, he must act decisively to reverse the outcome. The problem
is there is no single decisive action that would reverse events.
Eventually, the inherent divisions in Ukraine might reverse events.
However, a direct invasion of eastern Ukraine would simply solidify
opposition to Russia in Kiev and trigger responses internationally
that he cannot predict. In the end, it would simply drive home that
although the Russians once held a dominant position in all of
Ukraine, they now hold it in less than half. In the long run, this
option — like other short-term options — would not solve the
Russian conundrum.

Whatever Putin does in Ukraine, he has two choices. One is simply to
accept the reversal, which I would argue that he cannot do. The
second is to take action in places where he might achieve rapid
diplomatic and political victories against the West — the Baltics,
Moldova or the Caucasus — while encouraging Ukraine’s government to
collapse into gridlock and developing bilateral relations along the
Estonia-Azerbaijan line. This would prevent a U.S. strategy of
containment — a strategy that worked during the Cold War and one
that the Europeans are incapable of implementing on their own. This
comes down to the Americans.

The United States has been developing, almost by default, a strategy
not of disengagement but of indirect engagement. Between 1989 and
2008, the U.S. strategy has been the use of U.S. troops as the
default for dealing with foreign issues. From Panama to Somalia,
Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq, the United States followed a policy of
direct and early involvement of U.S. military forces. However, this
was not the U.S. strategy from 1914 to 1989. Then, the strategy was
to provide political support to allies, followed by economic and
military aid, followed by advisers and limited forces, and in some
cases pre-positioned forces. The United States kept its main force in
reserve for circumstances in which (as in 1917 and 1942 and, to a
lesser degree, in Korea and Vietnam) allies could not contain the
potential hegemon. Main force was the last resort.

This was primarily a strategy of maintaining the balance of power. The
containment of the Soviet Union involved creating an alliance system
comprising countries at risk of Soviet attack. Containment was a
balance of power strategy that did not seek the capitulation of the
Soviet Union as much as increasing the risks of offensive action
using allied countries as the first barrier. The threat of full U.S.
intervention, potentially including nuclear weapons, coupled with the
alliance structure, constrained Soviet risk-taking.

Because the current Russian Federation is much weaker than the Soviet
Union was at its height and because the general geographic principle
in the region remains the same, a somewhat analogous balance of power
strategy is likely to emerge after the events in Ukraine. Similar to
the containment policy of 1945-1989, again in principle if not in
detail, it would combine economy of force and finance and limit the
development of Russia as a hegemonic power while exposing the United
States to limited and controlled risk.

The coalescence of this strategy is a development I forecast in two
books, The Next Decade and The Next 100 Years, as a concept I called
the Intermarium. The Intermarium was a plan pursued after World War I
by Polish leader Jozef Pilsudski for a federation, under Poland’s
aegis, of Central and Eastern European countries. What is now
emerging is not the Intermarium, but it is close. And it is now
transforming from an abstract forecast to a concrete, if still
emergent, reality.
Forces Leading to the Alliance’s Emergence

A direct military intervention by the United States in Ukraine is not
possible. First, Ukraine is a large country, and the force required to
protect it would outstrip U.S. capabilities. Second, supplying such a
force would require a logistics system that does not exist and would
take a long time to build. Finally, such an intervention would be
inconceivable without a strong alliance system extending to the West
and around the Black Sea. The United States can supply economic and
political support, but Ukraine cannot counterbalance Russia and the
United States cannot escalate to the point of using its own forces.
Ukraine is a battleground on which Russian forces would have an
advantage and a U.S. defeat would be possible.

If the United States chooses to confront Russia with a military
component, it must be on a stable perimeter and on as broad a front
as possible to extend Russian resources and decrease the probability
of Russian attack at any one point out of fear of retaliation
elsewhere. The ideal mechanism for such a strategy would be NATO,
which contains almost all of the critical countries save Azerbaijan
and Georgia. The problem is that NATO is not a functional alliance.
It was designed to fight the Cold War on a line far to the west of the
current line. More important, there was unity on the principle that
the Soviet Union represented an existential threat to Western Europe.

That consensus is no longer there. Different countries have different
perceptions of Russia and different concerns. For many, a replay of
the Cold War, even in the face of Russian actions in Ukraine, is
worse than accommodation. In addition, the end of the Cold War has
led to a massive drawdown of forces in Europe. NATO simply lacks the
force unless there is a massive and sudden buildup. That will not
occur because of the financial crisis, among other reasons. NATO
requires unanimity to act, and that unanimity is not there.

