Armenian Defense Minister pays working visit to Artsakh

Save

Share

 19:59, 8 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. At the invitation of the Minister of Defense of the Republic of Artsakh Kamo Vardanyan, the Minister of Defense of the Republic of Armenia Arshak Karapetyan paid a two-day working visit to the Republic of Artsakh on November 6.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the MoD Armenia, accompanied by the Commander of the Defense Army, Arshak Karapetyan visited military bases, met the servicemen on combat duty, got acquainted with the fortification of the positions, as well as the social and living conditions of the servicemen.

In one of the military units of the Defense Army, addressing the servicemen guarding the borders of Artsakh, the Armenian Defense Minister stressed that the most important guarantee of peace is an army capable of fulfilling its combat tasks.

Highly appreciating the efforts made to protect the borders of Artsakh during the 44-day war and after it, Arshak Karapetyan awarded a number of servicemen of the Defense Army with diplomas and departmental medals of the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Armenia.

On the same day, in Stepanakert, Arshak Karapetyan, within the framework of cooperation between the Defense Ministries of Armenia and Artsakh, participated in a working meeting of the leadership of the Defense Army, during which a number of issues related to security issues were discussed.

On November 7, Minister of Defense Arshak Karapetyan also visited Syunik region, in particular, the territory of Sev Lake (Black Lake). The Minister walked around the shore of the lake, met the soldiers on duty, thanked them for the round-the-clock combat duty.

Speaking about the possible solutions to the problem of infiltration of Azerbaijani units into the territory of the lake, the Minister once again assured that there is no alternative to the restoration of the state border, the Azerbaijani military must leave the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia.

During the visit, Arshak Karapetyan paid special attention to the construction of military positions in that highland zone, the accommodation conditions of the servicemen, and instructed the leadership of the military unit to correct the registered problems in a short period of time.

Comprehensive settlement of NK conflict possible only under mandate of OSCE MG Co- Chairmanship – MFA

Save

Share

 09:38, 9 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. The Foreign Ministry of Armenia issued a statement today on the first anniversary of the 2020 November 9 statement which put an end to the war in Artsakh.

Armenpress presents the text of the statement:

“In order to halt the aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan on September 27, 2020, against Artsakh and its people, with the direct involvement of Turkey and foreign terrorist fighters, on November 9, 2020, with the mediation of the President of the Russian Federation a Trilateral Statement on complete ceasefire and termination of all hostilities in the area of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was signed, which resulted in deployment of peacekeeping forces of Russia in Artsakh.

Today we once again bow before the brave Armenians who sacrificed their lives for the sake of the right of the Armenian people to live and build their own future, preventing the attempt of the aggressors to completely annihilate the Armenians from Artsakh.

The 44-day war, accompanied by mass violations of international humanitarian and human rights law, deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure and cultural monuments, use of prohibited weapons and other war crimes by Azerbaijan, resulted in thousands of casualties, tens of thousands of wounded, displaced people and mass devastation. As a result of the war, a number of regions of Artsakh were subjected to ethnic cleansing, and the population became victims of war crimes and mass atrocities committed by Azerbaijan. In particular, 40,000 people lost their homes and property, more than 17,000 civilian facilities and infrastructure were destroyed, hundreds of civilians were killed or injured, and the fate of many still remains unknown.

Armenia and Artsakh have consistently implemented the provisions of the Trilateral Statement, while just a month after the signing of the latter, despite the commitment to stop in the current positions at the time of signing, Azerbaijani armed forces infiltrated into Khtsaberd and Hin Tagher villages of Hadrut region of Artsakh, killing and capturing Armenian servicemen. Moreover, after the withdrawal of the Armenian troops from the regions mentioned in the document, the Azerbaijani side responded with the infiltration and continued illegal deployment of its armed units into the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia from the very same territories.

Azerbaijan has not yet implemented the paragraph 8 of the November 9 Statement, holding numerous Armenian prisoners of war, hostages and other detained persons in captivity, which is not only a gross violation of the Trilateral Statement but also of international humanitarian law.

The ceasefire regime established by the Trilateral Statement is periodically violated by the Azerbaijani armed forces, accompanied by targeting not only the positions of the Armenian Armed Forces and Artsakh Defense Army, but also peaceful settlements and civilians, leading to human and material losses.

Deliberately distorting and arbitrarily commenting the provisions on unblocking regional infrastructure enshrined in Trilateral Statements from November 9, 2020, and January 11, 2021, Azerbaijan circulates the idea of a so-called “corridor” and threatens with the use of force, which not only contradicts the letter and spirit of those statements, but also aims to undermine efforts of de-escalation in the region.

The consistent Armenophobic policy blatantly conducted by the highest leadership of Azerbaijan, the ethnic cleansing in the territories of Artsakh fallen under the Azerbaijani control as a result of the use of force, the destruction and desecration of the Armenian cultural and religious heritage, as well as the obstruction of the access of international humanitarian organizations to Artsakh demonstrate the fact that the guarantee of the right of the Armenians of Artsakh to safe and dignified life in their homeland under the jurisdiction or control of Azerbaijan is impossible.

The realities created as a result of the use of force by Azerbaijan against Artsakh and its people cannot create basis for the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Azerbaijan’s claims that as a result of the war the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and Nagorno-Karabakh itself does not exist in the international arena any more are also violations of the November 9 Trilateral Statement, as Nagorno-Karabakh is presented as a territorial entity right in the latter.

Only the full implementation of the Trilateral Statements from November 9, 2020 and January 11, 2021, particularly the immediate resolution of urgent humanitarian issues, first of all, the unconditional repatriation of all prisoners of war, hostages and other detained persons, the clarification of the fate of missing persons and the investigation of the cases of enforced disappearances, protection of the Armenian cultural and religious heritage, as well as the full resumption of the process of peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict can create conditions for ensuring lasting peace and stability in the region.

