IntelBrief: Ukraine Invasion Causes Problems for Moscow in the Caucasus

The Soufan Center
April 6 2022
Mikhail Klimentyev, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

Bottom Line Up Front

  • Adversaries of Russia in the Caucasus are taking advantage of Russia’s focus on its war against Ukraine and its demonstrated weaknesses on the battlefield.
  • Russia’s allies in the Caucasus are concerned that Moscow might not be willing or able to protect them while its involvement in Ukraine continues.
  • Armenia, an ally of Russia, is insisting that Russia prevent Azerbaijan from advancing in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh territory.
  • Pro- and anti-Russian factions in Georgia, including Russia-occupied territories, are using the Ukraine war to advance their respective agendas.

The poor performance of Russian forces on the Ukraine battlefield has apparently encouraged Russia’s adversaries in the Caucasus countries—Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia, all of which were republics in the Soviet Union—to advance their longstanding agendas. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s allies in the region appear to be concerned that Putin does not have the resources or bandwidth to protect them, given his difficulties in prosecuting a successful war in Ukraine.. In the Caucasus, Armenia has historically been a key ally of Russia; Azerbaijan is generally a Russian opponent and an ally of Turkey; and Georgia has, like Ukraine, been a victim of Russian aggression, losing the territories of South Ossetia and Abkhazia to Russian-supported separatists in 2008. Georgia’s government has nonetheless sought to preserve ties to Moscow in the current Russia-Ukraine conflict.

The leaders of Azerbaijan are apparently seeking to take advantage of Russia’s preoccupation with Ukraine and its poor battlefield performance to build on the country’s 2020 victories in the longstanding territorial dispute with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh territory. Following the 2020 clashes, in which Azerbaijan recaptured all territories lost to Armenia in the 1994 Nagorno-Karabakh war, Russia brokered a ceasefire and deployed peacekeepers to separate the two sides.

However, according to a Russian Defense Ministry statement, “From March 24 to 25 [2022] the Azerbaijani armed forces, violating the November 9 [2020] trilateral ceasefire agreement, entered the area of responsibility of the Russian peacekeeping contingent on the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and established an observation post.” The Ministry also accused Azerbaijan of striking Armenian forces using a TB-2 Bayraktar drone, the weapon supplied by Baku’s main ally, Turkey, which was pivotal to Azerbaijan’s gains in the 2020 battles. Turkey has also supplied the weapon to Ukraine, assisting its unexpectedly strong battlefield performance against the Russian invasion. The Azerbaijani ground advances were accompanied by a disruption in natural gas supplies to Karabakh, which Armenian authorities claimed was an effort by Azerbaijan to intimidate the ethnic Armenian population of that territory.

Armenian authorities, evidently concerned about Russia’s ability to protect its allies in the context of Moscow’s overriding priority in Ukraine, blamed the Russian peacekeepers for the Azerbaijani advance. On March 26, the Armenian Foreign Ministry stated, “We also expect the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh to undertake concrete, visible steps to resolve the situation and prevent new casualties and hostilities.” Armenia, a member of the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), hosts more than 10,000 Russian soldiers, including a Russian military base, Russian border guards, and the Russian peacekeeping force in the Armenian-controlled areas of Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian leaders appear to be concerned that Russia will withdraw some of these forces to replenish its depleted ranks in Ukraine. In an effort to reassure Russia’s allies in Yerevan, Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu—who is said to be under pressure from Putin for the poor Russian military performance in Ukraine—reportedly called his Azerbaijani counterpart to discuss “ways of stabilizing the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and supporting security in the Caucasus.” Perhaps as part of their efforts to engage Moscow to end the fighting in Ukraine, the United States and France issued statements criticizing Azerbaijan for the flareup. The State Department said, “The U.S. is deeply concerned about gas disruptions and Azerbaijan’s troop movements. Armenia and Azerbaijan need to use direct communications channels to immediately de-escalate.”

