Russia hopes Lachin Corridor will be unblocked parallel with Aghdam route opening

 17:35,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Russia hopes that soon the Lachin Corridor will be unblocked parallel with the Aghdam route and Nagorno-Karabakh will start receiving regular humanitarian aid from both directions, Russian Foreign Ministry representative Maria Zakharova said on September 12.

Speaking at a press briefing, Zakharova said that the foreign ministers of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan developed a plan on the simultaneous unblocking of the Lachin and Aghdam routes during their July 25 meeting in Moscow.

“Taking into consideration the significant difference in positions and the high level of mutual distrust, this work did not proceed easily. As a first step, on 12 September, 15 tons of food, personal hygiene products and beddings were conveyed to the residents of Nagorno-Karabakh requiring aid through the Russian Red Cross. We expect that taking into consideration the previously reached mutual-understanding, soon the Lachin Corridor will also be unblocked parallel with the Aghdam route, and then humanitarian aid will be regularly delivered to the region from the two directions,” Zakharova said, expressing hope that this way the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh will be stabilized and the normal life of the population will be restored.

“This will in turn create conditions for launching dialogue between Baku and Stepanakert and relaunching the rhythmic work in the direction of implementing the entire complex of the 2020-2022 highest level trilateral agreements on the normalization of the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations,” she added.

Armenpress: Nagorno-Karabakh president holds meeting with top brass, law enforcement leadership to discuss Azeri buildup

 19:43,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Nagorno-Karabakh President Samvel Shahramanyan has held a meeting with top law enforcement and military officials, local authorities announced.

The Nagorno-Karabakh President’s Office said Shahramanyan on Tuesday visited the Defense Ministry headquarters to hold a “consultation” with heads of security services.

The military-political situation in the region was discussed at the meeting. The ongoing Azerbaijani military movements and buildup, which began on September 5, was also discussed.

“Particular attention was paid to the issues of ensuring the security of the civilian population in the conditions of a humanitarian crisis and in case of possible developments of the situation, as well as to the objectives of the defense ministry of the republic in the current situation,” President Shahramanyan’s office added in a statement.

Asbarez: ANCA-Western Region 2023 Annual Banquet to Take Place Nov. 12


BY KATY SIMONIAN

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region will host its annual Awards Gala on Sunday, November 12 at The Beverly Hilton Hotel. This year’s Awards Banquet/Gala will shine a spotlight on individuals who continue to contribute to the Armenian American community’s exceptional legacy of public service, from activism and human rights advocacy to journalism, diplomacy and education.

As the Armenian community witnesses the ongoing illegal blockade of Artsakh which has left 120,000 Armenians on the brink of genocide, along with growing threats against the Republic of Armenia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, it is fitting to honor those who have dedicated their lives to preventing crimes against humanity and raising awareness about the plight of the Armenian people.

The 2023 ANCA-WR Honorees include:

  • Luis Moreno Ocampo will receive the Champion of International Justice Award for his trailblazing work at the International Criminal Court (ICC) and for standing as a prominent voice against Azerbaijan’s genocidal blockade of Artsakh.
  • Paul Krekorian will receive the Advocate for Justice Award for his years of committed service to the Armenian people and the City of Los Angeles, currently in his position as President of the LA City Council, where he commands bipartisan support and respect from his colleagues.
  • Michael Mahdesian will be honored with the prestigious Vahan Cardashian Award, which salutes his decades of global humanitarian activism and the instrumental role he has played in establishing the ANCA as an effective advocacy organization both in the Western Region and in Washington D.C.
  • Ellina Abovian will be honored with the Excellence in Media Award for her continued efforts to raise awareness through her platform on KTLA 5 about Armenia, Artsakh and the many contributions of the Armenian community, locally and across the United States.
  • Ambassador Edward P. Djerejian will receive the prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award for his years of diplomatic service across three presidential administrations from Reagan to Bush to Clinton, which included impactful positions as US Ambassador to Syria and US Ambassador to Israel. He continues to provide his expertise for the benefit of the Armenian homeland and Artsakh.
  • Richard G. Hovannisian will be posthumously honored with the Legacy Award for his meaningful and transformational contributions as a scholar of Armenian Studies who continues to inspire generations of people across the Armenian community and beyond.

