Construction site of U.S.-affiliated steel producer in Armenia targeted by Azeri military in heavy cross-border shooting

 12:17,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS. The construction site of a steelworks owned by a U.S.-affiliated company in the Armenian village of Yeraskh came under heavy Azeri cross-border gunfire over the weekend.

In a statement released Monday, GTB Steel, the company building the steel mill, said that the Azeri forces even targeted the site accommodation of workers.

“The Azerbaijani Armed Forces, from August 25 to 27, fired high intensity, unprecedented number of shots in the direction of the plant which is under construction in Yeraskh, and also targeted the workers' site accommodation. More than 60 shots were fired,” GTB Steel said in the statement.

The construction site of the steel mill was targeted by the Azeri forces many times before. During one particular cross-border shooting on June 14, the Azeri forces shot and wounded two Indian construction workers. On June 15, the U.S. State Department said Washington was “deeply concerned” that two civilian workers of the U.S.-affiliated company sustained injuries from “gunfire from the direction of Azerbaijan.”

Armenia fears Azerbaijan plans to commit collective punishment in NK, calls on civilized world to intervene

 21:16,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS. The Foreign Ministry of Armenia called out the Azerbaijani authorities on Monday for derailing the ongoing peace efforts after three residents of Nagorno-Karabakh were kidnapped by Azeri border guards in the Lachin Corridor.

In a statement, the foreign ministry warned that Azerbaijan could be planning to subject the entire people of Nagorno-Karabakh to collective punishment.

“Today, on August 28, Azerbaijani law enforcement agencies in the illegally installed checkpoint in Lachin Corridor kidnapped residents of Nagorno-Karabakh Alen Sargsyan, Vahe Hovsepyan and Levon Grigoryan. The transport was agreed upon in advance and was being carried out with Russian peacekeeping escort, who were to control the uninterrupted connection between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh through Lachin Corridor in accordance with clause 6 of the 9 November 2020 trilateral statement. The abovementioned persons were being transported to the Republic of Armenia to continue their studies. This step by Azerbaijan, which was preceded by the kidnapping of 68-year-old Vagif Khachatryan on July 29, who was being transported to the Republic of Armenia by the International Committee of the Red Cross for urgent medical treatment, constitutes a gross violation of the 9 November 2020 trilateral statement, the binding decisions of the UN International Court of Justice and is an explicit disregard for the unequivocal and targeted calls by the international community, including the members of the UN Security Council. These incidents, which happened under various fake pretexts, bring about substantiated fears that Azerbaijan is overtly planning to subject to collective punishment the entire people of Nagorno-Karabakh, who in the 1990s and in 2020 was forced to withstand large-scale aggressions unleashed by Azerbaijan and defend its right to live peacefully in its own homeland. The policy of mass deprivation of all fundamental rights of the entire population of Nagorno-Karabakh regardless of age, gender or health condition, subjecting them to starvation, blocking supplies of medications, essential products, gas and electricity, terrorizing the entire people through targeting civilians with snipers and kidnappings and blocking the Lachin Corridor showcases the Azerbaijani leadership’s true intentions, i.e., to avoid dialogue with Nagorno-Karabakh at all cost and instead continue its policy of ethnic cleansing. Instead of supporting the steps aimed at establishing peace and stability in the region the Azerbaijani side is explicitly investing its entire efforts in the direction of derailing them. Preventing the ongoing mass crime, with the use of every available instrument is the direct obligation of all actors having influence on the situation and overall, the civilized world,” the foreign ministry said.

President Macron announces new French diplomatic initiative to ramp up international pressure on Azerbaijan

 21:34,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS. French President Emmanuel Macron announced on Monday a new diplomatic initiative to increase international pressure on Azerbaijan to end its blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh.  

Speaking to French ambassadors at a conference, Macron said he will “have an opportunity to speak this week with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.”

“We will demand full respect for the humanitarian Lachin Corridor’s functions. We will once again present a diplomatic initiative in this direction on the international level in order to increase pressure,” Macron added.

On August 25, the French Le Figaro newspaper reported that France plans to introduce a UN Security Council resolution regarding the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from the Azerbaijani blockade of the Lachin Corridor.

