Asbarez: L.A. County Supervisor Barger and Solis Pray for Peace in Artsakh

October 23,  2020



Intimate prayer service on behalf of the Armenian community impacted by the current attacks launched by Azerbaijan and Turkey

LOS ANGELES—Los Angles County Supervisors Kathryn Barger and Hilda Solis joined with representatives of the Armenian religious community on Friday at the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Grand Park to provide prayer and intentions for the current suffering of Armenians in Artsakh.

The faith representatives included Western Primate Archbishop Hovnan Derderian; Western Prelate Bishop Torkom Donoyan; Father Armenag Bedrossian of Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Armenian Catholic Church; and Reverend Berdj Djambazian of the Armenian Evangelical Union of North America.

“The endurance of the Armenian people during this difficult time is a testament to their strength and a reflection of their history as the first nation to establish Christianity as their official religion,” said Supervisor Kathryn Barger, Chair of the Board of Supervisors. “Faith has always been at the center of Armenian culture and spiritual leadership and inspiration is important now more than ever during this difficult time.”

“I was humbled to join Armenian faith leaders in Grand Park today at the Armenian Genocide Memorial,” said Los Angeles County Chair Pro Tem Hilda L. Solis. “We are all committed to lifting up the voices of Armenians everywhere and we continue to pray for peace.”

On September 27, 2020, Azerbaijan with the support of the Republic of Turkey, launched a premeditated and unprovoked military operation in the Nagorno-Karabakh region directly impacting Armenians in the Republic of Artsakh. Azerbaijan, in concert with Turkey, has also conducted a robust misinformation campaign to deflect their aggressive activities.  This ongoing military offense has included attacks on civilian and residential structures, which killing 36 innocent civilians (including children and older adults) and wounding 115, according to the Office of the Human Rights Ombudsman of Artsakh.

Words of prayer from the faith leaders included some of the following:

“Prayer is the language of the truth. Prayer remains to be the ultimate _expression_ of peace and harmony in the world. Today, we pray to the Almighty God to awaken in the hearts of all nations the collective responsibility to bring justice to the cause. Silence, neutrality, and apathy cannot be key factors for the recovery of justice.”
–Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America

“It is an honor for us to hear the voice of justice coming from the great County of Los Angeles and its Board of Supervisors. We pray for stillness and for peace to come and to last. We pray for a commitment to human rights and the protection of all lives. We pray for peace and for justice in our homes and on our city streets.”
–Bishop Torkom Donoyan, Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America

“We stand united at a critical moment in history when the freedom, peaceful and productive life and sacred values are under threat in the land of the first Christian nations. If the truth and justice are on our side, with God’s help, then victory is at hand.”
–Father Armenag Bedrosian, Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church

“In the Bible, Deborah’s name means ‘working bee.’ We have two wonderful supervisors who are working so hard with their compassionate attitude and heart toward the community at large. There is a human dignity that needs to be respected. We pray for peace and for harmony in our country.”
–Reverend Berj Djambazian, Armenian Evangelical Union of North America

Los Angeles County is home to the largest population of Armenians outside of Armenia. For years, the County has supported the Armenian community through continued advocacy for their rights and increased awareness of their history.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/23/2020