Moscow also faces new problems in Georgia, which has not troubled Moscow greatly, despite simmering resentment over Russia’s 2008 military incursion. In the wake of the Ukraine war, Georgian leaders initially stated that the country would not join Western sanctions on Russia. However, the political opposition, identifying strongly with Ukraine as a victim of Russian aggression, attacked the government for trying to undermine Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Opposition pressure appeared to succeed, insofar as Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili subsequently pledged to join international financial sanctions against the Kremlin. Georgia’s Foreign Minister reaffirmed that stance, saying, “We are in full compliance with the financial sanctions imposed by the international community [against Russia]. The National Bank of Georgia has already made it clear that Georgia is complying with its obligations and international standards.” Appearing to move even further toward the opposition view, Georgia’s ruling party announced plans to “immediately” submit an application to join the European Union, after the bloc’s parliament backed Ukraine’s bid for membership amid Russia’s invasion.

Some of Moscow’s allies in the pro-Russian breakaway regions of Georgia seized on the Ukraine invasion as an opportunity to move. The Russian-backed breakaway region of South Ossetia immediately sought to hold a referendum on joining Russia. Abkhazia, the other Kremlin-backed breakaway region, did not take similar action. The Georgian government called the planned Ossetia vote unacceptable, and Russian leaders immediately denied having instigated the referendum attempt. It is not clear whether the South Ossetian attempt to legally join Russia will proceed. However, the increased polarization of Georgia’s politics—including new calls by many Georgians to recapture South Ossetia and Abkhazia from Russian control—might complicate Putin’s reported plans to redeploy 1,200 to 2,000 troops from the Russian-occupied Georgian territories to Ukraine. For Georgia’s government, the effort to find middle ground evidently failed when Zelenskyy decided to recall the Ukraine ambassador from Tblisi, claiming Georgia had not done enough to punish Russia for the invasion. The re-ignition of supposedly dormant disputes in the Caucasus has demonstrated that Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine has had significant unintended consequences that might outlast the war.

Opposition in Armenia rallies against govt’s land handling

Global Times, China
April 6 2022
Published: Apr 06, 2022 04:56 PM

   

Azerbaijani soldiers film Azeri military trucks moving through the town of Lachin on Tuesday. Azerbaijani soldiers and military trucks rolled into the final district given up by Armenia in a peace deal that ended weeks of fighting over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. Photo: AFP

Several thousand opposition supporters rallied on Tuesday in the Armenian capital Yerevan to denounce the government’s handling of a territorial dispute with arch-foe Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Long-contested between the Caucasus neighbors, Karabakh was at the center of an all-out war in 2020 that claimed more than 6,500 lives before it ended with a Russian-brokered cease-fire agreement.

The pact saw Armenia cede swathes of territories it had controlled for decades in what was seen in Armenia as a national humiliation, sparking weeks of mass anti-government protests.

Waving Armenian and Karabakh flags, protesters filled the capital’s central Freedom Square on Tuesday evening, with many shouting anti-government slogans.

They then marched through downtown Yerevan, vowing to block traffic in the streets later in the evening.

The rally was held on the eve of a summit in Brussels between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

“The government is ready to give away Karabakh to Azerbaijan,” Gegham Manukyan, a leader of opposition Dashnaktsutyun party told AFP at the rally.

“We have gathered here to draw red lines which no Armenian government must cross while dealing with Azerbaijan.”

“Many in Armenia rule out an option of Karabakh being part of Azerbaijan.”

During their talks on Wednesday – mediated by the European Council President Charles Michel – Aliyev and Pashinyan are expected to discuss the start of negotiations on a “comprehensive peace treaty.”

Armenia and Azerbaijan Hold Nagorno-Karabakh Peace Talks

FP
Foreign Policy
April 6 2022

By Colm Quinn, the newsletter writer at Foreign Policy.

Thousands of opposition supporters rally in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on April 5 to denounce the government’s handling of a territorial dispute with arch-foe Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.Thousands of opposition supporters rally in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on April 5 to denounce the government’s handling of a territorial dispute with arch-foe Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. KAREN MINASYAN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

Pashinyan and Aliyev Meet in Brussels

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev meet Wednesday in Brussels for talks mediated by EU Council President Charles Michel amid fears of fresh conflict over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Although Russia is not part of Wednesday’s talks, President Vladimir Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine looms large. Russian peacekeeping forces have been deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh as part of a Russian-brokered peace deal since the 2020 conflict ended in Azerbaijan’s favor. Whether they stay there depends on how the war in Ukraine progresses, as does Moscow’s interest in restoring peace should a renewed Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict break out.

