Turkish press: Turkish VP slams Armenian attack on Azerbaijani troops – Turkey News

Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay on July 13 strongly condemned a deadly weekend attack by Armenian armed forces on Azerbaijani troops.

“The attack by Armenia against friend and brother Azerbaijan is unacceptable. I strongly condemn it,” Oktay said on Twitter with the hashtag #SeninleyizAzerbaycan, meaning “We stand with you Azerbaijan.”

“I wish Allah’s mercy on our martyred Azerbaijani brothers,” he added.

Meanwhile, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu posted a video of Azerbaijan’s National Anthem also with the hashtag “We stand with you Azerbaijan.

Four Azerbaijani soldiers were martyred and four others injured in a border clash with Armenian troops on Sunday.

Upper Karabakh, or Nagorno-Karabakh, an internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan, has been illegally occupied since 1991 through Armenian military aggression.

7 Azerbaijani soldiers killed in clashes with Armenia

Meanwhile, seven Azerbaijani soldiers, including one major general, have been killed in border clashes with Armenian troops, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said on July 14. 

Kerim Veliyev, deputy defense minister, said many Armenian army military vehicles and positions have been destroyed in two days of clashes.

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On the basis of satellite photos, the Azerbaijani village of Dondar Ghuschu in the Tovuz region, located about 10 km from the front line, is presented, surrounded by artillery battery positions.


This was reported by the RzmInfo specialized website, the information of which was posted on its page by the spokesperson of the Defense Minister, Shushan Stepanyan. 


The Azerbaijani side surrounded its own population with artillery batteries, making it a target, and complains that fire was fired in that direction from the RA Armed Forces.

Asbarez: In Memory of Our Dear Father, Dr. Michael G. Mensoian

July 14,  2020

Dr. Michael Mensoian

BY CHRISTOPHER MENSOIAN AND MARTHA MENSOIAN

The following eulogy by Christopher Mensoian and Martha Mensoian was read during their father’s funeral services on July 10 at St. Stephen’s Armenian Apostolic Church in Watertown, Mass.

Dr. Michael G. Mensoian was born on June 24, 1927, in Providence, Rhode Island, to Michael George Mensoian, Sr., originally of Kesrig, a village outside of Kharpert, and Alice Mensoian (née Ogassian), originally from Massachusetts, whose parents had emigrated from the Adana region in the mid-1890s. Despite growing up during the Great Depression and losing his father at the age of seven, our dad was an eternal optimist, a source of great positivity and strength, and had a profound influence on the countless lives he touched.

He was a WWII veteran, leaving high school early at age 17 to enlist in the United States Navy to fight for his country, serving on the Destroyer USS Lyman K. Swenson. As the man of the house, he would send money and letters home to his mother and sister while his naval assignments took him to distant places in the Far East. One of our favorite photos is of our 17 year-old dad dressed in his white Navy uniform, proudly standing on the deck of the USS Lyman K. Swenson with Shanghai harbor behind him, smiling with a pipe in his mouth and a remarkable, meaningful, long life ahead of him.

When he returned home from WWII, he enrolled at Clark University to study geography, where he graduated in 1949. He went on to earn a number of graduate degrees, including three master’s degrees, a PhD, and a JD. Our dad always stressed the value of education and spoke about the importance of learning and being a lifelong student.

Our dad met the love of his life, our mom, Sirvart Gregorian, at an Armenian Students’ Association social while he was a professor at Boston State College. She was a registered nurse just down the street at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. The two married on July 5, 1969 and spent a long and happy life together until our mother’s untimely passing in 2003.

He became chair of the geography department at Boston State College, which later merged with the University of Massachusetts at Boston in 1982. He went on to lead the geography department at UMass Boston, eventually retiring as Professor Emeritus in Middle East and Political Geography. Our dad continued to teach courses, often standing and lecturing for three hours at a time, well into his eighties. He loved teaching, being in an academic environment, and spending his time discussing Armenian issues with people both young and old, all of which gave him so much energy.

The late Dr. Michael G. Mensoian pictured with his children Martha and Christopher

In addition to his day job as a professor, our dad was a true renaissance man. He was incredibly knowledgeable about a wide variety of subjects and the most handy person we ever knew. He designed and built his family home in Westwood, as well as an addition to our home in Newton, and more recently, at the age of 92, designed and constructed a massive mobile surface on which he erected his electric train set and stored train and track parts.

