Armenia Speaker of Parliament holds meeting with Iranian Ambassador

Save

Share

 16:04, 18 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Speaker of Parliament Ararat Mirzoyan received today Ambassador of Iran to Armenia Abbas Zohouri, the Armenian Parliament told Armenpress.

During the meeting Speaker Mirzoyan said he views Iran as a friendly country and reliable partner. Touching upon the Artsakh conflict, the Speaker said after the November 9 trilateral statement on the ceasefire it is necessary to implement the agreements reached. As a priority he mentioned the exchange of the prisoners of war with “all for all” principle. Mirzoyan added that the Nagorno Karabakh conflict cannot be considered as completely resolved because the status of Nagorno Karabakh – the right to self-determination of the Artsakh-Armenians has not been solved under the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship format. He said Iran cannot refrain from expressing position on the Artsakh issue, taking into account also the active involvement of other regional countries for the benefit of the Azerbaijani side both at the hostilities stage and afterwards.

The Ambassador stated that the Iranian side welcomes  the agreement on the ceasefire in Artsakh and reaffirmed the opinion of the Iranian Foreign Minister according to which the return of the prisoners of war should be quickly solved.

At the meeting the officials also discussed a number of issues relating to further boosting the inter-parliamentary ties, the economic relations and conducting joint economic activity in Armenia’s Syunik province.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia to use Sputnik V, AstraZeneca, Pfizer vaccines against COVID-19

 14:05, 18 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Vaccinations against COVID-19 in Armenia are expected to start in March, Minister of Healthcare Anahit Avanesyan told reporters after the Cabinet meeting, adding that the vaccinations will be carried out on voluntary basis, and the vaccine for risky group citizens will be for free.

“Small number of vaccines have already been used in Armenia, in particular several people have been vaccinated with Sputnik V which was received from Russia as a gift. Armenia will receive more doses in the near future and will be able to start the vaccinations for broader public circles. Risky group citizens will get the vaccine for free, but as for the price of the vaccine for other citizens, it’s still unclear”, the minister said.

He added that the government will import only those vaccines which have successfully passed the third stage of clinical trials. “The group of specialists will assess their efficiency, the risk of side-effects, the cost and will give their conclusion on the appropriateness of their use. So far, the professional commission, the experts have considered the use of AstraZeneca, Pfizer and the Russian Sputnik V vaccines. There are only issues connected with ensuring the thermal regime of Pfizer, which must be solved. The amount of vaccines to be imported by Armenia will depend on several factors, including their cost and how much money the state can provide for them”, he said.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Defense Ministry, General Staff, NSS are ensuring security environment in Syunik – government says

Tweet

 13:27, 18 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. The third meeting of the Syunik Task Force dealing with the province’s issues will be held on February 19. The task force is headed by PM Pashinyan’s advisor Robert Ghukasyan.

Ghukasyan said at the Cabinet meeting that right now the main issue of concern for the population in the province is the security environment. He said that the General Staff of the Armed Forces, the Ministry of Defense and the National Security Service Border Troops are working to ensure it.

The Ministry of Emergency Situations is also engaged in the works, namely for the installation of civil protection positions in communities.

“A new district is being built in the village of Shurnukh for the families who lost their homes, and at the same time they will receive state support until their homes are constructed,” Ghukasyan said.

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Government to implement new agriculture projects in bordering communities of Syunik province

Save

Share

 13:14, 18 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Works are underway to solve agriculture and animal husbandry issues of the bordering settlements in Syunik province, Armenian prime minister’s advisor Robert Ghukasyan said at today’s Cabinet meeting.

“The residents of the bordering communities of Syunik province have problems with agricultural works and animal husbandry. They were conducting their activities in wider territories, but today they do not have that opportunity. There is problem especially in Vorotan, the administrative territory of which is very small. We are working with the ministry of economy on this direction, we will soon have final solutions connected with the greenhouses, intensive orchards and smart barns. We will have the final decisions at the next session”, he said, adding that as the season of agricultural works approaches, the demining works have already started.

In turn Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said as a result of such concrete steps the residents of Syunik province will feel that the government stands by them.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Search operations halted due to weather conditions, says Artsakh

Save

Share

 12:36, 18 February, 2021

STEPANAKERT, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. The search operations for the bodies of the Artsakh war casualties have been suspended today due to weather conditions, the official of the State Emergency Service of Artsakh told Armenpress.

