Category: 2022
CivilNet: A New Wave of Russian Migrants in Armenia
CivilNet: Two Armenian soldiers have been found dead at their posts in the past two days
- 4,000 Ukrainian citizens have crossed the border into Armenia in the last three weeks, according to Denis Avtonomov, the Ukrainian Chargé d’Affaires in Armenia.
- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone conversation to discuss the situations in Nagorno-Karabakh and Ukraine.
- In separate incidents, two Armenian soldiers were found dead with gunshot wounds in the past two days.
Credits: Ruptly
Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijan builds 1,500 km of roads in liberated lands
By Sabina Mammadli
Some 1,500 kilometers of roads have been built in the Azerbaijani territories liberated from Armenian occupation in the 2020 Second Karabakh War.
Azerbaijani Prime Minister Ali Asadov made the remarks during a plenary session of the parliament’s discussion of the Cabinet of Ministers’ report on activities in 2021.
The most important issue, he said, was reviving Karabakh and creating the conditions for former internally displaced people to return to their homes.
He also described the further improvement of people’s living conditions in other parts of the country as a priority.
Asadov emphasized that a single approach is used in all regions.
Meanwhile, the Azerbaijan Automobile Roads State Agency published the most recent information on road infrastructure projects completed in the economic regions of Karabakh and East Zangazur.
Fuzuli-Hadrut highway
The12km Fuzuli-Hadrut highway falls under the first technical category and contains four lanes on it.
Forty percent of the earthwork, 23 percent of the paving, and 21 percent of the pipe construction is completed. A 300m stretch of the road has been paved with asphalt concrete.
The road project is expected to be completed in 2022.
Hadrut-Tug-Azykh highway
This 22-km highway falls into the fourth technical category. It has two lanes.
The road surface is being milled, the lower layer of asphalt concrete pavement is being laid on a 2.7-km section, and a new road base is being built on an 800-m section.
The road project is scheduled to be completed in 2022.
Barda–Aghdam highway
This 45-km highway falls under the first technical category. It contains four lanes.
Fifty-seven percent of the earthworks, 19 percent of the paving, 45 percent of the pipe construction, and 93 percent of the bridge construction have been completed.
The road construction is scheduled to be completed in 2022.
Gubadli–Eyvazli highway
The 28,5-km highway falls under the fourth technical category. There are two lanes on it.
Work on the destruction of rocks and the construction of a subgrade is currently underway. The regulatory expansion of the highway has been completed at the 8th km of the highway.
The road construction is scheduled to be completed in 2022.
Gubadli-Mahmudlu-Yazduzu highway
The highway is 26,4 km long and falls under the fourth technical category. There are two lanes on it.
The road planning work is currently underway and is scheduled to be completed in 2022.
Road infrastructure in Kalbajar, Lachin
The highway is 726, 3 km long and belongs to the fourth technical category. There are two lanes on it.
Earthworks are completed by 83 percent, road construction and paving by 25 percent, pipe laying by 95 percent, and road sign installation by 82 percent.
The road work is scheduled to be completed in 2022.
New road to bypass Lachin
The highway is 32 km long. It falls under the third technical category. It contains three lanes.
Along with the design of the highway, earthworks and the construction of a subgrade and a bridge are being carried out on sections 13-24 km.
The road works are planned to be completed in 2022.
Lachin Airport
The highway is undergoing construction and mobilization. In addition, drilling and blasting operations are underway to clear a 10-hectare area.
The road construction is scheduled to be completed in 2022.
Talish–Tapgaragoyunlu–Gashalti–Naftalan highway
The highway is 22 km long and classified as 2-4 technical. There are two lanes on it.
Earthworks on the first 8.5 kilometers and sections 9-22 kilometers of the road have been completed; work on water pipes and pavement is currently underway.
The road construction is scheduled to be completed in 2022.
Khudafarin-Gubadli- Lachin highway
The highway is 70,4 kilometers long and falls under the first technical category. There are four lanes on it.
