Tehran: Iran’s Border With Armenia Partially Closed by Azerbaijani Forces

Financial Tribune, Iran
Aug 28 2021
Iran’s Border With Armenia Partially Closed by Azerbaijani Forces

Parts of Iran border with Armenia have been closed by Azerbaijani forces, according to the Islamic Republic of Iran Customs Administration.

Rouhollah Latifi, spokesman of IRICA, citing incoming truck drivers from Armenia, added that the Goris-Kapan Road to Armenia was blocked by the Azerbaijani forces. 

According to the official, Yerevan and Baku were to hold talks on the issue, ISNA reported.

“Trucks carrying goods and passengers must ensure that the route is open in Armenia before leaving for the Nurduz border crossing in East Azarbaijan Province,” he said.

Azerbaijan’s Blockade Of Southern Armenia Continues

Aug 28 2021

By Eurasianet

By Joshua Kucera*

(Eurasianet) — The closure of Armenia’s main north-south highway has continued into its second day, in what appears to be yet another instrument of pressure that Azerbaijan is using on Yerevan in order to exact further concessions following its victory in last year’s war.

Azerbaijani soldiers continued to block two sections of the road connecting two of southern Armenia’s main cities, Goris and Kapan, on August 27. The road blockages have cut off three villages along that road, and interrupted international transit with Iran; the road that has been blocked is the only way that Iranian vehicles can get to and from the rest of Armenia.

Azerbaijani officials have maintained a studied silence about the road closure, though hours before it started Baku reported an attack on one of its soldiers by two Armenian soldiers in the area; Armenia has denied that any such altercation took place.

But the longer the blockade lasts, the more it appears to be yet another deliberate twisting of the screws by Azerbaijan, which has over the last several months exerted a steadily escalating pressure on Armenia in order to force Yerevan to sign a final resolution of the conflict on Baku’s terms: namely, renouncing any claim over Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenian-populated territory in Azerbaijan.

“The situation is going to get worse before it gets better,” said Richard Giragosian, the head of the Yerevan think tank Regional Studies Center. “Armenia has nothing to offer in terms of real concessions or compromises that Azerbaijan wants. Azerbaijan is the one that doesn’t feel the pressure to stop the escalation.”

The list of instruments that Azerbaijan had been using to effect that pressure had already been a long one: playing hardball with the return of Armenian prisoners in Azerbaijani custody, making rhetorical territorial claims against Armenia, making military incursions slightly inside Armenian territory, and dialing up the frequency of cross-border exchanges of fire. Now, add to that the closure of this key road.

It hasn’t been reported exactly where the Azerbaijani troops have been blocking the road, but there are many parts of the highway that run through bits of Azerbaijani territory. Until last year Armenian forces had occupied all that territory – their spoils from the first war between the two sides in the 1990s – meaning that Armenian traffic could pass through those sections undisturbed. But following Armenia’s defeat in last year’s war, Azerbaijan regained control of the territory and quickly reestablished its sovereignty over its sections of the road.

Until now that sovereignty has been expressed only symbolically, with flags, border guard posts and signs reading “Welcome to Azerbaijan” in English and Azerbaijan (but not Armenian). Baku now looks ready to act on it.

Even as official Baku has remained silent, hawkish analysts have celebrated the road closure. “Azerbaijan has allowed the use of its road for transportation, as an act of good will. But if the Armenians commit provocative acts, then Azerbaijan has the right to take appropriate measures,” said Azerbaijani analyst Togrul Juvarli in an interview with Caucasian Knot.

“Yesterday, what all Azerbaijanis have long dreamed of has happened,” wrote an Azerbaijani who blogs under the name Wind from Absheron. “Azerbaijani soldiers blocked the section of the road […] connecting the Armenian cities of Kapan and Goris.” The blogger noted that there is another road through Azerbaijani territory that Armenians use: the Lachin corridor connecting Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh. “Our society also demands the closure of that road [the Lachin corridor]; both belong to Azerbaijan, and we have no peace agreement with Armenia because the Irevan side doesn’t want peace,” the post concluded, using the Azerbaijani spelling for the Armenian capital city.

