There are various options of international mechanisms for the Stepanakert-Baku dialogue. Pashinyan

Save

Share

 17:40,

YEREVAN, APRIL 18, ARMENPRESS. There are various options of international mechanisms for dialogue between Stepanakert and Baku, ARMENPRESS reports, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan said during the discussion of the report on the implementation process and results of the Government Action Plan 2021-2026 for the year of 2022 in the National Assembly.

Anna Grigoryan, MP from the “Armenia” faction, asked what international mechanism should be in place for the Baku-Stepanakert dialogue.

“There are various versions of the international mechanism. Azerbaijan says no, there should not be an international mechanism, because it is its internal matter. In 2017, the chief negotiator representing Armenia also said that the problem is that Azerbaijan says that it is its internal matter,” the Prime Minister noted.

In the context of the events in Tegh village, Anna Grigoryan accused the Armenian authorities of inaction, noting that the Azerbaijanis come forward, deploy, and do not allow the Armenian side to carry out construction and engineering works. The Prime Minister replied that the MP’s information about the situation in Tegh village is at least not complete, the events did not happen that way.

“It’s not so that the Armenian side was not there. It is not that the Azerbaijanis did something, after which the Armenian side did something. It is not the case that the Armenian side does not carry out fortification works in its own territory. It is not the case that the Armenian side has not taken parts of the border under control. But it’s also not so that there aren’t problems there. There are problems there, and these problems are related to both certain activities and certain inactions. Those phenomena are very disturbing and problematic,” said the Prime Minister

Which Armenia company is put on US sanctions list?

NEWS.am
Armenia – March 13 2023

As we reported earlier, the US Department of Commerce has imposed export restrictions on 28 legal entities from ten countries, including one company that is registered in Armenia.

According to the US Department of Commerce, the legal name of this sanctioned company from Armenia is Tako LLC, which is registered in Yerevan.

Tako LLC and the other 27 companies were placed on the US sanctions list because, according to US authorities, they continued to supply goods to Russian companies that are already on the aforesaid sanctions list.

It is also interesting that, according to the US Department of Commerce, Tako LLC underwent a name change and was previously called Taco LLC, which was under US sanctions back in September last year. Taco LLC is a partner of the Russian company Radioavtomatika (Radioautomatics) and, according to the US authorities, it provided financial and material support to this company.

In addition to Taco LLC, the Milur Electronics LLC, the Armenian subsidiary of the Russian Milandr company, was put on the US sanctions list earlier—in November of last year—with similar accusations.

Azerbaijanis ‘bar Nagorno-Karabakh residents’ from crossing Lachin Corridor

April 5 2023
 5 April 2023

Russian peacekeepers evacuating people out of Nagorno-Karabakh. Image via Marut Vanyan.

The authorities in Stepanakert stated that the Azerbaijanis claiming to be eco-activists blocking the Lachin Corridor prevented a group of Nagorno-Karabakh residents from entering Stepanakert.

On Tuesday, Nagorno-Karabakh’s State Minister Gurgen Nersisyan stated that the 27 Nagorno-Karabakh residents had attempted to enter Stepanakert accompanied by Russian peacekeepers.

Nersisyan has said that the group had been residing in Armenia since the closure of the Lachin Corridor on 12 December.

The corridor — the only way in and out of Nagorno-Karabakh for its Armenian population — is under blockade by Azerbaijanis claiming to be eco-activists protesting illegal mining in the region.

Only four members of the group were reportedly allowed into Stapanakert due to illness, while the rest returned to Goris in southern Armenia after ‘long and persistent negotiations [with the Azerbaijanis] yielded no results’.

‘Azerbaijan, which regularly declares that the road connecting Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh] to Armenia is open, today openly prohibited the entry of Artsakh residents to their place of residence’, the State Minister wrote on Facebook after the incident.

‘Azerbaijan shows the completely opposite approach regarding those leaving Artsakh for Armenia, which directly documents their criminal behaviour and intention to expel Armenians from Artsakh.’

Moscow and Baku have yet to comment on the incident, however Azerbaijani media reported that the group of Nagorno-Karabakh residents were held up by Russian peacekeepers and not Azerbaijani protesters.

