Pashinyan expects opposition to officially rule out violence or use of weapons

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 12:17,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan says he expects the opposition to make a statement ruling out violence and the use of weapons in political matters.

The PM made the remarks at an online press conference when asked about the existing hate speech in Armenia.

 “Thank God nothing close to what happened with the Speaker of Parliament has happened over the past 2,5 years with any opposition politician, and it won’t happen. If we were to conduct a monitoring on social media, it’s still a question who was more targeted during the past 2,5 years. It is a fact that the atmosphere in the country must be improved, that the atmosphere of hate must be ruled out, and we don’t argue with this. But this requires specific actions not only from the government. I am stating that the things they tried to attribute to us this night is ruled out, it is ruled out that our actions have such toolbox. Let the opposition itself state, are they ruling out violence and the use of weapons? If they rule it out, then we have necessary preconditions for dialogue, for discussions and for overcoming the situation with joint powers,” Pashinyan said.

He pointed out that most of the political forces didn’t even condemn the November 10 riots in Yerevan when the Government headquarters, the parliament building and his official residence were attacked.

“Is it because they had organized it? How can they accuse the government in advocating hate speech?”

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Ceasefire regime observed along Artsakh-Azerbaijan line of contact

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 16:35, 13 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 13, ARMENPRESS. The ceasefire regime continues to be maintained along the Artsakh-Azerbaijan line of contact, the Defense Ministry of Artsakh reports.

On November 9 Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a statement on a full ceasefire and cessation of all military actions in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone since 01:00 Yerevan Time on November 10.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

CivilNet: Artsrun Hovhannisyan, who conducted daily briefings during the war, has resigned

CIVILNET.AM

22:02

Artsrun Hovhannisyan, representative of Armenia’s Defense Ministry who conducted daily public briefings during the war, has announced his resignation from the ministry.

“During this war, I conducted my military operations in the information space. How I did this job will be evaluated in time and by professional researchers. There is no person who does not fail. The information that I provided to the public was based mainly on briefings from Armenia’s Armed Forces General Staff Office and from the Artsakh Defense Army. Yes, I was convinced that we would win, that belief was based on the battles fought by many of my comrades-in-arms. I have left my position since November 9. I will continue to work in the scientific field. Please refrain from various offers. I have never been involved in politics and I have no intention to be involved. I bow before our heroic fallen soldiers. I will invest my life towards the education and upbringing of the new generation,” he wrote. 

A military expert and analyst, Hovhannisyan heads the Command Staff Faculty at the Vazgen Sargsyan Military University since March 2020.

Since 1997, Hovhannisyan has served in the Armenian Armed Forces. After graduating from the University in 2001 and being promoted to a Lieutenant, he was appointed as the Commander of Platoon of an anti-tank weapon in one of the Military Bases of the Ministry of Defense of Armenia.

Russia to open trade mission in Syria in 2020

 

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 15:50,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. The Russian government will establish a trade mission in Syria this year. Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin signed a relevant decree on November 10, reports TASS.

“The trade representation of the Russian Federation in the Syrian Arab Republic to be established in 2020 in the city of Damascus”, the decree reads.

The Russian Ministry of Industry and Trade is tasked to approve the structure and the staff list of the trade mission.

CSTO welcomes Karabakh armistice

 17:34,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) welcomes the adoption of the statement on ending the Nagorno Karabakh war, the organization’s Secretary General Stanislav Zas said.

“We welcome all actions which lead to establishment of peace in the region and stopping bloodshed. The CSTO had numerously called upon the sides of the conflict to return to the ceasefire regime and settle the Nagorno Karabakh conflict exclusively through peaceful negotiations,” Zas said.

He also positively assessed the decision to deploy Russian peacekeepers to the conflict zone.

