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Azerbaijani press: Baku: Iran continues smear campaign against Azerbaijan

By Ayya Lmahamad

Foreign Ministry’s Spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva has said that the Iranian Foreign Ministry does not stop its smear campaign against Azerbaijan.

She made the remarks while commenting on Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian’s interview with the Lebanese Al-Manar TV channel.

“Unfortunately, the Iranian Foreign Ministry does not stop its smear campaign against Azerbaijan. We strongly reject such accusations,” she said.

The spokesperson underlined that during the 44-day war, Azerbaijan stated and now stresses once again that there were no terrorists on the country’s territory. She underlined that on the territory of Azerbaijan, as a country that suffered from terror, “there has never been a place for terrorists”.

“Azerbaijan liberated its lands from occupation at the cost of the blood and lives of its martyrs. As President Ilham Aliyev noted, Azerbaijan, which has over 100,000-member army, does not need mercenaries,” she said.

Abdullayeva stressed the fact that Iran had not made similar accusations during the war, and there was no reason for concern until, after the war, the new government came to power.

“Reasons for these baseless accusations are the prevention of the illegal entry of Iranian trucks into Azerbaijan’s territory and the liberation of Azerbaijan’s lands from occupation. Our advice to those who want to look for terrorists is to carefully look around themselves,” she stated.

It should be noted that last October, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry provided the diplomatic corps in the country, including the Iranian embassy, with information about the participation of Armenian mercenaries in combat operations in the country’s formerly occupied territories.

Iran’s very inadequate behavior, illegal transportation of goods to Azerbaijan’s Khankandi without Baku’s consent, its description of Armenia as a “brotherly and friendly country”, the conduct of drills along the border with Azerbaijan, the closure of its airspace to planes carrying military supplies to Nakhchivan, in the past couple of weeks has flared up tension in its relations with neighbor Azerbaijan. 

It is noteworthy that Iran’s state circles, officials, MPs, and the media still continue their aggressive rhetoric against Azerbaijan, claiming about an alleged Israeli presence near its border, which Baku officially dismissed as unfounded.

Turkish press: Azerbaijan rejects Iran’s terrorist presence claim as ‘baseless’

Azerbaijani men living in Turkey wave flags of Turkey and Azerbaijan during a protest following clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia, in Istanbul, Turkey, July 19, 2020. (Reuters File Photo)

Azerbaijan blasted Iran late Monday for its “smear campaign” and claims about the presence of terrorist groups in the Caspian country.

“Our advice to those who want to look for terrorists is to take a good look around themselves,” Leyla Abdullayeva, spokesperson for Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry, said in a statement.

Her remarks were a rebuttal to recent claims by Iranian leaders, including Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, about the presence of terrorists in Azerbaijan.

“Unfortunately, the Iranian Foreign Ministry does not give up its smear campaign against Azerbaijan. We categorically reject such accusations,” said Abdullayeva.

“We said this during the 44-day war and we emphasize once again that there were no terrorists in Azerbaijan. In general, as a country that has suffered due to terrorism, there has never been a place for terrorists in Azerbaijan.”

Referring to last year’s Karabakh conflict, she stressed that Azerbaijan and its army of more than 100,000 soldiers did not need mercenaries to defeat Armenia.

“Surprisingly, no such accusations were made by Iran during the war, and no such concerns were raised until a new government came to power (in Iran) after the war,” Abdullayeva said, adding that an “anti-Azerbaijan campaign” will not benefit Iran in any manner.

She said Tehran has been resorting to “these baseless accusations” because Baku prevents the “illegal entry of Iranian trucks into Azerbaijan” and managed to liberate its occupied territories from Armenian control.

Tensions between Azerbaijan and Iran have escalated after Tehran moved troops close to the Azerbaijani border and conducted nonstop military maneuvers in reaction to a joint military drill by Azerbaijan, Turkey and Pakistan.

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

When new clashes erupted on Sept. 27 last year, the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces and violated several humanitarian cease-fire agreements.

The two countries signed a Russian-brokered agreement in November 2020 to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.

The cease-fire was seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia, whose armed forces withdrew in line with the agreement.

Prior to this, about 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory had been under illegal occupation for nearly 30 years.

On Jan. 11 this year, the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a pact to develop economic ties and infrastructure to benefit the entire region. It included the establishment of a trilateral working group on Karabakh.

Turkish press: Where is the homeland?


The stone walls on the edges of the fields, which looked like they were going to be destroyed if you touched them, were like the walls of my grandfather’s olive garden at Elanoz. I closed my eyes as if I, like very much the trips I made during my childhood, were going from Nicosia to my grandfather’s farm in Kotsiakis. I inhaled that scent in the air… Was it that of the maquis shrubland, heather and rosemary that produced that smell reminding me of my childhood?

Then I noticed the towns as I walked through the footprints left by the Knights of Malta. Although similar in many respects, that Mediterranean island state was very different from Cyprus. Most importantly, although the two elements that make up the islanders retained many different characteristics, they were able to demonstrate a common culture, language and even the ability to build a future together. It wasn’t my homeland; I wish the peoples of my homeland had the ability to reconcile as much as the Maltese and build a common future rather than pulling each other into bloodshed and enmity. Who’s right and who’s wrong doesn’t really matter at this point. They succeeded to build a common future under the same frying sun, we failed spitefully, and at this point, we are only at the point where we can only understand the meaning of living together by getting a divorce. In this respect, the European Union also faces a golden role to play, but unfortunately, it is not aware of this possibility. Within the EU, two states can, in fact, form an indirect federation and perhaps a framework for a more sincere arrangement after walking such a road for a while.

