AW Pandora Papers: South Caucasus connected to shadow financial system

A massive leak of offshore data exposing the hidden wealth of the world’s elites has implicated figures from the South Caucasus. 

The Pandora Papers are a cache of 11.9 million files that unveil how wealthy individuals hide their income and assets from taxation in offshore jurisdictions, or tax havens. The files, described by the Guardian as the “biggest trove of leaked offshore data in history,” reveal a complex web of offshore companies and corporate service providers that conceals the movement of hundreds of billions of dollars around the world every year. 

The Pandora Papers include data regarding 35 world leaders, including current and former presidents and prime ministers, and 300 other public officials in over 90 countries. Government officials are termed “politically exposed persons” (PEPs) because their proximity to public funds places them at a higher risk of money laundering. The files reveal how service providers have assisted corrupt and authoritarian leaders in hiding their wealth overseas without subjecting the source of their money to scrutiny. 

While the Panama Papers and Paradise Papers previously revealed massive networks of offshore companies, the Pandora Papers are unprecedented in their scale and scope. The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) wrote that the Pandora Papers end the “idea that abuses of the offshore system are the work of a few bad apples.” Instead they “expose a vast and often interconnected system that is feeding crises and discontent across the world.” 

The files were leaked to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) in Washington, D.C., which shared access with over 600 journalists worldwide. 

The Pandora Papers implicate Armenian businesspeople in an international network of tax havens. According to an investigation by Hetq (a member of the ICIJ), two Armenian mining companies were registered in offshore jurisdictions. 

In October 2012, British investors released a statement in Haykakan Zhamanak (the newspaper owned by the family of PM Nikol Pashinyan) that they planned to launch two mining projects in 2013—the Bazum iron ore mine in the Lori province and the Azatek gold-polymetallic mine in the Vayots Dzor province. The investors, including former member of British Parliament Sir Tony Paldry, would contribute $400 million to the projects through Surart Ltd. and VaykGold Ltd. 

Vardan Ayvazyan (Photo: Facebook)

Surat Ltd. and VaykGold Ltd. were founded by Vardan Ayvazyan, a former Republican MP who also served as the Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee of Economic Affairs (2007-2017) and Minister of Nature (2001-2007). 

George Howard Richmond (Photo: LinkedIn)

The Armenian Agency for State Register of Legal Entities listed Ayvazyan in 2012 as the owner of VaykGold Ltd., which came under the management of Coeur Gold Armenia Ltd. in 2014. However, as revealed by the Pandora Papers, at the time of the Haykakan Zhamanak announcement VaykGold Ltd. was managed by Coeur Gold Armenia Ltd., which was founded the previous year in Seychelles by Tbilisi-born British citizen George Howard Richmond. 

Sir Paldry told the ICIJ that he had no recollection of meeting Ayvazyan or knowledge of the newspaper announcement. 

In 2011 Coeur Gold Armenia Ltd. and Bazum Steel Ltd., which is based in Belize, briefly became shareholders in Surart Ltd., which was acquired wholly by Bazum Steel Ltd. two years later. According to Armenia’s State Revenue Committee, Surart Ltd. has suspended operations, and no company has the right to explore the Bazum iron ore mine. However Ayvazyan’s relatives founded another company, Iron Mining Ltd., in 2016, which was granted a permit the following year from the Ministry of Energy Infrastructure and Natural Resources to mine at Bazum. 

In 2021, VaykGold Ltd. signed a contract with the Ministry to develop the Azatek mine. In 2018, the Prosecutor General’s Office opened a criminal case investigating whether the license was issued illegally. The office also determined that a mineral extraction in 2017 had caused significant damage to the subsoil and its minerals. Armenia’s Investigative Committee charged Ayvazyan and Ashot Hovhannisyan, the company’s co-owner, with malicious evasion of taxes. The charges were later dropped, yet the company’s right to operate the Azatek mine was terminated by the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure. Hovhannisyan has applied to Armenia’s Administrative Court to invalidate the order, and the trial is ongoing.

Heydar Aliyev (Photo: Official website of the President of Azerbaijan)

The most damning revelations in the Pandora Papers connected to the South Caucasus involve President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan, whose relatives were revealed to own nearly $700 million in London real estate, acquired through an interconnected network of 84 secret offshore companies that the family has owned since 2006.  

While it was previously known that the Aliyevs own millions of dollars worth of property abroad, the British holdings uncovered by an OCCRP investigation, including luxury apartments, historical buildings and commercial developments, eclipse prior findings. 

Aliyev’s son Heydar acquired his first building for $48.9 million in 2009, when he was only 11 years old. The strip of commercial property in London’s exclusive Mayfair neighborhood was owned by Mallnick Holdings S.A., set up in the British Virgin Islands, and secretly handed over to Aliyev’s young son. 

By the time she was 19 years old, Aliyev’s younger daughter Arzu Aliyeva was the shareholder of Strahan Holding and Finance, an offshore company that acquired three apartments worth $9.7 million in the upscale London district of Knightsbridge. 

Trident Trust Group, the source of the largest tranche of files in the Pandora Papers numbering over 3.75 million, commissioned a British due diligence firm to investigate Arzu’s background. The firm concluded that “any transaction involving her should be subject to enhanced and ongoing scrutiny and verification.”  

“We draw our client’s attention to the widespread and sustained allegations of corruption against the subject’s father, Ilham Aliyev, and the apparent widely held opinion that any funds held by President Aliyev and his family have been accumulated as a direct result of his position as president of Azerbaijan,” the report reads. 

Leyla Aliyeva (Photo: Official website of Leyla Aliyeva)

By that point Trident Trust had already incorporated at least 16 offshore companies for Arzu Aliyeva. That year, Arzu’s older sister Leyla Aliyeva became the owner of an offshore company that held a large office building near London’s world-famous Regent Street, while Heydar became the landlord of a Michelin-star restaurant, an art gallery and the head office of Conde Nast. 

In response to an inquiry from OCCRP, a representative of Trident Trust wrote that “each of Trident’s trust and corporate services businesses is regulated in the jurisdiction in which it operates and is fully committed to compliance with all applicable regulations. Trident routinely cooperates with any competent authority which requests information.” 

The Pandora Papers connect the Aliyevs to the British crown estate, which purchased an office and retail property in Mayfair for over $90 million in August 2018. Money laundering investigator Dylan Kennedy told the Guardian that if the source of funds is found to be questionable, the property sale to the crown estate is the “pinnacle of legitimization.” 

The origins of the money used to buy these properties is unclear. However, reporters did find that at least eight of the companies, registered in the British Virgin Islands, received millions of dollars from laundering and transfer systems including the AzerbaijaniRussian and Troika Laundromats. The Azerbaijani Laundromat is a multi-billion dollar secret slush fund, likely connected to the Aliyev family, used among other things to purchase silence from European politicians regarding Azerbaijani human rights abuses.

Lillian Avedian is a staff writer for the Armenian Weekly. Her writing has also been published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Hetq and the Daily Californian. She is pursuing master’s degrees in Journalism and Near Eastern Studies at New York University. A human rights journalist and feminist poet, Lillian’s first poetry collection Journey to Tatev was released with Girls on Key Press in spring of 2021.



Europe offered Turkey cash to join Paris climate accord

Politico.eu
Germany, France, UK and two development banks involved in deal with Ankara.
By Karl Mathiesen
October 8, 2021 8:04 pm
Turkey’s ratification of the Paris climate agreement this week came
after President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government was offered a
guarantee of financial support in talks with France, Germany, the U.K.
and two development banks.
The parliament in Ankara ratified the deal late Wednesday night,
ending years of refusal to take the final legal step to join the
international agreement to limit global warming it signed in 2015.
It came after a deal in principle to provide Turkey with financial
support to clean up its emissions, which was struck between Ankara and
officials from France, Germany, the World Bank’s International Finance
Corporation and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development,
according to two people who described aspects of the discussions. They
would not confirm whether the governments themselves were the source
of the funding, or the development banks. The details of the deal
would be announced "in a timely manner," one said.
The U.K. was also involved in the talks but not a signatory of the deal.
German Environment State Secretary Jochen Flasbarth called Turkey's
ratification "a very important step on which I cooperated long and
intensively with our Turkish colleagues."
Turkish Environment Minister Murat Kurum held talks last Saturday with
U.K. COP26 President Alok Sharma, French Minister of Ecological
Transition Barbara Pompili and Flasbarth.
An IFC Spokesperson said it was "glad to support Turkey as Turkey has
chosen to ratify the Paris Agreement, but it is not correct that IFC
funds have been pledged toward this end."
After those discussions, Turkey announced a new goal of "net zero
emissions" by 2053 — a precise date that may owe less to detailed
economic analysis of Turkey's emissions pathways than to the 600th
anniversary of the fall of Byzantine Constantinople, today's Istanbul,
to the Ottoman Empire. Turkey hasn't clarified if that goal is for all
greenhouse gases or CO2 alone.
Turkey has withheld its legal assent to the climate accord as leverage
in a decades-long campaign to be considered a developing country under
the terms of the 1992 U.N. climate convention. That would make it
eligible for a share of certain climate funds.
Turkey's current status is in limbo, where countries have offered it
an exemption from having to pay financial contributions, but it
officially remains part of the group of developed nations.
Turkey's ratification statement said it would implement the Paris deal
"as a developing country." But one of the people who described the
deal with the European governments and banks said Turkey's status
under the convention would not change as part of the deal they had
struck with Ankara.
Germany had floated a deal with Turkey as far back as 2017, but with
the U.S. at that point shaping to withdraw from the Paris deal,
Erdoğan was not subject to the pressure from major powers he has felt
in the run-up to the COP26 climate talks, which start in Glasgow in a
little over three weeks.
But with Joe Biden's administration having rejoined the deal this
year, Turkey was the only G20 economy not to have ratified the deal.
Only Yemen, Libya, Iraq, Iran and Eritrea remain outside.
 

Never mind Russia: Turkey and Vietnam are Microsoft’s new state-backed hacker threats du jour

The Register
Never mind Russia: Turkey and Vietnam are Microsoft's new state-backed
hacker threats du jour
[It isn't just the big dogs preparing to bite, warns Redmond]
By Gareth Corfield
Oct. 8, 2021
Iran, Turkey and both North and South Korea are bases for nation-state
cyber attacks, Microsoft has claimed – as well as old favourite
Russia.
While more than half of cyberattacks spotted by Redmond came from
Russia, of more interest to the wider world is information from the US
megacorp's annual Digital Defence Report about lesser-known nation
state cyber-attackers.
"After Russia, the largest volume of attacks we observed came from
North Korea, Iran and China; South Korea, Turkey (a new entrant to our
reporting) and Vietnam were also active but represent much less
volume," said MS in a post announcing its findings.
While the usual suspects of Russia, China and North Korea are
highlighted in the report, Vietnam's APT32 was highlighted by
Microsoft's infosec people for targeting "human rights and civil
organisations."
The Vietnam-linked group has a track record of not only spying on
these but also "foreign corporations with a vested interest in
Vietnam's manufacturing, consumer products, and hospitality sectors",
according to Thailand's CERT.
"In the last year, espionage, and more specifically, intelligence
collection, has been a far more common goal than destructive attacks,"
said Microsoft in its report, focusing on state threats to cyber
security in general rather than Vietnam specifically. "While nations
other than Iran mostly refrained from destructive attacks, they did
continue to compromise victims that would be prime candidates for
destructive attacks if tensions increased to the point where
governments made strategic decisions to escalate cyber warfare."
Alongside Vietnam as a newer entrant to the ranks of state-backed
threats was Turkey, singled out for hacking Middle Eastern and Balkans
telcos. Threat group UNC1326 (aka SeaTurtle) was previously reported
on in depth by Cisco Talos in 2019, which pointed out that SeaTurtle
was targeting "national security organisations in the Middle East and
North Africa" that wanted to gain "persistent access to sensitive
networks and systems."
Microsoft said SeaTurtle was "most heavily focused on countries of
strategic interest to Turkey including Armenia, Cyprus, Greece, Iraq,
and Syria," scanning for exploitable remote code vulnerabilities in
its targets' networks.
Aside from the state-backed threats, the Microsoft report noted that
ransomware criminals were most likely to target retail, financial
services, government and healthcare orgs, with the US being their
number one target nation. The next unluckiest countries as far as
ransomware was concerned were China, Japan, Germany and the United
Arab Emirates.
"Fewer than 20 per cent of our customers are using strong
authentication features like multifactor authentication," groaned
Redmond in its closing remarks, noting that offering MFA "for free"
wasn't spurring companies and other organisations into enabling it.
If they did, Microsoft thinks its security customers would "be
protected from over 99 per cent of the attacks we see today."
Something worth thinking about next time your users are moaning about
password policies
 

Armenpress: OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs ready to facilitate Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting

OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs ready to facilitate Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting

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 00:45, 9 October, 2021

GENEVA, OCTOBER 8, ARMENPRESS. The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs say they are ready to facilitate a meeting between the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders.

“The Co-Chairs have taken positive note of President Aliyev’s and Prime Minister Pashinyan’s public statements expressing their readiness in principle to meet with each other under the auspices of the Co-Chairs,” OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Stephane Visconti of France, Andrew Schofer of the United States of America, and Igor Khovaev of the Russian Federation said in a statement released October 8. “The Co-Chairs look forward to engaging the sides on modalities and details of such a meeting and reiterate their willingness to visit the region in the near future to discuss next steps in the process.”

The statement comes after the Co-Chairs held consultations with UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi and International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Vice President Gilles Carbonnier in Geneva.

“The Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairperson in Office (PRCiO) Andrzej Kasprzyk also participated in the meetings.  All participants stressed the importance of full, unimpeded access by international humanitarian organizations to carry out their work.  In light of the recent constructive meeting between the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan on the margins of the UN General Assembly, the Co-Chairs welcomed Azerbaijan’s release of one Armenian serviceman and also discussed possible de-escalatory and humanitarian measures, including with regard to detainees, missing persons, and the voluntary return of all displaced persons.  The Co-Chairs emphasized their intention to continue working with the parties to find areas of agreement.”

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia records 1331 daily coronavirus cases

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 11:11, 9 October, 2021

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 9, ARMENPRESS.  1331 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 271 205, the ministry of healthcare reports.

8428 COVID-19 tests were conducted on October 8.

894 patients have recovered in one day.

30 patients have passed away, bringing the total number of death cases to 5529.

The number of active cases is 16 896.

The number of people who have been infected with COVID-19 but died from other disease has reached 1227.

Indian FM to pay first ever visit to Armenia

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 11:45, 9 October, 2021

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 9, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of India Subrahmanyam Jaishankar will pay a visit to Armenia on October 12-13, ARMENPRESS reports the Foreign Ministry of India informed.

This will be the first ever visit of the Indian Foreign Minister to the Republic of Armenia.

The progress of bilateral relations and regional developments will be discussed during the visit.

In Armenia, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar will have meetings with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Minister of Foreign Affairs Ararat Mirzoyan, and Speaker of the National Assembly Alen Simonyan.

Iran, Israel and the Rising Tensions in the Caucasus

Bloomberg
Oct 7 2021
By 

Soviet writer Vasily Grossman’s final work, An Armenian Sketchbook

Oct 7 2021

An Armenian Sketchbook, translated by Robert and Elizabeth Chandler, New York Review Books, 133 pages.

Vasily Grossman (1905-1964), the Soviet journalist and writer, is known above all for his two massive novels, Stalingrad (1952) and Life and Fate (1960) , dealing with the Second World War on the Eastern Front. He was also an outstanding war journalist, documenting the Nazi genocide of the Eastern European Jews, as well as all the major battles of the Red Army, which played the decisive role in defeating fascism.

The recent translation of Stalingrad into English for the first time recalls another work of Grossman’s that only became available to an English-speaking audience in 2013. An Armenian Sketchbook, dating from 1962, is a very different sort of book than the earlier war novels. As the title suggests, this slim volume consists of an informal and at times humorous and almost light-hearted account of Grossman’s trip to the small Soviet republic in 1961, where he was tasked with translating a lengthy Armenian war novel. There is much here that puts a smile on the reader’s face.

An Armenian Sketchbook

But the book is also, in its slighter fashion, as deeply moving as Grossman’s previous work. In 12 brief chapters, while objectively and with great affection detailing aspects of Armenian life, the author artfully and naturally interweaves profound insights deeply bound up with the Russian Revolution, the unprecedented struggle of the Soviet people against Nazi barbarism and the bitter experiences of Stalinist terror and dictatorship.

There is also a connection between this remembrance of Armenia and the destiny of Life and Fate. As translator Robert Chandler explains in his introduction, the Soviet authorities had refused to allow his monumental sequel to Stalingrad to appear in print when he submitted it for publication in 1960. More than that, the manuscript was confiscated, and the regime went so far as to remove carbon paper and typewriter ribbons. Grossman was shattered by what he called “the arrest” of the work to which he had devoted years of struggle. Life and Fate was not to appear until its publication in Switzerland in 1980, long after the author’s death. An English translation followed, in 1985.

In the second half of 1961, perhaps in an effort to soften the blow of the censorship of his novel and to “buy him off” with another assignment, literary officials suggested that Grossman undertake the trip to Armenia. Even though he knew no Armenian, he was asked to edit (“translate,” as that term was generally used during this period) a literal translation of a lengthy novel.

The arduous work of retranslating had to be carried out in Armenia so that Grossman could consult both with the author of the book as well as its original translator. This occupied him for some months.

In the first half of 1962, after his translation work had been completed, Grossman finished writing his reminiscences of the trip. Once again he faced official pressure and censorship. Literary bureaucrats were particularly concerned by a chapter that dealt with the role of Stalin. Grossman, by this time angry over many years of harassment and tangling with the bureaucracy, refused to allow the book’s publication. An Armenian Sketchbook did not appear in the USSR until 1965, some eight months after the author’s death, and whole chapters were omitted.

It should be kept in mind that this period of the early 1960s was the height of the Thaw, under Stalinist leader Nikita Khrushchev, who gave the “Secret Speech” in February 1956 exposing some of Stalin’s monstrous crimes. Political prisoners were released from labor camps, and censorship was somewhat eased. Millions of workers and intellectuals sought an explanation for the Stalinist terror, many raising the slogan “Back to Lenin.” Grossman’s little book reflects the spirit of these times. Even then, of course, the parasitic Stalinist bureaucracy enforced strict limits on what could be said or written, as was revealed by Grossman’s own treatment.

The complete English translation of An Armenian Sketchbook, with missing passages and chapters restored, is a small gem. Grossman’s descriptions of his experiences are no less effective for their brevity. He depicts Armenian villages, austere mountains, the view of Mount Ararat in extreme eastern Turkey and the customs—religious and otherwise—of the people. A few extracts can hardly do justice to the beauty and perceptiveness of Grossman’s prose.

“In Yerevan [the capital] and in towns and villages in the mountains and on the plains,” he writes, “I met people of all kinds. I met scientists, doctors, engineers, builders, artists, journalists, party activists, and old revolutionaries. …I saw plowmen, vintners, and shepherds; I saw masons; I saw murderers, fashionable young ‘mods,’ sportsmen, earnest leftists, and cunning opportunists; I saw helpless fools, army colonels, and Lake Sevan fishermen.”

Grossman feels very close to the Armenian people. He closely and concretely observes, not content to view from afar. His sentiments are not vague and pacifistic. He is close to the masses, with a feeling for their suffering combined with an optimism about humanity’s potential.

He writes, for instance, about meeting “a sweet, asthmatic old man by the name of Sarkisyan. … When he was young, he was an important figure in the Party; during his years as an émigré, he knew Lenin. And then he was denounced as a Turkish spy, beaten almost to death, and sent to a camp in Siberia, where he remained for 19 years.

“And then he returned home, not embittered but convinced that people are essentially good, glad to have enriched his heart through conversations in camp barracks, north of the Arctic Circle, with ordinary Russian peasants and workers, glad to have enriched his mind through conversations with Russian scientists and intellectuals.”

Grossman writes frequently in these pages on the issue of nationalism in the 20th century. The profound impact of the October Revolution can be seen and felt in his prose. His comments on narrow nationalism of course apply today as much as in the previous century.

“Now, after Hitler, it has become more important than ever to look at the question of nationalism—of nationalistic contempt and nationalistic arrogance,” he writes.

“Imagine our Russian intellectuals, the kind, merry, perceptive old women in our villages, our elderly workers, our young lads, our little girls being free to enter the melting pot of ordinary human intercourse with the people of North and South America, of China, France, India, Britain and the Congo.

“What a rich variety of customs, fashion, cuisine, and labor would then be revealed! … And the beggarliness, blindness, and inhumanity of narrow nationalism and hostility between states would be clearly demonstrated.”

“When a large and strong nation,” he continues, “with huge armies and powerful weapons, proclaims its superiority, it threatens other nations with war and enslavement. The nationalistic excesses of small oppressed nations, on the other hand, spring from the need to defend their dignity and freedom. And yet, for all their differences, the nationalism of the aggressors and the nationalism of the oppressed have much in common.”

The influence of Marxism finds _expression_ in the way Grossman approaches a variety of subjects, despite the awful perversions of the Stalinist regime, which falsely claimed to represent socialism and turned Marxism into its opposite, a defense of nationalism and bureaucracy.

On a visit to the world-famous Lake Sevan, for instance, he writes with profound understanding of the relationship between the object and subject. He describes “a little cloud lit by a quiet sunset” and a “summer rain or a young moon reflected in the pockmarked surface of a forest stream in April.” He continues: “For a particular scene to enter into a person and become part of their soul, it is evidently not enough that the scene be beautiful. The person also has to have something clear and beautiful present inside them. It is like a moment of shared love, of communion, of true meeting between a human being and the outer world.”

A similar grasp of Marxism is suggested by the following digression on art, which savagely depicts the monstrosity of “socialist realism,” the only work approved by the Stalinist regime: “… there is, surprisingly, more true realism in the craziest picture of the most abstract subjectivist, in the silliest concoction of lines, dots, and spots, than in all the harmonious worlds commissioned by bureaucrats. A strange, silly, crazy picture is, after all, a true _expression_ of at least one living human soul. But whose living soul can we sense in this harmonious, officially sanctioned world so full of apparently naturalistic detail, so dense with ripe ears of wheat and fine forests of oak? Nobody’s—there is no soul in a government office.”

In the final chapter, Grossman gives a detailed account of an Armenian wedding to which he has been invited. After hours of celebration, a collective-farm carpenter addresses Grossman directly. His words are translated for the Russian Jewish guest.

“The carpenter was talking about the Jews, saying that when he was taken prisoner during the war he had seen all the Jews being taken away somewhere separate. All his Jewish comrades had been killed. He spoke of the compassion and love he felt for the Jewish women and children who had perished in the gas chambers of Auschwitz. He said how he had read articles of mine about the war, with portrayals of Armenians, and had thought how this man writing about Armenians was from a nation that had also suffered a great deal. … Long, thunderous applause confirmed that the Armenian peasantry did indeed feel compassion for the Jewish nation.”

Discussing anti-Semitism, Grossman obliquely but firmly indicts the regime for tolerating, even promoting anti-Semitism: “I have more than once heard Russians—both intellectuals and simple people—speak with compassion of the horrors that befell the Jews during the Nazi occupation.

“But I have also encountered the vicious mentality of the Black Hundreds. I have felt this hatred on my own skin. From drunks on buses, from people eating in canteens or standing in queues, I have heard black words about the nation martyred by Hitler. And it has always pained me that our Soviet lecturers, propagandists, and ideological workers do not speak out against anti-Semitism—as did Korolenko, as did Gorky, as did Lenin.”