The countries that were at risk from 1945 to 1989 are not the same as
those at risk today. Many of these countries were part of the Soviet
Union then, and the rest were Soviet satellites. The old alliance
system was not built for this confrontation. The Estonia-Azerbaijan
line has as its primary interest retaining sovereignty in the face of
Russian power. The rest of Europe is not in jeopardy, and these
countries are not prepared to commit financial and military efforts
to a problem they believe can be managed with little risk to them.
Therefore, any American strategy must bypass NATO or at the very least
create new structures to organize the region.

Characteristics of the Alliance

Each of the various countries involved is unique and has to be
addressed that way. But these countries share the common danger that
events in Ukraine could spread and directly affect their national
security interests, including internal stability. As I observed, the
Baltics, Moldova and the Caucasus are areas where the Russians could
seek to compensate for their defeat. Because of this, and also
because of their intrinsic importance, Poland, Romania and Azerbaijan
must be the posts around which this alliance is built.

The Baltic salient, 145 kilometers (90 miles) from St. Petersburg in
Estonia, would be a target for Russian destabilization. Poland
borders the Baltics and is the leading figure in the Visegrad
battlegroup, an organization within the European Union. Poland is
eager for a closer military relationship with the United States, as
its national strategy has long been based on third-power guarantees
against aggressors. The Poles cannot defend themselves and the
Baltics, given the combat capabilities necessary for the task.

The Dniester River is 80 kilometers from Odessa, the main port on the
Black Sea for Ukraine and an important one for Russia. The Prut River
is about 200 kilometers from Bucharest, the capital of Romania.
Moldova is between these two rivers. It is a battleground region, at
least of competing political factions. Romania must be armed and
supported in protecting Moldova and in organizing southeastern Europe.
In Western hands, Moldova threatens Odessa, Ukraine’s major port also
used by Russia on the Black Sea. In Russian hands, Moldova threatens
Bucharest.

At the far end of the alliance structure I am envisioning is
Azerbaijan, on the Caspian Sea bordering Russia and Iran. Should
Dagestan and Chechnya destabilize, Azerbaijan — which is Islamic and
majority Shiite but secular — would become critical for limiting the
regional spread of jihadists. Azerbaijan also would support the
alliance’s position in the Black Sea by supporting Georgia and would
serve as a bridge for relations (and energy) should Western relations
with Iran continue to improve. To the southwest, the very pro-Russian
Armenia — which has a Russian troop presence and a long-term treaty
with Moscow — could escalate tensions with Azerbaijan in
Nagorno-Karabakh. Previously, this was not a pressing issue for the
United States. Now it is. The security of Georgia and its ports on
the Black Sea requires Azerbaijan’s inclusion in the alliance.

Azerbaijan serves a more strategic purpose. Most of the countries in
the alliance are heavy importers of Russian energy; for instance, 91
percent of Poland’s energy imports and 86 percent of Hungary’s come
from Russia. There is no short-term solution to this problem, but
Russia needs the revenue from these exports as much as these
countries need the energy. Developing European shale and importing
U.S. energy is a long-term solution. A medium-term solution,
depending on pipeline developments that Russia has tended to block in
the past, is sending natural gas from Azerbaijan to Europe. Until now,
this has been a commercial issue, but it has become a strategically
critical issue. The Caspian region, of which Azerbaijan is the
lynchpin, is the only major alternative to Russia for energy.
Therefore, rapid expansion of pipelines to the heart of Europe is as
essential as providing Azerbaijan with the military capability to
defend itself (a capability it is prepared to pay for and, unlike
other allied countries, does not need to be underwritten).

The key to the pipeline will be Turkey’s willingness to permit
transit. I have not included Turkey as a member of this alliance.
Its internal politics, complex relations and heavy energy dependence
on Russia make such participation difficult. I view Turkey in this
alliance structure as France in the Cold War. It was aligned yet
independent, militarily self-sufficient yet dependent on the
effective functioning of others. Turkey, inside or outside of the
formal structure, will play this role because the future of the Black
Sea, the Caucasus and southeastern Europe is essential to Ankara.

These countries, diverse as they are, share a desire not to be
dominated by the Russians. That commonality is a basis for forging
them into a functional military alliance. This is not an offensive
force but a force designed to deter Russian expansion. All of these
countries need modern military equipment, particularly air defense,
anti-tank and mobile infantry. In each case, the willingness of the
United States to supply these weapons, for cash or credit as the
situation requires, will strengthen pro-U.S. political forces in each
country and create a wall behind which Western investment can take
place. And it is an organization that others can join, which unlike
NATO does not allow each member the right to veto.