“We believe that the deployment of Russian peacekeepers is a significant deterring factor for the sides not to use force. We once again remind that a solution to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict is possible only by political-diplomatic methods,” he said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

EXCLUSIVE: Azerbaijan, Armenia ‘near ceasefire deal’ on Nagorno-Karabakh

Middle East Eye
Nov 8 2020
Draft deal forces Armenia to withdraw from some areas amid the deployment of a Turkish and Russian peacekeeping force, Turkish sources tell MEE


By 

Ragip Soylu

 in 

Ankara

Azerbaijan and Armenia are close to striking a meaningful ceasefire deal over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and its surrounding regions which have been occupied by Armenia since 1992, Turkish sources have told Middle East Eye.

The deal will mandate Armenia to cede a large chunk of territory while placing a Turkish and Russian peacekeeping mission in the area.

On Sunday, Azerbaijan announced it had captured Shusha, Nagorno-Karabakh’s second-largest city, a claim Armenia denied.

Explained: Armenia and Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

Read More »

The sources, speaking to Middle East Eye on condition of anonymity, said that the rapid progress of Azerbaijani forces on the ground had pushed Armenia to consider the Russian mediation plan, which is backed by Turkey, to stop the conflict.

At least 1,000 people, and possibly up to 5,000, have been killed since fighting broke out on 27 September in the enclave, an internationally recognised part of Azerbaijan but populated and controlled by ethnic Armenians.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, reached an understanding on the components of a draft deal on Saturday in a phone call, the sources said.

The details were discussed by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, in a subsequent phone conversation.

According to the draft deal, Armenia will immediately withdraw from five out of seven occupied raions (a type of administrative unit of several post-Soviet states) surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, once both sides agree to the conditions of the truce.

Under the terms of the ceasefire, Yerevan will pull out from the remaining two raions in 15 days. The draft deal does not require Baku to leave its recently captured territories, but would put a halt to Azerbaijan’s offensive against Nagorno-Karabakh, which is now partly controlled by Baku.

In a significant move, both sides will possibly agree to the establishment of two corridors.

One road leading from Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh would initially ensure Yerevan’s access to the region. Armenia, in return, will allow the creation of a second corridor which would connect the Azerbaijan territory of Nakhcivan to Baku.

The Turkish and Russian peacekeeping forces would then be deployed to uphold the ceasefire.

“The Azerbaijani government doesn’t want to rapidly seize [the city of] Khankendi [Stepanakert in Armenian] and cause civilian casualties,” one of the Turkish sources said.

“This deal stops the possible humanitarian crisis while honouring the legitimate Azerbaijani demands on the territory.”

Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan in the 1990s, prompting a long unresolved conflict that has seen tens of thousands of people killed.

The disputed mountainous area has been held by Armenian forces for nearly three decades, despite four UN Security Council resolutions urging them to withdraw.

Israeli-made cluster bombs used by Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh, says Amnesty

Read More »

Three other ceasefire attempts since September have failed, with both sides accusing each other of violating it. But none of the deals directly included Turkey as a guarantor. 

The game changer in the frozen conflict appears to have been Turkey’s direct military aid to Azerbaijan since the summer.

Close allies Turkey and Azerbaijan have conducted joint military drills for years, most recently in August, when Turkish officers shared the experience and expertise they had developed in the Syrian and Libyan conflicts.

Turkey has brought in Syrian mercenaries to prop up Azerbaijani defences, while deploying Turkish military staff capabilities to create a strategy for Baku.

Turkey has also sold armed drones which have devastated the Armenian front and deployed Turkish F-16s as a deterrent, even though they were not used in the actual fighting.

A second Turkish source said Ankara has seen an opening in the Nagorno-Karabakh region while the US and the rest of the world had been focusing on the US presidential elections.

Ankara believes the Russians, on the other hand, have turned a blind eye to the Turkish-backed offensive to punish Armenia’s Western-backed leader, Nikol Pashinyan.

“Russians have only complained about the Syrian mercenaries’ presence on the battlefield,” the source said.

“Lavrov even described the city of Shusha as an Azerbaijani city in his talks with a Turkish delegation in Moscow last month.”

