Azerbaijan must commit to respecting, protecting, and implementing the right to return of ethnic Armenians from NK – HRW

 12:20, 5 October 2023

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 5, ARMENPRESS. Governments involved in facilitating talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan should secure concrete commitments from Azerbaijan’s president on respecting, protecting, and implementing the right to return of ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh, Human Rights Watch said today. More than 100,000 ethnic Armenians, nearly the entire current population of the area, have fled in recent days, HRW said in the statement.

“Azerbaijan’s plan for reintegration of the region and its residents should set out how, in both the short and long-term, it will respect human rights, in particular those of ethnic minorities; and it should welcome an independent mission for sustained international monitoring of these commitments.

“Azerbaijan’s partners should insist on an international monitoring mission to report publicly on conditions facing ethnic Armenians who have remained in Nagorno-Karabakh, and to identify human rights violations, particularly those that would undermine ethnic Armenians’ right to return to their homes. Partner governments should also urge Azerbaijani authorities to take substantive steps to facilitate the right to return, either for short-term visits or for the longer-term.

“Azerbaijan’s partners should send an unambiguous message to the country’s leadership that when it comes to the right to return, they will not accept hollow rhetoric and half measures,” said Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The fear and lack of trust on all sides make a sustained international presence essential for the right to return to be meaningful, not theoretical.”

“Human Rights Watch interviewed, on the Armenian border, 14 individuals and 7 families who fled Nagorno-Karabakh; as well as 12 humanitarian workers, medical personnel, Armenian officials, and a representative of the former Nagorno-Karabakh de facto authorities.  

“The European Council President, Charles Michel, has facilitated a series of talks between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. A meeting between the two leaders had been planned on the sidelines of the European Political Community (EPC) summit in Granada on October 5, 2023, with Michel’s participation together with French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. On October 4, Azerbaijani media announced that Aliyev had refused to participate in the talks at the last minute, against the backdrop of the French foreign minister’s October 3 visit to Armenia and other developments.

“In possible future talks, European leaders should underscore the need for commitment to international rights monitoring and a comprehensive rights-compliant vision for the region that might encourage people to return. In an October 3 media interview, Michel urged Azerbaijan to “show goodwill by engaging, while respecting international law, to protect the rights and security of the entire population that lives in Azerbaijan, including the Armenian population.”

“Germany’s foreign minister has publicly indicated that it, “along with its international partners,” is “committed to an international mission” to Nagorno-Karabakh, adding that the people of the region “need to be able to trust that they are not alone.”

“More than 100,000 people have fled Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia since September 24, leaving the region, in effect, temporarily depopulated. Among those who remain are older people and the very ill, who were either unwilling or unable to flee. The mass exodus followed Azerbaijan’s September 19 military attacks to regain full control over Nagorno-Karabakh. The next day, a cease fire was announced, followed by initial talks between Azerbaijani authorities and representatives of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenian community. The enclave’s de facto authorities then agreed to disband.

“Nagorno-Karabakh is a region of Azerbaijan whose ethnic Armenian-majority population had, together with Republic of Armenian forces, fought a war to secede from Azerbaijan in the early 1990s. During this time, more than 700,000 ethnic Azeris were expelled or displaced from Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and 7 surrounding districts; 300,000 to 500,000 ethnic Armenians fled or were expelled from Azerbaijan starting in 1988.

“Nagorno-Karabakh remained de facto, separate from Azerbaijan, and occupied the seven surrounding districts until 2020, when Azerbaijan initiated hostilities and retook most of the area. A truce statement ending the 44-day war provided for Russian peacekeeping troops to have a presence in Nagorno-Karabakh and to control what was then the Lachin Corridor, the only road linking Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, until 2025.  

“Azerbaijan blocked the Lachin Corridor from December 12, 2022, through September 24, 2023, causing a near complete disruption of the movement of people and goods. It resulted in acute shortages of food, medications, hygiene products, petrol, and other essential supplies in Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan also eventually cut utility lines from Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh.

“When the Lachin road reopened on September 24, people began to flee. People interviewed said they fled their homes in fear and panic. Many also said that the nine-month de facto blockade and alleged atrocities by Azerbaijani forces during the 2020 war, including the killings and torture of civilians, caused extensive fear and distrust.