When we landed in Delhi on the first scheduled direct flight, I think it was 2007, we were greeted by a spectacular crowd of voices and images. We stayed in a historic hotel that was magnificent and for decades, Hollywood celebrities and historical figures stayed. We visited Agra, Taj Mahal, Jaipur and many more places, but my obsession was to visit Kashmir, Srinagar, Mogul Gardens, where Indian authorities were very reluctantly granting anyone travel visas due to the violence in the region at the time.

We arrived in Srinagar accompanied by a guide and with very strict security measures. Our hotel, which was previously a Hilton hotel but was converted into a state guest house in those days, was hidden behind sandbags.

Our local hosts were very concerned about the safety of me and my wife because the local elected administrator had very recently survived an assassination attempt, but was wounded. However, since I was at a place I dreamt of a lot since my childhood and has always considered myself a “platonic Kashmiri,” I was extremely happy to be there.

After meeting with local administrators, soldiers, and walking around the Mogul Gardens and even the Governor’s Mansion and the magnificent grove next to it, I was able to somehow contact Muslim dissidents and listen to them. How sad that the Kashmir issue, which could be a haven of peace between India and Pakistan and will make great contributions to the two countries and the region before anyone else, cannot be solved. When I left Kashmir, I felt sad as if I was leaving Cyprus. Unfortunately, opportunities to visit the Pakistani part of Kashmir have always been postponed so far, due to earthquakes or other problems. It’s fate.

Years ago, in 1992, a ceasefire was not yet been declared. Russian-backed Armenian attacks were advancing in Nagorno-Karabakh. Cities and regions were falling into the hands of Armenians one after the other. As members of the TRT and AA teams, we watched the war with great pain as we see escapees, witnessing misery and cruelty.

There came a moment when on our one side was Iran, while on the other three sides of us were lands occupied by Armenian soldiers; we were besieged. After a few minutes of evaluating the situation, we thought if we fall into Armenian hands obviously we would be tortured to death but “if we are caught by Iranians, we will be tortured the most, they will not kill us, after a while hand us back to Turkey in one piece” and thus decided to escape into Iranian territory. Since Iran already moved its borders as far as 30 kilometers inside Azerbaijan, demonstrating a great example of humanity so that Azerbaijani escapees can reach comfortable free zones through that “presumed” Iranian territory, we entered the Iranian territory comfortably. We even “borrowed” a large can of gasoline from a temporarily abandoned military garrison for our vehicle that ran out of gas. After going about 90 kilometers inside Iran along the border, we returned to Azerbaijani territory around Beylegan. Surat Husseinov had staged a coup. Haidar Aliyev, who came from Nakhichevan, became head of Ali Mejlis and declared a state of emergency. Since it was past midnight, the wises way was to drive our car toward Baku through those secondary roads.

Exhausted, we saw the lights of a farm around 3:45 a.m. We haven’t eaten or drunk in almost 20 hours, so we’re desperate. If there were soldiers, we would surrender. As we approached the farmhouse, we heard an old man shouting at her wife: “My wife, get up! We have guests…” Turkish culture. At that hour of the day, the tandoor was burned, a few chickens they had were cooked and fresh grapes were brought from the vineyard. We were given a feast… In the meantime, we found out in the conversation that these people, who welcomed us and spoke in a smooth “Turkish Cyprus dialect,” were displaced people from occupied Agdam. A relative had temporarily placed them in that vineyard. Tears poured down our eyes. What a generosity!

That evening, I had one of the greatest experiences of my life. Once again, I have come to believe that the true homeland is the language.

Asbarez: SAS Launches International Association of Armenian Librarians and Archivists

International Association of Armenian Librarians and Archivists logo

The Society for Armenian Studies has announced the creation of the International Association of Armenian Librarians and Archivists, a new organization operating under the umbrella of the SAS, with the goal to provide an international forum for information specialists working broadly with Armenian topics and materials. IAALA plans to host online events and to create standing committees to address acquisitions, cataloging, research and reference, preservation, and digitization issues. It also intends to be an advocate for the need of Armenian expertise in the libraries of public institutions throughout the world.  

IAALA was born through discussions that followed the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the United States Congress, when Nora Avetyan of UCLA and Ani Boyadjian of the Los Angeles Public Library spearheaded a successful effort to change the official subject heading of the Library of Congress from “Armenian Massacres” to “Armenian Genocide.” Two other members of that committee, Levon Avdoyan (Library of Congress, retired) and Seda Aykanian Matevosian (Vahan and Anoush Chamlian Armenian School) joined Avetyan and Boyadjian in the efforts to realize an association of Armenian librarians and archivists. In conversation with the Executive Committee of the Society for Armenian Studies, they established IAALA under the aegis of SAS as an organization that would support librarians and archivists of Armenian material and to bridge the divide between the librarian and scholarly worlds.

The mission statement of the International Association of Armenian Librarians and Archivists affirms: “The last few decades have witnessed the enrichment of existing libraries and archives that hold Armenian materials of all types as well as the creation of new private and public facilities both in the United States and around the globe. The primary purpose of the International Association of Armenian Librarians and Archivists is to provide a forum for the information specialists and those associated with these institutions to discuss topics of mutual interest, to seek solutions to problems and questions as they develop, and to establish a much-needed connection between scholars and researchers who either may need their services or who may not know where needed materials exist. As a group associated with the Society for Armenian Studies, the Association follows the rules and regulations of that body.”

The executive committee of IAALA is made up of a truly international group of librarians and archivists, chaired by prominent scholar Levon Avdoyan (Library of Congress, retired). The other members of the executive committee include Boris Adjemian (Nubarian Library, Paris), Nora Avetyan (UCLA), Ani Boyadjian (Los Angeles Public Library), Anna Chulyan (National Library of Armenia and Armenian Library Association, Yerevan), Nerses Hayrapetyan (U.S. Embassy, Yerevan), Seda Aykanian Matevosian (Vahan & Anoush Chamlian Armenian School), Khatchig Mouradian (Library of Congress), and Tigran Zargaryan (National Library of Armenia, retired, and Armenian Digital Library). Christopher Sheklian (Radboud University) serves as the liaison from the SAS and Emilio Bonfiglio (University of Tübingen) serves as the liaison from the Association Internationale des Etudes Arméniennes.