“The rescuers of Artsakh are ready for the resumption of the search operations if the weather conditions allow. The search operations will be carried out mainly in the southern sections of the battle zones”, the official said.

So far, a total of 1379 bodies of servicemen and civilians of Artsakh have been found during the search operations in the battle zones.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Minister of economy offers condolences on death of former agriculture minister Sergo Karapetyan

Save

Share

 11:37, 18 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Economy of Armenia Vahan Kerobyan has offered his condolences over the death of former minister of agriculture Sergo Karapetyan, the ministry said.

“With a deep sorrow I have learnt about the death of former minister of agriculture Sergo Karapetyan.

On behalf of the ministry staff and myself personally I express my sincere condolences to Sergo Karapetyan’s family, relatives and colleagues.

At this difficult moment of loss please accept my condolences and support”, the minister’s condolence letter reads.

Former minister of agriculture Sergo Karapetyan died on February 18 from COVID-19 complications at the age of 72.

He has served as agriculture minister from 2010 to 2016.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Economy shows first signs of post-crisis recovery, Armenian PM says

Save

Share

 11:32, 18 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s economy is showing the first signs of the post-crisis recovery, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said during today’s Cabinet meeting.

“According to the data of the first 15 days of February, 604,000 more transactions with cash registers and settlement documents have been registered than in the first 15 days of February 2020. And the trade turnover increased by 12% or nearly 31,4 billion drams compared to the first 15 days of February 2020. I would like to remind that the COVID-19 impact didn’t exist in early February 2020 because no coronavirus case has been confirmed in the country that time. And February 2020 has recorded a very serious growth against February 2019”, the PM said.

Pashinyan stated that the export and import volumes have also greatly increased in the first 15 days of February. “The conclusion from here is that the economy seems is entering into a recovery phase, and this, of course, is very important news”, he added.

At the meeting Chairman of the State Revenue Committee Edvard Hovhannisyan clarified that the growth in the trade turnover mainly relates to three fields – retail consumption, manufacturing and services.

In his turn Minister of Economy Vahan Kerobyan noted that attention should be paid on the consumption growth. “We should continue the support provided to the economy until we are sure that we are in stable condition”, he added.

PM Pashinyan stated that the government continues all assistance programs for the business.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenians Continue to Suffer Following Artsakh War

Feb 19 2021

02/19/2021 Azerbaijan (International Christian Concern) –  A group of Armenian pilgrims heading towards the Armenian monastery in Dadivank were originally blocked and have since been allowed to enter. The monastery came under Azerbaijan’s control following the 44-day war.

On February 7 a group of Armenian Christians were seeking to visit the monastery and were accompanied by Russian peacekeepers. Previously, only the number of pilgrims had to be reported in advance of their trip, and that no more than 30 could visit at a time. However, on February 7 the group was met with new restrictions and told to wait in a nearby village. When they attempted to return, they were again turned away and told that the names of the visitors must be provided in advance. On February 14 the Christians were finally able to visit Dadivank.

Azerbaijan also continues to threaten the security and safety of Armenians via political maneuvers. Azeri President Ilham Aliyev recently introduced and announced the recipients of the National Hero and Patriotic War Hero awards. Most notably, Ibad Huseynov reportedly received the National Hero award. Huseynov was a veteran of the first Nagorno-Karabakh war in which he received significant attention after he boasted of photos of him holding the severed head of an Armenian soldier. His prominence was promoted in and by Azeri politicians and press, as well as gaining the attention of Turkish President Erodgan who has been photographed shaking hands with Huseynov.

Azerbaijani rhetoric towards Armenians and Christians continues to appear heavily influenced by Turkish ideologies. Limitations placed on Armenians as well as the promotion of violent human rights offenders indicate that the fallout from the most recent Nagorno-Karabakh war is still just beginning.

 

The Problem with Western Absence in the South Caucasus

Feb 19 2021
FEBRUARY 19, 2021 OLIVIA LETTS

The Cipher Brief’s Academic Incubator partners with national security-focused programs from colleges and Universities across the country share the work of the next generation of national security leaders. 

Olivia Letts is a graduate of the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service.