A highlight of the evening will be the announcement of a tribute named for a beloved ANCA-WR former Board member and one of our community’s most respected and fierce activists, Steve Artinian, who we tragically lost this year. The Steve Artinian Visionary Activist Award will annually honor an ANCA-WR local chapter and leader whose efforts have had the most impact with a spirit of grace, kindness and dedication in line with Steve Artinian’s selfless and generous service to the Armenian Cause. The program will feature a special presentation to celebrate this new prestigious award. The inaugural recipient of this award will be the ANCA-Nevada Chapter led by Lenna Hovanessian for significant accomplishments at the state level in Nevada to advance Armenian Genocide education and all aspects of the Armenian Cause.

The ANCA-WR’s Annual Awards Gala offers the Armenian community an opportunity to take inspiration from the work of these most admirable honorees, and raise our collective voices in support of the Armenian Cause and the ongoing work of the organization.

To purchase tickets for the 2023 ANCA-Western Region Awards Gala, please click here.

To sponsor the 2023 ANCA-Western Region Awards Gala, please click here.

To purchase ads for the 2023 ANCA-Western Region Awards Gala Tribute Book, please click here.

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region is the largest and most influential nonpartisan Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues in pursuit of the Armenian Cause.

Katy Simonian is a member of the 2023 ANCA-Western Region Awards Banquet/Gala Committee.

Menendez Urges Biden Administration to Hold Aliyev Accountable and Prevent Genocide in Artsakh

Sen. Robert Menendez makes remarks on the Senate floor


WASHINGTON – This week, Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, delivered remarks on the Senate floor about the ongoing ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh.

He called on the United States and the international community to respond and hold President Aliyev and his regime accountable for their actions in the region, which bear the hallmarks of genocide.
 
“Of course, to be an honest broker means we need to tell the truth about Azerbaijan’s atrocities,” Chairman Menendez said. 

“We need to call out those individuals perpetrating this campaign of ethnic cleansing. We need to target them—including President Aliyev—with sanctions. We need to be cutting off their access to the wealth and oil money they have stashed away at financial institutions around the world, to their yachts and mansions across Europe. The evidence is there and we must preserve it so that Aliyev can be held accountable for these atrocities,” Menendez added.
 
Below is the complete text of Menendez’s remarks.

 
Mr. President, I rise to speak about a horrific set of events that are taking place in a part of the world that we could do something about.
 
In this photo, this dead man’s body is completely emaciated. The skin, tight over his bones, barely covers his skeleton. Bruises and scars stretch across his chest. This is not a victim at the side of the road during the Ottoman Turk’s Armenian Genocide. It is not a Holocaust survivor laying on the ground as allies liberated Buchenwald. It is not a human carcass left in the wake of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, or the Hutu in Rwanda or Serbian forces in Bosnia. Mr. President, it is from the Human Rights Defender’s Office in Nagorno-Karabakh. And it is from August. Only weeks ago.
 
Because Mr. President, right now—as you sit there in the dais, and I stand here in the chamber—the Aliyev government in Azerbaijan is carrying out a campaign of heinous atrocities that bear the hallmarks of genocide against the Armenians in Artsakh. They have purposefully and viciously trapped an estimated 100,000 to 120,000 Christian Armenians in the Karabakh Mountains. There is only one road out connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia for people, food, medicine, and basic supplies, and the Azerbaijanis have blocked it since December of last year.
 
Despite some reports yesterday, no aid has moved. They have tried to deny their role but make no mistake, the Azerbaijani government is now wholeheartedly embracing this brutal blockade, denying the Armenian community food and fuel and medicine.
 
Aliyev and his regime are trying to starve these people into death or into political submission.
 
‘There are no crematories and there are no machete attacks,’ wrote the former prosecutor at the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno Ocampo, in a recent report. But he said, ‘starvation is the invisible genocide weapon. Without immediate dramatic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few weeks.’ This group of Armenians – talking about over 100,000 – will be destroyed in a few weeks. Not my observations, the observations of the former prosecutor of the International Criminal Court.
 