“People interviewed described an ordeal lasting days on the clogged Lachin road with little or no food or water, jammed in their cars, trucks, and other vehicles with their families and whatever few belongings they could quickly take.

“We could not even take any possessions except documents and a change of clothes, no space in the car,” said a woman from Kert village.

“A woman who travelled with nine people crowded into a car said: “We went to Khodjaly and spent four days at the peacekeepers’ base, at the airport just sitting on the asphalt, waiting for evacuation.”

“An official in Goris, Armenia, said that a number of people, mostly older, had died during the mass exodus, although Human Rights Watch did not independently verify this.

“Azerbaijani authorities have repeatedly said that everyone’s rights will be protected in Nagorno-Karabakh, yet such assertions are difficult to accept at face value after the months of severe hardships, decades of conflict, impunity for alleged crimes, in particular during hostilities, and the Azerbaijani government’s overall deteriorating human rights record, Human Rights Watch said.

“Most people interviewed said they would consider returning to Nagorno-Karabakh to collect their belongings if they could do so under international protection. A man from Khankendi (Stepanakert) said he would consider returning with his family for the longer term “if Azerbaijan allows Armenians to live there as a community – with Armenian schools, Armenian church, administration staff recruited from members of the community.”

“With Aliyev’s withdrawal from the Granada talks, the EU, US, and others involved in mediating negotiations should redouble efforts to emphasize specific steps Azerbaijan needs to take to facilitate the right to return, whether for short-term visits to collect remaining belongings, deal with their real estate property, visit graves, and the like, or for those who wish to return permanently, Human Rights Watch said.

“Those who choose not to return permanently should be compensated for their property and should be able to collect any other goods left behind as well as access any bank accounts or benefits, such as pensions. Azerbaijan should also ensure that evacuees’ property is protected from looting or other harm.

“For those who return, Azerbaijan should ensure access to education in the Armenian language and provide concrete guarantees protecting people’s ability to exercise civil, political, religious, and cultural rights without discrimination. Ethnic Armenians who fled should be provided with all necessary information and clear guidelines on resuming their residency in Nagorno-Karabakh, and how their rights, including to property and social security entitlements, will be assured. Future arrangements should provide for an ethnic balance in policing and local governance structures. In line with international humanitarian law, Azerbaijan should refrain from prosecuting people for participating in military hostilities during the wars of the 1990s and in 2020.

“The past few weeks have been a horrific period for Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population”, Williamson said. “Azerbaijan’s partners should now ensure that Azerbaijani authorities do not turn this trauma and loss into long-term injustice,” HRW said in the statement.

Turkish Press: Azerbaijan refuses Armenia peace talks after Türkiye not included

Daily Sabah, Turkey
Oct 4 2023

An anticipated meeting between Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was shelved after Aliyev decided not to join. The two leaders were scheduled to meet in Spain for peace talks after a 2020 war over Karabakh. Yet, tensions between the two countries rose again after Baku launched an offensive against Armenian separatists in its territory Karabakh in September.

Baku was already angered over France’s support for Armenia and what it called the biased stance of Paris despite its role as a mediator. France would have been among the participants of the meeting, along with Germany and Azerbaijan. Baku also proposed that Türkiye join the talks. When other parties rejected the idea, Aliyev decided to skip the meeting, Azerbaijani diplomatic sources told Anadolu Agency (AA) on Wednesday.

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Earlier, Turkish media outlets reported that President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan would not participate in the meeting.

A five-way meeting would focus on peace between two old foes, in conflict since the dissolution of the Soviet Union. France, home to a large Armenian diaspora, is among the major backers of Yerevan and offered military aid to Armenia earlier this week, to the chagrin of Baku, which wrestled back its territory Karabakh from the country after a brief war three years ago. Azerbaijan also complained that France was not neutral while trying to mediate the conflict after French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna accused Azerbaijan of a “blockade” and “forced displacement” of Armenians in Karabakh.

Azerbaijan on Tuesday criticized French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna's remarks against Baku during her visit to Armenia. "Repetition by (Catherine Colonna) of fake ‘blockade' and ‘forced displacement' narratives in her meetings in Armenia doesn't serve peace," Aykhan Hajizada, spokesperson for the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, wrote on X. "Her statements on ‘France always standing by Armenia's side' finally removed all masks off French claims to being an honest broker & neutral mediator," Hajizada added.