He was actively involved in various Armenian organizations, including the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) and the Armenian Relief Society (ARS), and served on the Board of Trustees of the Armenian Cultural and Educational Center (ACEC) and Armenian Students’ Association (ASA). Our dad also was a longtime contributor for his beloved newspaper, The Armenian Weekly. Throughout the years, he published at least 88 articles, and just recently, completed his last article which will hopefully be published posthumously.

Anyone who was fortunate enough to have met our dad knew that he was full of passion and energy and had a love for life, Armenian causes, and most of all, his family. He traveled to Armenia and Artsakh multiple times, most recently in 2019 at the age of 92.

One of his proudest moments was on July 16, 2016, when he became a citizen of the Republic of Armenia at the age of 89. In a 2016 article for the Armenian Weekly he wrote: “I am not the quintessential Armenian, yet my feeling Armenian has been part of my essence since childhood. Dual citizenship… had a very personal meaning, which took hold after my first visit to Armenia some years ago. Not only was it motivated by a desire to connect with my dad’s past, but by my firm belief that it was an important way for us in the Diaspora to convey our faith in Armenia and its people.”

A few weeks ago, our dad turned 93. As many of you know, he remained highly active until his injury this past Sunday, July 5th (our parents’ wedding anniversary), doing one of the things he loved most: working in the backyard. Up until that day, he was still driving his car, self-sufficiently living in his home in Newton, working on his train set, continuing to donate his time and energy to a number of Armenian organizations, writing for the Armenian Weekly, and perhaps most precious to him, spending time with his family.

His heart was so strong that even after suffering an aortic dissection on Sunday, which, we were told, would cause him to pass on that day, he confounded doctors by regaining consciousness late Sunday evening and spending the next day and a half alert and speaking with his children, who stayed by his side the entire time.

He was the strongest, wisest, kindest, most caring father that we could have ever hoped for. He was the consummate role model, an eternal optimist, and a fountain of positivity and strength, who inspired our family and the countless others with whom he came into contact. Words cannot express how much we loved our dad and how much he meant to us. His passing leaves a massive void in our hearts. We will miss him dearly and will love and honor him forever through our actions going forward.

Asbarez: ANCA’s New FrontRunner Program Scales Up Pro-Armenian Social Media Advocacy

July 14,  2020

Visit Frontrunner.anca.org/register to sign up to be an ANCA FrontRunner and advance ANCA advocacy priorities on social media

Frontrunner.anca.org is the newest ANCA online action tool to advance shared community priorities

WASHINGTON—The Armenian National Committee of America has launched the innovative FrontRunner program, making it easier than ever for advocates to share timely, high-impact pro-Armenian messages among their friends and supporters on their favorite social media platforms.

“Today’s social media landscape is a modern-day battleground for the Armenian Cause, a dynamic arena in which a small, devoted core of on-line voices can drive the constructive pro-Armenian conversations that we need to see if we’re to win new hearts and minds for Armenia and Artsakh,” said ANCA Information Technologies Director Nerses Semerjian, who designed the unique program.  “FrontRunner scales up the ANCA’s online presence by making it easier than ever to ensure friends and family learn about our latest initiatives, take action to advance community priorities, and help expand the ANCA’s presence across social media.”

ANCA FrontRunner members serve as the organization’s online ambassadors, sharing spotlighted ANCA social media posts.  Registered participants receive an ANCA text on the weekdays of their choice, which will direct them to the highest-priority ANCA posts of the day on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.  Participants can choose to like, share, or comment on the posts or explore other ANCA targeted materials.

ANCA Leo Sarkisian Program alumna Victoria Messikian (Class of 2018) offers this helpful video to assist in the ANCA FrontRunner sign up process.

Signing up takes less than 60 seconds, helping out each week involves just a few minutes, and participants can opt-out at any time.  Register now.

The ANCA FrontRunner Program is the latest in a growing suite of ANCA online activism tools launched under Semerjian’s direction since 2015, starting with the March to Justice platform, which serves as the ANCA’s primary online outreach portal to elected officials, decision-makers, and media. The ANCA Rapid Responder Program was launched soon thereafter, offering advocates a simple way to ensure their voices are the first to the heard on vital issues from Artsakh security to Armenia development and Armenian Genocide justice. Now, over 10,000 strong, the Rapid Responder Program has made an impact on the federal, state, and local levels ensuring the speedy delivery of millions of messages, and leading to the passage of landmark legislation. In 2017, the ANCA launched its Quick Connect system, which directly connects community members by phone with their U.S. legislators to advance Armenian American advocacy priorities.

