Tens of thousands rally in Armenia demanding the nation’s prime minister resignation

Fox 11 Los Angeles
Dec 5 2020

Tens of thousands of opposition supporters marched across the Armenian capital Saturday to push for the resignation of the ex-Soviet nation’s prime minister over his handling of the conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh.  

In six weeks of fierce fighting that ended with a Russia-brokered peace deal on Nov. 10, the Azerbaijani army reclaimed lands that Armenian forces have held for more than a quarter-century.   Armenia’s opposition parties warned Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan there would be civil disobedience across the country if he does not resign by noon on Tuesday.

RELATEDClick here for more coverage of the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan

Pashinyan has refused to step down, defending the peace agreement as a painful but necessary move that prevented Azerbaijan from overrunning the entire Nagorno-Karabakh region.  

More than 20,000 protesters rallied in Yerevan on Saturday, chanting “Nikol ,you traitor!” and “Nikol, go away!” and then marched to the prime minister’s official residence.  

“The seat of the prime minister of Armenia is currently being occupied by a political corpse,” Artur Vanetsyan, the leader of the opposition party Homeland and the former head of the National Security Service, said at the protest rally.  

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Several priests of the Armenian Apostolic Church joined the protest, denouncing Pashinyan for allowing Azerbaijan to take over some holy sites.  

Nagorno-Karabakh lies within Azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994. That conflict left not only Nagorno-Karabakh itself but large chunks of surrounding lands in Armenian hands.  

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In 44 days of fighting that began on Sept. 27, Azerbaijan troops routed the Armenian forces and wedged deep into Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing Armenia to accept the Nov. 10 peace deal that saw the return to Azerbaijan of a significant part of the separatist region. It also obliged Armenia to hand over all of the areas it held outside Nagorno-Karabakh.  

Azerbaijan completed reclaiming those territories on Tuesday when it took over the Lachin region located between the Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.  

Armenian opposition leaders hold Pashinyan responsible for failing to negotiate an earlier end to the hostilities at terms that could have been more beneficial for Armenia. They have emphasized, however, that the opposition wasn’t pushing for the annulment of the peace deal.  

Veteran politician Vazgen Manukyan, whom 17 opposition parties have nominated as their candidate for prime minister, said at Saturday’s rally that his transition government would seek to renegotiate some vague aspects of the Nov. 10 peace deal.   Manukyan, 71, served as prime minister in 1990-91, when Armenia was part of the Soviet Union and later served as defense minister during the separatist war.  

Armenia’s Health Ministry said Wednesday that at least 2,718 Armenian servicemen were killed in the latest fighting. At least 55 Armenian civilians also were killed.  

Azerbaijan said this week that 2,783 troops of its were killed and more than 100 were still missing.

The government said 94 of its civilians also were killed and more than 400 were wounded.  

Azerbaijan celebrated the end of fighting as a national triumph, and President Ilham Aliyev established a new Nov. 8 national holiday called Victory Day to commemorate the event.  

Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said it will conduct a military parade next Thursday involving  3,000 troops and 150 military vehicles. It said the show will also feature trophy weapons seized from the Armenian forces.  

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is scheduled to visit Azerbaijan that day. Turkey has strongly backed its ally and used the hostilities to expand its clout in the region.

Earlier this week, Russian and Turkish military officials signed documents to set up a joint monitoring center to ensure the fulfillment of the peace deal.  

Russia deployed nearly 2,000 peacekeepers for at least five years to monitor the peace deal and to facilitate the return of refugees. The Russian troops will also ensure safe transit between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia across the Lachin region. 

Associated Press writers Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow and Aida Sultanova in London contributed to this report.

Commander of Russian peacekeeping contingent visits Armenian PoWs in Azerbaijan

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 5 2020

Artsakh’s President Arayik Harutyunyan held another meeting with a group of relatives of the missing in action, servicemen and civilians held in Azerbaijani captivity. Attending the meeting was Rustam Muradov, commander of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Artsakh.

“I would like to express my sincere gratitude to General Muradov, who personally visited Azerbaijan, met with some of our prisoners of war on the spot, provided us with their names and surnames,” President Harutyunyan said.

he noted that Azerbaijan has so far confirmed the names of fewer detainees than our indisputable evidence shows.

“According to the agreement reached, we will continue the activities to find all the captives and the bodies of the victims and return them as soon as possible,” the President stated.


In Nagorno-Karabakh, an ancient rivalry is driving a modern war and the losses are mounting

ABC News, Australia
Dec 5 2020
 
 
 
By Filippo Rossi
 
 
After a long, cold night on the frontline Sos and David returned to the building where they grew up and dropped their gear and AK-47 assault rifles to the floor, exhausted.
 