                                        Friday, 
Another Rights Group Condemns Use Of Cluster Bombs Against Karabakh Civilians
        • Armen Koloyan
Armenia- A building damaged by recent shelling in Stepanakert, 17Oct2020
Human Rights Watch (HRW) accused Azerbaijan on Friday of repeatedly using widely 
banned cluster munitions in the shelling of civilian areas in Nagorno-Karabakh.
“During an on-site investigation in Nagorno-Karabakh in October 2020, Human 
Rights Watch documented four incidents in which Azerbaijan used cluster 
munitions,” the U.S.-based group said in a report.
The report says that HRW researchers have identified the “remnants of 
Israeli-produced LAR-160 series cluster munition rockets” in the Karabakh 
capital Stepanakert and the town of Hadrut and examined damage caused by them.
“Azerbaijan received these surface-to-surface rockets and launchers from Israel 
in 2008–2009,” it says.
“The continued use of cluster munitions – particularly in populated areas – 
shows flagrant disregard for the safety of civilians,” said Stephen Goose, the 
head of HRW’s arms division sector.
“The repeated use of cluster munitions by Azerbaijan should cease immediately as 
their continued use serves to heighten the danger for civilians for years to 
come,” Goose said.
London-based Amnesty International also condemned the use of cluster rockets 
against residential areas in Karabakh following the September 27 outbreak of 
large-scale hostilities between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces. In an October 5 
statement, it described the practice as “appalling and unacceptable.”
Azerbaijan denounced the Amnesty statement, insisting that the Azerbaijani army 
is not deliberately targeting Karabakh civilians.
“Azerbaijani officials have accused the Armenian side of using cluster munitions 
in this conflict, but Human Rights Watch has not independently verified those 
claims,” says the HRW report. It says the Azerbaijani authorities have refused 
to allow HRW to conduct a similar on-site investigation on 
Azerbaijani-controlled territory.
“Neither Armenia, nor Nagorno-Karabakh de-facto authorities, are known to 
stockpile cluster munitions but they possess multi-barrel rocket launchers 
capable of delivering these weapons,” it concludes the report.
According to officials in Stepanakert, the war has left nearly 40 Karabakh 
civilians dead so far. Thousands of others have taken refuge in Armenia.
The fighting has also gravely affected many residents of Azerbaijani cities and 
villages north and east of Karabakh. The Azerbaijani authorities have reported 
more than 60 deaths among them.
France Demands End To Turkish ‘Provocations’ In Karabakh
FRANCE - French President Emmanuel Macron, wearing a protective face mask, 
welcomes Armenian President Armen Sarkissian for a meeting at the Elysee Palace 
in Paris, France, 
France stepped up on Friday criticism of Turkey’s role in the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict, saying that it is hampering international efforts to stop fighting 
between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces.
“Our objective is clear: to see the ceasefire applied,” French government 
spokesman Gabriel Attal said after President Emmanuel Macron met with his 
Armenian counterpart Armen Sarkissian in Paris.
“The President [Macron] is working closely with [Russian President] Vladimir 
Putin for this,” tweeted Attal. “The solution to this conflict can only be found 
in appeasement. That is why it is imperative that Turkey cease its dangerous 
provocations in the region.”
Shortly after the outbreak of large-scale hostilities in and around Karabakh on 
September 27 Macron accused Turkey of recruiting jihadist fighters in Syria and 
sending them to Azerbaijan. "I urge all NATO partners to face up to the behavior 
of a NATO member,” the French leader said on October 1.
The Turkish and Azerbaijani governments rejected the French accusations backed 
by Armenia. Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev accused Macron of pro-Armenian 
bias.
France, Russia and the United States have for decades led international efforts 
to resolve the Karabakh conflict in their capacity as co-chairs of the OSCE 
Minsk Group. The three mediating powers have repeatedly called for an immediate 
end to the ongoing war.
The situation in the conflict zone was the main focus of Macron’s talks with 
Sarkissian. A statement by the Armenian presidential press office said the two 
leaders agreed on the need for an unconditional implementation of 
Armenian-Azerbaijani ceasefire agreements that were brokered by Moscow and Paris 
earlier this month.
The statement cited Sarkissian as saying that Turkey’s military support for 
Azerbaijan is “further escalating the situation and endangering regional peace 
and stability.”
French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said last week that “the only country 
which isn’t calling for respect of the ceasefire is Turkey.”
Turkish Vice-President Fuat Oktay told the CNN Turk broadcaster on Wednesday 
that Ankara will not hesitate to send troops to Azerbaijan if such a request is 
made by Baku.
Moscow, Yerevan Want Removal Of ‘Foreign Fighters’ From Karabakh Conflict Zone
NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- A view shows a fragment of an artillery shell at the 
fighting positions of ethnic Armenian soldiers on the front line during a 
military conflict against Azerbaijan's armed forces, October 20, 2020.
Senior Russian and Armenian diplomats demanded the immediate removal of foreign 
mercenaries from the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone when they discussed 
continuing hostilities there on Friday.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Oleg 
Syromolotov and the Armenian ambassador in Moscow, Vartan Toghanian, “exchanged 
thoughts in the context of the continuing escalation in the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict zone.”