Members of Congress Condemn Azerbaijan’s Aggression Against Armenia

July 14,  2020

Congressional leaders raise alarm bells about Azerbaijan’s latest attacks against Armenia. Senator Ed Markey (D-MA), Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA), and Rep. TJ Cox (D-CA) have spoken out as Congressional concerns continue to grow.

As Congressional Opposition to Aliyev Grows, ANCA Calls on Lawmakers to Take Action in Face of Azerbaijan’s Worst Ceasefire Violations Since the April 2016 4-Day War

WASHINGTON—Congressional condemnation of Azerbaijan’s latest attack against Armenia continued to grow today, as reports emerged from the region of more than 15 casualties during the worst cease-fire violation since the April, 2016 Azerbaijani incursion against the Republic of Artsakh, reported the Armenian National Committee of America.

“Azerbaijan is once again attempting to start a war with Armenia,” said Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone (D-NJ). “Azerbaijan’s constant use of caustic rhetoric aimed at Armenia and Artsakh are part of a concerted effort to provoke another conflict.”

Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) shared his support for Armenia’s right to territorial integrity and Artsakh’s calls for self-determination.  “I stand with Armenia as they protect their territorial integrity. Azerbaijan and Turkey must respect the Armenian/Azeri border, respect the aspirations of the Armenian people of Nagorno Karabakh, and should deescalate this conflict immediately,” stated Sen. Markey.

House Intelligence Committee Chair Adam Schiff (D-CA) was the first U.S. House member to condemn Azerbaijan’s attack.

“I am very concerned by the recent provocative and destabilizing actions taken by Azerbaijan in recent days along the Armenian border, including the shelling of Armenian soldiers,” stated Rep. Schiff.

“These acts risk the lives of soldiers and civilians and raise the danger of a spiraling conflict that could be devastating to the region, particularly in the midst of a global pandemic. These actions must also be viewed in context of Azerbaijan’s consistently bellicose rhetoric towards Armenia and Artsakh, and its refusal to allow international monitoring of their borders. I urge the State Department to make clear to all parties the need for restraint and diplomacy, and reduced tensions,” concluded Rep. Schiff.
Central California Congressman TJ Cox (D-CA) noted “Azerbaijan’s recent attack on the region of Tavush, Armenia is a violation of the ceasefire agreement between the nations, as well as a result of Azerbaijan’s refusal to allow international monitoring of their borders. The US must take a firm stance in condemning this threat to peace.”  Rep. Cox cited his support for an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act, led by Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA), that would prohibit funds from being used to send defense articles or services to Azerbaijan.

Senior House Foreign Affairs Committee Member Brad Sherman (D-CA) noted, “I am very concerned by Azerbaijan’s provocations along the #Armenian border. Such actions put the lives of soldiers and civilians at risk. Unfortunately, these actions do not come as a surprise given Azerbaijan’s increasingly bellicose rhetoric towards Armenia & #Artsakh.”

“The ANCA welcomes these powerful Congressional condemnations of Azerbaijan’s attack,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian, “We thank each of these Senate and House leaders and look forward to supporting legislative opportunities in the coming days and weeks to more forcefully challenge Baku’s escalating aggression.”

The ANCA has issued a nationwide action alert calling on Congress to condemn Azerbaijan’s latest attacks and to support pro-peace initiatives in the region including the enactment of the Royce-Engel proposals (removal of snipers from the line of contact, increased deployment of OSCE monitors, and the placement of gunfire-locator mechanisms to identify the aggressors in the conflict).  Armenia and Artsakh have both agreed to the Royce-Engel measures; Azerbaijan remains the only obstacle to their implementation.  The ANCA alert also calls for continued U.S. aid to the Republic of Artsakh to fund life-saving de-mining programs carried out by The HALO Trust.  Take action. anca.org/alert

Watch a video action appeal by ANCA Leo Sarkisian Intern Aram Harumi below.

