Armenian PoWs send letters to families with help from ICRC

Jan 29 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - Representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross visited the Armenian prisoners of war still being held in Azerbaijan, Zara Amatuni, PR specialist of the ICRC office in Armenia, has said, according to Sputnik Armenia.

"Employees of the organization visited all those persons whose capture was confirmed by the Azerbaijani authorities. Among them are those who were captured at the end of 2020 and in November 2021," Amatuni was quoted as saying Friday, January 28.

The ICRC staff got to learn more about the conditions of detention, handed over letters and video messages from families to the PoWs, as well as took their messages for their families. In addition, with the mediation of the Red Cross, the prisoners were able to talk to their relatives on the phone.

Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Alen Simonyan stated that the number of Armenian prisoners held in Azerbaijan, according to various estimates, is about 70 people. According to unofficial data, about 130 Armenian soldiers are in captivity in Azerbaijan.

Newspaper: Armenia outgoing President has some future plans?

  News.am  
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

YEREVAN. – Hraparak daily of the Republic of Armenia (RA) writes: The resignation of President Armen Sarkissian continues to be discussed in various circles, and people state that he has not become passive even after his announcement on resignation. His staff has issued two or three statements, and yesterday the RA President delivered a message dedicated to the Army Day.

Analysts believe that a person leaving Armenia does not behave like that, and this proves that Armen Sarkissian has some plans for the future.

And as for the resignation, it, apparently, was a surprise not only for [PM] Nikol Pashinyan and the [Armenian] society in general, but also for his own staff. Moreover, our presidential sources say that in the days before the resignation, Armen Sarkissian contacted the staff, gave instructions to prepare documents related to a new project, as well as to book tickets to participate in a European conference, whereas the next day called and canceled the instructions given yesterday.

The [presidential] staff is also surprised and does not find an explanation for what happened.

It is true that in the past there were rumors about [Sarkissian] resigning [from office], but at this moment there was no fact attesting to that.

Newspaper: How Armenia PM justifies expensive purchases?

  News.am  
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

YEREVAN. – Zhoghovurd daily of Armenia writes: During the penultimate—the final—press conference of 2020, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had reflected also on the matter of the official cars being acquired for the [country’s] officials, justifying the process of buying new, expensive cars [for them].

Pashinyan had explained this [process] by the fact that the [official] cars—which serve those holding state positions—on the balance of the state security service are old and break down often. (…).

(…) however, the question does not arise in Pashinyan as to whether or not the [aforesaid] cars have passed the relevant inspection before going on the road. Maybe the malfunction was before the moment of moving, which could have been eliminated, then head on to the road. Are the people in charge of the problem—the specialists or the mechanics—properly dealing with the car? (…).

On the other hand, Pashinyan's [aforesaid] statement may have more far-reaching goals to justify the super-expensive and new [official] car to be bought for the prime minister tomorrow, the next day, with the excuse that, "Oh dear people, the old [official] cars were breaking down on the road."

In the near future, it will be clear what Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's tendency was to make references to officials' official cars remaining or breaking down on the roads. It is clear that neither of the abovementioned two observations can be understood and justified.


Moscow police interrupt screening of film about Armenian statesman Garegin Nzhdeh

  News.am  
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

Moscow police have interrupted the screening of a film about Armenian statesman and military strategist Garegin Nzhdeh (Garegin Ter-Harutyunyan), Regnum reported, citing its source.

Accordingly, those in attendance to this screening were dispersed by the police—and on the grounds of the Russian Criminal Code article on the inadmissibility of the "rehabilitation of Nazism."

The screening of this film was organized by the Union of Armenians of Russia.

First Ombudsperson: No document on Armenia recognition of Azerbaijan’s Soviet borders

  News.am  
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

This year marks the 30th anniversary of a number of significant events in the history of independent Armenia. Despite the small time distance by historical standards, not everyone now has a correct idea of the events of those years. The respective facts and documents were discussed in the below interview to Armenian News-NEWS.am by the First Ombudsperson of Armenia, human rights activist Larisa Alaverdyan.

How did the internationalization of the Nagorno-Karabakh [(Artsakh)] conflict begin?

2022 is a special year in the history of independent Armenia. It was in 1992 that Armenia became a member of the European Conference on Security and Cooperation, which later became the OSCE. Thus began Armenia's entry into the international community. Although the process of sovereignty and independence began in 1990, Armenia, like other former USSR republics—except the Baltic states—was not yet a member of the international community, was not a member of the UN, was not a member of the OSCE, as well as was not a participant in or member of other international intergovernmental organizations.

The only thing that happened before 1992 was in the end of December 1991, when Armenia, along with several other former Soviet republics, began the process of joining the CIS, which was founded in early December by Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine. It should be noted that Azerbaijan (represented by A. Mutalibov), which was present at the meeting of the leaders of the countries participating in the meeting in Almaty, did not join the CIS. (It happened in September 1993, after the military coup, when the popularly elected President A. Aliyev (Elchibey) was overthrown and H. Aliyev seized power). The Baltic states were not included in the CIS; they were recognized by the members of the international community back in September 1991.

In January 1992, Armenia and Azerbaijan invited the OSCE Mission to the region, which visited Armenia, Azerbaijan, and the NKR [(Nagorno-Karabakh Republic)] in February. The history of the formation of the CSCE deserves special attention. Few remember that the organization was established on the initiative of the Soviet Union. It was the Soviet Union and the other countries of the Warsaw Pact that offered to sign such an agreement in the early [19]70s, whose participants will be both Western and Eastern European countries, as well as Canada and the United States; that is, the two opposing camps (socialist and capitalist) of the time, as they thought the Cold War was over.

During the two years (1973-1975), as a result of discussions, the Helsinki Final Act (HFA) was formulated and adopted, which played a significant role in the institutional development of the CSCE. The HFA's goal was to unite—30 years after the end of World War II—the borders and territories of the states that then resolved the existing, if not disputes, then the "unevenness," and consolidate the easing of international tensions.

When we talk about the CSCE (OSCE since 1995) and the UN, it is necessary to distinguish the positions of these organizations on the principle/right of peoples to self-determination. In the UN documents, the self-determination of peoples is a RIGHT, whereas in the HFA it is interpreted as one of the ten PRINCIPLES which will play its unique role in the future, proceeding from the political interests of the OSCE members. Looking ahead, we note that the OSCE Lisbon Summit (December 1996) proposed three principles for the settlement of the "Karabakh conflict," previously agreed with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, according to which Nagorno-Karabakh (not NKR) can self-determine as part of Azerbaijan, not to be independent of it as it already existed. And all that was "substantiated" by the "principle of territorial integrity."

 In all those years, the Azerbaijani leader, claiming that "the principle of territorial integrity is more important to the international community than the principle of the right of peoples to self-determination," referred to that resolution which was not adopted. It was not accepted due to the disagreement of Armenia, which used its veto power (this was not due to a change of position, but to the tense situation in the country, which was connected with the well-known fact of "illegitimacy of the election" of the first president for the second term, "destabilization of the situation, and the authorities’ threatening to suppress the discontent"). Armenia's refusal caused understandable bewilderment by all other OSCE members and the leadership, as in all previous years the Armenian leadership, led by L. Ter-Petrosyan, put forward such a model for "resolving" the agreed conflict with Azerbaijan. And from that position, as it became clear from the subsequent events, neither the first president nor the leadership of the ANM [(Armenian National Movement party)] has ever retreated.

Going back to 1992, it should be reminded that in response to the application of Armenia and Azerbaijan to the Council of Ministers of to the CSCE in late January 1992, it was decided to send a special mission to the region, which was instructed to study the issue on the ground and submit a report on the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. The mission report was presented on February 28, 1992, and on the same day the Committee of High-Level Officials of the CSCE adopted a decision in which twice—in points 1 and 2—it is spoken about "the conflict in the Nagorno-Karabakh region of the Republic of Azerbaijan." Thus appeared the wording according to which the national liberation movement of the Armenians against genocidal Azerbaijan was described as a conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, or in Soviet terminology, a "conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh."

All the attempts of the NKR leadership, as well as many analysts, to prove to the international community that the essence of the complete distortion of what is happening in the region directly threatens the right of the Armenian population to live and create in their historically uninterrupted settlements, as well as the impeccable international legal basis for NKR independence from Azerbaijan as the only way to avoid genocide met with this wording that reflected Yerevan's position but contradicted reality, which clearly ignored national interests and threatened the security of the Armenian state, nation, as well as of the region.

Thus, the internationalization of the Karabakh conflict started from a completely distorted point of view; that is, at the suggestion of the Armenian leadership, the CSCE considered everything taking place in the region on the eve of the former Soviet republics to join the UN as a conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which "claimed" the territory of another independent (in a few days) state.

At that time I was an analyst at the Special Commission on Artsakh of the Supreme Council of Armenia, and that document also appeared in our commission. On that occasion, I spoke on the radio. At the suggestion of the Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia, I prepared a text that reflected on the main risks of that wording and the complete contradiction of the realities, both legal and factual. All the members of the commission were also convinced that such a beginning completely distorts the essence of what is happening and predetermines the status of the NKR, whereas it should have been the subject of discussion within the CSCE. Moreover, there was hope that, unlike the Gorbachev Moscow, the international organization would assess the impeccability of the international legal and domestic legitimacy of the formation of the NKR.

However, the first president of the RA [(Republic of Armenia)] did not agree—from the lips of infamous G. Libaridian—with that, and therefore the above-mentioned absolutely biased opinion and position, which, apparently, has long been rooted in the ANM leadership, became the beginning of the so-called internationalization of the Karabakh conflict, catastrophically distorting the essence of the issue.

The current [Armenian] authorities regularly reprimand the second president of "withdrawing Karabakh" from the negotiation process. How justified are such allegations? And to what extent are the statements about the recognition of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity by Armenia justified?

 It is a completely different story. Recently, many have begun to use "oral folk art" even in matters that require serious discussion and require minimal familiarity with real events and documents. There is a definite time: the beginning of April 1997, when L. Ter-Petrosyan was still president when the last meeting took place around one [negotiating] table with the participation of NKR representatives. All the other "opinions" are idle talk, aiming to mislead the general public of the country and all Armenians.

The logic of pulling Karabakh out direct trilateral contacts (but not from the negotiation process) came from the initial position of the ANM, or rather the party leadership, and contradicted the people's movement the roots of which were the Karabakh movement. One of the most important consequences of the Karabakh movement becoming the ANM was the transformation of the NKAO into a constitutional demand to reunite Armenia against corruption, a movement against democracy, totalitarianism, which soon turned into a struggle to leave the USSR. Such movements took place in 1989 in all (except Central Asia) Union republics. Already in September of the same year, the ANM party leaders and the non-governmental organizations created by them voiced the idea that an end would be put to ethnic discrimination in democratic republics, as a result of which the demand for the NKAO to leave Azerbaijan would lose its meaning. This artificial "idea" became the unchanging basic thesis of the ANM team that came to power in August 1990 and personally of the first president.

Let us also turn to Armenia's commitments under other ratified documents, indicating its entry into the CSCE, the UN and later other international organizations. There is not a single document that mentions Soviet borders. There is not and cannot be such a document recognizing any state within its declared borders. Modern international law understands recognition as a bilateral political act that is not tied to designated borders. And the periodic voicing of a statement of recognition, allegedly by the UN, is both illiteracy and gross manipulation, since the UN does not have the function of recognizing a state, it accepts (or does not accept) it as a member of the organization.

For three decades now, gross manipulation has been going on both on the part of Azerbaijan and certain political circles of Armenia, which find themselves in power and implement plans that directly contradict international law in its correct sense outside the political conjuncture and are ultimately directed against Armenia and all Armenians. Finally, if we are talking about existing borders at the end of 1991, it should be emphasized that the NKR was not part of Azerbaijan, and in this sense, all attempts to prove that Azerbaijan has any rights over the NKR only emphasize the depth of the crisis in modern international relations. Thus, everyone should be well aware that there is no such document in which Armenia recognized the Soviet borders of Azerbaijan.

Armenia opposition faction: European structures are engaged in cover-up

  News.am  
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

The European structures are engaged in covering, said in a statement released by the parliamentary faction of the opposition Armenia bloc.

"During the unleashing of the 44-day war, during the Azerbaijani-Turkish aggression, the use of force, gross violations of international humanitarian principles by Azerbaijan during the war, while there are still Armenian prisoners of war, the ongoing aggression against the territory of the Republic of Armenia after the war, hostile rhetoric, continued use of force and the threat of force, European structures have been busy and engaged in cover-up. And in any reaction to these facts, they are trying to put a sign of "equality" between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which is simply ridiculous. It is noteworthy that with a lesser violation of rights than the illegal detention of prisoners of war, the same body came up with a proposal for specific restrictions (sanctions) against the state, and in this case sends a message to Azerbaijan and Turkey about impunity," they noted.

"PACE did not react in any way to the use of administrative resources and other violations recorded during the pre-election period and on election day, the illegal arrest of three opposition deputies, the unconstitutional restriction on the movement of opposition deputies, and political persecution.

"PACE actually did not react in any way to the unconstitutional practice of confiscation of the system of electronic sighting of courts, which was carried out by the executive branch about eight months ago, when all cases are now signed by “hand”, or to the facts of ignoring the will of voters in elections to the local self-government bodies and in the post-election period.

"PACE considers the new restrictions on freedom of speech "democratic" and does not even notice cases of violation of the rights of journalists in the National Assembly.

The factual circumstances of all the listed problems were presented to PACE on November 4, 2021, both orally and in writing," the statement reads.

Armenia ex-president Sargsyan gives exclusive interview

  News.am  
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

Third President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan gave an exclusive interview. This is stated in a message circulated on the official website of the ex-president in Facebook.

“…Despite the destructive war, despite the capitulation, there are still opportunities”: Serzh Sargsyan.

An exclusive interview with Serzh Sargsyan will be aired soon,” the message reads.

Red Cross helped Armenian captives in Azerbaijan contact their families

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

Representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) visited Armenian captives being held in Azerbaijan, ICRC Armenia Office Communications Program Manager Zara Amatuni told Sputnik Armenia on Friday.

"Employees of the organization visited all those persons whose captivity has been confirmed by the Azerbaijani authorities. Among them are those who were captured at the end of 2020 and in November 2021,” Amatuni said.

The ICRC employees familiarized themselves with the detention conditions, delivered letters and video messages to the captives from their relatives and took their messages to their families. In addition, with the help of the Red Cross, the prisoners were able to talk to their families by telephone.

According to the official data, 199 servicemen and 21 civilians are still missing after the Artsakh war in autumn 2020.

Armenia’s defense minister, army chief and other top officials didn’t issue Army Day messages

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

Armenia’s Defense Minister Suren Papikyan, Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Artak Davtyan, Director of the National Security Service Armen Abazyan and several other senior officials did not issue congratulatory messages on the Army Day marked on January 28, former Chief of Staff of the Constitutional Court Edgar Ghazaryan said.

“Even Chairman of the Yerkrapah Volunteers Union (YVU) Sasun Mikayelyan did not issue a congratulatory message,” he wrote on Facebook late on Friday.

In Ghazaryan’s words, the summary of the events of January 28 marking the 30th anniversary of the Armenian army indicates the “criminal conduct of the Armenian authorities aimed at humiliating the military and downgrading its importance in people’s lives”.

“President Armen Sarkissian fled the country and tendered his resignation just a few days before the 30th anniversary of the army. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced that he had caught Covid-19, and under its pretext cancelled all official events, which had not been reported before,” he said.

The former top court staffer underlined that no Army Day celebrations were held in Yerevan and Armenia’s regional centers, with no military awards given to war participants.

Also, Ghazaryan charged that no congratulatory messages were sent to Armenia by defense ministers of other countries, the CSTO chief or heads of other international military-political organizations.

“MPs from the Civil Contract faction showed utterly disrespectful behavior in the Yerablur Military Pantheon, desecrating the memory of fallen soldiers. These are just some of the facts, while it remains for each person to make judgements,” he noted.

Vardan Voskanyan: Construction of North-South highway must remain a priority

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 29 2022

The construction of the North-South highway must remain a priority for Armenia, according to expert on Iran Vardan Voskanyan.

“In an interview to Armenpress news outlet on January 27, Iranian Ambassador to Armenia Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri clearly stated that as part of Iran's program on an international transport hub connecting the Persian Gulf to the Black Sea, Tehran considers the North-South highway passing through Syunik Province as the main transit route, not the Julfa (Iran)- Jugha (Nakhichevan)-Yeraskh (Armenia) railroad,” he wrote on Facebook on Saturday.

“Remarkably, addressing this issue twice, the Iranian diplomat straightforwardly reminded that even in case of unblocking communications, the proposed railroad options cannot be a reason to ignore the importance of the road passing through Armenia’s Syunik Province and providing direct land communication between Yerevan and Tehran, thus the construction of the North-South highway must remain a priority.

“Taking also into account the position of the Iranian side, Armenia should clearly state that the very North-South highway, through which the Iranian “Persian Gulf-Black Sea” and the Indian “North-South” transport hubs are to pass, rather than the railway connection between “mainland” Azerbaijan, Nakhichevan and Turkey via the Meghri region, is of vital importance to ensure safe internal and external communication and development of our country,” Voskanyan stated.