“They emphasized the unacceptability of the deployment to the region of 
militants of illegal armed groups from a number of Middle Eastern and North 
African countries and the necessity of their immediate withdrawal from there,” 
the ministry said in a short statement.
RUSSIA -- Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Oleg Syromolotov attends an 
international conference in Moscow, September 3, 2018
Russia implicitly accused Turkey of recruiting “terrorists and mercenaries” from 
Syria and Libya for the Azerbaijani army shortly after the outbreak of the 
ongoing war over Karabakh on September 27. The Russian foreign intelligence 
chief, Sergei Naryshkin, warned on October 6 that the region could become a 
“launch pad” for Islamist militants to enter Russia.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and his foreign and defense ministers have 
raised the matter with their Turkish counterparts in phone calls reported in 
recent weeks.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Thursday that 
Russian “military experts” and other officials are serious dealing with “this 
issue.” She did not elaborate.
“I can assure you that very active work is being done in a non-public manner,” 
Zakharova told reporters. “This is a really serious problem for us.”
Ankara strongly denies sending members of Turkish-backed groups to fight in 
Karabakh on Azerbaijan’s side. Baku also denies the presence of such mercenaries 
in the Azerbaijani army ranks.
Multiple reports by Western media have quoted members of Islamist rebel groups 
in areas of northern Syria under Turkish control as saying over the past month 
that they are deploying to Azerbaijan in coordination with the Turkish 
government.
Trump Claims Progress Towards Karabakh Truce
U.S. - U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to journalists in the Oval Office at 
the White House in Washington, .
U.S. President Donald Trump spoke of “really good progress” made in 
international efforts to stop the war over Nagorno-Karabakh after U.S. Secretary 
of State Mike Pompeo met with the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in 
Washington on Friday.
Reuters reported that Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov met with 
Pompeo for about 40 minutes. Moments after he left, Armenian Foreign Minister 
Zohrab Mnatsakanian arrived for his meeting.
Pompeo tweeted after the separate talks that he discussed with Mnatsakanian and 
Bayramov “critical steps to halt violence in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.” 
“Both [sides] must implement a ceasefire and return to substantive 
negotiations,” he wrote.
Pompeo did not report any fresh Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements that effect.
The U.S. State Department spokeswoman, Morgan Ortagus, said separately that 
Pompeo believes a Karabakh settlement should be based on “the Helsinki Final Act 
principles of the non-use or threat of force, territorial integrity, and the 
equal rights and self-determination of peoples.”
U.S. - U.S.Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with Armenian Foreign Minister 
Zohrab Mnatsakanian in Washington, .
According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Mnatsakanian told Pompeo that 
Azerbaijan is unwilling to respect ceasefire agreements and is seeking a 
military solution to the Karabakh conflict. He also condemned Turkey’s military 
support for Azerbaijan.
For his part, Bayramov was reported to brief Pompeo on Azerbaijan’s “just 
position” and Armenia’s “destructive policy” on the Karabakh conflict.
Meanwhile, Trump said Washington is “working with Armenia” with regard to 
de-escalating the conflict.
“We have a very good relationship with Armenia,” Trump told reporters at the 
White Hose. “They are very good people, they are so dedicated. They are 
incredible people, and we will see what happens.”
“I think really good progress is being made with respect to that,” he said. “We 
have a lot of people living in this country originally from Armenia. They are 
great people and we’re going to help them.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed hope on Thursday that the U.S. will 
assist Russia in its efforts to get the conflicting parties to respect a 
ceasefire agreement that was brokered by Moscow on October 10.
U.S. -- U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with Azerbaijani Foreign 
Minister Ceyhun Bayramov to discuss the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, at the 
State Department in Washington, 
The U.S. Russia and France have been leading international efforts to resolve 
the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict in their capacity as co-chairs of the OSCE 
Minsk Group. They have repeatedly issued joint statements calling for an 
immediate end to the hostilities.
The hostilities continued unabated on Friday, with both sides reporting heavy 
fighting at various sections of the “line of contact” around Karabakh.
Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army said it continued to repel Azerbaijani attacks 
on its frontline positions south of the disputed region. The Defense Army 
released the names of 27 more Armenian soldier killed in action, raising to 924 
the total number of combat deaths within its ranks.
The Azerbaijani army has still not disclosed its combat casualties.
Nagorno-Karabakh - Firefighters try to extinguish fire in Stepanakert caused by 
shelling, .
There were also reports of continued shelling of civilian areas on either side 
of the “line of contact.”
In particular, Karabakh’s capital Stepanakert came under Azerbaijani rocket fire 
for the first time in four days. Local authorities said the rocket strike 
destroyed several buildings and shops and damaged a gas pipeline.
“The Defense Army will strike back shortly,” a Karabakh official said following 
the late-night shelling.
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.
 

