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Armenia Ombudsman meets with France Ambassador, presents urgency of Armenian POWs’ return

News.am, Armenia
Oct 24 2021

Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan today received newly appointed Ambassador of France to Armenia Anne Louyot and congratulated her on assuming the important mission, as reported on the Facebook page of the Human Rights Defender of Armenia.

Tatoyan presented the urgency of the return of Armenian captives and the violations of the rights of residents on the borders of Armenia due to the criminal acts of the Azerbaijanis.

The Ombudsman highly appreciated the professional and self-dedicated work of French reporters during the war [in Nagorno-Karabakh] in September-November 2020.

During the meeting, Tatoyan presented facts that affirm the violations committed by the Azerbaijani Armed Forces against residents on Armenia’s borders. He went into detail and said people have been deprived of their homes and lands and are facing social and security issues.

Tatoyan emphasized that delimitation and demarcation with Azerbaijan without the creation of a buffer zone and without the removal of armed Azerbaijani soldiers will not ensure the rights of citizens of Armenia and especially borderline residents and will lead to the committal of new violations of rights and further escalation. He added that the main reason for violations of the rights of civilians of Armenia by the Azerbaijani Armed Forces is the policy of Armenophobia and hostility of the Azerbaijani authorities which reached the level of fascism after the war. Moreover, this is reflected in an international document, that is, the Resolution of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe of September 27, 2021.

The Ombudsman stressed that all the servicemen and civilians of the Armenian side illegally held in Azerbaijan are captives, must be immediately released and returned to Armenia without any political or other precondition, and the Azerbaijani authorities are artificially delaying and politicizing the process, grossly violating the rights of the captives and their families, causing them sufferings and causing tension in society.

CivilNet: Armenia plans to ban plastic bags in 2022

CIVILNET.AM

24 Oct, 2021 08:10

Starting January 1, 2022, Armenians should not expect to see any plastic bags at retail stores. In just a few months, the sale and free distributions of plastic bags thicker than 50 microns will be banned in Armenia.

Arthur Ghavalyan from Armenia’s Ministry of Environment says that the goal is to stop the circulation of bags intended for short-term use, and to switch to bags made of reusable or biodegradable materials.

But what do Armenian think about this decision? 

Belarus, Armenia discuss cooperation in sport

Oct 21 2021

MINSK, 21 October (BelTA) – Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Belarus to Armenia Aleksandr Konyuk met with Deputy Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sport Karen Giloyan of Armenia, BelTA learned from the press service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Belarus.

The parties discussed a wide range of issues of bilateral cooperation in sport and the organization of sports events.

The parties noted the high potential for expanding bilateral ties and expressed confidence that the effective cooperation between the two countries will continue.

Did Iran stop an Azerbaijani advance in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War?

Oct 21 2021
 21 October 2021

Video still from Caliber YouTube video.

According to a report by an Azerbaijani military news outlet, as well as one major international journalist, the Iranian military crossed the internationally recognised Iranian-Azerbaijani border on the Aras river and briefly halted advancing Azerbaijani forces.

The claim was made in a video published by the Azerbaijan-based Caliber military news outlet on 10 October. According to Caliber, a small contingent of Iranian troops wielding small arms set up concrete barriers and prevented a further advance for ‘several days’.

Reportedly, after negotiations, the Iranian troops then withdrew back to their side of the border. 

Ragıp Soylu, the Turkey Bureau Chief for Middle East Eye, a London-based online publication covering the Middle East, appeared to confirm the claim, tweeting on 10 October that the claim was ‘correct’ and that ‘one regional source’ and ‘one Azerbaijani official’ had confirmed the claim at the time.

OC Media has not been able to independently verify the claim. Responding to a request for comment, the Azerbaijani Defence Ministry referred OC Media to the State Border Service, who did not return multiple requests for comment.

The Caliber video was published during a diplomatic flare-up between Iran and Azerbaijan, during which Azerbaijan accused Iranian transport lorries of moving goods into Nagorno-Karabakh, while Iran accused Azerbaijan of harbouring Israeli state assets. 

At the beginning of the month, Iran carried out multi-day military exercises on its north-western border with Azerbaijan, which coincided with a thinly veiled threat made by Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei towards Baku. 

[Read more: Analysis | What is behind the growing Iran-Azerbaijan tension?]