Construction of a subgrade and bridges is underway at 45 km in the direction of Gubadli-Lachin and 14 km in the direction of Khanlig.
Earthworks have been completed in 47 percent of cases, pavement works in 10 percent of cases, pipe laying and underground passage construction in 25 percent of cases, bridge construction in 24 percent of cases, and retaining wall contraction in 22 percent of cases.
Shukurbayli – Jabrayil – Hadrut highway
The highway is 39,7 km long and falls under the first technical category. There are four lanes on it.
Earthworks have been completed in 58 percent of cases, pavement works in 17 percent of cases, pipe laying and underground passageway construction in 64 percent of cases, and bridge construction in 56 percent of cases.
The road construction is scheduled to be completed in 2023.
Aghdam–Fuzuli highway
The highway is 64,8 km long, it falls under the first technical category. It contains four lanes.
Earthworks are 3 percent complete, and projecting is also underway.
The road construction is scheduled to be completed in 2023.
Ahmadbayli-Fuzuli-Shusha highway
The highway is 81,6 km long, it falls under the first technical category. It contains four-six lanes.
Construction of a subgrade, as well as eight bridges, six tunnels, and five underpasses, is currently underway.
The road construction is scheduled to be completed in 2023.
Ahmadbayli-Horadiz-Jabrayil-Zangilan-Aghband new highway
The highway is 123,6 km long, it falls under the first technical category. It contains four lanes.
Earthworks are 50 percent complete, pipe laying and underground passageway construction is 35 percent complete, and bridge construction is 48 percent complete.
The road construction is expected to be finished in 2024.
Kalbajar–Lachin highway
The highway is 72,3 km long and is classified as first and second technical. It has two to three lanes and a 9.8-kilometer tunnel.
Earthworks and mobilization efforts are currently underway. Approximately 2 percent of the work has been completed.
The road construction is scheduled to be completed in 2025.
Toghanali–Kalbajar–Istisu highway
The highway is 80,7 km long and falls into the first and second technical categories. It has two-three lanes.
Tunnel 1 is 6.3 km long and the Murovdag tunnel is 11.6 km long.
Subgrade construction is currently underway, as is the installation of water pipes in the 12-13 km and 26-28 km areas. Work to relocate existing canals has been completed in sections 8.5 – 8.7 and 12.8 – 13.5 km; water pipe laying has been completed in some areas, and canal construction continues in sections 26 – 26.5 km.
Drilling of 1,857 m was completed at the Murovdag tunnel’s entrance and exit. Drilling operations began at the tunnel’s exit.
The project is expected to be completed in 2026.
Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijani State Committee protests against European Parliament’s biased resolution
BAKU, Azerbaijan, March 17. The Azerbaijani State Committee on Religious Associations has made a statement protesting against the biased resolution of the European Parliament adopted on March 10, 2022, Trend reports via the committee.
According to the statement, the resolution was prepared under the influence of the Armenian lobby, doesn’t reflect reality, and contains false Armenian statements.
The statement noted that the resolution nothing mentions the true situation connected with the fate of Azerbaijani historical and religious monuments.
So, during the period of Armenian occupation in the territories of Azerbaijan, 65 out of 67 mosques were destroyed (the Aghdam Juma mosque was partially preserved due to the fact that it was used by Armenian armed forces for military purposes, and the Yukhari Govhar Agha Mosque in Shusha, after the so-called repair, was presented as a “Persian” mosque ).
The resolution also mentions nothing about the ethnic cleansing and genocide against Azerbaijanis by Armenia, the Armenization of Azerbaijani toponyms, the destruction, along with hundreds of historical and cultural monuments, mosques and other shrines, the desecration of religious values, the facts of the Gregorianization or destruction of Albanian churches, in general, about the vandalism against the religious and cultural heritage of Azerbaijan.