The closures have effectively marooned the residents of three small villages in between the closed sections of the road. The mayor of one, Shurnukh, told Caucasian Knot that they have been getting deliveries of bread from Goris facilitated by a Russian military escort. (Russian border guards patrol the road, with posts set up on the Armenian side of the border.)

The blockade also has stranded “hundreds” of Iranian trucks, transport company officials told Sputnik Armenia. It also has disturbed internal communications: The head of one Armenian trucking company said that he normally has 50 trucks a day transporting about 1,000 tons of copper concentrate from mines in Syunik to Yerevan. “Our trucks that went to Syunik for copper concentrate are stuck there and can’t return back,” said the official, Gagik Agajanyan of the company Apaven.

Several Armenian officials have reported that Russian border guards have been facilitating negotiations between the two sides. The deputy governor of Syunik, however, told local media that the Azerbaijani forces are refusing to negotiate with their Armenian counterparts, demanding only to speak to the Russians.

Russian officials have yet to comment on the ongoing blockade, but Giragosian said that Moscow likely will be the key actor in resolving the issue. The ceasefire statement that ended last year’s war was brokered by Russian President Vladimir Putin, and while Baku can easily turn the screws on Armenia in its weakened state, with Moscow it runs the risk of going too far in undermining the ceasefire, Giragosian said.

“The real key is in Moscow, not in Yerevan,” the analyst said. “That is, Azerbaijan is dangerously approaching a red line, a limit of Russian patience, because this is very much a move by Azerbaijan to challenge the Russian-imposed ceasefire agreement as much as it is a challenge to Armenia.”

*Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at Eurasianet, and author of The Bug Pit.

Tehran: Iran land route to Armenia reopened: ICA

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Aug 28 2021

TEHRAN, Aug. 28 (MNA) –  According to Iran’s customs spokesman, a part of the land route from Iran to Armenia was reopened after a temporary closure.

On Friday, Iranian Customs authorities announced that the entrance of the Goris-Kapan road to Armenia was blocked by the Azerbaijani forces, based on the news received from some drivers.

The land route to Armenia was reopened, a spokesman for the customs said on Friday night.

Trucks and cars were allowed to pass through the route to Armenia, Seyed Ruhollah Latifi said.

Moghri Customs, which is located in front of Norduz crossing in East Azerbaijan Province, has announced that it is ready to readmit trucks and buses to pass through Armenian destinations.

RHM/5290651

Tehran: Iran’s land transit route to Armenia reopened after temporary closure

Press TV, Iran
Aug 28 2021
Saturday, 9:52 AM  [ Last Update: Saturday, 11:29 AM ]

The road between the Armenian cities of Goris and Kapan, near the Azerbaijani village of Eyvazli. (file photo)

Iran says its land transit route to Armenia has reopened after a temporary closure and now trucks and cars are allowed to use it.

“Given the level of trade between Iran and Armenia and in order to facilitate the exchange of goods, in consultation with the Armenian border, the transit route of Goris-Kapan in the Norduz region of Julfa was reopened,” Brigadier General Ahmad Ali Goudarzi, the border commander of Iran’s Law Enforcement Forces, said on Saturday.

Iranian customs office (IRICA) authorities had earlier announced that the entrance of the Goris-Kapan road to Armenia was blocked by the forces of the Republic of Azerbaijan.

“According to the news received from some drivers, the entrance of the Goris-Kapan road to Armenia was blocked by the Azerbaijani forces,” said Ruhollah Latifi, a spokesman of IRICA.

“Following the blocking of a part of Iran’s land route to Armenia until further notice, the executive customs and transport companies have been asked to refrain from sending cargo to the Norduz border,” he added. “Passengers and trucks carrying goods should make sure that the route is open in Armenia before leaving for the border of Norduz in East Azerbaijan Province.”