Apa, a pro-government Azerbaijani TV channel, reported that the group had departed from Goris in Armenia and was met by Russian peacekeepers on the Lachin Corridor, who accompanied them to Shusha (Shushi).  In Shusha, the group was allegedly stopped by another Russian peacekeeping checkpoint because their trip to Stepanakert had not been pre-arranged.

Apa corroborated State Minister Nersisyan’s claim that four members of the group were transported to Stepanakert due to illness, adding that they were taken there in Azerbaijani ambulances accompanied by Russian peacekeepers.

‘According to obtained facts, some Azerbaijanis even broke into one of the cars’, the Human Rights Defender of Nagorno-Karabakh, Gegham Stepanyan, wrote on Facebook late on Tuesday. 

‘Moreover, by allowing the exit of people from Artsakh in various ways, but prohibiting entry, the Azerbaijani authorities are openly implementing a policy of ethnic cleansing, as Ilham Aliyev once again admitted in his statement on 10 January.’

Stepanyan was referring to a statement made by Aliyev, in which he said: ‘for whoever does not want to become [an Azerbaijani] citizen, the road is not closed, but open. They can leave’.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s Foreign Ministry condemned the incident and called it the ‘next level of practical implementation of [Azerbaijan’s] plan to ethnically cleanse Artsakh and expel its people from their historical homeland’.

The ministry’s statement went on to accuse the international community of ‘tacit approval, if not complicity’ in Baku’s actions.

Only vehicles belonging to the Red Cross or the Russian peacekeepers have been allowed in and out of Nagorno-Karabakh since the blockade of the Lachin Corridor started in mid-December. They are usually stocked with essential medical supplies and food, and are responsible for transporting those needing urgent medical care to hospitals in Yerevan.

The Lachin blockade was condemned by a number of Western countries and the European Union, with the International Court of Justice ordering Azerbaijan to unblock the road in late February.

[Read more on OC Media: ICJ orders Azerbaijan to unblock Lachin Corridor]

This article was amended after publication to include reports of the incident by Azerbaijani media.

 For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.


Art: Uncovering the Photographer Behind Arshile Gorky’s Most Famous Painting

HYPERALLERGIC
March 30 2023
Art

As we pursue photographer Hovhannes Avedaghayan a fascinating picture begins to emerge of him and the world of which he was part.
Shushan and Vostanig Adoian, Van, c. 1911, photographed by uncredited photographer (image courtesy Dr. Bruce Berberian and The Arshile Gorky Foundation)

Around 1911, mother and son Shushan and Vostanig Adoian visited a local photography studio in Van, a heavily Armenian city near the eastern border of the Ottoman Empire. There, they sat for a portrait, one they might send to Setrag Adoian, her husband and his father, in the United States. The absence of that man from the portrait is palpable. It is but the first of many absences and disappearances to disturb a photograph that in time became a memorial object and then artistic source material. Indeed, the portrait seems almost haunted by its own disappearance, its fading as an autonomous object with its own particular orbit and history as it is overtaken by these other narratives. But could autonomy be regained, and a link to its own world reforged? 

In later years Vostanig, by that time a migrant to the United States and an artist using the name Arshile Gorky, was reunited with the photograph and used it as source material for two canvases, monumental pieces that he worked on over a period of decades, and for a great number of drawings that served as studies for the two canvases, as well as navigations of and negotiations with the image of his younger self beside his (by then late) mother. The two canvases are now in major US public art collections: the National Gallery of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. The photograph is in a private collection but belongs no less to the world of art, for it has become part of an art historical narrative.  

Hrag Vartanian made just this point at the commencement of Fixed Point Perspective, an ongoing project convening a number of artists to individually and collectively explore the heritage of Ottoman studio photography. As he observed of Gorky’s The Artist and His Mother artworks, “When we discuss the series, we focus on the avant-garde style of the painting and drawing. But what about the photography?” What might we learn, he went on to ask, when we actively contemplate photographs, and indeed search for the photographer responsible for the image of the Adoians? With these key questions, he proposed the Adoian portrait as offering a path into a wider history and culture.  