In Artsakh, the shelves of stores are empty. Children wait in lines for the chance of finding bread to feed their grandparents who are too weak to leave the house. There is no gas for ambulances. According to the head doctor at one maternity hospital, miscarriages have nearly tripled. And the BBC reports that one in three deaths in Nagorno-Karabakh is from malnutrition.
 
For months, Azerbaijan was just doing the bare minimum—allowing the International Committee of the Red Cross limited access. But in July, Aliyev blocked even the Red Cross. And in complete defiance of the Geneva Conventions, Azerbaijan detained medical patients the Red Cross was transporting through the corridor.
 
This is not only outrageous at face value but an insult to the international community and a threat to brave Red Cross workers around the world. In addition to arresting sick and elderly residents—a few weeks ago—Azerbaijan also detained university students who were trying to go to Armenia to start the school year.
 
Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry says there is nothing to worry about. These concerns are just the result of, ‘propaganda and political manipulations spread by Armenia.’
 
Really? You’re blaming Armenia for this? That is a flat out lie. It was Azerbaijan—with Turkish backing—that launched the war in 2020. A war that uprooted close to 100,000 Armenians from their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh. A war that killed 6,500 people. Now Aliyev blocks the Lachin Corridor and says ‘I’m not organizing ethnic cleansing.’
 
The same Azerbaijani President has also threatened to ‘chase away’ Armenian separatists ‘like dogs.’ Whose government issued a commemorative postage stamp showing a worker in hazmat gear spraying disinfectant on the region. We have seen and heard this kind of propaganda throughout history. It is the work of a regime intent on destroying and erasing this ancient Armenian community’s history in Nagorno-Karabakh.
 
But Mr. President—right now—the United States is failing. The United States is not meeting the humanitarian needs or publicly putting enough pressure on Aliyev to stop this campaign of ethnic cleansing. And I sincerely hope the State Department is not considering renewing the 907 waiver, which allows for security assistance to go to Azerbaijan. I don’t know how the United States can justify spending any kind of support—security or otherwise—to the regime in Baku.
 
We’ve seen a video of Azerbaijani forces killing unarmed Armenian soldiers in cold-blood.
 
We have reports of Azerbaijani soldiers sexually assaulting and mutilating an Armenian female soldier. So to send them assistance makes a mockery of the FREEDOM Support Act. Section 907 of this act is meant to ban security assistance to Azerbaijan until it is ‘Taking demonstrable steps to cease all blockades and other offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.’
 
But still, the Department of State has waived section 907 over and over and over again. Suffice it to say, I am strongly opposed to having any aid go to a fighting force known for war crimes and the violation of human rights. I understand the dynamics of the broader region are complicated, but our fundamental principles underlying security assistance should not be.
 
When the United States untethers our security assistance from human rights and American values to focus on short-term tactical military assistance, it not only damages long-term American national security interests, it flies in the face of our duty to honor the victims and survivors of the Armenian Genocide and our duty to ensure history does not repeat itself. We cannot look away from a systematic attempt to eradicate and erase an entire people from the face of the earth.
 
In 2021, as my colleagues witnessed here on the Senate Floor, I was overcome with emotion to see President Biden join us in recognizing—for the first time by an American president—the Armenian Genocide. More than a century ago, Ottoman Turks perpetrated a systematic campaign to exterminate the Armenian populations. Through killings, through forced deportation, and yes, through starvation.
 
What the Turks did is an irrefutable, historical fact. The recognition of this fact was a huge step forward and I am proud to have played a role in that effort. Proud that I spoke up even as many American leaders stayed silent. Proud that I pressured State Department nominees and officials to acknowledge this historical reality. Proud that I introduced or co-sponsored resolutions recognizing the Armenian Genocide since before I came to the Senate in 2006. But Mr. President, make no mistake—fighting the denial of Armenian Genocide is not only about the past. It is also about the present.
 
That is why I’m calling on Aliyev to immediately release the Armenian prisoners of war. It is why I have been working on legislation to address the current humanitarian crisis in Artsakh. And it is why—when USAID Administrator Power came before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee earlier this year—I pushed her to get humanitarian assistance to the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.
 