The Chair of the IAALA Executive Committee, Levon Avdoyan, commented on establishment of the Association by saying: “As we expand the executive committee to include an international membership of superbly qualified colleagues, Ani, Nora, Seda, and I want to thank Bedross Der Matossian and the SAS for their patience and guidance during the months we laid the foundation of IAALA. Our purpose was both to give a voice to and to provide a much-needed forum for librarians and archivists around the world who deal with all Armenian materials. Librarians and archivists are usually quiet about their work, so it is no surprise that they have not advertised the importance of the discipline. Much of the retention, preservation, processing, and dissemination and interpretation of Armenian material culture is due to their efforts. We hope that IAALA will unite the library and archives communities around the world to meet the modern challenges facing the profession and lead bright young talent to join with us to guarantee a bright future for our institutions.”

“We are truly excited about this major initiative,” said SAS President Bedross Der Matossian (University of Nebraska, Lincoln). “While we have organizations and societies dedicated to Armenian Studies, this is the first time in history that an international association of Armenian librarians and archivists has been established with a global presence under the leadership of Dr. Levon Avdoyan, a leading expert in the field. From Washington D.C. to Paris and from Yerevan to Tübingen, the Association will play a major role in advancing the field of Armenian Studies on the national and international levels. The commitment of the executive committee of the International Association of Armenian Librarians and Archivists and their mission inspire hope of strengthening the field of Armenian Studies and to raise its academic standards.”

Members of IAALA must also be members of the Society for Armenian Studies. To inquire about membership, please contact SAS President Bedross Der Matossian at [email protected] and complete the membership form. Under the “Field of Interest” category, please indicate “IAALA.” General inquiries about the International Association of Armenian Librarians and Archivists may be directed to [email protected]. Current members of SAS may join IAALA by emailing [email protected]. More information about the inaugural event will be forthcoming.

Society for Armenian Studies logo

The SAS, founded in 1974, is the international professional association representing scholars and teachers in the field of Armenian Studies. The aim of the SAS is to promote the study of Armenian culture and society, including history, language, literature, and social, political, and economic questions.

Information about the SAS can be found on its website or by following the SAS on its Facebook page, @societyforarmenianstudies.


Asbarez: Dink’s Family to Receive 1.5 million Turkish Liras in Compensation

Slain journalist Hrant Dink

The family of slain editor-in-chief of Turkish-Armenian daily Agos, Hrant Dink, will get a compensation of 1.5 million Turkish liras (about $168,000), as the Council of State upheld a decision of Istanbul’s 6th Administrative Court.

Dink’s widow, Rakel Dink, and her children had filed a lawsuit seeking damages totaling 1.5 million Turkish liras, including 500,000 liras for financial and 1 million liras for non-financial damages, saying that the Ministry of Interior had serious fault and responsibility in Hrant Dink’s murder.

The Istanbul 6th Administrative Court pointed out that Hrant Dink was targeted due to the articles he wrote and were published in the Agos Newspaper, which provoked some ultra-nationalist groups to react. The court added that his right to life was in clear and imminent danger, and therefore, protection measures should have been taken without waiting for his request. It ruled that there was no room for doubt about the administration’s fault in protecting Dink’s right to life.

Turkey’s Interior Ministry appealed the court’s ruling at the Council of State, which unanimously upheld the court’s decision.

Dink was assassinated on January 19, 2007 as he was entering the editorial offices of Agos.

18th Golden Apricot International Film Festival Announces its Winner Films



Scenes from the 18th Golden Apricot International Film Festival’s closing ceremony

The closing ceremony of the 18th Golden Apricot International Film Festival was held at the “Ararat” Museum of the Yerevan Brandy Company on October 9. During the closing ceremony, the jury announced the winners.

Pebbles (dir. Vinothraj P.S., India) won Golden Apricot in International Full-Length Competition. The Silver Apricot was awarded to Downstream to Kinshasa (dir. Dieudo Hamadi, Congo/ France/ Belgium). A New Old Play (dir. Qiu Jiongjiong, Hong Kong/ France) gained jury’s special mention.

The FIPRESCI Award, named after Peter van Bueren, was awarded to Taming the Garden (dir. Salomé Jashi, Switzerland/ Germany/ Georgia).

From left: Hovig Hagopian, Christine Haroutounian, Ovsanna Shekoyan

Golden Apricot in Apricot Stone competition was awarded to The World (dir. Christine Haroutounian, USA/ Armenia). Silver Apricot in the same competition won Storgetnya (dir. Hovig Hagopian, France/ Armenia). Special Award after Gennadi Melkonyan was awarded Handstand (dir. Ovsanna Shekoyan, Armenia).

Cornell Mundruzo, Hungarian theater and film director, laureate of dozens of other prestigious film festivals in Cannes, Locarno was this year’s president of the Golden Apricot 18th Yerevan IFF jury. The jury of the feature film competition consisted of producer François D’Artemare, director of the Krakow International Film Festival Krzysztof Gierat, film critic Larisa Malyukova and composer Robert Amirkhanyan.

The Apricot Stone regional short film competition jury consisted of actress Romanna Lobach, author of this year’s “Golden Apricot” posters, visual artist Vahram Muratyan, and festival director Philippe Jalladeau.

