Minasyan explains why French ambassador to Armenia keeps silent

Vestnik Kavkaza
Feb 6 2021

6 Feb in 22:09

Russian peacekeepers banned a group of French journalists to enter Nagorno-Karabakh with accreditation issued by Yerevan, former Armenian Ambassador to the Vatican and Portugal Mikayel Minasyan wrote in Telegram.

"Yesterday I got a call from a friend close to the Elysee Palace. And he says:

– Listen, what happened to our delegation there? I get some scattered information, there is nothing in the media, and nothing is clear.

– Come on, – I tell him, – the usual story. This is the result of your silence,” Minasyan notes, explaining:

"Russian peacekeepers prohibit entry, saying that you are entering Azerbaijan, and the accreditation received in Armenia is invalid. If you want to enter the region, get an Azerbaijani accreditation," News.am quotes the former diplomat as saying.

2nd meeting of Armenian, Russian, Azerbaijani Deputy PMs to take placein February

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 19:38, 3 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 3, ARMENPRESS. The 2nd meeting of the Deputy Prime MInisters of Armenia, Russian and Azerbaijan addressing the issue of unblocking transport communications in the region will take place in February, ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the Armenian Deputy PM.

The first meeting of the Deputy PMs took place on January 30, in Moscow.

Can the Minsk Group on the Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict Reinvent Itself? (Part Two)

Jamestown Foundation
Feb 1 2021

Russia, not the Minsk Group, will reinvent the Minsk Group, and is working on it (see Part One in EDM, January 28). The object is not the 12-nation Minsk Group Conference (this has been inactive since the mid-1990s), but its triple co-chairmanship of Russia, the United States and France, in which Russia seized the leading role from 2010 onward, ultimately to discard this setup through unilateral Russian action in November 2020. Usurping the Minsk Group’s collective mandate, the Kremlin unilaterally mediated the armistice between Armenia and Azerbaijan; and breaking that mandate, which had envisaged international peacekeeping, Russia deployed its own troops to Karabakh. The absentee Western players made it easy for Russia to fill the vacuum; and that made it inevitable for Azerbaijan and Armenia to accept, or even seek, Russia’s arbitration for lack of other options.

Western diplomacy failed yet again to counteract Russia’s method of working both within multilateral bodies (such as the Minsk Group) and around those bodies at the same time, using bilateral channels to circumvent the multilateral process.

In the next stage, Moscow intends to use the Minsk Group’s triple co-chairmanship to legitimize Russia’s faits accomplis on the ground. The Kremlin is prepared to let the co-chairs return to the region in support of Russia‘s initiatives. President Vladimir Putin, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, and Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabov continue briefing Washington and Paris about Moscow’s initiatives regarding Armenia and Azerbaijan. Those are basically post factum notifications of Russian actions; they are neither a trilateral negotiation among the co-chairs, nor the co-chairs’ mediation between Baku and Yerevan as per the group’s mandate. Such briefings amount to a pretense that the Minsk Group’s co-chairmanship continues to operate. Washington and Paris seem to go along, partly out of face-saving considerations and partly in the hopes of climbing back into the process. On January 30, in an interview with Dozhd TV, the US ambassador in Moscow, John Sullivan, said that such briefings are “yet another example of an area where the United States and France cooperate with the Russian government as Minsk Group co-chairs, and we wish to continue our cooperation” (RIA Novosti, January 30).

Putin and Lavrov (TASS, November 18, 2020 and December 17, 2020) have made clear all along that they would confine the co-chairs to humanitarian and economic assistance functions in Karabakh for the time being. Moscow expects Washington and Paris to help mobilize international financing for post-conflict reconstruction. Along these lines, Putin told the Davos Economic Forum on January 27 that the Minsk Group’s co-chairing countries “face the task of helping the war-affected areas to resolve humanitarian problems, restore damaged infrastructure, [and] assist the return of refugees” (Kremlin.ru, January 27, 2021).

Russia is the only actor participating in—and dominating—all the existing platforms and formats in the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict theater. Besides its near-monopoly in the Minsk Group, Russia is the sole “peacekeeper” with troops on the ground; it is Armenia’s official ally and security guarantor; it is the unrecognized Karabakh “republic’s” security guarantor and de facto protector; it is Turkey’s exclusive partner in the Joint Center for Ceasefire Monitoring (inaugurated on January 30); it is the mediator between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the border-demarcation processes in Karabakh and Syunik; and it is the initiator and convener of region-wide strategic transportation projects involving Azerbaijan, Turkey and Armenia, alongside Russia itself (see EDM, January 12).