Since July 12, Azerbaijan has launched a series of cross-border attacks against Armenia’s northern Tavush region, resulting in 16 casualties to date, including Major Garush Hambardzumyan, Captain Sos Elbakyan, and Junior Sergeants Smbat Gabrielyan and Grisha Matevosyan from the Armenian Armed Forces.  While no Armenian civilian casualties have been reported, though targets have included Tavush Textile, a factory that produces face coverings used during COVID-19 pandemic, forcing its closure to ensure the safety of its workers.

Just days prior to the attack, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev called ongoing Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group moderated peace talks regarding Artsakh “meaningless” and threatened to resolve the issue militarily.  The Azerbaijani Government has reportedly been fomenting protests in Baku, where sporadic angry mobs have urged military attacks against Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, and the Republic of Artsakh’s second-largest city, Shushi.

Asbarez: Amazon Halts Sale of Armenian Genocide Denial Book

July 14,  2020

Amazon removed “Armenian Genocide, A Big Lie” for denying Genocide

BY SHUNT JARCHAFJIAN

In recent weeks we have seen and heard much about the need to address the historical vestiges of tyranny. For some it might mean taking down statues of confederate leaders, the renaming of sports franchises, or the rebranding of Aunt Jemima pancake syrup. I for one decided to view this issue from the perspective of an Armenian. It meant addressing the misinformation campaigns run by the governments of Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Armenian Genocide denial comes in many forms. From chartered planes flying banners with denialist statements over our yearly protest at the Turkish Embassy to junk websites spewing the denialist rhetoric of the republic of turkey. One of the most dangerous forms of genocide denial is when we see it surface in academia.

Every year the government of Turkey spends millions of dollars on a failed campaign to deny the Armenian genocide. The dollars are funneled through think tanks, lobbyists, marketing groups, and institutions that fund academics. Its no secret that Turkey spent millions to fund “the Institute of Turkish Studies” to act as an academic front for the Turkish state.

Funding academia to rewrite and revise history is a sad attempt to hide the Republic of Turkey’s own culpability. Funding Turkish studies chairs at American universities and issuing grants to “historians” serves one purpose only, to buy history. There are certain “academics” who have earned a name for themselves by catering to the Turkish state’s denialist agenda by publishing “history” books that aim to undermine genocide recognition efforts and promote hate.

Interestingly enough, this problem is not one unique to Armenians. I recently read an article in the Jewish Chronicle about how Jewish interest groups pressured Amazon to remove literature that denied the holocaust.

The books referenced in the article were removed, but Amazon did not make an official statement acknowledging the removal.

I was curious to see if literature denying the Armenian Genocide was being sold on Amazon.  Usually such books have vague and misleading titles such as “Armenian history and the question of genocide,” or “The story behind Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story.” I didn’t need to search much until I stumbled upon the most blatant of all genocide denial books, Armenian Genocide, A Big Lie” by Dr. A.N. Cora.

Here it was, fictitious denialist propaganda, being sold by the world’s largest bookseller, right alongside books written by reputable historians. It should be a crime to cut a tree to print this garbage.

Searching for literature on the topic of the Armenian Genocide such not yield fiction published by genocide deniers.

On June 12th I sent an email to Jeff Bezos that read in part:

When searching for literature on the Armenian Genocide, Amazon.com search results yield many books authored by Genocide denialists and historical revisionist who wish to peddle hate-inspiring propaganda. Every day that this literature is available and promoted by Amazon.com is another day that Amazon is profiting from the trade in titles promoting Genocide denial and Anti-Armenian conspiracies and myths.

The Armenian Genocide is thoroughly researched and well-documented. Denying it is simply offensive and serves to kindle hate and anti-Armenian sentiments.

Amazon has policies to address offensive material and products that promote, incite, or glorify hate or violence towards any person or group.

Many authors of hate literature use misleading and deceptive titles, intentionally making it harder to separate from honest scholarly works. Those who wish to inflict pain on the survivors of genocide do not want to see any road blocks to the dissemination of hate literature.

I hope Amazon holds true to its stated principles and makes the appropriate changes necessary to address this issue. Now more than ever we must come together and better understand each other as human beings, and there is no substitute for having a foundation of knowledge based on Truth”

I soon received the following reply from someone on the Tech Support Executive Customer Relations team: “Jeff Bezos received your email and I’m responding on his behalf.”

About a week later the title was no longer listed on Amazon.

Unlike the article In the Jewish Chronicle, where Amazon did not acknowledge that it had removed the title, Amazon wrote back on June 30th stating:

“Thank you for bringing this matter to our attention and your patience while we further reviewed this title.