During her contacts in the Armenian capital Yerevan, Colonna blamed Azerbaijan for the recent developments in Karabakh.

In the fall of 2020, with Türkiye lending its support, in 44 days of clashes Azerbaijan liberated several cities, villages and settlements in Karabakh from illegal Armenian occupation. The war ended with a Russia-brokered cease-fire.

Then, earlier this month, in the wake of provocations by Armenian forces in Karabakh, Azerbaijan said it had launched "counterterrorism" activities to uphold the trilateral peace pact. After 24 hours, a cease-fire was reached, with Azerbaijan widely seen as the victor.

Armenia’s Pashinyan to attend EU talks despite Azerbaijani refusal

Reuters
Oct 4 2023

MOSCOW, Oct 4 (Reuters) – Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan will fly to Spain for talks with the European Union on Thursday despite reports that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has pulled out of the same event, Armenia's government reported on Wednesday.

Azerbaijani state media said earlier on Wednesday that Aliyev had decided against attending the EU-brokered event in Spain where he could have held talks with Pashinyan.

Russia's Interfax news agency Interfax cited Pashinyan as saying he regretted missing the opportunity to hold talks with Aliyev and saying he had been ready to sign what he called a "breakthrough" document related to the two countries' peace talks.

The five-way meeting with the leaders of France, Germany, Armenia, Azerbaijan and EU Council President Charles Michel was meant to take place in Granada, Spain, on Thursday.

Writing by Maxim Rodionov Editing by Andrew Osborn

Don’t expect EU sanctions on Azerbaijan — even though MEPs will vote for them

POLITICO
Oct 4 2023
BY ELISA BRAUN, GABRIEL GAVIN AND EDDY WAX

STRASBOURG — The European Parliament is expected to call for sanctions against Azerbaijan on Thursday over the seizure of the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh last month, but Baku's long lobbying reach in Europe and its crucial gas reserves mean EU countries will probably ignore the MEPs' demand.

Azerbaijan launched a lightning strike into the breakaway territory in September, forcing 100,000 people to flee. The crisis has exposed a deep division over Europe's attitude to the two parties. While European politicians are often willing to take Armenia's side in symbolic appeals and expressions of concern, Azerbaijan has established more hard power, not least because the EU is increasingly turning to Caspian Sea gas as an alternative to Russia after the Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine.

The situation "looks like it did with Ukraine," said Nathalie Loiseau, a French lawmaker from the centrist Renew group and chair of the Parliament’s defense committee, one of the co-authors of the resolution supporting Armenia. "But let's not repeat our mistakes, let's save our honor, let's save Armenia," she almost yelled at a pre-vote debate on Tuesday.

Surprisingly, Loiseau won support from voices of far-right ID group — which includes MEPs who have supported Azerbaijan.

By Gabriel Gavin
By Laura Kayali
By Laura Hülsemann

"It has to be said that the EU prefers gas to Armenian blood," said Jordan Bardella, one of France's rising stars on the far right.

Isabel Santos, a Portuguese MEP from the Socialists & Democrats, said the EU's gas deal with Azerbaijan "must be suspended, displaced populations must be accommodated and efforts must be made to conclude a sustainable peace agreement," while Željana Zovko, from the European People's Party, called on member countries to help Armenia. Fabio Massimo Castaldo, the most senior MEP in Italy's anti-establishment 5Star Movement, condemned "the silence, which sacrificed the Armenian population in the name of realpolitik."

The problem for the MEPs is that the power to impose sanctions lies with EU member countries, and they look unlikely to upset Azerbaijan's autocratic President Ilham Aliyev, who is winning the lobbying war.

Loiseau herself admitted that while her resolution, to be voted through on Thursday, is an important gesture, it won’t ultimately be effective.

“The real question is at member state level: Hungary is very close to Russia, Turkey and Azerbaijan, but there are also countries like Austria, Bulgaria and Romania that depend on Azerbaijani gas; and countries like Italy, which is hoping for operating licences for its oil company,” she told POLITICO. Meanwhile, at the top level, “the EU has gone mute” on the crisis, she blasted.