AW: ANC of Rhode Island meets with Congressman Seth Magaziner regarding the crisis in Artsakh

ANC-RI members met with Congressman Seth Magaziner to discuss the crisis in Artsakh. Pictured from l. to r.: ANC-RI chair Steve Elmasian, Steve Mesrobian, Congressman Magaziner, Ani Haroian, Berge Zobian and Harout Tashian

WARWICK, R.I.—Six members of the Armenian National Committee of Rhode Island (ANC-RI) met with U.S. Congressman Seth Magaziner (D-RI-2) in his Warwick office on the morning of August 24.

The freshman representative is a member of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues and has proven during his short term in office to be a strong ally and friend to his Armenian constituents in Rhode Island.

ANC-RI chair Steve Elmasian began the meeting by thanking Rep. Magaziner for his readiness to meet and discuss the worsening crisis in Artsakh.

ANC-RI member Steve Mesrobian thanked Rep. Magaziner for being a co-sponsor on all three current ANCA-backed House resolutions:

  • H.Res.108 – Condemning Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) and ongoing human rights violations.
  • H.Res.320 – Recognizing the Republic of Artsakh’s independence and condemning Azerbaijan’s continued aggression against Armenia and Artsakh.
  • H.R.2803 – Providing funding for Armenian Genocide education. 

Mesrobian reviewed the rapidly deteriorating situation in Artsakh with the congressman and his district director, Christa Thompson, and asked for the congressman’s help to reach out to both U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and USAID chair Samantha Power to fast track emergency humanitarian aid to the besieged Armenian population of Artsakh.

Rep. Magaziner was very aware of the situation and eager to help, repeatedly asking what more he can do to help the citizens of Artsakh.

Congressman Magaziner agreed to speak to the chairs of the Armenian Caucus to request a letter to Blinken and Power as well as to ask the House of Representative leadership for an update on the three open ANCA-backed resolutions.

The Armenian National Committee of Rhode Island (ANC-RI) has worked tirelessly for decades advocating for all issues of concern to Armenians in Rhode Island, the United States, Armenia and Artsakh. The ANC-RI is responsible for the Armenian flag flying at the RI State House and at every city and town in the state on April 24 each year. Additionally, the ANC-RI holds flag raising ceremonies annually in North Providence and Cranston, where local Armenian residents are honored. The ANC-RI also worked with the RI House of Representatives to be the first government body in the world to officially recognize Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh).


Armenpress: Prince Michael of Liechtenstein expresses readiness to personally lead humanitarian airlift to Nagorno-Karabakh

 21:46,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS.  Prince Michael of Liechtenstein and other humanitarian leaders have expressed readiness to lead a humanitarian airlift to Nagorno-Karabakh amid the Azeri blockade.

Switzerland’s Impact Investing Solutions said Monday that Prince Michael of Liechtenstein, expressed readiness to “lead a humanitarian airlift to besieged Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) and to be on the board that will fly to the region, bringing much-needed food and medication arranged by the Aznavour Foundation.”

“We from Impact Investing Solutions from Switzerland, who is partnering in facilitating this humanitarian mission, together with H.S.H. Prince Michael, other world leaders, current and former heads of state are also ready to lead necessary airlifts to Nagorno-Karabakh, where 120,000 people, including 30,000 children, have been deprived of food and medication for more than 8 months already,” Impact Investing Solutions said in a statement.

A call to organize a humanitarian airlift to Nagorno-Karabakh was first made in December 2022 by a group of global humanitarian leaders, including Leymah Gbowee, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate; Bernard Kouchner, former French Foreign Minister and former Minister of Health, Paul Polman, climate and equalities campaigner; former CEO of Unilever; Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland; Ernesto Zedillo, former President of Mexico and many more human rights defenders and peace activists.

“An international humanitarian airlift is being organized, delivering food and other essentials to the local population and evacuating those whose life is endangered to safety. Among these are several patients of the Republican Medical Centre Stepanakert in grave conditions requiring urgent medical care that cannot be adequately provided because of the blockade. In the meantime, while the road remains blocked, the humanitarian airlift should help the local population to survive and sustain. There already is an operational airport in Stepanakert, which can be used for this purpose. This will not require any additional efforts on the side of the international community except for those necessary to maintain the airlift and ensure its safety. Currently, there is a call to World Food Programme (WFP) and the Red Cross to organize the flight in the nearest days, and H.S.H. Prince Michael of Liechtenstein is ready to lead the first humanitarian mission.”