All this is a tribute to Russia’s diplomatic agility, regional expertise and non-ideological pragmatism. It has managed to maintain conflict-free relations with all regional players, work with any and all of them, and gain unmatched leverage in all directions. Russia effectively postures as upholding international law through support of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity; as providing security guarantees via “peacekeeping” to the Armenian population of Karabakh; and as promoting region-wide economic development through Russia’s role as convener of strategic transportation projects. In all of this, Russia capitalizes on the disengagement of the United States and the European Union from the region.

At this stage and going forward, Turkey is the only player in the region that can at least in part offset Russia’s influence, mainly by guaranteeing Azerbaijan’s full independence and sovereignty. The Turkey-Azerbaijan tandem protects Georgia also. Washington and Paris are prone to viewing the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict—and the situation in the region overall—through the prism of the US’s and France’s own strained relations with Turkey on issues unrelated to the South Caucasus. The multifaceted task before them, however, is to learn to compartmentalize, encourage Turkey’s newfound role in the South Caucasus, and solidify the Turkey-Azerbaijan-Georgia alignment.

CivilNet: UN Human Rights Commissioner says Karabakh Captives Must be Released

CIVILNET.AM

2 February, 2021 03:38

The UN Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner released a statement Monday calling for the prompt release of prisoners of war as well as the bodies of the fallen from the Karabakh War.

“We are alarmed at allegations that prisoners of war and other protected persons have been subjected to extrajudicial killing, enforced disappearance, torture and other ill-treatment,” said the UN experts statement.

Dozens of Armenian POWs, many captured in Karabakh following the ceasefire agreement, continue to remain in captivity in Azerbaijan as human rights groups continue to express concern for their safety. Human rights activist and lawyer Siranush Sahakyan, who represents Armenian POWs in the European Court of Human Rights, says there are roughly 120 Armenian POWs in Azerbaijan today.

“No exceptional circumstances whatsoever – whether a state of war, internal political instability or any other public emergency – may be invoked as a justification of torture and enforced disappearances,” UN says. “Such acts, when perpetrated in armed conflict, may also constitute war crimes.”

Armenian human rights activists have expressed their frustration regarding the exchange of Armenian POWs and accused Azerbaijan of refusing to collaborate with Russia and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), both of which coordinate the exchanges. They say Azerbaijan is withholding important POW information, including identities and health conditions.

The UN says its experts “will continue to engage with the authorities of both countries and closely monitor the situation.”

Yerevan, Tehran Discuss Discuss Removing Trade Barriers

January 25,  2020



ICCIMA Head Gholam-Hossein Shafeie (r) and Armenian Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan (l) meet in Tehran on Jan. 25.

Head of Iran’s Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture Gholam-Hossein Shafeie met with Armenia’s Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan on Monday to discuss ways of removing barriers to the expansion of economic cooperation, Tehran Times reported.

In this meeting, the two sides underlined the capacities for bilateral cooperation and explored ways for removing the existing challenges and obstacles to the expansion of trade relations and increasing the volume of joint investments by the two sides’ private sectors.

Considering some problems in the field of transportation, Shafeie proposed the establishment of a joint transit and transportation company between the two countries to overcome such issues.

The official noted that joint production by the two countries would be a successful solution for removing the existing hurdles for boosting trade relations between the two countries.

He further pointed to Armenia’s prominent role in the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and the country’s convenient access to the European market, describing the Armenian market as very valuable for the Iranian private sector’s trade and investment purposes.

“Iran and Armenia can reach an agreement to reduce trade costs by negotiating, exchanging trade delegations, and holding exhibitions,” Shafeie said.

Stating that the only shared land border between Iran and the EAEU region is the border between Iran and Armenia, the official stated that the fields of cooperation between the two countries are very diverse.

The Armenian minister for his part announced the dispatch of a delegation of Armenian entrepreneurs to Isfahan within a month and proposed the dispatch of a delegation from the Iranian private sector to Armenia.

According to Kerobyan, these visits will make the two sides’ private sectors more familiar with each other and their existing capabilities.

Heading a trade delegation, Kerobyan arrived in Tehran on Friday to discuss the expansion of trade relations between the two countries.

During this visit, which was organized by the Iranian Industry, Mining and Trade Ministry, the two sides signed a memorandum of understanding for boosting trade ties.

The MOU was signed by Kerobyan and the Iranian Industry, Mining, and Trade Minister Alireza Razm Hosseini in Tehran on Saturday.

