Reuters: Armenians march to mourn war victims as PM faces calls to resign

Reuters
Dec 19 2020
 
 
 
Armenians march to mourn war victims as PM faces calls to resign
 
By Reuters Staff
 
 
 
YEREVAN (Reuters) – Thousands of Armenians marched through the capital Yerevan on Saturday to commemorate the soldiers killed in a six-week conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region in which Azerbaijan made significant territorial gains.
 
The conflict and the fatalities on the Armenian side have increased pressure on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, whom the opposition accuses of mishandling the conflict by accepting a Russian-brokered ceasefire last month, to resign.
 
Pashinyan led the march, held on the first of three days of mourning, driving up to the Yerablur military cemetery to light incense on the graves of fallen soldiers along with other senior officials.
 
Although his supporters filled the cemetery to its brink, footage published on Armenian television showed Pashinyan’s critics shouting “Nikol is a traitor!” as his convoy passed by, escorted by heavy security.
 
Armenia’s opposition has called on its supporters to join a national strike on Dec. 22, at the end of the three-day mourning period, to pressure Pashinyan to resign over the losses incurred in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabkh.
 
Pashinyan, who swept to power in a peaceful revolution in May 2018, has rejected calls to resign.
 
 
 
Ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh accused Azeri forces on Wednesday of capturing several dozen of their troops, putting further strain on a ceasefire deal that brought an end to the fighting last month.
 
The two sides have nonetheless begun exchanging groups of prisoners of war as part of an “all for all” swap mediated by Russia.
 
Moscow has deployed peacekeepers to police the ceasefire, but skirmishes have nonetheless been reported.
 
Writing by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber; Editing by Clelia Oziel
 
 

21 km section of Goris-Kapan highway passes through disputed area – Armenian Defense Ministry

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 19 2020
The 21-kilometer section of the Goris-Kapan highway in the Syunik province passes through disputed areas in some places, the Ministry of Defense reports.

According to the agreement reached, Russian border guards will be stationed on the Goris-David Bek road section to ensure uninterrupted traffic.

The security of the 21km-long section of the Goris-Kapan highway, which passes through the disputed area, will be ensured by the Russian border guards.

On the line of contact the Armenian border troops will be deployed on the Armenian side, and the Azerbaijani border troops on the Azerbaijani side.

A whole complex of measures will be taken to ensure the safety of the mentioned road section.

Additional clarifications will be provided in the coming days.

Armenians March to Mourn War Victims as PM Faces Calls to Resign

ASHARQ AL-AWSAT
Dec 19 2020

Saturday, – 18:15
Asharq Al-Awsat

Thousands of Armenians marched through the capital Yerevan on Saturday to commemorate the soldiers killed in a six-week conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region in which Azerbaijan made significant territorial gains.

The conflict and the fatalities on the Armenian side have increased pressure on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, whom the opposition accuses of mishandling the conflict by accepting a Russian-brokered ceasefire last month, to resign.

Pashinyan led the march, held on the first of three days of mourning, driving up to the Yerablur military cemetery to light incense on the graves of fallen soldiers along with other senior officials.

Although his supporters filled the cemetery to its brink, footage published on Armenian television showed Pashinyan’s critics shouting “Nikol is a traitor!” as his convoy passed by, escorted by heavy security.

Armenia’s opposition has called on its supporters to join a national strike on Dec. 22, at the end of the three-day mourning period, to pressure Pashinyan to resign over the losses incurred in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabkh.

Pashinyan, who swept to power in a peaceful revolution in May 2018, has rejected calls to resign.

Ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh accused Azeri forces on Wednesday of capturing several dozen of their troops, putting further strain on a ceasefire deal that brought an end to the fighting last month.

The two sides have nonetheless begun exchanging groups of prisoners of war as part of an “all for all” swap mediated by Russia.

Moscow has deployed peacekeepers to police the ceasefire, but skirmishes have nonetheless been reported.

FBI Offers $50,000 Reward Regarding SF Armenian Church Arson

The Patch
Dec 18 2020
By Jeff Arnold, Patch Staff
Dec 18, 2020 1:23 pm PT

SAN FRANCISCO, CA — Four months after an arsonist set fire to an Armenian church in San Francisco, the city's FBI bureau is offering a $50,000 reward leading to the identification, arrest and conviction of anyone involved in setting the fire, officials announced this week.

The fire, which was set shortly after 4 a.m. on Sept. 17 at the administration building of St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Apostolic Church, caused significant fire, smoke and water damage to the building, FBI officials said. The administration building, which is located at 51 Commonwealth Ave. in the Laurel Heights neighborhood, housed church offices, a library and a Sunday school before the fire was set.

The fire followed incidents earlier in the year in which hateful graffiti was left at San Francisco's KZV Armenian School in July before shots were fired at the school in September. At this time, FBI officials do not know if the incidents are related to the arson at St. Gregory, officials said.

"This act of violence was not just an attack on a building, but on a congregation. This was an attack on a community," FBI Special Agent Craig Fair said in a news release announcing the reward for the church arson. "We are counting on assistance from members of the community to keep our city safe. Every lead will be thoroughly investigated.

