Armenpress: Eurasian Economic Union remains open for new partners, says Russia

 19:06,

TSAGHKADZOR, AUGUST 24, ARMENPRESS. The Eurasian Economic Union remains open for new partners, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said at the union’s intergovernmental council meeting in Armenia.

“The Eurasian Economic Union remains open for new partners. We very well realize that in the current conditions, expansion of partnership with other countries and regional unions is especially needed,” Mishustin said.

Expansion of partnership would allow to create a broad network of trade treaties and a common economic area of equal cooperation around the union, he added.

EU mission confirms monitors were present to ‘shooting incident’ on border

 17:37, 15 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. The EU monitoring mission (EUMA) has confirmed that its monitors were present to what it described as a “shooting incident” in their area of responsibility.

“We confirm that EUMA patrol has been present to the shooting incident in our area of responsibility. No EUMA member was harmed,” EUMA said on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

On August 15, the Azerbaijani military opened gunfire at the EU monitors and their vehicle in the direction of Verin Shorzha, in Gegharkunik Province, the Ministry of Defense of Armenia earlier said in a statement.

The EU monitors on patrol came under small arms fire by Azerbaijani Armed Forces, the ministry said.

“On August 15, at around 12:20 p.m., Azerbaijani AF units discharged fire from firearms targeting the EU observers patrolling in the vicinity of Verin Shorzha and their vehicle. There are no casualties,” reads a statement issued by the defense ministry.

The EU monitoring mission (EUMA) initially denied in a statement on social media the Armenian Defense Ministry’s statement on the shooting, but then removed the denial after a video was posted online, before eventually releasing a correcting statement confirming the shooting.

UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed, Armenian counterpart discuss bilateral relations

Aug 11 2023

ANI

Abu Dhabi [UAE], August 11 (ANI/WAM): Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs, discussed over the phone with Ararat Mirzoyan, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia, bilateral relations and opportunities to strengthen them across all domains.

During the call, the two ministers reviewed efforts aimed at developing and enhancing joint cooperation in all fields.

They also discussed several issues of common interest and exchanged views on regional and international developments. (ANI/WAM)

https://www.bignewsnetwork.com/news/273928282/uae-foreign-minister-abdullah-bin-zayed-armenian-counterpart-discuss-bilateral-relations

Armenian Human Rights Defender to send ad hoc report on Azeri shootings at Yeraskh steelworks to int’l organizations

 19:02, 9 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 9, ARMENPRESS. Today, on August 9, the Human Rights Defender published the English version of an ad hoc report on the continuous violations of human rights as a result of the shootings conducted by the Azerbaijani armed forces in the direction of the Yeraskh settlement of Ararat Province, Armenia.

The ad hoc report presents the violations of fundamental human rights registered by the Defender as a result of the fact-finding activities conducted in the Yeraskh settlement.

The violations of human rights as a result of the shootings conducted by the Azerbaijani armed forces in the direction of the settlement in June 2023 have been registered and analyzed in the ad hoc report. A number of recommendations aimed at solving the issues related to the protection of human rights are also presented in the report.

On June 13-14, 2023, shots were fired from the Azerbaijani combat positions in the direction of the Yeraskh settlement; in particular, the steel mill which is under construction with foreign investment in Yeraskh was intensively and deliberately targeted. As a direct result of the shootings, two Indian citizens were injured and taken to a medical institution.

As a result of the actions of the Azerbaijani armed forces, the civilian population’s rights to life, mental and physical integrity, property, education, work, entrepreneurship, and a number of other fundamental rights were violated.

The ad hoc report will be sent to international organizations and actors with a mandate to protect human rights, as well as competent state bodies.

The Armenian version of the Report was published on July 18.

Turkish Press: WAC: Complementary part of Azerbaijan-Armenia reconciliation

DAILY SABAH
Turkey – Aug 3 2023

The sixth meeting within the framework of the ongoing peace talks series between Azerbaijan and Armenia was held in Brussels between European Council President Charles Michel, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. Michel explained the issues discussed by the leaders during the meeting. According to the Azerbaijani press, the issue of the return of Azerbaijanis who were expelled from their native land in Armenia was discussed during the Brussels meeting. Although forgotten for years, this issue was brought up again by Azerbaijan after liberating its lands from occupation in 2020. In the 20th century, hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis living in Armenia were expelled from their lands four times. Three of these expulsions took place after the war between the two nations, and one was Soviet leader Joseph Stalin’s decision.