The Practicality of the U.S. Strategy

There are those who would criticize this alliance for including
members who do not share all the democratic values of the U.S. State
Department. This may be true. It is also true that during the Cold
War the United States was allied with the Shah’s Iran, Turkey and
Greece under dictatorship and Mao’s China after 1971. Having
encouraged Ukrainian independence, the United States — in trying to
protect that independence and the independence of other countries in
the region — is creating an alliance structure that will include
countries, such as Azerbaijan, that have been criticized. However, if
energy does not come from Azerbaijan, it will come from Russia, and
then the Ukrainian events will dissolve into tragic farce. The State
Department must grapple with the harsh forces its own policies have
unleashed. This suggests that the high-mindedness borne of benign
assumptions now proven to be illusions must make way for realpolitik
calculations.

The balance of power strategy allows the United States to use the
natural inclination of allies to bolster its own position and take
various steps, of which military intervention is the last, not the
first. It recognizes that the United States, as nearly 25 percent of
the world’s economy and the global maritime hegemon, cannot evade
involvement. Its very size and existence involves it. Nor can the
United States confine itself to gestures like sanctions on 20 people.
This is not seen as a sign of resolve as much as weakness. It does
mean that as the United States engages in issues like Ukraine and must
make strategic decisions, there are alternatives to intervention —
such as alliances. In this case, a natural alliance structure
presents itself — a descendant of NATO but shaped for this crisis,
much like the alliance I forecast previously.

In my view, Russian power is limited and has flourished while the
United States was distracted by its wars in the Middle East and while
Europe struggled with its economic crisis. That does not mean Russia
is not dangerous. It has short-term advantages, and its insecurity
means that it will take risks. Weak and insecure states with
temporary advantages are dangerous. The United States has an interest
in acting early because early action is cheaper than acting in the
last extremity. This is a case of anti-air missiles, attack
helicopters, communications systems and training, among other things.
These are things the United States has in abundance. It is not a case
of deploying divisions, of which it has few. The Poles, Romanians,
Azerbaijanis and certainly the Turks can defend themselves. They need
weapons and training, and that will keep Russia contained within its
cauldron as it plays out a last hand as a great power.

George Friedman is the Chairman of Stratfor, a company he founded in
1996 that is now a leader in the field of global intelligence.
Friedman guides Stratfor’s strategic vision and oversees the
development and training of the company’s intelligence unit.

http://www.rightsidenews.com/2014032534044/world/geopolitical/from-estonia-to-azerbaijan-american-strategy-after-ukraine.html

EU Doesn’t Consider Signing Of Political Component Of Association Ag

EU DOESN’T CONSIDER SIGNING OF POLITICAL COMPONENT OF ASSOCIATION AGREEMENT WITH ARMENIA

Monday 24 March 2014 10:45

Serzh Sargsyan and Catherine Ashton

Yerevan /Mediamax/. European Union doesn’t consider signing of
political component of Association Agreement with Armenia.

Mediamax requested Maja Kocijancic, Spokesperson for EU High
Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine
Ashton, to comment on the statement made by Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan according to which the EU’s decision to sign the political
component of Association Agreement with Ukraine opens “window of
opportunities” for Armenia.

In reply, Maja Kocijancic suggested getting acquainted with the
statement adopted last week following EU-Ukraine Summit which
particularly reads:

“The European Union, its Member States and Ukraine will sign the
political provisions of the Association Agreement. The European
Union and its Member States are committed to sign the remainder of the
Association Agreement and Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area, which
together with the political provisions constitute a single instrument”.

In September 2013, European Commissioner Stefan Fule said in his
interview to Mediamax that “we can’t decouple the Association
Agreement”.

“It has been the EU’s consistent position that the political
association and economic integration must go hand in hand and that they
are integral parts of the Association Agreement. We cannot therefore
decouple those two essential building blocks of the Agreement”,
Fule said then.

EU-Armenia Association Agreement including Deep and Comprehensive Free
Trade Area was supposed to be initialed at Eastern Partnership Vilnius
Summit in November 2013. After the Armenian President’s decision to
join the Customs Union stated on September 3, 2013, the EU stated
Association Agreement couldn’t be initialed. A joint statement of
Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and High Representative
for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton was signed
at the Vilnius Summit.

http://www.mediamax.am/en/news/foreignpolicy/9600/

Defense Ministry: Azeri Forces Fire At Armenian Civilians

DEFENSE MINISTRY: AZERI FORCES FIRE AT ARMENIAN CIVILIANS

17:40 24/03/2014 >> REGION

As farming work begins, Armenian frontline units become particularly
alert in taking preventive actions against Azeri forces opening fire
at Armenian civilians working in fields in border areas, spokesman
for Armenian Defense Ministry Artsrun Hovhannisyan told Panorama.am.