The book you mentioned, “The Armenian Genocide, A Big Lie” by Dr. A.N. Cora, has been removed from our website.

If there are any other specific titles you would like us to review, please reply to this email.

Thanks for choosing Amazon.”

I would like to praise Amazon in taking quick action to address the issue. I hope that they will take similar action on other titles that I have recommended for review.

I call on my compatriots to join in the fight for truth and justice. Our cause is not one championed by others. The Armenian Cause needs a new generation of guardians. We must strengthen the progress made by past generations and ensure that we do not lose ground in our fight against crimes against humanity. One person and a few emails can make a difference. There are many other fronts to this battle, from combating the destruction of our cemeteries and khachkars in Nakhichevan, to ensuring that consumers make informed decisions when confronted by Turkish products. The purchase of these products serves to enrich the Republic of Turkey and enable it to prolong its occupation of Western Armenia and its centuries long destruction of our cultural heritage. Lamenting about injustice is just as simple as taking action, so instead of just complaining, take action next time your confronted by something on the internet or in your local grocery store.

U.S. House to Consider Measures Blocking Transfer of Defense Articles to Azerbaijan

July 14,  2020

Representatives Pallone and Sherman are leading two amendments to the FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act which would limit U.S. defense transfers to Azerbaijan.

Key Votes to Take Place Monday July 20, in Wake of Deadliest Azerbaijani Attacks since 2016

WASHINGTON—In the wake of the worst Azerbaijani cross-border attacks against Armenia in years, the U.S. House of Representatives is set to consider a number of pro-peace amendments to a major Pentagon authorization bill, including one that would block U.S. defense transfers to Azerbaijan, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

“With Azerbaijan escalating its cross-border attack, these amendments offer Congress the opportunity to confront and constrain Aliyev’s aggression,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “As we approach Monday’s vote on these measures, we ask – with all urgency – that our friends and supporters call on their U.S. Representative to vote yes on the Sherman and Pallone amendments to the National Defense Authorization Act.”

Amendment #66 to the Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 6395), offered by Congressman Brad Sherman (D-CA), would mandate that “no funds authorized by this bill can be used to transfer defense articles or services to Azerbaijan unless the President certifies to Congress that the transfer of such defense articles or services does not threaten civil aviation.” The government of Azerbaijan has issued a standing threat to shoot down any civilian airplanes traveling between Armenia and Artsakh’s Stepanakert airport. This measure is cosponsored by Reps. Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Jackie Speier (D-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA), and TJ Cox (D-CA)

Amendment #397, spearheaded by Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ) would require that the Defense Department submit a report to Congress on a U.S. military aid program (known as Section 333) that has sent over $120 million worth of defense assistance to Azerbaijan over the past several years. Congressman Pallone announced his amendment during a video interview with ANCA Government Affairs Director Tereza Yerimyan earlier today. This measure is cosponsored by Reps. Sherman, Speier, and Schiff.

House votes are expected on these amendments as early as the morning of Monday, July 20th.

To call on your U.S. Representatives to support the Sherman and Pallone amendments, visit anca.org/alert.

Since July 12, Azerbaijan has launched a series of cross-border attacks against Armenia’s northern Tavush region, resulting in 16 casualties to date, including Major Garush Hambardzumyan, Captain Sos Elbakyan, and Junior Sergeants Smbat Gabrielyan and Grisha Matevosyan from the Armenian Armed Forces.  While no Armenian civilian casualties have been reported, targets have included Tavush Textile, a factory which produced face coverings used during COVID-19 pandemic, forcing its closure to ensure the safety of its workers.

Just days prior to the attack, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev called ongoing Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group moderated peace talks regarding Artsakh “meaningless” and threatened to resolve the issue militarily.  The Azerbaijani Government has reportedly been fomenting protests in Baku, where sporadic angry mobs have urged military attacks against Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, and the Republic of Artsakh’s second-largest city, Shushi.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/14/2020