The Azerbaijanis who were deported from Armenia in August 2022 and who define themselves as Western Azerbaijanis have now established a community. Aliyev, who attended the opening of the community’s building on Dec. 24, 2022, said that Western Azerbaijanis’ rights must be restored, and they must be able to return to their native lands. In parliamentary hearings on March 4, 2023, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan Khalaf Khalafov said that the return of Azerbaijanis should be one of the components of the peace agenda between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

After the Azerbaijani lands were liberated from the occupation in the 44-Day War in 2020, the Azerbaijan Refugee Society (ARS), which was founded by people fleeing from the occupied territories, was dissolved and, on Aug. 3, 2022, became the Western Azerbaijan Community (WAC). On Jan. 26, 2023, the WAC adopted a “Concept of Return,” that is, “The concept (of) ensuring (the) peaceful, safe and dignified return of Azerbaijanis expelled from nowadays Armenia.” According to this concept’s general goals, the objectives of the community are: obtaining a legally binding international agreement with an appropriate verification and guarantee mechanism ensuring the voluntary return of Azerbaijanis expelled from the territory of nowadays Armenia to their homeland in safety and dignity; securing the return process with appropriate security, humanitarian, socioeconomic and assistance programs; the establishment of international monitoring, accountability, security, intervention, and other necessary activities to prevent renewed expulsion of, discrimination against and harm to the returned population; and ensuring sustainable rehabilitation and reintegration of returnees through the implementation of reconstruction and reconciliation measures under international supervision.

After this concept was announced, the goal was to promote it internationally. On Feb. 22, 2023, the concept document was sent to the U.N. Security Council, the General Assembly and the Economic and Social Council. The WAC addressed a letter to UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay and called on the organization to send a fact-finding mission to Armenia to assess the state of Azerbaijani cultural heritage there. Then, on June 18, 2023, the WAC hosted a meeting with a representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Azerbaijan. In short, after the “Concept of Return” was announced, the community succeeded within three months in bringing their own issues to the agenda of international organizations and drawing the attention of the Armenian side.

Armenian officials, who remained silent about the fate of Azerbaijanis expelled from Armenia for many years, had to react when the WAC “Concept of Return” began to circulate in U.N. committees. The Permanent Representative of Armenia to the U.N. sent a letter to Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and accused Azerbaijan of pursuing an expansionist policy toward Armenia.

During a visit to Germany on March 2, 2023, Pashinian spoke with the German Council on Foreign Relations (GCFR) and claimed that the Western Azerbaijan initiative means that Armenia does not have its own sovereign territory and that the entire territory of Armenia is referred to as “so-called Western Azerbaijan.” The next day, the WAC issued a statement rejecting Pashinian’s claim. Then, on March 12, 2023, the WAC issued a letter to the Armenian premier that called on him to begin a dialogue on the issue of return. The letter highlighted that the rights of Azerbaijanis in the process of return should be ensured within the framework of an appropriate international mechanism. Pashinian refused the request of Western Azerbaijanis to return and said that Armenia’s archives are full of details of compensation paid to these people, but he didn’t show any documents as proof.

While Pashinian rejected the possibility of the return of Azerbaijanis, Aliyev stated on March 16, 2023, that: “The state of Azerbaijan will guarantee the individual rights and security of the Armenian residents living in Karabakh. Armenia must guarantee the rights and security of the WAC based on the principle of reciprocity.”

On March 17, 2023, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia issued a statement that evaluated Aliyev’s statement as a territorial demand against Armenia. Responding to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia on March 17, 2023, the WAC again rejected these claims, emphasizing that, “Our demands for a peaceful return to our homes should not be misinterpreted or misrepresented as being detrimental to the territorial integrity or sovereignty of Armenia.” The WAC further stated that this is not an issue of territory, it is a human rights issue.