Of course, a focus on the photographer can often severely circumscribe a photograph. “What was Egypt will become Beato, or du Camp, or Frith,” wrote Douglas Crimp just as the art market was beginning to sink its teeth into photographs, recategorizing and redefining them in the process. Yet the Adoian portrait has not suffered this fate — because an Ottoman Armenian studio photograph does not fit easily into a Eurocentric market-led art history of photography, and because, of course, art has already overtaken it via other means, Gorky the artist now appearing almost as the creator of his own boyhood image. To turn to the photographer in these circumstances has an unusually liberatory potential. It offers the opportunity to untether the photograph from its present moorings, so that it might spiral, in Allan Sekula’s words, not “inward toward the art-system” but “outward toward the world.”

Thus we are faced with both a photograph and a set of questions. Our starting point as we endeavor to spiral outward is the small space of the studio in which the Adoian photograph was made. Identifying the space is hampered by the photograph’s blurred and murky backdrop, and yet with close study, we can begin to match its backdrop with that of contemporaneous studio photographs from Van. Its design is akin to a cloister scene, depicting a series of columns and arches. Most interesting of all is a detail lying outside the frame of the Adoian picture but visible in other photographs, a view of a path — a winding path no less — leading up to a twin-peaked mountain.  

Also found on other photographs is the name of a photographer, Hovhannes Avedaghayan. As we pursue Avedaghayan through his pictures and the scant mentions of him in a variety of sources — from memory books (houshamadyan) to commercial business listings — a fascinating picture begins to emerge of him and the world of which he was part, the world from which the Adoian portrait hailed.

Avedaghayan was born in 1863 in Van, just as change was afoot in the Armenian world. Above the city, at the monastery complex of Varakavank in the foothills of the twin-peaked Mount Varak, Mgrdich Khrimian, the recently appointed vartabed (abbot) was at work on a series of radical teachings and publications that sought to situate Armenian life in a distinct Armenian geography, and to draw attention to the poverty and oppression faced by the largely rural Armenians who dwelt in those lands, as well as the plight of those forced to migrate. Varakavank became a symbol of a new sense of Armenian identity, one based not just in religion but also in a shared language, history, culture, and, perhaps above all, a shared ancestral homeland — a homeland in need of rescue. 

Hovhannes Avedaghayan, Varakavank, Van, c. 1910.; image published in Vasbouragan, Venice: St. Lazzaro Mkhitarian Dparan, 1930 (image public domain)

There is evidence to suggest that Avedaghayan himself saw Varakavank as a kind of spiritual home. The only photograph thus far traced to which he applied his name by hand to the front depicts Varakavank and an assortment of figures: clergy of the monastery, teachers and students of the attached school, and what might be a group of visiting pilgrims. (In other photographs the name appears as a print label on the reverse sides of mounts.) Another handwritten note is in the skies above: “To you, oh my beautiful nest of Varak, I fly across the infinite expanse.” The words are taken from a poem by Khoren Khrimian, Mgrdich Khrimian’s nephew and director of the Varakavank school. The poem expresses the yearnings of a migrant for his home, yearnings that Avedaghayan understood.  

As a young man Avedaghayan left his native Van for the Russian Caucasus, part of a defining pattern of Armenian migrancy. There he became involved with the emergent Armenian Revolutionary Federation, known as the Dashnaktsuthiun (Federation), or simply Dashnaks, founded in Tiflis (now Tbilisi) in 1890. The Dashnaks are thought to have been inspired, in part, by a famous speech in which Mgrdich Khrimian blamed the lack of reforms in the Ottoman East on Armenians’ use of peaceful petitions rather than violent weaponry. Thus revolutionary activity became another defining feature of Armenian life — giving definition, it is important to note, not because revolutionary involvement was widespread among Armenians, but because the activity that did exist would play a decisive part in the unfolding of Armenian history. Avedaghayan’s role in the group at this time is unclear but we do know that he was arrested by the Russian authorities (suggesting that his role was potentially an active one) and exiled along with other political prisoners to the notorious penal colony on the island of Sakhalin, off the Siberian coast.

At some point around the turn of the century, Avedaghayan succeeded in escaping from Sakhalin, returning to his home in Van by way of a long journey through Japan, China, India, and Iran. (Were this the life of a European or American photographer, such as the aforementioned Beato, du Camp, or Frith, this would be the stuff of legend.)