                                        Tuesday, 
Iran Offers To Ease Armenian-Azeri Tensions
Russia-- Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif speaks during a news 
conference following a meeting with his Russian counterpart in Moscow, June 16, 
2020
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif telephoned his Armenian and 
Azerbaijani counterparts on Tuesday to discuss the latest ceasefire violations 
on the border between Iran’s two South Caucasus neighbors.
The official Iranian news agency IRNA said Zarif urged Armenia and Azerbaijan to 
“exercise restraint” and restart talks on a peaceful resolution of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. He also expressed Iran’s readiness to help defuse 
tensions between the conflicting parties.
The Iranian Foreign Ministry made a similar statement earlier in the day.
“We believe these two neighboring countries should resolve their difference 
peacefully, and the Islamic Republic of Iran has always announced its readiness 
to help settle this row,” a ministry spokesman said, according to another 
Iranian news agency, ISNA.
During the separate phone conversations, Foreign Ministers Zohrab Mnatsakanian 
of Armenia and Elmar Mammadyarov of Azerbaijan briefed Zarif on the situation on 
the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Each conflicting side again blamed the other 
for heavy fighting that broke out there on Sunday.
According to the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, Zarif told Mammadyarov that 
Tehran stands ready to facilitate a Karabakh settlement.
International efforts to end the conflict have long been spearheaded by the 
Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe co-headed 
by the United States, Russia and France.
Armenian Government Cautiously Upbeat On Curbing COVID-19
        • Nane Sahakian
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia -- Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian speaks in the National Assembly, 
Yerevan, .
The Armenia government hopes to significantly reduce the daily number of new 
coronavirus cases by September and reopen schools as a result, according to 
Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian.
Speaking in the parliament on Monday, Avinian said Armenia’s COVID-19 infection 
rate has already fallen in recent weeks thanks to more people wearing face masks 
in public and practicing social distancing.
“In case this trend continues, it is projected that we will have 140 new 
infections a day in early September,” he said during a parliament session that 
discussed the government’s decision to extend the coronavirus-related state of 
emergency in Armenia by another month.
But he also cautioned: “The projections are very tentative and do not mean that 
the downward trend will necessarily continue because there are many factors at 
play.”
The daily number of COVID-19 cases registered by the Armenian health authorities 
has averaged between 500 and 600 for the past month after growing steadily since 
mid-April.
The authorities have reported a total of 32,490 cases and 581 deaths caused by 
the virus as of Tuesday morning. The official toll does not include the deaths 
of 184 other people also infected with the disease. The Armenian Ministry of 
Health says that they died primarily because of other, pre-existing conditions.
Avinian said that the government would have re-imposed a nationwide lockdown had 
the spread of the virus continued unabated this summer. The government now hopes 
that it will be safe enough for schools, theaters and other cultural 
institutions to reopen their doors this autumn, he said.
Liana Torosian, a senior official from the Armenian National Center for Disease 
Control and Prevention, likewise spoke on Tuesday of a “certain stabilization” 
of the coronavirus situation in the country.
“If this trend continues … we will have satisfactory results in September,” 
Torosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “But let’s wait and see how the 
situation develops and whether we all will be following the safety rules.”
Armenia Summons Ukraine Envoy Over Pro-Azeri Statement
Ukraine – The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry building in Kyiv.
Ukraine’s ambassador in Yerevan was summoned to the Armenian Foreign Ministry on 
Tuesday after his government effectively blamed Armenia for the latest upsurge 
in tensions in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone.
The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry portrayed deadly fighting that broke out on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border on Sunday as Armenian shelling of the Tovuz district 
in western Azerbaijan. A ministry statement called on Armenia and Azerbaijan to 
“de-escalate the situation” and seek a peaceful resolution of the Karabakh 
conflict.
“The Ukrainian side advocates a political settlement of the situation based on 
respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Republic of 