I believe that the United States can—and must—play an active role in addressing this conflict. Because the so-called Russian ‘peacekeepers’ who have supposedly been enforcing a ceasefire following Azerbaijan’s 2020 invasion have been—to no one’s surprise—wholly ineffective. As Azerbaijani forces began an incursion in September 2022, these Russian forces stood idly by. Moscow will no doubt seek to exploit any instability to its advantage, but they have also proved their lack of worth. Which is all the more reason that the United States must continue to play role.
 
We have been facilitating talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan, but we need to change our approach. We cannot continue to simply ‘facilitate’ talks. We have a responsibility to mediate, to pursue a meaningful—enforceable—agreement with the guaranteed rights, security, and dignity of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh as a central tenet. We must also encourage and—if necessary—broker direct discussions between political leaders in Stepanakert and Baku.
 
Of course, to be an honest broker means we need to tell the truth about Azerbaijan’s atrocities. We need to call out those individuals perpetrating this campaign of ethnic cleansing. We need to target them—including President Aliyev—with sanctions. We need to be cutting off their access to the wealth and oil money they have stashed away at financial institutions around the world, to their yachts and mansions across Europe.
 
The evidence is there and we must preserve it so that Aliyev can be held accountable for these atrocities. I have called on the United States Ambassador to the United Nations to introduce a resolution at the UN Security Council enforcing an end to Aliyev’s blockade. I am pleased to see that Secretary Blinken is personally engaging in the crisis now, but the message must be crystal clear. At the same time, the EU needs to step up too.
 
I was pleased to see High Representative Borell’s statement in July that the EU is ‘deeply concerned about the serious humanitarian [situation]’ in Nagorno-Karabakh… but I hope that actions accompany those words. Instead of just taking Azerbaijani gas and praising the country as a ‘crucial energy partner,’ they must also bring pressure to end the blockade.
 
How many leaders have somberly promised to learn history’s lessons and prevent future genocides? How many people have come to the floor of the Senate and said, ‘Never, never, again.’ How many people will have to die of starvation before we act? With Aliyev potentially moving troops along the border, we cannot say we didn’t see it coming.
 
This time must be different. In the past, plans to carry out genocide were clouded by distance or geography. But this time, we know. We know Aliyev is doing it right now, and we must not only hold him accountable for his actions, we must stop him from succeeding in erasing this Armenian community. We must stop him from starving these Armenians to death….or imposing political control by opening only the Agdam Corridor. This is not a substitution for opening the Lachin Corridor. It is not upholding the commitments of the 2020 agreement. Using basic humanitarian, food, and medical supplies as a political weapon is not acceptable.
 
And we have the power to do it—if we act now. Given the chance, who here among us would not go back and stop the Turks from rounding up the first Armenians victims of the genocide who were hung in the streets of Istanbul? Or the Serb forces who gave Bosnian Muslims a 24-hour ultimatum to surrender? Or the Rwandan radio broadcasts inciting violence?
 
Unlike those crimes of the past, we are living on the brink, right now. And so to the Biden administration, I would say, now is the time to step up and protect this vulnerable population. To the international community, now is the time to work together to bring pressure to stop this tragedy from unfolding in front of our eyes. And to the Armenian people, trapped in this blockade, with no food, know that you have friends and allies, here in the United States Senate and around the world, who will not rest until you are safe and secure. Hang on, hang on.
 
And to the men organizing and carrying out this brutal campaign, we will hold you accountable for your crimes, even if it takes a life time.
 
You will pay a price.
You will face justice.
And I certainly will not rest until you do so.

Putin Says ‘No Problems’ with Pashinyan But Blames Armenia’s Leader for Current Artsakh Crisis

President Vladimir Putin of Russia speaks at a conference in Vladivostok on Sep. 11


He Hopes Azerbaijan Won’t Commit Ethnic Cleansing

President Vladimir Putin of Russia on Tuesday said there were no problems between he and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, but blamed the Armenian leader for the current Artsakh crisis.

Speaking at an economic forum in Vladivostok, Russia, Putin said confirmed that Pashinyan contacted him about the recent military build up along the Armenia and Azerbaijan border and Yerevan’s fears of renewed attacks against Armenia and Artsakh.