The sources said Azerbaijan had ramped up its efforts to take more territory over the weekend ahead of the declaration of the ceasefire.


https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/nagorno-karabakh-ceasefire-deal-azerbaijan-armenia?fbclid=IwAR3SRV5yPMA4GL8T-Yww7TKAEQDSiEdWw_wRxZaBaUanVq2nSwVq5Q82n94

President of Artsakh posthumously awards police officers

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 14:18, 5 November, 2020

STEPANAKERT, NOVEMBER 5, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan signed a decree on posthumously awarding police officers with Medal of Courage who were fallen while defending the border of Artsakh from the Azerbaijani large-scale military operations, the Police of Artsakh told Armenpress.

The following police officers have been awarded posthumously:

Gagik Petrosyan

Garik Dolukhanyan

Arsen Harutyunyan

Tigran Petrosyan

Gevorg Kirakosyan

Benik Hambardzumyan

Hrayr Danielyan

Aren Asryan

Shirak Hambardzumyan

Igor Poghosyan

 

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Archaeological camp of Artsakh’s Tigranakert significantly damaged by targeted Azerbaijani strike

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 19:08, 6 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS. Archaeological camp of Artsakh’s Tigranakert town has been significantly damaged by a targeted Azerbaijani strike. Two of the four cottages have been destroyed, the others have been damaged, Tigranakert’s expedition leader Hamlet Petrosyan told ARMENPRESS.

Days ago someone had seen this atrocity and informed Petrosyan. Later a group of volunteers that tries to examine the situation of the monuments of Artsakh, visited the place and saw that the bomb had landed near the cottages, destroying two and damaging the other two cottages.

According to Petrosyan, they visit there only in the summer. He thinks Azerbaijanis targeted it deliberately, thinking that there might be people there. ‘’An 18th century citadel is next to it, which is a museum and is much better seen. I think they might have thought that there might be people in the cottages’’, Hamlet Petrosyan said.

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1034181.html?fbclid=IwAR1p1lif8fE0uTOx4mW-p5SSdEuRdWGdaA2_gcJUUd4a51uc0bTVnO8u2wE