Photograph of Arshile Gorky, “The Artist and His Mother” (c. 1926-42) at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC (photo © and by Carolina Miranda, used with permission)

Back in Van, Avedaghayan established what appears to be the city’s first photographic studio. Photography came to Van a little later than in other comparable cities of the region, but followed a familiar pattern of arriving via an Armenian with imported technology and techniques, and largely serving the Armenian community. Avedaghayan’s clientele broadly resembled that of other Armenian studios of the Ottoman East. He pictured a cross-section of local society — families, businesspeople, clerics, and students — but wealthier Vanetsis were predominant.

Studios served Armenian communities, responding to their particular needs — those of a dispersed people. A number of Avedaghayan’s photographs relate, like the Adoian portrait, to the migratory phenomenon. The regional migrations of the sort that Avedaghayan had embarked upon had been part of Armenian life for generations. But by the late 19th century, a new global movement had come to dominate, in which Armenians crossed continents in search of economic opportunity and security, and the US was the favored destination. Photographs such as the Adoians’ were threads that tied people together, part of a global exchange between those who had left their ancestral homelands and those who stayed behind. They brought people together in another sense, to gather around them, to look and converse, to tell stories, and to remember loved ones. Photographs were the objects around which families, friends, and communities adhered, in and between the Old and the New World.   

The flower in Vostanig’s hands is a motif repeated across many of Avedaghayan’s migrant photographs, evidently placed there by the photographer to serve as signs and gestures of love and friendship for the photographs’ intended recipients. As photographic technologies and techniques were similar from one city to the next, perhaps only in such small details can we begin to observe a particular individual at work behind the lens.

What did mark Avedaghayan’s studio as different was his involvement in a more unusual, clandestine form of picture-making. He had not entirely left the revolutionary life behind, and served as a photographer for Dashnak activists in the Van region. Revolutionary groups, especially the Dashnaks, specialized in visual propaganda. They understood the role photographs could play in gathering people together as communities — their images of revolutionary heroes can be approached as one large nation-building enterprise. They understood, too, the vast narrative potential of photographs; the one they encouraged was of heroic and righteous struggle against oppressive overlords, and photographs proved instrumental in forging mythic, larger-than-life personas for activists.  

Hovhannes Avedaghayan. Khisarji Kevork’s family, Van, 1910s (image courtesy Armen Shahinian collection)

Such figures, in the end, became all too much the instruments of fantasy. The presence of some revolutionaries in the eastern provinces gave the Ottoman government a pretext for the wholesale removal of Armenian populations in 1915, under the cover of war. It was an utterly violent removal, undertaken via massacre and forced migration to the unforgiving climes of the Syrian desert. And it was the violent removal of not only people but also their culture and history.  

Van was one of the few places where Armenians defended themselves against these machinations. Avedaghayan was certainly involved in defending the city’s Armenian sections — as were practically all Armenians, even the young Vostanig — and there is a distinct probability that he was involved in creating the photographs of that defense. Thousands of Vanetsis were saved — but they would never again dwell in their homeland. More than 100,000 of them subsequently marched eastward on foot; two-thirds reaching their destination in the Caucasus. Though some managed to travel further still, the vast majority stayed, under very difficult conditions. Shushan Adoian died in 1919 in Yerevan amid a sea of starving refugees from the Ottoman Empire; Vostanig sailed for the US in 1920; Hovhannes Avedaghayan lived in Baku, where he died in 1923 at the age of 60.

Thus to uncover the maker of the Adoian photograph is also to uncover part of the often shrouded, ignored, and misrepresented history and visual culture from which it emerged. This is possible because Armenians occupied a highly visual world. Theirs were lives lived with, among, and through photographs and other images.

What can be said of the visual culture of the Ottoman Armenian photographic studio? My own assessment is that it is difficult to make a case for Avedaghayan’s photographs, and indeed those produced by comparable local studios, as formally distinctive or innovative. A globalized medium, photography replicated its forms across the world, its methods being imported into each new place as surely as were its technologies. Studying photographs collectively rather than individually helps to lay bare this essential truth. Ottoman Armenian studio photography required the intervention — and idiosyncratic vision — of a Gorky to turn one of its number from a repetitious or “unoriginal” example into something of interest to the art world.