“Let's rally together to bring aid and relief to Nagorno-Karabakh,” the organization added.

Armenian Wounded Heroes Fund: Rehabilitating Wounded Heroes One Hero at a Time

Some of the wounded soldiers who have benefitted from AWHF services


BY LORI KHATCHATURIAN

Tens of thousands of young soldiers risk their lives every day to protect Armenia. The sad reality is that out of those who return, many lose their quality of life.

Unfortunately, after the 44-day war, Armenia has hundreds of soldiers who are amputees, having lost one or multiple limbs. Prosthetic devices such as artificial arms or legs have the potential to restore a soldier’s quality of life. However, they cost from a range of $5,000 to $50,000 and require additional physical therapy, making it extremely difficult for Armenian soldiers to gain access to. In addition, even the best prosthetics need to be replaced multiple times during the life of a soldier.

The AWHF rehab center in action

As a high school student given the opportunity to present a speech at Johns Hopkins University, I decided to research solutions to combat this problem. As part of my research, I visited the Armenian Heroes Rehabilitation Center (Center), which has immensely contributed to prosthetic and rehabilitation availability in Armenia.

The Center opened in May 2021 and is funded by the generous donations of AWHF supporters, to provide heroes free one-on-one training on how to use their prosthetics. Upon arriving at their newest, renovated center, I was able to meet and interview Armenian veterans. Most of the veterans come from impoverished villages across Armenia and once they lost their limbs felt they couldn’t accomplish anything more in their lifetime. However, the Center completely changed these expectations and provided these heroes with the hope they needed. When soldier amputees first come to the Center, experts work with them for up to 3 years. In this process, experts strengthen veterans’ muscles, attach prosthetic devices, and rehabilitate veterans post prosthetic attachment. This entire process is free of charge and available to every soldier in Armenia, no matter their socioeconomic status.

The Center is run by Lieutenant Colonel Sargis Stepanyan, a veteran who lost both his legs and one arm while retrieving fallen comrades under enemy fire. What struck me most from Stepanyan’s interview is when he stated, “If a wounded hero does not want to walk, he won’t.”

Not only does the Center provide free prosthetics and rehabilitation, but they prioritize the hero’s mental health. The Center does not separate those with and without prosthetics in the training room to create a sense of normalcy.

Everything in the Center from the gym equipment to the locker rooms is disability and wheelchair friendly, which is also unique in Armenia. In order to motivate and provide the soldiers with a sense of purpose, Stepanyan trains soldiers for international competitions once their prosthetic rehabilitation is over. Stepanyan, an international Paralympic arm-wrestler and world champion, serves as an example for other soldiers that their disabilities are not limiting.

AWHF assists soldiers both physically and psychologically when returning to their full capacity. Centers and organizations like these are key to providing access to implementing prosthetics and rehabilitation in developing countries. In addition to the Rehab Center, AWHF has provided over 20,000 USA military first aid kits, which provide immediate medical aid and to stop bleeding.  These first aid kits have saved numerous lives over the past five years. Visit the AWHF website for more information.

Lori Khatchaturian is a Senior at La Canada High School. She is Co-Chair of the Armenian Club, President of LA Children’s Hospital Club, President of Key Club, Secretary of the National Honors Society.




Asbarez: Europe Officials Say they Will Go to Lachin to Ensure Humanitarian Assistance


Several European officials have sounded the alarm on the worsening humanitarian situation in Artsakh and have vowed to personally travel to the Lachin Corridor to personally address and ensure the delivery of humanitarian assistance to the residents of Artsakh.

Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights Dunja Mijatović  on Monday again called for the restoration of free movement along the Lachin Corridor and confirmed readiness to travel to Artsakh to assist in overcoming the existing human rights challenges.

“I remain seriously concerned about the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and the human rights of its population following the blocking of the road running through the Lachin Corridor since December 2022. I reiterate the call I made at that time to restore free movement along that road,” Mijatović said.

“Despite my calls and those of numerous other international stakeholders, the humanitarian and human rights situation in the area has reportedly further deteriorated, affecting particularly the most vulnerable, due to the prolonged disruption in the movement of people and access to food supplies and urgent medical care. The International Committee of the Red Cross, which is for the moment the only international humanitarian organization operating across the Lachin Corridor, indicated that the population was facing a lack of life-saving medication and essentials,” she added.