“The main enemy is panic. We teach that to our children,” says Sos, 30, and the father of a four-year-old boy. “The most important thing is self-control.”
 
For several days the Azerbaijan army has been besieging Sos and David’s hometown of Shushi — as it is known in Armenian — or Shusha in Azeri.
 
The area Sos (pictured) and David are willing to die to defend is called Nagorno-Karabakh, a region inside Azerbaijan.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)

In the background, mortars and cannons are rumbling and the war’s frontline line sits just a few hundred metres away from their home. “Everything is getting worse. But we will not let them enter our city. We will die for Shushi and for Artsakh,” says David, using the Armenian term for the contested region.
 
The area Sos and David are willing to die to defend is called Nagorno-Karabakh, a region inside Azerbaijan. Following war in the early 1990s this pocket of land is home mainly to ethnic Armenians and controlled by a separatist government supported by Armenia.
 
But the region remains disputed and on September 27 this year, fighting erupted again.
 
Azerbaijan will continue to retain the Armenian ethnic majority region of Nagorno-Karabakh.(ABC News: Jarrod Fankhauser)
 
‘We like peace’
 
Sos and his brother are ethnic Armenians. They were children during the first war and Sos remembers his father returning home with his rifle which seemed so huge and heavy back then.
 
David keeps a photograph of Sos’s son in his pocket. They are both visibly traumatised by what they have seen.
 
“It is difficult to see so many bodies, especially when you lose a loved one or see family suffering,” says Sos, who sent his wife and child to Armenia as soon as the fighting began.
 
“We don’t want to kill anyone, we like peace, but when they attack us and threaten our families we are forced to resist. The longer the war lasts the more brutal it becomes.”
 
But entrenched ethnic rivalry that goes back centuries can turn even the most peaceful person into a fighter.
 
Sos is well-educated, a computer programmer and graduate of the Yerevan Technology Institute. His brother David is a mathematician. A third brother fought on another frontline and even their mother joined the fight — baking bread for the soldiers before being forced to evacuate.
 
“When we saw our city being attacked we came back to defend it,” says Sos. “We are ready to die for our motherland and our city.”
 
But it wasn’t to be. Over a few weeks of fierce fighting, and with support from Russia, the region was won back by Azerbaijan, displacing thousands of Armenians who live there.
 
The shelter is full of soldiers and civilians with guns. They have a table, a gas heater to cook on and some beds, but little more.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
A desperate last stand
 
Sos and David’s hometown of Shushi, located on a rocky hill in the heart of the Artsakh-Nagorno-Karabakh region, is symbolic for both sides. An old Armenian saying states that “whoever controls Shushi, controls Karabakh”. This was a decisive battle.
 
Shushi’s residents, along with the Armenian army’s reinforcements, have made a desperate last stand to defend the town from attacks by the powerful and technological advanced Azeri army.
 
As the battle for Shushi rages, Sos and David are the first line of defence. “I remember when we were children we used to play war in these streets,” says Sos. “It breaks my heart to see them ravaged by conflict.”
 
The shelter is full of soldiers and civilians with guns. They have a table, a gas heater to cook on and some beds, but little more.
 
The walls are protected with plastic to keep in the heat.
 
Suddenly, there is a loud explosion. “It’s 50 metres from here,” says Yuri, 60, a relative. “Stay in the shelter. Don’t move.


 
Suddenly, there is a loud explosion, and Yuri (pictured) tells those around him not to move.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
“They will wait two minutes before shooting another one. It’s their tactic,” he tells the people who try to go out and check on the damage.
 
After a while, there is another explosion, just as Yuri predicted.
 
Sos and David run out from the shelter to join their positions.
 
They know the Armenian army faces a critical situation, but no one is ready to accept the bad turn the war has taken.
 
After a week-long siege, Azeri troops surrounded the town at the beginning of November. They sent in ground forces, supported by shelling from heavy artillery.
 
‘A sniper almost killed me’
 
On the Armenian side of the city chaos rules.
 
From the separatist’s capital city Stepanakert — known as Xhankendi in Azeri and just a few kilometres as the crow flies from Shushi — it is possible to see the bombs exploding and you can hear the sound of Kalashnikovs.
 
The small Soviet-styled Tabletka ambulances fill up the city’s main hospital, one after the other, evacuating dozens, perhaps even hundreds, of badly injured soldiers.