Grossman with the Red Army in Schwerin, Germany, 1945 (Wikipedia)

The lasting impact of the October Revolution on the best sections of the Soviet intelligentsia and working class can be seen in these lines and throughout the small volume. This occurred despite the horrors or Stalinism, and even the participants’ own lack of understanding. Grossman himself became somewhat discouraged and disoriented in the face of the degeneration of the Revolution, but he never abandoned a profound belief in human progress. This, in the face of all that he had witnessed, has an enormous objective significance. Almost 60 years after the writing of this book, the cause of socialism remains thoroughly alive.

Grossman’s concluding lines underscore the fact that, although this particular visit had deeply affected him, he was writing not only about Armenia:

“Though mountains be reduced to mere skeletons, may mankind endure forever. … Probably I have said much that is clumsy and wrong. But all I have said, clumsy or not, I have said with love.

“Barev dzez—All good to you, Armenians and non-Armenians!”

 

Azerbaijan DM denies reports soldier killed civilian in Nagorno-Karabakh


Oct 10 2021



Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry denied claims by the de facto Republic of Artsakh that Azerbaijani soldiers had shot and killed a civilian in the Nagorno-Karabakh region on Saturday.
The police force of the Republic of Artsakh reported on Saturday that Aram Tepnants, a 55-year-old resident of Martakert in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, was shot by a sniper from the Azerbaijan Armed Forces while driving a tractor in an agricultural area.
The Foreign Ministry of the republic strongly condemned the alleged shooting, saying it was aimed at “creating an atmosphere of fear among the peaceful population of the Republic of Artsakh and emigration of Armenians from the country.” 
The Republic of Artsakh is a de facto republic internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan. Last year, the area in which the republic sits was recaptured by Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh war against Armenia.

Georgian, Armenian Prime Ministers Meet in Yerevan

Civil Georgia
Oct 10 2021

Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili met his Armenian counterpart Nikol Pashinyan in Yerevan on October 9, reaffirming “Georgia’s commitment to continuing its active role as a mediator to secure peace and stability” in the region.

The press service of the Georgian Government said the parties discussed the Peaceful Neighborhood Initiative for the South Caucasus proposed by PM Irakli Garibashvili in the UN. The two PMs stressed “the new peace format will foster discussions on the prospects of the peaceful neighborhood initiative that will engage international partners alongside the South Caucasus states,” it added.

The two prime ministers, according to the same report, also discussed matters of the bilateral cooperation agenda, including the issues discussed during Nikol Pashinyan’s recent visit to Tbilisi.

On its part, Armenian PM’s press office said Nikol Pashinyan and Irakli Garibashvili noted the high-level intensive bilateral contacts testify to the dynamic development of the Armenian-Georgian relations and the high level of political dialogue.

The parties, as per the same report, also “exchanged views on the regional situation and developments” and reaffirmed their readiness to further deepen friendly ties and agreed to continue the active dialogue.

The visit comes some ten days after the Georgian Prime Minister met Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Baku on September 29. Some three weeks before that, on September 8-9, PM Pashinyan visited Tbilisi to meet President Salome Zurabishvili and PM Garibashvili.

Earlier in May, PM Garibashvili’s visits to Baku and Yerevan preceded Georgia-U.S. brokered deal between Azerbaijan and Armenia, involving Baku’s release of 15 Armenian prisoners of war in exchange for getting from Yerevan a map of landmines in Agdam district, controlled by Armenian forces until recently.

Discussing the swap deal, Georgian Deputy Prime Minister, Foreign Minister David Zalkaliani recently told Georgian Public Broadcaster on October 7 that Tbilisi is making efforts the accord to be followed by further “concrete steps.”

FM Zalkaliani said Georgia maintains “active communication” with both South Caucasian neighbors, as well as European and U.S. partners in this regard. Tbilisi should serve as platform for dialogue, including over infrastructure, logistics, transport, and railway issues, the Georgian Foreign Minister noted.

Top Georgian diplomat said time-frame of these steps depends on the readiness of Baku and Yerevan, but expressed hopes for the opportunities in this respect, judging by information he possesses from his Armenian and Azerbaijani colleagues.