“The relevant stakeholders should immediately find a solution to avoid any further deterioration of the very dangerous situation the local population is facing and guarantee safe and free passage to those providing humanitarian assistance and those ensuring human rights protection,” Mijatović  said.

“I confirm my commitment and readiness to engage with all the relevant interlocutors and to travel to Nagorno Karabakh to assist in overcoming the existing human rights challenges,” Mijatović added in her statement.

Meanwhile, Switzerland’s Impact Investing Solutions said Monday that Prince Michael of Liechtenstein, has expressed readiness to “lead a humanitarian airlift to besieged Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) and to be on board the flight to the region, bringing much-needed food and medication arranged by the Aznavour Foundation.

“We from Impact Investing Solutions from Switzerland, who is partnering in facilitating this humanitarian mission, together with H.S.H. Prince Michael, other world leaders, current and former heads of state are also ready to lead necessary airlifts to Nagorno-Karabakh, where 120,000 people, including 30,000 children, have been deprived of food and medication for more than 8 months already,” Impact Investing Solutions said in a statement.

A call to organize a humanitarian airlift to Nagorno-Karabakh was first made in December 2022 by a group of global humanitarian leaders, including Leymah Gbowee, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate; Bernard Kouchner, former French Foreign Minister and former Minister of Health, Paul Polman, climate and equalities campaigner; former CEO of Unilever; Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland; Ernesto Zedillo, former President of Mexico and many more human rights defenders and peace activists.

“An international humanitarian airlift is being organized, delivering food and other essentials to the local population and evacuating those whose life is endangered to safety. Among these are several patients of the Republican Medical Center in Stepanakert in grave conditions requiring urgent medical care that cannot be adequately provided because of the blockade. In the meantime, while the road remains blocked, the humanitarian airlift should help the local population to survive and sustain. There already is an operational airport in Stepanakert, which can be used for this purpose. This will not require any additional efforts on the side of the international community except for those necessary to maintain the airlift and ensure its safety. Currently, there is a call to World Food Programme (WFP) and the Red Cross to organize the flight in the nearest days, and H.S.H. Prince Michael of Liechtenstein is ready to lead the first humanitarian mission,” the statement said.

“Let’s rally together to bring aid and relief to Nagorno-Karabakh,” the organization added.

Asbarez: AMAA Artsakh Holds Youth Camp

AMAA Artsakh camp attendees


BY VIKTOR KARAPETYAN
AMAA Representative in Artsakh

They are trying to eliminate us, but we live and keep others alive…

Life in Artsakh is different. To live here you must be a support for those around you. You must transmit life to others. You must fight and not give up.

Uncertainty, chaos, despair… it seems that spring will never come to your Homeland. It is difficult to work with members of the young generation who live in this chaos and convey to them hope. It is even more difficult to show them one’s share of the mission.

Once again, from August 14 to 18, AMAA’s branch in Artsakh brought together many youth to encourage, give hope and teach them that each of us has something to do to build the Motherland. We must learn to be healthy in mind, heart, soul, and the life we live so that we can pass on the same to others.

The Camp, filled with entertainment, educational and patriotic sessions, separated the children from their everyday worries and the blockade.

We must all learn together by helping and uplifting each other to overcome these challenges and difficulties.

“It is the heroic resistance that will save the Motherland and not pitiful foreign mercy,” said Zaven Khanjian, AMAA Executive Director/CEO. “We firmly stand by your side, with unbreakable will, but we humble ourselves against your heroic struggle. We appreciate, love, join your struggle and bow before you.”

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/28/2023

                                        Monday, 


More Noncombat Deaths In Armenian Army’s Ranks

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Soldiers march at an Armenian military base, December 24, 2022.


An Armenian soldier reportedly shot dead a comrade before taking his own life 
while on combat duty on Sunday, adding to the growing number of noncombat deaths 
in the Armenian army’s ranks.

Armenia’s Investigative Committee suggested on Monday that the fatal shootings 
were the result of a gross violation of military regulations. The 
law-enforcement agency did not immediately arrest or charge any other servicemen 
in connection with the deadly incident which it said occurred at an army post on 
the border with Azerbaijan.