“He [Pashinyan] sent me a comprehensive letter… We are in contact with him. There are no problems with Armenia and Prime Minister Pashinyan. We are in constant contact with him,” Putin said.

However, he went to say that the actions taken by Pashinyan, especially Yerevan’s recognition of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity that gave Baku sovereignty over Artsakh had placed the entire situation in a different light. Putin went on to suggest that Pashinyan nixed the issue of the status of the Nagorno-Karabakh, which was to be determined in future, by recognizing Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and referencing the 1991 Alma Ata Treaty.

“Armenia basically recognized Azerbaijan’s sovereignty over Karabakh. And in their statement in Prague, they recorded it on paper,” Putin said.

“The leadership of Armenia has publicly announced this, considering the entire territory that existed before 1991 within Azerbaijan SSR and noting the square kilometers of the territory, which also includes the territory of Karabakh. This happened and it was not our decision,” the Russian president added.

Putin argued that after Pashinyan’s statements on the recognition of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, Yerevan is looking to Moscow to resolve the humanitarian crisis.

“What can we say? There is nothing to say here if Armenia itself has recognized Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan,” asserted Putin, saying that Yerevan is currently focusing on the crisis that has arisen since the 2020 war and not looking at the entirety of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

“The key aspect of the entire conflict was the status of Karabakh, and now that has been decided by Armenia itself. That’s the whole problem,” Putin said.

He said that Russia had proposed that Armenia would keep the entire Karabakh region, including Kelbajar and Lachin but claims that Armenia refused this proposal.

“We proposed our settlement options, this is a known fact,” Putin told the Eastern Economic Summit in Vladivostok on Tuesday.

“Armenia controlled seven regions, which it kept under its jurisdiction after the well-known Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict [of the 1990s]. We proposed to reach an agreement with Azerbaijan so that the two regions—Kelbajar and Lachin—as well as the entirety of Karabakh would actually remain under the jurisdiction of Armenia. But the leadership of Armenia did not agree to this—although we were trying to convince the leadership of Armenia for 10 or 15 years. Various options were floated, but in the end it all came down to this,” Putin explained.

The Russia president explained that Yerevan’s decisions have created situations that concern Moscow, especially the humanitarian crisis and the threat of ethnic cleansing by Azerbaijan.

“Of course, other issues have arise here, such as issues related to the humanitarian component and the mandate of our peacekeepers [in Nagorno-Karabakh]. The mandate is still in force, and the issues of that are humanitarian in nature, the prevention of ethnic cleansing, of course, have not gone away. I fully agree with this,” Putin acknowledged.

“I hope that the leadership of Azerbaijan is not interested in any kind of ethnic cleansing [in Nagorno-Karabakh] as they have always told us and continue to tell us,” Putin said, expressing hope that Baku is interested in resolving the situation.

“Now [Azerbaijani] President Aliyev tells me: ‘you know that Armenia has recognized Karabakh as ours, that the question of the status of Karabakh no longer exists, it has been resolved,” Putin added, saying that Yerevan’s approach has created new problems in the region.

AW: Artsakh 2023: Agriculture is crucial amidst the illegal blockade

The ongoing blockade of Artsakh by Azerbaijan keeps residents under constant threat and looming uncertainty about their future. Locals struggle to provide even the most basic necessities for themselves and their families amidst the worsening humanitarian crisis, which has depleted energy sources and gutted the economy, already weakened by the 44-day war in 2020. The situation is worrisome in Stepanakert, the capital of Artsakh, as compared with the villages because of the meager agricultural land for growing food and lack of transportation means due to fuel deficiencies. 

Armenia Tree Project (ATP) checked in with beneficiaries of its Artsakh Backyard Greenhouse Program, to whom it had distributed vegetable seeds before the blockade. ATP’s 51 Backyard Nursery beneficiaries from the Askeran and Martuni districts have some alternatives to the shortages. In addition to cultivating their backyards, they grow vegetables and greens in the small greenhouses. This helps them and their families to overcome malnutrition and restricted diets. 