Despite a few tepid messages of concern from senior EU figures, the growing crisis is forcing Brussels to choose between its self-proclaimed values and the benefits of partnership with Azerbaijan.

Prior to the crisis, Europe was moving closer to Baku, with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen even traveling there in 2022 and hailing Azerbaijan as one of Europe’s more “reliable, trustworthy” partners. Even before Aliyev's military assault on Nagorno-Karabakh, the EU chief's agreement to double the purchases of Azerbaijani gas by 2027 already raised eyebrows.

An abandoned car left by fleeing Armenians on the side of a road leading to the Lachin corridor | Emmanuel Dunand/AFP via Getty Images

“Azerbaijan has huge hydrocarbon resources in the Caspian Sea, but to cover its domestic consumption, it has to import gas from Russia, so there's a thinking in Brussels that the gas contract was a huge mistake, because it means importing some of Russia's gas,” said Michaël Levystone, an associate researcher at the Russia-Eurasia Centre of IFRI, the French Institute of International Relations.

Gas supply from Azerbaijan’s Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) only accounts for 3.4 percent of the EU’s total imports in 2022, while Moscow still supplied up to 15 percent of the Continent’s gas demand that same year, according to a Commission spokesperson.

Azerbaijan is, however, set to play a pivotal role in Europe’s energy strategy, because of nearby Turkmenistan — which has the world's fourth largest gas reserves. Both EU and American companies are eyeing transit infrastructure through Azerbaijan, and EU officials are holding meetings to strengthen cooperation.

Azerbaijan's influence strategy started long before the war in Ukraine, recruiting former high-profile personalities from EU governments.

Former German government spokesman Otto Hauser was hired as an honorary consul and the Azerbaijanis secured ties with his political party, the Christian Democrats, according to an investigation by Vice. In France, former justice minister and MEP Rachida Dati has long been a vocal advocate for establishing closer ties with Baku. Azerbaijan also worked with Tony Blair, a former prime minister of the United Kingdom, to advise a BP-led consortium looking to export natural gas from Azerbaijan to Europe.

Baku has consistently invited EU lawmakers too, with some of them still acting as vocal supporters of the regime like Andris Ameriks, an MEP from Latvia in the Socialists and Democrats group, who told POLITICO he still "[supports] Azerbaijan's integrity."

François-Xavier Bellamy, a French conservative MEP who openly supports Armenia, said several colleagues confessed they had to withdraw their support for one of his pro-Armenia amendments because of pressure coming from their energy ministers and other colleagues. He also said he had been the target of a defamation campaign alleging he was paid by Armenia.

On the other side, Armenia is working with lobbying firm Rasmussen Global and also counting on the European Armenian community, which protested on October 1 in various capitals and is active in calling politicians to action or even putting pressure on candidates ahead of elections. But Azerbaijan's years of lobbying and economic arguments can hardly be outweighed by the lesser resources Armenia invested in its influence strategy.

“It's quite embarrassing for Western democracies that we have been sitting idly by while the Azeris de facto have blocked access to Nagorno-Karabakh,” said Anders Fogh Rasmussen, founding chairman of Rasmussen Global and former NATO secretary-general.

For the time being, Europe is clinging to its position as a mediator, but now has to face the fact that peace talks are nowhere near close. Azerbaijani President Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan were to meet on Thursday in the Spanish city of Granada for Western-mediated talks aimed at ending their historic enmitybut Aliyev canceled just a day before.

“The EU thought that the most important thing was to be involved in mediation, but the problem is that it has gone mute in this mediation,” said Loiseau. “Mediation does not mean being neutral between an aggressor and its victim.”

Eddy Wax and Elisa Braün reported from Strasbourg. Gabriel Gavin reported from ArmeniaSarah Wheaton reported from Brussels.


Azerbaijan’s president refuses to attend EU talks with Armenia PM

FRANCE 24
Oct 4 2023

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev has turned down a European meeting in Spain with Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan this week, because of European support for Yerevan, a government official told AFP on Wednesday.