ACADEMIC INCUBATOR — The November ceasefire, brokered by Russia to end Armenia and Azerbaijan’s fighting over the highland territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, is unlikely to hold.  It provides yet another example of Russia taking the lead where the West has disappointed in recent years, following closely on the heels of Moscow’s decision to fill the power vacuum in Syria after the United States left its Kurdish allies to be ousted by Turkish forces.

Russia’s monopoly on Nagorno-Karabakh peacekeeping is not ideal for Azerbaijan or Armenia, as Russia has been known to exploit weaknesses in former Soviet satellite countries in order to maintain its influence.  From the heavy-handed actions it has taken in the War in Donbass and 2008 Russo-Georgian War, to the subtler disinformation campaigns it has waged throughout Eastern Europe, Russia has made a clear effort to keep the control in its neighborhood.  Yet Moscow can hardly be villainized for leading diplomacy efforts in Nagorno-Karabakh, where no other country is even attempting to mitigate the deadly ethnic conflict which continues to foment more instability costing Azerbaijani and Armenian lives.

The First Nagorno-Karabakh War lasted from 1988 to 1994, resulting in over 25,000 deaths and producing over 1 million refugees on both the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides.  The war ended in a Pyrrhic victory for the Armenians, whose borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan were sealed as a result.  Azerbaijan, suffering a deep wound in national pride, was forced to accommodate the large majority of refugees.  The continuing dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh was thenceforth referred to as a “frozen conflict,” and the international community never imparted the blessing of legitimacy to the region known to Karabakhi Armenians as the Republic of Artsakh.  In the 2020 thawing of the conflict, over 5,000 soldiers were killed, and Karabakhi Armenians, historically the dominant ethnicity in the region, were forced to leave their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh behind—just as minority Azerbaijanis fled the region in the 1990s.

Although Azerbaijan has technically won the most recent round of the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh and reclaimed the territory it lost to Armenians in the First Nagorno Karabakh War, Russia is the real victor.  Per the conditions of the ceasefire, Moscow has deployed 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to Nagorno-Karabakh, and they are to remain there for at least five years.  The United States and the European Union have been all but virtually absent in the Caucasus region amid the violence between Azerbaijan and Armenia.  Turkey provided Azerbaijan with symbolic support and weapons for waging war, but it played a minimal role in brokering peace.

The result of the international community’s absence in Nagorno-Karabakh has been free reign for Russia to dictate the short-term outcome of the conflict.  It has also contributed to weak prospects for long-term peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan.  Moscow may have all the implicit power of a mighty military and some very skilled diplomats, but the latest ceasefire should be viewed for what it is—a band-aid for a deadly ethnic conflict, not a permanent solution.  Russia will not be able to prevent a future outbreak of fighting from prompting a major mobilization of Azerbaijanis or Armenians.  In fact, Russia has already confirmed that there have been ceasefire violations.

Thomas de Waal conducted extensive interviews of both Azerbaijanis and Armenians for his book Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War.  Published in 2003, it still provides one of the best analyses of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and it describes the extent of deep distrust and harmful attitudes toward the “other” in Azerbaijan and Armenia.  Azerbaijanis are still likely to see Armenia, where Russia has a military base, as a willing pawn in Russian plans to assert dominance.  Armenia is bound to incorporate the recent Azerbaijani victory into its national identity of suffering, rooted in the Ottoman-perpetrated Armenian Genocide.  This is especially likely as nationalist Armenian understanding tends to view Azerbaijanis as ethnic “Turkic” peoples who share strong linguistic and cultural ties with Turkey.  Allegations of Turkey’s involvement in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will only intensify Armenia’s sense of vulnerability.  With Armenians reeling from their recent loss, they will encourage angry and politically-mobilized Armenian diaspora communities throughout the West to press their countries to take action.

Nationalist sentiment in Armenia and Azerbaijan has spoiled various potential peace agreements, including several ill-fated but well-intentioned efforts by the OSCE’s multinational Minsk Group to solve the conflict through multinational diplomacy.  The United States, a co-chair of the Minsk Group, has vacillated between open support of Armenia and tacit preference for the Azerbaijani state due to its anti-Russian and anti-Iranian leanings, and oil wealth.  As a result, it has been unable to take full advantage of its leadership role in the Minsk Group to shape a fair peace.