The comprehensive and lasting settlement of the conflict is only possible through peaceful negotiations under the mandate of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship, which assumes the clarification of the status of Artsakh, ensuring conditions for the safe return of displaced Armenians of Artsakh to their places of residence throughout Artsakh, and realization of the right of the Armenians of Artsakh to safe and dignified life in their homeland, based on equal rights and self-determination of peoples.

Armenia reiterates its readiness to undertake practical efforts towards the de-escalation of the situation in the region, gradually overcoming the atmosphere of hostility, opening an era of stability and peaceful development. At the same time, for the effectiveness of this process, Azerbaijan should adopt a constructive position, renouncing its policy of Armenophobia, aggressive rhetoric and actions”.

Positive atmosphere created for Armenia-Saudi Arabia mutual partnership: Foreign Ministry’s response to ARMENPRESS

Save

Share

 09:45, 9 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian’s recent visit to Saudi Arabia for participation to the Future Investment Initiative conference and meeting with the Crown Prince, Deputy Prime Minister, and Minister of Defense of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman will greatly contribute to the progress of the Armenian-Saudi inter-state relations, Foreign Ministry of Armenia told ARMENPRESS, in response to the question whether Armen Sarkissian’s visit will contribute to the establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Saudi Arabia.

The ministry said that despite the absence of diplomatic ties, contacts at different levels between Armenia and Saudi Arabia have taken place over the past years. According to the MFA, it’s a long time this process is underway.

“In general, it can be said that a positive atmosphere has been formed for the mutual cooperation with the Saudi side”, the ministry said.

Asked whether the President’s visit could contribute to achieving progress in the establishment of diplomatic ties or creating good preconditions for that, the ministry said: “Since the independence of Armenia, the relations with the countries of the Middle East are one of the key directions of Armenia’s foreign policy, taking into account both Armenia’s geographical position towards the region and the existing deep historical-cultural ties. Armenia has adopted a policy of strengthening and deepening the existing ties with the countries of the region, expanding the cooperation with them in areas of mutual interest, and this policy is also reflected in the Armenian government’s 2021-2026 action plan. From this perspective we are confident that President Armen Sarkissian’s working visit to Saudi Arabia aimed at taking part at the Future Investment Initiative international forum and his meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman will significantly contribute to the progress of the Armenian-Saudi inter-state relations.”

In response to the question whether Armenia plans to take any steps through diplomatic means or whether contacts have taken place with the Saudi side, the ministry added: “It’s worth mentioning that Armenian-Saudi contacts at different levels have been recorded over the past years, therefore this process exists for a long time. In general, it can be said that a positive atmosphere has been formed for the mutual partnership with the Saudi side.

On October 26, 2021, President of the Republic of Armenia Armen Sarkissian paid the first visit to Saudi Arabia, one of the pivotal countries of the Arab-Islamic world, in the history of independent Armenia.

Within the framework of that visit, which is of exceptional importance in the history of Armenian-Arab relations, particularly those between the Republic of Armenia and Saudi Arabia, the President of Armenia attended the 5th Conference of the “Future Investment Initiative.”

President Sarkissian together with the Crown Prince, Deputy Prime Minister, and Minister of Defense of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman attended the opening ceremony of the conference.

The President of Armenia, and the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia talked about the need to develop relations between the two countries and their future. It was noted that the rich historical ties between the two peoples are a good basis for building future interstate relations.  

 

Reporting by Aram Sargsyan

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia And Turkey Lean Toward Rapprochement, But Constraints Linger – Analysis

Nov 10 2021

By Emil Avdaliani

Statements and actions indicate that Armenia and Turkey are interested in improving relations – possibly even opening their shared border, which would be a game-changer for the South Caucasus. However, Azerbaijan’s role in Turkey’s decision-making process regarding Armenia, along with outside players’ desire to protect their own interests in the region, will make rapprochement difficult.

Armenia and Turkey’s relationship is typically characterized by mutual distrust and animosity. However, the two countries recently expressed intentions to mend bilateral relations. On Aug. 27, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan argued for reconciliation with Turkey “without preconditions.” Turkish politicians hinted at the same idea. Beyond the rhetoric, Armenia has made some concrete moves signaling a willingness to reach a meaningful understanding with Turkey. For instance, Armenia has allowed Turkish Airlines to fly to Baku directly over Armenia and allowed Azerbaijan to use its airspace. Yerevan also unveiled a five-year government action plan stipulating its willingness to make efforts to normalize relations with Ankara. 

The timing of these efforts is crucial. The results of the second Nagorno-Karabakh war have created circumstances that would allow Armenia and Turkey to overcome obstacles that previously prevented them from making progress toward normalization. After its defeat, Armenia is seeing that it is impossible to rival Azerbaijan while under a blockade and is intent to act beyond its historical grievances against Turkey.  

Exactly what the envisioned normalization could look like is still unclear. Perhaps the countries will discuss establishing some level of diplomatic relations and potentially opening the 300-kilometer (186-mile) border between Turkey and Armenia – a development that would have powerful geopolitical implications for the South Caucasus. Much will depend on the political willingness of the leaders involved and the blowback from nationalist groups or influence of other geopolitical actors, such as Azerbaijan and Russia. No meaningful Armenia-Turkey rapprochement will occur without Baku and Moscow’s involvement. Indeed, the Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu stated on Oct. 28 that Ankara consults Baku regarding the mending of relations with Yerevan. Baku’s influence and Russia’s interests in the region make the full and quick restoration of ties unlikely.

