The Story of Nagorno-Karabakh Is Incomplete

Sept 7 2021
SEPTEMBER 7, 2021

EARLY IN GHOSTS OF KARABAKH, a documentary about the 2020 Karabakh War, journalist Jake Hanrahan interviews a young Armenian soldier stationed at the frontline. A blasted-out tank and bare winter mountains serve as backdrop while Hanrahan asks the soldier whether he believes a ceasefire with the Azerbaijani army will last. “The war isn’t over yet,” the young man replies. “There’s a big possibility that the enemy won’t stop until they’ve taken over all of [Nagorno-Karabakh] and even Armenia.” Hanrahan’s film moves through territories recently destroyed by war and invites locals including veterans, nurses, refugees, and widows to tell their stories before the camera. This isn’t the full story of Nagorno-Karabakh, but it’s a fair attempt to highlight the experience of those who were on the ground for some of the worst fighting the region has seen in decades.

For the documentary, Hanrahan and his team, who make up the independent platform Popular Front, reported only from the Armenian side; Azerbaijan denied them entry. The Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, too, tried to control the team’s access to fixers and locations, so they relied on cooperative locals to travel to shooting locations. When I asked Hanrahan how he approached reporting without access to both sides, he told me context was key. “The way of balancing it was just to go into detail,” he said. During the war, “a lot of the reporting was accurate, maybe in terms of facts, but facts without context are useless.”

Nagorno-Karabakh is a mountainous enclave in the Caucasus region that is claimed by Azerbaijan but has been inhabited and governed by Armenians. The disputed territory has seen several wars and ethnic cleansing committed by both sides. The most recent fighting began last September and ended with an Azerbaijani victory and ceasefire in November. During that war, the self-determined Artsakh Republic—where Karabakh’s ethnically Armenian population of about 150,000 live—was supported by Armenia. Azerbaijan, meanwhile, received military aid from Turkey. The conflict displaced thousands of Armenians and left a significant portion of Nagorno-Karabakh under Baku’s control. Today, tensions along borders remain high, and skirmishes are frequent. Azerbaijan is still holding dozens of Armenian prisoners of war.

I can attest to this recent war’s devastating impact: I am an Armenian living in Yerevan, and my relatives and friends have served at the frontlines. In forty-four days, more Armenian soldiers were killed than American soldiers during the entire twenty-year invasion and occupation of Afghanistan. For Armenia and Artsakh, whose combined population is just three million, that death toll is equivalent to a lost generation.

During the war, when I looked for coverage of what was happening in the international press, I found mostly misunderstanding or indifference. Through Twitter, I discovered Popular Front, as well as reports from a handful of independent journalists who visited the frontline under great personal risk to collect firsthand experiences of the war. Their work was and is the exception. The international press remained mostly uninterested. As thousands died in a conflict involving major players—Turkey, Russia, France, and the United States—Western news outlets ignored it or engaged in lazy, under-researched storytelling. When Azerbaijan waged an unprecedented drone war against Nagorno-Karabakh, the media silence persisted. The ongoing POW crisis barely appears in the international press. 

In Armenia, we relate to the international press the way one relates to a ghosting love interest. You may not care about us, but we hang on your every word. Global headlines register as decrees because they reflect the attitudes of larger countries that decide our fate. Two days before Azerbaijan launched its attack on Nagorno-Karabakh, Americans within Armenia received a US Embassy alert advising them not to travel to the region. It seems world powers knew what was coming before the first shell hit. The local Armenian press, especially independent and investigative reporting, is limited. During the war, news outlets mostly reiterated statements from the government, which meant that the war’s devastating reality was hidden from Armenians until the moment of capitulation.   

Because there was so little coverage of the war, every story broaching the topic felt monumental. Armenians fervently collected foreign press articles and shared them on social media. Our collector’s enthusiasm, however, soon gave way to frustration because much of the reporting painted an incomplete picture. Major outlets like the Financial Times made embarrassing errors, publishing photos showing Artsakh’s capital, Stepanakert, alongside headlines about Azerbaijani cities. Many reports hesitated to identify an instigator to the conflict, employing passive voice to say that fighting had merely “erupted.” And most of the press failed to point out the power imbalances between the two sides: Azerbaijan is militarily superior, has roughly three times the population of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia combined, and was backed by Turkey. 

In Armenia, we relate to the international press the way one relates to a ghosting love interest.

The majority of coverage simplified the conflict’s complicated history, tracing it only as far back as the nineties. The New York Times described Nagorno-Karabakh as conquered land, while the Associated Press emphasized the presence of Armenian troops in the region without mentioning that Armenians have lived there for centuries, alongside Azerbaijanis. Nagorno-Karabakh’s population was 94 percent Armenian when the Soviets made it a semi-autonomous part of Azerbaijan in 1923, and roughly 75 percent Armenian when it declared independence in 1991. This act of self-determination led to violence, which turned to war. A ceasefire ended fighting in 1994, when Armenian forces gained control and displaced hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis from districts bordering Nagorno-Karabakh. That territorial gain was aggressive. Still, implying Armenians are occupiers in the region is a willful ignorance of history.

For Armenians, the misframed coverage felt personal, as if the world was turning its back. Reporters on the ground, too, noticed errors of omission. “It really seemed as though some journalists hit the Nagorno-Karabakh Wikipedia page before churning out their pieces,” Lindsey Snell, an independent reporter, wrote to me in an email. Peter Liakhov, an editor of the independent Tbilisi-based news platform, OC Media, noticed a pattern of reporting that defined the conflict through imported frameworks. “It takes work to understand what the context is for the conflict geopolitically, nationally,” he said. “They just slot in Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Nagorno-Karabakh based on preconceptions… and that’s deeply irresponsible. I think it belies a great lack of respect for what’s actually happening.”

Some of the misunderstanding is surely also due to practical limitations. Covering Nagorno-Karabakh is difficult and dangerous. Azerbaijan and Turkey rank 167 and 153, respectively, on the World Press Freedom Index. Both regimes jail journalists who are critical of their governments. Many reporters who travel to Nagorno-Karabakh find themselves in the line of fire. They spend nights in bomb shelters or face threats from propagandists on social media. For some outlets, the Karabakh conflict is just too remote and too marginal to justify the resources needed to cover it. In its pitching guidelinesForeign Policy actually names Nagorno-Karabakh as a topic they don’t want to hear about unless it’s “relevant or worth reading by someone in, say, Antananarivo…” 

This method of story selection is reductive at best. In a globalized world, everyone is complicit. If you’re an American citizen, your tax dollars have directly funded Azerbaijan with military aid. If you’re European, your elected officials have been bought by a multi-billion-dollar laundromat set up by Azerbaijan’s ruling elite. If you’re British, your government has lobbied to open mines in territories newly taken by Azerbaijan, and your economy is bolstered by UK companies that are set to develop Shushi, a city Armenians lost during the war, and BP, which is deeply invested in Azerbaijani oil. From a less cynical perspective, the sheer scale of human suffering and the loss of democracy in Karabakh should be enough to garner interest. As Jake Hanrahan puts it: “For me, when kids are dying, it’s important to report it no matter where it is.”

Journalism without context always has consequences. The stakes are especially high with Nagorno-Karabakh, where the erasure of a people’s history is beginning to align with physical erasure. Perhaps the most important context left out of virtually all coverage of the war and that of the POW crisis is the violent state rhetoric of Turkey and Azerbaijan. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the president of Turkey, uses phrases such as “remnants of the sword,” which refers to Armenian and other non-Muslim survivors of twentieth-century Ottoman persecution. At a meeting with a German municipal delegation, Hajibala Abutalybov, who was the mayor of Baku for seventeen years and a deputy prime minister until 2019, said: “Our goal is the complete elimination of Armenians. You, Nazis, already eliminated the Jews in the 1930s and 40s, right? You should be able to understand us.” And of course, both states continue to deny the Armenian Genocide, in which Ottoman Turks massacred at least 1.5 million Armenians.

Ilham Aliyev, the president of Azerbaijan, promotes a systemic Armenophobia that has acquired new fascistic forms in the past year. In April, Aliyev opened a victory park to celebrate Azerbaijan’s gains in Karabakh. The park displays helmets of dead Armenian soldiers and exhibits with mannequins that show Armenians in humiliating poses. Aliyev has said Armenians are being driven out of Karabakh “like dogs.” And he often makes claims on the territory of nearly half the Armenian Republic. Ongoing altercations along Armenia’s borders indicate that these aren’t empty threats.

Any coverage of Nagorno-Karabakh that doesn’t address Erdogan’s and Aliyev’s dangerous rhetoric tacitly endorses it. One month into the recent war, Genocide Watch declared that Azerbaijan’s persecution of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians had become a genocide emergency. A few days after that report’s release, the New York Times published an article, written by its Istanbul bureau chief, that focused on the shelling of Terter, an Azerbaijani village; it made no mention of the tens of thousands of Armenians who’d fled Nagorno-Karabakh due to nonstop bombardment of major towns and cities.

In painful moments, a nation, like an individual, wants to be seen. While Armenians grapple with the aftermath of war, the loss of life and right to ancestral lands, we turn to the outside, hoping our story might be recognized and told. Yet the international press believes a story is only valuable if it serves market interests or is happening in the more “important” parts of the world. This attitude applies a hierarchy to suffering and inevitably warps the historical record—a history that, for Armenians, has never been set straight.


Sports: Lothar Matthäus calls Germany victory over Armenia a “dream evening”

Sept 7 2021

Is Germany getting its mojo back?

Sports: ​Preview: Armenia vs. Liechtenstein – prediction, team news, lineups

Sports Mole
Sept 7 2021

Preview: Armenia vs. Liechtenstein – prediction, team news, lineups

By Adepoju Marvelous

Armenia play host to Liechtenstein at the Vazgen Sargsyan Republican Stadium on Wednesday seeking an immediate response to a huge defeat last time out.

On the other hand, Liechtenstein have neither picked up a win nor a point after the first five round of matches and have it all to do in World Cup 2022 Qualifying Group J.


Serge Gnabry
 put the Germans in the box seat with a brace inside the opening 15 minutes, before further goals from Marco ReusTimo WernerJonas Hofmann and Karim Adeyemi completed the rout.

Consequently, Joaquin Caparros‘s men have dropped to second spot in the group, with the likes of Romania and North Macedonia now beginning to bear down on them.

Next up for Armenia is a meeting against a Liechtenstein side who they have not lost to in any of the previous five encounters dating back to 2018.

Wednesday’s hosts were made to work hard for a 1-0 victory in the most recent clash back in March, when an 83rd-minute own goal from Noah Frommelt settled the tie.

Liechtenstein suffered a fifth consecutive defeat in their qualifying campaign, losing 2-0 against Romania at the National Arena on Sunday.

The damage was done in the first half where goals from Alin Tosca and Cristian Manea put Martin Stocklasa‘s men to the sword in Bucharest.

With no points on the board and just one goal scored so far, the Blues-Reds are rooted to the foot of the group, 10 points behind their next opponents.

Wednesday’s visitors would need to pick up maximum points from their five remaining games and also hope that results elsewhere go their way, so it is safe to say that they are down and out already.

Armenia World Cup Qualifying – Europe form:

  • L


Armenia form (all competitions):

  • W
  • W
  • D
  • L
  • D
  • L

Liechtenstein World Cup Qualifying – Europe form:

  • L


Liechtenstein form (all competitions):

  • L
  • L
  • L
  • L
  • L
  • L




© Reuters

Armenia’s Hovhannes Hambardzumyan was off hauled with an injury less than one hour into his side’s defeat to Germany, making him a doubt for this one.

David Terteryan was Hambardzumyan’s replacement in the aforementioned game and the former is expected to be given the nod should the latter be deemed unfit to participate.

Nicolas Hasler has scored more goals for Liechtenstein than any other active player, and the Thun midfielder will need to be at his best if the visitors are to stand any chance of getting a positive result.

Roman Spirig will be pushing for a place in the XI after was handed his national team debut in a 10-minute cameo appearance off the bench last time out.

Armenia possible starting lineup:
Yurchenko; Hovhannisyan, Voskanyan, Haroyan, Terteryan; Bayramyan, Angulo, Grigoryan, Adamyan; Barseghyan, Mkhitaryan

Liechtenstein possible starting lineup:
Buchel; Goppel, Hofer, Malin, Grunenfelder, Wolfinger; Hasler, N. Frick, Frommelt; Y. Frick, Kardesoglu


Armenia, in search of a positive response to last week’s defeat, are favourites to claim all three points in this one against a side struggling at both ends of the field. We expect the home to come out on top, scoring plenty of goals en route to a comfortable victory.


Armenian Summer Festival opens in London

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 7 2021

Armenian Ambassador to the UK Varuzhan Nersesyan participated in the traditional Armenian Summer Festival, organized by the Committee of the Armenian Diocese in Great Britain and Ireland, the Armenian Embassy in UK informs.

The event started with a minute of silence in memory of the Armenians who sacrificed their lives during the 44-day war unleashed by Azerbaijan against Artsakh last year.

In his opening remarks, Ambassador Nersesyan attached importance to the organization of the event, during which the best traditions of Armenian culture, history, art and cuisine were presented..

He also stressed the important role of the British-Armenian community in the development and strengthening of bilateral relations, pledging to do his best to expand that cooperation.

Bishop Hovakim Manoogian, Primate of the Armenian Diocese of Ireland, Baroness Cox, Member of the House of Lords, Rupa Hook, Member of the UK Parliament, Patrick Sukhdeo, President of the Barnabas Foundation, Chairman of the British-Armenian Community Council Armand Abrahamyan, the Mayor of Ealing attended the event.

Film: ​Fortress: Shooting of new film co-produced by Armenia kicks off in Sicily, Italy

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 7 2021

Fortress: Shooting of new film co-produced by Armenia kicks off in Sicily, Italy

September 7, 2021, 10:58 1 minute read


The shooting of the full-length feature film Fortress directed by Jessica Woodworth and co-producer of the Armenian side Angela Frangyan has started in Sicily, Italy. The film is a co-production between Armenia, Belgium, Italy, Bulgaria and the Netherlands, the Armenian National Cinema Center informs.

Armenia has both financial and creative participation in the film, which stars Armenian actor Samvel Tadevosyan, Hollywood actress Geraldine Chaplin and others.

Co-producer of the Armenian side Angela Frangyan says: “When I was told that Jessica Woodworth was in Armenia a looking for a “fixer,” a person that would look locations and accompany the team, I immediately agreed, thinking that it was a good opportunity to show my favorite places to the famous director. The Armenian lands became a real inspiration for the director. Later, they invited me to the Netherlands and offered to be their co-producer, even though I had no experience with such a large project.”

“Everything in Armenia seems to be beyond any specific time and place, this is a unique attraction,” Jessica Woodworth says.

In March 2021 Eurimages announced support to the film.



Iraq’s President highlights expansion of Armenian diplomatic presence in the country

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 7 2021


On September 6, on the occasion of the completion of the diplomatic mission, the Ambassador of the Republic Armenia to Iraq Hrachya Poladyan met with the President of Iraq Barham Saleh, the Embassy of Armenia in Iraq reports.

During the meeting, President Saleh thanked Ambassador Poladian for the effective work done within the framework of the development of bilateral relations, attaching importance to the expansion of diplomatic presence of Armenia in Iraq, the intensification of economic, cultural programs and initiatives.

During the meeting President Saleh conveyed his warm greetings and best wishes to the leadership of Armenia.

Ambassador Poladian thanked the President Saleh for the warm welcome and words of appreciation noting the active support of Iraqi authorities and President Saleh personally, in the implementation of various programs and initiatives of the Armenian Embassy in Iraq.

Armenia to hold three-month training for reservists

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 7 2021


By the decision of the Government of the Republic of Armenia of September 2, 2021, three-month training for reservists will be held from September 15 to December 15. Privates, warrant officers and officers will be involved in the training. If necessary, the participants of the gatherings will be involved in military duty.

The training camps are announced for the purpose of improving the military skills of the citizens registered in the reserve.

Citizens will be considered servicemen during the whole period of participation in the rallies, will enjoy all the benefits and social benefits provided for the servicemen.

Their civilian jobs will be preserved, they will be paid for each month of training. Participation in the courses will be counted as work experience.

Avoiding the training will result in criminal consequences.

Former chief of Armenia’s Investigative Committee arrested

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 7 2021


Former chief of the Investigative Committee of Armenia Aghvan Hovsepyan has been arrested, the Special Investigation Service informs.

Investigation has established that during his tenure as Head of the Prosecutor General between March 18, 2004 and September 13, 2013 and as President of the Investigative Committee between July 18, 2014 and June 11, 2018, Aghvan Hovsepyan participated in the management of a number of LLC companies carrying out business activity.

Furthermore, the Special Investigation Service says Hovsepyan received a bribe in the amount of 190,000,000 AMD and embezzled property worth 800,000,000 AMD.

Aghvan Hovsepyan is also charged with money laundering in the amount of 1,299,404,414 AMD.

The former President of the Investigative Committee has been arrested.

French Ambassador Jonahan Lacôte wraps up mission in Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 7 2021


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan received the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of France to Armenia Jonathan Lacôte, who is completing his diplomatic mission in our country.

The Prime Minister noted that Mr. Lacôte’s tenure overlapped with a difficult and eventful period for Armenia and the region. Nikol Pashinyan noted that this period not only did not have a negative impact on the Armenian-French unique relations, but the bilateral cooperation became even closer. The Prime Minister added that there are wide opportunities for developing cooperation between the two friendly states in various fields. According to the Prime Minister, the Governments of Armenia and France are interested in developing and expanding cooperation, which is based on the centuries-old friendship of the Armenian and French peoples.

At the same time, the Prime Minister stressed the important role of France as a Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group. Referring to Armenia’s chairmanship of the Organization of La Francophonie, Nikol Pashinyan noted that the difficulties caused by the pandemic, as well as the war of the last year deprived our country of the opportunity to be active within the organization, but expressed confidence that cooperation within the organization will become more effective and close in the near future. 

‘’Those difficulties have not overshadowed our relations with France, and here your personal contribution should be emphasized. We will perceive you as a friend of Armenia, we will be glad to see you in our country in the future’’, the Prime Minister said, wishing Jonathan Lacôte success.

Ambassador Lacôte thanked for the high appreciation and noted that both difficult and happy moments took place in Armenia during the period of his tenure.

‘’I have exciting memories of the peaceful revolution in Armenia. The recent events in the country showed that democracy in Armenia is irreversible and the Armenian people can be proud of it’’, the Ambassador said. Jonathan Lacôte noted that France will continue close cooperation with Armenia in various spheres, including for pushing forward with the reforms.

During the meeting the sides referred to the process and future works in the spheres of investments, education, healthcare and joint programs in other directions.

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijan’s soldier brought back in exchange for Armenian soldiers

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Sept. 7

Trend:

Conscript of the Azerbaijani army Jamil Babayev, detained on Aug. 26 on Azerbaijan’s territory where Russian peacekeeping forces are temporarily stationed, was returned to Baku, State Commission for Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing Persons told Trend.

The commission said Babayev was returned to Azerbaijan through assistance of the Russian peacekeeping forces, by exchange for two Armenian soldiers – Arthur Nalbandian and Aramais Torozian.

On August 26, the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan distributed information that Jamil Babayev voluntarily left the psychiatric department of the Ganja hospital and went to the territory, where the Russian peacekeeping forces are temporarily stationed.