Azerbaijan frees Iranian truck drivers as ties thaw with Tehran

The Times of Israel
Oct 21 2021
Illustrative — An ethnic Armenian soldier stands guard next to Nagorno-Karabakh’s flag atop of the hill near Charektar in the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh at a new border with Kalbajar district turned over to Azerbaijan, Nov. 25, 2020 (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)

BAKU — Azerbaijan released Thursday two Iranian truck drivers whose arrest last month on charges of illegally entering the country strained ties between Baku and Tehran.

The move marks a thaw between Azerbaijan and Iran a week after their foreign ministers agreed to resolve a crisis in ties through dialogue.

Azerbaijan’s customs department said Thursday it had handed over the drivers to the Iranian side in a decision “guided by principles of humanitarianism, mutual respect and good neighborliness.”

The standoff between the countries was sparked by allegations from Tehran that its sworn enemy Israel maintained a military presence in Azerbaijan. Baku denied the claims.

Iran vowed to take any necessary action and staged military drills near its border with Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov spoke last week by phone with his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and the pair agreed to resolve differences through dialogue.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian is seen before meeting with his Russian counterpart in Moscow on October 6, 2021. (Kirill Kudryavtsev/Pool/AFP)

Israel is a major arms supplier to Azerbaijan, which late last year fought a six-week war with neighbor Armenia for control of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Azerbaijan and Iran have long been at loggerheads over Tehran’s backing of Armenia in the decades-long Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The war last year ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire that saw Armenia cede swaths of territory — including a section of Azerbaijan’s 700-kilometer (430-mile) border with Iran.

Baku said the drivers entered Azerbaijan through that territory, bypassing border control to avoid customs duties it had imposed recently — to Iran’s fury — on cargo transit to Armenia.

Tehran has long been wary of separatist sentiment among its ethnic Azeri minority, who make up around 10 million of Iran’s 83 million population.

Opinion | The enduring lies of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

Oct 21 2021
 21 October 2021

A child holds a poster reading: ‘Not Syunik, Zangazur’. Illustration: Robin Fabbro/OC Media.

The manufacture of a new collective memory of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War is underway in Azerbaijan. This process has the sole purpose of burying the real dynamics and lived experiences of the conflict under narratives that serve only the interests of the state and its ruling elites.

A few days ago, a new school year began in Azerbaijani schools. Because of the pandemic, this will be the first time that children will be entering schools since 2019. 

In the autumn of 2020, as the fighting broke out in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, those young children who would have had their first full encounter with government propaganda through the voices of ‘patriotic’ educators stayed home. 

But this brief respite in the state’s ability to propagandise to young minds should not inspire much optimism. Yes, children may have felt the war by seeing the trauma, injury, or death of their fathers, older siblings, relatives, and family friends. Perhaps they will carry such pain their whole lives. But how they understand this and themselves will likely be repackaged or perhaps even hidden from them by the overwhelming narratives produced by the state. 

Whatever the narratives and traumas underlying the war, it is these narratives that will seize the collective consciousness of the Azerbaijani public.

As the late scholar of nationalism, Benedict Anderson, once mentioned, just as we usually need another to point out to us that the baby in an old yellowed photograph is, indeed, ourselves at a younger age — the state and media ‘narrate’ the past and form our understanding of it, even if we might have experienced this past directly.

The first lesson of the school year, now returned to in-person education, has been dedicated to the victory in last year’s war. Already the manufacturing of memory has begun. This is perhaps best illustrated in one very noteworthy photo.

Two young boys, apparently first-graders, are standing in line with their classmates. There are photos of Azerbaijani servicemembers killed in the war on the clothes of the two boys and the other students that surround them. and in addition, the first-grader was holding a banner bearing the words ‘Sünik yox Zangazur’ (‘Not Syunik, Zangazur’).

This reference to recent irredentist claims made by Azerbaijan towards Armenia — specifically a claim on a prospective corridor through Armenia’s southern Syunik province that would connect western Azerbaijan to Nakhchivan — did not exist at the time of the war and anyways, cannot be understood by a child as young as six or seven. But no matter, the photo exists. 

Even if this child lost a father or brother to the war. The photo can be shown to reveal to the child that for him, it was always about ‘Zangazur’, and that he must be ready to own Zangazur. This ‘reminder’ will likely be made by the aforementioned ‘patriotic educator’, the same sort of school teacher who as an election worker would be involved in the falsification of elections. 