 
Dozens of wounded arrived at the hospital.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
A soldier gets down in panic: “A sniper almost killed me,” he screams, showing the scratch the bullet left on his neck. He walks around with red eyes. People try to calm him down.
 
A winding road connects the two cities. It is blanketed in fog and seems to mirror the Armenian defeat.
 
Soldiers walk along the side of the road. A sign of retreat? “It’s hell up there,” shouts one, but keeps moving, an RPG on his shoulder.
 
Further along the road ambulances lie flipped on their sides, then bloody bandages mixed with piles of empty ammunition boxes.
 
The road has been shelled and is dirty and torn up by tank tracks.
 
A winding road connects the two cities. It is blanketed in fog and seems to mirror the Armenian defeat.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
Snipers are silent killers.
 
“They are everywhere,” says Sos, on the phone the next day.
 
A few hours after our phone call, the Armenian government decided on what for many is the worst-case scenario: The complete evacuation of Stepanakert.
 
It was November 7 and the city was all but surrounded by Azeri fighters.
 
Soldiers wait in Stepanakert the night before the evacuation of the city.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
Civilians gathered quickly what possessions they can before jumping in cars heading for the Armenian border. Traffic lines up for kilometres.
 
Despite their best intentions rising panic is all but impossible to control. Everyone is trying to escape fast.
 
Armenian artillery batteries reposition outside the city and soldiers set up last-minute checkpoints to make sure no male citizen below 58 is leaving. They will have to stay and defend the town.
 
‘We are out of the city’
 
Sos’s second phone call two days later, on November 9, puts an end to all Armenian hopes: “Me and David are good. But Shushi is lost. We are out of the city”.
 
The news is astonishing. Nagorno Karabakh’s most symbolic town has fallen into Azeri hands.
 
The Armenian government keeps denying what has happened but the Azeri leaders publish a video showing Azeri flags waving over Shushi’s city hall.
 
From the hill, Stepanakert is an easy target. The war may be over.
 
Later that day, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announces a new ceasefire with Azerbaijan, brokered by Russia, which will hold the re-conquered territories and will hand over control of three more regions occupied by Armenia for almost 30 years.
 
The deal will cut off what remains of Nagorno Karabakh’s territories from direct connection with Armenia.
 
“We had no other choice but to sign. If we didn’t stop the hostilities we would have suffered much more human and territorial losses,” Pashinyan argued.

 
Demonstrators storm the parliament building in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital city and their rage feels unstoppable.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
Rage feels unstoppable
 
Officially, more than 2,300 Armenian soldiers lost their lives.
 
The defeat is hard for the Armenians to digest. Rage feels as if it will become unstoppable. Demonstrators storm the parliament building in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital city.
 
The next day, protestors line front of the building to call for the Prime Minister’s resignation.
 
“This is a betrayal. What for did all those young soldiers die for?” asks Vaghe, 52. “It makes no sense to finish a war like this. We have to keep fighting.”
 
Officially, more than 2,300 Armenian soldiers have lost their lives defending the country.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
On the other side is Susannah, 66. She was forced to evacuate Stepanakert a few days earlier.
 
“I demand the immediate resumption of all the hostilities and Pashinyan’s resignation,” she screams. “He made an agreement while people were sleeping.”
 
She is traumatised. She has been forced to leave her home with little warning.
 
Susannah was forced to evacuate her home.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
But on the same day some commanders, like Artur Grigoryan, couldn’t believe the Government’s decision.
 
Grigoryan, 40, is a lieutenant with the Armenian special forces who fought in Shushi.
 
“The town is still under our control,” he says, defying the evidence. “If the Prime Minister will not find a solution, we will find it by ourselves. We are ready for anything.”
 
Yerevan and many other cities are now full of Karabakh refugees who are relying on benefactors and public aid to survive.
 
Evelyna, 62, a widow and mother of three with a son at the frontline, was living in a small village in the south which fell into Azeri hands two weeks after the war started.
 
“When they stormed into the village, we had no other choice but to leave. I had no time to gather anything,” she says, gesturing to her clothes to indicate she left empty-handed.
 
“I don’t know what I will do now. Our houses are burnt down”.
 
Evelyna will probably never see her belongings again.
 
‘Thank God I didn’t renovate’
 
As a consequence of Putin’s brokered agreement, the region of Kalbajar was the first region scheduled to return to Azerbaijan in mid-November.
 
It is mountainous and remote. This region, too, is symbolic for both sides.
 
However with such short notice to evacuate the whole territory, a 10-day extension was agreed.
 
But it was too late. As soon as the agreement was made public, chaos has ruled in Kalbajar’s valleys.
 
