AW: Fordham University hosts forum on “unheard voices” of the Armenian Genocide

Prof. Ani Kalayjian, Dr. Suzan Meryem Rosita Kalaycı and Prof. Harold Takooshian at the August 14 forum at Fordham University

NEW YORK—What happens after trauma, genocide, war and sexual violence? How do we heal from the trauma? How do we pass on the positive lessons learned from those atrocities? These and more difficult questions were raised on Monday, August 14, 2023 at Fordham University during an insightful forum titled, “The Armenian Genocide of 1915: Unheard Voices of Armenian and Turkish Women,” led by Dr. Suzan Meryem Rosita Kalaycı. 

Dr. Kalaycı is a professor at Oxford University. She is a historian, researcher, author and a Quaker chaplain of St. Hilda’s College. In 2019, she founded the Oxford Network for Armenian Genocide Research at Oxford, with the goal to foster new research directions in the study of the Armenian Genocide. The project seeks to create a thriving community of researchers at Oxford who study the Armenian Genocide in a global context rather than merely in its local Ottoman setting, with a chronological scope not confined to the period between 1915 and the end of World War I. Dr. Kalaycı’s upcoming book is entitled Reading Silences: Essays on Women, Memory, and War in 20th Century Turkey.

As one of the first of the 20th century’s many genocides, the Armenian Genocide provides a unique path into understanding the connective histories of state-sponsored human rights abuses. A central aim of the Oxford Network for Armenian Genocide Research is to make the Armenian Genocide part of global conversations about human rights, witnessing violence and genocide prevention. 

Clearly the complex machinery of state-sponsored violence continues. Chanting and affirming “never again” has not worked. The United Nations Human Rights Declaration, hundreds of peace organizations, civil society activism and conscientious corporations’ efforts have not stopped governments from continuing to wage wars and commit genocide against innocent people, stripping them of their resources and dignity and causing individual, collective and generational trauma.  

Kalaycı’s presentation was eye-opening and insightful, addressing several of her projects within the Oxford Network for Armenian Genocide Research and pulling literature from history, oral history, sociology, law and psychology. The network’s activity and academic presence at Oxford University includes:

  • International workshop “Weight of Emotions: Humanitarianism, Archives, and Feelings. A Re-reading,” held at Oxford University, 2019. 
  • Project with the International Armenian Literary Alliance (IALA) in 2021, exploring the role storytelling can play in imagining futures after war. 
  • Regular invited speakers’ series on the topic of the Armenian Genocide.
  • Weekly seminar series: the Gomidas “Silence and Visuality Seminars on Armenian Art and History.
  • Supervision of undergraduate and graduate research on the Armenian Genocide.
  • Regular conversations with national government and politicians on genocide awareness and prevention, including formal recognition of the Armenian Genocide. 
  • Outreach activities in British schools, including the development of lesson plans and resources for schools to teach the Armenian Genocide in years 11 and 12.
  • Open-access publication: Armenian Genocide: A Reader’s Guide to archival sources at the Bodleian Archives Special Collections
  • International partnership with the Oral History Archives at Columbia University (OHAC). Together with OHAC, they digitized and are now in the process of transcribing the Columbia Armenian Oral History Collection—an important, widely unknown collection of 147 testimonies of child survivors of the Armenian Genocide.
  • Collaboration with the internationally acclaimed graphic artist, Nvard Yerkanian, who received an Armenian American Illustration Award in 2021 for an illustration they commissioned that was featured on postcards

Attendees engaging in a discussion with Dr. Kalaycı following her presentation

A vibrant discussion took place following Dr. Kalaycı’s presentation. Discussants were Souren A. Israelyan, a New York City attorney and former president of the Armenian Bar Association, and Professor Ani Kalayjian of Columbia University, an expert on trauma and genocide. Israelyan discussed the urgency of Dr. Kalaycı’s historical work, given the tragic “new genocide” unfolding in Artsakh today, where the Azerbaijani military’s “Operation Iron Fist” is partnering with Turkey for the “ethnic cleansing” of Armenians. Prof. Kalayjian underlined the importance of Dr. Kalaycı’s oral history work to share the “unheard voices” of the Armenian Genocide, especially with continued denials by officials in Turkey and at the U.N. Prof. Kalayjian linked this with the powerful new film Aurora’s Sunrise, which is now in U.S. theatres. 