The FIPRESCI jury consisted of film critics Alexander Melyan, Dominic Schmid, Mike Naafs.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/11/2021

                                        Monday, 
Armenian Authorities Mull COVID-19 Health Pass
        • Narine Ghalechian
France - A woman shows a COVID-19 health pass in a cafe in Paris, August 9, 2021.
Armenia’s health authorities are considering introducing a mandatory coronavirus 
health pass for entry to cultural and leisure venues, Health Minister Anahit 
Avanesian revealed on Monday.
Speaking in the Yerevan studio of RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, Avanesian said the 
extraordinary measure may be needed to increase the very low vaccination rate in 
the country of about 3 million.
According to the Armenian Ministry of Health, just over 344,000 people received 
at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine and only 170,212 of them were fully 
vaccinated as of October 10.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian deplored these “very bad” numbers last week and 
said the authorities must rely on their “administrative levers” more heavily to 
speed up the vaccination process.
Avanesian said her ministry is now looking into the experience of Western 
countries where people must produce the health pass showing they have been 
vaccinated against COVID-19 or have had a recent negative test in order to visit 
bars, restaurants and other public venues.
“We are working on that,” she said, answering questions from Facebook users. “We 
are collecting facts about what enforcement mechanisms should be put in place.”
“A tentative draft decision will be ready soon, within two weeks,” added the 
minister.
The government has already taken other administrative measures in a bid to have 
many more Armenians get vaccinated. A recent directive signed by Avanesian 
requires virtually all public and private sector employees refusing vaccination 
to take coronavirus tests twice a month at their own expense.
The requirement took effect on October 1, prompting protests from some 
opposition politicians and anti-vaccine campaigners.
Avanesian again defended it. She argued that Armenian hospitals are increasingly 
struggling to cope with a new wave of coronavirus infections that began this 
summer.
The Ministry of Health has reported an average of over 1,000 cases and at least 
20 coronavirus-related deaths a day over the past week.
Armenian Court OKs Heavier Fines For Defamation
Armenia - The Constitutional Court holds a hearing in Yerevan, July 9, 2021.
In a ruling condemned by press freedom groups, Armenia’s Constitutional Court 
has upheld the constitutionality of a government-backed bill that will triple 
maximum legal fines set for defamation.
The bill involving amendments to the Armenian Civil Code was drafted by a close 
associate of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and passed by the National Assembly 
in March. It stipulates that media outlets and individuals convicted of 
“slander” could be fined as much as 6 million drams ($12,450) while those making 
offensive claims will face a maximum fine of up to 2 million drams.
President Armen Sarkissian refused to sign the bill into law in April, saying he 
shares concerns that it could be exploited by government officials and 
politicians to stifle press freedom. Sarkissian also suggested that the bill is 
“contentious in terms of its constitutionality ” and asked the Constitutional 
Court to pass judgment on that.
In its verdict publicized at the weekend, the court ruled that the amendments do 
not run counter to the Armenian constitution.
Armenia’s leading media associations expressed outrage at that conclusion in a 
joint statement issued on Monday. They argued that it contradicts a 
Constitutional Court ruling on the issue handed down in 2011 and accused the 
court of ignoring Council of Europe recommendations and precedent-setting 
decisions of the European Court of Human Rights.
The statement signed by 11 organizations also says: “Application of the 
disproportionately strict measures would cause more damage than contribute to 
the struggle against vices. Especially given that both politicians and officials 
and representatives of various strata of the population often perceive criticism 
directed at them as a defamation or insult and go to court. This could create 
serious obstacles to unfettered activities of the media.”
The main author of the controversial bill, parliament speaker Alen Simonian, 
earlier rejected such criticism echoed by Western watchdogs such as Freedom 
House and Reporters Without Borders.
The Armenian media groups linked the heavier fines for defamation to what they 
described as other curbs on news reporting imposed by the country’s current 
leadership. Their statement points to recently enacted bills that banned media 
outlets from citing social media accounts belonging to unknown individuals and 
made it a crime to gravely insult state officials.
The Armenian authorities’ decision to criminalize slander and defamation was 
strongly criticized by Freedom House late last month. The Washington-based group 
said it testifies to a “clear degradation of democratic norms in Armenia, 
including freedom of expression.”
Georgian PM Visits Armenia On ‘Mediation’ Mission
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - Prime Ministers Nikol Pashinian of Armenia and Irakli Gharibashvili of 
Georgia meet in Yerevan, October 9, 2021
Georgia’s Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili visited Yerevan and met with his 
Armenian counterpart Nikol Pashinian on Saturday as part of his attempts to 
improve Armenia’s relations with Azerbaijan.
Gharibashvili met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Baku late last 
month three weeks after receiving Pashinian in Tbilisi. He said he discussed 
with Aliyev “the importance of transforming the region” but did not elaborate.
Gharibashvili also divulged few details of his latest “productive” talks with 
Pashinian. He tweeted on Sunday that they discussed a “new peace initiative for 
the South Caucasus and Georgia’s readiness to pursue active mediation to create 
more opportunities for sustainable peace and development in the region.”
“Tbilisi has taken on an active mediating role in normalizing relations between 
its neighbors, notably Armenia and Azerbaijan,” the Georgian premier told 
reporters on Monday. He again did not go into details.
An Armenian government statement on the talks said the two leaders “exchanged 
thoughts on the situation and developments in the region.”
“The parties reaffirmed their readiness to consistently deepen bilateral 
friendly ties and agreed to continue their active dialogue,” added the statement.
Speaking ahead of his September 29 trip to Baku, Gharibashvili said he could 
play a “positive role” in building bridges between Georgia’s two South Caucasus 
neighbors locked in a bitter conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. His foreign 
minister, Davit Zalkaliani, said on Friday that he has already helped to 
establish “active communication” between Yerevan and Baku.
In June, the Georgian government facilitated the release of 15 Armenian 
soldiers, taken prisoner by Azerbaijan during last year’s war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh, in exchange for maps of Armenian minefields provided to Baku. 
It is not clear whether Tbilisi hopes to arrange more such swaps or assist in 
the opening of Armenian-Azerbaijani transport links.
Alexander Iskandarian, the director of the Yerevan-based Caucasus Institute, 
noted that Armenia has until now negotiated with Azerbaijan mainly with Russian 
mediation.
“It’s hard to tell at this point just how serious these contacts [initiated by 
Georgia] are and whether they can yield any results,” Iskandarian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service.
Pashinian paid an official visit to Georgia on September 8. Turkish President 
Recep Tayyip Erdogan said afterwards that the Armenian prime minister 
communicated through Gharibashvili an offer to meet with him and discuss the 
possibility of normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations.
Erdogan appeared to make such a meeting conditional Armenia recognizing 
Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh and agreeing to open a transport corridor 
that would connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave.
The press offices of the Armenian and Georgian premiers refused to say on Monday 
whether Turkish-Armenian relations were also on the agenda of their weekend 
talks.
Karabakh Civilian Killed In Truce Violation
        • Marine Khachatrian
Nagorno-Karabakh - A road sign at the entrance to the town of Martakert.
An ethnic Armenian farmer in Nagorno-Karabakh was shot dead by Azerbaijani 
forces while working in his pomegranate grove at the weekend, authorities in 
Stepanakert said.
The 55-year-old man, Aram Tepnants, was a resident of Martakert, a small town in 
northern Karabakh town close to the Armenian-Azerbaijani “line of contact” in 
and around the disputed territory.
“He worked with his own tractor and in his own grove,” a spokesman for the 
Karabakh police told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Saturday. “An Azerbaijani army 
sniper noticed him and fired in that direction, fatally wounding him.”
The Martakert mayor, Misha Gyurjian, said that Russian peacekeeping soldiers 
deployed along the “line of contact” witnessed the incident. “Peacekeepers were 
sitting with [Tepnants] inside his tractor,” claimed Gyurjian.
The Russian Defense Ministry confirmed on Sunday that the farmer was killed “as 
a result of gunfire from the Azerbaijani side.”
“The Russian [peacekeeping] contingent command is conducting an investigation 
into the incident with the participation of representatives of the two sides,” 
the ministry said in a statement.
Azerbaijan denied that its troops killed the Karabakh Armenian civilian.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry insisted that he was killed by Azerbaijani sniper 
fire and accused Baku of violating the terms of a Russian-brokered ceasefire 
that stopped last year’s Armenian-Azerbaijani war. In a short statement, it 
demanded a “proper investigation” into Tepnants’s death.
Tepnants is the first Karabakh civilian killed since the ceasefire came into 
force on November 10, 2020.
In the last several months, Karabakh authorities have periodically accused 
Azerbaijani troops of opening small arms fire at Karabakh villages mostly 
located close to the town of Shushi (Shusha) occupied by them during the 
six-week war. They have said that such incidents are aimed at intimidating 
Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population and causing them to leave the territory.
The Karabakh foreign ministry charged that the purpose of the deadly shooting 
outside Martakert was to not only trigger a “mass emigration” of Karabakh 
Armenians but also undermine the Russian peacekeeping mission. It urged Russia, 
the United States and France, the three world powers co-heading the OSCE Minsk 
Group, to “hold the Azerbaijani side accountable and prevent such incidents in 
the future.”
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.
 