People packed what they could and then burnt down their own houses.
 
They have removed metal sheets from the rooves and the wooden planks from the ground.
 
Beds, tables, chairs and clothes were piled on trucks and cars. Some tied horses behind their vehicles and others led their sheep and cattle along the cold and winding mountain pass — the only route to Armenia.
 
“You have to burn it,” says one man to his wife.
 
“I cannot,” she replies. “My hands will not allow me”.
 
“Do it,” he repeats.
 
Together, they throw a gas-filled plastic bottle over the wooden parts of their house.
 
Soon, smoke rises to the sky from dozens of people’s homes.
 
People packed what they could and then burnt down their own houses.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
“Thank God I didn’t renovate my bathroom. I would have wasted my money,” says an old man sarcastically as he gathers some cables and an antenna. “Before going tonight, I will burn it”.
 
Behind him, his neighbour’s house is ravaged by flames.
 
‘I couldn’t stop crying. I cannot sleep’
 
The region of Kelbajar was the first to be evacuated(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
The Kalbajar district is witnessing its second mass exodus in less than three decades.
 
During the first war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the early 1990s, thousands of Azeris were forced out after losing the region.
 
The rubble of their homes remain, a testament to their presence, next to new Armenian homes. Now the story is repeating itself the other way around.
 
Anahit lives in Bersham village, next to the Terter river.
 
She watches on, as her husband removes the roof of their home and loads a small truck with their belongings. The ground is covered with clothes.
 
Anahit watches her husband remove the roof of their home and load a small truck with their belongings.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
“We’ve been living here for more than two years,” she says. “I don’t know what we will do now. We will take our cows and go to Armenia.
 
“When I heard about the agreement I couldn’t stop crying. I cannot sleep. What are we going to do?” she says.
 
Anahit and her husband are an example of the many Armenian families who came to the region as part of a government program to repopulate Kalbajar after 1994.
 
“They gave us free electricity, free building material for the house. We discovered that there was the chance and we took it,” she says.
 
Many Armenian citizens from disadvantaged communities took this step, unaware of the potential consequences or the way they were being caught up in the government’s political goal to colonise the region.
 

A man looks around his destroyed home.(ABC News: Filippo Rossi)
 
A never-ending revenge
 
In the region’s main town, Qartvachar, the sound of people escaping breaks the usual silence of this beautiful region.
 
Many looters sneak in silently from Armenia to steal what others have left behind.
 
“These are our lands. Historical monuments can prove it,” says Mariam, 38. “I will leave only by force.”
 
She has invested everything in a small guesthouse next to her home.
 
“I already took off the windows in case we have to go,” she says. Behind her, a soldier removes a public sign from the municipality. It will not be needed any longer.
 
Kalbajar burns. Queues of traffic to trying to escape of the region stretches for kilometres.
 
Some people dismantle entire electrical power stations. Others cut down trees with a plan to resell the wood in Armenia or use it to heat their homes as winter descends.
 
As the army steadily evacuates tanks and troops from the region Russian peacekeepers enter from the other direction to take their positions.
 
Kalbajar is the symbol of Armenian defeat: not only have people lost their homes but cultural heritage is now lost to their enemy.
 
With towns and villages lost, and accusations of war crimes on both sides, the foundations of a never-ending cycle remain in place.
 
 
 