While this debate between Armenia, Azerbaijan and the WAC continued, on April 12, 2023, a group of Western Azerbaijani women sent an appeal to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to support the safe and dignified return of Azerbaijanis to their homes. According to Azerbaijani media, the EU unequivocally affirmed its support for the right of return of all affected populations and acknowledged the significance of this issue within the broader peace process.

To sum up, while the Armenian government demands rights and security for the Armenians living in Azerbaijan within the framework of the international mechanism, it does not want to recognize the right of return of the Azerbaijanis expelled from Armenia. Despite the Armenian side trying to present the demand for the return of Azerbaijanis as an expansionist policy, the WAC maintains that returning back is a human rights issue.

Since the Second Karabakh War, President Aliyev has repeatedly stated that the Azerbaijani state and constitution guarantee the rights and security of Armenians living in Karabakh, but a similar statement has not been made by Pashinian about the Azerbaijanis who want to return to their homelands. To set an example and achieve the normalization of Azerbaijan-Armenia relations, the Armenian side can demand rights and security for Armenians living in Karabakh while also ensuring the right of return and security for Azerbaijanis who formerly lived in Armenia.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Head of Department at the Baku-based think tank Center of Analysis of International Relations (AIR Center)

Nagorno-Karabakh aid convoy held at Lachin Corridor

July 27 2023
 27 July 2023

A convoy of lorries loaded with aid is stuck at the entrance to the Lachin Corridor, with Azerbaijani border guards so far refusing to allow it to enter Nagorno-Karabakh.

The convoy was arranged by the Armenian Government, which says it consists of around 400 tonnes of food and other essential supplies. Late on Wednesday, the convoy passed the Armenian checkpoint on the border but was prevented from proceeding further. 

The convoy comes in response to a growing humanitarian crisis among Nagorno-Karabakh’s 120,000 residents, who have been cut off from outside food and medical supplies since mid-June. 

Azerbaijan’s State Border Service condemned the convoy before it left Yerevan on Wednesday, labelling it a ‘provocation’ and warning Armenia against ‘aggravating the situation’. 

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said that Armenia not agreeing with the Azerbaijani Government before dispatching the convoy represented ‘an attack on the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Azerbaijan, and is another provocation against the Lachin border checkpoint’. 

They also accused Armenia of ‘not being sincere’ in the peace process and of carrying out an ‘aggressive policy’. 

Responding on Thursday morning, Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan said that if Azerbaijan did not allow the convoy to pass, this would ‘only prove Baku’s genocidal intention in Nagorno-Karabakh’.

‘Isn’t it because the real goal of Azerbaijan is to starve the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, to subject them to genocide?’, he asked.  

Pashinyan emphasised that the convoy was solely humanitarian and said the government was awaiting a ‘positive response’ from both Baku and the Russian peacekeeping mission in Nagorno-Karabakh to ensure the supplies reached their destination. 

He added that allowing the aid to enter the region would be a ‘positive step’ towards peace. 

In their statement on Wednesday, the Azerbaijani foreign ministry dismissed reports of the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh as ‘political blackmail’. They insisted that an alternative route to bring supplies into Nagorno-Karabakh, from Aghdam in Azerbaijani-government controlled territory, could be used. They said that the European Union and Red Cross backed the use of Aghdam Road.

The ceasefire agreement that brought an end to the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in November 2020 stipulated that the Lachin Corridor should remain open under the control of the Russian peacekeeping mission. However, since December 2022, Azerbaijan has limited traffic along the route, at times entirely, first with government-backed ‘eco protesters’ and then with the creation of a border checkpoint in April.

Following a meeting with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan on 15 July, EU Council President Charles Michel appeared to back the use of the Aghdam road while also insisting that the Lachin Corridor should remain open.

‘I emphasised the need to open Lachin road. I also noted Azerbaijan’s willingness to provide humanitarian supplies via Aghdam’, his statement said. 

Michel’s statement was met with criticism in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, with local civil society organisations calling for the EU not to legitimise the blockade of the Lachin Corridor. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said he did not have a mandate to discuss the proposal, implying that such questions should be discussed directly with the authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh.

On Wednesday, EU High Representative Josep Borrell reiterated the EU’s position. He said the bloc ‘took note of the expressed readiness of the Azerbaijani authorities to also supply goods via the city of Aghdam’ but insisted ‘this should not be seen as an alternative to the reopening of the Lachin corridor’.