Latifi stressed that negotiations between Yerevan officials and Baku in this regard took place on Friday morning.

Iran urges Azerbaijan, Armenia to exercise restraint amid border clashes

Iran has urged Azerbaijan and Armenia to exercise restraint as tensions flared up at the two countries’ border.

The Azeri Defense Ministry said two Armenian soldiers had attempted to stab an Azeri border guard in the area, with the Armenian Defense Ministry denying the allegation as a “sheer lie” and “more disinformation campaign by Azerbaijan.”

Mohammad Javad Hedaiati, the director general of the Transit Office of the Roads and Transportation Organization, said the Goris-Kapan land route was temporarily blocked as the Armenian side had introduced another route around this road which was not suitable in terms of road construction quality.

“On this side route introduced by Armenia, it was possible for 6- and 10-wheeled trucks to pass but it was not possible for trailer traffic,” Hedaiati said.

The official said the issue had been resolved following talks between Azeri and Armenian authorities, adding that the main axis was opened and it was possible for all transit trucks to pass.

The two countries ended six weeks of war over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region last year.

On September 27, 2019, heavy clashes broke out between the two ex-Soviet republics over Nagorno-Karabakh, which is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but has been populated by ethnic Armenians since 1992 when they broke from Azerbaijan in a war that killed some 30,000 people.

Six weeks of fighting that claimed more than 6,500 lives on both sides was brought to a close with a Russian-brokered ceasefire in November that secured territorial advances for Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding districts.


Turkey sending ‘positive signals’ to Armenia, Yerevan will respond in kind – PM Pashinyan

Aug 28 2021

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Friday that Turkey has been sending “positive signals” to his country and that Yerevan will respond in kind, Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency reported.

“We will evaluate these gestures and respond to positive signals with positive signals,” Pashinyan said at a cabinet meeting.

His remarks came two days after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said that “a new door of opportunity for peace has been opened” following last year’s Nagorno-Karabakh war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which saw the latter seize large parts of the disputed region from Armenian forces.

Erdoğan argued that in light of the new reality on the ground in Upper Karabakh, Armenia should seize the opportunity to repair ties with its neighbours. Turkey is close allies with Armenia’s rival Azerbaijan and sold it advanced weapons that Baku used against Armenian forces during last year’s conflict.

“If Armenia moves in line with this, Turkey will also act accordingly,” the Turkish president said on Wednesday, according to Anadolu.

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/asia-pacific/armenia-acknowledges-positive-signals-from-turkey/2348047


Armenian Protestant church transformed into library in SE Turkey

Aug 28 2021

Krikor Agabaloglu

An Armenian Protestant church in Diyarbakır province has been leased to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism for a period of 10 years to serve as a public library, Turkish media reported.

According to the protocol, the ministry will pay a monthly fee of TL 1,000 ($120) to the Directorate General for Foundations.

The decision caused an outcry from Turkey’s Armenian community. In a video message shared by journalist Aris Nalcı on Twitter, Krikor Ağabaloğlu, leader of the Armenian Protestant community of Turkey, said the decision caused them great pain and that they absolutely condemned it.

“Every human has the right to worship,” Ağabaloğlu said. “It’s the property of the Armenian Protestant community. … As the spiritual leader of Armenian Protestants in Turkey, I have requested that it be handed over us.”

According to Ağabaloğlu, the Armenian community had turned the church over the government back in 1983 due to security concerns. But it was not returned to the Armenian community despite requests. Prior to the latest move, the church was used by the provincial governor’s office for carpet weaving courses.

“Can you imagine this? There’s a church where people can worship. There‘s a community, and it isn’t handed over for their use,” Ağabaloğlu said. “They don’t think it‘s appropriate to use this building as a church and instead allocate it to other people to be used for different purposes. … This can’t be considered appropriate, either from a religious or an ethical perspective.”