Ankara has expressed a willingness to improve bilateral relations with Armenia over past decades. The biggest effort came in 2009, when the Zurich Protocols were signed, leading to a brief thaw between the two. Though eventually unsuccessful (Baku intervened to put a de facto end to the deal in 2009, and on March 1, 2018, Armenia announced the formal cancellation of the protocols), Ankara has often emphasized the need for improved ties with Yerevan. 

The more recent developments between Turkey and Armenia have been subtle, but the frequency of positive statements nevertheless indicates that a trend is emerging. After its defeat in the second Nagorno-Karabakh war, Armenia is taking a more pragmatic approach in its foreign policy. In Yerevan’s calculus, the improvement of relations with Ankara could deprive Baku of some advantages. The Azerbaijan-Turkey alliance will remain, but its growth could slow if Armenia establishes better relations with Turkey. Still, Baku might be less hostile to the rapprochement because of Armenia’s slow but steady cooperation in matters of regional infrastructure. 

For example, the railway revival project in the South Caucasus finally seems to be moving forward. During a visit to Moscow on Oct. 15, Pashinyan expressed openness to a railway from Azerbaijan to the Nakhchivan exclave and further to Turkey via Armenia’s southernmost region of Syunik. Some reports also hinted at new agreements on regional connectivity and border demarcation to be signed in Moscow, though their signing dates are unknown, betraying the fragility of Armenia-Azerbaijan talks. If the two sides agree on the railway project, however, this development would not be one-way; Armenia would get a railway link to Russia and Iran through Azerbaijan. This seems to be a good bargain for Baku and especially for Yerevan, though domestically it will be hard to sell to Pashinyan’s opposition. 

A potential byproduct of improved relations between Ankara and Yerevan – the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border – could be a game-changer that equates to opening up the entire South Caucasus region. Armenia will have a new market for its products and businesses. In the longer term, the opening will allow Yerevan to diversify its economy and therefore lessen its dependence on Russia and the fragile route that goes through Georgia. Ankara would also benefit by gaining another route to penetrate the region. Such an opening would also have implications for the balance of power in the region.

Though Russia expressed readiness to help Armenia and Turkey normalize their relations, saying that such a change would boost peace and stability in the region, it is unclear how Russia would benefit from the rapprochement. First, normalization would mean economic diversification and expanded connectivity, both of which directly hit at Russian influence in the South Caucasus. The closed borders have always enabled Russia to play a major role in the region by providing connectivity. 

One possible benefit for Russia is that the Armenia-Turkey connection would allow Russia to have a direct land link with Turkey via Azerbaijan and Armenia. However, meaningful economic benefits are doubtful, as the route is long and could remain unreliable because of distrust between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Moreover, for Russia, the Black Sea will remain a primary route for trade with Turkey because of its shortness, reliability, and low cost.  

In voicing support for the normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia, Moscow could also be considering another factor: Turkey’s growing influence.

Arguably, the biggest winner if Ankara and Yerevan can achieve normalization would be Turkey. While the West is rethinking its position in the wider Black Sea region, Turkey has been actively involved in the South Caucasus both by choice and by compulsion. It has achieved significant results by disrupting regional status quos around the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and the South Caucasus’ limited connectivity. This started in the 1990s, when Turkey worked with Georgia and Azerbaijan to undermine Russia’s centuries-long monopoly on the region’s railway and road connections. Countering Russia-sponsored lines running north and south, Turkey pioneered east-west connectivity. 

To further its strategy for opening up the South Caucasus, Turkey is using Armenia’s defeat in the second Nagorno-Karabakh war to push for greater connectivity with Azerbaijan beyond the route that runs through Georgia. Armenia is critical here. As the defeated side, Yerevan is taking a more realistic view of the need to break the blockade it has been under. Azerbaijan has regained control over much of the territory the Armenians controlled militarily, thus removing a major sticking point for potential Armenian-Turkish reconciliation, given Baku’s influence over Turkey on Armenian matters. 

Turkey’s moves to increase connectivity with Armenia would weaken Iran’s position, too. An opened border with Turkey will diminish Armenia’s dependence on Iran for imports and will increase chances for a corridor to Azerbaijan. The rail corridor through Armenia’s Syunik province will undermine Tehran, which is increasingly suspicious about Ankara’s influence in the South Caucasus. This ties into recent tensions between Azerbaijan and Iran over transit routes, detained Iranian trucks, military drills held near Azerbaijan’s borders, and, most of all, increased Turkish influence. 

The results of the second Nagorno-Karabakh war present Turkey and Armenia with an opportunity to pursue rapprochement. Yet ingrained distrust between the two sides, nationalist groups in both countries, and Azerbaijan’s desire to protect its own interests could scupper Ankara and Yerevan’s attempts. It is also unclear whether Russia would offer long-term support for the countries’ increased connectivity; not all of the proposed projects fit into Moscow’s interests in the South Caucasus, and Russia is suspected of not being wholeheartedly interested in facilitating long-term peace in the region. This makes the process of seeking normalization fraught with problems. 

Moreover, the Western absence from the post-Karabakh war processes adds pressure. The United States and European Union outwardly express hopes for the normalization of ties between Armenia and Turkey and welcome the revival of railways, but collectively the West is distanced from the process, leaving matters in the hands of Eurasian powers.  

Illiberal peacemaking could produce immediate results, but is unlikely to have a concrete basis befitting all interested parties. Thus it is likely that though we will be seeing continued diplomatic activity from both Ankara and Yerevan, concrete rapprochement will nevertheless be hard to achieve. 

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and not an official policy or position of the New Lines Institute, where this article was also published.

Click here to have Eurasia Review’s newsletter delivered via RSS, as an email newsletter, via mobile or on your personal news page.