The Armenian minister also met with the Governor of the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) Abdolnaser Hemmati and discussed banking issues and ways of increasing the level of trade between the two sides.

Film: Armenia’s ‘Songs of Solomon’ to compete for International Feature Film Oscar

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 29 2021

Arman Nshanian’s feature film debut “Songs of Solomon” is included in the 93rd Academy Awards in the international feature film category, The Variety reports. 

“Songs of Solomon,” written by Audrey Gevorkian and based on “The Past Unsung” by Sirvart Kavoukjian, explores the life of the composer Archbishop Solomon, also known as  Komitas, who had a profound impact on ethnomusicology. It centers on a childhood friendship, torn apart by the Hamidian massacres in the 1890s as a brave Turkish woman at a time of dire prejudice risks her own life and the life of her family to save her best friend, who is hunted down for her religious beliefs.  The film spans the period from 1881 to 1915, which marks both the Armenian Genocide and Komitas’ final concert.

“Songs of Solomon” stars Samvel Tadevossian, Arevik Gevorgyan, Tatev Hovakimyan, Sos Janibekyan, Arman Nshanian, Artashes Aleksanyan and Jean-Pier Nshanian along with child actors Slava Seyranyan, Iren Ayvazyan and Mery Hovsepyan.

The film, released on Nov. 26 in Armenia, is produced by Nick Vallelonga of Vallelonga Productions, Asko Akopyan of Oscar Gold Productions and Nshanian under his People of Ar Production Company in association with AnEva Productions in Armenia. Karo Kavoukjian serves as Executive Producer. Vallelonga won Academy Awards for best picture and and best original screenplay for 2018’s “Green Book.” “Songs of Solomon” will be opening in the U.S. in 2021.

Society for Armenian Studies, AGMI Sign an Agreement on Cooperation

January 26,  2020



The Society for Armenian Studies logo

As part of its new policy to strengthen ties with academic institutions in Armenia, the Society for Armenian Studies signed an Agreement on Cooperation on January 13 with the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation. The Agreement aims at cooperating on different academic projects that would be beneficial to both parties and advance the field of Armenian Genocide studies.

The scope of the cooperation includes, but is not limited to, exchange of mutual information on academic activities carried out by both parties; exchange and loans of books relevant to both parties; exchange of knowledge and expertise with respect to Armenian Genocide; sharing of advice, educational consultation, and research about the Armenian Genocide study and research; cooperation through local and international conferences and symposia to advance the field of genocide studies in general and Armenian Genocide studies in particular; mutual cooperation to educate the general public about the Armenian Genocide; and close cooperation and coordination between the “Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies published by the prestigious Brill publishing house and the “International Journal of Armenia Genocide Studies,” “Ts’eghaspanagitakan Handes,” both published by the AGMI.

Professor Barlow Der Mugrdechian, Director of Armenian Studies Program at California State University, Fresno, will serve as the liaison on behalf of the SAS while Dr. Edita Gzoyan, Deputy Scientific Director of The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation and the editor of IJAGS will serve on behalf of the AGMI.

Commenting on the Agreement, SAS President Bedross Der Matossian said, “We are looking forward to cooperate with The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation on academic issues pertaining to genocide studies in general and the Armenian Genocide in particular. This is part of our new policy to strengthen ties with different academic institutions in Armenia. This cooperation will be mutually beneficial to all of us. The Society for Armenian Studies has members whose research deals with the Armenian Genocide. Through harnessing the existing potential of scholars from both bodies, the field of the Armenian Genocide Studies will advance in the right direction.”

The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation logo

Professor Harutyun Marutyan, Director of The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation, welcomed the Cooperation Agreement stating, “The challenges facing researchers in the field of Armenian Studies in the 21st century require new, modern approaches and the consolidation of Armenian potential. The shaping of the Armenian factor in the field of humanities, taking world experience into account, is one of the priorities of our time. The study and popularization of Armenian history, culture and the issues of the Armenian Genocide are among the imperatives for both the AGMI and SAS. We are sure that the goals and intentions mentioned in the Cooperation Agreement, signed between the two institutions, will be realized and will contribute to the expansion of ties between researchers on both sides and the development of Armenian Studies in general.”

The SAS, founded in 1974, is the international professional association representing scholars and teachers in the field of Armenian Studies. The aim of the SAS is to promote the study of Armenian culture and society, including history, language, literature, and social, political, and economic questions.

If you are interested in contributing to the activities of SAS please contact Prof. Bedross Der Matossian at [email protected].

Information about the SAS can be found on its website at societyforarmenianstudies.com or by following the SAS on its Facebook page, @societyforarmenianstudies.