Prof. Harold Takooshian, chairperson of the program, presented Dr. Kalaycı with the 2023 ABSA Outstanding Award MedalThe audience had a diverse background in the arts, law, history, sociology and psychology and shared their efforts of activism and the importance of mindful positive action.  

Thanks are extended to the event co-sponsors: Armenian Society at Fordham University, ABSA (Armenian Behavioral Science Association), ATOP MeaningfulWorld and FIRST (Fordham Institute for Research, Service, & Teaching). The presentation is available online at https://youtu.be/_AAWejlm49I.




What does the expansion of BRICS mean for the South Caucasus?

BRICS family photo at 15th BRICS Summit, Johannesburg, South Africa, August 22, 2023 (Wikimedia Commons)

The BRICS summit, hosted by South Africa from Aug. 22-24, 2023, came amid a tumultuous, almost entropic period in global politics. Intensifying U.S.-China competition and the war in Ukraine have emphasized geopolitical fault lines. Meanwhile, many newly-formed medium-sized powers, frustrated by U.S. foreign policy, have reduced their dependency on U.S. currency while increasing bilateral trade in their own currencies in order to challenge the unipolar system and raise their concerns. For such countries, joining non-Western blocs such as BRICS has been a main objective.

BRICS is a group of emerging economies made up of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. Economist Jim O’Neil predicted that by 2050 BRICS would surpass the wealth of the major: Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. BRICS may face certain internal challenges. While China and Russia have their own agendas against the West, India, Brazil and South Africa want warm relations and to avoid sanctions. The expansion of BRICS will nonetheless have an impact on the emergence of the new world system and Eurasian politics. As India and Russia push for north-south connectivity along the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), the membership of Persian Gulf countries Saudi Arabia, the Emirates and especially Iran (which recently also joined the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, or the SCO) will further accelerate regional trade interconnectivity and increase Russia’s influence in the South Caucasus, which is the key linkage between Russia and the Persian Gulf. 

BRICS as an Emerging Economic Power Amid Global Challenges 

BRICS encompasses about 26.6-percent of the gross world product and 32.5-percent of Global GDP in Purchasing Power Parity (PPP). BRICS was formed to highlight investment opportunities between the member states, yet gradually it became a cohesive geopolitical bloc. Bilateral relations between the member states are conducted on the basis of non-interference, equality and mutual benefit. BRICS is considered the foremost geopolitical rival to the G7 bloc of the U.S.-led leading advanced economies (U.S., U.K., Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan, with the EU as a non-enumerated member). 

BRICS has been pushing for de-dollarization, yet there is a lack of unanimity on how this process will be shaped. As I mentioned in my recent article reflecting on discussions during the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, “BRICS is becoming a rising de-dollarization coalition, with the group developing multiple de-dollarization initiatives to reduce currency risks and bypass U.S. sanctions. However, it is far from reality, at least for now, to argue that the group will initiate a common currency replacing the U.S. dollar. During the panel debates, many opposing ideas were presented from different representatives of member states. All member states aimed for de-dollarization, but none are in favor of a common currency to replace it, even though they aim to establish a ‘polycentric global monetary system by promoting the internationalization of the currencies of member states.’” BRICS member states will continue trading with their local currencies instead of using the dollar until a unanimous agreement is reached to institutionalize de-dollarization and come up with an alternative currency. To this end, Russia has crafted a joint strategy between the members of BRICS, the SCO and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) to increase the use of national currencies in trade. 

Another challenge facing the bloc is the significant difference in the foreign policies of its member states regarding the U.S.-led unipolar world system and a clear and consistent vision of a multipolar order. In his book The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South, Indian Marxist scholar Vijay Prashad said that the bloc has its limitations compared to the West. Prashad argued that BRICS has neither established new institutions to counterbalance the West nor come up with an alternative ideology for neoliberalism. He says BRICS has no ability to challenge the primacy of the U.S. and NATO. 

