Yerevan ready to usher in era of peace, anticipates constructive steps from Baku

TASS, Russia
Nov 9 2021
Yerevan stressed that Baku continued to violate the provisions of the trilateral statement, “holding many Armenian POWs, hostages and other detainees, which is a gross violation not only of the trilateral statement, but also of international humanitarian law”

YEREVAN, November 9. /TASS/. Armenia is ready to take practical steps to overcome all animosity in order to usher in the era of peaceful development and stability in the region, however it expects Baku to follow suit, the Armenian Foreign Ministry reported on Tuesday on the occasion of the anniversary of the cessation of hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh and the signing of a trilateral statement by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia.

“Armenia affirms its readiness to undertake practical efforts to defuse the situation in the region, gradually overcome animosity, bring stability to the region and usher in the era of peaceful development. At the same time, for the process to be effective Azerbaijan must opt for a constructive stance, and abandon its anti-Armenian policy and hostile rhetoric,” the message reads.

Yerevan stressed that Baku continued to violate the provisions of the trilateral statement, “holding many Armenian POWs, hostages and other detainees, which is a gross violation not only of the trilateral statement, but also of international humanitarian law.”

“Ceasefire violations by the Azerbaijani Armed Forces are regular and are accompanied not only by attacks on the positions of Armenian troops and the Artsakh Defense Army (unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic — TASS), but against peaceful communities and residents, which leads to human and material losses,” the statement says.


Baku accuses Yerevan of trying to discredit Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh

TASS, Russia
Nov 9 2021
Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, 2020

BAKU, November 9. /TASS/. Armenia is seeking to escalate the situation in the region and discredit the activities of Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Leila Abdullayeva said on Tuesday, commenting on the Armenian foreign ministry’s statement following an armed incident near the city of Shusha.

“The Armenian foreign ministry has neither political, nor legal, nor moral right to make any statements about developments on Azerbaijan’s territory. As for the incident, it was yet another provocation of the Armenian side,” Abdullayeva said in a statement.

On Monday, Armenian media reported about an armed incident near the city of Shusha in Nagorno-Karabakh. According to Armenpress agency, “civilians conducting works on a water pipeline at a crossroads near the city of Shusha came under shelling by the Azerbaijani side.” As a result, one person was killed and three more received gun wounds.

According to the Azerbaijani foreign ministry spokesperson, the Armenian side notifies Russian peacekeepers about any works near Shusha and such works are to be conducted in the presence of peacekeepers. “This time, no one informed the Russian peacekeepers and they were not present during the ‘works.’ Naturally, it gives grounds to questions,” she noted.

She recalled that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and other officials took part in an event in Shusha. “Naturally, security measures are enhanced on such occasions. Bearing this in mind, it is absolutely illogical to organize any repair works on the adjacent territory,” she stated.

She also recalled that Armenia’s defense minister made a trip to Karabakh a day before and described it as “another provocation.”

“The above-mentioned episodes demonstrate that the Armenian side is deliberately escalating the situation. And the fact that these actions were taken ahead of the anniversary of the signing of the trilateral statement on ceasefire reveals Yerevan’s attempt to discredit the activities of Russian peacekeepers,” she added.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, 2020, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. On November 9, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh. Under the document, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides stopped at the positions that they had held and Russian peacekeepers were deployed along the engagement line in Nagorno-Karabakh and along the Lachin corridor that connects Armenia with the enclave to exercise control of the ceasefire observance. Apart from that, several districts came over to Baku’s control.


Armenian real estate market booms

eurasianet
Nov 9 2021

Ani Mejlumyan Nov 9, 2021

Central Yerevan (iStock/Getty)

In a slowing Armenian economy, one sector is showing unexpected growth: real estate.

While the country’s economic activity index measured 4.4 percent during the first three quarters of 2021, in the real estate sector the figure was over 16 percent.

Between January and September this year, the country saw 143,000 real estate transactions — more than 16 percent over the same period in 2020. Of all the deals, 37 percent represented property sales.

“September has been somewhat record-breaking in the real estate market. This is especially visible in the mortgage sector, which is growing fast,” Armen Nurbekyan, the head of the Central Bank’s macroeconomics department, told journalists on November 2.

“From February 2021, the real estate market started getting more active, the price drop that we had in 2020 slowly came back to normal and became equal with pre-COVID, pre-war times,” Suren Tovmasyan, the head of Armenia’s Cadastre Committee, told Public TV. “We see a positive tendency, if the economy and political situation remain stable, the market will keep growing,” said Tovmasyan.