Thousands demand removal of Armenia’s PM

The Courier, Australia
Dec 6 2020
Thousands demand removal of Armenia’s PM

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/05/2020

                                        Saturday, 
Opposition Sets Ultimatum For Armenian PM To Resign
Armenia -- Opposition supporters demonstrate at Liberty Square in Yerevan, 
December 5, 2020.
A coalition of 16 Armenian opposition parties gave Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian until Tuesday to step down or face nationwide protests as it again 
rallied thousands of supporters in Yerevan on Saturday.
Holding their biggest rally so far, opposition leaders stood by their demands 
for the formation of an interim government and conduct of snap general 
elections. They again blamed Pashinian for sweeping Armenian territorial losses 
in and around Nagorno-Karabakh suffered during the recent war with Azerbaijan.
The anti-government street protests were sparked by a Russian-brokered ceasefire 
that stopped the six-week war on November 10. The opposition forces accuse 
Pashinian’s government of mishandling the war and capitulating to Baku.
They held their latest demonstration three days after nominating veteran 
politician Vazgen Manukian as a caretaker prime minister who they believe should 
prepare for and hold the elections within a year.
“We could have prevented the war,” Manukian told thousands of people who 
gathered in Yerevan’s Liberty Square. “We could have won the war. We could have 
ended the war earlier and with minor losses.”
Manukian made clear that his interim administration would not walk away from the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani ceasefire agreement. He said it would seek instead to 
ensure that the agreement’s ambiguous provisions are interpreted in Armenia’s 
favor.
The crowd then marched to Pashinian’s official residence tightly guarded by riot 
police and other security forces.
Ishkhan Saghatelian, a leader of the opposition Armenian Revolutionary 
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), read out the opposition ultimatum there. “Nikol 
must go. Period,” he said.
Saghatelian warned that the opposition will launch a nationwide campaign of 
“civil disobedience” if Pashinian fails to announce his resignation by Tuesday 
noon.
The idea of an interim government and fresh elections is also backed by 
President Armen Sarkissian and a growing number of public figures. Pashinian has 
rejected it so far.
The prime minister again signaled no plans to resign or agree to snap polls in a 
televised address to the nation aired on Saturday morning. He said he is not 
clinging to power and only wants to ensure that “the people stay in power.”
Pashinian emphasized the fact that Armenia’s last parliamentary elections, held 
in December 2018 and won by his My Step bloc, were widely recognized as 
democratic. In an apparent reference to the country’s former leaders, he said 
that “some circles” want to come to power through a fraudulent vote.
President Sarkissian insisted, meanwhile, that Armenia is in a “deep post-war 
crisis.” “The government cannot act in the spirit of the [public] mood of 2018,” 
he said in a statement issued later in the day. “Today’s reality is completely 
different.”
Kocharian, Pashinian Engage In Bitter War Of Words
Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian attends hearings at the Court of 
Appeals, Yerevan, December 9, 2019.
Former President Robert Kocharian provoked a furious response from Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian on Saturday after joining the Armenian opposition in 
blaming him for the outcome of the Nagorno-Karabakh war and demanding his 
resignation.
In a televised interview aired late on Friday, Kocharian charged that 
Pashinian’s government made the war “inevitable” with reckless diplomacy and 
miscalculations of Armenia’s military potential and needs. He said its “grave 
blunders” committed during the war predetermined Azerbaijan’s victory.
The sweeping territorial losses suffered by the Armenian side stripped Pashinian 
of his legitimacy, Kocharian told the Fifth Channel TV station in his first 
public remarks made since the outbreak of the six-week war stopped by a 
Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10.
“I can recall only one case in history where a state lost [a war] but did not 
change its government,” he said. “It was [after] the first war in Iraq in 1991. 
Saddam Hussein stayed in power, using his entire totalitarian system. He ended 
up badly: they hanged him.”
“It is only natural that a defeated government must be replaced,” added the man 
who ruled Armenia from 1998-2008.
Pashinian hit back at Kocharian and Armenia’s other former leaders in a 
televised address to the nation aired the following morning.
“We failed not in diplomacy but in our attempts to offset diplomatic failures of 
the last 20-25 years,” he said.
Pashinian claimed that Karabakh peace proposals made by the United States, 
Russia and France during and after Kocharian’s rule were not favorable for 
Armenia and Karabakh. He went on to accuse the country’s former rulers of not 
doing enough to strengthen the Armenian military and illegally enriching 
themselves instead.
“The reason for our failure is that Armenia was a corrupt state for at least 25 
years,” declared the embattled prime minister.
Armenia - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses the nation, Yerevan, 
December 5, 2020.
The bitter war of words came amid continuing calls for Pashinian’s resignation 
and snap general elections voiced by opposition groups, a growing number of 
public figures and even President Armen Sarkissian. The premier has rejected 
them, saying that he is still trusted by most Armenians.
Kocharian urged his supporters to participate in ongoing anti-government 
demonstrations organized by a coalition of 16 opposition parties. He backed an 
interim prime minister nominated by them earlier this week.
In that context, the 66-year-old ex-president did not deny having political 
ambitions. “I will try to do everything in my power to help the country overcome 
this difficult period,” he said.
Kocharian has been standing trial on corruption and coup charges that were 
leveled against him shortly after Pashinian swept to power in the “Velvet 
Revolution” of April-May 2018. He rejects the accusations as politically 
motivated.
Russia has also criticized the criminal proceedings. Russian President Vladimir 
Putin has repeatedly made a point of congratulating Kocharian on his birthday 
anniversaries and praising his legacy.
Kocharian on Friday also made a case for Armenia’s “much deeper integration” 
with Russia. He insisted that only Russia can help his country rearm its armed 
forces and confront new security challenges in the aftermath of the Karabakh 
war. This is why, he said, the next Armenian government should be not only more 
competent but also fully trusted by Moscow.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