As part of a larger community initiative, ATP built a greenhouse at the Shushi Technological University in Stepanakert last year, and the staff was provided with vegetable seeds. The greenhouse and vegetable seeds have allowed the university to provide the local community with fresh herbs and vegetables. 

Sofia, granddaughter of ATP Artsakh Backyard Nursery Program beneficiary, helping with her grandma’s garden

In a remote village, ATP Backyard Greenhouse Program beneficiary Armine Baghisyan provided much-needed support to her pregnant daughter Arus and granddaughter Sofia. “Life has become an everyday struggle, but I don’t have the right to give up. Every day I am awakened by my little sunshine Sofia,” Arus said.  

“There is only one car, the bread car, which delivers bread to all the villages in the region. We are lucky enough that the bread man doesn’t mind transporting vegetables and other goods, which my mom and others send to their families and relatives in the towns,” she continued.

Unfortunately, because of the continued blockade and fuel shortages, moving around has been almost impossible since June. Arus’s two-year-old daughter, Sofia, doesn’t understand why her parents can no longer take her to the village to see her beloved granny. Armine has been left alone to tend to her backyard nursery.

“The goods from my greenhouse and backyard were the only source of vitamins for my daughter and her yet to be born child. I spend all day gardening and taking care of each plant carefully. The prices for vegetables and fruits, if available, are skyrocketing. A kilogram of tomatoes is 2,500 drams, which is about 10 times higher than it used to be. This blockade has made us realize lots of things. Almost everybody in the village is now actively engaged in farming,” Armine said.

In a move to bolster Artsakh’s food security, 90 tons of seed potatoes were delivered to the residents of Artsakh’s Martuni region in April through a collaboration between the ATP, Armenian Missionary Association of America (AMAA) and the Tufenkian Foundation. 

“Unfavorable weather conditions, heavy rainfalls, hail and the inability to use agricultural machinery because of fuel and electricity shortages have certainly negatively impacted the crop yield,” said Masis Zargaryan, Deputy Head of Martuni District Administration. “But it goes without saying that even the smaller yields from the vegetable seeds have been a godsend. We’ve been able to provide markets, to some extent, with fresh produce such as cucumbers and tomatoes. I am hopeful that there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and we are going to overcome all these horrors with dignity. There is no other way.”

Though the situation in Artsakh remains uncertain, we continue preparing aid with the hopes of transporting the necessary tools to Artsakh to keep the Artsakh Greenhouse Nursery Program alive. If you’d like to contribute to this program, please visit our website.

Armenia Tree Project (ATP) is a non-profit program based in Woburn and Yerevan conducting vitally important environmental projects in Armenia's cities and villages and seeks support in advancing its reforestation mission. Since 1994, ATP has planted and restored more than 6,000,000 trees, and hundreds of jobs have been created for Armenians in seasonal tree-related programs.


Asbarez: ‘Amerikatsi’ will Screen at Las Vegas AMC Town Square this Weekend

‘Amerikatsi” screens nationwide


The Armenian American Cultural Society of Las Vegas announced that the movie “Amerikatsi” will be screening at the Las Vegas AMC Town Square theater from September 15 to 17.

The movie is about Charlie, an Armenian-American, who in 1948 repatriates to Soviet Armenia and is unjustly imprisoned.
 

“Amerikatsi” has already been submitted for the 96th Academy Awards, set for March 2024, in the Best International Feature Film category.

There will be a Q&A session with actor and director Michael Goorjian during the Vegas screening of the film, the details of which will be announced at a later time.

To watch the official trailer for “Amerikatsi,” or to purchase tickets to the screenings in Las Vegas, visit the AMC Theaters website.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 09/12/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Ruling Party Denies Forcing Public Workers To Attend Rallies

        • Narine Ghalechian
        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia - The ruling Civil Contract parrty's mayoral candidate, Tigran Avinian, 
campaigns in Yerevan's Erebuni district, August 24, 2023.


The ruling Civil Contract party has denied growing reports that it is forcing 
public sector employees in Yerevan to attend election campaign rallies of its 
mayoral candidate Tigran Avinian.