However, Armenian-made photographs are distinctive in a sense, for they were made in and circulated through a distinctive milieu. Their forms and conventions might have been familiar, prosaic, perhaps even hackneyed at times, and yet they took on new life and meaning when created and deployed in the unique circumstances of the Armenian world.

And they carry the searing mark of unique lives. Take the Adoians. When they posed before Avedaghayan’s lens, Shushan and Vostanig were taking part in the same process as hundreds of others before them. Yet they did so in order to speak of their own lives, to declare their uniqueness. The particularity of the photograph lies not in pose or composition but in those lives. It is an object that not only records life but plays a role and has a force within it. Armenians visiting studios tended to understand this about photographs, their power, their promise, their possibility. 

Aram Jibilian’s limited edition poster project for Fixed Point Perspective, which includes the following images, “Ottoman Armenian Figure in an Empty Landscape”(2017), backdrop painting by Simon Agopyan, 1910, and “Dust in the Bellows” (2017), backdrop photograph by unknown Ottoman Armenian photographer, 1912. (image courtesy the artist)

Today, photographs can possess these qualities still — but only if we allow them. The artists involved in Vartanian’s Fixed Point Perspective project work with Ottoman Armenian photographs. This does not position photographs as passive objects, raw source material (in the way the Adoian portrait is regularly perceived in relation to Gorky’s The Artist and His Mother series). Rather, these contemporary artists work with Ottoman Armenian photographic culture in acts of engagement and renewal, even what we might call collaboration with long-gone studio photographers and their subjects. This is what is frequently misunderstood about Gorky’s works — they were created in partnership and part of their power has its source in the original photograph, and the studio and culture from which it sprang. 

The project’s contemporary artists have produced their artworks in conversation, in solidarity, with their century-old partners. Photographs thus continue to bring people together, to bind the fractured world. One piece in particular has a powerful hold on my mind, Aram Jibilian’s print work “Ottoman Armenian Figure in an Empty Landscape,” in which the studio portrait of an Armenian man becomes his ghostly apparition in the Armenian homelands. It speaks of the disappearance of a people and their culture, their absence from the land and from history, and the way in which that absence can haunt us through photographs. But it also speaks of a return from nothingness — a reappearance. It is the sort of return that can occur only when we open our eyes and both converse and commune with the past.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 22-03-23

Save

Share

 17:24, 22 March 2023

YEREVAN, 22 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 22 March, USD exchange rate down by 0.18 drams to 388.17 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 0.70 drams to 418.91 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.01 drams to 5.04 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.94 drams to 476.94 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 221.68 drams to 24367.11 drams. Silver price down by 0.51 drams to 280.36 drams. Platinum price stood at 16414.1 drams.

Rasmussen calls for international, armed, UN-mandated mission in Nagorno Karabakh

Save

Share

 13:07,

YEREVAN, MARCH 25, ARMENPRESS. The risk of an open war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the near future is real and underestimated, Former NATO secretary-general (2009-14) and former prime minister of Denmark Anders Fogh Rasmussen said in an interview with Le Figaro.

“There is a single road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. Only one. And this road has been blocked since December 12 . From essential products to medicines, nothing goes by. Residents are stuck on the Armenian side and cannot return to their homes . This situation can lead to a humanitarian disaster. The ultimate goal could be ethnic cleansing, making the life of the inhabitants so difficult that many of them would leave the territory.

I wrote a message to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev urging him to lift the blockade. He did not answer me, just as he never reacted to the various statements by the international community. The International Court of Justice has itself ordered Azerbaijan to restore movement. But the blockade is still there. I appreciate Emmanuel Macron’s strong commitment on this subject, and I hope that France will be joined by the other main Member States of the European Union in increasing the pressure on President Aliyev,” Rasmussen, the founder of Rasmussen Global international political consultancy firm, said.

Asked to elaborate on what kind of pressures he means, the former NATO Secretary General said: “The European Commission and Azerbaijan are bound by an energy agreement . Obviously, after cutting off the Russian gas supply, we need alternatives. But this agreement can precisely be an excellent basis for increasing the pressure on the Azerbaijani president. It is important to tell Baku that our energy interest will not make us look away from a potential humanitarian crisis.