Pashinyan later said he would still go to the summit of the European Political Community (EPC) in Granada, saying it was a “shame” that the two leaders would not be able to sign a “turning point document” on the contested Karabakh region.

Two weeks ago, Aliyev launched a one-day offensive that saw his country regain control of Nagorno-Karabakh, the home of pro-Armenian separatists.

The talks were to take place on the sidelines of the European summit, under the mediation of France, Germany and the European Council.

“Azerbaijan did not consider it necessary to participate in negotiations in this format,” an Azerbaijani government official told AFP.

Aliyev would not attend because of “pro-Armenian statements by French officials… and statements on the supply of weapons and ammunition (to Yerevan), on military cooperation”, the official told AFP.

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said in Yerevan on Tuesday that Paris had agreed to deliver military equipment to Armenia, without elaborating.

The official said Aliyev’s decision was also influenced by “accusations made yesterday by EU Council President Charles Michel”.

Michel, who has mediated several meetings between the foes in recent years, criticised Baku’s use of military force.

The official also cited an “anti-Azerbaijani atmosphere” and said Baku had wanted the meeting to take place in Turkey, its ally, which welcomed the Karabakh offensive.

In Yerevan, Pashinyan told parliament Wednesday that he would still travel to Spain.

“We are going to Granada with a delegation from the foreign ministry and the Security Council,” he said. 

“It is a shame that the meeting has not taken place,” he said.

“We were in a constructive and optimistic mood, because we thought that a turning point document could be signed,” he said. “Until this morning the likelihood of this was very high.”

Pashinyan said he hoped an agreement would be signed “at a good moment”. 

Most of the Armenian population of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh republic has fled since Azerbaijan’s offensive, and the separatist government has agreed to dissolve.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a dispute over the mountainous region since the final days of the Soviet Union, going to war twice: in the 1990s and in 2020. 

(AFP)


Armenia: Under fire PM Pashinyan refuses to resign

First Post
Oct 4 2023
Ajeyo Basu

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who is under fire, said on Wednesday that he would step down immediately if it would help Armenia’s issues, but he thought it would make matters worse.

The pressure on Pashinyan has increased since neighbouring Azerbaijan took control of the Armenian-populated territory of Nagorno-Karabakh last month, as evidenced by his remark to an opposition member of parliament.

Since then, the majority of Karabakh’s population—more than 100,000 people—has fled and sought safety in Armenia, a nation with a population of only 2.8 million.

Since taking office in 2018, Pashinyan claimed that Armenia had always experienced difficulties.

“I’ll say it straight: If I know that, for example, by my resignation or removal all these challenges will be resolved, I’ll do it the very next second because, unlike you, I do not cling and have never clung to my chair,” the state news agency Armenpress quoted him as saying.

“But all my analysis shows that this will lead to exactly the opposite result. And this is also the reason why it isn’t happening.”

The destiny of Nagorno-Karabakh, which the majority of Armenians view as a national tragedy that has forced them to leave ancestral territories, has prompted protesters to call for Pashinyan to resign.

Despite the fact that the ethnic Armenian majority in the region had enjoyed de facto independence since seceding in a war in the 1990s after the fall of the Soviet Union, the territory is accepted internationally as belonging to Azerbaijan.

According to Azerbaijani state media, Pashinyan previously declared he would attend Thursday’s negotiations in Spain that were being mediated by the European Union despite Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan pulling out.

In the past 30 years, the two neighbours have engaged in two wars over Karabakh, and despite efforts by the EU, the US, and Russia, they have not yet agreed to sign a peace deal.

(With agency inputs)

https://www.firstpost.com/world/armenia-under-fire-pm-pashinyan-refuses-to-resign-13203702.html

Stepanakert deserted after Azerbaijan defeats Armenian separatists

Al Jazeera, Qatar
Oct 4 2023

Al Jazeera gains exclusive access to the largest city in Nagorno-Karabakh after tens of thousands of its resident fled.

Khankendi, Azerbaijan – An eerie silence blankets the town square of largest city in the Nagorno-Karabakh region

Baby strollers, chairs, and empty boxes are all that remain in the square after more than 100,000 Armenians fled Khakendi in haste, the latest casualties of an old territorial conflict.