Besides, nearly 900 cemeteries were completely destroyed, tombstones were broken, and graves were excavated with the desecration of the remains. Azerbaijani citizens were deprived of the opportunity to visit the graves of their loved ones for 30 years.
The committee’s statement once again highlighted the fact that during the 2020 second Karabakh war, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces didn’t conduct any military operations against civilians, as well as religious facilities, which was repeatedly confirmed by foreign journalists.
“Following the second Karabakh war, the Azerbaijani government announced its intention to restore all religious monuments destroyed by the Armenian Armed Forces in the territories liberated from Armenian occupation during the war, and this process is already being carried out as part of the socio-economic development of these territories on the basis of the “Great Return” program,” the statement said.
Besides, according to the committee’s statement, the Azerbaijani side has repeatedly stated that the protection of historical and religious monuments in the territory of Azerbaijan, including the liberated lands, is the responsibility of the Azerbaijani state.
The statement further said that the ongoing restoration of two churches, along with mosques, in Shusha, is a clear indicator of Azerbaijan’s respectful attitude towards other cultures and religions.
“Azerbaijan, unlike Armenia, doesn’t discriminate against historical and cultural heritage on religious and ethnic grounds and is committed to its obligations under international conventions, including the 1954 Hague Convention on the Protection of Cultural Property in Time of Armed Conflict,” the statement emphasized. “However, the Armenian side violates, along with this Convention, the requirements of the “International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights”, the European Convention of 1992 “On the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage” and other international documents.”
The statement also reminded that following the video meeting held on February 4, 2022, with the participation of the President of Azerbaijan, the President of France as the chairmanship of this country in the EU, President of the Council of the EU and the Prime Minister of Armenia, an agreement was reached to send a UNESCO mission to Azerbaijan and Armenia.
According to the statement, the above agreement is a confirmation of the need to study the state of the cultural heritage belonging to the Azerbaijani people on the territory of Armenia.
In conclusion, the committee’s statement expressed regret that the resolution of the European Parliament didn’t mention all the facts.
AW: Armenia and Azerbaijan consider peace talks as violence in Artsakh escalates
A sign reading I love Khramort (Hunan Tadevosyan, February 26)
While violence escalates in Artsakh, Armenian and Azerbaijani authorities have exchanged statements on initiating peace talks.
Human Rights Defender of Artsakh Gegham Stepanyan has appealed to the international community to take action against Azerbaijan’s escalated aggression targeting the civilian Armenian population of Artsakh. He said that while Azerbaijan’s authorities have pursued tactics to intimidate the Armenian population of Artsakh since the end of the 2020 war, their actions have intensified in recent days, as Azerbaijan’s military is now targeting civilian communities using large caliber grenade launchers and mortars, weapons that have not been deployed since the war.
“The deliberate and coordinated actions of the Azerbaijani authorities are aimed at evicting Armenians from Artsakh and pursuing a policy of ethnic cleansing,” Stepanyan said in the March 15 video broadcast.
Azerbaijan’s military fired on the villages of Khramort and Nakhichanik of the Askeran region and the villages of Khnushinak and Karmir Shuka of the Martuni region in Artsakh on March 9, according to Artsakh officials. Last month, videos spread on social media depicting Azerbaijani forces ordering Armenian civilians to evacuate border villages in Artsakh by loudspeaker. Later videos depict broadcasts of calls to prayer, the Azerbaijani national anthem and selections from an Azerbaijani opera.
Artsakh Human Rights Defender Gegham Stepanyan
Meanwhile, Stepanyan says that restoration work began on Wednesday on the primary pipeline supplying gas to Artsakh from Armenia. The entire population of Artsakh was left without gas in sub-zero temperatures, compromising access to heating and hot water and forcing schools and medical centers to close, after Azerbaijan’s authorities prohibited Armenian crews from accessing the damaged section of the pipeline for over a week. The pipeline runs through an area under the control of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces near Shushi.
