Azerbaijani forces opened irregular fire in direction of Artsakh village

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Armenia – Jan 10 2022

Reports, spread by Azerbaijani media, claiming the units of the Artsakh Defense Army have opened fire from a vehicle toward the Azerbaijani positions are another disinformation and do not correspond to reality, the press department at the Artsakh Republic Ministry of Defense said in a statement. 

"In reality, the Azerbaijani military forces opened irregular fire toward a village from positions located near Karmir Shuka settlement in Artsakh's Martuni region, as a result of which a car belonging to a Artsakh resident parked near a kindergarten was incinerated. The command of the Russian peacekeeping contingent were notified about the incident and measures were taken to make the Azerbaijani side adhere to the ceasefire regime," the ministry said. 

Artsakh Ombudsman sent a letter to Google over Azeri baseless claims

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Armenia – Jan 10 2022

The Human Rights Defender of the Artsakh Republic Gegham Stepanyan sent a letter to Google, urging not to give in to the Azerbaijani provocations, to ignore the baseless demands presented by Azerbaijan, to refrain from removing the Armenian toponyms and geographical names of Artsakh from the digital maps.

The Ombudsman particularly noted that these efforts of Azerbaijan are another manifestation of Azerbaijan's long-standing policy of depriving the people of Artsakh of their homeland and denying the Armenian identity of Artsakh. He reminded that the aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan against the people of Artsakh in the Fall of 2020, aimed at the seizure of the entire territory of Artsakh and destruction of its people, became the culmination of Azerbaijan's criminal policy.

it is noted that in order to support its alleged rightfulness of claims over Artsakh, Azerbaijan has been deliberately erasing, destroying, and eradicating any traces of Armenians and Armenian culture and history from every centimeter of the territory under its control.

The true motives behind the request of Azerbaijan to remove Armenian toponyms from maps can be easily defined: Nagorno Karabakh is not just a place name, but a totality of Armenian culture and history. The Armenian toponyms of Artsakh are memories of places, as well as living memories of the people who gave these names to such places. It is well-known that toponyms serve as symbols of regional culture and thus reflect the history, habitat, and environment of a place. Azerbaijan’s request to remove Armenian toponyms from the maps is nothing more than an attempt to create desired reality on the maps․  

In the letter, the Ombudsman presented the regulations of international law, which enshrine the right of peoples to freely use and preserve their place names, to inherit from generations. He stressed that international law does not consider toponyms and geographical names to be the property of states, but considers them to be the intangible heritage of peoples.

Gegham Stepanyan noted that the removal of Armenian toponyms will only condone Azerbaijan’s gross violations of human rights of the people of Artsakh and support its efforts aimed at legitimization of the results of illegal use of force.

Appreciating Google’s human-centered approach to use the Armenian geographical names in its maps, the Ombudsman expressed confidence that the company will reject Azerbaijan’s continuing attempt to alter maps and engage in ethnic cleansing.

Arman Tatoyan discussed issues related to the rights of Armenian community with Kazakh counterpart

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Armenia – Jan 10 2022

Armenia's Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan on Monday held a phone conversation with Human Rights Commissioner of Kazakhstan Elvira Azimova to discuss issues related to the rights of Armenian community in light of recent developments in Kazakhstan. 

As the Ombudsman's Office said in a press statement, during the Azimova stressed that issues of the rights of the Armenian community remain in the center of her attention and expressed readiness to offer support upon necessity. 

During the conversation, Ombudsman Tatoyan expressed condolences over the victims of the ongoing developments in the country. 

Opposition MP unveils his team’s stance on deployment of Armenian troops to Kazakhstan

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Armenia – Jan 8 2022

Armenian MP Gegham Nazaryan from the main opposition Hayastan faction expressed his team’s stance on the deployment of 100 Armenian troops to Kazakhstan as part of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) peacekeeping mission.

In a Facebook post late on Friday, the lawmaker said there had been numerous requests for the faction’s position on sending peacekeepers to the unrest-hit country.

“The Hayastan faction believes that Armenia did not have to prevent the deployment of a CSTO contingent to Kazakhstan, but no Armenian serviceman should have left for that country, for a very understandable reason,” he wrote.

The MP cited Kazakhstan’s pro-Azerbaijani stance during the 44-day war in Artsakh.

“Kazakhstan also congratulated Azerbaijan on November 9. I think our position is completely clear.

“I would like to add that in the current situation, when the wounds of the war have not yet healed and its effects are still visible, not a single Armenian soldier should be sent to a foreign country, especially to Kazakhstan, where only intra-clan issues are being resolved, not inter-clan,” Nazaryan noted.

Azerbaijani forces opened fire in direction of Verin Shorzha village

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Armenia – Jan 8 2022

The armed forces of Azerbaijan opened fire on Saturday toward the Armenian positions located near Verin Shorzha village of the country's Gegharkunik province, Sputnik Armenia reported, citing the village mayor Artyom Yeranosyan. In his words of the mayor, the shooting lasted around an hour.

"Azeris started biting. I am not sure what type of gunfire they used but what is certain the fire came at a distance of just 3 km from our village," Yeranosyan told the source.

 

Turkish press: Horse-drawn sleighs arouse interest in Turkey’s east

Lake Çıldır, the second largest lake in Turkey’s east, has been drawing attention with several winter activities, as the lake turns into a natural ice rink in this cold season, ideal for ice sports and nomadic activities such as horse-drawn sleigh, javelin and archery races.

Since the Touristic Eastern Express that runs from Ankara to the eastern province of Kars resumed its service after one-and-a-half years of hiatus, the region regained the interest of visitors, offering them fun-filled activities and impressive natural and historical sightseeing spots.

Located at 1,959 meters above sea level and covering an area of 123 square kilometers, the lake in the province of Kars becomes completely frozen when the temperature starts falling below zero degrees, leading ice thickness to reach 25 to 30 centimeters, and thus, making it a picturesque winter landscape with its famous local ice fishermen and horse-drawn carriages.

Visitors to the lake, where fishermen break the ice on the surface and catch fish like Eskimos, also get a chance to take a ride with horse sleighs or walk around the ice-covered part of the lake, which looks like glass since it has not snowed yet.

Locals, as well as tourists, also enjoy what can be called barbeque parties on the lake. People grill the fish they catch and have a nice picnic out in the cold. People also indulge in activities such as performing traditional halay dance, called aşık.

Lake Çıldır was one of the most significant attraction spots in the region two years ago, but due to the pandemic-related measures imposed across the country, it became an untended and idle stop for a while.

But when officials decided to resume the Touristic Eastern Express services, the region started to attract attention again. Now, university students, photographers, tourists and influencers are among the majority of the people traveling on the line as it used to be before the pandemic.

As the trains depart from the Turkish capital every Wednesday and Friday and arrive in Kars after 20 hours of journey, visitors are able to spend the weekend in Kars and enjoy a day in a Scandinavian-like adventure.

Apart from Lake Çıldır, the archaeological site of Ani is also one of the frequent destinations of visitors in the region.

Nearly 25 significant structures, consisting of walls, mosques, cathedrals, palaces, churches, monasteries, firehouses, baths, bridges and a partially destroyed closed passage, have survived to the present day in the ancient city of Ani, the capital of the Bagratid Armenian kingdom between 961 and 1045.

Turkish press: Russian, Kazakh presidents discuss unrest in Kazakhstan

Elena Teslova   |08.01.2022

MOSCOW 

The Russian president and his Kazakh counterpart on Saturday discussed the latest situation in the Central Asian nation after massive countrywide protests claimed several lives and caused material damages.

In a phone call with Vladimir Putin, Kazakhstan's Kassym-Jomart Tokayev proposed that a videoconference be held between the leaders of Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) members in the coming days — a suggestion backed by his Russian counterpart, the Kremlin said in a statement.

Thanking Russia and the other members of the CSTO for their support, the Kazakh president informed Putin of the developments in the country, noting that the situation was stabilizing, the statement added.

Putin voiced support for Tokayev's proposal and called Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to discuss the situation, said another Kremlin statement.

Both Lukashenko and Pashinyan agreed, with the latter, as the current head of the CSTO, promising to arrange it, the statement added.

The protests in Kazakhstan broke out on Jan. 2, when drivers held demonstrations against an increase in liquefied petroleum gas prices (LPG) in the city of Zhanaozen in Mangystau. The protests later spread to Aktau city 135 kilometers (84 miles) west.

Supportive protests in the western cities of Atyrau, Aktobe, and Oral, where the country's petroleum and natural gas reserves are located, spread to other areas of Kazakhstan to turn into countrywide public demonstrations.

So far, 4,266 people have been detained, including nationals of neighboring countries, the country's interior minister said in a statement.

According to the Kazakh Interior Ministry, at least 18 security officers and 26 protesters have lost their lives during the ongoing unrest.

In response, Tokayev declared a state of emergency in the commercial capital Almaty and the oil-rich Mangystau region from where the protests spread to the rest of the country.

Armenpress: Armenia reports 195 daily COVID-19 cases

Armenia reports 195 daily COVID-19 cases

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 11:15, 8 January, 2022

YEREVAN, JANUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. 195 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Armenia in the past 24 hours, the ministry of health said.

The total number of confirmed cases has reached 345,713.

165 patients have recovered in one day, bringing the total recoveries to 332,753.

The death toll has risen to 7999 (2 death cases registered in the past one day).

4985 COVID-19 tests were conducted on January 7.

The number of active cases is 3449.

Cable internet access restored in Kazakhstan’s capital

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 11:18, 8 January, 2022

YEREVAN, JANUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. Cable internet access in Kazakhstan’s capital city of Nur-Sultan, which was down since Friday, has been restored, reports TASS.

However, mobile internet access remains unavailable.

The internet access in the city went down at about 12:00 local time (09:00 Moscow time), but mobile phone network was relatively stable.

On Wednesday, cable internet access in Nur-Sultan was down for about six hours since 17:00 (local time). A curfew is currently in effect in the capital between 23:00 and 07:00.

On January 2, protests sparked in several cities of Kazakhstan. In several days, they escalated into mass riots and assaults at the bodies of authority in many cities. Thousands of people were injured, and there were casualties. President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev asked the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) for assistance. CSTO peacekeepers have already commenced their mission in Kazakhstan. According to the authorities, the constitutional order in Kazakhstan was generally restored on January 7. The situation in Almaty remains the most complicated.