Armenian FM raises the issue of POWs in a meeting with President of the UN General Assembly

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YEREVAN, JULY 28, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan met with the President of the 76th session of the UN General Assembly, Foreign Minister of the Republic of Maldives Abdulla Shahid on July 28, who is in Armenia on a working visit.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, congratulating his colleague on the occasion of his successful presidency of the UNGA, Minister Mirzoyan highly appreciated Abdulla Shahid’s contribution to addressing the current global challenges and consolidating the efforts of the international community for this purpose, based on the idea of effective multilateralism.

The cooperation between the United Nations and Armenia in the direction of achieving the sustainable development goals was emphasized.

Ararat Mirzoyan noted that Armenia, being a member of the UN Human Rights Council, is committed to promoting the global agenda for the protection of human rights. Abdulla Shahid, for his part, highly appreciated the effective activity of Armenia in the Council.

Minister Mirzoyan emphasized that one of the priorities of Armenia's cooperation with the United Nations is the promotion of the genocide prevention agenda, which also includes the protection of the memory and dignity of the victims of the genocide. It was added that Armenia attaches particular importance to the strengthening of the UN's early warning capabilities and the improvement of relevant mechanisms for the prevention of crimes.

During the meeting, the parties also highlighted the importance of ensuring the involvement of women in the decision-making process and expressed satisfaction with the initiative of the Maldives to recognize July 24 as the day of female diplomats, with Armenia as the co-author of the resolution.

Regional stability and peace issues were also touched upon.

The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia emphasized the need to solve the humanitarian problems caused by the war unleashed by Azerbaijan, in particular, the repatriation of Armenian prisoners of war and other detained persons, as well as the need to preserve the Armenian historical and cultural heritage of Artsakh in the territories that have passed under the control of Azerbaijan, emphasizing the imperative of the unhindered involvement of relevant UN structures on the ground.

Minister Mirzoyan reaffirmed Armenia's commitment to achieving a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmanship, noting that it is the only format with an international mandate, within the framework of which issues of security and protection of all rights of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh can be addressed.

Within the framework of the visit, Abdulla Shahid also had a meeting with female diplomats of the Armenian Foreign Ministry, during which the importance of ensuring the equality of women and men and the implementation of steps in the direction of women's economic empowerment was highlighted.

Project of Christ statue on Armenian mount sparks historians’ and rights defenders’ criticism

Caucasian Knot
Project of Christ statue on Armenian mount sparks historians' and rights defenders' criticism
The installation of a statue of Jesus Christ on Mount Atis violates the law on the protection of cultural heritage and natural areas, 16 human rights and public organizations have stated. They doubt the attractiveness of the statue for tourists.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported that on July 16, on the top of Mount Atis, activists held a rally against the erection of the above statue, which was the initiative of Gagik Tsarukyan, the leader of the "Prosperous Armenia" Party. The idea was approved by the Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, who announced that the statue would increase tourists' interest in Armenia. Scientists opposed the idea, while the Armenian Apostolic Church believes that the statue is contrary to the cult tradition.

The construction of the statue has revealed corruption risks in the alienation of a public area that is a historical monument, as well as the non-transparent activities of Armenian authorities, the authors of the statement signed by the Transparency International Anticorruption Centre, the Vanadzor Office of the Helsinki Civil Assembly, the Helsinki Association of Armenia and other organizations assert.

"They are destroying not only a natural monument, but also the cultural and historical heritage. There are more than 50 antiquities of the Neolithic, Stone and Bronze Ages on Mount Atis," said Garegin Miskaryan, the initiator of the petition against the construction of the statue.

Asmik Arutyunyan, an expert from the NGO "Rights Protection Without Borders", said that authorities had ignored the demand of public organizations and continue the construction.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 03:53 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:
Scientists oppose construction of residential houses near scientific centre in Yerevan, In Yerevan, police detain five opponents of construction in a park, Human rights defenders criticize dispersal of protest against construction in Yerevan.

Author: Tigran Petrosyan Source: СK correspondent
Источник: ?fbclid=IwAR2_V5t3XzFzo5wKjb-VWY21W6822D2HyL0ES3YlLs9VIOFHGHhANCWqG9E
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Forced migrants from Karabakh demand to build a settlement for them in Armenia

Caucasian Knot


At a protest action in Yerevan, more than 50 forced migrants from Nagorno-Karabakh have added to their earlier demands a call to build a separate settlement for refugees. Officials in Armenia ignore the problems of forced migrants and do not allow them meeting members of international institutions, the “Association of Armenian Refugees” announces.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that migrants from Nagorno-Karabakh regularly hold protests in Yerevan. They demand from the Armenian authorities to grant them the official refugee status and recognize the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh. In particular, on July 14, a protest action with such demands was held by several dozen forced migrants from Gadrut.