The Expansion of BRICS and Internal Pluralism

Since 2022, BRICS has sought to expand its membership, as several developing and new rising powers have expressed their interest in joining. At the 15th BRICS summit in South Africa, BRICS announced that six new emerging market economies will join the group and full membership will take effect on January 1, 2024.  According to many political analysts, the main objective behind this expansion is building a multipolar world system to increase the marginalized voice of the Global South. Between 2022 and 2023, over 40 countries have expressed interest in joining BRICS, including Cuba, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Venezuela, Turkey, Mexico, Uruguay and Pakistan. 

BRICS accounts for 40-percent of the world’s population and a quarter of global GDP. Adam Gallagher and Andrew Cheatham argued in the United States Institute of Peace that “adding to the bloc means that BRICS would be a stronger and more influential group, further advancing multipolarity.” “Despite divisions among the BRICS members, there is an emerging consensus that the international order is not working and a new one is needed,” the article reads. Each member state has its own perspective on worldview and the expansion of the bloc, with notable differences between India and China. 

Gallagher further argues that Russia is “keen on advancing a multipolar world and sees BRICS expansion as a way to undermine the liberal international order.” Following its invasion of Ukraine, Russia has looked to the Global South, mainly Africa and the Persian Gulf, to facilitate trade relations and bypass Western sanctions. He says the presence of dozens of members at the summit was seen by Russia as a “positive signal regarding its international standing.” China also views the bloc as a tool to shape the global system and an alternative world order to that led by the U.S. China has been in favor of its expansion, arguing that economic distress in some of the BRICS countries is “weakening the BRICS countries’ common identity, position and enthusiasm to continue promoting the cooperation mechanism,” as argued by Antara Ghosal Singh. As the era of the post-pandemic rapid economic growth in Brazil, South Africa and Russia has passed, adding new members to the bloc could accelerate economic activity within member states and around the globe. Moreover, China wants to take advantage of the war in Ukraine, which has brought Europe into a “new Cold War environment,” to promote its global agenda and connect newly emerging economies to its supply chains, such as by connecting them through the Belt and Road Initiative. 

Cheatham and Gallagher also agree that the U.S. fears that China may use BRICS as a tool to consolidate its position globally. They argue that the world is seeing a “new wave of ‘minilateralism’ – a style of diplomatic engagement that gives prominence to small- and medium-sized coalitions of like-minded states.” This trend will be accelerated with the expansion of BRICS. The U.S. is concerned that China is taking advantage of this process and positioning itself as the leader of the emerging multipolar world. 

Although Brazil and India are cautious not to turn the bloc into an anti-Western coalition, China and Russia have used it as leverage against the West. After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, many countries around the world were expected to take sides, and blocs such as BRICS give rising middle power the space to raise the voice of the Global South.

Initially, Brazil and India were not in favor of expansion, fearing that it would “dilute their influence and impact their non-aligned foreign policies.” On the other hand, China and Russia were pushing the expansion of BRICS as a “counterweight to the Group of 7 and other Western-led alignments.” Brazil, isolated from Eurasian political developments, does not have as much diplomatic weight as Russia or China to shape global affairs and believes that the expansion of the bloc would diminish its influence as a leader in the Global South. As Andre Pagliarini has argued, “Brazil’s enduring embrace of the UN suggests that it does not aspire to a global order hostile by definition to the U.S., but rather one in which Washington is more inclined – even if compelled – to listen to others.” 

Meanwhile, India, which possesses the largest population in the world, is wary of the bloc becoming anti-Western in orientation and being used as a tool by China to increase its influence in Asia and around the world. One of the founding nations of the non-aligned movement during the Cold War, New Delhi has carried this legacy even in today’s current great power competition. While India is also a member of the SCO, its political relations with the U.S. keep expanding, and it works with Japan and Australia to counter China’s expansion in the Indo-Pacific. India has its own interest in becoming a world economic power. While China’s economic engine may be sputtering at the moment, Bloomberg Economics predicts that India is ready to “pick up the slack and could boost the BRICS’ share of global GDP to more than 40% by 2040, compared with 32% last year.”