It could be that Ilham Aliyev is an autocrat, like Vladimir Putin. But I firmly believe that he is aware of the disadvantage of being considered an international pariah, as is the case for his Russian counterpart. In my opinion, Aliyev carefully calculates the limits not to be exceeded in violations of international law. Because the blocking of Nagorno-Karabakh is a violation of the law, as well as the attacks carried out last September on Armenian soil, followed by the occupation of parts of territory. The European Union must make it clear to the Aliyev regime that these violations will not go unpunished.”

He added that Russia – who is in control of the Lachin Corridor – did nothing to prevent the blockade.

“Indeed, the Lachin Corridor has been under the control of Russian peacekeepers since an agreement in 2020. I saw with my own eyes the soldiers posted to control the road. They are very close to the place of the blockade, but they do nothing! Moscow did absolutely nothing to prevent this situation, just as it said nothing when Baku attacked Armenia in September. It cannot be ruled out that Moscow, in addition to a lack of will to help its historic ally, also lacks the capacity to do so, being fully engaged on the Ukrainian front. Either way, there is clearly a paradigm shift in the Caucasus, with Russian influence and impact fading. Armenians are deeply disappointed by this inaction. That’s why they look for reliable friends.”

Asked why Europe has a special responsibility in Armenia, Rasmussen said: “I think that a new conflict in this region at the gates of Europe cannot serve us. First of all, this risks compromising our energy supply. Also, the passivity of Russia suggests the existence of an informal alliance between Moscow and Baku, and between Moscow and Istanbul. This is why European states must engage in the South Caucasus.

I think the European Union has grasped what is at stake by deploying an observer mission to the Armenian border. For the moment, the group is too small, the means too limited, and the experts do not have access to the Azeri side of the border. But it’s a good base. The objective is twofold: in the immediate future, to contain the threat – because Azerbaijan will not dare to attack as long as European observers can observe the facts. In a longer perspective, I encourage the European Union to make it a real fact-finding mission to establish documented facts on the humanitarian situation in Nagorno Karabakh. We must also urge President Aliyev to engage in peace negotiations…”

Rasmussen noted that Armenia highlights ensuring the rights and security of Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh, and said that this would require a peacekeeping mission “which can warn of an imminent risk of ethnic cleansing.”

“I therefore plead for the deployment of an international and armed mission, under a United Nations mandate,” he added.

Russian Ambassador visits Tavush province, border security discussed with local authorities

Save

Share

 15:13,

YEREVAN, MARCH 25, ARMENPRESS. The Ambassador of Russia to Armenia Sergei Kopyrkin visited the Tavush Province where he met with Governor Hayk Ghalumyan.

During the meeting “the sides attached importance to the continuous development of the Armenian-Russian relations, including interregional cooperation,” the Russian embassy said in a readout.

Commending the dynamics of trade-economic cooperation between the two countries, the Ambassador and the Governor discussed the current state and prospects of expansion of the ties between Tavush Province and the federal subjects of Russia, including by taking into account the significant mutual interest displayed by business circles.

Russia’s Trade Representative to Armenia Anna Donchenko informed the Tavush administration on the possible formats for establishing and developing partnership between the business communities of Russia and Armenian provinces.

Ambassador Kopyrkin thanked the Tavush authorities for supporting the humanitarian initiatives implemented by Russia, including supporting the Russian language education.

The necessity of ensuring security along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border was emphasized. The Ambassador spoke about Russia’s systemic efforts for supporting a peaceful settlement in the region. The Russian Ambassador then visited the village of Berkaber.

The ambassador also toured the Ijevan branch of the Yerevan State University and the Russian Center.

As Azerbaijani Forces Target Artsakh Civilians, Baku Blames Russian Peacekeepers

Russian peacekeeping forces on the Lachin corridor


While Azerbaijani forces continued to open fire at Artsakh civilians Thursday and Friday, official Baku blamed the Russian peacekeeping forces for hastening what it called the illegal transfer of arms into Artsakh.

Azerbaijani combat positions on Thursday and Friday targeted and opened fire with weapons of various types and calibers at a group of citizens carrying out pruning work in the vineyards of Machkalashen community of the Martuni region, the Artsakh Interior Ministry reported.

