Iran-Azerbaijan infowar heats up again

Sept 2 2022
Joshua Kucera Sep 2, 2022

A war of words between Azerbaijan and Iran has again heated up, with semi-official sources in Azerbaijan openly calling for Iran’s large ethnic Azerbaijani minority to break free.

“The time has come: Southern Azerbaijan should secede from Iran,” went an August 26 headline on Caliber.az, a website connected to Azerbaijan’s presidential administration. (“Southern Azerbaijan” is the irredentist term for Iran’s Azerbaijani-dominated northern provinces.)

An article the following day in Haqqin.az, a site connected to Azerbaijan’s security services, was headlined “Southern Azerbaijan is striving for independence!” And it suggested that Baku was ready to help the process along: “The Azerbaijani state has enough mobilizing force to defend the rights of its compatriots,” the unidentified author wrote, referring to Iranian Azerbaijanis. “And the Azerbaijani government has enough resources to support a new wave of the national-liberation movement.”

Relations between Baku and Tehran have been rocky since the 2020 war between Azerbaijan and Armenia. While Iran has repeatedly expressed its support for Azerbaijan regaining control of many of the territories it lost in the first war between the two sides in the 1990s, it appears worried about a now-emboldened Azerbaijan’s potential next steps.

This most recent flare up appears connected to July statements from Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in which he expressed concern about Azerbaijan’s intentions for a new transport link connecting Azerbaijan’s exclave of Nakhchivan with the Azerbaijani mainland, a route that Baku calls the “Zangezur corridor.” The route will pass along Armenia’s border with Iran, with uncertain consequences for Armenia-Iran commerce.

Azerbaijan and Armenia are currently in negotiations over the precise nature of that route, and the sensitive political question of who will have what kind of control over transit along the route. But Azerbaijan has frequently touted the corridor in pan-Turkic terms (it would allow smoother access from mainland Azerbaijan to Turkey, which borders Nakhchivan), alarming Iran. And Azerbaijan has further threatened that if it doesn’t get what it wants from Armenia, it could take the territory by force.

Iranian officials say they don’t oppose the new route per se. “Iran is not against the creation of the Zangezur corridor,” Iran’s ambassador to Baku, Abbas Mousavi, said on August 28. “It depends on Azerbaijan and Armenia and is an international issue. The principle of our country is that one country cannot influence the national interests of another country, including neighbors.”

But Tehran also has said repeatedly that changing borders in the Caucasus would amount to a “red line.” In a July 19 meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Tehran, Khamenei reiterated that concern. “If there is an effort to block the border between Iran and Armenia, the Islamic Republic will oppose it because this border has been a communication route for thousands of years,” he said.

Tehran has been expressing its support for Armenia’s territorial integrity in other ways. Iran announced that it is opening a consulate in the southern Armenian city of Kapan and appointed a consul in August, which was a “clear signal” to Baku, analyst Salar Seifaldini told the Iranian newspaper Donya-e Eqtesadi.

There also has been a recent uptick in anti-Azerbaijan articles in the Iranian press. One newspaper even resurrected a 12-year-old Italian tabloid story claiming that the wife of President Ilham Aliyev was having an affair with the president of Belarus, Aleksandr Lukashenko.

And on August 24, a Turkish pro-government tabloid printed quotes of what it said was an audio recording of a former senior Iranian diplomat, Ebulfezl Zuhtevend, making various insulting and provocative comments about Azerbaijan. “Azerbaijan is a frightening phenomenon for us. Nakhchivan should be completely annexed to Iran,” he reportedly said. “Armenians are allies of Iran, and it has always been this way throughout history. There is no such thing as Azerbaijan … Azerbaijan should be annexed to Iran again, otherwise it will infect Iran like a cancer cell.”

Tension between Iran and Azerbaijan already has flared on several occasions since 2020. In May, Aliyev got into a public argument with an Iranian analyst who accused Baku of allowing Iranian Azerbaijani separatists a government-supported platform. Last fall, the arrest of two Iranian truck drivers by Azerbaijani police escalated into Iranian military exercises on Azerbaijan’s borders.

In both those cases Baku appeared to be gently dabbling in stoking separatism, but the recent appeals are the most overt yet.

“Probably our compatriots often look dreamily at us, seeing the constant development of an independent Azerbaijan … So the population of Southern Azerbaijan can take the example of what to strive for,” the Caliber.az piece concluded. “Our southern brothers, we know that you can do it! The time has come!”

As always in Iran-Azerbaijan relations, the shadow of Israel is looming large over this latest bout of tension. In July, Israel’s ambassador to Baku, George Deek, tweeted a photo of himself reading a book called “Mysterious Tales of Tabriz,” referring to the major city of northern Iran. 

The tweet caused a small social media firestorm, with several Azerbaijanis and their supporters tweeting similar images, and resulted in a thinly veiled threat from Iran’s ambassador to Baku, Abbas Mousavi. 

Mousavi subsequently gave a long interview to the Tehran Times in which he portrayed Azerbaijan-Iran relations as warm, with the only sore spot being Israel’s attempts to drive a wedge between them. He did not mention the Zangezur corridor.

On August 31, the defense trade publication Breaking Defense published a piece detailing Israel-Azerbaijani military cooperation and its potential use against Iran.