Already, only a year after the war, veterans who volunteered, believing that victory would bring brighter days, would not tell this student that they cried and asked for help or about the abandonment by the government that they faced after demobilisation.

What is happening now is not too dissimilar from what happened after the First Nagorno-Karabakh War. Indeed, the fact that we have such a clear delineation between a ‘first’ and ‘second’ war is emblematic of the ignorance of the realities in the conflict.

In 1994, a ceasefire brought an ‘end’ to the fighting, but despite that, the violence continued. Core issues remained unaddressed, especially the fates of the hundreds of thousands forced from their homes. 

The whole time, the actual dynamics of the conflict also remained hidden. That this was a conflict sustained by the suffering of the poor and destitute of both Armenia and Azerbaijan, and serving the interests of elites and ruling classes — all carried out with the blessing of imperial power — of course, has remained largely unsaid. 

That dynamic has continued right into the present.

Who really won this war? Was it really ‘Azerbaijan’ writ large? Or was it that small collection of private interests and capitalists now enriching themselves on reconstruction contracts and new business projects in the so-called ‘liberated territories’? Even as the threat of war still hangs over the region — and there is a different, but still broken status-quo, the only thing that is certain are these profits.

Naturally, none of this is part of the public discussion. Indeed, it might be argued that many Azerbaijanis are not even aware of the most basic facts of the second war and its outcomes, such as the fact that Russian troops and the local Armenian population have full control over large parts of Karabakh.

The classical nationalist opposition, which has recovered some of its immediate post-war weakness but nevertheless remains a marginal force, has been trying to put this question of ‘the rest of Karabakh’ on the agenda but has largely failed to do so.

Meanwhile, the Azerbaijani authorities are putting all efforts towards keeping the public gaze away from Karabakh itself, and the remaining unsolved questions. Instead, it has chosen to engage in counter-populism by making irredentist claims on Armenia (Not Syunik, Zangazur).

Of course, one must ask why an authoritarian government, already much stronger than its splintered and exhausted opposition, even needs such a counter-narrative? The answer is that it is not only a counter to the opposition, it is also maintenance of a public emotion necessary for the authorities continued rule: hatred.

Without hatred towards the ‘other’, in this case, Armenia; without a slogan that would be written on a poster held by a young schoolboy, the government, built as it is on militaristic nationalism, would not have an ideology with which to rule. 

The ‘old lie’ first written by the Roman poet Horace, it seems, must be reconstituted again and again: ‘Dulce et decorum est, pro patria mori’ — ‘It is sweet and fitting to die for the homeland’.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author’s alone, and do not necessarily reflect the views of OC Media’s editorial board.

Deputy PMs of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia discuss unblocking of communication routes


Oct 21 2021


    JAMnews

    Yerevan

A trilateral meeting of the working group on unblocking communications in the region took place in Moscow. This was the eighth meeting of the Deputy Prime Ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia. The meeting was supposed to go on for two consecutive days.

However, according to an official statement that appeared after the end of the talks, the participants in the meeting agreed to continue the discussions “in the near future”. No other details were disclosed.

The working group was created to implement the agreements reached by the heads of the three countries in the fall of 2020. On November 9, a trilateral declaration of an armistice in Karabakh was signed. One of the clauses of this document referred to the “unblocking all economic and transport links in the region”. On January 11, 2021, a working group was created, which holds periodic meetings and discusses possible options for opening the transport routes.


  • The road to Nakhichevan: is Armenia surrendering its territories to Azerbaijan or emerging from blockade?
  • Armenia’s Security Council Secretary: There will be no exchange of territories with Azerbaijan
  • Highlights of the Armenia-Azerbaijan agreement and what happens next

The meeting on October 20 was held behind closed doors, without the participation of journalists.

At the end of the meeting, only the following official information appeared in the Armenian media:

• The first part of the 8th meeting of the working group has ended,
• The prospects for the restoration of transport communications in the South Caucasus region were considered,
• Further progress of work was discussed within the framework of the statement of the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan dated January 11, 2021,
• The meeting participants agreed to hold the second part of the 8th meeting in the near future.

But even before the end of the talks on October 20, the Armenian media, referring to their sources, reported that the parties were discussing the unblocking of the transport routes and had not yet come to an agreement on key issues. In particular, the meeting participants discussed legal issues that would arise in the event of a possible unblocking of transport communications.