During the protest action, Levon Airiyan, the chair of the “In the Name of Gadrut” NGO, voiced four demands of forced migrants to the Armenian government.

First of all, the authorities of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh should “ensure the Armenian status of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).” Furthermore, the authorities should clarify the refugee status for forced migrants, protesters say.

The forced migrants also demand to build a separate community for their community in Armenia.

The fourth requirement voiced by the forced migrants concerns social problems. According to the decision of the authorities, financial support for the forced migrants should be provided until housing is allocated to them. However, according to a spokesperson for the protesters, the payments of money “are being delayed for months and the refugees are not even able to pay rent.”

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 11:33 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:

Relatives of Azeri veteran reproach authorities for neglecting his problems, Armenia: IDPs from Gadrut demand refugee status, Refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh demand to return them to their homeland.

Author: Armine Martirosyan Source: СK correspondent

Источник:

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Agvan Ovsepyan, former Armenian PPG, hospitalized

Caucasian Knot


Agvan Ovsepyan, who was arrested on charges of bribery and money laundering, has been taken to hospital in Armenia, his secretary has informed. The health condition of the former Public Prosecutor General (PPG) is grave.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported that on March 4 this year, the court granted the investigators' petition to extend Agvan Ovsepyan's arrest by two months. On May 6, the court rejected the defence's motion to release Ovsepyan on bail.

Ovsepyan is in grave condition; they prepare to operate on him, lawyer Erem Sargsyan, his advocate, has informed, adding that his client's diseases have worsened.

According to investigators, in 2004-2013, while being the PPG, and in 2014-2018, while being the Chairman of the Investigating Committee (IC), Ovsepyan was managing several enterprises, received a bribe of USD 380,000, embezzled property worth USD 1.6 million, and legalized the proceeds of crime in the equivalent of USD 2.6 million. Ovsepyan refused to plead guilty.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 11:50 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:

Agvan Ovsepyan, former Prosecutor General of Armenia, left in custody, Head of Armenia's Investigating Committee resigns, Transparency International: the police and the court are the most corrupt bodies in Armenia.

Author: Armine Martirosyan Source: СK correspondent

Источник:

© Кавказский Узел

Over 200 Azerbaijani refugees move to Agaly village

Caucasian Knot
July 23 2022


Other ten families of internally displaced persons (IDPs, or forced migrants) have moved to new houses built in the village of Agaly, Zangilan District. Thus, the first stage of resettlement to the village, where 201 people now live, is over.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported that on July 19, Azerbaijani authorities announced the start of a mass refugees' return to Nagorno-Karabakh. On this day, 10 IDP families, 45 people in total, who had been temporarily accommodated in the town of Zangilan and in the village of Masazir, Apsheron District, moved to new houses built in the village of Agaly, Zangilan District. On July 21 and 23, 21 other families also moved to Agaly.

In this village, which came under Azerbaijan's control after the 2020 autumn, houses are provided together with land plots. A total of 1357 out of 1457 forced migrants expressed their desire to return home there.

The "Report" outlet has noted that the villagers who have returned to their homes had experienced exciting moments. According to Bakhtiyar Abdullaev, one of the migrants, he was born in the village in 1976; and during the war he and his family had to move to Sumgait.

"Glory to the Almighty that we have returned to our native village; there's no limit to my joy," Mr Abdullaev has stated.

Earlier, Azerbaijani economists pointed to possible problems in residents' resettlement. It is not enough to give people housing; it's necessary to create infrastructure and jobs, Natig Djafarli has noted.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on July 25, 2022 at 10:10 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:

Ten families of forced migrants return from Azerbaijan to Karabakh, Forced migrants' families begin returning to Zangilan District, Azerbaijan defines places for two BCPs with Armenia.

Source: Caucasian Knot

Источник:

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Armenian oppositionist Avetik Chalabyan back at large

Caucasian Knot

Avetik Chalabyan, an Armenian oppositionist, has been released from custody, because his detention term has expired and was not extended.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported that on May 14, 2022, Avetik Chalabyan was arrested for two months in connection with an attempt to bribe the chairman of the Student Council of the Agrarian University in Yerevan aiming to mobilize students for protests. Chalabyan's case is fabricated; authorities want to intimidate protesters in this way, Avetik Ishkhanyan, a human rights defender, has stated. The supervising prosecutor refused to approve the indictment in the Chalabyan case and returned the case materials to investigators. However, on July 10, a court in Yerevan extended the arrest of the oppositionist by two weeks.