Azerbaijan within its internationally recognized borders,” the statement added, 
echoing the Azerbaijani position on the conflict’s resolution.
According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh 
Kocharian presented Yerevan’s “assessment” of that statement when spoke with 
Ukrainian Ambassador Ivan Kuleba.
Kocharian also briefed Kuleba on “the situation created as a result of 
Azerbaijan’s aggressive actions” and, in particular, shelling of Armenian 
villages and towns located close to the Azerbaijani border.
Ukraine’s current and former governments have repeatedly voiced support for 
Azerbaijan in the Karabakh conflict. For its part, Armenia has consistently 
voted against UN General Assembly resolutions condemning Russia’s actions in 
Crimea and upholding Ukrainian sovereignty over the Black Sea peninsula.
Deadly Fighting Continues On Armenian-Azeri Border (UPDATED)
Armenia -- Soldiers of an artillerty unit of the Armenian army train at a 
military base in Tavush province, September 18, 2019.
Seven Azerbaijani servicemen, including an army general, and four Armenian 
soldiers were killed on Tuesday in fierce fighting that continued on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border for the third consecutive day.
Azerbaijan’s Deputy Defense Minister Kerim Veliyev said Major-General Polad 
Hashimov and Colonel Ilgar Mirzoyev died “like heroes” in the western Tovuz 
district bordering Armenia’s northern Tavush province, the scene of the fighting.
According to Azerbaijani news agencies, Veliyev also confirmed the deaths of 
five other Azerbaijani soldiers, among them two army majors. He gave no other 
details of the incident.
At least four other Azerbaijani soldiers were killed shortly after skirmishes at 
that section of the Armenian-Azerbaijani frontier, the worst in years, broke out 
on Sunday.
The Armenian military reported, meanwhile, that it has suffered its first 
casualties since the start of the hostilities. Shushan Stepanian, the 
spokeswoman for Armenia’s Defense Ministry, said Major Garush Hambardzumian and 
Captain Sos Elbakian were killed by enemy fire.
The ministry reported later in the day two more combat deaths in the Armenian 
army ranks. It said both victims were junior sergeants.
Stepanian said in the morning that an Azerbaijani military drone attacked 
civilian infrastructure in Berd, an Armenian town close to the border section. 
She said none of the town residents were hurt as a result.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry condemned the reported drone attack, saying that 
the Azerbaijani side will receive an “adequate response.”
According to the authorities in Yerevan, Azerbaijani forces shelled two Armenian 
border villages on Monday.
Baku likewise accused the Armenian side of shelling Azerbaijani villages located 
along the heavily militarized border. It said that a 75-year-old resident of one 
of those villages was killed on Tuesday.
The conflicting sides accuse each other of provoking the escalation with 
attempts to seize enemy positions in the mountainous area.
The truce violations there continued despite calls for an immediate end to the 
skirmishes voiced by Russia, the European Union and the United States. The U.S., 
Russian and French mediators trying to a broker a resolution of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict urged Armenia and Azerbaijan on Monday resume peace 
talks “as soon as possible.”
U.S. -- U.S. State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus stands at the lectern 
during a press conference at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, June 
10, 2019
The U.S. State Department added its voice to the mediators’ appeal and condemned 
the deadly violence “in the strongest terms.”
“The United States joins the Minsk Group Co-Chairs in calling for the sides to 
resume substantive negotiations as soon as possible and in emphasizing the 
importance of returning OSCE monitors to the region as soon as circumstances 
allow,” said the department spokesperson, Morgan Ortagus.
For its part, Russia stated through Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Tuesday 
that it remains “deeply concerned” about the situation on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
Peskov also said Moscow is ready to make “mediation efforts” to defuse the 
tensions and facilitate progress in Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks. He pointed 
to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s “intensive contacts” with his 
Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts.
Lavrov urged Yerevan and Baku to immediately stop hostilities and show 
“restraint” during his separate phone conversations with Zohrab Mnatsakanian and 
Elmar Mammadyarov.
The Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers also spoke on Monday by phone 
with Josep Borrell, the EU’s foreign policy chief. Borrell tweeted afterwards 
that he “underlined the need to defuse tensions and cease fire.”
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.
 