RFE/RL AZERBAIJANI service: Azerbaijani Opposition Activist Gets One Year In Prison

Azerbaijani Opposition Activist Gets One Year In Prison
December 01, 2020 15:27 GMT
        • By RFE/RL's Azerbaijani Service
Azerbaijani oppositionist Mahammad Imanli (file photo)
BAKU -- A member of the opposition Azerbaijan Popular Front Party (AXCP), 
Mahammad Imanli, has been sentenced to one year in prison for breaking 
coronavirus measures, a charge he rejects as false, calling it politically 
motivated.
On December 1, Judge Mirheydar Zeynalov of the Sabuncu district court in Baku 
found Imanli guilty of failing to comply with coronavirus precautions and 
"spreading the disease."
Imanli rejected the court's findings saying he was sentenced "only because I am 
a member of the AXCP."
A day earlier, a prosecutor at the trial asked the judge to sentence Imanli to 
18 months in prison.
Imanli has insisted that a police statement noting he was detained on July 20 
was false.
According to him and his lawyers, he was detained on July 16 and kept in a 
police station for four days, during which time he was interrogated regarding 
his participation in unsanctioned rallies in Baku in support of the country’s 
armed forces amid an escalation of military tensions with neighboring Armenia.
Imanli is one of almost 50 AXCP members arrested in July after the rallies in 
support of the Azerbaijani Army.
Investigators have said that, during the unsanctioned rallies in mid-July, AXCP 
activists clashed with police injuring some of them, upended private vehicles, 
and damaged parliament.
Many of the activists who were detained were charged with damaging private 
property, attacking law enforcement officers, and disrupting public order.
Dozens of AXCP members have been arrested, and some imprisoned, in recent years 
on what their supporters have called trumped-up charges.
Opponents of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Western countries, and 
international human rights groups say his government has persistently persecuted 
critics, political foes, independent media outlets, and civic activists.
Aliyev denies any rights abuses. He took power in 2003 shortly before the death 
of his father, Heydar Aliyev, a former KGB officer and communist-era leader who 
had ruled Azerbaijan since 1993.
 

RFE/RL AZERBAIJANI service: Israel Urges Citizens To Avoid Georgia, Azerbaijan, Citing Iran Threat

Israel Urges Citizens To Avoid Georgia, Azerbaijan, Citing Iran Threat
December 03, 2020 20:41 GMT
        • By RFE/RL
A memorial service for Iranian nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who was 
killed on November 27.
Israel's government is warning that Israeli targets abroad could come under 
attack by Iran, citing threats issued by Tehran following the killing of a 
prominent Iranian nuclear scientist last week.
"In light of threats recently coming from Iranian officials and in light of the 
involvement in the past of Iranian agents in terror attacks in various 
countries, there is a concern that Iran will try to act in such a way against 
Israeli targets,” according to a December 3 statement issued by the prime 
minister’s National Security Council.
It advised against travel to nearby countries such as Georgia, Azerbaijan, 
Turkey, the United Arab Emirates (U.A.E.), and Bahrain, as well as the Kurdish 
area of Iraq and Africa.
Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who was at the heart of the country's past covert nuclear 
program, was killed on the outskirts of Tehran on November 27.
No one has claimed responsibility, but Iranian officials have blamed the killing 
on Israel, an exile opposition group, and Saudi Arabia.
A top adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said that Iran will 
give a “calculated and decisive” response.
Israeli officials have declined to comment on the killing, while the Iranian 
opposition group and Saudi Arabia have denied any involvement.
Elliott Abrams, the top U.S. envoy on Iran, said on December 3 that Iran is 
unlikely to retaliate over the assassination before the inauguration of Joe 
Biden as U.S. president on January 20, 2021, in case it jeopardizes any future 
sanctions relief from the United States.
"If they want sanctions relief, they know that they're going to need to enter 
some kind of negotiation after January 20, and it's got to be in their minds 
that they don't want to...undertake any activities between now and January 20 
that make sanctions relief harder to get," Abrams told Reuters.
Iran and its proxies have targeted Israeli tourists and Jewish communities in 
the past.
Israel in recent months has signed U.S.-brokered agreements establishing 
diplomatic relations with the U.A.E. and Bahrain.
With reporting by AP and Reuters
 

Asbarez: Kamala Harris Hires Advisors with Ties to Turkey, Azerbaijan

December 5,  2020


Vice President Elect Kamala Harris’ picks for national security advisor Nancy McEldowney (left) and domestic policy advisor Rohini Kosoglu

Vice-President Elect Kamala Harris on Friday announced two key staff appointments, both of whom have ties with Turkey and/or Azerbaijan.