Armenia has reason to worry about the future, despite Russia’s historically strong support. Moscow’s failure to intervene on Armenia’s behalf in 2020, despite a defense pact, illustrates the shifting allegiances in the South Caucasus. On Feb. 22, the day after Putin publicly recognized the independence of the Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic, Aliyev was in Moscow signing a deal to increase military and diplomatic cooperation.

Recent incidents on the ground have raised tensions between the two sides. In March, Armenia accused Azerbaijan of violating a cease-fire agreement when Azerbaijani troops captured the town of Farukh, a strategically important village in Nagorno-Karabakh in an area usually patrolled by Russian forces. Azerbaijan rejected the accusation, saying the town was part of its internationally recognized territory.

Armenia’s security council has since accused Azerbaijan of “preparing the ground for fresh provocations and an offensive on Nagorno-Karabakh.”

During Wednesday’s talks, Pashinyan and Aliyev are expected to discuss Nagorno-Karabakh as well as other pressing bilateral issues. Despite their differences, both leaders have sounded positive notes coming into the meeting. Lilit Makunts, Armenia’s ambassador to the United States, said via e-mail that she expects a “constructive” meeting and that her government is both “keen and has political will to achieve peace and stability.”

“In this context leaders may also touch base upon the issues of a possible comprehensive peace agreement,” Makunts added.

Khazar Ibrahim, Azerbaijan’s ambassador to the United States, also intimated that a nascent peace deal was forming. “We all need peace,” Ibrahim told Foreign Policy. “We expect practical steps in the direction of having a real peace deal.”

Regardless of the outcome, the fact that the two leaders are meeting at all is significant, especially since a formal framework for negotiations has yet to open. It also highlights the interest the European Union has taken in the issue and follows a similar meeting at the end of 2021.

“With the situation in Ukraine right now, it’s really very important that we have EU officials at such a senior level to get involved bringing these sides together,” said Olesya Vartanyan, a senior analyst for the South Caucasus region at the International Crisis Group. Vartanyan noted the frequency of engagement as a further positive sign: “It’s not just one event they had in December one day—it’s something that is becoming more of a process.”

The EU’s involvement is also timely, given Russia’s preoccupation with the war in Ukraine. Russia’s economically precarious situation risks diluting the power it once had to mediate in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, a development that calls for more interlocutors, Vartanyan said. “If Russia really becomes weaker and not able to pay attention to the South Caucasus, then I’m afraid we are left with a huge problem.”

Whether the EU can present itself as a neutral party is also up for debate. If one looks at its recent aid package to the six EU Eastern Partnership nations, the balance clearly seems in favor of Armenia, with the $3.1 billion doled out last July contrasting with the $152 million given to Azerbaijan. (Ukraine, another member of the partnership, received $2 billion.) However, relations could soon shift in Azerbaijan’s favor, especially as European countries look for replacements for Russian gas.

In Armenia, there is a sense among opposition groups that another capitulation is on the horizon. As Joshua Kucera explores in Eurasianet, that feeling stems from a subtle change in rhetoric from Armenia’s leaders, who seem resigned to Azerbaijan gaining full control over ethnic Armenian areas in Nagorno-Karabakh currently under the protection of Russian peacekeepers.

Georgian Speaker Meets Armenian Leaders

Civil Georgia, Georgia
April 6 2022

Georgian Parliament Speaker Shalva Papuashvili, visiting Yerevan on April 5-6, has met Armenian President Vahagn Khachaturyan and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Meeting with President Khachaturyan on April 5, Speaker Papuashvili stressed the importance of cooperation in the South Caucasus, the Georgian Parliament’s press service reported.

In this regard, he highlighted Georgia’s Peaceful Neighborhood Initiative, envisaging for Tbilisi to host an international gathering which would include Armenia, Azerbaijan, the U.S. and the EU to facilitate dialogue and confidence-building in the South Caucasus.