Artillery fire intensify at border with Azerbaijan decreases – Armenian defense ministry

TASS, Russia
Azerbaijan’s defense ministry said on Sunday Armenian army units had tried to attack Azerbaijan’s positions at the Tovuz section of the border with use of artillery systems

YEREVAN, July 13. /TASS/. The intensity of artillery fire from the Azerbaijani side has decreased but aggravations occur regularly, Armenian Defense Ministry Spokeswoman Shushan Stepanyan said on Monday.

“Azerbaijan aggravates the situation at the border periodically. As of now, the intensity of artillery shelling and attacks of unmanned aerial vehicles has decreased. The Armenian armed forces are in control of the situation. There are no losses on the Armenian side,” she wrote on her Facebook account.

Azerbaijan’s defense ministry said on Sunday Armenian army units had tried to attack Azerbaijan’s positions at the Tovuz section of the border with use of artillery systems. According to the ministry, clashes continued through the night. Four Azerbaijani soldiers were killed and four more were wounded.

Armenia’s defense ministry said, in turn, that the border situation had aggravated after Azerbaijan’s attempted attack. The Armenian defense ministry said that two Armenian policemen and three soldiers had received minor wounds in shelling by the Azerbaijani side.

Earlier on Monday, Russia’s foreign ministry expressed serious concern of the dramatic aggravation of the situation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and called on the side to show restraint and stay committed to the ceasefire. The Russian side expressed readiness to help settle the situation.

The conflict between neighboring Armenia and Azerbaijan over the highland region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory that had been part of Azerbaijan before the Soviet Union break-up but was mainly populated by Armenians, broke out in the early 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijani Soviet Republic.

In 1991-1994, the confrontation spilled over into large-scale military action for control over the enclave and some adjacent territories after Azerbaijan lost control of them.

Talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement have been held since 1992 in the format of the so-called OSCE Minsk Group, comprising along with its three co-chairs – Russia, France and the United States – Belarus, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Finland and Turkey.



Deadly border clashes reignite Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict

France 24
 
 
Yerevan (AFP)
 
Deadly border clashes between arch-foes Armenia and Azerbaijan entered a second day on Monday, as the EU and regional power broker Moscow urged restraint.
 
Three Azerbaijanis were killed on Sunday and one on Monday, oil-rich Baku’s defence ministry said, adding that both sides were using artillery, mortars and tanks in the north part of their border.
 
The Armenian foreign ministry said the artillery fire from Azerbaijan “receded” later on Monday, claiming Yerevan was “fully controlling” the situation.
 
The two former Soviet republics have been locked in a simmering conflict for decades over Azerbaijan’s separatist region of Nagorny Karabakh, which was seized by ethnic-Armenian separatists in a 1990s war that claimed 30,000 lives.
 
The international community still views the region as part of Azerbaijan.
 
The current fighting — hundreds of miles from Nagorny Karabakh — erupted days after Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev raised the spectre of war and denounced delays in Karabakh talks.
 
Each side blamed the other for the current flare-up.
 
“Armenia’s political and military leadership will bear the entire responsibility for the provocation,” Aliyev told officials in a meeting.
 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in turn accused Azerbaijan of “provocations” that would “not go unanswered” and his defence minister said Armenian forces would react “including by taking advantageous positions” in Azerbaijani territory.

– Risks regional stability –
 
Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan on Monday discussed the crisis by phone with the head of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), a Moscow-led military bloc.
 
Before the call, Azerbaijani officials had already said Armenia’s “military adventure” was aimed at drawing the CSTO into the fighting.
 
All-out war between the two countries could potentially drag in regional powers — Armenia’s military ally Russia and Azerbaijan’s patron Turkey — which compete for geopolitical influence in the strategic region.
 
Majority-Muslim Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan has received strong backing from its historic ally Ankara.
 
Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Azerbaijan was just trying to “protect its territorial integrity”, labelling Armenia’s actions “unacceptable” and urging the country to “come to its senses”.
 
Yerevan reacted by condemning Turkey’s “provocative attitude,” with its foreign ministry accusing Ankara, in a statement, of undermining the “security and stability in the region.”
 
Armenia’s military ally Russia — which wields influence on both Baku and Yerevan — expressed “serious concerns” over the crisis, which it said “endangers the region’s stability”, urging the countries to “show restraint”.
 
Later on Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held phone conversations with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts, urging de-escalation.
 
The European Union issued a statement calling on both sides “to stop the armed confrontation… and undertake immediate measures to prevent further escalation.”
 
– Troubled talks –
 
Mediated by the “Minsk Group” of diplomats from France, Russia and the United States, peace talks between the two sides have been going on since the 1994 ceasefire.
 
Aliyev threatened last week to withdraw from talks “if they do not yield results” and rejected statements by negotiators that there could be no military solution.
 
Despite the strong wording, his remarks were widely seen as diplomatic pressure for the stalled talks’ intensification.
 
Armenia, which controls the disputed region, is happy with the status quo in Karabakh that also suits Russia’s interests as the Kremlin uses its power-broker’s role in asserting its influence in the ex-Soviet republics.
 
Desperate to restore its territorial integrity by diplomatic means, energy-rich Azerbaijan, whose military spending exceeds Armenia’s entire state budget, has repeatedly threatened to take back the territory by force.
 
Moscow-allied Armenia has vowed to crush any military offensive.
 
In 2016, deadly clashes in Karabakh nearly spiralled into full-scale war.