Emil Avdaliani has worked for various international consulting companies and currently publishes articles focused on military and political developments across the former Soviet sphere.

​Armenia, wounds unhealed one year after the war

Nov 10 2021
Armenia, wounds unhealed one year after the war

At the Tavush cemetery, near the border with Azerbaijan, a family mourns 
a soldier who died during the 2020 conflict.

By Àlex Bustos
10 November 2021


On 10 November 2020, the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan came to an end. The two nations, former Soviet republics of the Caucasus, had been engaged in combat for 44 days, in Nagorno Karabakh (Armenian majority population – under the control of Armenian troops since 1994 – but located in Azerbaijani territory and recognised as part of Azerbaijan by the international community). Disputed since last century, this territory has been the cause of skirmishes and the 1992 to 1994 and 2016 armed conflicts between the two countries.

During the latest armed confrontation, Baku was supported by Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s Turkey, a country Armenia has condemned before the European Court of Human Rights for allegedly sending Syrian mercenaries into the conflict zone. The cross accusations between Armenia and Azerbaijan include the proceedings filed with the International Court of Justice over the alleged laying of mines (by Armenia) following the end the war and Azerbaijan’s holding of war prisoners.

The fears that the conflict might escalate and spread beyond the Armenian and Azerbaijani borders were not materialised. The EU is Baku’s largest trading partner and crude oil is one of its main exports, so maintaining the flow of the pipelines passing close to Nagorno-Karabakh was a priority.

The conflict ended in defeat for the Armenians and with the signing of an armistice by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia (which mediated the ceasefire). Armenia agreed to cede a large part of Nagorno-Karabakh (a territory inhabited by some 146,000 people and which declared itself independent in 1991 but has not been recognised by any country) to Azerbaijan. According to sources in both countries, around 4,000 soldiers were killed in the fighting on the Armenian side and some 3,000 on the Azerbaijani side, plus the civilian casualties and the thousands wounded.

Although the war is over, there are still periodic skirmishes on the border between the two countries and there is no end to the nationalist exaltation. Whilst victory has boosted morale in Azerbaijan, in Armenia, the wounds of the conflict continue to sting. But, for now, neither side wants to go back down the military route.

Yerevan, in the Armenian capital, is home to the Armenian Wounded Heroes rehabilitation centre where former soldiers, most of them in their 20s and 30s, battle with their war wounds. This generation was born during or shortly after the conflict of the early 1990s. Many of those here (from amongst the more than 10,000 wounded in the conflict) have lost one or more limbs. Such is the case for Sayn, who on the day he welcomed us had started work on making his way down stairs with his two new prosthetic legs. The 20-year-old was a professional soldier before the conflict. Now he plans to return to the town of Ararat (Armenia), where he was born, to work in the fields with his family, once his rehabilitation is complete.

“I lost one of my legs in a drone attack that killed 17 people,” explains another wounded soldier, 27-year-old Samuel who went to the front as a volunteer. Since being amputated, he has been living between Stepanakert, capital of Nagorno Karabakh (where he is from), with his wife, and Yerevan, where he goes for rehabilitation every two weeks whilst waiting to receive a prosthesis, which will enable him to walk again.

For this young man, who works in the Foreign Ministry of what is left of the self-proclaimed republic of Artsakh (as the Armenians call Nagorno-Karabakh), “peace with Azerbaijan is possible, but not in the short term”.

Vardan, from Yerevan, was called to the front whilst doing his military service on Armenian territory. He says that “even if he hadn’t been obliged, he would have gone anyway”. At the age of 19, he was fighting with the Armenian troops to repel the Azerbaijani attacks on Nagorno-Karabakh. Sixty per cent of those killed on the front were between 18 and 25 years of age. Most of his friends and acquaintances also traded their homes for barracks during the conflict.

At the moment, he does not feel ready to fight on the front, “neither physically nor mentally”, and for now he will continue to work at the logistics company where he is employed. But if need be, he tells us, he would be ready to return to the front to defend Armenia within a few years.

Levon (not his real name, to protect his identity), who is also from the Armenian capital, was one of the young men who was sent to the front at just 19 years of age. He had been doing his military service for two months when he was sent to fight as part of the sniper unit. He resents that the Azeris had more resources, such as drones, and says that the hardest thing is the “first time”: “the first hour of combat, the first dead body, the first dead friend”. “You go out thinking you’re going to die,” he recalls.

His Christian faith, one of the pillars of Armenian identity, helped him to carry on. “In war, you feel God’s presence everywhere,” he says.

He fought until the end of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and was finally able to return home in November after being away for more than two months. “Armenia has suffered a lot from the genocide and wars. Still, we Armenians, we never lose our strength and our hope and we are always ready to fight for our land and our lives.”

Many young Armenians are now torn between living in Armenia or emigrating to a country – often the United States or Russia – that offers more opportunities than the Transcaucasian country, with its poor economy, high unemployment and low minimum wage (around US$300 or €260).

The war also affected the civilians who suffered from the shelling in Nagorno-Karabakh. Those living in the territories brought under Azeri control (just over two thirds of Nagorno-Karabakh), following the signing of the ceasefire deal, lost their homes. Some of them went as far as to burn their houses (many built with their own hands in the 1990s), preferring to see them destroyed rather than allowing an Azerbaijani to live there.

One of those forced to flee Artsakh was Ruzanna, a resident of Stepanakert. “We lived amid the shelling for a month,” she says. Although she was able to keep her home, she chose to leave for the Armenian capital. “Everything changed before my very eyes, everything looks sad. Stepanakert filled up with the many refugees [from areas under Azerbaijani control], so much so that it’s hard to get around the city now,” she tells us.