FM Mnatsakanyan and US State Department’s Philip Reeker emphasize need to cease hostilities in NK

Save

Share

 16:25,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs Zohrab Mnatsakanyan had a meeting on October 22 with Philip Reeker, the US Assistant Secretary of State in the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs.

Mnatsakanyan mentioned that his visit is taking place during a difficult time for Armenia and the region. He said that Azerbaijan has unleashed a large-scale war against Artsakh, which is accompanied with deliberate targeting of the Artsakh peaceful population and civil infrastructure – constituting war crimes with their volume and essence – aimed at the extermination of the indigenous people of Artsakh.

Mnatsakanyan noted the fact that Turkey is directly involved in the Azeri aggression, manifested with both direct military participation and the transfer of foreign militant terrorists from the Middle East to Azerbaijan, and that it is a serious threat for regional security and peace.

Both sides emphasized the necessity for immediately bringing to life the agreements on cessation of hostilities. In this context the Armenian FM highlighted the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairing countries’ unity in this issue.

Mnatsakanyan reiterated Armenia’s commitment to the October 10 and 17 agreements and the establishment of a stable ceasefire observed with verification mechanisms.

Mnatsakanyan is scheduled to meet Secretary of State Mike Pompeo later in the day. 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

National Hero title recipient Azeri colonel killed in action, Baku confirms

Save

Share

 16:20,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani presidency has officially confirmed the death of Shukyur Hamidov, a Colonel of the Azerbaijani military who was killed in action in the attacks on Artsakh. His death was reported by the Azeri media on October 22, which said that the colonel, who held the title of National Hero of Azerbaijan, was killed in the Kashatagh region. The Azeri President Ilham Aliyev called the colonel’s family to convey condolences, his office said in a news release. 

Hamidov was bestowed with the National Hero title for his participation in the attacks on Artsakh in April 2016, when he served as the commander of the 706th brigade of the 2nd Army Corps of the Azeri Armed Forces.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Azerbaijani air force bombs town of Martakert in Artsakh

Save

Share

 17:30,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani military is bombarding the town of Martakert in Artsakh. The State Service of Emergency Situations of Artsakh said Azerbaijan has deployed air force in targeting the town.

“At midday, around 14:20, the Karegah village of Kashatagh region was bombarded by the Azeri armed forces from Grad multiple rocket launchers, and then they shelled the Karegah-Berdzor road. There are no victims among the peaceful population,” the service said adding that material damages have occurred.

“There are no military facilities anywhere around here. The Azerbaijani forces are currently again bombing Martakert. Their air force is deployed over the town,” the service said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Azerbaijani UAV destroyed in Armenia

Save

Share

 20:58,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS.  The air defense units of the Armed Forces of Armenia have destroyed an Azerbaijani UAV in the north-eastern part of Armenia, ARMENPRESS reports spokesperson of MoD Armenia Shushan Stepanyan wrote on her Facebook page.

The photos of the leftovers of the UAV show that it is a production of Azad Systems company, which is an Azerbaijani-Israeli joint company.

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1032572.html?fbclid=IwAR126ty5DpgYUWlDqc-dPbC6J9WX-KJ2ccbcclCQxEakwZw91CmBQw8lCuI



Armenian sides emphasize importance of ceasefire and verification mechanism- FM tells Deutsche Welle

Save

Share

 17:35,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Zohrab Mnatsakanyan gave an interview to the German Deutsche Welle over the ongoing large-scale aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan against the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), the MFA told Armenpress.

Here is the text of the full interview:

Deutsche Welle: There is currently fighting in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh which is governed by ethnic Armenians, but which is recognized as part of Azerbaijan by the international community. Hundreds have already been reported dead. You have been part of talks to broker two ceasefires in that regard. And yet the fighting continues. What responsibility does Armenia and the forces in the region which you back bear for the continued fighting?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: We have committed ourselves fully to the two statements: one in Moscow, the joint statement of the 10th of October, and the second one on the 17th of October, committed fully to respect the ceasefire, to go back to the negotiations, and to find a peaceful resolution to this conflict. We have been totally faithful. However, the Azerbaijani side has chosen the part of war. The two ceasefires have been violated right away after we have reached an agreement, and there has been no calm on the line of contact and throughout the territory where the conflict is taking place. So, we have issued a statement today, in which we have reiterated our full commitment to the agreements that we have reached and expressed in those two statements.

Deutsche Welle: Mr. Foreign Minister, you said that you are committed. But I would like to put it to you, because on Saturday the Azerbaijani side said that 14 people were killed, 14 people, in the city of Ganja, the country’s second largest city, in an overnight attack-missile by Armenia. You said that you are committed, what is your responsibility?  

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Now let me put it again in the context. On the 10th of October at 12 noon we were supposed to have a ceasefire. The Nagorno-Karabakh forces have been fully committed to this, we have been restrained, the shelling was continuing, the massive offensive have been continuing, the Armenian settlements in Nagorno-Karabakh have been under consistent shelling, air bombing, the rocket launchers, the UAVs have been pounding the towns and villages in Nagorno-Karabakh excessively. We have, by now, 38 dead amongst the civilians, we have 116 seriously wounded, we have over 8,000 infrastructure and property destroyed.