"Regardless of how insignificant you think your information might be, we strongly encourage you to come forward and we welcome your information and assistance."


The FBI said it takes all acts or threats of violence seriously and is committed to investigating crimes that are potentially hate-motivated. The FBI has jurisdiction to investigate fires set at houses of worship under the Church Arson Prevention Act of 1996.

If anyone has information about the arson at the church, they are asked to contact the FBI San Francisco Division at (415) 553-7400 or tips.fbi.gov. Tips can remain anonymous. Informants may also contact the San Francisco Police Department's Anonymous Tip Line at (415) 575-4444, or may text a tip to TIP411 and begin the text message with SFPD, which guarantees the callers' anonymity.

https://patch.com/california/san-francisco/fbi-offers-50-000-reward-regarding-sf-armenian-church-arson

Also at
https://sfbayca.com/2020/12/18/fbi-offers-reward-for-arrest-incowardly-arson-attack-on-armenian-church/
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/fbi-offers-50k-reward-in-arson-fire-at-armenian-church-in-sf/2427239/
https://www.sfexaminer.com/news/fbi-offers-50k-reward-in-search-for-arsonist-behind-armenian-church-fire/
https://www.kron4.com/news/bay-area/fbi-offers-50k-reward-in-armenian-church-arson-investigation/
https://www.sfgate.com/hdn/hrlm/p/fastly_redirect.html?dm=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.sfgate.com%2Fnews%2Fbayarea%2Farticle%2FFbi-Offering-Reward-In-Arson-Fire-That-Left-15814553.php

Losers in the 21st-century Great Game

Church Times, UK
Dec 18 2020

18 DECEMBER 2020

PA

The Primate of the Artsakh diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, presides at a service in a bomb shelter in Nagorno-Karabakh, in October

BADLY wounded by Azerbaijani rockets and desecrated by invading soldiers, the Armenian Apostolic Cathedral in Shushi, Nagorno Karabakh, stands today forlorn and lifeless. Prospects of the incumbent, Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, celebrating Christmas there this year — and for the foreseeable future — are nil. The town has been effectively “cleansed” of its Armenian Christian population (News, 4 December, 11 December).

The fate of Sushi’s cathedral symbolises the deep trauma now afflicting the Armenian nation, the first to accept the Lordship of Christ in 301. The immediate cause of the trauma is Azerbaijan’s victorious six-week war (between 27 September and 9 November) for mastery of Nagorno Karabakh, a tiny, self-declared independent satellite of neighbouring Armenia.

More than 100,000 people — approximately two-thirds of its population — were forced to flee their homes. Much of Nagorno Karabakh is now occupied by Azerbaijan. Much more would have been lost had Russia, the traditional protector of Armenian Christians, not imposed a ceasefire backed by military peacekeepers.

Will the displaced ever be able to return to their homes in this ancient Armenian homeland? Will Shushi’s cathedral and other similarly emptied and desecrated churches ever host Christian worship again? Will they be transformed into mosques? Will Azerbaijan resume its war for Armenian territory? These are the kinds of questions which weigh heavily these days in the hearts and minds of Armenian Christians.

THE answers to such questions will not be determined locally. Nagorno Karabakh lies at the centre of a long-running geopolitical conflict, what Kipling dubbed “the Great Game”: i.e., the Great Power competition for the vast, strategically important, predominantly Turkic Muslim territory stretching from Anatolia to Xinjiang province in western China.

The Great Game started as a competition between Britain and Russia for imperial ascendancy in the mid-19th century. It continues today as a competition between the United States, Russia, and China, each of which is allied to a number of smaller states. Over the past 25 years, the oil-rich associate NATO member Azerbaijan has achieved military supremacy over Armenia by positioning itself as a crucial strategic asset within Washington’s network of alliances.

The Armenians have long been among the biggest losers in the Great Game. Archbishop Martirosyan rightly places the recent six-week war in the context of an ongoing process of “genocide”. It began in earnest with massacres of Armenians in Turkey in the late 19th century, and reached a peak during the First World War in Turkey, in the great Armenian genocide.

PAA man prays in Ghazanchetsots Cathedral, Shusha, partly destroyed by shelling, in October 

The anti-Armenian religious/ethnic cleansing extended into Trans-Caucasia, and continued there after the war’s end. Armenians were massacred in the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, in 1918, and in Shushi in 1920. The genocide process was only suspended by the imposition of Soviet power in the early 1920s.

As the Soviet Union was on the verge of collapse, in 1988, it erupted again with the massacre of the Armenian residents of the city of Sumgait, near the Caspian Sea. Among the dead were the close relatives of Archbishop Martirosyan. This set in motion a chain reaction of violence which produced the full blown Azeri-Armenian war of religious/ethnic cleansing from 1991 to 1994. With Turkey and Azerbaijan’s joint war on Nagorno-Karabakh this year, the process has begun again.