Tensions along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border have also intensified in the past week, with reports of renewed gunfire. Armenian soldier Hrach Arami Manasaryan died from a gunshot wound on March 7 after the Azerbaijani Armed Forces opened fire on Armenian military posts along the western part of the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. The United States mission to the OSCE released a statement mourning Manasaryan’s death and calling for “greater restraint, for forces to distance themselves from each other in the contested border areas, and for intensified diplomatic engagement to find comprehensive solutions to all outstanding issues.”
Yerevan-based analyst Tigran Grigoryan said that the Russian invasion of Ukraine triggered this latest round of violence. “Azerbaijan is using the small window of opportunity created by the war in Ukraine to reach some tactical goals on the ground. Baku is also testing Russia’s red lines and limitations in Nagorno-Karabakh in this new geopolitical reality. Azerbaijan will surely keep on trying to further exploit Moscow’s weaknesses if the Russian war effort in Ukraine lasts for too long,” he wrote.
Meanwhile, Armenian and Azerbaijani authorities have said in recent days that they are preparing to launch a negotiation process on signing a peace agreement.
Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Vahan Hunanyan told Armenpress news agency on March 11 that Armenia will “probably soon apply” to the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs to initiate peace talks with Azerbaijan.
Later that day, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said that Baku had sent a proposal to Yerevan listing five principles that must precede the normalization of relations between the two countries. “If Armenia sincerely wants to normalize relations, then this is a very good opportunity for them,” Bayramov told Anadolu Agency.
On March 14, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry publicized the five principles, which include mutual recognition of each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, mutual affirmation of the absence of territorial claims to each other and a legally binding obligation not to make such claims in the future, refraining from threatening each other’s security, delimitation and demarcation of the border and unblocking of communication and transport links.
That day, the Armenian Foreign Ministry announced that it had responded to the proposals from Azerbaijan and applied to the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs to “organize negotiations on the signing of a peace agreement” between the two countries “on the basis of the UN Charter, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Helsinki Final Act.”
In an interview with Armenpress on March 15, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said that “every negotiation on a peace treaty must be held without preconditions.”
He also said that the principles set forth in the proposal do not address all of the existing problems in the region, namely the status of Artsakh and the rights and freedoms of the Armenians who reside there. “The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is not a territorial issue, but a matter of rights,” he said.
Olesya Vartanyan, senior South Caucasus analyst at the International Crisis Group, said that the exchange of official statements between Armenia and Azerbaijan “indicates that no resumption of the official talks is in sight.” “This is because they publicly revealed the details of weeks and months of discussions on how to return to negotiations,” she tweeted.
Anar Mammadli, a human rights activist from Azerbaijan, criticized the five-point proposal and called for a “comprehensive roadmap for peacebuilding” from the Azerbaijani government. “This should include the terms of peace with Armenia, the investigation of war crimes, demining of the region, joint study and protection of historical and cultural monuments, ensuring the security of the Armenians of Karabakh and other issues,” he wrote on Facebook.
Amid accusations of ceasefire violations by the Azerbaijani military, rumors have also been spreading in the Azerbaijani media criticizing the efficacy of the Russian peacekeeping mission in Artsakh.
An article published in the pro-government Report.az on March 7 blamed the Russian peacekeepers for failing to prevent ceasefire violations in Artsakh, which it attributes to the Armenian side.
“Considering that only Russian peacekeepers are deployed on the territory of Azerbaijan, it means that the responsibility for monitoring compliance with the ceasefire regime lies entirely with them. That is, the peacekeepers either do not cope with the functions assigned to them, or simply connive with the Armenians,” the article reads.
The article further accuses the Russian peacekeepers of “abusing Russia’s military operation in Ukraine” to arm Armenians in Artsakh.
An article published on the same day in military news website Caliber.az accused head of the Russian peacekeeping contingent Andrei Volkov of abusing his position and engaging in corrupt business practices in Artsakh, for which the article provides no evidence.
