Artsakh has to get strong, ex-ombudsman says on Independence Day

Panorama
Armenia – Sept 2 2022

Armenia’s former Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Arman Tatoyan issued a congratulatory message on the 31st anniversary of Artsakh’s independence marked on September 2.

“The struggle for the independence of Artsakh is aimed at defending our dignity, rights and safety. 11 years ago on this day, the independence of Artsakh was proclaimed to ensure it.

I have repeatedly provided evidence that Azerbaijan has pursued and continues to pursue an actual genocidal policy against Artsakh and Armenia, which is marked by state-sponsored hatred, hostility, encouraged and unpunished crimes affecting Armenians from around the world. This requires the existence of a statehood independent from Azerbaijan as a guarantee for the protection of the indigenous Artsakh people, the Armenians.

For the sake of the blood split by our heroes, safety and rights of our children, we should not stop defending the rights of Artsakh Armenians.

We must believe in ourselves and not allow the destructive feeling of inability to fight and incompetence to be instilled in us.

Artsakh has to get strong,” reads the message.

Armenian Trade With Russia Raises Re-Export Questions By Ani Mejlumyan

Aug 31 2022

As international sanctions bite Russia and many Western companies have stopped doing business in the country, Moscow has tried to fill the gaps with a program it calls “parallel imports.”

Armenia has reported a nearly 50 percent increase in trade with Russia, raising questions about what part Armenia is playing in supplying Russia with the foreign goods its economy needs.

While the data are inconclusive about whether Armenian companies are in fact engaging in parallel exports, or re-exports, the raw trade numbers have caught the attention of Western diplomats in Yerevan.

Armenian exports to Russia, its largest trade partner, grew 49 percent in the first half of 2022 compared with the same period last year, the country’s official statistics agency reported at the beginning of August. Imports grew 42 percent.

That suggests a heavy level of re-export, independent economist Suren Parsyan told Eurasianet.

“There is no data that would specifically measure re-export, but there are clear economic indicators that help us understand that the volume is high,” he said. One example: that manufacturing has only grown 2.7 percent, compared to an overall export growth of over 50 percent.

Still, authoritative data are difficult to come by. The Armenian customs authorities release statistics only twice a year, and the last they have published are for 2021. Russia, meanwhile, has stopped publishing data. Russia’s customs service had previously published foreign trade numbers monthly, but the last such update came in January, the month before Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine.

Without those figures, it is impossible to know whether the increased exports from Armenia originated there or in a third country. 

Western embassies in Yerevan are trying to determine whether the growth in exports to Russia is “natural” or “unfavorable,” one diplomat told Eurasianet on condition of anonymity.

Among the “natural” explanations: a rising dram has made Armenian exports to Europe comparatively unfavorable and exporters have shifted to Russia; Armenian companies can be trying to take advantage of the new paucity of Western goods in Russian markets; and Russian emigres to Armenia have set up businesses there and do business with Russia.

“However we don’t know, and we have doubts, if these three natural causes would explain such an upswing in trade,” the diplomat said.

There are varying levels of concern about what may be happening, the diplomat said: “Sanctions evasion is the center of our attention, but we don’t have enough data yet. But re-exports are of course a concern, too.”

Sanctions against Russia and a potential economic crisis in that country are fraught with consequences for Armenia’s own economy, which depends heavily on Russia. But Armenian officials also have emphasized the positive of the new environment. Russian “companies under restrictions can enter the international markets in other ways, including through Armenian territory,” Minister of Economy Vahan Kerobyan told Shant TV shortly after the war in Ukraine started. “Along with many problems, there are also small opportunities.”

The ministry did not respond to queries from Eurasianet by the time this story was posted.

Armenia’s main export is heavy metals, which saw only a 4 percent increase in the first half of 2022 compared to the same period last year. But processed food exports increased 36 percent, and the fastest growing sector of exports was land, air, and water vehicles, which increased 2.3 times and is now the second-largest category of exports. That pattern suggests that the increase in exports is due to re-exports, wrote commentator Hakob Kocharyan on the news website 168.am. 

While Western diplomats have expressed concern about similar patterns of re-export to Russia via Turkey, the volume of Armenian trade is so much lower that it is not as much of an issue, the diplomat said.

Given Armenia’s geopolitical situation, Western governments have long been lenient when it comes to economic relations with Yerevan’s anti-Western partners. 