The Impact of the Expansion of BRICS on the South Caucasus

Iran’s accession to BRICS is a win for Russia, India and China. Moscow and Beijing have been trying to integrate Iran into their regional architectures. This was clear during Iran’s accession to the SCO in 2023, in an attempt by Russia and China to bring Iran into their orbit amid a possible breakthrough on nuclear negotiations between Iran and the West. Iran is an important partner for Russia to push its regional agenda in the Middle East (mainly Syria but also in Iraq and Lebanon). The China-brokered diplomatic rapprochement between Iran and Saudi Arabia was a diplomatic victory for Moscow to minimize U.S. influence in the region. 

Iran’s membership announcement in BRICS came amid intensified diplomacy to reduce its isolation and boost its economy by strengthening ties with Russia, China and India and improving its diplomatic relations with its Arab neighbors. The Islamic Republic has the second largest worldwide gas reserves and is rich in oil. It has a geostrategic location bordering 13 countries with access to the Persian Gulf, Caspian Sea, Central Asia and the South Caucasus. It is also part of China and India-backed international transit corridors. Normalization between Iran and the Persian Gulf Arab countries, in addition to Chinese investments in these countries, could reduce disputes and promote dialogue. 

During the recent BRICS summit, Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi said that the “Iranian leadership sees BRICS’ challenge to the conventional economic order as an opportunity to weaken U.S. influence on the global stage.” Iran’s accession will have an impact on the South Caucasus, especially on those countries that are participants in the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC). On August 27, the General Director of the Railway Company in Iran announced the transit of Russian cargo to Saudi Arabia through the Iranian section of the INSTC. This will further push Iran and Russia to finalize the construction of the remaining section of the railway, the Astara-Rasht railway, connecting Azerbaijan to Iran. 

Divyanshu Jindal, a Research Associate at NatStrat, Center for Security and Strategic Studies in India, told the Armenian Weekly that “INSTC has been a landmark connectivity project for expanding India’s trade outreach with Central Asia and Russia and is being seen as a major corridor for connectivity with Europe. Not only does this help the member states reach new markets, but the corridor holds immense potential in kickstarting economies in the decade ahead. As the world’s focus shifts toward Asia, the Eurasian region and various projects involved around it (like the Eurasian Economic Union) will only increase in significance.” 

Jindal argued that India is interested in playing a significant role in regional connectivity and trade. He said the Persian Gulf-Black Sea corridor proposed by Iran and Armenia is the ideal parallel corridor to the INSTC, given the warm relations between Iran, India and Armenia and the strengthening of defense ties between India and Armenia. Armenia can become a major transit hub serving as a gateway to European markets and further enhancing Yerevan’s regional security.

Iran’s accession to BRICS and the implementation of new economic projects around INSTC make the bloc attractive to Armenia and Azerbaijan. As Georgia has its path clear towards trans-Atlantic institutions, pressure may increase on Armenia and Azerbaijan to join similar blocs in the future. Meanwhile, integrating the infrastructure of the South Caucasus into the Eurasian regional system has been the objective of Russia for the past years. However, a competition may emerge between different geo-economic projects in the region, such as the Turkish-Azerbaijani backed “middle corridor” and the Russian-Iranian-Indian backed North-South corridor. It is crucial to see where China will be positioned in these competitive projects. Global powers such as the U.S. would not be happy to see the South Caucasus serve as a bridge between Russia, Iran and the Persian Gulf, which could trigger new conflicts.

 Armenia has some options to choose from. The unblocking of communication channels between Baku and Yerevan is far from reality for the time being due to Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh and its aggressive attitude towards Armenia. Instead, Yerevan should keep promoting the Black Sea-Persian Gulf corridor. By doing so, Yerevan would keep its window open to the West, offering itself as a crucial transit hub between Europe and India and a highway connecting Russia to the Middle East via Iran. Such a step may bring certain risks, yet proactive diplomacy from Armenia’s side may repel pressures from competing global powers. 