‘The EU also notes that ICRC activities in the region have been heavily impacted and calls for their full resumption, including medical evacuations and humanitarian supplies. The EU stresses that humanitarian access must not be politicised by any actors’, Borrell said. 

‘It is incumbent on the Azerbaijani authorities to guarantee safety and freedom of movement along the Lachin Corridor imminently and not to permit the crisis to escalate further’, he added.

The Red Cross has expressed a readiness to use the Aghdam road to deliver aid to the region’s population, but said on Tuesday that they had not received permission to do so, without mentioning which side was withholding permission. 

While still being able to transfer some patients requiring urgent medical needs to Armenia, the Red Cross has said they have been prevented from delivering medicine to the region.

Shortages of medical and hygiene supplies have been widely reported in Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as the dwindling fuel supplies affecting the operation of ambulances.

 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.


Nagorno-Karabakh crisis puts the spotlight on EU ties with Azerbaijan

POLITICO
July 27 2023

Azerbaijan is accused of throttling the ethnic-Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh — setting off a crisis in relations with the European Union just as the country becomes an increasingly important fossil fuel supplier to replace imports from Russia.

Members of the European Parliament are demanding action, and late Wednesday the EU’s chief diplomat Josep Borrell said that the bloc is “deeply concerned” about the worsening humanitarian situation in the region.

Worry is growing over the risk of famine in Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway region inside Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized borders. The Armenian population declared independence after a brutal war in the early 1990s, but Azerbaijan reversed many of those gains in a lightning campaign in 2020.

Since December, the only road in or out of the mountainous territory has been under the control of Azerbaijan’s armed forces and, for the past two weeks, local officials say a checkpoint on the Lachin Corridor linking Karabakh with Armenia has been closed to civilian traffic and supply trucks.

In a statement Tuesday, the International Committee of the Red Cross, which has been bringing food and medicine to the tens of thousands of Armenians in Karabakh, said that “despite persistent efforts, we are currently unable to deliver aid.”

“People lack life-saving medication and essentials like hygiene products and baby formula. Fruits, vegetables, and bread are increasingly scarce and costly. Other food items such as dairy products, sunflower oil, cereal, fish, and chicken are unavailable,” it added. Miscarriages have tripled in the past month as a result of malnutrition, one doctor told local media.

A day earlier, the president of the unrecognized local Armenian administration, Arayik Harutyunyan, declared that it had become a “disaster zone” and called on international organizations, foreign nations and the U.N. to urgently intervene.

Over the weekend, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan warned that a repeat of the 2020 war is now “very likely.” He accused Baku of laying the foundations for “genocide” in the region.

Azerbaijan denies it is blockading Nagorno-Karabakh, and has offered to provide aid by a road from Aghdam, a regional hub it regained in 2020, almost totally leveled during three decades of Armenian control.

Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry called Borrell’s statement “regrettable” and said it was driven by “propaganda and political manipulations spread by Armenia.”

Responding to a question from POLITICO, Harutyunyan insisted that his government is unable to accept the offer because, “Azerbaijan created this crisis and cannot be the solution to it.”

Local officials fear that becoming dependent on Baku for supplies would effectively end their independence and make them vulnerable to future shut-offs.

However, Azerbaijan’s foreign policy chief, Hikmet Hajiyev, declared this week that the international community should press the local Armenians to accept supplies via Aghdam, insisting “there is no other way! Game over!”

The EU is slowly waking up to the crisis. Borrell said Azerbaijan is disregarding an International Court of Justice ruling mandating that it keep the road open. He added that the Aghdam route “should not be seen as an alternative” to the Lachin Corridor.

In its response, Baku accused the bloc’s top envoy of a “blatant misinterpretation” of the International Court of Justice ruling. 

The EU has a long-standing interest in the region.

Commission President Ursula von der Leyen jetted to Baku last year, hailed the country as a “crucial energy partner” and signed a deal to double the EU’s purchases of Azerbaijani gas.

After Azerbaijan launched a series of incursions into Armenia last year, Brussels signed off on a Common Security and Defense Policy monitoring mission along the border in the hope of preventing future bloodshed.