The conflict and its consequences were among the main campaign issues debated during the snap parliamentary elections of 20 June 2021 in Armenia, which Nikol Pashinyan won with a comfortable margin. His victory allowed him to maintain his position as the prime minister, despite being identified as the person ultimately responsible for the country’s defeat by its neighbour. “He is the only one who can help the Armenian people. He’s made mistakes, but he has learned from them,” said Arin, who voted in the elections.

Pashinyan and his government now have a number of pressing issues to deal with: the health response to Covid-19, the unstable economic situation (aggravated by the war) and, not least, the border issue with Azerbaijan, which is unlikely to be resolved in the near future.

As for Nagorno-Karabakh, reconstruction work is underway in the areas recovered by Azerbaijan, such as Shushi (Shusha for the Azerbaijanis), and Turkey remains present as a partner for strategic infrastructure. Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev, has meanwhile indicated his willingness to talk with Pashinyan to normalise bilateral relations, but has ruled out any chance of granting special status or autonomy to the Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh.

This article has been translated from Spanish by Louise Durkin

The Valley’s Armenia: The Mission Returns

Your Central Valley, CA
Nov 9 2021


by: Justin Walker

Posted: Nov 9, 2021 / 07:00 PM PST / Updated: Nov 9, 2021 / 07:00 PM PST


FRESNO, Calif. (KSEE) — A medical mission of mercy from Fresno to Armenia leaving life-saving gifts and life-changing impact for years to come. In late September and early October a 40-member team of Fresno doctors, surgeons, dentists and other medical professionals traveled to Armenia for their sixth mission.

Through the hard work, highlights what those medical experts are calling their “best trip yet.”

Watch the report at the link below

​The US Must Save Armenia From Russia

Townhall
Nov 10 2021

The US Must Save Armenia From Russia
Wes Martin
Posted: Nov 10, 2021 12:01 AM
The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

What do you call a country whose prime minister chairs Russia’s six-nation military alliance, hosts a permanent Russian military base, holds a bilateral mutual defense pact with Russia, and whose customs and tariff policy is subsumed within Russia’s Eurasian Economic Union trade zone?

The answer is, surely, “Russia’s ally.”

Today, Armenia, the nation in question, is more under the control of the Kremlin than at any point since the collapse of the Soviet Union to which it once belonged. But it’s not what Armenians want. Who would?

Still, the United States allowed this to happen to a Christian nation whose people want to face west but remain trapped in Russia’s cold embrace. That’s a disgrace.

America has a duty to put it right.

But there’s not much time. Exactly one year this week from a short but brutal war with their neighbor Azerbaijan the situation is not better for Armenia – but worse. To mark last year’s ceasefire – which they, not America, brokered – Russia is hosting the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan for “peace talks.” What we can be sure of is that whatever is agreed is intended to make both these former Soviet satellite states more dependent on today’s Russia – and further apart from each other.

We can already see Russia’s cynical opportunism in the way it has used Armenia’s defeat to turn the screw on its supposed “ally”: in the lands Armenia seized in a conflict from Azerbaijan 30 years ago and lost back to them last year, access to the only town they clung on to is today guarded, and access policed, by Russian so-called “peacekeepers.”

At the same time Putin’s little green men have succeeded in creating another frozen conflict in the Caucasus, his business associates have swooped in like vultures to pick at what remains of Armenia’s economy. The country’s collapsing, dangerous, Chernobyl-design nuclear power plant that supplies almost all their electricity looks set to be decommissioned – and replaced with Russian gas pipelines – making Armenia even more vulnerable to the whims of the Kremlin.

While Russia has been making almost all the running, there is one intervention the U.S. has staged which is at least a preview for how Armenia could be coaxed from Putin’s embrace.

Over the summer the State Department brokered an exchange of prisoners for mine-maps. For fifteen Armenian POWs, Azerbaijan received ordnance surveys pinpointing where Armenia had – after victory in their 1990s war – laid millions of landmines across a quarter of their neighbor’s country. Clearance of the most intensely land-mined territory in the world per square mile means Azerbaijan can return close to a million of its internally displaced citizens to the places and homes they were forced to flee a generation ago.

This agreement – which Russia could have delivered but didn’t – shows how only the U.S. can be the broker between these two long-term adversaries.  Russia wants perpetual destabilization.  America must strive for stability.

America must use its influence and bring Armenia and Azerbaijan closer together. Just as only the U.S. could reconcile European nations – victors with the vanquished – in the aftermath of the Second World War, only the U.S. has the ability to be the indispensable peacemaker between these two countries.

Prisoner-for-maps exchanges are a start – but not nearly enough. The U.S. must go much further. America once facilitated the pooling of resources and the reconciliation of peoples between France and Germany – so they would not fight again. Today the way to guide Armenia off Russian energy dependency is to link the country in trade and transport to its energy rich neighbor Azerbaijan. The U.S. should go further still, by encouraging the two to allow travel of peoples and capital between them, and to build economic prosperity together.

The post-war European model shows this is in no way fanciful, even between nations which have been at daggers drawn for generations.  But what it takes is long-term and intensive American diplomatic engagement – along with both technical and reconstruction assistance.

It shouldn’t be Russia hosting the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan this week: it should be America. It shouldn’t be Russian companies pressing down on the remains of Armenia’s economy and energy independence: it should be American enterprises raising them up. It shouldn’t be Russian troops acting as gatekeepers to an ethnic-Armenian-but-Azerbaijani-owned territory in the southern Caucasus. It should be American power and influence that brings these two neighbors together so they can work out their differences and begin to live in peace and security side by side.

Twelve months ago – by our own inaction – the U.S. set the stage for Putin’s “peace talks” in Moscow this week. We can see across the world time and again that few countries can withstand a Russian brokered “peace.”