While no casualties were reported, Artsakh official suspended all agricultural activities in the region.

The Artsakh Interior Ministry also slammed Azerbaijan’s disinformation saying that Baku is deliberately misleading and misrepresenting the situation.

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry on Friday claimed that Armenians were using the Stepanakert-Ghaybalishen-Lisagor road to transport military supplies.

“The Azerbaijani side is misleading the international community and preparing the ground for another provocation against the civilian population of Artsakh,” the Artsakh police said in a statement.

“The Artsakh Ministry of Internal Affairs considers it necessary to emphasize once again that the movement of civilians and the transportation of humanitarian goods are carried out along the forest and mountain road bypassing Shushi, accompanied by Russian peacekeepers,” explained the statement, saying that Azerbaijani has labeled the trucks carrying the materials as military vehicles.

“The movement of one combat vehicle ZTR-82A belonging to the Russian peacekeeping contingent, three tent KamAZ [trucks] and one KamAZ vehicle with a fuel tank belonging to Armenians was recorded by means of technical monitoring of the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan,” Azerbaijan’s defense ministry said.

“With such actions, the Russian peacekeeping contingent does not fulfill its obligations defined by the provisions of the trilateral statement [of November 9, 2020],” Baku accused the Russian peacekeeping contingent.

“Such incidents should be stopped immediately. Such illegal actions, which happen on a regular basis, testify to the need for Azerbaijan to set up a border and control checkpoint at the end of the Azerbaijani-Armenian border on the road to Lachin,” added Azerbaijan’s defense ministry.

Armenia opposition MP: Azerbaijan is building up military equipment

News.am
Armenia –

Opposition MP Taguhi Tovmasyan is in daily contact with the residents of Armenia’s border region and with the military, who alert that they had seen movement and alerted her, about which she considered it necessary to contact Armenia’s international partners so that a possible escalation of tension could be prevented as much as possible. Tovmasyan told about this today to reporters in the National Assembly—and referring to the reports about the buildup of Azerbaijani armed forces on the borders of Armenia.

“It is clear that if military equipment is being built up, it is not done for no reason; it is done to prepare for a certain [military] operation. I have received alarms from Gegharkunik, Tavush [Provinces], and all along Artsakh [(Nagorno-Karabakh)]. There was a movement of [Azerbaijani] military equipment that worried people.

“There is already quite a big and intense reaction; everyone is interested. I have reactions from various superpowers at the highest level that they are following the process, will follow the further developments with great attention as well, trying to prevent certain actions,” the Armenian opposition MP said.

Healthcare Ministry reports new cases of measles, two patients in serious condition

Save

Share

 10:18, 9 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 9, ARMENPRESS. The total number of confirmed cases of measles in the ongoing local outbreak in Armenia has reached 43, the Armenian Ministry of Healthcare reported Thursday.

11 patients recovered while 17 others are hospitalized. Two of them are in serious condition.

40 of the 43 patients are unvaccinated, while the three others had skipped their second dose of the vaccine, according to the healthcare ministry. 

Healthcare authorities recommend children get two doses of the measles vaccine, starting with the first dose at 12 through 15 months of age, and the second dose at 4 through 6 years of age. The Armenian healthcare ministry advised parents to get their children vaccinated if they’ve missed the immunization schedule.

At the same time, unvaccinated direct contacts of confirmed cases should also get vaccinated, healthcare authorities said.

Measles is one of the world’s most contagious diseases. It is spread by coughing and sneezing, close personal contact or direct contact with infected nasal or throat secretions.

The virus remains active and contagious in the air or on infected surfaces for up to 2 hours. It can be transmitted by an infected person from 4 days prior to the onset of the rash to 4 days after the rash erupts.

Unvaccinated young children are at highest risk of measles and its complications. Unvaccinated pregnant women are also at risk. Any non-immune person (who has not been vaccinated or was vaccinated but did not develop immunity) can become infected.

The first sign of measles is usually a high fever, which begins about 10 to 12 days after exposure to the virus, and lasts 4 to 7 days. A runny nose, a cough, red and watery eyes, and small white spots inside the cheeks can develop in the initial stage. After several days, a rash erupts, usually on the face and upper neck. Over about 3 days, the rash spreads, eventually reaching the hands and feet.