Economic interconnectivity is crucial for the South Caucasus, as it could bring foreign investment and stability. Politically, the facilitation of trade along the INSTC corridor will consolidate Russia’s influence in the South Caucasus and Iran’s position as a bridge between the Caucasus and the Persian Gulf. Meanwhile, small- or medium-sized countries, to preserve their strategic position in the region, will continue to balance alliances or bandwagon and join regional economic groups.

Yeghia Tashjian is a regional analyst and researcher. He has graduated from the American University of Beirut in Public Policy and International Affairs. He pursued his BA at Haigazian University in political science in 2013. In 2010, he founded the New Eastern Politics forum/blog. He was a research assistant at the Armenian Diaspora Research Center at Haigazian University. Currently, he is the regional officer of Women in War, a gender-based think tank. He has participated in international conferences in Frankfurt, Vienna, Uppsala, New Delhi and Yerevan. He has presented various topics from minority rights to regional security issues. His thesis topic was on China’s geopolitical and energy security interests in Iran and the Persian Gulf. He is a contributor to various local and regional newspapers and a presenter of the “Turkey Today” program for Radio Voice of Van. Recently he has been appointed as associate fellow at the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut and Middle East-South Caucasus expert in the European Geopolitical Forum.


RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/29/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Baku Promises Quick Release Of Karabakh Detainees

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia - Protesters picket the Russian Embassy in Yerevan, .


The three residents of Nagorno-Karabakh arrested on Monday at the Azerbaijani 
checkpoint in the Lachin corridor will be set free after serving out a 10-day 
“administrative arrest,” according to Azerbaijani authorities.

The young men were taken into Azerbaijani custody as they and dozens of other 
Karabakh Armenians travelled to Armenia in a convoy of vehicles escorted by 
Russian peacekeepers. Karabakh’s leadership and the Armenian government strongly 
condemned the arrests.

Azerbaijan’s Office of the Prosecutor-General said late on Monday that the three 
detainees are members of a Karabakh football team that had “disrespected” the 
Azerbaijani national flag in a 2021 video posted on social media.

In what it called an act of “humanism,” the office said that they will not be 
prosecuted on relevant criminal charges and will be placed instead under a 
ten-day administrative arrest. They will be freed and “deported from Azerbaijan” 
after completing the short jail term, it said.

Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, met with the detainees’ parents 
early on Tuesday. They said he assured them that their sons will be released and 
brought to Stepanakert very soon. Harutiunian’s office did not clarify who will 
repatriate Alen Sargsian, Vahe Hovsepian and Levon Grigorian and when.

In Yerevan, meanwhile, dozens of mostly Karabakh-born citizens demonstrated 
outside the Russian Embassy for the second consecutive day to demand that Moscow 
ensure the immediate release of the three men in line with its peacekeeping 
mandate. They were furious with the fact that Russian peacekeeping soldiers 
escorting the convoy did not stop Azerbaijani security officers from arresting 
the men.

“As we can see, such cases keep happening and we see no mechanisms for 
preventing them,” one of the protesters, Arega Hovsepian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service.

Hovsepian pointed to the July arrest at the Lachin checkpoint of another 
Karabakh Armenian man, Vagif Khachatrian, who was being evacuated by the 
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to Armenia for urgent medical 
treatment. The 68-year-old was taken Baku to stand trial on charges of killing 
and deporting Karabakh’s ethnic Azerbaijani residents in 1991. Karabakh’s 
leadership rejected the “false” accusations.

The ICRC has organized such medical evacuations on a regular basis since 
Azerbaijan halted last December commercial traffic through the only road 
connecting Karabakh to Armenia. Last week, Baku also allowed other categories of 
Karabakh’s population, notably university students and holders of Russian 
passports, to travel to Armenia.

No Karabakh residents were transported to Armenia through the Lachin corridor on 
Tuesday. Gegham Stepanian, Karabakh’s human rights ombudsman, said that both the 
Russian peacekeepers and the ICRC must refrain from organizing more such trips 
in the absence of Azerbaijani “security guarantees.”