OFFICIAL responses in Britain to the war of Azerbaijan and its allies against the world’s oldest surviving Christian nation have tended to be low-key ritual appeals for peace. For the Karabakhi Christians, there have been no demands from officialdom for “humanitarian” military intervention of the kinds executed in response to violence against civilians by geopolitical adversaries such as Serbia’s Miloševic, Libya’s Gaddafi, and Syria’s Assad.

Some in Britain have appealed for non-violent responses, such as the suspension of military aid from Britain and other NATO countries to Azerbaijan and Turkey; the suspension of their participation in NATO fora; and the recognition of Nagorno Karabakh’s right to self-determination. But they have come mainly from the small Armenian diaspora in the UK and a handful of human-rights activists, and have not been widely reported.

Given the subordinate part that Britain plays in Washington’s network of alliances, and its strong economic interests in Azerbaijan’s oil and natural gas fields, it is no surprise that policymakers in Whitehall are reluctant to get into the crosshairs of alliance partners and energy-sector shareholders, on behalf of 150,000 mainly poor, displaced Armenian Christians who have little to offer other than the example of their strong Christian faith.

But it was not supposed to be this way. Last year, the Prime Minister accepted in its entirety the Bishop of Truro’s report on the plight of persecuted Christians (News, 30 August 2019). In doing so, he pledged to “provide protection for vulnerable Christian communities”, and to place this duty “at the heart of the priorities of UK foreign policy”.

This did not happen this autumn as Azerbaijan emptied much of Nagorno Karabakh of its Christian population. The options for combating persecution suggested in the Truro report (News, 17 July), such as sanctioning those responsible for atrocity crimes and tabling a UN Security Council Resolution for the protection of endangered Christian communities, were not used.

This abdication of responsibility suggests that implementation of the Truro policy recommendations will follow the imperial logic of the Great Game, at the expense of endangered, but inconveniently situated, ancient Christian communities.


Dr John Eibner is the international president of Christian Solidarity International.

https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2020/18-december/comment/opinion/losers-in-the-21st-century-great-game?fbclid=IwAR1BF2SBeRr3zr4RHZW4FlOyy5E7BCNjVq1Kz8zGb_GEvPTWb6TffjZpbEE#.X90ajyMOE5p.facebook


Germany’s COVID-19 death toll rises by 952 in one day

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 09:58, 16 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. Germany’s death toll from the coronavirus in the past day rose by 952, a new high during the entire pandemic, the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), a German federal government agency and research institute responsible for disease control and prevention, said, reports TASS.

The country’s total death toll from the coronavirus hit 23,427. Over the past day, 27,728 coronavirus cases were registered in the country and since the start of the pandemic the coronavirus case tally has reached 1,379,238.

Since Wednesday, Germany will introduce new quarantine measures until at least January 10. All shops besides those selling foodstuffs and other essential goods, will be shut down. Hair, beauty, massage salons and tattoo studios will be closed. Banks, pharmacies, post offices, car repair shops, petrol stations and pet shops will remain open. Not more than five people are allowed to meet in private houses and flats. This does not refer to children under 14 years of age. On December 24-26, a maximum of 10 citizens will be able to gather, but only relatives.

Artsakh military “loses contact” with entire personnel of several positions in two villages

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 10:30, 16 December, 2020

STEPANAKERT, DECEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Defense of Artsakh announced in a statement that in the evening of December 15, in unknown circumstances, it lost contact with the military personnel of several combat positions of the Defense Army deployed in the direction of the Hin Tagher and Khtsaberd villages of Hadrut.

“Search operations continued during the entire night and today morning. With the mediation of the Russian peacekeeping contingent, active steps are carried out to determine the likelihood of the Armenian servicemen’s capture for launching necessary actions in the event of confirmation,” the Artsakh Ministry of Defense said. It said they would provide regular updates on the search operations.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia reports 1098 new cases of COVID-19 in one day

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 11:08, 16 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. 1098 new cases of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) have been confirmed in Armenia in the past one day, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 150,218, the ministry of healthcare said today.

1242 more patients have recovered in one day. The total number of recoveries has reached 128,694.

3272 tests were conducted in the past one day.

27 more patients have died, raising the death toll to 2556.

The number of active cases is 18,331.

The number of patients who had coronavirus but died from other disease has reached 637 (11 new such cases).

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian, Estonian FMs discuss regional security, stability over phone

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 11:09, 16 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ara Aivazian held a telephone conversation with Minister of Foreign Affairs of Estonia Urmas Reinsalu, the Armenian foreign ministry told Armenpress.

The Estonian FM congratulated Ara Aivazian on appointment, wishing success in his mission.

The ministers discussed a number of issues relating to the Armenian-Estonian relations, highlighting their mutual readiness to take actions to further expand and enrich the bilateral agenda. They exchanged views also on the cooperation in multilateral formats.

The officials then continued discussing regional security and stability-related issues. In this context the Armenian FM introduced his Estonian counterpart on the ongoing actions aimed at addressing the current humanitarian crisis in Artsakh caused by the Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression. The sides highlighted addressing peaceful settlement issues exclusively within the frames of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan