Analysts treat flights from Baku to Nakhichevan via Armenia as exceptions

Caucasian Knot
Oct 10 2021

Air flights from Azerbaijan to Nakhichevan via the territory of Armenia are no harbinger of unblocking two countries’ communications, Armenian analysts believe. These flights will not affect Armenia’s relations with Iran, which has closed the airspace for Azerbaijani military aircrafts, the analysts have added.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that on October 6, an Azerbaijani passenger plane made a flight through the Armenia’s airspace for the first time in seven years.

According to Armen Vardanyan, a political analyst, the permit for the Azerbaijani party to fly in Armenia’s airspace will not become an instrument of pressure on Azerbaijan.

Akop Badalyan, a political observer, believes that the provision of Armenia’s airspace to Azerbaijan will not affect the Armenian-Iranian relations. Armenia will not be able to use the air corridor as an instrument of pressure on Azerbaijan, since this is not the only route to Nakhichevan, the observer has added.

Mr Badalyan was sceptical about chances of opening Armenian-Azerbaijani communications. According to his version, so far there are no prerequisites for this, since the opening of communications is not so much an economic as a political agenda; and there are contradictions among the parties.

Goar Iskandaryan, an Iranian scholar, believes that European countries, including France, Germany and Austria, are interested in opening this air route.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on October 9, 2021 at 07:33 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Author: Tigran PetrosyanSource: CK correspondent

Source: 
© Caucasian Knot

Civilian perishes in Nagorno-Karabakh

Caucasian Knot
Oct 9 2021

Aram Tepnants, a resident of the Martakert District, died after being shot by a sniper from the Azerbaijani Army, the Nagorno-Karabakh police have informed.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh lasted from September 27 to November 9, 2020. Armenia lost 3781 people; other 253 persons are listed as missing, the Investigating Committee reported on September 27.

Let us remind you that according to the authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh, a total of 742 militaries and 80 civilians perished in the last autumn war; 45 militaries are registered as missing. 42,000 residents became forced migrants, of which 38,154 citizens lost their property and housing.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on October 9, 2021 at 02:12 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Source: CK correspondent

Source: 
© Caucasian Knot

Refugees from Gadrut tell about living conditions in Nagorno-Karabakh

Caucasian Knot
Oct 9 2021

During the war, refugee families lost all their property; authorities are partially compensating their rental expenses, former residents of the city of the Gadrut District have informed. A total of 1365 refugee families from the Gadrut District now live in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that the Gadrut townspeople, who moved to Stepanakert after their hometown had come under Azerbaijan’s control, complained about disorder, problems with work and high prices for rented housing. Armenian authorities have promised them new social support measures.

“On October 10, Azerbaijani militaries entered Gadrut; hostilities began; and already on October 12, the city surrendered,” said Gagik Avanesyan, a participant in the first Karabakh War and a Gadrut resident.

From the first days of the war, the city was heavily shelled, he has noted. His family, like other Gadrut residents, lost all the property.

After the war, the family of Lyudmila Andreeva, a nurse and a refugee from the Gadrut District, when coming from Armenia decided to settle in Stepanakert. However, due to high rental fees, they decided to find housing in one of the villages.

As a result of the autumn war of 2020, up to 40,000 residents of Karabakh became forced migrants, the Ministry of Social Security has informed.

The “Caucasian Knot” has also reported that by this April Karabakh residents had applied about 6943 apartments and private houses, completely destroyed or damaged during the shelling in the fall of 2020.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on October 8, 2021 at 06:23 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Author: Alvard GrigoryanSource: CK correspondent

Source: 
© Caucasian Knot

VIDEO: Cuban, Armenian musicians captivate crowds at Expo 2020 Dubai

Gulf Today, UAE
Oct 10 2021

Cuban singers perform at Expo 2020 Dubai on Saturday.

Gulf Today, Staff Reporter

A vibrant scene set the jubilee stage on fire at the Expo with Cuban, Armenian music taking the crowds through local rhythms on Saturday.

A massive audience immersed in to the cultural tunes of the both the courtiers.

The venue was jammed packed.  

The Expo kick started its monthly Expo Beats music festivals from this Thursday.

The organisers said, “Fill your ears with musical styles from around the world and hear your favourite performing artists.”

Expo Beats is a unique monthly festival that takes visitors on a journey around the globe through music, dance and culture.

It will present a feast of colour, creativity and culture throughout Expo 2020 Dubai, from the island influences of the Caribbean, Hawaii and the Philippines to the tribal rhythms of Bangladesh and Tanzania. The monthly series will blend genres, create fusions and invite the world to experience traditional and contemporary sounds in new and exciting ways.

With the theme, “Late Nights @ Expo” artists and people from across the world every Thursday and Friday night will connect with each other through performances, breaking barriers between musical styles, generations and cultures.

Expo 2020 Dubai witnessed a heavy turnout from hundreds of thousands of visitors on Friday until late, especially from families, while the event management teams at the site contributed to managing crowds with complete professionalism, using crowd management and communication techniques to reduce congestion areas, to maintain health safety standards and spacing.

Visiting the Armenian Orphans Genocide Museum in Byblos, Lebanon

Oct 10 2021
The National Herald

The Armenian Orphans Genocide Aram Bezikian Museum in Byblos, Lebanon. Photo: Facebook

Growing up, I have always been an avid visitor of museums, especially internationally ones. From archaeological and historical museums like the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Modern Museum of Art, and fun and engaging museum such as SpySpace, the type of institutions gives excellent educational references and guidance. When I conducted field work in Lebanon, there was one that caught my eye. This one was Armenian Genocide Orphans Museum in Byblos, Lebanon, which surprisingly, it is not well known outside of the Armenian community.

On August 20th, 2021, I had the honor of visiting the Armenian Genocide Orphans Museum in Byblos. Before visiting, I had knowledge of the Armenian Genocide and how Lebanon took in many Armenian refugees, but not at the magnitude that I was taught at the museum. The Orphanage has the nickname ‘Bird’s Nest,’ and it sits the archaeological site of the ancient Phoenician Byblos Castle. Named after Aram Bezikian, the museum tells the stories and plights of hundreds of thousands of Armenian Genocide survivors and their history in Lebanon after the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire. My guide for the tour is Krikor Alozian, who is a plethora of knowledge. In the beginning of the tour, there was information of the earliest stages of the pogroms and persecutions of the Armenians before the genocide, such as the Hamidian Massacres. These massacres were a series of pogroms meant to take out anger against Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians for the military setbacks of the Ottoman Empire by Sultan Abdul Hamid II and Kurdish collaborating chieftains. The massacres took place in the late 1890s, a period when many Armenians already enduring over eight hundred years of Turkish rule and persecution yet continued to thrive under them.

Later in the gallery, I was showed Sultan Abdul Hamid was later overthrown by the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), also infamously known as the Young Turks. At first they made promises of reform and new constitutional changes that would help ease tensions for the empire’s second-class citizens, such as the Armenians, Greeks, Maronites, and Assyrians; but there was also a darker side to them. Pre-Great War, there was a growing sense of nationalism around the world, and a hardline one took place in Asia Minor. Though Armenians and other Christians were relegated to second class citizens, they were the backbone of the Ottoman Empire. While most Turkish citizens served in the military and high administration, Armenians were the more educated and higher paid doctors, bankers, historians, archaeologists, and merchant traders. Many European aristocrats and nations did business and trading directly with the Armenians and Greeks of the empire, instead of the Turkish administration. This would later become a disdain for them, even though they lived side by side with Turks for hundreds of years. The second cause for disdain was the ever-increasing Russian presence on the Ottoman borders, with many Armenians being incorporated into the Russian Empire and later fighting alongside them. This along with a mass influx of Turkish, Carcassian, and Kurdish refugees from military setbacks gave the Young Turks the pretext they were looking for to enact their ultimate plan: a genocide.

The genocide took place in 1915, with the arrests and execution of many Armenian intellectuals on April 24th. Though it is widely known as the Armenian Genocide, it also coincided with the genocide of Greeks, Assyrians, and many Lebanese, particularly Maronites of Mount Lebanon, making it a Christian Genocide as a whole. Armenians were death marched to the brutal deserts of Syria, starved, bayoneted, and burn alive in their own churches. There were hundreds of thousands of orphans from the genocide, as the parents were primarily killed with the children left to fend for themselves. The next exhibit showed the network of those orphans and surviving adults, from Cilicia, Aleppo, and Beirut. Beirut would become a home to hundreds of thousands of Armenian orphans. In dire need of food, shelter, clothing and warmth, the people of the modern state of Lebanon opened their arms and incorporated these Armenians into their society. Many of these Armenians would help govern key cities such as Anjar and Bourj Hammoud.

The last part of the exhibit showed the grown of Armenians of Lebanon, the foundations of the orphanages and various aid groups which helped them, such as the Near East Relief. The last part of my tour was when Krikor allowed me to write a message for any future visitor and a massage of faith and hope for Armenians and descendants in a sacred book at the museum. I have been to various museums around the world, such as the Met Museum in NY and other historical museums in Japan and Greece, but nothing has moved me more than the Armenian Genocide Orphans Aram Bezikian Museum and Bird’s Nest Orphanage. This is a museum I would recommend to anyone who wants to be informed in one of the world’s most brutal genocides and the heartbreaking plight of the survivors, who to this day has not received just, acknowledgement, or reparations from the Turkish Republic. In an era of economic hardships and difficulties, the museum could use the visitors or donations to help continue ruining it thoroughly and to support orphans, who to this day, are being helped at the Bird’s Nest Orphanage. I consider August 20th, 2021, one of the most memorable days of my life, and this event was a major reason.

Julian McBride is a forensic anthropologist and independent journalist.


Iran Concerned by Israel’s Drones in Azerbaijan

Oct 9 2021
Saturday, 9 October, 2021 – 05:15
Washington – Istanbul – Asharq Al-Awsat

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian has said his country does not accept “geopolitical changes” in the Caucasus.

He made his remarks during talks with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov in Moscow.

The American researcher and writer from The National Interest, Trevor Filseth, said that “while the comments were offered without reference to any nation, they were presumably directed at Azerbaijan, Iran’s northwestern neighbor, which has cooperated on defense issues with Israel, to Iran’s consternation.”

“We certainly will not tolerate geopolitical change and map change in the Caucasus, and we have serious concerns about the presence of terrorists and Zionists in this region,” Amirabdollahian said during a press conference.

Filseth added, “Azerbaijan and Iran have long had a difficult relationship. In 1945, the Soviet Union sought to promote a secessionist uprising by ethnic Azeris in northwestern Iran, where they have long maintained a demographic majority.

“While the uprising was crushed the following year after Moscow withdrew its support, Iran has long feared Baku’s influence on Iranian Azeris, leading it to build closer relations with Armenia.”

“Iran maintained neutrality during the six-week war from September to November 2020 between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Both countries claim the Nagorno-Karabakh region, known in Armenia as “Artsakh,” which was part of Azerbaijan during the Soviet era but maintained a majority-Armenian population and sought to join Armenia following the Soviet collapse,” he stated.

Filseth went on saying that “while Armenia won the first war in 1994, Azerbaijan decisively won the 2020 rematch—largely owing to the influence of Israeli military technology, including drones. While Azerbaijan’s consequential victory led military planners to study its outcome for lessons, Iran quickly raised concerns about Baku’s use of Israeli weaponry.”

Bloomberg revealed that Israel “supplies Azerbaijan with drones and other high-tech weapons that helped Baku tip the military balance in its favor in last year’s war with Armenia.”

The past weeks saw tension in other fields. Azerbaijan continued its controls and imposed a “road tax” on Iranian trucks moving through its territory. In the process, some Iranian lorry drivers were detained.

“The drills carried out by our country in the northwest border areas are a question of sovereignty,” the Iranian foreign ministry spokesman said in a statement on the ministry website.

Tehran “will take all measures it judges necessary for its national security”, he said, adding, “Iran will not tolerate the presence of the Zionist regime near our borders.”

As Turkey’s efforts to ensure border security against irregular migration and smuggling activities continue, the 20-kilometer section of the security wall in the Caldiran district of the eastern province of Van, on the Iranian border, has been completed.

Van Governor Mehmet Emin Bilmez told Anadolu Agency that “175 kilometers of trenches have been dug. A 64-kilometer wall is being built in three stages. The installation of the 20-kilometer wall has now been completed. The stone used in the 34-kilometer wall has been produced.”

 

"Ribbon of Eternity" monument in Armenia vandalized again

News.am, Armenia
Oct 10 2021

The “Ribbon of Eternity” monument in Armenia was vandalized again after anonymous people stole the copper mold parts from the monument, the Kotayk Regional Service for Monument Protection reports.

The Service also reported that construction and renovation works have been in progress since the beginning of this year, adding that the monument had been completely destroyed due to such incidents and asking citizens to refrain from taking such actions since any manifestation of vandalism is condemnable and criminally punishable.

Cross-stone commemorating 14 martyrs of 44-day war unveiled at school in Armenia’s Abovyan

News.am, Armenia
Oct 10 2021

At Victor Hambardzumyan School #10 in the city of Abovyan, which I also graduated from, I attended a ceremony during which a cross-stone dedicated to the memory of our 14 martyred brothers who fell in the 44-day war in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) was unveiled, after which the martyrs were blessed and commemorated. This is what Minister of Environment of Armenia Romanos Petrosyan wrote on his Facebook page.

Petrosyan also expressed his respect to the heroes and their families, adding that they are the ones who gave the people of Armenia the honor to live and create.

Iran is ready to participate in construction of transit route leading to Georgia through Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Oct 10 2021

Deputy Minister of Roads and Municipal Development of Iran Kheyrula Khademi says Iran is ready to participate in the construction of a new transit road leading to Georgia through Armenia.

“Armenia is preparing to create a new transit route from Iran to Georgia. We have declared the willingness to participate in the construction of that road,” Khademi said, ILNA agency cites. The official stated that this concerns the new corridor, besides the alternative Goris-Kapan road on which the parties have reached an agreement.

Khademi stated that there is currently a route that links the Eastern Azerbaijan state of Iran to Yerevan. “According to the new changes, the nearly 21-km section of the road is considered a part of Azerbaijan,” the deputy minister added. According to him, the Azerbaijani side isn’t against passing through that short section in which there is only one control checkpoint that charges road fees.

“It is necessary to create an alternative road as soon as possible so that the road no longer passes through the territory of Azerbaijan, which is important for the Armenians and meets their interests,” Khademi stated.

Russian MOD issues statement on murder of peaceful Armenian civilian by Azerbaijanis in Karabakh

News.am, Armenia
Oct 10 2021

The Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation has confirmed yesterday’s murder of a peaceful civilian by Azerbaijanis in Martakert.

“On October 9, a peaceful civilian of Mataghis village received a lethal injury after gunshots fired by the Azerbaijani side while he was working on a farm located in Martakert region (near the line of contact). The command of the Russian contingent is exploring the incident with representatives of both sides,” the ministry’s press release reads.

On October 9 at around 1:15 p.m. police of Martakert received a report stating that 55-year-old citizen Aram Tepnants had been murdered following a gunshot fired by an Azerbaijani sniper in a pomegranate garden. A criminal case has been launched.