Prices, especially in Yerevan where the activity is strongest, have been inching up. After a drop of 0.7 percent in the first quarter of 2021 compared to the previous quarter, prices increased 1.5 percent in the second quarter and 3.2 percent in the third.

“There is an unexpected growth in activity of the market; we didn’t expect that after the pandemic, and in this political situation,” Vahe Danielyan, a real estate agent, told Public TV. “I think prices will grow further.”

But the increase in activity may not be a good sign for the economy.

“The market has grown but it means that people don’t know where else to invest,” economist Suren Parsyan told Eurasianet. “Instead of investing in industries like manufacturing, trade, or services they are buying property because there is little trust that the economy will be stable.”

The active market is likely connected to a recent government decision to shut down a program that had allowed homebuyers to apply their income taxes to their mortgages.

In August, the government announced that it intended to phase out the program, citing the fact that a disproportionate number of the beneficiaries were concentrated in Yerevan. It will stop supporting mortgages in Yerevan in July 2022 and across the country by 2025.

“People were trying to get into the program before it’s too late,” Parsyan said. 

The bill has already passed its first reading in parliament, the second reading has yet to be scheduled.

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Nagorno-Karabakh: Land still laced with mines, year after war

Al-Jazeera, Qatar
Nov 9 2021

Several people have been killed and injured as de-mining agencies say lack of resources slows efforts to clear weaponry.

By Liz Cookman
Published On 9 Nov 2021

Baku, Azerbaijan – A year after intense fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, the territory is still so heavily laced with mines and unexploded weaponry that it could take more than 10 years to be fully cleared.

Over the past year, thousands of munitions have been removed but de-mining agencies say a lack of resources and insufficient information are complicating the clean-up operation.

Halo Trust, a humanitarian group that helps countries recover after conflict, is working alongside other groups to clear areas under ethnic Armenian control, while Azerbaijan’s operation is being carried out by the government-run Azerbaijan National Agency for Mine Action (ANAMA).

As well as a large number of landmines across both sides, Halo Trust says the biggest challenge on Armenian-held territory is cluster munitions, which scatter submunitions or bomblets over a wide area.

They have found and destroyed almost 2,000 cluster munitions since the end of the war in November last year, but suffer from a lack of funding. They have 150 staff members against the required 250.

A survey by the Trust found that 68 percent of inhabited settlements either had cluster munitions or evidence of their use.

The group told Al Jazeera it is still finding cluster munitions on agricultural land and in areas frequently used by families for picnics.

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One Armenian has been killed since the end of the war, while 20 have suffered amputations or life-changing injuries.

The Trust estimates that more than 16 square kilometres (6 square miles) of land are contaminated, with the search likely to continue for at least another four years.

“Cluster munitions have a high failure rate and can cause injuries and fatalities long after war has finished,” said Miles Hawthorn, Halo Trust’s programme manager in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“The most common type found in Nagorno Karabakh has a distinctive pink ribbon, which makes them cruelly attractive to children.”

Mine maps dispute

According to Human Rights Watch, Armenia and Azerbaijan used cluster munitions, which are widely banned under an international treaty, during last year’s war.

Both deny using them, but accuse the other of doing so.

For ANAMA, the biggest and most time-consuming challenge comes from locating landmines due to inefficient recording of their whereabouts.

With a team of more than 600 people in the field, it says it has so far cleared almost 18,000 anti-personnel mines, more than 9,000 other sorts of mines and 23,000 unexploded ordnance, as well as more than 19,000 hectares (47,000 acres) of land.

As part of last year’s peace deal, Armenia handed over a number of mine locator maps. However, according to ANAMA, they are incomplete and are only about 25 percent accurate.

“The biggest question is, are these all the mine maps?” said Samir Poladov, deputy chairman of the board of ANAMA.

“The ones we did receive were inaccurate and incomplete. Many don’t even have information about coordinates, they just have a general drawing of the area with some information and approximate locations, but they are better to have than nothing.”

Baku believes Yerevan could have more mine maps than were turned over last year. However, Armenian analysts and commentators say they do not exist.

Historic conflict

Armenia and Azerbaijan, two former Soviet republics, fought for six weeks from September last year over Nagorno-Karabakh in a conflict that killed more than 6,500 people – mostly soldiers.

In November 2020, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a ceasefire agreement that granted Azerbaijan control of parts of Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as adjacent territories that had been occupied by Armenians since the first Karabakh war in the 1990s.

During the first conflict, forces from both sides laid landmines across the area, rendering swaths of the territory hazardous. An assessment by the United Nations and the United States at the time found that more than 100,000 landmines had been planted.

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According to estimates by ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh, landmine explosions killed 180 people and injured 507 in the 1990s – what they claim is the highest number of landmine accidents per capita in any region of the world.

The problem was compounded by the second war, yet Azerbaijan is keen to push ahead with clearances so those who were displaced during the first war can return. For decades, they have been living in temporary accommodation.

Poladov said some people, desperate to see their homeland for the first time since the 1990s, returned before the area had been secured. As a result, there have been 60 civilian accidents, including two deaths.

Explosions also injured five de-miners and killed two Azerbaijani journalists and a local government official.

Years-long clearing effort ahead

While visiting the newly-regained territories still requires government permission, ANAMA is running a mine risk education campaign alongside UN children’s agency UNICEF to raise awareness of the dangers.

More than 600,000 Azerbaijanis fled Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts during the first war, between 1988 and 1994; the country has one of the world’s largest populations of internally displaced people per capita.

Although the government is planning a number of smart cities to help them return, Deputy Foreign Minister Elnur Mammadov told Al Jazeera that it could take 10 to 12 years for the area to be fully cleared of hazardous weapons.

It is thought the first Azerbaijanis will be able to return to live in Nagorno-Karabakh by the end of this year or early next year.

The use of anti-personnel mines is a violation of international law, but neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan has signed the 1997 Mine Ban Convention to eliminate their use. Both say they are unwilling to stop their use until the other does.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

Why Turkey and Azerbaijan Won’t Get a Corridor Across Armenia

The National Interest
Nov 9 2021

If Turks hope to enjoy unhampered trade with Central Asia all the way to the Chinese border, then Armenians in Artsakh should enjoy the same unhampered trade through Turkey all the way to France or the United Kingdom.

by Michael Rubin

It has now been one year since Armenia and Azerbaijan accepted a ceasefire ending the forty-four-day war between Azerbaijan and Artsakh, the unrecognized Armenian state in Nagorno-Karabakh. The war left Artsakh as a rump state and saw Armenia return Azerbaijani districts that it had occupied during the first war with Azerbaijan shortly after the Soviet Union’s fall. The agreement, published on the Kremlin website, also allowed Russia to insert nearly 2,000 troops as peacekeepers between the two sides and called for an exchange of prisoners of war and other hostages. The final clause declared:   

All economic and transport connections in the region shall be unblocked. The Republic of Armenia shall guarantee the security of transport connections between the western regions of the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic in order to arrange unobstructed movement of persons, vehicles and cargo in both directions. The Border Guard Service of the Russian Federal Security Service shall be responsible for overseeing the transport connections.

In recent months, however, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev have sought to redefine the clause in two important ways. Firstly, they interpret it as granting them a corridor that will bisect sovereign Armenian territory. Secondly, they ignore the first sentence that seeks to unblock economic and transport connections across the region. The Biden administration should make clear such reinterpretation is unwarranted and illegitimate.

Initially, there was optimism among Turks and in Central Asia that vehicular traffic from Nakhchivan, an Azerbaijani exclave separated from the rest of Azerbaijan by Armenia’s Zangezur corridor, could revive the moribund economy in eastern Turkey and expand trade and tourism across Central Asia. Aliyev’s cocky belligerence soon quashed that possibility. “The creation of the Zangezur corridor fully meets our national, historical, and future interests. We will be implementing the Zangezur corridor, whether Armenia wants it or not,” he said earlier this year on Azerbaijan’s state-controlled television. That Secretary of State Antony Blinken certified that Azerbaijan had committed itself to diplomacy and eschewed military force just two days after Aliyev made his threat demonstrates either State Department incompetence or a deliberate violation by Blinken of the Freedom Support Act.

Regardless, Turkey supported Aliyev’s bluster. Turkey’s official state-run television channel blamed Joseph Stalin who, while People’s Commissar for Nationalities, awarded Zangezur to Armenia, which the channel claimed was until then Azeri. The irony here, of course, is that Stalin had similarly transferred Nagorno-Karabakh, historically Armenian territory, to Azerbaijan. By laying claim to Zangezur, the Turkish and Azeri governments undermine the legitimacy of Aliyev’s claims to Nagorno-Karabakh. A subsequent Turkish article argued, “The Zangezur Corridor was the most important clause in favor of Azerbaijan and Turkey,” no matter that the ceasefire agreement called for a transport link rather than a formal corridor.   

Erdoğan addressed the issue with more finesse than his Azeri partner. He said that any meeting with the Armenian leader to discuss ending Turkey’s blockade of Armenia required first fulfilling Azerbaijan’s demands. “God willing, the problem between Azerbaijan and Armenia will be overcome with the opening of the corridors,” Erdoğan said in September. When Armen Grigoryan, secretary of the Security Council of Armenia, acknowledged in October that Armenian roads could be open to Azerbaijani and Turkish traffic albeit under Armenian control and without a loss of sovereignty, Aliyev again allowed his triumphalism and expansionism to get in the way of a pragmatic solution. Speaking at a joint news conference with Erdoğan, Aliyev said, “Both Turkey and Azerbaijan will take necessary steps for the realization of the Zangezur Corridor… to unite the entire Turkic world.” 

Both President Joe Biden and Blinken have repeatedly declared that “diplomacy is back,” but when it comes to the South Caucasus, it is absent. This is unfortunate because there is a real opportunity to promote peace within the region and advance American interests. A common refrain among the State Department’s unofficial Turkey lobby and beneficiaries of Azerbaijan’s “caviar diplomacy” is that Azerbaijan is a better ally to the United States than Armenia because of Yerevan’s ties to both Moscow and Tehran. Put aside that, in reality, Azerbaijan’s ties to Russia and Iran have grown exponentially over recent years. If Washington’s goal was to scale back Armenia’s ties to Russia and Iran, then the best way forward would be to pressure Turkey and Azerbaijan to lift their double blockade of Armenia in order to reduce Armenian dependence upon Russia and Iran. Turkey should open its borders to Armenian trade as should Azerbaijan. While Turkey hopes its trucks could drive through Zangezur to Armenia, Armenian vehicles should likewise be able to drive from Yerevan to Istanbul. If Turks hope to enjoy unhampered trade with Central Asia all the way to the Chinese border, then Armenians in Artsakh should enjoy the same unhampered trade through Turkey all the way to France or the United Kingdom.  

Aliyev made a mockery of the Section 907 waiver allowing U.S. assistance to the autocratic petrostate. It is time to revoke the waiver until the Azeri dictator proves his commitment to peace and diplomacy by opening Azerbaijan’s borders to Armenian trade. Likewise, if Blinken truly wants to encourage peace in the region, he should recall newly appointed Jeffrey Flake, the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, and direct him to return to Ankara only when he can drive there from the Armenian capital.

Michael Rubin is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, where he specializes in Iran, Turkey, and the broader Middle East. He also regularly teaches classes at sea about Middle East conflicts, culture, terrorism, and the Horn of Africa to deployed U.S. Navy and Marine units. You can follow him on Twitter: @mrubin1971.

Image: Reuters.

UK Must recognise ‘appalling historical injustice’ of Armenian genocide, says MP

Evening Standard, UK
Nov 9 2021
Despite no fewer than 31 countries now officially recognise the Armenian genocide, the UK has still failed to follow suit, Tim Loughton has said.
By 

Martina Bet
2 hours ago

The UK can help right an “appalling historical injustice” by recognising the Armenian genocide, a Conservative former minister has said.

Tim Loughton the MP for East Worthing and Shoreham put forward in the House of Commons a bill that would require the UK Government to formally recognise the genocide of the Armenians in the period 1915 to 1923 and to establish an annual commemoration to the victims of the Armenian genocide.

Mr Loughton, who chairs the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Armenia, claimed that despite the fact that no fewer than 31 countries now officially recognise the Armenian genocide, the UK has still “failed to follow suit”.

He insisted a memorandum from the Foreign Office back in 1999 “let the cat out of the bag” when it said: “Given the importance of our relationship, political, strategic and commercial with Turkey, recognising the genocide would provide no practical benefit to the UK.”

“Refusing to recognise the Armenian Genocide risk conveying a dangerous message of impunity that a crime unpunished is a crime encouraged or downplayed”

Mr Loughton insisted “glossing over the uncomfortable inconveniences of past history is not the basis for strong and constructive relationships.”

He told MPs: “We cannot legitimately call out and stand up to genocide still going on in the 21st century by sidelining and neglecting the genocides of the 20th century.

“Refusing to recognise the Armenian Genocide risk conveying a dangerous message of impunity that a crime unpunished is a crime encouraged or downplayed.”

He noted the Bill is strongly supported by members from at least five parties across the House, before adding: “We have the opportunity to do our best to help right an appalling historical injustice and as a leading advocate of human rights on the international stage, send out a clear message that we recognise genocide wherever and whenever it has been committed, as the worst crime against humanity and we will call it helped defend the victims and bring the perpetrators to justice.”

In April, US president Joe Biden formally recognised the systematic killings and deportations of hundreds of thousands of Armenians by Ottoman Empire forces in the early 20th century as “genocide”.

Mr Biden used a term for the atrocities that his White House predecessors had avoided for decades amid concerns over alienating Turkey.

The Turkish foreign ministry said in response at the time: “We reject and denounce in the strongest terms the statement of the President of the US regarding the events of 1915 made under the pressure of radical Armenian circles and anti-Turkey groups.”

Mr Loughton’s Armenian Genocide Recognition Bill was listed for a second reading on March 18 2022, but is unlikely to become law due to a lack of parliamentary time.

 

Armenia condemns “violation of ceasefire” at borders with Azerbaijan Republic

Iran Front Page
Nov 9 2021

Armenia’s foreign ministry has strongly condemned what it calls blatant violation by the Azerbaijan Republic’s military of a ceasefire agreement signed between Yerevan and Baku last year.

The ministry said the Azerbaijan Republic’s forces opened fire on civilians doing construction work near the Stepanakert-Shushi road, which is under the control of Russian peacekeepers. 

The ministry said the incident took place on November 8 and left one civilian dead and three others injured.

“We strongly condemn the gross violation of the ceasefire regime by the Azerbaijani armed forces, which was established by the Statement of November 9, 2020. It is noteworthy that the incident took place on the eve of the first anniversary of the signing of the Trilateral Statement and on the day of the visit of the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev to Shushi, wherein another statement full of Armenophobic rhetoric and threats of use of force was delivered,” the ministry said in a statement.

The ministry stressed that the attack was the second by the Azerbaijan Republic’s armed forces within a month that caused human casualties. 

Armenia has repeatedly accused the Azerbaijan Republic of violating the ceasefire, brokered by Russia, at border areas, which Baku denies.

Baku had earlier issued a statement to mark the anniversary of the “victory in Karabakh conflict”. In the statement, it called for normalization of ties with Yerevan and implementation of the trilateral ceasefire.

Armenians rally in Athens, march to Turkish Embassy

Nov 9 2021
by GCT

Hundreds of Armenians marched to the Turkish Embassy in Athens on the first anniversary of the Artsakh war, the Armenian National Committee of Greece informs.

Participating in the rally were the Most Reverend Archbishop of the Orthodox Armenians of Greece Mr. Kegam Hatserian, the President of the Central Council of the Orthodox Armenians of Greece Mr. Takvor Ovakimian.

The positions of the Armenian National Committee were presented by Harout Spartalian.

After the brief event in the Syntagma Square, the participants walked peacefully to Rigillis Square, as the police did not allow them approach the Turkish embassy.

The peaceful protest ended with the national anthems of Armenia and Greece.

Security expert calls for advancement of “remedial secession” for Artsakh

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 14:05, 6 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS. The delimitation and demarcation between Armenia and Azerbaijan must begin based on such principles which would define certain “red lines” in order for there not to be new threats for Armenia and Artsakh, security expert Sossi Tatikyan said at a seminar.

“We must closely follow the developments and advance the remedial secession principle, proving that Artsakh’s existence within Azerbaijan contains a real threat of ethnic cleansing,” Tatikyan, an expert in Public Administration, International Relations and Security said at the “Corridor or Road, What Should Armenia’s Stance Be discussion in Yerevan.

“We must be able to reach the kind of situation for Artsakh so that with time Azerbaijan will lose legal and political right towards Artsakh,” Tatikyan said.

Speaking about Azerbaijan’s statements on the so-called “Zangezur corridor”, Sossi Tatikyan noted that unblocking of roads rules out the idea of a corridor, rather being a degree of it.

“In the modern world the unblocking of roads is seen positively, whereas the situation of our region, which spans for decades, is perceived unnatural. And we must be able to capitalize this for our strategic communication. We must emphasize that there is absolutely no need for a corridor and push this issue out of the agenda. We must emphasize that the corridor has become necessary for Azerbaijan only for the reason that it itself has been keeping the road blockaded for years. And if the unblocking of roads were to happen in the region, then there won’t be any necessity for a corridor,” she said.

“I believe that yesterday’s statement issued by the Russian foreign ministry contains these elements. It contains encouraging elements on Russia also being convinced in the matter that there is no necessity of a corridor, that there is a need of unblocking the roads. I think we must understand how to use these roads in order for there not to be new security problems for Armenia.”

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 06-11-21

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 17:32, 6 November, 2021

YEREVAN, 6 NOVEMBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 6 November, USD exchange rate stood at 475.91 drams. EUR exchange rate stood at 549.25 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate stood at 6.64 drams. GBP exchange rate stood at 639.29 drams.

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

Gold price stood at 27482.64 drams. Silver price stood at 363.09 drams. Platinum price stood at 15943.5 drams.