France Slams ‘Immoral’ Blockade Of Karabakh


Azerbaijan - French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna attends a joint news 
conference with Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov in Baku, April 27, 
2023.


France stepped up on Tuesday criticism of Azerbaijan’s blockade of 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s only land link with the outside world, with Foreign Minister 
Catherine Colonna saying that it is aimed at forcing the Karabakh Armenians to 
leave their homeland.

“The strategy of stifling, which aims to provoke a mass exodus of Armenians from 
Nagorno-Karabakh, is illegal, as was established by the [International Court of 
Justice,] and it is also immoral,” Colonna declared during an annual conference 
of French ambassadors held in Paris.

She said that France is seeking a “just and lasting peace” between Armenia and 
Azerbaijan that would allow Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population to continue 
living there and guarantee “respect for their rights, culture and history.”

Speaking at the conference on Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron said 
Paris will try to drum up stronger international pressure on Azerbaijan to end 
the blockade that has led to severe shortages of food, medicine and other basic 
necessities in Karabakh. He said he will hold further discussions with Armenian 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

Baku denounced Macron’s remarks, saying that they run counter to Azerbaijan’s 
territorial integrity. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry was also quick to hit 
out Colonna. It accused Paris of obstructing Baku’s efforts to “integrate the 
Karabakh Armenians” into Azerbaijan.

“We are once again calling on the French side to put an end to such subversive 
and provocative statements,” added a ministry spokesman.

Macron spoke with Pashinian by phone on Tuesday. According to an Armenian 
readout of the call, Pashinian told him that the humanitarian crisis in Karabakh 
is “worsening by the day” and requiring urgent international intervention.

France, which is home to a sizable Armenian community, has been the most vocal 
international critic of the Azerbaijani blockade. Azerbaijan has repeatedly 
accused Macron and other French officials of siding with Armenia in the Karabakh 
conflict.




Karabakh Rejects Azeri Aid Offer

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Nagorno-Karabakh - Activists block a road from Stepanakert to Aghdam offered by 
Azerbaijan as an alternative supply line to Karabakh and demand the reopening of 
the Lachin corridor, July 18, 2023.


Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership on Tuesday dismissed an Azerbaijani proposal to 
provide the Armenian-populated region with food that has been in short supply 
due to Baku’s eight-month blockade of the Lachin corridor.

The government-linked Azerbaijan Red Crescent announced in the morning that it 
is sending two trucks loaded with 40 tons flour to the town of Aghdam adjacent 
to Karabakh and hopes that the Karabakh Armenian will accept the shipment. It 
also expressed readiness to deliver other basic foodstuffs.

The Azerbaijani offer came as Karabakh struggled with a worsening shortage of 
bread that has become the main staple food in Stepanakert and other Karabakh 
towns since Baku tightened the blockade in mid-June.

A spokeswoman for Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, rejected the offer 
as a ploy designed to deflect international attention from the blockade and a 
serious humanitarian crisis caused by it. Lusine Avanesian said Baku should 
instead allow renewed traffic through the only road connecting Karabakh to 
Armenia in line with a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the 2020 
Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

“If the Azerbaijani authorities are really interested in ending the worst 
humanitarian disaster of the people of Artsakh and stopping their genocide, then 
instead of playing false philanthropy they should stop blocking the restoration 
of supplies to Artsakh through the Lachin Corridor envisaged by the tripartite 
declaration of November 9, 2020 and the orders of the International Court of 
Justice,” Avanesian told the Artsakhpress news agency.

Harutiunian likewise ruled out accepting any aid through the Aghdam route when 
he addressed hundreds of people who rallied in Stepanakert’s central square on 
Monday night.

“Only one road will be functioning: the Lachin road. We’re not going bring in 
food from any other places,” Harutiunian told the angry crowd in a speech 
repeatedly interrupted by jeers and heckling. This was the only part of his 
speech that drew applause.

The spontaneous rally was triggered by the arrests at an Azerbaijani checkpoint 
in the Lachin corridor of three Karabakh men who traveled to Armenia in a convoy 
escorted by Russian peacekeepers. The Azerbaijani authorities accused them of 
desecrating an Azerbaijani flag in 2021.