CivilNet: Russia confirms the killing of an Armenian civilian by Azerbaijan

CIVILNET.AM

11 Oct, 2021 09:10

  • The Russian Ministry of Defense has confirmed the news of the killing of a civilian near Martakert by Azerbaijanis in Nagorno Karabakh.
  • Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan will meet Russian President Valdimir Putin in Moscow on October 12.
  • October 11 is International Day of the Girl Child. According to national statistics, there are roughly 5,000 unborn girls in the last eight years in Armenia.

Credits: Ruptly

A year on from the Second Karabakh War, Armenians are uncertain of the future

Open Democracy
Sept 27 2021



With concern over borders and tentative hope for new infrastructure, Armenia is trying to find its place after a war that shook the country to its core

Knar Khudoyan
27 September 2021, 11.42am

It has been a year since the Second Karabakh War – a 44-day conflict that started with Azerbaijani missile strikes rising up over Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, and ceased only when Russia brokered a ceasefire in November 2020.

This caused public panic to rise in Armenia, with delayed official announcements about new border demarcations and demilitarisation activities, and an attempted coup. Azerbaijani troops are now stationed deep in the heart of what was once Armenian Karabakh, as well as the ‘buffer zone’ (the territories surrounding it) and are visible on Armenia’s official borders.

In the aftermath of this existential defeat for the country, public support appeared to waver for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who came to power on the back of Armenia’s 2018 revolution. However, in June, he was resoundingly re-elected during snap elections and received, what he calls, a popular mandate to bring “an era of peace in the region”.

Pashinyan has since called on the Armenian public to have “strong nerves”’ and persist with an agenda of peace, despite armed incursions by Azerbaijani forces along the country’s border. For those grieving loved ones or recovering from the trauma of the conflict, strong nerves are not easy to come by. Fears are still palpable that the war with Azerbaijan could resume, with military planes flying low over towns, military exercises growing larger, and warnings in the media growing more alarming.

One of the solutions appears to lie in a new transport infrastructure that would make Armenia – whose borders to the east and west are cut off due to conflict – a new regional hub for transporting goods, and perhaps people. Yet the fate of these new efforts lies not only in ongoing and secretive diplomatic negotiations, but in Armenian citizens’ willingness to go ahead with this potentially radical transformation mere months after a conflict that killed thousands.

To gain an insight into the public’s thoughts, I travelled to two towns likely to be affected by the potential changes, one in northern Armenia, and the other in the south.

When war broke out on 27 September 2020, it was a quiet Sunday in the mountain town of Berd, nestled between Azerbaijan and Georgia in northeast Armenia. The local community had been planning an agricultural event, the annual Honey and Berry Festival, which is a main event in the calendar of this town that is cut off from Armenia’s north-south highway.