Arat Karagözyan, chairman of an Armenian non-profit, said the area where the church is located is closed off to civilians until 2023. “Given this, we wonder why they made such a hasty decision,” he said.

There have been ongoing concerns about the preservation of Armenian cultural and religious sites in Turkey. On January 17, the Turkish-Armenian bilingual Agos weekly reported that a 19th century Armenian church was put up for sale on a Turkish real estate website. In the ad, the church, which is located in Bursa province, was described as “perfect for a tourist attraction because it is in a UNESCO protected area.”

On January 26, Agos reported that an Armenian church dating to 1603 in the western province of Kütahya that was on the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism’s preservation list was demolished after it was acquired by a private party.

Another Armenian church, Surp Yerrortutyun (Holy Trinity), will serve as the “World’s Masters of Humor Art House” as part of a project to found a “humor village” in central Turkey’s Akşehir district, the hometown of famous 13th century Turkish satirist Nasreddin Hoca.

Election of the new patriarch: Armenian Catholic bishops will meet in the Vatican from September 20th

Aug 28 2021
Saturday,
Aleppo (Agenzia Fides) – The Armenian Catholic Bishops of the dioceses in the Middle East and in the countries of the Armenian Diaspora will meet in Rome from September 20th to elect their new Patriarch. This was confirmed to Fides by the Armenian Catholic Archbishop of Aleppo, Boutros Marayati, current Administrator of the Armenian Catholic Patriarchate of the Church. “The Holy Synod Synod, which opened on June 22nd in the Lebanese Convent of Our Mother of Bzommar, was unsuccessful”, recalls Archbishop Marayati.

In fifteen days, no candidate obtained two thirds of the votes of the twelve bishops participating in the Synod, the threshold required to be elected successor of Patriarch Krikor Bedros XXI Ghabroyan, who died last May 25 (in the photo, during the Eucharistic concelebration with Pope Francis, ed). Therefore the meetings of the electoral synod had been interrupted in accordance with the canon of the Eastern Churches and the matter had been referred to the Pope. “Now we will meet again on September 20th at the Pontifical Armenian College in Rome for a two-day spiritual retreat. From September 22nd, the Synodal Assembly for the election of the new Patriarch will begin. It will be chaired by Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, Prefect of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches”, explains Archbishop Marayati.

As for the procedure for electing the Patriarchs, the first paragraph of Canon 72 of the Canonical Code of the Eastern Churches states: “He is elected who obtains two-thirds of the votes, unless particular law establishes that after an appropriate number of ballots, at least three, an absolute majority of the votes suffices, and the election is to be conducted according the norms of can. 183, §§3-4”. The second paragraph of the same canon 72 makes it clear: “If an election is not successful within fifteen days from the opening of the synod of bishops of the patriarchal Church, the matter devolves to the Roman Pontiff”.

Should the Synod of Bishops of the Armenian Catholic Church not end with a clear election again, the positive result of the electoral assembly would, however, be guaranteed by a series of exceptions, which would make it possible, after a certain number of unsuccessful votes, to elect the candidate as Patriarch who achieves an absolute majority (half plus one) of the votes cast. If there is no election, the candidate who receives the relative majority of the votes cast will be elected Patriarch. Finally, when two candidates get the same number of votes, the most senior bishop by priestly ordination will become Patriarch. (GV) (Agenzia Fides, 28/8/2021)

Political analysts link highway blocking on Armenian border with problem of transit to NAR

Caucasian Knot, EU
Aug 28 2021

Azerbaijan has blocked the Goris-Kapan highway for residents of Armenia in order to get concessions from Yerevan on the Zangezur Corridor issue, Beniamin Pogosyan, a political analyst, and Tatul Akopyan, the coordinator of the ANI Research Centre, have stated.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that the Azerbaijani State Frontier Service reported an attack on August 25 committed by Armenian militaries on an Azeri border guard. Yerevan refuted the accusations, but Azerbaijani militaries blocked a section of the Goris-Kapan highway and stopped cars with Armenian residents for several hours. On August 26, Azerbaijan blocked the second section of the highway.