The protesters demanded that the authorities in Stepanakert take urgent measures 
to secure the release of the young men. Harutiunian addressed them after 
midnight following an emergency meeting with his top aides as well as other 
leading Karabakh politicians.

The Karabakh leader said the question of his resignation, which has repeatedly 
come to the fore during the Azerbaijani blockade, was also on the agenda. He 
said he will decide in the coming days whether or not to step down.



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.

 

US Senator Bob Menendez calls out Azerbaijan for ‘outrageous behavior’ after kidnapping of Armenians in Lachin Corridor

 10:22,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 29, ARMENPRESS. United States Senator Robert Menendez has called out Azerbaijan for its “outrageous behavior” after three Armenians were kidnapped by Azeri border guards in Lachin Corridor on Monday. 

“Deeply troubled that Azerbaijan continues its outrageous behavior aimed at intimidating Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, withholding humanitarian access, and undermining the critical work of the ICRC. This is unacceptable,” Menendez, the Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said in a post on X.

On August 28, Azerbaijani border guards in the illegally installed checkpoint in Lachin Corridor kidnapped residents of Nagorno-Karabakh Alen Sargsyan, Vahe Hovsepyan and Levon Grigoryan. All three are students who were traveling to Armenia to continue their studies. The transport was agreed upon in advance and was being carried out with Russian peacekeeping escort.

The Foreign Ministry of Armenia called out the Azerbaijani authorities for derailing the peace efforts and warned that Baku seeks to perpetrate collective punishment against the entire population in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Nagorno-Karabakh President vows to rescue kidnapped students

 10:09,

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 29, ARMENPRESS. President of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Arayik Harutyunyan has “guaranteed” that the three men kidnapped by Azerbaijani authorities on Monday will “soon” be returned.

“I have some assuring [news],” Harutyunyan said after a meeting with public figures and politicians in parliament. “First of all, I’ll try to establish contact in order to speak with our boys, and get an exact date when they will return. This won’t take long. And they will personally know the name of the official who will bring our boys back to Stepanakert. I guarantee it,” Harutyunyan said.

He called on the families of the kidnapped men to visit his office Tuesday morning.

On August 28, Azerbaijani border guards in the illegally installed checkpoint in Lachin Corridor kidnapped residents of Nagorno-Karabakh Alen Sargsyan, Vahe Hovsepyan and Levon Grigoryan. All three are students who were traveling to Armenia to continue their studies. The transport was agreed upon in advance and was being carried out with Russian peacekeeping escort.

The Foreign Ministry of Armenia called out the Azerbaijani authorities for derailing peace efforts and warned that Baku seeks to perpetrate collective punishment against the entire population in Nagorno-Karabakh.

In an effort to whitewash its criminal record, Azerbaijan unilaterally decides to send ‘aid’ to victims of its blockade

 10:46,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 29, ARMENPRESS. In an apparent effort to whitewash its lengthy record of human rights violations and disregard for international law, the Azerbaijani authorities, who have caused a humanitarian disaster in Nagorno-Karabakh, have now unilaterally decided to send “humanitarian aid” to the victims of their own actions.

Nagorno-Karabakh has been blockaded by Azerbaijan since December 2022. The blockade has led to a humanitarian crisis, with shortages of all essential products.

Azerbaijan had previously claimed to be willing to send supplies through the Aghdam road. This was viewed in Nagorno-Karabakh as an attempt by Baku to subjugate them. Nagorno-Karabakh rejected the offers on receiving any Azeri aid through the Aghdam-Stepanakert road despite the crisis.

On August 29, Azerbaijani news media reported that the Azerbaijan Red Crescent Society will send 40 tons of flour to the Aghdam-Stepanakert road in what Azerbaijan hypocritically described as a “humanitarian gesture.”

Armenia offers support to Slovenia to overcome aftermath of floods

 10:28,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 29, ARMENPRESS. On August 28, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan had a meeting with Tanja Fajon, Vice-President and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia. The meeting took place on the sidelines of the Bled Strategic Forum in Slovenia.