Nathalie Loiseau, the chair of the European Parliament’s defense committee, said the EU should go further than just voicing concern and impose “targeted sanctions” on Azerbaijani officials “responsible for hate speech and illegal decisions,” arguing that the bloc’s status as a mediator shouldn’t prevent it from standing up for its self-declared values.

Nor, she said, should its energy ties with Baku weaken its leverage, because “in a trade relationship, both partners are dependent.”

The EU has repeatedly cautioned that what it sees as inflammatory rhetoric is a threat to peace in the region. Despite that, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has threatened to “chase away” Armenian separatists “like dogs” and Baku previously issued a commemorative postage stamp featuring a worker in hazmat gear spraying disinfectant on the region.

Brussels’ External Action Service has dispatched its civilian monitors to the start of the Lachin Corridor to “get first hand and verified information on current developments.”

However, according to François-Xavier Bellamy, a French MEP who sits on the Parliament’s energy committee, it appears there simply isn’t the political will in Brussels to do anything more substantive at present.

“It’s becoming a case of Parliament vs. the Commission. We’ve tabled questions, we had a debate and now Parliament has voted to support a settled position on introducing sanctions on Azerbaijan,” he said. “But if the Commission won’t listen, what else can we do?”

According to Laurence Broers, a leading analyst on the conflict and an associate fellow at Chatham House, the EU is trying to “compartmentalize” its role in the peace process to avoid damaging its relations with Armenia or Azerbaijan.

“We have seen some friction in the messaging between different parts of the EU, with the European Parliament taking a stronger normative stand,” he said. “Those parts of the EU more directly engaged with the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict have tended to rely more on positive incentives rather than negative disincentives.”

European Council President Charles Michel has spearheaded a series of trilateral talks in Brussels, bringing together Aliyev and Pashinyan. However, the situation on the ground has continued to worsen.

“Michel’s rhetoric is well received in Baku,” said Rusif Huseynov, director of Azerbaijan’s Topchubashov Center think tank. “He refers to Azerbaijani territorial integrity, he mentioned the Aghdam route as an alternative. Critical voices from MEPs of course are a source of irritation in Baku, but I don’t think there’s too much concern because Azerbaijan has good relations at the level of Charles Michel and von der Leyen.”

A spokesperson for Michel declined to comment on whether the EU needs to step up its response to the growing humanitarian catastrophe, saying only that a press release issued two weeks ago had details of yet more talks planned for after the summer holidays.

“That answers your question,” the official said.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s president goes on sit-down strike

 TASS 
Russia –
Arayik Harutyunyan plans to hold it on Renaissance Square in Stepanakert

YEREVAN, July 18. /TASS/. President of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic Arayik Harutyunyan said on Monday he is going to stage a sit-in in Stepanakert’s central square.

“I am forced to take this extreme step so that Armenia, Russia, the United States, France, the European Union, the UN Security Council and others cannot ignore Azerbaijan’s current and future aggressive actions and crimes and ultimately implement their commitments under the trilateral statement, the international court ruling and other documents,” he said in a televised address to the nation.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told a government meeting on June 16 that Azerbaijan had completely blocked the Lachin corridor making it impossible to deliver humanitarian cargoes to Nagorno-Karabakh, leaving some 120,000 people in the region on the edge of a humanitarian catastrophe. International organizations, including the International Committee of the Red Cross, have limited access to the region.

https://tass.com/world/1648177

More fake news released by Azerbaijani military, warns Armenia

 09:51,

YEREVAN, JULY 19, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry continues its disinformation campaign targeting the Armenian military with another false accusation on border shooting, the Armenian Defense Ministry warned on Wednesday.

“The [Ministry of Defense] of Azerbaijan continues to come up with the usual kind of disinformation. The statement of the [Ministry of Defense] of Azerbaijan that the units of the Armed Forces of Armenia opened fire on the Azerbaijani combat positions located in the eastern and southwestern parts of the frontier zone between 12:40 a.m. and 1:40 a.m. on July 19, does not correspond to reality,” the Armenian Defense Ministry said in a statement.

Armenian Church in Ukraine condemns "blessing" of Armenians for war against Ukraine

July 5 2023