Now, Armenia finds itself more dependent on Russia than at any time in its post-independence history. Meetings between Armenian and Russian officials have become ever more frequent since the end of the 2020 war with Azerbaijan; Russia brokered the ceasefire to that war and Russian peacekeepers now protect the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Armenia, in turn, has abstained from many anti-Russia votes in international fora, has agreed to buy Russian gas in rubles and even plans to subsidize Black Sea ferry connections from Georgia to boost trade with Russia. 

As long as Armenia is not abetting sanctions evasion, “I don’t believe this will seriously impact the West’s relations with Armenia,” analyst Benyamin Poghosyan told Eurasianet. “The U.S. is interested in weakening Russia’s positions in Armenia,” he said. But they also don’t want to weaken the position of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, he said.

“They know very well that they can’t find better candidates for leadership, so I don’t believe that the U.S. is interested in making economic life in Armenia even harder, thus putting pressure on Pashinyan.” 

“We understand the impact sanctions against Russia have on the Armenian economy,” a spokesperson from the U.S. embassy in Yerevan told Eurasianet. “We appreciate the government’s continued commitment to comply with these sanctions.”


Air raid sirens go off in US embassy in Iraq

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 10:19,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. Air raid sirens went off in the US embassy located in the “green zone” of Baghdad, TASS reports citing SHAFAQ News.

According to the report, explosions are heard in the “green zone,” where government buildings and foreign embassies are located. Meanwhile, Al Arabiya reports that rockets were fired at the “green zone.”

A security source told Al Arabiya that multiple launch rocket systems were fired at the “green zone,” causing the embassy sirens to go off.

No further details are currently available. There were no reports of killed or injured in the strike.

On Monday, hundreds of supporters of Shia imam Muqtada al-Sadr, who announced his decision to quit politics, have occupied Baghdad’s “green zone,” where government buildings and foreign embassies are located, surrounded the Republican Palace and entered the building. Despite the nationwide curfew, clashes continue in the capital and a number of regions of Iraq. According to the latest reports, 20 people were killed in armed clashes, and over 300 were injured.

Asbarez: Glendale City Council Establishes Sister City Relationship with Artsakh’s Martuni

The Glendale City Council, on Aug. 23, voted to become a sister city with Artsakh’s Martuni


BY TONY ORDOUKHANIAN

GLENDALE—The Glendale City Council led by Mayor Ardy Kassakhian on Tuesday unanimously adopted a resolution to establish a sister city relationship with the city of Martuni in the Republic of Artsakh.

Glendale City Councilmember Ara Najarian, Elen Asatryan, Dan Brotman and Paula Devine voiced their support for the effort.

During the presentation of this resolution, Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region Government Affairs Coordinator Edward Barsoumian spoke in support of the initiative being taken by the City Council.

“This resolution will undoubtedly promote meaningful discourse on the humanitarian crisis and current situation in Artsakh, cultivating greater cultural exchange, and demonstrating the City of Glendale’s leadership in combating hate and promoting cultural understanding across the globe,” said Barsoumian.

Mayor Kassakhian had first proposed this collaboration to his fellow Council Members in June. Beyond establishing the sister city relationship with Martuni, the councilmembers underscored the importance of promoting the economic development of Martuni, the preservation of Armenian cultural heritage across Artsakh, and the strengthening of relations between the citizens of Glendale and the Armenian population of the Republic of Artsakh.

Councilmember Devine moved the item and Councilmember Najarian seconded it, allowing for Martuni to become the 10th city to establish sisterhood ties with the City of Glendale.

With the pending transfer of the cities of Aghavno, Berdzor and Nerkin Sus to Azerbaijan on August 25, ANCA-WR’s representatives highlighted the unfolding humanitarian catastrophe which has resulted in the displacement of hundreds of Armenian families from their indigenous lands. Moreover, they expressed the determination of Armenians to prevent cultural genocide through the removal of historical and cultural monuments (Khachkhars) from the three cities prior to their transfer to Aliyev’s genocidal regime which has waged a campaign of destruction and desecration against Armenian religious and cultural sites in territories occupied by Azerbaijan during and after the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh Conflict.