During the meeting, the interlocutors touched upon the issues of bilateral cooperation between Armenia and Slovenia, ongoing programs, expressing willingness to take steps to activate bilateral political dialogue.

Referring to the damages in Slovenia resulting from the floods – the worst natural disaster since the country gained independence, Minister Mirzoyan expressed Armenia's solidarity with the people of Slovenia and expressed readiness to provide support in overcoming the consequences of the natural disaster. He emphasized the importance of adequate response and steps to address natural and man-made disasters.

Views were also exchanged on the Armenia-EU partnership and cooperation within international organizations.

Regional security issues were also on the agenda of the meeting of the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Slovenia.

Ararat Mirzoyan briefed his counterpart on the deepening humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from Azerbaijan's illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor and stressed that  Azerbaijan's policy of keeping 120,000 people under actual siege, aimed at ethnically cleansing the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, should not be tolerated in the 21st century.

Minister Mirzoyan emphasized the imperative to implement legally binding Orders of the UN International Court of Justice of February 22 and July 6, 2023, immediately lift the blockade of the Lachin corridor, and prevent the imminent humanitarian catastrophe in Nagorno-Karabakh. The importance of targeted calls and steps from international partners, including the EU and its member states, was emphasized.

BREAKING: Nagorno-Karabakh President mulls resigning and joining militia

 11:21,

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS. President of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Arayik Harutyunyan has revealed that he has been considering stepping down.

Addressing demonstrators Monday evening in Stepanakert City, Harutyunyan said his potential resignation was discussed during his latest emergency meeting with officials on Monday.

“My possible resignation was also discussed, and a few days before I also wanted to resign. Tomorrow or the day after we will have another meeting in a narrow format, and in the event of a decision being made that I shall resign, I will go and serve in the outposts with the militia as early as this Sunday,” Harutyunyan said.

The demonstrators had gathered after Azeri border guards kidnapped three residents of Nagorno-Karabakh in Lachin Corridor.

Every third death in Nagorno-Karabakh is caused by malnutrition amid blockade

 11:26,

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS. Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) does not negotiate the opening of any road other than the Lachin Corridor, President Arayik Harutyunyan has said.

Addressing demonstrators outside the parliament building in Stepanakert, the Nagorno-Karabakh President said that malnutrition is now the cause of every third death amid the ongoing Azeri blockade.

The demonstrators had gathered after Azeri border guards kidnapped three residents of Nagorno-Karabakh in Lachin Corridor.

“Famine, widespread shortages, pregnant women are suffering miscarriages as a result of this situation. We’ve come to this situation because we had faith in everyone, the major powers, the UN,” Harutyunyan said.

He added that he held an emergency meeting for 6 hours Monday evening with political forces but they did not reach any joint decision. Harutyunyan said as president he has a duty to make a decision, which nevertheless could not get public approval.

“We must solve our food problem, the humanitarian problem in a very short period of time, within a few days,” Harutyunyan said. This comment sparked an angry reaction by the crowd, who said that they are fighting for their right to live in their homeland and build a future, and not for food.

“We are alone. We don’t have friends or support. We will resolve all problems together,” Harutyunyan responded.

He said that they are not discussing the opening of any other roads except the Lachin Corridor.

“Regardless of anything the issue of the road must be resolved. We were waiting so far, we had faith, we believed Putin, we believed Biden, we believed Macron and the government of Armenia…but we are left as hostages,” Harutyunyan said, vowing to resolve the humanitarian issue soon.

Mayor of Paris to personally lead humanitarian convoy for Nagorno-Karabakh to entrance of Lachin Corridor

 12:22,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 29, ARMENPRESS. Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo will visit Armenia on August 30 to personally lead a humanitarian convoy for Nagorno-Karabakh to the entrance of Lachin Corridor, the Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations of France (CCAF) announced Tuesday.

The new convoy, sent by the City of Paris, the regions of Île-de-France, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Hauts-de-France, Occitania and Pays de la Loire, will join the Armenian humanitarian convoy and the previously sent French aid truck stranded at the entrance of Lachin Corridor in Kornidzor because of the Azerbaijani blockade.