Berd has experienced military skirmishes on a regular basis since the 1994 ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan, including fighting in July last year, which is now considered to be the prelude to the 44-day war. And so when the news came of Azerbaijan military forces attacking Karabakh, the farmers who had gathered for the expo didn’t panic immediately.

With the constant risk of war hanging over it, Berd has always had a significant military presence. For locals, this provided a feeling of security, as well as jobs. Yet military employment contracts have not been enough to stop people from moving to safer places.

Armenian soldiers in Berd | Image: Eliza Mkhitaryan

Since 2015, the Armenian government has tried to curb migration from this area to Russia, providing tax relief for businesses that invest in Berd’s 24 border communities. This move encouraged textile workshops to set up near the town. Olya, a resident of the village of Chinari, told me that she had been offered a sewing job, but that “the machine had to run uninterrupted for 12 hours a day”.

“The job would have left me no time to tend to my garden,” she says, noting her patch of tomatoes and figs, which she sells locally. Instead, along with five other women, Olya started a cooperative and used a United Nations Development Programme grant to build a greenhouse instead.

Despite the state’s attempts to diversify, the Armenian military remained the biggest and most well-paying employer in this town – until the war.

“My son was in the war. He returned very shocked and saddened by what he saw,” Anahit, a local resident, told me. “He could no longer work in the military, but is now trying to start some business with friends. Although he had already built a career. Anyway, I support whatever decision he makes.” Others in the town, mostly women contractors, have been fired and replaced by new staff, as the Armenian army is being reformed.

Image: Eliza Mkhitaryan

Since the Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement last November, the guns have been surprisingly silent in Berd. But it’s not enough for residents to feel secure. Many families in this town lost their sons in the war. Their photos decorate the walls of the schools they attended and the hallway of the city museum. Aspram, a cook at the town’s military base, told me that her nephew died in the war. “He and all the other kids who died were special in a way,” she said. “War takes the best.”

Some families, however, cannot even grieve: their sons are still listed among the missing.

Despite the November 2020 agreement’s provisions for exchanging prisoners of war (POWs), hostages and other detainees, the number of Armenians kept in Azerbaijani custody or reported missing has remained unknown – only prior to the anniversary did the Armenian government report that 231 combatants and 22 civilians are missing. A few rounds of detainees held by Azerbaijan have been returned – 103 in total, in exchange for 15 Azerbaijanis held by Armenia, as well as maps showing the location of landmines in territory now under Azerbaijani control. But as the full list of POWs is unknown, many families whose sons’ bodies have yet to be found nurture hope that their loved ones are alive, even in Azerbaijani captivity.

“Every day in this uncertain time counts as ten in terms of our agony,” says a mother whose son, a soldier, is still missing. She says she attends weekly pilgrimages to several churches in Berd for the traditional matagh, a lamb sacrifice ritual.

“I am haunted by thoughts of anxiety, imagining what exactly might be happening with my son,” she said. “If he is alive, is he being treated humanely? Can he eat? Can he use the bathroom? Is he being tortured? I pray that God keeps my mind away from such thoughts.”

The parents of prisoners of war and missing soldiers are in a difficult place, and are cautious of not being used in local politics. Still, a prominent opposition figure, Artur Vanetsyan, promised earlier in the year to bring back prisoners of war “within two or three days” if he came to power. Pashinyan himself later suggested that he was ready to send his own son to Baku in exchange for all Armenian detainees.

Berd | Image: Eliza Mkhitaryan

Small-scale fighting continues along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, but no longer near Berd. The skirmishes now take place in the Ararat region, on Armenia’s western border with the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan, and in the Gegharkunik and Syunik regions to the east and south. In these areas, tension remains over Armenia and Azerbaijan disagreements on the demarcation of borders. This eventually caused the breakdown of the fragile tri-party negotiations with Russia, on “unblocking the routes”. To follow on from the November 2020 agreement, Pashinyan met Ilham Aliyev, the president of Azerbaijan, in Moscow in January, where they agreed to set up a working group on “unblocking all economic and transport links in the region”. Since the 1990s war, many Soviet-era transport connections were frozen, and the January statement promised to prioritise rail and road connections, while encouraging the pitching of other projects to the three countries’ leaderships for approval too.

“Cities located on the highway to Georgia or Iran are better off. There is more movement there. Here life becomes harder and harder but nobody notices it. When I go to Yerevan, I see the gap between wealthy and poor people. Here, everyone is poor”

Anahit Esayan, a wild blueberry gatherer in Berd, said that the community there was “totally cut off from all interstate roads”.

She added: “Cities located on the highway to Georgia or Iran are better off. There is more movement there. Here life becomes harder and harder but nobody notices it. When I go to Yerevan, I see the gap between wealthy and poor people. Here, everyone is poor.”

For others in Berd, though, there are concerns about nearby Azerbaijani enclaves inside Armenia. The Armenian authorities have not ruled out that the three Azerbaijani enclaves inside Armenia will be exchanged with Artvashen, an Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan.

Anahit Badalian, who heads a women’s resource centre in the town, said that the “uncertainty” over Voskepar and Barkhudarly, two Azerbaijani enclaves situated on the main road to Berd, was the “biggest problem” for the town.

Unlike Berd, Meghri, which is Armenia’s southernmost town, was well connected during the Soviet era.

Meghri, which is on the border with Iran, used to benefit from a direct rail route through Azerbaijani Nakhchivan to Yerevan, along the Araxes river. That rail line was blocked in 1993 due to the war over Nagorno-Karabakh, which subsequently separated Meghri residents from Yerevan by a meandering and mountainous eight-hour drive, resulting in expensive transport costs for everyday products.

The end of the war, it seems, could speed up Meghri’s transport connections. While the construction of a 556-kilometre north-south highway started in 2012 under Serzh Sargsyan, the country’s kleptocrat leader ousted in 2018, it was not finished, despite outstretching its initial budget of $962m.