Deutsche Welle: You have casualties, the other side says that they have casualties. The Azerbaijani say that 60 people have been killed, 270 wounded since the fighting. So, I just like to ask you, because I am hearing from you: both sides are accusing each other, they say that you started it, you say that they started it. Either someone or one of you is lying here. It doesn’t bode well, does it, for two countries, who need to sit together and find a peaceful solution to the conflict.

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Excellent point you are making about the blame game. This is exactly this devious path that has been chosen to engage in the blame game and to continue with the attacks on the civilians, on the Nagorno-Karabakh consistently. We have been calling for the verification mechanisms for the ceasefire. If the Armenian sides – in Nagorno-Karabakh, in Armenia – are blamed in any way, then let’s go ahead, let’s do the verification mechanism and be done with it. However, Azerbaijan has been consistently avoiding that, consistently rejecting those proposals, because this is a very convenient way of deception and engaging us into this blame game, ensuring the international community that there is no way forward. 

Deutsche Welle: Right. Well, those accusations as we have been mentioning have been coming from both sides, Mr. Foreign Minister. So then, I would like to ask you the message, ultimately, that has been coming from your side. The message from the Armenian Prime Minister, he said the following in the days after the first ceasefire was agreed, and this is a quote: “At this decisive moment, we will not cave in, because this is a faithful war for our people,” he added to that, “we will fight till the end, and that end is called free and happy Nagorno-Karabakh.” I’ll put it to you, because, I mean, this was in the days after the first ceasefire was agreed and he is talking about fighting till the very end. Is this really a rhetoric that is supposed to support, build support for a ceasefire, build support for peace? 

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Look, when you have three and a half weeks, when your people are under such massive attack, when day after day, every day you have your people subjected to risks of existential threat, risks of existence on this earth, when you are fighting for your life, when you have the ceasefire violations consistently upon you, when you have this situation, obviously you are fighting for your life. Again, I am emphasizing this with full responsibility, the Armenian sides emphasize the importance of the ceasefire and the verification mechanism. I reiterate strongly the commitment of Armenia to respect the ceasefire, to respect the commitments we have undertaken on the 10th of October and the 17th of October. The Nagorno-Karabakh has also reiterated its support to that. But sitting back and waiting when you are killed, your family is killed, your property is destroyed… You have to understand this is a fight for existential existence. This is everything that this conflict is about. I want to come back to the very important question that you also raised and that is the question of the peaceful resolution. 

Deutsche Welle: Absolutely and we are certainly going to talk about that. But before we head there, I would just like to put it to you once more: Russia, your partner, with whom you have a defense deal, who has been working very hard at brokering ceasefire agreements; the Foreign Minister of theirs, Sergey Lavrov reportedly told you to “halt provocative war-like rhetoric.” So, I would just like to ask you, once again, to give you an opportunity. It seems as if you are not signaling that you are serious about peace, about these negotiations with this type of rhetoric. Will you take responsibility for that?  

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Look, so far as the rhetoric is concerned, we have been dealing with a rhetoric which is based on the hatred of Armenians, on the encouragement to kill Armenians. We have today cases of beheadings and mutilations of our compatriots in Nagorno-Karabakh, fueled by this rhetoric. This is not a new thing. This has been happening for a very long time. We have cases of glorification of murderers of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh. What I want to come back to, is that I agree very much the rhetoric doesn’t help. The rhetoric is fueling poison into this. And the peaceful resolution has absolutely no alternative. This is what we have been so consistent about. When it comes to peaceful resolution, we have been working very consistently and we have been ever advocating for a peace resolution of this, on the basis of such an arrangement, in which the interests of all the parties are taken into account. 