Before leaving for Moscow, Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan told reporters that “the unblocking will take place within the legal framework of the CIS countries”.

He said that there should be a discussion of issues related to roads and railways. According to him, within the framework of the discussions of the trilateral working group, all options for railway communication of the Soviet era are being discussed. However, he did not specify which of them will be restored in the first place. He just stated that the Armenian side has certain ideas on this matter.

The Deputy Prime Minister reinstated that the working group is not discussing the issue of any “corridor”, including one running through the Armenian city of Meghri, on which the Azerbaijani side insists. Earlier, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan also said that they were in favor of unblocking, but all roads that would open for Azerbaijan and Turkey would be under the sovereign control of Armenia.

Local experts warn that the new ways proposed by the Azerbaijani side have little to do with economic feasibility. Moreover, they “do not promise Armenia anything except the next geopolitical risks”, political scientist Vahe Davtyan believes:

“The launch of the railway communication along the specified route will finally close the transport ring around Armenia, as a result of which the blockade, in which the republic has been for the past 30 years, will not only not disappear, but will acquire new outlines”.

In his opinion, it would make sense to unblock the Kars-Gyumri railway, which operated until 1993:

“By the way, this section is in a usable condition and, according to experts, as a result of the appropriate repair work, it can begin operating in one or two months. With the restoration of train traffic on this section, unblocking of regional communications could be implemented through the Armenian Yeraskh (north of the Ararat region) to Nakhichevan and further – along the route noted above to Baku”.

Gagik Aghajanyan, director of the Apaven cargo transportation company, claims that the construction of a railway connecting the southern regions of Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan and Turkey through a corridor to Meghri is fraught with complete transport isolation of Armenia and may turn into a disaster.

In his opinion, transport communications can be unblocked without Meghri, and with minimal costs. The businessman speaks about the operation of the railway from Turkey through Akhuryan to Gyumri, Yerevan, Yeraskh and Nakhichevan:

“Yeraskh is located 500-600 meters from the border with Nakhichevan. We can build a railway covering these 500 meters to the border, and that’s it. The road through Yeraskh will allow access to the Black Sea ports of Georgia through Nakhichevan. In addition, this road will not bypass Armenia unlike a corridor through Meghri”.

Armenia gets rid of "Nagorno-Karabakh Republic" ballast?

Vestnik Kavkaza
Oct 19 2021
 19 Oct in 17:00  Mikhail Belyaev, exclusively for Vestnik Kavkaza

In recent days, deputies of the ruling Civil Contract party in Armenia have noted a number of remarkable statements on the topic of Karabakh. Two parliamentarians from Nikol Pashinyan’s party at once voiced their thoughts, for which they would probably have been hung on the first Yerevan pillar a year ago.

For example, the deputy from the Civil Contract faction Vigen Khachatryan bluntly stated: “It is very dangerous to promote the idea that Armenia has no future without Karabakh. The highest goal is Armenia, not Karabakh. There can be no question of these lands being considered territories Armenia, we should talk about whether the lives of these people (the Armenian population of Karabakh – editor’s note) in Azerbaijan are in danger or not. ” Surprisingly, in the Armenian segment of social networks, this statement caused only moderate dissatisfaction among the opposition, and Khachatryan’s party members did not react to him at all and, accordingly, did not pull up his colleague.

Vigen Khachatryan’s reconnaissance by force was successful, and after a couple of days his fellow in the faction Gagik Melkonyan stated that the guarantor of the security of the Armenian population in Karabakh is not Armenia, but Russia. In particular, answering a question about the recent aggravation of the situation in the region, Melkonyan said: “Contact the Russian embassy. The Russians are the guarantor of security, and ask them why this happened.”