Azerbaijan has gained control over the section of the Goris-Kapan highway not according to the statement of November 9, 2020, but in December on the basis of an oral agreement, Beniamin Pogosyan, a political analyst, has noted.

He believes that Azerbaijan was looking for a reason to block the highway in order to put pressure on Armenia and achieve concessions on the issue of a transport corridor between Baku and the Azerbaijani enclave – the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic (NAR).

Tatul Akopyan, the coordinator of the ANI Armenian Research Centre, has noted that the Goris-Kapan highway was also blocked from 1990 to 1993 at the peak of the Karabakh war. Since the fall of 2020, Armenian authorities have failed to equip an alternative route.

The problem will persist until Armenian authorities create a full-fledged alternative to the Goris-Kapan highway, Mr Akopyan has stressed.

In Akopyan’s opinion, the hopes for Russia are in vain spread in the Armenian society. “It is beneficial for Russia to keep corridors under its control: in this way, it will control both Armenia and Azerbaijan,” he has concluded.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 04:50 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Author: Tigran PetrosyanSource: CK correspondent

Source: 
© Caucasian Knot

Armenian analysts rule out Yerevan’s refusal to talk on Karabakh within OSCE Minsk Group format

Caucasian Knot, EU
Aug 28 2021

Armenia is interested in the negotiations on Nagorno-Karabakh within the format of the OSCE Minsk Group; and the West will support it in this, Armenian political analysts believe.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that Armenia is ready to resume negotiations with the OSCE’s participation, Nikol Pashinyan has stated. The tripartite armistice agreement, which contradicts the principles of the OSCE Minsk Group conflict settlement, prevents Armenia from intensifying the negotiations, political analysts have stated.

The transfer of the Karabakh issue into the OSCE format cannot imply any Yerevan’s concessions, Andrias Gukasyan, a political analyst, has noted. He has recalled that at the suggestion of the OSCE, Azerbaijan should withdraw its troops from Shushi and Gadrut, return these territories under Armenian control and agree to hold a referendum.

The Azerbaijani party is trying to gradually weaken the Armenian influence on Nagorno-Karabakh, Thomas de Waal, an expert on the Karabakh conflict, has stated on air of the “Azatutyun TV”.

In the opinion of Gukasyan, Russia plays a central but destructive role in the conflict settlement. Only due to Russia’s position, the Azerbaijan’s aggression against Nagorno-Karabakh remains unpunished he believes.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 07:06 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Author: Armine MartirosyanSource: CK correspondent

Source: 
© Caucasian Knot

​EU, WHO hand over 30 medical refrigerators for vaccine storage to Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 28 2021

EU, WHO hand over 30 medical refrigerators for vaccine storage to Armenia

 , 15:15 

The European Union and the World Health Organization handed over 30 medical refrigerators for vaccine storage to the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia.

The Chargé d’affaires a.i., EU Delegation to Armenia Jan Plešinger, RA Deputy Minister of Health Lena Nanushyan, and the Special Representative of WHO in Armenia were at the National Center for Disease Control to receive the equipment and discuss the upcoming procurement and technical assistance.

“The EU is honoured to provide assistance to Armenia jointly with the WHO, in order to strengthen capacities of the healthcare sector and to overcome the COVID-19 pandemic. The refrigerators will be used to keep vaccines and other medical products at a stable temperature, thus offering safer storage facilities, and – consequently – benefiting Armenian citizens. We need to patiently continue the fight against this pandemic together,” said chargé d’affaires a.i. at the EU Delegation to Armenia Jan Plešinger.

The EU and WHO stand by the Government of Armenia to provide sufficient supply of vaccines to citizens and overcome the pandemic faster.