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/02/2020

                                        Monday, November 2, 2020
Armenia Upbeat On 2021 Economic Growth Despite Pandemic, War
Armenia -- A textile factory in Berd
Despite the coronavirus pandemic and continuing war in Nagorno-Karabakh Armenia 
expects its economy to grow by 4.8 percent in 2021, the government in Yerevan 
said in unveiling next year’s budget this week.
The document submitted to the National Assembly on November 2 calls for 1.5 
trillion drams (about $3 billion) in taxes and duties, which is higher than this 
year’s revenue pattern.
Under a revised budget for this year the Armenian government expects to raise 
only 1.32 trillion drams ($2.65 billion) in taxes and duties.
The total revenues of the state budget next year are expected to amount to 1 
trillion 569 billion drams (over $3.1 billion) and the spending pattern is 
projected at 1 trillion 843 billion drams (over $3.7 billion). The budget 
deficit is estimated at 274 billion drams or more than $551 million according to 
the current exchange rate.
In presenting the budget in parliament Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian 
expressed confidence that due to efficient work the government will be able to 
achieve success despite challenges posed by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and 
war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Deputy Prime Minister or Armenia Mher Grigorian
“Obviously, 2021 will be a tough year for all of us. But I am sure that as a 
result of our joint work we will be able to have a budget that will consider all 
possible risks and challenges, generate sufficient resources for their effective 
neutralization and counteraction, and also ensure the socio-economic stability 
and security of our country,” the vice-premier said.
According to the same document, Armenia will close 2020 with an economic decline 
at 6 percent.
“Of course, we cannot say that martial law has not affected the economy and 
budget in any way. Of course, it has and will continue to affect the revenue 
pattern of the budget, and we should think about the debt threshold accordingly. 
But I believe that we will find the balance that will allow us to get out of 
this situation,” Grigorian said.
For his part Finance Minister Atom Janjugazian did not exclude that this year’s 
economic decline may be even steeper – at 6.8 percent. “After making this 
6-percent decline forecast we once again revised our budget estimations, 
concluding that because of the hostilities [in Nagorno-Karabakh] we may expect 
an additional negative development of 0.8 percentage points this year,” he said.
According to the draft state budget for 2021, by the end of this year Armenia’s 
state debt will stand at $8 billion 850 million, and by the end of next year it 
will amount to $9 billion 215 million.
Karabakh Armenians Confirm Senior Commander’s Death
Ethnic Armenian military authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have confirmed the 
death of a senior commander as military and civilian casualties in the armed 
conflict with Azerbaijan continued to rise on Monday.
The military’s press service on November 2 released the names of 11 more 
servicemen killed in action since the start of hostilities on September 27, 
which raises the total death toll among ethnic Armenian forces to 1,174.
Among those 11 is also deputy commander of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Defense Army, 
Colonel Artur Sarkisian. Nagorno-Karabakh’s de facto Defense Minister, 
Lieutenant-General Jalal Harutiunian was replaced last week after being wounded.
Azerbaijan does not reveal its military casualties, considering them a wartime 
secret.
During November 2 the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides have also accused each 
other of targeting civilian areas.
According to spokesperson of Armenia’s Defense Ministry Shushan Stepanian, at 
around 6:10 pm Azerbaijan’s armed forces opened artillery fire in the direction 
of the positions of the armed forces of Armenia and the settlement of David Bek 
in the country’s southern Syunik province. She said that one civilian was killed 
and two others were wounded by the artillery fire.
An RFE/RL Armenian Service correspondent working in Nagorno-Karabakh reported 
that the town of Martakert in the northeast of the region was again shelled by 
Azerbaijan’s armed forces today.
Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said on November 2 that several 
civilian settlements in the Tartar region inside Azerbaijan had been shelled by 
ethnic Armenian troops.
Both sides deny targeting civilians in the ongoing conflict.
Meanwhile, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has called for an 
international inquiry into the alleged participation of mercenaries from Syria 
and Libya on Azerbaijan’s side in the conflict.
“This issue should be the subject of an international inquiry,” Pashinian said 
on Facebook after the Armenian side had shown videos of interrogations of two 
Syrian fighters that Armenians say were taken prisoner on the battlefield.
Both Azerbaijan and its ally, Turkey, have denied the involvement of mercenaries 
in the hostilities.
Aliyev Urges Russia To Stay Neutral In Karabakh Conflict
        • Armen Koloyan
AZERBAIJAN -- Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev gestures as he speaks during an 
address to the nation in Baku, October 26, 2020
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has called on Russia to maintain neutrality 