We can’t afford to stand aside. The United States must – and should – save Armenia from Russia.

Experts raise alarm over fate of Georgia’s leading art museum amid political upheaval

The Art Newspaper
Experts raise alarm over fate of Georgia's leading art museum amid
political upheaval
By Sophia Kishkovsky
10 November 2021
[Concerns persist that a government-backed renovation of the Shalva
Amiranashvili Museum of Fine Arts in Tbilisi could endanger its
collection of 139,000 ancient and modern works.]
Uncertainty surrounds a controversial renovation plan for Georgia’s
leading art museum as political upheaval grips the South Caucasus
country. According to former and current staff members at the Shalva
Amiranashvili Museum of Fine Arts in Tbilisi, its 139,000-strong
collection of ancient and modern works could be endangered by a
relocation proposed by the culture minister, Tea Tsulukiani.
Meanwhile, architectural preservationists have raised concerns about
the rumoured demolition of the museum’s classical-style 1838 building,
a former seminary at which Joseph Stalin once studied.
The museum turmoil coincided with the cloak-and-dagger return to
Georgia of the exiled former president Mikheil Saakashvili ahead of
municipal elections on 2 October. He was arrested and has been on
hunger strike for more than a month—leading to his transfer this week
to a prison hospital—while thousands have rallied in Tbilisi to demand
his release and medical treatment in a civilian clinic. Mass
demonstrations have followed the elections, when the ruling Georgian
Dream party swept mayoral runoffs in Tbilisi and other major cities
amid widespread allegations of vote-buying. Georgian Dream defeated
Saakashvili’s United National Movement party in 2012 parliamentary
elections.
Tsulukiani is an ally of Georgian Dream’s founder Bidzina Ivanishvili,
a Kremlin-connected billionaire who bought Picasso’s Dora Maar with
Cat for $95.2m in 2006 and served as Georgia’s prime minister in
2012-13. She became culture minister in March, having served as
minister of justice from 2012 to 2020. Soon after her appointment,
Tsulukiani announced the renovation of the Shalva Amiranashvili Museum
as “a major generational endeavor” that will require "very significant
human and financial effort”. In July, she said urgent action would
have to be taken since Unesco experts had determined that precious
icons in the museum’s collection are seriously damaged and need to be
moved.
Meanwhile, opposition politicians and opposition-affiliated media
outlets have linked Tsulukiani’s overhaul of the museum building to
the real-estate interests of Ivanishvili, the lead investor behind the
$500m urban development project Panorama Tbilisi, which includes a
newly constructed hotel next door to the museum.
Eka Kiknadze, the museum’s former manager, tells The Art Newspaper
that she was abruptly demoted to laboratory assistant in a reshuffle
after she requested details about Tsulukiani’s plans. The new
director, Nika Akhalbedashvili, a former justice ministry official
appointed by Tsulukiani, told staff in July that the collection would
have to be moved within months. Museum employees and preservationists
have protested that the plan is ill-considered, amid fears that the
collection might never return to the building. According to Kiknadze,
a long-term strategy to move the museum’s collection to
climate-regulated temporary storage in adjacent buildings has gone
ignored.
The collection comprises “the main artefacts in Georgian culture, from
medieval icons to modern Georgian art”, Kiknadze says, with the most
valuable medieval works being known as the Treasury. These were
“supposed to be temporarily [relocated] while the historic building
was undergoing rehabilitation” under a “multi-stage” plan drawn up by
specialists of Georgia’s National Museum, an umbrella organisation
that oversees a dozen institutions including the Shalva Amiranashvili
Museum of Fine Arts. This would have provided a suitable 3,500 sq. m
space “equipped according to all modern standards for storing museum
collections in terms of climate and humidity, with the most up-to-date
micro-climate, fire and physical safety systems”, Kiknadze says.
The abandoned strategy, which is still visible on the National Museum’s website
, was created after the organisation partnered with Germany’s Prussian
Cultural Heritage Foundation in 2010-12 in a cultural “twinning”
programme funded by the European Union. It referred to a design
concept for the Shalva Amiranashvili Museum’s renovation by the French
architect Jean-Francois Milou, who also proposed a masterplan for an
“Avenue of the Arts” to unify various buildings of the Georgian
National Museum.
The current situation “is quite alarming and very offensive because
many years of work have gone down the drain”, says George
Partskhaladze, a member of the Georgian National Museum’s research
council who worked on the twinning project and restoration strategy.
Irina Koshoridze, the chief curator of Oriental collections, has
confirmed to The Art Newspaper that “the transfer of collections has
not started yet” at the Shalva Amiranashvili Museum but she warns that
“no temperature and climate conditions” are in place if objects are
relocated.In contrast, a decade ago the 5,000 works of the Oriental
collection were carefully moved to the Simon Janashia Museum of
Georgia nearby, including 25 early Persian paintings that Koshoridze
described as its “most important and world-renowned” works.
Supporters of the museum recently raised the alarm over the fate of
another prized artefact, the medieval Ancha Icon of the Saviour, which
dates to the sixth or seventh century. In August, the Patriarch of the
Georgian Orthodox Church, Ilia II, asked the prime minister Irakli
Garibashvili to hand over the icon to the Anchiskhati church after
which it is named, for use in religious services.
“The historic building of the Museum of Fine Arts to Bidzina
Ivanishvili, the museum’s treasures to the Patriarchate—this is the
goal for which Tsulukiani, who is capable of all, was appointed
minister of culture,” commented Roman Gotsiridze, a United National
Movement opposition MP, according to local news reports.
Neither the Georgian culture ministry nor the National Museum
responded to The Art Newspaper’s requests for comment. A ministry
statement posted this summer on Facebook decried the poor condition of
the Shalva Amiranashvili Museum, which it said “does not meet the
elementary standards of seismic resistance”. The statement refuted
claims that the building could be demolished, however, adding: “the
ministry intends to save the unique exhibits preserved in the museum”.
Tsulukiani has also claimed that works went missing under previous
museum management.
In late September, Akhalbedashvili, the museum’s new director, accused
local media of spreading lies and said: “the art museum building will
definitely be restored in the place where it is now”.
 