Meanwhile, the Armenian official’s administration said that in the context of regional security, President Khachaturyan “presented Armenia’s long-standing efforts to establish peace, underscoring the issue of defending the rights of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Also on April 5, Speaker Papuashvili and PM Pashinyan discussed cooperation between the two countries and existing security risks and challenges in the region, the Parliament’s press service stated.

“I think that the Armenian-Georgian relations are in a unique period, we can see new dynamics, new mood, new perspectives at the political level,” PM Pashinyan told the Georgian parliamentary chairperson during the meeting.

The Armenian PM further expressed his hope that Tbilisi and Yerevan will attain closer institutional cooperation through “high-level and intensive political relations.”

Speaker Papuashvili has previously met his Armenian counterpart Alen Simonyan as part of the two-day trip. He is also set to sit down with  Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and the leader of Armenia’s Apostolic Church, Catholicos Karekin II.

Armenian opposition rallies ahead of Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting

eurasianet
April 6 2022
Ani Mejlumyan Apr 6, 2022
Armenians rally April 5 to demand no territorial concessions ahead of a meeting between their prime minister and the president of Azerbaijan. (photo: Armenia Alliance, Facebook)

Armenia’s political opposition has rallied to demand no territorial concessions to Azerbaijan ahead of the two leaders’ meeting in Brussels.

Thousands, in the largest demonstration since elections in July 2021, rallied in central Yerevan on April 5 under a banner reading “Artsakh will not be part of Azerbaijan.” Artsakh is an alternate Armenian name for Karabakh, the territory at the heart of the decades-long conflict between the two sides. “For the sake of Artsakh, let’s save Armenia,” participants chanted.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was to meet Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev the following day in Brussels, the first face-to-face between the two leaders since December.

As the government’s public rhetoric has shifted in recent months, many Armenians have begun to fear that the leadership is preparing to cede control over Karabakh.

The rally was organized by the two opposition blocs in parliament, “Armenia” and “I Have Honor,” who accused Pashinyan of putting Armenia’s own security at risk with his conciliatory moves toward Azerbaijan.

“None of us here want war, but we can’t surrender to the butcher,” Aram Vartevanyan, a senior member of the Armenia Alliance, told the crowd. “We can’t lose again because we have nothing to lose anymore,” said Hayk Mamijanian of “I Have Honor.”

The rally also saw a rare public appearance by Serzh Sargsyan, the former president of Armenia whom Pashinyan overthrew in the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” and who is now a supporter of “I Have Honor.”

Sargsyan told reporters that he doubted a formal agreement would be reached in Brussels but that Pashinyan and Aliyev may come to a verbal agreement that would be “unacceptable” for Armenians. “The Armenian people will never agree to have Artsakh under Azerbaijani rule under any circumstances,” he said. “Otherwise, Armenia will always be begging for peace.”

Public support for ceding control over Karabakh is virtually zero. In the most recent poll by the International Republican Institute, in December, respondents were asked what would be an acceptable solution to the conflict with Azerbaijan. Thirty-five percent favored independence for the territory, 50 percent making it part of Armenia, and 11 percent making it part of Russia. One percent favored the status quo, and less than one percent said “other.”

Speakers at the rally demanded that Armenia must remain Nagorno-Karabakh’s security guarantor and that the country could not sign a treaty with Azerbaijan that would violate the rights of the Armenian population of Karabakh to self-determination.

“Any government that deviates from our core demands will be sent to hell,” said Ishkhan Saghatelyan, a member of the Armenia Alliance and a senior official in the Armenian Revolutionary Federation – Dashnaktsutyun.

In Karabakh itself, the territory’s de facto parliament also issued a statement on the eve of the Brussels meeting calling for “Armenian unity.”

“We are certain that the republics of Armenia and Artsakh with the full support of the Armenian diaspora, merged into a single fist, together will be able to withstand regional challenges and stand up for its national interests,” the parliament said in an April 5 statement published on its website.

Aliyev and Pashinyan are meeting to work out the implementation of the ceasefire agreement that ended their 2020 war, and to work on a comprehensive political resolution of the conflict.