Why should the West reconsider its role in Russia and Turkey’s neighborhood?  Firstly, there are basic humanitarian considerations to be upheld by working to prevent more suffering amongst Armenians and Azerbaijanis who have endured tragic losses.  Russia was right to step in and forge a short-term solution to stop fighting, and Azerbaijan and Armenia had no choice but to rely on Moscow’s peace-brokering.  However, Russia still undeniably strives to control geopolitics in the Caucasus.  Acting alone it is unlikely to prioritize Kumbaya and national healing.

Secondly, the Caucasus is a strategically important region that is often overlooked by the West.  The mountainous region is located at the crossroads of major partners and adversaries of the United States and European Union, and instability in Nagorno-Karabakh provides yet another playground for these countries to vie for power.  The Caucasus is also traversed by major oil pipelines, whose routes are dictated by tricky regional energy politics.  Strengthening multilateral diplomacy in the Caucasus region will present the United States and Europe with chances to work with rather than against Moscow, as well as ample opportunity to cooperate with estranged NATO ally Turkey.  The OSCE Minsk Group is still best vehicle available for promoting cooperation among incompatible international partners and should be resuscitated—the international community does not need to go through the trouble of kickstarting a new effort.

Thirdly, the United States and Europe should maintain a presence in the Caucasus region to safeguard international norms which are at stake, including the sovereignty of two small nations.  Azerbaijan and Armenia are vulnerable to intimidation by more powerful neighbors which have been known to flout international norms when it suits them.  Furthermore, Turkey’s potential exploitation of Syrian mercenaries and ex-ISIS terrorists in support of Azerbaijan is a disturbing trend.  If true, it constitutes a major abuse of current loopholes in international norms pertaining to the fate of foreign fighters stuck in the Middle East, where former terrorists and their families are stuck in limbo as their home countries have shirked taking responsibility for them.

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict presents many challenges to the international community which deserve to be met with sensitivity, persistence, and renewed multinational efforts.  The West’s proactive diplomatic involvement is vital, as peace negotiations will need perspectives which are less swayed by selfish geopolitical considerations of local actors.  To build a lasting peace, addressing the plight of displaced persons will be vital, along with substantial efforts to heal war traumas and deep-rooted aversions to peacebuilding.  Since Armenia and Azerbaijan are far from ready to normalize their relations, there is so much the West can do to eliminate their many obstacles to peace.  Perhaps it could be argued that some corners of the globe are ready for non-interventionism to dominate the Western diplomatic mindset, but not the troubled Caucasus.

Olivia Letts is a graduate of the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service

https://www.thecipherbrief.com/column/academic-incubator/the-problem-with-western-absence-in-the-south-caucasus 

Armenia: TikTok brings light into a culture of darkness

Feb 19 2021

MELANIE MARGARYAN WRITES — If you don’t know much about Armenia, that’s not really surprising.

Armenia is a tiny country in the Caucasus, where nothing interesting really happens. Well, besides war and really sad stuff. But let’s talk about something great that’s been happening for Armenians, for once: TikTok.

If you go onto YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, etc, and try to find Armenian video entertainment, there isn’t much. And the videos that you do find are usually skits written by professional Armenian creators and actors. But if you go onto TikTok and look up any Armenian-related hashtag, you get an unbelievable amount of results with billions of views.

These TikToks are not exclusively posted and created by professional actors or entertainers. Armenians of all ages and backgrounds put up content and get hundreds to thousands to millions of likes and comments. And they’re not just Armenian-related videos. Most of the content is funny and light-hearted, which is incredibly refreshing for Armenians with a long, dark cultural history.

If you read the comment sections of these Armenian comedy TikToks, they’re usually loaded with comments from other Armenians who feel strongly related to the video they just watched. People make comments like: “This is so accurate it’s crazy”, “MY GRANDMA DOES THIS,” and “If you’re Armenian and say you don’t relate to this, you’re a liar.”

Through these TikToks, Armenians across the globe are connecting to one another in a way that has never before happened. With this new platform they are able to build an upbeat, tightknit virtual community. This is a really big deal, mainly because Armenians are dispersing increasingly across the world

Yes, TikTok has helped transform the tears of sadness into tears of laughter for the Armenian community.   In this way, maybe, history is not doomed to repeat itself, but to re-script its story from one of less tragic to more comedic proportions.