ANCA-WR Youth Committee Chairman Tony Ordoukhanian also spoke in high support of this new sister city relationship. “It is through this resolution that we as a collective society, regardless of our heritage, Armenian or not, and our creed that we firmly hold onto, that we can firmly stand against hatred, ethnic cleansing, and work to uplift the human rights that the people of Artsakh deserve.” Ordoukhanian expressed his hope that the passage of the sister-city resolution will spark an improved US foreign policy to Artsakh.

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region is the largest and most influential nonpartisan Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues in pursuit of the Armenian Cause.

Tony Ordoukhanian is the Chair of the newly-formed ANCA-WR Youth Committee and a member of the class of 2022 ANCA-WR Summer interns.




Azerbaijan grossly violates the International Humanitarian Law – MP

ARMINFO
Armenia – Aug 24 2022
Alexandr Avanesov

ArmInfo.Azerbaijan grossly violates the International Humanitarian Law, the provisions of the Trilateral Statement: ALARM TO THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY, Taguhi Tovmasyan, Chairperson of the Standing Committee on Protection of  Human Rights and Public Affairs, RA Parliament, wrote in a Facbook  post.  

With a regular unlawful decision Azerbaijan’s criminal government has  banned the searches for the bodies of the Armenian military personnel  and civilian persons in the occupied by Azerbaijan communities of  Artsakh since January, 2022, thus trying to cause mental suffering to  the Armenians worldwide. 

The Statements from November 10, 2020, January 11, 2021 envisage the  urgent regulation of the humanitarian issues carrying paramount  importance, including “an exchange of prisoners of war, hostages and  other detained persons and bodies of the dead”. However, Azerbaijan  unilaterally infringes the interstate arrangements once again,  simultaneously “striking” at the fundamental norms of the  International Humanitarian Law stated in four  Geneva Conventions “On  the Protection of Victims of War” from 1949, in the additional   Geneva Protocol from 1977 attached to August 12, 1949 Geneva  Conventions “On Protection of Victims of International Armed  Conflicts”, as well as two additional protocols appearing as a system  of rules aimed at protecting a human during the armed conflict.

The European Convention on Human Rights forms a combination of mutual  initiatives and objective obligations, and the principle of  reciprocity is on. The imperative of implementing the provisions of  the International Humanitarian Law is evident, thus I again address  my international colleagues OSCE Parliamentary Assembly  OSCE Office  for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) OSCE – The  Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe Council of  Europe DG Human Rights and Rule of Law Council of Europe Council of  Europe Office in Yerevan Council of Europe Commissioner for Human  Rights Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe  U.S. Embassy  Yerevan European Union in Armenia Human Rights Watch UN Armenia  United Nations Human Rights   to condemn such a criminal behavior by  Azerbaijan and take respective measures to protect the fundamental  rights of the missing Armenian military personnel and civilian  persons and their families.

Such a criminal behavior by Azerbaijan sets forward an objective  question: if Azerbaijan doesn’t fulfill even the requirements of the  International Humanitarian Law, then why does Nikol Pashinyan bring  I. Aliev’s claims to life. Non-implementation by Azerbaijan of the  mentioned humanitarian requirements gives the opportunity to oppose  and act from the position of a claimant to protect Humanitarian Law.  However, Nikol Pashinyan does not do it for obscure reasons.

Minister: 75% of Karabakh’s arable lands, 85% of pastures under Azeri control

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – Aug 24 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Nearly 75% of Artsakh’s arable lands and 85% of pastures of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) have remained in territories currently under Azerbaijan’s control, Minister of Finance and Economy of Artsakh Vahram Baghdasaryan has told Armenpress.

The 2020 war unleashed by Azerbaijan heavily affected the economic development of Artsakh, causing decline in virtually all branches. In 2021, the GDP dropped 12,7%, while industrial output declined 33,6% against 2020.

Most fertile grounds and nearly 90% of irrigated agricultural areas too are in territories that Azerbaijan captured in the Second Karabakh War.

Baghdasaryan said the number of livestock was reduced by over 50%, while agricultural output dropped 51,1% against 2020.

The Second Karabakh war lasted 44 days and ended when Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Russian and Azerbaijani Presidents Vladimir Putin and Ilham Aliyev signed a ceasefire statement on November 9, 2020. Under the deal, the Armenian side returned all the seven regions surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, having lost a part of Karabakh itself in hostilities.