Harris announced the appointment of Nancy McEldowney as her national security advisor and Rohini Kosoglu as her domestic policy advisor.

A career U.S. Foreign Service official, McEldowney’s resume includes stints as U.S. Chargé d’Affaires and deputy chief of mission in Turkey (2005-2008) and Azerbaijan (2001-2004). Last month, McEldowney joined President Elect Joe Biden’s presidential transition team to facilitate efforts related to the Department of State.

It was during McEldowney’s tenure in Ankara when the Turkish-Armenia protocol process started that was preceded by President George W. Bush’s infamous Rose Garden press briefing where he condemned the Armenian Genocide resolution being discussed in Congress. She presumably played a more direct role in advancing the protocols in her position as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs from 2009 to 2011.

President Elect Joe Biden has gone on record to express his frustrations with the Turkish government and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“What I think we should be doing is taking a very different approach to him [Erdogan] now, making it clear that we support opposition leadership,” Biden told The New York Times in December, 2019.

“He [Erdogan] has to pay a price,” Biden said at the time, adding that Washington should embolden Turkish opposition leaders “to be able to take on and defeat Erdogan. Not by a coup, not by a coup, but by the electoral process.”

She was in Baku when the U.S. waived the Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act, that preconditioned U.S. assistance to Azerbaijan with the end of Armenia’s blockade by Ankara and Baku.

In his fourth announcement in October, while fighting still raged in Karabakh due to Azerbaijan’s aggressive attacks, which were supported by Turkey and Ankara-backed mercenaries from Syria, Biden called on the administration to enforce Section 907 bans on aid to Azerbaijan and the flow of military equipment into Azerbaijan.

“While he brags about his deal-making skills at campaign rallies, Trump has yet to get involved personally to stop this war. The administration must fully implement and not waive requirements under section 907 of the Freedom Support Act to stop the flow of military equipment to Azerbaijan, and call on Turkey and Russia to stop fueling the conflict with the supply of weapons and, in the case of Turkey, mercenaries,” Biden said at the time.

The Sri Lankan-American Kosoglu, who is Harris’ pick for domestic policy advisor, is the wife of Turkish-American software engineer Ozkan Sedat Kosoglu, who hails from Turkey’s northwestern province of Kırklareli.

The announcement of her appointment was hailed by Turkish media, which welcomed the “Bride of Kirklareli” being named to such a high-ranking post.

Harris described Kosoglu as “not only an expert on some of the most important issues facing the American people but also one of my closest and most trusted aides from the Senate and presidential campaign.”

Prior to her appointment on Friday, Kosoglu served as senior advisor on the Biden-Harris campaign, before which she was Harris’ chief of staff in the Senate directing her legislative strategy and leadership on key committees, including the Senate Judiciary, Homeland Security and Government Affairs, as well as Budget Committees.

2021 U.S. Defense Authorization Act Mandates Sanctions Against Turkey

December 5,  2020



ANCA, Hellenic American Leadership Council Welcome Provision Punishing Turkey for Purchase of Russian S-400s

ANCA, Hellenic American Leadership Council Welcome Provision Punishing Turkey for Purchase of Russian S-400s

WASHINGTON—The Hellenic American Leadership Council (HALC) and the Armenian National Committee of America applauded the completion of the 60th Annual National Defense Authorization Act.  The NDAA for Fiscal Year 2021 included a provision that effectively mandates that the United States imposes sanctions on Turkey.

In the 115th Congress, ANCA and HALC launched a joint advocacy initiative to remove Turkey from the F35 program and to hold Turkey accountable for violating the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act.  The ANCA-HALC advocacy campaigns warned members of Congress against the dangers of failing to hold Turkey accountable and allowing it to have weapons that President Erdogan may turn against our allies – including Greece, Cyprus, Israel, and Armenia – and possibly even U.S. forces.

Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ), who played a key role in the NDAA amendment, tweeted: “Incredibly proud to have helped secure inclusion of a provision in the NDAA to do what President Trump refused to do: Officially determine on behalf of the U.S. government that Turkey took delivery of Russian S-400 defense systems and therefore will be sanctioned under existing law.”

Endy Zemenides, HALC’s Executive Director praised Senator Menendez’s leadership and noted:  “It took a while but the days of whitewashing Turkey’s consistent destabilizing behavior, violations of American and international law, and lack of reliability as an ally are over.  Congress is sending a clear signal to the incoming Biden Administration that ‘Accountability’ and not ‘Appeasement’ must be the key to US-Turkey policy.”