in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh given its status as an 
international mediator.
According to Interfax-Azerbaijan, while receiving in Baku Secretary-General of 
the Cooperation Council of Turkic-speaking States Baghdad Amreyev on Monday, 
Aliyev said: “The prime minister of Armenia has sent a letter to the president 
of the Russian Federation, asking for military support. This is completely 
unacceptable. And there are absolutely no grounds for that, because we are 
conducting actions in our territory, we are defeating the enemy in our lands, 
freeing them from the Armenian occupation, while we do not attack the territory 
of Armenia.”
Aliyev went on to say that as a co-chair of the Organization for Security and 
Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) Minsk Group Russia is supposed to maintain a 
neutral position on this issue, which he said is stipulated by the mandate of 
the OSCE, whose Minsk Group co-chairmanship also includes the United States and 
France.
On October 31, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian sent a letter to Russian 
President Vladimir Putin in which, invoking a 1997 treaty with Russia, he 
formally asked Moscow “to define types and amount of assistance” that it can 
provide to Armenia. Pashinian said that the fighting between ethnic Armenian 
forces in Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan that broke out on September 27 was 
approaching the country’s borders and that some encroachments on the territory 
of the Republic of Armenia have already taken place.
ARMENIA -- Russian President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian during a meeting on the sidelines of a session of the 
Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in Yerevan, Armenia October 1, 2019.
In response to the letter the same day, Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs 
reaffirmed Moscow’s commitment to Armenia under the 1997 Treaty on Friendship, 
Cooperation and Mutual Assistance, saying that “Russia will render all necessary 
assistance to Yerevan if military operations take place directly on the 
territory of Armenia.”
At the same time, the Russian ministry again called on the parties to the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to halt military operations immediately, deescalate 
the situation and return to “substantive negotiations” to achieve a peaceful 
settlement.
Earlier, Armenian Prime Minister Pashinian also signaled Yerevan’s agreement to 
the deployment of Russian peacekeepers in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone, 
but said that such a move would require the consent of all parties to the 
conflict.
Last week, U.S. National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien said that he believes 
that Scandinavian peacekeepers should be deployed in the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict zone.
Meetings with members of the Armenian community of Los Angeles on Friday, 
October 30, O’Brien said any armed peacekeeping force in the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict zone should not include Minsk Group co-chairs, including the United 
States, or neighboring countries.
“Any sort of Turkish mediation or peacekeeping role is a non-starter for the 
United States, as well as for Armenia,” O’Brien said.
“We believe that both countries should accept Scandinavian peacekeepers, and we 
are working with Scandinavian governments to put together a peacekeeping force 
that could be deployed into the region to keep the ceasefire,” the senior U.S. 
official added.
Commenting on O’Brien’s statement on Monday, Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister 
Andrei Rudenko said that issues like this should be coordinated with the parties 
to the conflict.
“You should ask the Americans where they got these proposals and ideas from. All 
the necessary parameters of possible mechanisms should be agreed upon in 
consultations with the parties to the conflict,” the Russian diplomat said when 
asked by journalists to comment on O’Brien’s remarks.
Officials in Yerevan and Baku have not yet commented on O’Brien’s statement.
Armenian Police Vow Tougher Approach As Coronavirus Cases Spike Amid Karabakh War
Armenia -- A masked police officer patrols streets of Yerevan, July 10, 2020.
Armenia’s police have warned citizens to abide by the mandatory rule of wearing 
face masks in all public spaces or face fines as the numbers of new coronavirus 
cases and resulting deaths have soared in recent days amid continuing 
Armenian-Azerbaijani clashes in Nagorno-Karabakh.
In what appears to be a second and much stronger wave of the pandemic Armenia 
has been recording more than 2,000 new cases and several dozen deaths a day 
during the last week or so.
Since the start of the epidemic in March, more than 93,000 people have tested 
positive for the novel coronavirus in a country with a population of about 3 
million. According to Armenian health officials, 1,391 of these people have so 
far died from COVID-19, making it one of the highest COVID-19 death rates in the 
world (469 deaths per million).
According to the Health Ministry, hospitals in Armenia are overwhelmed with 
coronavirus patients, with as many as 576 people needing hospitalization 
currently on the waiting list due to the shortage of hospital beds.
The healthcare situation in Armenia is complicated by an ongoing armed conflict 
with Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh from where hundreds of wounded ethnic 