Let us recall the background: a few days ago a civilian Armenian was killed in Karabakh, then an Azerbaijani civilian column was fired upon, and a little later – a sniper shot an Azerbaijani soldier. On the same night, there was a bloody incident at an Armenian military post in the Agderin direction, as a result of which six Armenian soldiers were seriously wounded. Azerbaijan denied any involvement in both the first and the last incidents, while Armenia claimed that the military position was destroyed by an Azerbaijani strike UAV (initially, the Armenian media reported a mortar attack). Meanwhile, pro-government sources in Azerbaijan report that the conditional “civilian” of Armenian origin, after whose murder an exacerbation began in the region, worked on his tractor near the contact line without the necessary coordination with Russian peacekeepers and the Azerbaijani Armed Forces and did not respond to repeated warnings to leave the territory. …

Remarkable in this story is the rather mild reaction of official Yerevan to the recent incidents in Karabakh. It suggests that the aforementioned Armenian MPs from the ruling party did not voice private opinions, but announced changes in Armenia’s approaches to Karabakh. For example, the Armenian Foreign Ministry got off with statements about the need to investigate and punish the perpetrators, while the RA Defense Ministry completely ignored the shootings in Karabakh, in particular, the wounding of six servicemen. On the other hand, the Armenian military department hastened to refute the report about the shelling of Armenian positions in Yeraskh on the border with Nakhchivan by Azerbaijan. Paradoxically, the most radical statements from Yerevan today are voiced not by officials and the military, but by Arman Tatoyan, who received the post of RA Ombudsman during the reign of Serzh Sargsyan.

Yerevan’s cooled interest in the Karabakh separatists can be explained, in our opinion, by both a large regional policy and purely economic reasons. Today Baku and Yerevan have brought their positions closer on some key aspects of the new regional configuration, which implies mutual recognition by the two countries of each other’s territorial integrity and unblocking of regional communications. At the last CIS summit, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for the first time announced that Azerbaijan will receive through the territory of Armenia not only railway, but also automobile communication with Nakhchivan. Earlier, Yerevan insisted that only a railway would be presented to Baku for communication with the autonomous republic.

On the other hand, after Azerbaijan returned under its direct control most of the territory of Karabakh, which remained in the zone of responsibility of the RF Ministry of Defense from the abolished Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region, the economically unviable “stub” turned into a financial black hole for Armenia, which is experiencing an economic crisis.

Yerevan does not understand what to do with this “appendix”, but political and economic expediency suggests only one way out – to carefully throw “ballast” on Azerbaijan, preferably securing temporary security guarantees for the Armenian population there from Russia. This arrangement seems to suit Moscow, Baku and Yerevan.

Azerbaijani press: French court annuls "treaty" with illegal Armenian regime in Azerbaijan’s Karabakh

By Trend

An illegal agreement signed by the French Department of Isere (Grenoble, France) with the separatist Armenian regime in the previously occupied Azerbaijani Hadrut district [illegally established by the regime in Azerbaijan’s Karabakh and liberated from the Armenian occupation in the 2020 Second Karabakh War] was canceled, the Azerbaijani Embassy in France told Trend.

According to the embassy, the court of the French city of Grenoble annulled the so-called “Charter of Friendship between the Department of Isere and the Hadrut district”, signed on September 20, 2019 by representatives of the separatist regime during a visit to Isere.

Azerbaijani side twice filed claims on illegality of this act – in February and November 2020, the embassy said.

“The decision of the court, which was adopted on September 27 of this year and was officially handed over to the Azerbaijani side today, states that this document [“Charter of Friendship”] was signed by the president of the municipal council of the Isere department in violation of Articles 5, 14, 20, 52 and 55 of the French Constitution, according to which only the president of the country has the right to make decisions on its foreign policy issues,” the embassy said.

“The decision also emphasizes that by signing the illegal charter, the president of the council violated article L. 1115-1 of the Code of Local Self-Government, which presupposes that the principle of respect for France’s international obligations applies to all aspects of the activities of local self-government bodies,” added the embassy.

The Department of Isere with a population of 1.2 million people is the largest department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region. Part of this region (with the capital in Lyon) accounts for the majority – 15 out of 28 – of illegal acts and agreements signed by the heads of local self-government bodies (departments, cities, communes) with the authorities of the separatist regime.

This is already 11th illegal document annulled by the French courts. Another two claims are in the courts of France. Work continues on the annulment of the remaining illegal documents and decisions adopted in support of the separatist regime in the previously occupied territory of Azerbaijan’s Karabakh.

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijan, Armenia to sign new documents in Moscow

By Trend

Azerbaijan and Armenia will sign two new documents in Moscow on November 9, Trend reports citing Armenian media outlets.

The first document is about the demarcation and delimitation of the state border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, according to which Yerevan and Baku will mutually recognize their borders and territorial integrity.

The second document concerns the unblocking of communications in the region, especially the details of the creation of “roads – corridors”, including between Azerbaijan and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic.