Deadly clashes break out once more at Armenia-Azerbaijan border

France 24
Jan 12 2022
In this Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2020 file photo, An ethnic Armenian soldier stands guard next to a Nagorno-Karabakh flag on a hill near Charektar in the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh. © AP – Sergei Grits

Armenia said Wednesday that the number of its soldiers killed in border clashes with Azerbaijan had risen to three, in the most serious outbreak of fighting between the ex-Soviet adversaries in months.

Azerbaijan previously said one of its soldiers died in the fighting on Tuesday along the disputed and volatile border region, where tensions are still high in the wake of a war between the Caucasus nations in 2020.

Armenia's defence ministry said in a statement Wednesday that the body of an Armenian serviceman was discovered with fatal gunshot wounds in the vicinity where "intense skirmishes" had erupted on the previous day.

Two soldiers wounded in the fighting were in a stable condition, the defence ministry added.

Both sides have accused the other of initiating "provocations" that sparked the exchange of fire that left one Azerbaijani soldiers and the three Armenian troops dead.


The deaths represent a serious threat to a ceasefire implemented with
 Russia's help in November 2020 that brought an end to six weeks of brutal warfare that claimed the lives of 6,000 people on both sides.Armenia said earlier that its military had been targeted by artillery and drones in its eastern border area, a claim Azerbaijan denied.

The war centred around control for Nagorno-Karabakh, a sparsely-populated and mountainous separatist region inside Azerbaijan that had been controlled for decades by Armenian fighters.

As part of the ceasefire agreement, Armenia handed back large areas that the breakaway region had controlled for decades, including Kalbajar, where Azerbaijan said its soldier had been killed in the recent escalation.

(AFP)

Putin, Armenian PM discuss CSTO peacekeeping operation in Kazakhstan — Kremlin

TASS, Russia
Jan 12 2022
They noted the efficient coordinated action by the peacekeeping contingent, facilitating the normalization of the situation in the republic

MOSCOW, January 12. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed the CSTO peacekeeping operation in Kazakhstan in a phone call with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Wednesday, the Kremlin press service reported.

Taking into account Armenia’s chairmanship of the CSTO, Putin and Pashinyan "exchanged opinions on the course of the CSTO peacekeeping operation in Kazakhstan," the report said. They noted "the efficient coordinated action by the peacekeeping contingent, facilitating the normalization of the situation in the republic," the Kremlin said.

Besides, the Russian president and the Armenian prime minister discussed Nagorno-Karabakh and certain issues regarding the implementation of the agreements documented in the statements of the Russian, Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders of November 9, 2020, January 11 and November 26, 2021.

Putin and Pashinyan agreed to continue contacts at different levels, the Kremlin said.

According to the January 6, 2022, decision by the CSTO Collective Security Council, the bloc's collective peacekeeping forces were deployed to Kazakhstan for a limited time period in order to stabilize and normalize the situation. The contingent includes the armed forces of Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Currently, the main mission of the Russian units is to protect Almaty’s main strategic facilities.

Four killed in renewed clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan

Jan 12 2022
 

Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Photo: Armenian Public Radio.

Armenia reports three soldiers killed, two wounded, and Azerbaijan one soldier killed following fresh border clashes.

The fighting took place on the Gegharkunik-Kalbajar section of the Armenia-Azerbaijan border and began on 11 January. 

Both countries accused the other side of opening fire first and breaching the ceasefire. The Armenian Ministry of Defence also accused Azerbaijan of using artillery and suicide drones.

The Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has framed the incident as a ‘manifestation’ of the ‘continuous encroachments of Azerbaijan on the territorial integrity of Armenia’. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, has blamed the ‘political-military leadership’ of Armenia for the ‘bloody provocation’.

According to the latest statement from the Azerbaijani Defence Ministry released on 12 January, the Armenian military fired upon Azerbaijani positions on the night of 11 January and the morning of 12 January with ‘small arms and large-calibre machine guns’. No further deaths or injuries were reported. 

On 10 January, authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh reported that the Azerbaijani military fired at ‘civilians and civilian objects’ in the Martuni (Khojavend) region. 

According to a recent report by the International Crisis Group, 94 people, including one Russian peacekeeper, have been killed in Nagorno Karabakh and on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border since the 10 November 2020 ceasefire agreement that brought an end to the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War.


Armenia’s unique experience with COVID-19

Jan 12 2022

Whilst Armenia has suffered from many problems since the end of its recent war with Azerbaijan, its experiences with COVID-19 have seemingly been better than many countries. This is despite the fact that various social and institutional factors should have resulted in the opposite outcome.

- Armen Grigoryan -

An ambulance has deployed a mobile vaccination point against COVID-19 on the streets of Yerevan. May 2021. Photo: frantic00 / Shutterstock

The Armenian government’s pandemic management was influenced by economic concerns right from the beginning. This was quite understandable, as the country’s fast growing tourism and hospitality sector had been badly hit. This has recently been considered a key area for economic development. As political scientist Ivan Krastev noted in March 2020, “at a certain point, governments will be forced to choose between containing the spread of the pandemic at the cost of destroying the economy, or tolerating a higher human cost to save the economy.” Around the same time, economic forecasts varied for the country, with the Asian Development Bank’s rather optimistic expectation of 2.2 per cent growth contrasting with the 11 per cent decline considered possible by Armenia’s former Minister of Economy Vahram Avanesyan. Eventually, the pandemic and the country’s disastrous military confrontation in the autumn resulted in a decline of 7.4 per cent.

The only lockdown imposed by the Armenian government lasted from late March to May 2020 at the latest. This involved the closure of all businesses apart from medical institutions, infrastructure facilities, banks, pharmacies, supermarkets and food shops. The country also decided to suspend all public transportation. Later, only educational institutions were closed a few times for several weeks. It should also be remembered that the country’s social structure, which involves many low-income, rural and traditional households with multigenerational families, was also an additional risk factor. There was also a clear lack of discipline and control as many people kept gathering outside their apartment blocks to meet up and play board games.

Neighbouring experiences

In comparison with neighbouring Georgia, Yerevan seemingly failed to properly tackle the pandemic. Tbilisi imposed longer restrictions earlier and a mask mandate was more strictly observed by the country’s population. Georgia also introduced various additional measures, such as a curfew and a nationwide ban on the use of personal cars and motorcycles. In the last days of April 2020, Armenia experienced a considerable growth in active case numbers. By May 11th, the country’s death rate (15.9 per million) was much higher than that in Georgia (3.0 per million). The government’s approach was heavily criticised by the political opposition and civic groups. A clear unwillingness to adopt zero tolerance policies similar to those in Georgia and amend some regulations were some of the main reasons behind the public outrage. Whilst it was particularly clear that the police were unwilling to enforce restrictions, the courts tended to overrule fines for violations of the mask mandate.

However, the situation changed radically in a few months. The infection rate and number of deaths in Georgia grew sharply during September 2020. By November, it was clear that the situation in Armenia was improving despite fewer restrictions. It should also be noted that the possibility of visiting cultural events, cafes, restaurants, beauty parlours and gyms had an important therapeutic effect on the population. This was especially true following the psychological impact of the war. The author’s brief interviews with 28 persons of different sex and occupation, age 24 to 52, suggest that another lockdown similar to those experienced in several European countries would cause depression and other psychological disorders among a large segment of the population.

By summer 2021, before the spread of the delta variant, the situation in Armenia was essentially not of particular concern. Armenia even found itself on the EU’s safe country list. Wizzair flights from Vienna, which commenced in July, were full with many visitors, especially those from the Czech Republic and Slovakia. While in Georgia, there were a number of new cases, with many resulting in death between June and August. While Armenia experienced its highest number of cases and deaths per capita soon after the spread of the delta variant, the situation has stabilised in recent weeks. This is despite the fact that only 22 per cent of the population have been fully vaccinated. The majority of people have not been wearing masks or paying attention to social distancing (even in closed areas, such as shops or public transport). At the same time, very few obeyed the requirement to wear masks in the open air as demanded by governmental decree imposed between November 1st and December 17th. However, the daily number of new cases has dropped from over 2000 in the period between October 20th and November 6th, to below 200 by December 16th. Meanwhile, in Georgia, where the population is about one third larger, the number of daily cases is still counted in the thousands, with a death rate surpassing that found in Armenia. At the same time, the smaller number of diagnosed cases in Armenia should not be attributed to the smaller number of tests. After all, unvaccinated employees of all public and private institutions have been obliged to take PCR tests every second week since October 15th and weekly since December 1st.

Social attitudes

When the infection rate and number of deaths reached its peak in late October and early November, there were suggestions that unvaccinated patients might be required to pay for treatment. It was also suggested that “green passes” might be required to enter shops, restaurants and other business premises after the new year. Still, the government reiterated that no new lockdowns were planned. In an interview on December 23rd, Minister of Health Anahit Avanesyan said that the omicron variant had not yet been found in the country. She also stated that green passes might be required from mid-January and that paid treatment might be introduced from February. The feasibility of such measures is not clear, as paid treatment might encourage some people to avoid testing and hospitalisation until the last possible moment.

Few people in Armenia still worry about the presence of an unmasked person. In the spring and summer of 2020, such situations often resulted in altercations. There was even a stabbing on April 14th 2020, when two men brawled on a bus. Few people are also willing to discriminate against the unvaccinated. This attitude is essentially limited to a handful of activists on social media, who are also likely to continue restricting their own social interactions. Asking about others’ vaccination status is not popular either in the country. It is even quite surprising that the antagonism between vaccine enthusiasts and sceptics is so negligible, given the extreme political polarisation that Armenia has experienced over the last year. The war with Azerbaijan and the resulting disagreements over normalisation and border delimitation have contributed greatly to divides in Armenian society.

Armenia’s low vaccination rate still seems troublesome. The AstraZeneca (acquired with the EU’s support via the COVAX programme), Sinovac and Sputnik V vaccines have all been available since April 2020. Sputnik V is generally preferred by those planning to travel to Russia for work and other reasons, as Russia keeps refusing to recognise the other vaccines. Some increase in the pace of vaccinations could be observed in the autumn, as several hundred thousand doses of Moderna were donated by Lithuania, Norway and Slovakia. In December, the country’s first Pfizer vaccine doses were donated by Portugal. The government has also allocated 1.2 billion Armenian dram (about 2.22 million euros) for procurement of additional supplies from Pfizer. In November, the government also procured 400,000 doses of the Sinopharm vaccine.

Some good luck?

It is also important to mention that, perhaps surprisingly, a number of richer countries with far better healthcare systems have registered higher death rates than Armenia. This was the case last winter and spring and now as well. For example, as of December 26th 2021, Armenia had experienced 2673 deaths per million. This is in comparison to Georgia (3397), the Czech Republic (3329), Slovakia (3001), Bulgaria (4443) and Hungary (3980). Meanwhile, in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which has the same vaccination rate as Armenia, the death rate is 4082. This situation is also reflected in the figures available for the last seven days, with even some Western European countries experiencing higher weekly death rates despite new lockdowns.

It is subsequently possible to hypothesise that a considerably higher proportion of Armenians have achieved natural immunity. In order to examine such a hypothesis and to determine the country’s progress towards herd immunity, a representative sampling of people who have neither been vaccinated nor had a positive PCR test would be needed. This investigation would have to involve people of different sex, age, occupation, health condition and lifestyle.

At the same time, several publications already show that lockdowns and other restrictive policies are clearly having negative middle and long-term effects on public health. In October 2021, a group of Hungarian scholars published research showing that about 5000 fewer malign tumour cases had been diagnosed in the 15 months since the beginning of the pandemic in comparison to previous periods. This means that more complicated treatment will be needed in the future. The number of people waiting for surgery in Hungary has doubled since the start of the pandemic. This is clearly having a negative effect on the population’s quality of life, as most of the postponed operations concern cataracts and knee and hip replacements. The number of children treated for mental health problems has grown by 40 per cent. There has also been a general growth in mental health problems, with the consumption of tobacco, alcohol and drugs increasing during this time. A notable increase in domestic violence and other violent crime is also evident within the data.

In most countries, the working class and small businesses have been the most affected by the economic consequences of repeated lockdowns, with disruption to education also ensuring that social divides will remain in the future. Notably, the director of the Motol University Hospital in Prague, Miloslav Ludvík, has suggested that lockdowns are simply postponing the end of the pandemic while harming countries’ economies and societies.

The number of COVID-related deaths in Armenia still could and should have been lower. However, this would have probably required selective protection targeting the elderly and other risk groups, rather than lockdowns and other restrictive measures.

Armen Grigoryan is co-founder and vice president of the Yerevan-based Centre for Policy Studies, and a member of the advisory board of the project Resilience in the South Caucasus: Prospects and Challenges of a New EU Foreign Policy Concept, implemented by the Institute of Slavic Languages and Caucasus Studies, University of Jena.


https://neweasterneurope.eu/2022/01/12/armenias-unique-experience-with-covid-19/


Top Armenian peacekeeper says key task was to stop terrorists from poisoning water supply

TASS, Russia
Jan 12 2022
In Almaty, in addition to the Druzhba waterworks, the Armenian peacekeepers are also guarding one of the largest bread factories

ALMATY, January 12. /TASS/. One of the key objectives of the Armenian peacekeeping unit in Almaty was preventing the rampaging terrorists from poisoning the local water supply, the unit’s commander Major Ayrapet Mkrtchyan told journalists on Wednesday.

"One of the main tasks at the Druzhba water supply facility was the prevention of the water [supply] from being poisoned," he stated.

According to the commander, the water supply facility is a strategic object and quite possibly it could have been targeted for contamination by the terrorists.

In Almaty, in addition to the Druzhba waterworks, the Armenian peacekeepers are also guarding one of the largest bread factories.

According to the January 6, 2022 decision by the CSTO Collective Security Council, the bloc's collective peacekeeping forces were deployed to Kazakhstan for a limited time period in order to stabilize and normalize the situation. The contingent includes the armed forces of Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Currently, the main mission of the Russian units is to protect Almaty’s main strategic facilities.

Armenian Defense Ministry reports serviceman killed on border with Azerbaijan

TASS, Russia
Jan 12 2022
Another two Armenian servicemen were wounded in the shootout with the Azerbaijani army in the eastern sector of the border

YEREVAN, January 12. /TASS/. The body of an Armenian serviceman killed in a shootout on the border with Azerbaijan was found overnight on Wednesday, the press service of the Armenian Defense Ministry reported.

"In the zone of intense skirmish, which began after the provocation committed on January 11 by Azerbaijani subdivisions in the eastern direction of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, on the same day at midnight, the body of an RA Armed Forces serviceman, private Vahan Vachagan Babayan (born in 2003) was found with a fatal gunshot wound," the statement noted.

On Tuesday night, the Armenian Defense Ministry reported two servicemen killed in the shootout with the Azerbaijani army in the eastern sector of the border. Another two servicemen were wounded, their condition is stable.

Armenia announced the death of three soldiers as a result of a shootout on the border with Azerbaijan

Jan 12 2022

The Armenian Ministry of Defense announced the death of three soldiers as a result of a shootout on the border with Azerbaijan. All three died on Tuesday 11 January.

Source: www.obozrevatel.com

This was reported on the website of the defense department. The cause of the deaths was «provocations of Azerbaijani units in the eastern direction of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border».

So, at about 17:30, units of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces allegedly resumed shelling of Armenian positions, using artillery and unmanned aerial vehicles. The Armenian side took retaliatory actions.

As a result, 20-year-old private Arthur Mkhitaryan and junior sergeant Rudik Gharibyan, as well as 19-year-old private Vahan Babayan, who received a fatal gunshot wound, were killed.

In addition, two more soldiers were wounded . Their condition is stable and life is not in danger.

Now the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border is relatively calm.

In December 2021, there was shooting on the border between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Then it was reported that two soldiers were injured, and the parties accused each other of provocations.

As you know, the conflict between the countries over Nagorno-Karabakh escalated in 2020, resulting in the death of about six thousand people. By the end of the year, Azerbaijan and Armenia agreed on a truce and signed a corresponding statement.

https://thetimeshub.in/armenia-announced-the-death-of-three-soldiers-as-a-result-of-a-shootout-on-the-border-with-azerbaijan

Armenia reports death of third soldier in Azerbaijan’s provocation

Jan 12 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - The Defense Ministry on Wednesday, January 12 reported on the death of a third Armenian serviceman, private Vahan Babayan (b. 2003), in Azerbaijan's latest border provocation on Tuesday.

Two other Armenian soldiers – Artur Mkhitaryan and Rudik Gharibyan (both born in 2002) – were killed earlier in the day, while two others were injured in fighting.

"The two wounded servicemen are in stable condition, their lives are not in danger," the Defense Ministry added.

Azerbaijani forces violated Armenia’s border in several sections in the provinces of Syunik and Gegharkunik on May 12 and 13 and are still refusing to withdraw their troops from the area. On November 16, the Azerbaijani side launched a fresh offensive in the province of Syunik, during which Armenian soldiers were killed and taken captive.

Armenia lifting ban on import of Turkish goods due to "political reasons"

Jan 12 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - Minister of Economy Vahan Kerobyan has said that Armenia's decision to lift the ban on the import of Turkish goods is due to political reasons, although he himself was in favor of extending the embargo.

"As the body responsible for the economy, we must closely monitor and protect the companies that have been created in the past year and make sure that their existence is not endangered, that they are not left out of the market," Kerobyan said Wednesday, January 12, according to Armenpress.

"We are monitoring the situation, and if problems arise and we see that the businesses of investors are endangered because they haven't grown enough to withstand competition with Turkish goods, we will introduce certain programs to protect investors."

The ban was first imposed on December 31, 2020, for six months and was extended for another six months in June. It expired on December 31, and the new decision took effect the next day.

In the war against Artsakh (Karabakh) in fall 2020, Turkey supported Azerbaijan militarily, also by transferring terrorist mercenaries from the Middle East to fight against Karabakh. Armenia was the first to report on Turkey's deployment of thousands of Syrian fighters to Azerbaijan. International media publications followed suit, as did reactions from France, Russia, Iran.

There can be no friendship with torturers: French MP quits Friendship Group with Azerbaijan

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 12 2022

Member of the French National Assembly Dino Cinieri has quit the France-Azerbaijan Friendship group.  

“As the Armenians celebrate Christmas and the great hope that this feast of peace brings, I see with horror that Azerbaijan is martyring and torturing Armenian soldiers and civilians in the worst possible way,” the MP said in a statement as he announced the decision.

Armenian Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan earlier reported new cases of torture of Armenian soldiers. In one case the Azerbaijani servicemen demanded that an Armenian soldier renounce Christianity and convert to Islam. After the Armenian soldier refused to obey, his legs were burned, he was severely beaten and humiliated.

In another case, Azerbaijanis burned the cross-shaped tattoo on the body of a captured soldier with a lighter.

“These barbaric practices are unbearable and unworthy of a member country of the Council of Europe and of a regime that sits within the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.,” he added.

Mr. Cinieri noted that “by invading Artsakh on September 27, 2020, Azerbaijan wanted us to believe that it was a simple territorial issue.”

“I decide to resign from the France-Azerbaijan Friendship group, so as not to endorse hateful practices which clearly reveal a desire to destroy a people, its culture and its faith. 106 years after the genocide that aimed to exterminate the Armenians, history repeats itself. There can be no friendship with torturers,” Dino Cinieri stated.

https://en.armradio.am/2022/01/12/there-can-be-no-friendship-with-torturers-french-mp-quits-frienshship-group-with-azerbaijan/