The terms under which that political agreement are being discussed have evolved in recent weeks. Baku has offered a five-point proposal to Yerevan, according to which the two sides would recognize each other’s territorial integrity, promise not make claims to each other’s territory in the future, not threaten each other’s security, demarcate the border, and unblock transportation links.

Pashinyan and other officials have said that proposal is acceptable, but also that the rights of Armenians living in Karabakh must be guaranteed.

That has fed suspicion that Pashinyan is prepared to recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity – that is, including Karabakh, which is now protected by a 2,000-strong Russian peacekeeping force.

“We are not hearing statements like ‘Artsakh can’t be a part of Azerbaijan under any form,’ instead we hear that Armenia and Azerbaijan are recognizing each other’s territorial integrity and shouldn’t have any claims over each other’s territory,” Benyamin Poghosyan, head of the Yerevan think tank Center for Political and Economic Strategic Studies, said in an April 3 program on RFE/RL. “I can conclude that the only claim the Armenian government has on Azerbaijan is to give up that 3,000-square-kilometers area that is now under Russian control, give that territory some status under Azerbaijan, and promise not to kill the people in Artsakh.”

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Members of Armenian parliament visit Helena, Yellowstone

April 5 2022


    Cece Braken, of the Lewis and Clark County elections office, talks with Armenian members of parliament about the election process on Tuesday at the City-County Building.


Several members of the National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia are visiting Helena and other parts of Montana this week, following an agenda peppered with visits with state officials, learning about the American political system, touring Yellowstone National Park and getting a taste of life in the Big Sky State.

The six-member group arrived March 31 in a visit hosted by WorldMontana, an affiliate of Global Ties that participates in the International Visitor Leadership Program sponsored by the U.S. State Department. This was WorldMontana’s first in-person program since 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Stops included meetings with the Montana Legislative Division, Secretary of State’s Office and various state lawmakers, a visit with Lt. Gov. Kristen Juras, tours of the Helena Independent Record and Montana Historical Society, a stop at the Commissioner of Political Practices Office and a visit with the Lewis and Clark County elections office.

“They had a lot of questions about the school elections, especially about the differences between how their country runs their school system and how we run our school system,” said Connor Fitzpatrick, elections division supervisor. “Their government is more involved.”

“They were a great bunch,” he said.

The Armenia contingent will be in Helena through Thursday, according to their agenda.

Other stops on the agenda include a visit to the office of Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., a visit to the Montana Department of Commerce, a presentation with Helena Rotary International Club and dinner at the Montana Club.

The group also met with Dave Hunter, a U.S. political and parliamentary consultant based in Montana, and was to meet with Patricia Cotter, former state Supreme Court justice.

During their visit to the Independent Record, they said mining is the No. 1 industry in Armenia, but that most people work in agriculture. Although there are about 8 million Armenians living throughout the world, only about 3 million live in Armenia. 

They also said they are geographically located so that both Russians and Ukrainians visit their country. They said Russia is a strategic partner.

They said there are 107 members of their parliament, comprised of three main factions.

Separate group photos were taken during their visit to the Independent Record, with members saying they were not allowed to have photos taken with other factions. 

WorldMontana hosts nearly 150 international leaders through this and other programs each year. Participants may include parliament members or international leaders in the fields of environmental affairs, local government, media, education, human rights, law, e-commerce, management of nonprofit organizations, livestock and wildlife management or foreign affairs.

Alexandra “Sasha” Fendrick, executive director of WorldMontana, said the tours provide a people-to-people experience.

“They are professional politicians, but they are also people,” she said.






Akçam appointed to UCLA Armenian Genocide Research Program

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 6 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – At the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), the Promise Armenian Institute has announced the creation of the Armenian Genocide Research Program as one of its component parts, with Turkish historian Taner Akçam appointed as its inaugural director, the Armenian Mirror Spectator reports.

Akçam will be leaving his position as Kaloosdian Mugar Professor in Modern Armenian History and Genocide at the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies of Clark University, in Worcester, Mass., and assuming his new post on May 1 of this year.