Armenian servicemen and scores of civilians have been brought to Armenia for 
treatment since the hostilities began on September 27.
Government officials and healthcare specialists in Armenia believe that the war 
situation has largely affected the epidemiological state of affairs as people – 
servicemen, volunteers, others involved in wartime activities – began to care 
less about social-distancing and mask-wearing rules, which have been mandatory 
in Armenia for months and at one point in September admittedly led to a dramatic 
decrease in the infection rate.
Deputy Chief of Armenia’s Police Ara Fidanian warned citizens on Monday that 
from now on police officers will pay greater attention to enforcing the 
anti-epidemic rules by fining those who break them. He acknowledged that in 
recent weeks Armenian law-enforcement bodies have been more preoccupied with 
duties emanating from the current martial law regime, issuing much fewer fines 
for breaking anti-epidemic rules.
“Although we have mainly focused our efforts on ensuring the legal regime of 
martial law, we are now engaging additional forces, including female police 
officers, in the fight against the novel coronavirus,” Fidanian said, adding 
that control will also cover public transport.
Failing to wear a face mask in public spaces in Armenia, including in public 
transport, may result in a fine of 10,000 drams (about $20) imposed on the 
offender. Citizens caught breaking the rule may be find an additional 10,000 
drams if they have no passport or other ID around them.
Armenia Slams Turkey, Azerbaijan As Syrian Fighters Captured In Karabakh
The building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia in Yerevan
Armenia has accused Turkey and Azerbaijan of seeking to give the conflict in 
Nagorno-Karabakh an inter-religious character by bringing in jihadists from the 
Middle East to fight there.
In a statement released on November 1 Armenia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said 
that at least two mercenaries from Syria had been captured by Nagorno-Karabakh’s 
ethnic Armenian defense army during the fighting with Azerbaijan in the region.
Nagorno-Karabakh’s de facto ethnic Armenian authorities showed videos of two men 
whom said they had been recruited in Syria by Turkey to fight for Azerbaijan for 
a monthly pay of $2,000. One of them said they were also promised an extra 
payment for each “beheaded infidel.”
“The transfer of jihadists to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone reveals the 
intentions of the Turkish-Azerbaijani leadership to give the conflict an 
inter-religious character,” Armenia’s ministry said.
“This is a completely new manifestation of the expansion of terrorism, when 
foreign terrorist fighters and jihadists from the Middle East have been deployed 
to the conflict zone in the OSCE area; it is a serious threat to international 
and regional security and stability,” the statement added, stressing that 
“Armenia will continue to undertake consistent steps in the fight against 
international terrorism, in that regard cooperating with all interested 
partners.”
Russia, France, the United States, Iran and other countries and international 
organizations have also voiced their concern about credible reports of Syrian 
mercenaries being involved in the Nagorno-Karabakh fighting.
Azerbaijan and Turkey have denied recruiting any mercenaries to fight in the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone, instead accusing Armenia of having PKK (Kurdish 
Workers’ Party) fighters and other mercenaries fighting on its side, a claim 
discarded by Yerevan as groundless.
Yerevan’s arguments on the presence of mercenaries on the Azerbaijani side have 
also been supported by multiple investigative reports by Western journalists, 
some of which alleged that Turkey began recruiting jihadist fighters to be later 
deployed in Azerbaijan as early as July.
In an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service (Azatutyun) last month one such 
journalist, Lindsey Snell, estimated that the number of Syrian mercenaries 
fighting for Azerbaijan at one point was around 2,000.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a UK-based human 
rights organization, at least 217 Turkish-backed Syrian mercenaries have been 
killed in the fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

UEFA investigates Qarabag ‘hate’ post targeting Armenians

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 2 2020

UEFA has launched an investigation amid calls for sanctions against Azerbaijani club Qarabag after one of its staff apparently posted a hate message targeting Armenians, European football’s governing body said on Monday, AFP reports.

“An Ethics and Disciplinary Inspector has been appointed today to conduct a disciplinary investigation regarding the statements made on social media by a Qarabag FK official,” UEFA said.

“Information in regards to this investigation will be made available in due course.”

At the weekend the Armenian Football Federation (FFA) complained about a post on social media by “Nurlan Ibrahimov, a PR and media manager of Qarabag FK…calling to kill all the Armenians, old and young, without distinction.”

The FFA added that “he also justified the fact of Armenian genocide committed by Turkey” in 1915 and 1916. The posts were later deleted.

After losing in the third qualifying round of this season’s Champions League competition, Qarabag dropped into the Europa League, in which they are due to play the Turks of Sivasspor away on Thursday.