The former president had once claimed that the highway would allow Armenians to reach ports at the Black and Caspian seas, shortening the ride from Meghri to Armenia’s northern border with Georgia from ten hours to five. Since Sargsyan’s removal from power, however, 29 people have been charged with corruption offences relating to the highway, including the former president’s brother.

Image: Eliza Mkhitaryan

Armenia is now in a rush to build the as-yet undeveloped parts of the road, including the 60-kilometre section linking the Syunik towns of Sisian and Kajaran, including five kilometres of bridges and 12 kilometres of tunnels, which will cut through the hills and valleys that separate them. With this modified north-south highway, the Armenian government wants to avoid incidents with Azerbaijan, such as that on 25 August, when the Azerbaijani military closed a section of the M2 highway, which zig-zags into territory now under their control, effectively blocking travel between Armenia’s north and south.

Aside from these direct security concerns, this infrastructure could also benefit the region’s businesses. Ishkhan Aslanyan, an entrepreneur from Meghri who produces dried fruit in a Soviet-era wine factory, says reaching the foreign market is complicated, though doable, and is looking forward to the opening of the north-south highway.

“The highway will be a boost for Meghri’s agriculture exports,” Aslanyan tells me, noting that freezer trucks currently take 2.5 days to transport his figs, which ripen quickly, to Moscow’s markets. Indeed, there may be more reason to export from Meghri, he says, as the town’s success in agriculture has motivated younger people to cultivate the land and plant new fig trees.

“The Meghri issue is above our agency. It’s a question of world powers: Iran, West and East. The issue is, can we actually benefit from it?”

The infrastructure topic, however, is sensitive. Though Meghri could also benefit from the reconstruction of rail routes, the “transport corridor”, as Azerbaijani officials call it, has led to speculation in the press and by the opposition, in particular former president Robert Kocharyan, that Pashinyan plans to ‘concede’ Meghri to Azerbaijan. In turn, Pashinyan claims that it was Kocharyan himself who negotiated compromising over Meghri in previous rounds of talks on Nagorno-Karabakh. Indeed, the Armenian prime minister refuses to use the ‘corridor’ term, as it suggests a level of Azerbaijani sovereignty over the route.

Before the war, Meghri residents liked to think of their town as a spot along the Silk Road – the ancient trade route that linked the East and the West. Now when possible north-south or east-west connections are in sight and central to the aftermath of the war, Meghri residents tend to be diplomatic in interviews.

“The Meghri issue is above our agency. It’s a question of world powers: Iran, West and East,” said Vardan, a hotel owner in Meghri. When asked about unblocking transport from Azerbaijan, he said: “The issue is, can we actually benefit from it?”

Image: Eliza Mkhitaryan

The Armenian government believes it can benefit from greater connectivity. At least economically, it wants to end the three-decade transport blockade that arose in the first Karabakh conflict. Armenia’s prime minister says he is ready to work towards normalising relations with Turkey, including opening the border and reopening rail connections.

But this commitment to becoming a crossroad of East and West is not the only clarity that the new government has articulated. Armenia also seems to have a more defined economic policy now – or perhaps a more defined debate. For instance, Khachatur Sukiasyan, the first businessman in Armenia to be called an oligarch in the early 1990s, promoted an ‘Armenia-first’ narrative in his first speech as MP in the summer.

“We have always liked to listen to foreigners, but here’s what’s important. We don’t use any protection mechanism to defend local producers,” he said, calling for a policy to protect Armenian business.

To argue his point, Sukiasyan criticised the 2004 privatisation of the country’s biggest mining company, the Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum Combine in Syunik. Under this scheme, a 60% interest in the mine was sold abroad to a German mining company, Cronimet.

“With the efforts of Armenian citizens, the mine developed and brought revenue,” he noted, but still castigated the sale of the mine to an outside party with “no institutional connection to the country’s mining industry in the past”.

Whether Pashinyan’s plans for transformation is successful depends not only on how strong Armenians’ nerves are, but whether the plan is viable in the eyes of citizens

This, Sukiasyan alleged, led to potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in lost taxes and royalties. Though confirmation of Sukiasyan’s figures has yet to emerge, Armenia’s mining sector has long had a reputation for moving profits abroad in a less than transparent manner.

“At least if the money stays within Armenia, some new buildings would be built,” he said.

In July, the Armenian parliament voted to approve new legislation that would be the first attempt to raise taxes on foreign companies. Royalty fees for three non-ferrous metals (copper concentrate, molybdenum concentrate and ferromolybdenum) were raised from 15 to 30%. This law is expected to increase the revenue of the state budget by 30 billion drams ($627m) by the end of 2021, to benefit from a windfall of rising copper prices globally.

Armenia’s new minister of high-tech industry, Vahagn Khachatryan, has since declared a policy to favour Armenian producers, and particularly those who commit to produce military technology. The defeat of Armenian forces in last year’s war is often attributed to the superior unmanned aerial systems Azerbaijan used: Turkish Bayraktar TB2 drones and Israeli loitering munitions, also known as ‘kamikaze drones’.

Yerablur cemetery / Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan | Image: Eliza Mkhitaryan

The one-year anniversary of the Second Karabakh War coincided with the 30th anniversary of Armenian independence from the Soviet Union, marked on 21 September. The contrast between these two events was felt keenly on Tuesday night, when televisions across the country simultaneously broadcast two events – a candlelight vigil of mothers marching to the Yerablur military cemetery in Yerevan, and the city’s independence celebration on Republic Square.

The latter was a high-tech, multi-media production, with projections of the national flag, cultural and historic symbols, and the phrase ‘I stand with the homeland’ flashed on the government building’s facade, a drone show flickering in the night sky.