Deutsche Welle: So, you acknowledge that the rhetoric is not helpful, and that you want to pursue a peaceful solution. Then therefore, I would like to ask you, in that context, let’s talk about how we got here. And I would like to go back to more than a year ago. For months, the tension has, in fact, been ratcheted up, and I’d like to go back to something that your Prime Minister said. This was more than a year ago. He travelled to Nagorno-Karabakh, a region which is disputed, we have to mention, and called for the reunification of Armenia with Karabakh. He said the following: “Nagorno-Karabakh is Armenia, and that is that”. He also, repeatedly, led the crowd enchant – “unification”, the nationalist slogan that gained popularity in the 1980s and the 1990s, as Armenians fought for Karabakh to break away from Azerbaijan. Do you acknowledge that more than a year ago this was a clear provocation of the other side. If you want peace, why would the Prime Minister travel to Nagorno-Karabakh and say that?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Now, let me come back again to that very point that the question about Nagorno-Karabakh is the question of their existence, the physical threat that they have been confronting over this many-many years. When the Prime Minister in Armenia was saying this, he was referring specifically to the responsibility of Armenia as the sole guarantor for the physical security of our compatriots, the sole guarantor to look after that security for our compatriots. They defend themselves, but there is no other guarantee apart from Armenia. The Prime Minister, in fact, has been very consistent in his specific approaches concerning the resolution of the conflict. The Prime Minister, in that very same speech, was referring to the negotiating process and repeating the very basic approaches that Armenia has been promoting – a compromise-based solution, which means the interests of all the parties in that very same speech. However, what we have been dealing with is this deliberate taking out of context of the statement of the Prime Minister without regard to all other things he has been saying over there and most of the time now. 

Deutsche Welle: This comment, in particular, came from your Prime Minister. We’re talking a lot about the language and the rhetoric, and I’d also like to look at the actions that you have been taking. There is a third road, currently, a plan to be constructed through disputed territory from Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh. A number of EU parliamentary committees have condemned the move. This is what they say: “The decision to build this highway has been taken without the consent of the competent authorities in Azerbaijan in violation of international law.” So these are not just words here, these are real concrete actions on the part of Armenia and an Armenian supported government in the region. These provocations are not just words, they’re actions, aren’t they? 

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Now, let’s take another look at it. Let’s look at it through another prism. For 30 years now, Azerbaijan has been taking every effort to isolate Nagorno-Karabakh from this world, to isolate any link of Nagorno-Karabakh people from anyone outside their land, blocking anything that might be, you know, referring to the normal life in Nagorno-Karabakh, banning every action that the international community might take to, you know, for the people in Nagorno-Karabakh to have a normal life. Now, Nagorno-Karabakh is a land in which people are living. Look, now, we have a situation where 90,000 people are displaced, 8,000 property and infrastructure is destroyed. There is a humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, and what are we having: are we going to leave them alone? Are we going to disregard the lives of our people, our compatriots? Are these lives less important?

Deutsche Welle: But that wasn’t my question, Mr. Foreign Minister. My question was – do you acknowledge that it is a provocative action that you are taking in the region, that the other side interprets as a provocative action?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Excuse me, I’m saying this again. What is not provocative: letting our people strangle in Nagorno-Karabakh? Letting our people in isolation in Nagorno-Karabakh? They are less important than any other people anywhere in the world? Excuse me, I cannot agree with this, I will never agree with this. Our people will not be strangled. They are people like any other people. And this was exactly the policy towards Nagorno-Karabakh, to degrade them, to deny them the right to live freely in dignity, to live in safety, and to live in security. And now you are telling me that what we are doing to make sure that they have that opportunity to live a normal life is a provocative action. I cannot agree with it.

Deutsche Welle: Absolutely not. I’m just asking you about a road that you’re planning to build in the region that the other side sees as a provocation, Mr. Foreign Minister. Another action that I would like to also ask you about, that has also been seen as a provocation from the other side is the following: the fact that there was an election that was held recently, the following transpired in relation to that: at the inauguration in the city of Shushi, which happened to have been overwhelmingly populated by Azerbaijanis prior to the 1992-1994 war, and a key symbol of Azerbaijan’s claim to the territory, it aroused, apparently, a considerable anger in Azerbaijan, which was then added to the fact that your Prime Minister had presence at the inauguration. Now, the European Union has acknowledged that this election was indeed not valid under legal international standards. Do you acknowledge that this was also provocative?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Again, the European Union didn’t put it in exactly that way. The European Union acknowledged that Nagorno-Karabakh is a community of people who have been organizing their life in democratic way…

Deutsche Welle: They said in view of the so-called presidential and parliamentary elections in Nagorno-Karabakh, they reiterated that it does not recognize the constitutional and legal framework.

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Exactly, the constitutional and legal framework, however, they do not deny for the people of Nagorno-Karabakh to organize their life in a democratic way: to elect their representatives, to elect their representatives by way of a democratic method. And the blames coming out from Azerbaijan are preposterous, to say the least, in a society which has known nothing but one family rule since the 1990s. And talking about democratic process and denying our people the democratic process, and imposing their methods on the people of Nagorno-Karabakh is not going to work.