Azerbaijan activists sound alarm over wave of killings of women

AFP
By Elman MAMEDOV
Wed, November 10, 2021
Dilara Bagiyeva's face grew pale as she recounted how, after suffering
abuse from her husband for a decade, he turned on their eight-year-old
daughter in a drunken fit last year.
That evening in November, he returned home intoxicated to their
13th-floor apartment in Azerbaijan's capital Baku, beating Bagiyeva
first in the bedroom, then the hallway and finally the kitchen, where
he tried to throw her from the balcony.
Before the 41-year-old English teacher lost consciousness, she
remembered her daughter Farah pleading: "Daddy, don't hit my mom."
When she came to, Farah was nowhere to be seen. Police who arrived at
the scene shortly after refused to let Bagiyeva see the body.
"He dragged me out onto the balcony that night to throw me off.
Instead, he threw my baby out the window," Bagiyeva said.
"She was my everything," she added, looking at a picture of her
daughter on her phone.
Bagiyeva is among thousands of women subjected to domestic violence in
Azerbaijan, where activists are sounding the alarm over femicide
despite considerable barriers in the conservative Caspian Sea country.
Seventy-one women were killed in the ex-Soviet republic by husbands or
male relatives last year and 48 more in the first eight months of
2021, the office of Azerbaijan's prosecutor general told AFP in an
email.
The first Muslim nation to introduce universal suffrage in 1919,
Azerbaijan is one of the most secular countries in the Islamic world.
But wives and daughters are often limited to carrying out family
duties in its male-dominated society, which tolerates abuse against
women.
- 'Fear of retribution' -
Officials said the approximately 2,000 cases of domestic violence
against women that are reported annually are just the tip of the
iceberg, as most victims remain silent.
"Many women don't phone the police for fear of retribution from family
members," said Taliya Ibrahimova of the state committee for women's
affairs.
The government last year adopted a four-year action plan to combat
domestic violence that included setting up a hotline and a state-run
shelter for victims.
Ibrahimova said a 2010 law to tackle domestic violence was being
updated, and the violation would soon become a separate category of
offence in the penal code.
But activists say the measures are not enough, and accuse the
authoritarian government of President Ilham Aliyev of failing to
protect women.
"Femicide is a political issue because tackling the problem requires
political will," said Gulnara Mehdiyeva, a prominent women's rights
activist.
She described Azerbaijan's political system as "despotic", and said
the authorities "don't want citizens to know their rights".
Mehdiyeva said activists had come under pressure from conservative
groups since March 8 last year, when they held their first rally to
raise awareness of violence against women.
She said a pro-government website had even leaked recordings of her
conversations with a friend "to portray me as a whore and to shame
me".
There is a prevalent "negative attitude in society that accuses us of
eroding family values", Mehdiyeva said.
The US embassy this year raised concerns over the killings of women,
while the British embassy urged Azerbaijan to join the 2011 Istanbul
Convention on combating violence against women and domestic violence.
Azerbaijan is among just a handful of countries that have not ratified
the first legally binding international treaty to address the issue.
- 'Until my last breath' -
The United Nations says Azerbaijan lacks the statistics to accurately
track trends on women's rights, including on the pay gap and physical
and sexual harassment.
But it noted that, as of February this year, women held only 18
percent of seats in parliament.
"Women lack the foundational representation in public office that
would ensure that others hear their voices," the Borgen Project, a
US-based women's rights group said last year.
Lawyer Zibeyda Sadikova said police "don't take seriously" women who
report domestic abuse, but instead "shame and subject them to
psychological pressure".
"Many women I try to convince to report (abuse) to the police say they
already did, and the police told them to reconcile with their
husbands, who have since continued beating them," she said.
"Most people in society think a woman must be locked up at home and
her husband has the right to beat her."
She said the flawed implementation of government policies and gaps in
legislation added to the problem.
"The government must fill such legal gaps, initiate an
awareness-raising campaign, and ensure women's access to psychological
and judicial assistance," she said.
Bagiyeva said her husband was at first only charged for beating her
and not for murdering her child, whose death was ruled a suicide.
But she said a murder probe was now underway, and she had appealed to
the prosecutor general and even to strongman Aliyev for justice.
"I will fight until my last breath, until my strength expires, to
restore justice, so the truth comes out," she said.
eg-im/jbr/mbx/ah
 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/10/2021