Prime minister Pashinyan restated his wish to “transform our defeat into victory”, as if trying to unify these disparate anniversaries. His transformation plan entails making peace with a reformed Armenian military, a liberalised economy with state regulation, and cross-border transit for goods, not yet for civilians. If Armenians are to rethink their nationhood and its foundation, these new ideological premises merit wider political discussion, even if local politics is saturated with fights between opposition and ruling parties, and warnings of imminent war in the media.

More pressingly, whether Pashinyan’s plans for transformation is successful depends not only on how strong Armenians’ nerves are, but whether the plan is viable in the eyes of citizens, burned out after a year of grief and uncertainty.

All photographs by Eliza Mkhitaryan.

“Iranian troops will enter Armenia and liquidate the Zionist uprising”


Oct 6 2021



Written by The Frontier Post

Yuri Sokolov

The situation in the South Caucasus is unstable again. On the border with Iran and Armenia, Turkey and Azerbaijan have begun a new stage of the exercises “Indestructible Brotherhood-2021”. Iran, in turn, is carrying out maneuvers on the border with Azerbaijan. The parties exchange unfriendly statements and link them with the results of the war in Karabakh. Gazeta.ru understood the reasons for this tension and how it would affect Moscow’s interests.

“Conquerors of Khaybar” vs. “Brotherhood-2021”

The first anniversary of the second Karabakh war gave rise to new contradictions in Transcaucasia. They manifested themselves in early September, when Azerbaijan began to hinder the supply of Iranian fuel to Nagorno-Karabakh. The Azerbaijanis stopped freight transport from Iran, which was heading to Stepanakert, and charged a fare from each driver.

In response, the Iranian armed forces announced the Conquerors of Khaybar exercises in the northwest of the country. It is important to note that Tehran is conducting large-scale exercises on the border with Azerbaijan for the first time in 30 years.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei made a loud statement. “T-hose who suffer from illusions will soon be slapped in the face. The countries of the region should not allow foreign armies to interfere, ”he said.

The Iranian government newspaper Vatan-e-Emrooz specified the official position of the state in a very peculiar way: “Ankara and Baku know that in case of a change in borders, Iranian troops will immediately enter the territory of Armenia and liquidate the Zionist uprising.”

Iran, apparently, hints at close military-technical cooperation between Azerbaijan and Israel during last year’s war – in particular on drones. Although in Tel Aviv it was repeatedly emphasized that this interaction did not at all mean acceptance of one or another side of the conflict, but was explained only by commercial interests.

“Now Iranian propaganda is actively using the Israeli map for an internal audience, talks about the presence of the Israeli military in Azerbaijan and symbolically calls its teachings“ Conquerors of Kha-ybar ”in honor of the Battle of Khaibar in 629, where the troops of the Prophet Muhammad defeated the Jews. However, in reality, the Iranians are not worried about Tel Aviv, but Ankara,” – Isa Javadov, a historian and orientalist, told Gazeta.Ru.

Azerbaijan and its ally Turkey announced their intention to conduct joint maneuvers as part of the next stage of “Indes-tructible Brotherhood-202-1” on October 5-8 on the border with Armenia and Iran, in the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic.

At the same time, the parties focused on the fact that they are talking about “measures for demining and training in the territories liberated from the Armenian occupation.” In Yerevan, it seems, they took the hint. In any case, on October 4, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan arrived in Tehran for talks with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian.

Zangezur Corridor of Discord

Regardless of the reasons that prompted Iran to defend its position at the diplomatic and military level, it is difficult not to notice that Tehran’s policy has changed markedly with the coming to power of President Ibrahim Raisi in the summer of 2021.

“The situation is very alarming, since the actions of the new president are rather unconstructive and clearly not peaceful. I hardly imagine that ex-Pres-ident Rouhani would use escalation to advance his goals, as Raisi does, ”says Stanislav Pritchin, senior researcher at the Center for Post-Soviet Studies, IMEMO RAN .However, according to t-he expert, it will be difficult for Tehran to change the balance of power in the region.

“The ability of Baku to influence the Iranian-Armenian trade by blocking the Goris-Kapan highway was only a trigger for the accumulating discontent of Iran. In the long term, Iran fears the opening of the Zangezur corridor, which will connect Azerbaijan and Turkey by land and will be able to attract the Azerbaijani-Turkish military presence on the border of Iran and Armenia under various pretexts, ”Javadov said.

Thus, the transit of Iranian products and energy resources through Armenia to other regions will be jeopardized, and the Cauca-sus will become another place where Ankara will seize the levers of pressure on Iran, the expert said.

“Tehran’s militant rhetoric adds even more complexity to the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh co-nflict, which is already filled with internal dynamics. But the most unpleasant thing for Moscow is that such rhetoric of Tehran gives Ankara even more opportunities to act as the patron of Baku and, accordingly, get even more reas-ons to increase its influence in Azerbaijan,” Pritchin said.

At the moment, the strategy of the Iranian leadership strongly contradicts the roadmap of the Karabakh settlement outlined by Russia. “By its demonstrative unwillingness to build the Zangezur corridor, Iran is actually torpedoing the achievements of Russian diplomacy in unblocking transport communications,” Isa Javadov explained.

Nevertheless, a positive outcome for the Iranian side under a military scenario is hardly visible, the expert said.

The armed formations of the Islamic Republic are now involved in Syria and Iraq, significant costs are spent on financing allied groups in Yemen and Lebanon, and instability in Afghanistan is a reason to keep troops in this direction. Another military conflict involving Iran will only exacerbate its international isolation and hit once again on the well-being of the population.

At the same time, neither Azerbaijan nor Turkey are also interested in the conflict, although they are pulling troops to the borders to demonstrate force. Russia, too, would be satisfied only with a balance of interests in the region, which excludes a military scenario. This probably explains the diplomatic work being carried out by the head of the Russian Foreign Ministry Sergei Lavrov . On October 6, the minister plans to hold talks with his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amir Abdollahian.