Deutsche Welle: I’d also like to ask you, because we’ve talked so much about peace here. I’d like to ask you about where that process stands and your role in all of that. Because the international community has really been calling on you for leadership and compromise on this issue. You say that you are working with the OSCE Minsk Group, which has been charged with helping to resolve the conflict. But you can even manage to take action on some of the basic principles that the Group put forward more than a decade ago, including returning territories, seven districts, which are surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, to Azerbaijan. So I’d like to put it to you – is territory more important to you than peace?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: What is most important to us is this, the free life in dignity, in safety and security for our people in Nagorno-Karabakh. Therefore what is most important for us is the status of Nagorno-Karabakh and the security of Nagorno-Karabakh. And this has been a very consistent position of Armenia, and we continue to work on this basis, and we do have the necessary parameters to work out that compromise in which our interests are met, while at the same time in a measurable balance, that the interests of the other party are also met. It is not territories that are more important for us, this devastation, this consistent pounding, air bombing and shelling that these people are going through for three and a half weeks, people are living in shelters, this is happening at a time when COVID19 is still around in the world, the least that Azerbaijan could care about, is about these things. They apparently don’t care about the lives of their own people, they are overwhelmed with this choice of a war.

Deutsche Welle: Back to that, and I’d like to ask you, because the former US Ambassador to Armenia, Richard Mills, I mean, you say that you are supporting peace in the region, he assessed the situation as follows upon his departure from the country in 2018. He said that it was disturbing how few Armenians were willing to make concessions to Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, he has quoted the saying: “harsh reality is that any settlement is going to require the return of some portion of the occupied territories.” He doesn’t seem to believe that you’re serious about it.

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Well, I do not agree with the assessment, I do not agree with the assessment of Richard Mills. I would again reiterate and retaliate in saying that I haven’t seen any sign of compromise coming out from Azerbaijan. What we have been consistently seeing is the maximalism and this warmongering hate-infused rhetoric and no willingness to compromise on the part of Azerbaijan. But let me put that aside, let me go back again to the question of the compromise. For over these past two years, our government has been fully committed to move forward with the peace process.

Deutsche Welle: Right. So, then let me ask you. Because, when your government took power back in 2018, it was the so-called Velvet Revolution, there was so much hope for a thaw in the conflict. And this is how the International Crisis Group assesses the situation: they say that progress seemed palpable; they say that a new government was ready to see a compromise solution, and that it appeared that the government of Azerbaijan also reciprocated. But then, they cited this rhetoric, this tit-for-tat rhetoric that we talked about earlier in our conversation. And so I’d like to put it to you. The bloodshed, the toxic rhetoric from both sides: has it limited your capacity to reach a deal, and did you miss an opportunity to seize on that initial hope, did you miss your window, did you overplay your hand? 

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: You know, I think it’s a very interesting point you are raising. Look, a part of our work, over the past two years, within this the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship, was about creating an environment which is conducive to peace. And we have invested a very good effort in that, together by the way. Together with Azerbaijan and with Nagorno-Karabakh, we have been working towards such steps, which would somehow defuse, somehow reduce that tension and that mutual mistrust. We have had a very interesting project implemented in the Autumn of 2019, when we exchanged journalists traveling to Baku, to Yerevan, and to Stepanakert. This was a very modest but very important step, it didn’t fall apart. And we had full confidence, and we had very good understanding on the Armenian side that, you know, we have to invest effort in creating an environment conducive to peace. Now what we see is that it was a futile effort, and it is very very bad. Now so far as the opportunities are concerned,  it is our job, it is our responsibility never to give up, to use every opportunity, every window, no matter how narrow it is, every corridor to walk, because this is a responsibility, because this is about the lives of our people. And we care about the lives of our people, we care about every single life. And now we have so many, so many casualties. I hope that the Azerbaijani side also has such a sense of responsibility. We would need to see that demonstrated. And that demonstration would be in this cessation of hostilities, ceasefire, the verification, and move on with a peace process. 

Deutsche Welle: And as each side has a similar message to what you have demonstrated and as each side was waiting to see movements from both sides, Mr. Foreign Minister, I’d like to just put it into the bigger regional picture, because Turkey, a NATO ally, is of course, backing Azerbaijan quite forcefully, we have to mention, and pushing for a military solution here. You have a defence deal with Russia, as we know, but so far they have been relatively neutral. Are you short on friends right now?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: We are never short on friends. But the very important point you raised is about the major spoiler: Turkey. Turkey has been the destabilizing force in this situation. We have been warning about this consistently, we have been seeing this destabilizing aggressive policies in every direction of the neighborhood of Turkey: East Meditteranean, North Africa, Middle East, and we were absolutely cognizant about the risks of exporting this destabilizing policies in our region. We have been seeing the signs of it, when there was a transfer of military equipment to Azerbaijan, when there was a transfer of foreign terrorist fighters recruited in the parts of Syria controlled by Turkey, and from Libya transported to Azerbaijan. And what Azerbaijan has done is absolutely crazy. It is absolutely crazy that Azerbaijan today is a terrorist hub. 