Azerbaijan defeated separatist forces in the breakaway region last month leading to Armenian leaders agreeing with Baku that the so-called state of Artsakh will cease to exist.

After the separatist forces were routed, the ethnic Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, part of oil-and-gas-rich Azerbaijan that had been beyond Baku’s control since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, began fleeing into Armenia.

Khankendi’s residents too, fearful of persecution, left for neighbouring Armenia, leaving behind their homes and businesses.

They departed despite Azerbaijan’s assurances of their safety and equal treatment as citizens.

Red Cross workers are in Khankendi, known to Armenians as Stepanakert, offering to evacuate those who could not find space on the buses and cars heading to Armenia.

The city’s morgue staff have also left, so even the dead being repatriated to Armenia by the Red Cross.

“We continue to find other people stranded for the time being in the city and we have another concern considering the rural areas haven’t been reached yet,” Marco Succi from the Rapid Deployment Team of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) told Al Jazeera.

“If you ask me about immediate needs, it’s electricity, water and gas for [the] coming winter. ICRC has worked with Azerbaijan authorities and look forward to working with them,” he added.

Puppies, left exposed to the elements, run to anyone they see in the square, hoping to be fed. Horses wander the roads, lost without their masters, their hooves on the tarmac breaking the silence.

An occasional ambulance travels down the windswept streets, searching for anyone left behind in need of medical assistance.

It’s a scene is repeated throughout the city.

Iran Ready to Send Aid to Displaced Ethnic Armenians

Telesur
Oct 4 2023

On Tuesday, Foreign Affairs Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian expressed Iran’s readiness to send humanitarian aid to the displaced ethnic Armenians in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

He made the remarks in a meeting with Secretary of Armenia's Security Council Armen Grigoryan in the Iranian capital Tehran.

During the meeting, Amir-Abdollahian stressed that Iran's policy was to preserve the international borders and countries' territorial integrity, highlighting the necessity of resolving the Caucasus region's problems by regional countries.

He referred to the 3+3 format, which brings together the three Caucasian states of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, as well as its three neighbors, Iran, Russia, and Türkiye, as an efficient mechanism for resolving regional issues.

The Armenian official thanked Iran for its principled position in support of Armenia's territorial integrity and welcomed negotiations within the 3+3 format.

Meanwhile, Iran's embassy in Armenia announced Tuesday that the country's first batch of humanitarian aid sent by the Iranian Red Crescent Society has arrived in the southern Armenian province of Syunik.

The consignment contains more than 50 tons of aid materials, including tents, blankets, food and heaters.

Last month, Azerbaijan took Nagorno-Karabakh from ethnic Armenians. Azerbaijan's capture of Nagorno-Karabakh led to an exodus of many ethnic Armenians from the region during the following days. Armenia and Azerbaijan have been at loggerheads over the mountainous region since 1988.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Iran-Ready-to-Send-Aid-to-Displaced-Ethnic-Armenians-20231004-0004.html

French foreign minister pledges arms for Armenia in visit to Yerevan

euronews
Oct 4 2023

Catherine Colonna said Armenia needed to be able to defend itself two weeks after Azerbaijani forces invaded Nagorno-Karabakh despite the presence of Russian peacekeepers.

On a visit to Armenia, French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna says Paris has agreed to deliver military equipment to the small South Caucasus nation.

After visiting ethnic Armenian refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh, including burns patients injured in a petrol station explosion, the minister pledged military support.

She said: “I would like to publicly state that France has agreed on future contracts with Armenia which will allow the delivery of military equipment to Armenia so that it can ensure its defence. You'll understand that I can't go into more detail at the moment."

In a two-week period, 100,000 Armenians fled the enclave in an exodus prompted by Azerbaijan’s invasion of the contested region. The enclave’s seizure happened despite the presence of Russian peacekeeping forces.

The French minister’s visit came on the same day that Azerbaijan announced it had arrested a number of ethnic Armenian political leaders from Nagorno-Karabakh. 

An Azerbaijani news agency reported Arayik Haratyunyan, who led the region until September, had been brought to the Azerbaijan capital. 

Three other key leaders were also detained including former separatist presidents Arkadi Gukasian and Bako Sahakyan, as well as Davit Ishkhanyan, the speaker of the separatist legislature.