“When we decided to establish this research program, we did a full search as per UCLA’s requirements, and Taner [Akçam] was selected to be the inaugural director. This will be an entity that certainly will be related to Armenian studies, and there certainly will be overlapping interests with the Armenian Studies Center, but it is going to be a separate program within the Promise Armenian Institute,” said Dr. Ann R. Karagozian, the director of the Promise Armenian Institute (PAI).

Akçam declared, “The reason why they make this an administrative position, but not a faculty position, in my understanding, is that this is the easiest way to establish such a position. A faculty position would have to go through different boards, meetings and departments and it would have taken maybe 3-4 years because it is a state university.”

Akçam is leaving his tenured chair at Clark University permanently. He acknowledged that this move is a little risky, as the position must be renewed every year. He said, “There is a risk, but I thought I should take this risk because it is worth it.”

Karagozian was very positive about the program, declaring: “I am confident that the Armenian Genocide program will continue. If it is successful – and I have every reason to believe it will be entirely successful – we are hopeful that it will eventually become an endowed chair associated with this program.”

New children’s library in Sweden home to Armenian literature

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 6 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – A newly established children’s library in Sweden includes Armenian literature, according to information provided by the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport.

Books written by classic and contemporary Armenian writers are now part of Sweden’s largest collection of foreign language children’s books.

The project is being implemented in cooperation with the diplomatic missions of foreign countries accredited in Sweden, the Astrid Lindgren Foundation, the Sami community of Sweden, and the Swedish library network.

The Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of Armenia, through the mediation of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, has donated sixteen children’s books, including by national poet of Armenia Hovhannes Tumanyan.

U.S. "encourages" further Armenia-Azerbaijan peace talks

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 6 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke with Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev on Tuesday, April 5 and expressed his encouragement for further peace negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

According to two separate statements from the Department of State, Blinken cited Pashinyan and Aliyev’s planned meeting with European Council President Charles Michel on April 6.

“He reiterated the United States stood ready to help by engaging bilaterally and with like-minded partners, including through our role as an OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair, to help the countries find a long-term comprehensive peace,” the statements said.

Pashinyan’s office said in a statement of its own that the PM presented the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) caused by the actions of the Azerbaijani units, the humanitarian issues, and attached importance to a targeted reaction from the United States.

Azerbaijan has broken into Nagorno-Karabakh, and the incursion has left three Armenian soldiers dead and at least 14 others injured. On March 24, Azerbaijan stormed into the zone of the responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers stationed in the area and is refusing to completely withdraw its forces from strategic heights.

the two exchanged views on the demarcation and delimitation of borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the possibility of unblocking communications in the region, as well as the ongoing dialogue between Armenia and Turkey.

UK lawmakers meet displaced Karabakh civilians in Syunik

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 6 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – The members of a UK delegation led by the Head of Great Britain-Armenia Friendship Group Tim Loughton have visited the province of Syunik to communicate with and learn more about displaced residents if Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh).

During the 44-day war unleashed by Azerbaijan in the fall of 2020, more than 20.000 families from Artsakh moved to Syunik. About 4.000 displaced people currently reside in the province, including 248 families displaced from Shushi, Askeran and Hadrut.

The Chair of the Armenian parliament’s Standing Committee on Foreign Relations Eduard Aghajanyan, members of the Committee Maria Karapetyan, Sargis Khandanyan, and Yerevan’s Ambassador to the UK Varuzhan Nersesyan accompanied the delegation.

During a meeting, Syunik governor Robert Ghukasyan presented the situation created in the provnce after the 44-day war and underlined that the international community should express its distinct position on concrete cases.

“We heard these people’s stories who had gone through the war. That information is interesting and valuable. We would like to take with us their messages, their voice to our parliament and present everything happening in this part of the world,” Loughton said.

Member of the British delegation Baroness Caroline Cox noted: “Beginning from 1991 first war, I have been next to you. I have seen with you the tragedies and horrible events that have happened during these years. I have seen what crimes have been committed by Azerbaijan in the war. We know that you have suffered a lot. I have always admired the Armenian people, every time you reborn from the ashes. You will always be in my heart and prayers. I am next to you.”