“The adoption of this key NDAA provision – long sought by the ANCA and our HALC and IDC allies – holds Erdogan accountable for his increasingly reckless and anti-American actions,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “It is our hope that the incoming Biden Administration will reflect and reinforce this broad bipartisan consensus, bringing to an end a shameful era in which the first instinct of U.S. diplomacy has been to erase every Turkish sin, excuse every Turkish offense, and appease even the most irrational Turkish demand.”

Pashinyan Again Touts Opening Transport Links with Azerbaijan

December 5,  2020



Armenia southern city of Meghri is at the heart of the Nov. 9 agreement-mandated roadway to Nakhichevan

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Saturday, once again, touted the need to open transportation links to Azerbaijan, one of the many troubling provisions of the November 9 agreement that he signed to end the war.

Since the start of the implementation of the agreement, which also called for the handover of large swaths of territory in Artsakh to Azerbaijan, individual citizens have felt the brunt of the vagueness of the document with no official explanation or instructions. Instead, Pashinyan has attempted to justify the agreement ignoring the plight of citizens who, for example, went to work at the Sotk mine in Armenia and were met with 250 Azerbaijani troops claiming ownership to 50 percent of the mine, which has been operating in Armenia for more decades. In other instances, residents in Artsakh were given 48 hours to evacuate their homes, because, it turned out, their villages were to be handed over to Azerbaijan.

The ninth and final point of the agreement calls for all economic and transport links in the region to be unblocked, adding that “the Republic of Armenia shall guarantee the safety of transport links between western regions of the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic with a view to organizing the unimpeded movement of citizens, vehicles and cargo in both directions.”

“Subject to agreement by the Parties, the construction of new infrastructure linking the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic with regions of Azerbaijan shall be carried out,” adds the agreement.

This provision of the “end of war” accord, has alarmed residents of the Syunik Province, which after almost three decades find themselves sharing a border with Azerbaijanis who have newly occupied the Lachin and other territories formerly under control of Armenians. This uncertainty also resulted in the resignation of the Syunik governor and has called into question the sovereign of Meghri, which borders Iran.

On Wednesday, residents of the Tegh village in Syunik found themselves in the awkaward—and potentially dangerous—position of negotiating with newly installed Azerbaijani border guards and armed units on the other side of the border, with no official instruction from the government, despite the fact that Pashinyan dispatched his newly-minted advisor, Armenia controversial former education minister, Arayik Harutyunyan to Syunik.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev, has set his eyes on Meghri, proposing to build a highway connecting what is now under control of Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan, setting off more panic among residents.

Yet, on Saturday, Pashinyan repeated what he has been saying in defense of the agreement, that for Armenia’s future economic prosperity, opening of the transportation routes with Azerbaijan would be vital.

Of course, the prime minister framed this issues by arguing that open rail links with Iran and Moscow would greatly benefit Armenia’s economy. The railroad to Iran goes through Nakhichevan, while the one to Moscow must go through Baku.

“If we are to think about the future, we must think about the possibility of new factors emerging in economic life. Will there be significant changes in our economy from the resumption of the Armenia-Russia and Armenia-Iran railway communication? I think, yes. If we look at the question in this context, the picture looks different. But now, as I said, much more urgent issues need to be addressed,” he said.

Pashinyan also sought to minimize residents’ concerns—or allay their fears—by saying that Armenia’s armed forces were in control of the border with Azerbaijan.

“Many Armenian citizens are seriously concerned about the processes taking now place on some sections of the Armenian state border with Azerbaijan,” said Pashinyan. “This, of course, is understandable, but we must state that our armed forces are deployed along the entire state border of Armenia. What is happening in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) is a separate issue.”

He then went on to discuss “various practical problems,” brushing aside residents’ concerns by saying those issues “are not insurmountable, and we are working to solve them.”

When it came to Meghri, Pashinyan simply said that the only mention of the word “corridor” in the November 9 agreement related to Lachin, which was handed over to Azerbaijan on Tuesday, leaving a 3-kilometer “corridor” that is now controlled by Russian peacekeepers.

“I mean, there is no concept of a “corridor” regarding Meghri,” Pashinyan said.

There was no concept of ceding villages in Mardakert to Azerbaijan spelled out in the agreement. Nevertheless, residents of seven villages woke up to evacuation orders late last month and find themselves homeless because at the last minute it was determined that their villages were actually part of Aghdam, which was surrendered to Azerbaijan on November 20.