“[I]t is clear that tight defense relations with Azerbaijan offers Israel some potential benefits, including the deployment of sensors on Azeri soil or using its long border with Iran to enable better penetration of special units into Iran. Azerbaijan could also, in theory, offer up its airspace for Israeli jets to enter Iranian territory if needed,” read the article. It was republished on an Azerbaijani government-run news aggregator.

Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at Eurasianet, and author of .

https://eurasianet.org/iran-azerbaijan-infowar-heats-up-again

Military helicopter, over 100 firefighters deployed to tackle grassfires near Ijevan Wine Factory

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 12:38, 2 September 2022

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. A military helicopter and over 100 firefighters are deployed near the town of Ijevan to tackle a grassfire that’s been burning for already 3 days, authorities said.

Around 7 to 8 hectares of grass area is burning.

The grassfire is close to the Ijevan Wine Factory.

On September 2, the Tavush provincial rescue department of the Ministry of Emergency Situations dispatched additional fire brigades to the scene.

No injuries are reported.

Ambassador of Iran to Azerbaijan informed about the next possible meeting in "3+3" format

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 18:21,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 29, ARMENPRESS. The next meeting in the "3+3" format (Iran-Turkey-Russia and Armenia-Georgia-Azerbaijan) may take place before the end of the year in Iran, ARMENPRESS reports, referring to the Azerbaijani media, Iran's Ambassador to Azerbaijan Seyed Mousavi.

"This initiative was very successful. We expect that the next meeting will take place before the end of the year, this time in Iran," Mousavi said.

The first meeting in the "3+3" format took place on December 10, 2021 in Moscow. The delegations of Turkey, Russia, Iran, Azerbaijan and Armenia, headed by the deputy foreign ministers, participated in the meeting. Georgia refused to appear at that meeting.




Armenian Food Festival returns to Richmond for 62nd year

Aug 23 2022
RICHMOND

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — The 62nd Annual Armenian Food Festival returns to Richmond for a family-friendly weekend of Armenian delicacies and culture.

The event is reportedly Richmond’s oldest and longest-running food festival and features fare prepared by members of the St. James Armenian Church. Attendees will have the opportunity to taste shish kabobs, cheese beoreg, Armenian meat pies, stuffed grape leaves and the famous original Hye Burger.

The festival will also include traditional music and dancing, as well as Armenian beer and wine. The event is free to attend. Food and drink can be bought on site.

The event will take place from 11:30 a.m. until 9:30 p.m. on both Friday, Sept. 9, and Saturday, Sept. 10, at the St. James Armenian Church, located at the corner of Pepper and Patterson Avenues.

For more information, visit the Armenian Food Festival website here.

Japan pledges $30 billion in aid to Africa

 

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 15:09,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 27, ARMENPRESS. Japan pledged $30 billion in aid for development in Africa on Saturday, saying it wants to work more closely with the continent, Reuters reports.

Addressing a Japan-Africa summit in Tunisia, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said Tokyo would work to ensure grain shipments to Africa amid a global shortage.

Kishida said the $30 billion would be delivered over three years.

The Japanese PM participated in the summit online because of testing positive for COVID-19.

Armenpress: Russian Investigative Committee says other people might be involved in Darya Dugina’s murder

Russian Investigative Committee says other people might be involved in Darya Dugina’s murder

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 20:18,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 23, ARMENPRESS. The investigators of the Russian Federation do not rule out that other persons, except the Ukrainian Natalia Vovk, may be involved in the murder of journalist Darya Dugina, ARMENPRESS reports, citing "RIA Novosti", the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation said.

"The investigation plans to declare Natalia Vovk wanted. Other persons involved in the crime are being identified," the Russian Investigative Committee informed.

The Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation has confirmed that Ukrainian Natalia Vovk rented an apartment in the building where the murdered woman used to live to track her movement.

"A search is being carried out in that apartment in order to find important objects for the investigation. Also, the garage rented by Vovk has been found, and a search is being conducted there as well," said the Russian Investigative Committee.

Firefighters, medical workers, and journalists die in Turkey as a result of a major traffic accident

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 14:33,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 20, ARMENPRESS. A major traffic accident took place in Gaziantep (Aintap) region of southern Turkey, as a result of which 15 people died, ARMENPRESS reports, "RIA Novosti" agency informs, citing Turkish sources.

According to the report of Haber TV channel, the passenger bus crashed into the parked ambulance and fire trucks, as well as into the car of the "İhlas" news agency, on the section called "Nizip" of the Tarsus-Adana-Gaziantep highway. 22 people were injured in the accident.

According to preliminary data, two firefighters, two paramedics and two journalists are among the victims.

PM Pashinyan visits the scene of Surmalu blast

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia – Aug 15 2022

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan visited the scene of the blast at Yerevan’s Surmalu shopping center, where an explosion took place on August 14.

The Prime Minister was accompanied by the Mayor of Yerevan Hrachya Sargsyan, the Minister of Emergency Situations Armen Pambukhchyan, the director of the rescue service Armen Gasparyan, the head of the Office of Coordination of Inspection Bodies Artur Asoyan.

Prime Minister Pashinyan was briefed on the process of search and rescue works.

https://en.armradio.am/2022/08/15/pm-pashinyan-visits-the-scene-of-surmalu-blast/