AFP: Armenian blast death toll rises to 6, over 60 injured


Aug 15 2022

Yerevan (AFP) – The death toll from an explosion at a bustling market in the Armenian capital Yerevan rose to six on Monday as search operations continued for people believed trapped under rubble.

Another 61 people were injured and 15 were missing after Sunday’s blast that led to the collapse of a building at the Surmalu wholesale market, Armenia’s Emergency Situations Minister Armen Pambukhchyan said.

Rescue operations were continuing “very carefully” with people still believed to be trapped beneath the debris, he added.

Pambukhchyan told reporters that video footage of the incident showed that “there can be no talk of a terrorist attack” as the fire started before the explosion.

He said the fire spread to “pyro materials”. Local media had earlier said the explosion went off at a place that stored fireworks.

The cause of the fire was being established.

The minister said that smoke and small fire could persist for several more days with lots of plastic smouldering at the scene.

Photos and videos posted on social media after the blast showed a thick column of black smoke over the market and what appeared to be a series of detonations can be heard.

Prosecutors meanwhile launched a probe into violations “on stocking inflammable goods”, breaches in fire safety standards and the death of people “due to negligence”.

Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan visited the site of the blast on Monday, according to his press service.

In all, 200 firefighters and medical workers were sent to the scene, as well as fire engines and construction site equipment.

Rescue workers used a digger to clear away rubble, an AFP journalist at the scene reported earlier.

The disaster comes as the country of three million people is still recovering from a 2020 war with Azerbaijan, which ended in a heavy defeat and sparked a political crisis.

https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20220815-armenian-blast-death-toll-rises-to-6-over-60-injured
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Turkish press: Azerbaijani army finds minefield in eastern Lachin region

Burak Dag   |16.08.2022


BAKU, Azerbaijan

The Azerbaijani army on Monday discovered a minefield in the eastern Lachin region, the country’s Defense Ministry said on Tuesday.

The army’s engineering units detected over 900 anti-personnel mines while conducting terrain reconnaissance in the “northwestern direction of the Saribaba high ground,” a ministry statement said.

It said that the mines, laid by “illegal Armenian armed detachments,” were “neutralized” by a specialized team.

“All the mines detected in this direction were produced in Armenia after the Patriotic War, in 2021,” the statement said.

After an Azerbaijani soldier was killed as a result of the provocation carried out by the illegal Armenian forces in Karabakh on Aug. 3, the Azerbaijani army carried out a retaliatory measure called “revenge.”

“As a result of the ‘revenge’ retaliatory measure carried out by Azerbaijani Army Units, the Girkhgiz peak, as well as Saribaba along the Karabakh ridge of the Lesser Caucasus and a number of other important heights, were taken under control,” the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry had said on Aug. 4.

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh (Upper Karabakh), a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

During the conflict in fall 2020, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages that had been occupied by Armenia for nearly three decades.

A Russian-brokered deal in November 2020 brought an end to the conflict.

2-day mourning declared in Armenia in connection with explosion in Yerevan shopping center

ARMINFO
Armenia – Aug 16 2022

ArmInfo. By the decree of Prime Minister of Armenia  Nikol Pashinyan, on August 17-18, mourning was declared in the  country in connection with the tragedy that occurred in the Yerevan  Surmalu shopping center.

On August 14, an explosion took place in Surmalu shopping center. A  fire in a pyrotechnic warehouse is mentioned as a probable cause.  Rescuers managed to put out the fire only the next day. Until now,  work is underway to clear the rubble and search for missing citizens.  As of the morning of August 16, 16 people were killed, 8 citizens are  missing, more than 60 people were hospitalized. In connection with  the incident, a criminal case was initiated. 

Yerevan blast: 5 Iranian, 1 Russian citizen among 21 missing persons

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 18:44,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. As of 6:19 p.m., August 15, firefighting, search and rescue operations are continuing in Yerevan’s “Surmalu” shopping center. Firefighting works are carried out in 4 locations. As a result of the fire and explosion in “Surmalu” on August 14, 21 people may be missing, 4 of them Iranian and 1 Russian citizen.

6 citizens are confirmed dead. All of them are citizens of Armenia.

Minister of Emergency Situations Armen Pambukhchyan is coordinating the firefighting works at the scene.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure Gnel Sanosyan visited the scene earlier today.