Avinian on Tuesday specifically dismissed a video suggesting that entire staffs 
of schools, kindergartens and local government bodies participated in one such 
rally that was held in the city’s Nor Nork district on Friday.

The video posted on social media shows an activist posing as an Avinian loyalist 
talking to many of the participants and writing down large numbers of attendees 
from their respective entities duly given by them. The activist, Artur 
Chakhoyan, accused the party headed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian of 
ordering them to rally for Avinian in hopes of boosting his chances in the 
municipal elections scheduled for September 17.

“I’m not sure that the numbers or other facts given [to Chakhoyan] are true,” 
Avinian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service in an interview.

Avinian, who has been widely regarded as Yerevan’s de facto mayor since March, 
said the schoolteachers, kindergarten personnel and other public workers 
interviewed by Chakhoyan may have lied because of a lingering fear of their 
superiors “left over from the past.” He suggested that many of them genuinely 
support him because the current municipal administration is renovating dozens of 
schools and kindergartens in the Armenian capital.

“We categorically reject the use of administrative resources and call on 
law-enforcement bodies receiving such reports to conduct a thorough 
investigation,” said Avinian.

Pashinian also called for such inquiries in an interview with Armenian Public 
Television aired late on Monday. He claimed at the same time that any abuse of 
administrative resources contradicts the “essence” of his party and values 
espoused by it.

Armenia - Daniel ioannisian, 7Sep2023.

Daniel Ioannisian, a leader of a coalition of civic groups monitoring the 
upcoming polls, dismissed Pashinian’s explanation as “not convincing.” The 
Avinian campaign’s recourse to the illegal practice has been “systematic,” he 
said, adding that the Independent Observer coalition has already sent to 
prosecutors two “crime reports” about public workers being forced to go to Civil 
Contract rallies.

“There has been no reaction from the prosecutors yet,” Ioannisian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service. “Our reports are based on both what our observers heard and 
saw and videos posted on the Internet.”

“Most participants of the [Nor Nork] rally work for local or central government 
bodies,” he said. “Why was there such disproportion?”




Russia Again Blames Pashinian For Karabakh Crisis


Russia - Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during an economic forum in 
Vladivostok, .


The humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh is a result of Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s decision to recognize the region as part of 
Azerbaijan, Russian President Vladimir Putin insisted on Tuesday.

Echoing statements by the Russian Foreign Ministry, Putin said Yerevan is 
therefore wrong to criticize Moscow for not unblocking the Lachin corridor 
effectively shut down by Baku in December.

“The president of Azerbaijan is now telling me, ‘Well, you know that Armenia has 
admitted that Karabakh is ours, that the issue of Karabakh’s status is closed’ … 
What should we say? There is nothing we can say,” he told an annual economic 
forum in the Russian city of Vladivostok.

“If Armenia recognized that Nagorno-Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan … then what 
are we talking about? This is the key component of the whole problem. The status 
of Karabakh was decided by Armenia itself,” added Putin.

The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, made the same point 
on August 30 in response to the Armenian criticism. She cited Pashinian’s and 
Aliyev’s joint statements on mutual recognition of each other’s territorial 
integrity that were issued after their talks organized by the European Union in 
October 2022 and May 2023. The Armenian Foreign Ministry hit back at Zakharova 
in an extensive written response.

Czech Republic - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev talk during a European summit in Prague, October 6, 2022.

Tensions between the two longtime allies deepened further in the following days, 
with Pashinian declaring that Armenia’s reliance on Russia for defense and 
security has proved a “strategic mistake.” Moscow condemned Pashinian’s remarks. 
The Russian Foreign Ministry listed them among “a series of unfriendly steps” 
taken by Yerevan, in a note of protest handed to the Armenian ambassador on 
September 8.

Those steps include a joint U.S.-Armenian military exercise that began on 
Monday, a visit to Ukraine by Pashinian’s wife, and Armenia’s plans to accept 
the jurisdiction of an international court that issued an arrest warrant for 
Putin in February. Pashinian insisted in televised remarks aired late on Monday 
that they are not directed at Moscow.