According to the spokesman, the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group
are being regularly informed about the enemy’s activity, but despite
numerous appeals, Azerbaijan keeps firing at peaceful civilians.

“Armenian frontline units do everything possible to ensure security
of civilian population,” Hovhannisyan concluded.

Source: Panorama.am

Syria’s Armenian-Populated Town Is Emptied

SYRIA’S ARMENIAN-POPULATED TOWN IS EMPTIED

March 23, 2014 | 22:29

Syria’s predominantly Armenian-populated town of Kessab was emptied
after rebel forces attacked the region in a bid to control strategic
points in the area.

Kessab was under fire over the past several days from gunmen entering
the region from the Turkish border. By Saturday, most of the town’s
population had taken refuge in Latakia, The Armenian Weekly reported.

According to reports, Kessab and its surrounding villages are now
largely under the control of rebels.

“According to a military source, units of the armed forces have
since morning been directing fatal strikes to the terrorist groups
which infiltrated the border from Turkey in Kassab area, inflicting
heavy losses upon them,” reported the Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA)
on Sunday.

Perched in the northwestern corner of Syria, near the border with
Turkey, Kessab had, until very recently, evaded major battles between
the army and rebels. Many Syrian Armenians had taken refuge there
because of the relative calm in the area over the past three years.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Ara Harutyunyan: Artsakh Welcomes Any Struggle For Self-Determinatio

ARA HARUTYUNYAN: ARTSAKH WELCOMES ANY STRUGGLE FOR SELF-DETERMINATION

19:36 24.03.2014

Crimea, Nagorno-Karabakh

Armine Gevorgyan
Public Radio of Armenia
Stepanakert

“Artsakh welcomes any struggle for self-determination,” Prime Minister
of the Nagrono Karabakh Republic Ara Harutyunyan said in an exclusive
interview with Public Radio of Armenia.

On March 18 the Russian and Crimean leaders signed a reunification
treaty. On the same day a concert was held in Stepanakert dedicated
to the self-determination of the people of Crimea. A day before the
NKR Foreign Ministry had issued a statement, saying it considers
the referendum held on March 16 in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea
as yet another manifestation of realization of the right of peoples
to self-determination. Later on the referendum was welcomed by the
groups and factions of the NKR National Assembly.

Armenia’s reaction to the position of official Stepanakert was
not unequivocal. Different assessments of politicians followed. In
particular, ex-Foreign Minister Alexander Arzumanyan declared that
he saw Russia behind the celebration of Crimea’s self-determination
in Nagorno Karabakh.

“I don’t know how the fact was accepted in Armenia, but Artsakh
welcomes any struggle for self-determination. It’s perhaps difficult
for people in Armenia to understand what self-determination means,
since Armenia has never faced the issue. We have welcomed the fact
that the people of Crimea have decided how they want to live. We have
welcomed the independence of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Kosovo. This
is the democracy, not the massacre in Maidan. Democracy is the
expression of a position through a referendum,” Ara Harutyunyan said.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/03/24/ara-harutyunyan-artsakh-welcomes-any-struggle-for-self-determination/

Shushi Events Need Legal Assessment

SHUSHI EVENTS NEED LEGAL ASSESSMENT

18:39 24.03.2014

Lusine Avanesyan
Public Radio of Armenia
Stepanakert

March 23 marked the 94th anniversary of the bloody events in Shushi.

The massacres in the city with a 30 thousand Armenian population
resulted in the death of 7-8 thousand people, about 17 thousand
Armenians left the city. After this the Armenian history of Shushi
was consigned to oblivion for about 70 years.

To mark the anniversary the Shushi History Museum and the “Kachar”
scientific center organized a discussion at the Artsakh State
University. Participants of the conference adopted a statement, which
says that “the massacres organized and perpetrated by the Democratic
Republic of Azerbaijan and the burning of the once flourishing city
were not only the continuation of the Turkish policy of Armenocide,
but were also targeted against humanity and democracy.”

Participants of the discussion – historians, political scientists
and lawyers – referred not only to historic episodes, but also the
ongoing propaganda war and the counter-actions.

The Shushi events need a legal assessment. According to lawyer Avetik
Harutyunyan, these can be described as genocide.

In the statement the participants denounced the events of 94 years ago,
voicing confidence that the condemnation and legal assessment of the
ongoing policy of terrorism and ethnic cleansing are effective tools
to prevent such phenomena in the future.

According to the participants of the discussion, impunity is the
reason of the criminal policy adopted by the Republic of Azerbaijan,
the successor of the Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan.

Vivid examples of this policy include the massacres and deportation
of 1987-1991, the war unleashed against Artsakh and today’s situation
at the border.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/03/24/shushi-events-need-legal-assessment/