                                        Wednesday, November 10, 2021
Russia Backs Mediators’ Renewed Visits To Karabakh
November 10, 2021
        • Gevorg Stamboltsian
        • Naira Nalbandian
Nagorno-Karabakh -- Bako Sahakian, the Karabakh president, meets with the U.S., 
Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Stepanakert, October 16, 
2019.
Russia said on Wednesday that the U.S., Russian and French mediators co-heading 
the OSCE Minsk Group should be able to resume their visits to Nagorno-Karabakh 
as part of their peace efforts.
“Russia attaches importance to a quick resumption of visits to Karabakh by the 
Minsk Group co-chairs in their full format,” the Russian Foreign Ministry 
spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, told reporters.
In that regard, Zakharova reaffirmed Moscow’s support for the Minsk Group’s 
continued activities.
“The format of the OSCE Minsk Group enjoys broad international support,” she 
said. “The Russian Foreign Ministry also attaches importance to the troika’s 
efforts in the context of addressing socioeconomic and humanitarian issues 
facing the region.”
The mediating troika had for decades travelled to Karabakh and met with its 
leadership during regular tours of the conflict zone. The visits practically 
stopped with the onset of the coronavirus pandemic and the subsequent outbreak 
of the Armenian-Azerbaijani war.
The mediators were widely expected to resume their shuttle diplomacy after 
organizing talks between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in New 
York on September 24. It is still not clear when they could arrive in the region.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian suggested over the weekend that their 
planned trip is delayed by Azerbaijan. He said he asked the Minsk Group’s U.S. 
co-chair, Andrew Schofer, about reasons for the delay when the latter 
accompanied a senior U.S. State Department official on a visit to Yerevan last 
week.
“He said they are working towards making the visit,” Pashinian told Armenian 
Public Television. “I think that it’s overdue, I think that it should have 
already taken place. I presume that the Azerbaijani side is creating some 
obstacles.”
Azerbaijani leaders have repeatedly said that Baku’s victory in last year’s war 
ended the Karabakh conflict. Armenia as well as the United States and France 
have publicly insisted that the conflict remains unresolved.
Armenian Medics Prosecuted For Fake COVID-19 Certificates
November 10, 2021
Armenia - People line up at an open-air coronavirus vaccination site in Yerevan, 
May 7, 2021.
Nine Armenian medical workers have been arrested in recent weeks on charges of 
issuing fake coronavirus vaccination and test certificates, according to state 
prosecutors.
Starting from October 1, virtually all employees of Armenia’s public and private 
entities have been required to get inoculated or take coronavirus tests twice a 
month at their own expense. Health authorities introduced the requirement in a 
bid to increase the slow pace of vaccinations which greatly contributed to a 
resurgence of COVID-19 in the country.
Speaking during an October 7 cabinet meeting in Yerevan, Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian ordered law-enforcement authorities to crack down on medics who he 
said issue fake vaccination certificates to individuals refusing to be 
vaccinated. The Armenian police and National Security Service announced a few 
days later the first arrests of employees of policlinics serving as the 
country’s principal vaccination centers.
The Office of the Prosecutor-General said on Wednesday that 15 medical workers 
have been charged with selling fake vaccination certificates as well as 
documents showing negative test results to a total of about 310 people. The 
latter paid from 5,000 to 40,000 drams ($10-$84) per document, it said in a 
statement.
The statement added that nine of the suspects are currently under arrest pending 
investigation. Investigators are continuing to take “large-scale measures” to 
expose more such forgeries, it said.
The prosecutors urged Armenian medical personnel to avoid such practices, 
warning that they would risk “strict” punishment.
According to the Armenian Ministry of Health, nearly 614,000 people in the 
country of about 3 million received at least one dose of a vaccine as of 
November 7. Only around 10 percent of the country’s population was fully 
vaccinated.
Meanwhile, Armenia’s daily coronavirus death toll hit a new record after months 
of a steady increase in infections. The Ministry of Health said 69 people died 
from COVID-19 on Tuesday.
U.S. Condemns Killing Of Karabakh Armenian Civilian
November 10, 2021
        • Heghine Buniatian
        • Susan Badalian
NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Azerbaijani soldiers patrol at a checkpoint on a road 
outside the town of Shushi (Susa), November 26, 2020
The U.S. State Department has condemned the killing of an ethnic Armenian 
resident of Nagorno-Karabakh committed just outside the Azerbaijani-controlled 
town of Shushi (Shusha) on Monday.
The 22-year-old Martik Yeremian was gunned down and three other utility workers 
wounded while repairing a water pipe off the road connecting Karabakh to Armenia.
The Russian Defense Ministry confirmed on Tuesday that they were shot “from the 
Azerbaijani side.” It said Russian peacekeeping forces stationed in Karabakh are 
investigating the incident together with Karabakh Armenian and Azerbaijani 
officials.
“We condemn the violence that caused the death of an Armenian civilian,” read a 
statement posted on the Twitter page of the State Department’s Bureau of 
European and Eurasian Affairs.
“We urge Armenia and Azerbaijan to intensify their engagement including through 
the Minsk Group Co-Chairs to resolve all outstanding issues related to or 
resulting from the [Nagorno-Karabakh] conflict,” it said.
According to Gagik Poghosian, the chief executive of Karabakh’s water and 
sewerage network, the four workers repaired a pipeline supplying water to a 
Russian peacekeeping post near Shushi when they were approached by an armed 
Azerbaijani man.
“He asked what they are doing,” Poghosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “Our 
guys replied that they are eliminating the consequences of an accident, and he 
immediately started shooting.”
“This is the road through which hundreds of vehicles go to Armenia and come back 
every day,” he said. “We have worked there for months.”
The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry on Tuesday did not deny that the civilians were 
shot by an Azerbaijani serviceman. But it blamed the Armenian side for the 
shooting, saying that the Karabakh Armenian workers were not escorted by Russian 
soldiers and that the incident took place during Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev’s visit to Shushi.
“An event attended by Azerbaijan’s president and other high-ranking officials 
was held in Shusha, and tight security measures are taken in such cases,” a 
ministry spokeswoman said.
The governments of Armenia and Karabakh have strongly condemned the shootings.
“Azerbaijan is trying to disseminate despair in Artsakh (Karabakh) so that 
people choose to leave Artsakh while those willing to return don’t come back,” 
said Davit Babayan, the Karabakh foreign minister.
In recent months, Karabakh authorities have periodically accused Azerbaijani 
troops of opening small arms fire at Karabakh towns and villages mostly located 
close to Shushi. A 55-year-old Karabakh Armenian farmer was shot dead outside 
the northern Karabakh town of Martakert last month.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.