Putin on Tuesday also said that there are “humanitarian issues” in Karabakh 
require urgent solutions. He expressed hope in that regard that Baku is not 
planning any “ethnic cleansing” in the Armenian-populated territory where Russia 
deployed about 2,000 peacekeeping troops following the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani 
war. The Armenian government maintains that the Azerbaijani blockade is aimed at 
forcing the Karabakh Armenians to flee their homeland.




Russian Humanitarian Aid Sent To Karabakh

        • Susan Badalian

Azerbaijan - A Russian Red Cross truck carrying humanitarian aid for 
Nagorno-Karabakh is headed to Aghdam, September 9, ,2023.


A truckload of Russian humanitarian aid reached Nagorno-Karabakh on Tuesday in 
what Moscow described as a “first step” towards the restoration of relief 
supplies to the region blocked by Azerbaijan.

A truck carrying 15 tons of food and other essential items provided by the 
Russian Red Cross entered Karabakh from the Azerbaijani town of Aghdam, a supply 
route which Baku has been promoting as an alternative to the Lachin corridor 
connecting Karabakh to Armenia.

The authorities in Stepanakert have opposed that route until now, saying that it 
would legitimize the nine-month Azerbaijan blockade of the Lachin corridor. They 
indicated at the weekend that they agreed to accept the Russian aid through the 
Aghdam road in return for an Azerbaijani pledge to allow Russian peacekeepers 
and the International Committee of the Red Cross (IRCR) to resume humanitarian 
supplies through the corridor.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that Baku is ready to do that 
“parallel” to the opening of the second, Azerbaijani-controlled supply line.

The Russian Foreign Ministry reported later in the day an agreement on the 
“parallel unblocking of the Lachin and Aghdam routes.” The ministry spokeswoman, 
Maria Zakharova, said Moscow expects that “humanitarian aid will flow to the 
region unhindered in both directions on a regular basis.”

Such a compromise arrangement is also favored by the United States and the 
European Union. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken reaffirmed support for it 
in a weekend statement that expressed serious concern at the “rapidly 
deteriorating humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

It is not clear whether Karabakh’s leadership remains adamant in rejecting any 
aid offered by the Azerbaijani government. Scores of Karabakh Armenians have 
been blocking a local road leading to Aghdam to prevent two Azerbaijani trucks 
loaded with 40 tons of flour from entering the region.

Azerbaijan tightened the blockade in mid-June by halting all humanitarian 
traffic through the Lachin corridor. The move seriously aggravated shortages of 
food, medicine and other basic necessities in Karabakh, forcing the authorities 
there to start rationing bread in Stepanakert last week. Each local resident has 
since been able to buy only half a loaf of bread a day.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Azerbaijan’s military buildup has caused tension on border – Pashinyan

 23:24,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. The situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border is tense because Azerbaijan has amassed troops there, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Monday.

“The situation is tense because Azerbaijan has amassed troops on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border and around Nagorno-Karabakh. And the assessments that I gave at the Cabinet meeting haven’t changed,” Pashinyan said in an interview with Public Television.

Heavy responsibility rests upon new leader of Nagorno-Karabakh – PM

 23:13,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. Very heavy responsibility rests upon Samvel Shahramanyan, the new elected leader of Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said.

In an interview with Public Television on Monday, PM Pashinyan said he regrets that Arayik Harutyunyan resigned.

“I regret Arayik Harutyunyan’s resignation. I can say that during the whole time we had a very good working environment and mutual-understanding. I can express regret over his resignation. Regarding the new elected leader of Nagorno-Karabakh, Samvel Shahramanyan, I think the situation is such that there’s not much to congratulate. Very heavy responsibility rests upon him,” Pashinyan said.

PM Pashinyan said that Armenia must be guided by the logic of combining the stances and approaches with the international community, and not contrasting them. He said that the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh must not be politicized.

“We must focus our efforts on overcoming the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh. We shouldn’t allow the issue’s humanitarian essence to transform into a political one by unnecessary politicization. Our approaches stem from this logic,” the Armenian PM said.

Asked whether he maintains contact with the NK authorities, the PM said, “Yes, there’s contact, it has been, it is important for the authorities of Armenia to get first-hand information to get acquainted with the situation.”