The term of Avetik Chalabyan's custody has expired; after which he was released, Varazdat Arutyunyan, his advocate, has informed.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 07:59 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:

Armenia: opposition activist detained for trying to bribe chairman of university student council, Car driver detained after crashing into opposition tents in Yerevan, Thirty-nine people detained at protests in Yerevan.

Author: Tigran Petrosyan Source: СK correspondent

Источник:

© Кавказский Узел

Residents of Karmir Shuka in Karabakh alarmed by resumed shelling

Caucasian Knot
Residents of Krasny Bazar in Karabakh alarmed by resumed shelling

After four months of calmness, shelling of the Karabakh village of Krasny Bazar resumed; the house of a local resident was damaged, the villagers have reported. The international community should pay attention to Azerbaijan's actions, Gegam Stepanyan, the Ombudsperson of Nagorno-Karabakh, has stated.

On Thursday (July 28), the Armenian Ministry of Defence (MoD) announced shelling of its positions on the Azeri border' and the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MIA) of Nagorno-Karabakh reported the shelling of the border villages of Tagavard and Krasny Bazar. The Azerbaijani MoD refuted this information.

Earlier, this February, Krasny Bazar villagers stopped taking their children to kindergarten because of shelling (Krasny Bazar is called Karmir Shuka in Armenian, and Gyrmyzy Bazar in Azerbaijani, – note of the "Caucasian Knot"). Shelling keeps people in constant fear, and livestock is stolen from households, villagers said on February 21.

"Azerbaijan's actions are aimed at disrupting the normal life of Karabakh communities and intimidating the civilian population," Mr Stepanyan has claimed on the Facebook*.

The village of Krasny Bazar became a border village after the Karabakh war in the fall of 2020. Azerbaijani military posts are next to it, as well as the base of the Russian peacemaking contingent.

Marta Mesropyan, a resident of the Red Bazaar, said that she was "bathing her child when the shelling began."

"When it turned into intensive, I grabbed the child and hid in a secluded place in the house," the woman has added. According to her story, "from April to this day, everything was calm."

Vigen Shakhnazaryan, the owner of the damaged house, has noted that "only by happy chance, none of the children suffered."

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 10:13 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:

Krasny Bazar residents tell details of living under shelling, Ombudspersons of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh demand withdrawal of Azerbaijani militaries away from villages, Karabakh residents accuse Azerbaijani armed forces of a shelling attack on a village.

Author: Alvard Grigoryan Source: СK correspondent

Источник:

© Кавказский Узел

Perspectives | Azerbaijan remaking its military in Turkey’s image

Fuad Shahbaz Jul 28, 2022
Training together (Azerbaijan MOD)

On October 5, 2020, when the full-scale war between Azerbaijani and Armenian armed forces had just started in and around Nagorno-Karabakh, President Ilham Aliyev was already talking about military reform. In an interview with Turkish state-run broadcaster TRT, Aliyev said that his intention was to remake the Azerbaijani military “based on the Turkish model but on a smaller scale.”

That reform had been underway for several years, as Azerbaijan sought to move away from a Soviet model of the armed forces – featuring a heavy use of conscripts and large quantities of infantry and armor units – toward a more NATO-style professional, mobile, high-tech force. As Turkey was Azerbaijan’s closest ally, it was naturally the NATO military Baku sought to emulate. 

Turkey’s heavy military support to Azerbaijan in the war against Armenia solidified that orientation. As Aliyev put it in the interview: “Turkey's moral support and the Turkish defense industry products at our disposal strengthen us, and the whole world can see that. The Turkish Army is the second strongest army in NATO today, and no one can confront it.”

Even though the war ended with an Azerbaijani victory, recapturing most of the territory it had lost to Armenians in the first war between the two sides in the 1990s, Azerbaijan’s plans only gathered speed. 

It began to roll out a series of new military reforms envisaging an increase in spending, setting up new unitsa brand new National Defense University, and boosting the number of special forces. And all of it was to be based on a Turkish model.

The rapid development of special forces appears to be the top reform priority. In April 2022, Aliyev reported that “Azerbaijan has doubled the number of special forces after the Karabakh war.” That includes a new branch of special forces established after 2020, units called “commandos” and based on Turkish units of the same name. 

While regular special forces are elite units oriented toward long-term conventional wars, commando units are more oriented toward shorter-term operations in hard-to-reach mountainous areas and in extreme weather conditions – the environment in many of the territories Azerbaijan regained in 2020, including the Lachin, Hadrut, and Kelbajar districts. Commandos go through a more intensive training program and are armed only with handheld weapons like sniper rifles and high-explosive hand grenades, and use light armored vehicles. Regular special forces, by contrast, are equipped with more heavily armored vehicles, large-caliber rifles, grenade launchers, man-portable mortars, and portable missile systems and other sophisticated kit.

So far, Azerbaijan has reported establishing five commando units, with two based in the Hadrut and Kelbajar districts. The location of the other three has not been made public, but it is safe to assume that they also are close to the border of Armenia and the line of contact with the areas in Karabakh controlled by Russian peacekeepers. And further expansion is expected: Adalat Verdiyev, an Azerbaijani military expert, has reported that Azerbaijan soon plans to double the number of commando units and regular military units in the Karabakh region. Officials have not made public how many commandos Azerbaijan now has, but Aliyev has said the number is in the “thousands.”

The commando units will operate directly under a new Land Forces Command, which also is a direct Turkish import. The command was established in 2021 and its first commander is Lieutenant General Anvar Afandiyev, an alumnus of the Turkish Military Academy. The new command will now coordinate all ground operations; previously all military operations in any domain were commanded from the General Staff. Since its establishment, the Land Forces Command has opened a new command center and several other facilities

The new National Defense University, set up in March 2022, is a Turkish model, with its standards based on that of the Turkish Defense University. Azerbaijan also has boosted the number of its military personnel studying in Turkey itself, with more than 200 officers and contract soldiers studying there at the moment.

There are limits, however, to the Turkish military influence in Azerbaijan. While there were widespread reports following the launch of the 2020 war that Turkey may set up a military base in the country, Aliyev poured cold water on them, saying that “this option has not been discussed with Turkey.” Azerbaijan’s military doctrine does not allow the establishment of foreign military bases in the country, but Aliyev kept the door open. “If there is a big threat to Azerbaijan, we will use this opportunity, because Turkey is our ally,” he said.

Perhaps the most well-known element of Turkish influence on Azerbaijan’s military is in its weaponry. The TB2 Bayraktar drones played a critical role in the 2020 victory over Armenia, but they are far from the only Turkish weaponry in Azerbaijan’s arsenal. Other recent acquisitions include the Dragoneye electro-optic sensor system, Cobra II armored vehicles, TRG-300 guided multiple launch rocket systems, TRLG-230 laser-guided missiles, T-122 Sakarya multiple launch rocket system, among others.

The modernization of Azerbaijan’s military is part of a broader post-2020 military expansion, including a significant increase in the military budget. Aliyev has cited the risk of Armenian revanchism as the reason. But a more likely motivation is the overall declining security environment in Azerbaijan’s neighborhood. The full-scale conventional war now underway in Ukraine, and the relatively successful defense mounted by the NATO-trained Ukrainian armed forces has only strengthened the case for military reform and moving beyond the Soviet legacy.

Fuad Shahbazov is an independent policy analyst focusing on regional security issues in the South Caucasus. He tweets at: 

https://eurasianet.org/perspectives-azerbaijan-remaking-its-military-in-turkeys-image

Will Armenia buy military drones from India? Yerevan and Delhi in negotiations



  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Buying military drones from India

Armenia is in active negotiation with India over the purchase of drones and other weapons produced in India. Information about a possible deal was published by Indian news outlet DnaIndia. The Armenian Defense Ministry has so far refrained from comment.

Military expert Karen Hovhannisyan considers the Defense Ministry’s silence understandable, as the deal has not yet been concluded.

At the same time, he believes that maintaining relations with just one strategic partner, Russia, is the wrong approach. Hovhannisyan says Armenia must find new allies — and India could be one of those.


  • “Are Washington and Moscow watching?” Visits of the heads of US and Russian special services to Yerevan
  • “Was Aliyev right?” On the withdrawal of the Armenian Armed Forces from Nagorno-Karabakh
  • Sharing classroom with your ‘enemy’: how Armenians and Azeris study together in Tbilisi

DnaIndia, which announced Yerevan’s intention to purchase military drones and other weapons, is one of the largest English-language newspapers in Mumbai, India’s commercial and economic center.

According to the publication, in June of this year an Armenian Defense Ministry delegation went to Delhi with a list of weapons it requires.

The ministry’s website did not publish anything about the visit to India. Rumors about a possible deal were neither confirmed nor denied.

Meanwhile, Delhi itself reports the words of an Armenian official that the 2020 war in Karabakh made it necessary to reconsider the military needs of the country. The Indian outlet does not report his name, but quotes him as saying:

“The war has shown how useless Russian military equipment is against Turkish weapons, especially Bayraktar drones.”

DnaIndia does not specify what types of weapons are being sought, whether a deal has been concluded, nor for how much.

Two months ago, the country’s authorities announced the launch of the first Armenian satellite into space, and now they announce that they are setting themselves other “ambitious goals”

The Armenian authorities have repeatedly stated that the development of relations with India is one the country’s foreign policy priorities. Especially after the Karabakh war, contacts between representatives of the two countries have increased. Foreign ministers have held three meetings over the past year, where trade and economic relations were the main topic of their discussions.

Military cooperation has been mentioned twice in the last six months. On April 13, Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikyan received the Indian Ambassador to Armenia, Kishan Dan Dewal. Papikyan and Deval are said to have discussed “the need for military-political consultations, mutual high-level visits, as well as the signing of an agreement on military cooperation between the Armenian and Indian defense ministries.”

The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia, Ararat Mirzoyan, also touched upon this topic. During a regular meeting of the Armenian-Indian intergovernmental commission held in July, he stressed that the defense and military-technical spheres have great potential and are extremely promising for both countries.

“In the military sphere, we have already begun to explore the possibilities of concrete cooperation. We look forward to long-term relations,” Sanjay Verma, Secretary of the Western Direction of the Indian Foreign Ministry, said in response.

The parties did not announce any details about possible military cooperation.

Before the Karabakh war, in March 2020, the Indian press reported that Delhi would supply Armenia with four state-of-the-art radars capable of determining the trajectory of artillery at a distance of 50 kilometers. The deal was reported to cost $40 million.

Armenian media did not publish information about this deal. According to the same Indian DnaIndia, the deal had been concluded.

Pashinyan-Erdogan telephone conversation should not be overestimated or underestimated, experts believe, Instead, it should be regarded as a step forward in the Armenian-Turkish normalization process

Yerevan’s silence on the matter is justified, military expert Karen Hovhannisyan believes. The expert did weigh in on whether the transaction would take place at all. There is too little information and it is too early to judge the results.

“We must wait for information from the Armenian side. When it starts to emerge what is meant by “other types of weapons”, we will understand what level the Armenian-Indian relations have reached,” Karen Hovhannisyan told JAMnews.

According to the expert, Armenian-Indian relations can be brought to the level of strategy and alliance.

He maintains that there are still other countries in the world, and there is no need to maintain relations with just one strategic partner — Russia.

“The national interests of Armenia and India coincide on many issues. We should be guided by this and develop a strategic partnership. And why not? It is possible to develop the military industry in Armenia with the help of India or enter joint production,” the expert pointed out.

Some Armenian analysts believe the leak about negotiations in the Indian press indicates that “the Indian side does not want to sell drones to Armenia.” Hovhannisyan says Delhi may have had other intentions:

“Perhaps India is publishing the agreement to show that it is trying to become an important state in the region and the world in the military industry, to assume an important place in this area.”

The expert did not answer JAMnews’ question about the purchase of weapons based on India’s capabilities and Armenia’s needs. According to him, “assuming can hurt the cause.”

https://jam-news.net/will-armenia-buy-military-drones-from-india-yerevan-and-delhi-in-negotiations/

UNGA President deletes Armenian Genocide post after Turkey complains

PanARMENIAN
Armenia –

PanARMENIAN.Net - President of the UN General Assembly Abdullah Shahid has deleted a tweet about his visit to the memorial to the victims of the Armenian Genocide in Yerevan on Wednesday, July 27.

“I am very moved by my visit to this museum. I thank you for warmly receiving me as part of my visit to Armenia,” Shahid wrote in the since deleted social media post.

The post was removed after the protest of the Turkish Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Wednesday, July 27, maintaining that the trip has been “exploited” in favor of “one-sided Armenian claims”.

Turkey issues similar statements every time a head of state or international organization visits the memorial or recognizes the Genocid.

On April 24, 1915, a large group of Armenian intellectuals was rounded up and assassinated in Constantinople by the Ottoman government. On April 24, 2022, Armenians worldwide commemorated the 107th anniversary of the Genocide which continued until 1923. Some three dozen countries, hundreds of local government bodies and international organizations have so far recognized the killings of 1.5 million Armenians as Genocide. Turkey denies to this day.