Antony Blinken: Biden Administration will consult with Congress on April 24th statement

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 23 2021

U.S. President Joe Biden’s nominee to serve as Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, confirmed that the incoming Administration will consult with Congress on the wording of its April 24th statement, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

In response to a written question from Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) during his confirmation hearing, Blinken noted that: “As a presidential candidate, President Biden pledged in his Remembrance Day statement to support a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide,” adding: “The Administration will determine the wording for the White House statement to mark Remembrance Day once in office and will consult with Congress on this important issue.” The U.S. House and Senate nearly unanimously passed Armenian Genocide Resolutions in 2019.

Senator Markey also asked about what steps the Administration plans take “to ensure the immediate return of POWs being held by Azerbaijan.” Blinken stressed, in response, that: “the United States should be leading a diplomatic effort to find a lasting resolution to the conflict, working together with our European partners, including facilitating the return of prisoners of war.”

“We join with Armenian Americans and our pro-Armenian allies from across Massachusetts and around the country in thanking Senator Markey for his leadership in calling out and confronting the continuity of official Turkish and Azerbaijani genocidal intent and actions against the Armenian people,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “In the wake of Baku’s war crimes against Artsakh – armed and incited by Ankara – it is more urgent than ever for the United States to signal both Turkey and Azerbaijan that the U.S. will no longer turn a blind eye to their genocidal drive to destroy the Armenian nation.”

The full text of Senator Markey’s questions and Secretary of State-designate Blinken’s responses are provided below.

Sen. Markey: Will you formally recognize the crimes committed against the Armenian people by the Ottoman Empire as Genocide?

Blinken: As a presidential candidate, President Biden pledged in his Remembrance Day statement to support a resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide. Our administration will be committed to prioritizing human rights and ensuring such a tragedy is not repeated. The Administration will determine the wording for the White House statement to mark Remembrance Day once in office and will consult with Congress on this important issue.

Sen. Markey: In the aftermath of the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia last year, what steps will the Administration take to ensure the immediate return of POWs being held by Azerbaijan?

Blinken: As the President has said, the United States should be leading a diplomatic effort to find a lasting resolution to the conflict, working together with our European partners, including facilitating the return of prisoners of war. If confirmed, I will reinvigorate U.S. engagement to find a permanent settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict that protects the security of Nagorno-Karabakh and helps to ensure another war does not break out. This includes stepping up our engagement via the Minsk Group, of which the United States is a co-chair, and additional diplomatic work to prevent any further interference by third parties.

Sen. Markey: Will the Administration restrict funding to Azerbaijan, fully enforcing Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act, as President-elect Joe Biden urged the Trump Administration to do?

Blinken: In light of the recent outbreak of hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Biden-Harris administration will review our security assistance to Azerbaijan. If the circumstances warrant, we will be prepared to suspend waivers of requirements under section 907 of the Freedom Support Act. If confirmed, I look forward to working with Congress and the Secretary of Defense to determine the appropriate level of assistance to meet the security needs of Armenia and the region.

Armenian, French FMs discuss post-war situation in NK conflict zone by phone

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 12:47,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ara Aivazian held a telephone conversation today with French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, the Armenian foreign ministry told Armenpress.

The officials discussed the post-war situation in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone, the regional security and peace-related issues.

Introducing the implementation process of the November 9 trilateral statement on the establishment of ceasefire and the deployment of peacekeepers in Artsakh, FM Aivazian drew the attention of his French counterpart on the necessity of completely addressing the humanitarian problems which require urgent solution, in particular the return of Armenian prisoners of war from Azerbaijan.

The Armenian and French FMs also exchanged views on the ongoing steps of addressing the humanitarian crisis in Artsakh, highlighted the need for direct and uninterrupted engagement of international organizations to the process.

The talk also focused on the issue of the preservation of the Armenian cultural, historical and religious heritage in the territories of Artsakh which have come under the Azerbaijani control, as well as on the role of special international structures in this process.

During the phone talk the ministers also touched upon the resumption of the peace process in the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship format and the upcoming timetable of the Co-Chairs in this respect.

They also discussed a number of issues of the bilateral agenda.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

U.S. Ambassador emphasizes importance of safe return of detainees

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 20:01,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy met with a group of the think tank experts to discuss the commitment of the USA (as OSCE Minsk Group Co-chair country) for the sustainable and comprehensive settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Facebook page of the Embassy.

Ambassador Tracy also underscored the importance of the safe return of remaining detainees.