Deutsche Welle: But Mr. Foreign Minister my question to you is about whether you see the risk of being isolated in the region, because the European Council and foreign relations, there was an assessment in the following way: they say that Russia’s rather neutral reaction to recent clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan reflects exacerbation with its ally’s inflexibility in negotiations. There is a perception in Moscow that in the last two decades the balance of power has shifted in favour of Azerbaijan, and that instead of hearing to a more or less acceptable deal, Armenia has been unreasonable and uncompromising. Russia does not want to pick up the geopolitical tap for that. Are you afraid of being isolated?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: That is an assessment that I wouldn’t agree with. Look, we have the OSCE Minsk group Co-Chairmanship, of which Russia is a responsible member. We have our allied relations with Russia, and we have many other partnerships in the world. Now, the point here is that we have been consistent about the cessation of hostilities and consistent about the work that has been done personally by President Putin on the 10th of October, personally by President Macron on the 17th of October. This has to happen. So intransigence of Armenia is not something I can agree with. The defence of the Armenian population in Nagorno-Karabakh, by the Karabakh forces and the support of Armenia, is something that is our saying is about basic defense of human lives in Nagorno-Karabakh. But again how many times do I have to say, there is no alternative to the peaceful resolution.

Deutsche Welle: Okay, we have to leave it there. Thank you so much, Armenian Foreign Minister, Zohrab Mnatsakanyan, for joining us in the Conflict Zone. 

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Thank you very much.

Azerbaijan bombing Artsakh’s Stepanakert – DEVELOPING

Azerbaijan bombing Artsakh’s Stepanakert – DEVELOPING

Save

Share

 21:03,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Air raid siren has been activated in Stepanakert, the correspondent of ARMENPRESS reports.

The Armenian United Information Center informs that Azerbaijan is bombing Martuni city.

21:04 – Azerbaijan strikes Stepanakert.

21:09  – The correspondent of Armeniapress reports that nearly 8 bombs reached Stepanakert.

21:22 – The correspondent of ARMENPRESS informs that air raid siren is deactivated in Stepanaert.

21:24 – ”A while ago Azerbaijan fired a number of powerful missiles against Stepanakert’s residential buildings. There is still no information about casualties. Is this the answer of the discussions mediated by State Secretary Pompeo?”, Artsakh’s Human Right Defender wrote in his Twitter micro blog.

21:38 – Air raid siren again activated in Stepanakert

21:49 – The correspondent of ARMENPRESS reports that air raid siren is again deactivated.

22:08 – Stepankert bombing results in a fire

22:23 – Gas pipe damaged as a result of the bombing

[see video]


Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 23-10-20

Save

Share

 17:39,

YEREVAN, 23 OCTOBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 23 October, USD exchange rate down by 0.30 drams to 494.01 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 0.48 drams to 585.25 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.05 drams to 6.47 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 0.59 drams to 646.41 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 387.04 drams to 30192.39 drams. Silver price down by 1.91 drams to 395.72 drams. Platinum price down by 389.81 drams to 13818.03 drams.

U.S. Embassy in Turkey warns its citizens of kidnapping and terrorism risks

Save

Share

 18:02,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Embassy in Turkey has warned its citizens and foreigners of possible kidnapping or terrorist attacks, ARMENPRESS was informed from the statement issued by the Embassy.

‘’ The U.S. Mission in Turkey has received credible reports of potential terrorist attacks and kidnappings against U.S. citizens and foreign nationals in Istanbul, including against the U.S. Consulate General, as well as potentially other locations in Turkey.  U.S. citizens are advised to exercise heightened caution in locations where Americans or foreigners may gather, including large office buildings or shopping malls.

All American Citizen and visa services at U.S. Mission in Turkey’s facilities (including U.S. Embassy-Ankara, U.S. Consulate General-Istanbul, U.S. Consulate-Adana, and the U.S. Consular Agency-Izmir) will be temporarily suspended.   Individuals with scheduled appointments will be notified by email with instructions on how to reschedule their appointments”, reads the statement.