Rumors have also spread that Russian peacekeepers are leaving Artsakh for Ukraine. Videos disseminated on social media in Azerbaijan show a column of Russian military vehicles traveling along the Lachin corridor. Another article from Caliber.az, published on March 9, speculated that the Russian peacekeepers are “being redeployed to Ukraine,” once again without providing any evidence.
“According to another version, part of the Russian peacekeeping forces will be redeployed to the 102nd military base at Gyumri, and soldiers at that base will in turn be sent to help the Russian army in Ukraine,” the article reads.
The Artsakh Security Council denied these rumors, stating that the Russian peacekeeping force “continues conducting its mission based on the provisions of the 2020 November 9 trilateral statement.”
The Russian mission in Artsakh, which has not issued a single press release since January 26, has not commented on the accusations.
Armenpress: 5.9 magnitude earthquake rocks southern Iran
5.9 magnitude earthquake rocks southern Iran
09:23, 17 March, 2022
YEREVAN, MARCH 17, ARMENPRESS. A magnitude 5.9 earthquake rocked southern Iran on Thursday, TASS reports citing the European Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC).
The quake’s epicenter was located at a depth of ten kilometers some 166 kilometers northwest of the city of Bandar Abbas with a population of around 352,000.
There have been no reports about casualties and damages.
UPDATED: Serviceman found dead in military position, investigation underway
09:29, 17 March, 2022
Last updated: 11:36
YEREVAN, MARCH 17, ARMENPRESS. Authorities are investigating the death of a serviceman at a military position, the Ministry of Defense said in a statement on March 17.
“On March 16, around 21:10, the body of conscripted serviceman Private Albert L. Siroyan (born 2002) of a military base of the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Armenia was found with a gunshot wound to the jaw in a military position deployed in the country’s south-eastern direction. An investigation is underway to fully determine the circumstances of the incident,” the Ministry of Defense said.
Military investigators said they’ve launched a criminal case on Article 360.1 Paragraph 2/3 of the Criminal Code, indicating that they have reasons to believe that Private Siroyan’s death was suicide and a co-serviceman is suspected in abetment to suicide.
Update shows information from military investigators.
G7 top diplomats to discuss situation around Ukraine on March 17
09:46, 17 March, 2022
YEREVAN, MARCH 17, ARMENPRESS. Group of Seven (G7) foreign ministers will hold online talks on March 17 to discuss the situation around Ukraine, TASS reports citing the Japanese foreign ministry.
Japan will be represented by Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi.
The ministers will discuss the current situation around Ukraine and will exchange views on further actions and steps to strengthen cooperation within G7.
MEP seriously concerned by current humanitarian situation in Artsakh
10:37, 17 March, 2022
YEREVAN, MARCH 17, ARMENPRESS. Chair of the Delegation for relations with the South Caucasus, Member of the European Parliament, Marina Kaljurand, has expressed her concerns about the current humanitarian situation in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).
In a statement she called for the speedy resumption of negotiations on a lasting conflict settlement.
“On 8 March, the natural gas pipeline supplying Nagorno-Karabakh was damaged in an area under the control of Azerbaijan. Despite freezing temperatures, the pipeline has not been repaired yet and the entire population of Nagorno-Karabakh has been without gas supplies already for a week. It is urgent that unhindered access is provided to the damage site without delay in order to restore supplies as soon as possible”, she said in a statement.
“At the same time, reports of ceasefire violations have multiplied since early March, along the Nagorno-Karabakh line of contact, as well as on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border, including reports of Azerbaijan’s high-calibre mortar shelling of several Nagorno-Karabakh villages. Over the past weeks, Azerbaijani army loudspeakers directed at these villages have been calling on the local Armenian population to leave the area, intensifying the psychological pressure and threatening the use of force.
I am seriously concerned by these developments and the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and strongly condemn any hostile actions aimed at civilians. I reiterate my call for the speedy resumption of negotiations on a lasting conflict settlement and recall the EU’s readiness to step up assistance to build confidence and address humanitarian and other issues”, the MEP said.