The shootings sparked fresh uproar from human rights activists monitoring the 
armed forces. According to one of them, Zhanna Andreasian, 54 Armenian soldiers 
died in the first half of this year, and only a dozen of them were killed by 
enemy fire.

Fifteen other conscripts were found dead in January at their military barracks 
destroyed by a major fire. Virtually all other victims of deadly noncombat 
incidents committed suicide, according to military investigators. Six more 
soldiers, including the latest victims, died in August.

“This is unprecedented,” Andreasian said on Monday, commending on the grim 
statistics. “There was no such scale under our former rulers.”

The veteran activist blamed Defense Minister Suren Papikian and the army top 
brass for the increased number of deaths which she said makes mockery of 
sweeping defense reforms repeatedly announced by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
after the 2020 war with Azerbaijan.

“He [Papikian] doesn’t speak up, and we don’t know … what they are reforming. He 
had better resign together with his boss [Pashinian,]” she told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service.

Another human rights campaigner, Artur Sakunts, said the declared reforms cannot 
make any difference unless the authorities take “urgent” measures to tackle poor 
army discipline. He said military commanders must at last be held accountable 
for deaths and other serious incidents happening in their units.

Andreasian similarly complained that senior or mid-ranking officers are rarely 
prosecuted over such crimes. She accused investigators of routinely covering 
them up.




France's Macron Seeks Stronger Pressure On Azerbaijan


France - President Emmanuel Macron gives a speech in front of French ambassadors 
at the Elysee Palace, Paris, .


France will try to drum up stronger international pressure on Azerbaijan to end 
its continuing blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh, French President Emmanuel Macron 
said on Monday.

"I will have an opportunity to speak this week with [Armenian] Prime Minister 
Pashinian and with [Azerbaijani] President Ilham Aliyev,” Macron told French 
ambassadors to countries around the world.

“We will demand full respect for the Lachin humanitarian corridor and we will 
again take a diplomatic initiative in this direction internationally to increase 
the pressure,” he said in remarks cited by French media.

Macron gave no details of that initiative. France’s Le Figaro daily reported 
last week that Paris is “preparing to submit” to the UN Security Council a draft 
resolution designed to help Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population left “on the 
verge of starvation.”

The Security Council discussed the worsening humanitarian crisis in Karabakh 
during an August 16 meeting initiated by Armenia. Although most of its members, 
including the United States, urged the lifting of the Azerbaijani blockade, the 
council did not adopt a relevant resolution or statement.

The U.S., the European Union and Russia have repeatedly called for renewed 
commercial and humanitarian traffic through the sole road connecting Karabakh to 
Armenia. Azerbaijan has dismissed their appeals.

Baku was quick to denounce Macron’s latest remarks, saying that his “language of 
pressure” is unacceptable. An Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokeswoman also 
objected to the French leader’s use of the term “Lachin humanitarian corridor.” 
He said it violates Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

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




Bread Shortage Worsens In Karabakh

        • Susan Badalian

Nagorno-Karabakh - People wait in a line outside a bakery in Stepanakert, August 
8, 2023.


Authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have urged local farmers to sell wheat harvested 
by them amid a deepening shortage of bread resulting from Azerbaijan’s 
eight-month blockade of the Lachin corridor.

Bread appears to have become the main staple food in Stepanakert and other 
Karabakh towns since Baku tightened the blockade in mid-June by halting all 
relief supplies to the Armenian-populated region carried out by Russian 
peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross. Local food stores 
have run out of limited amounts of other basic other foodstuffs sold in previous 
months.

The bread shortage worsened in recent days, with Stepanakert residents saying 
that they now have to spend more hours waiting in lines to buy up to loaves per 
person from bakeries.

“When you stand in a line you lose a whole day,” one of them, Arega Ishkhanian, 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “If you queue up at six in the evening, you may 
have to wait until the next morning.”

“And the problem is not just bread, there is nothing else available,” she said. 
“But at least the kids could eat bread.”

Nagorno-Karabakh - Stepanakert residents line up to buy bread, August 8, 2023.

In a statement issued on Sunday, Karabakh’s Agricultural Fund said it is 
supplying additional quantities of flour to bakeries to try to alleviate the 
problem. Underscoring its gravity, the agency said the authorities are ready to 
buy up all wheat grown and stored by Karabakh farmers and to swiftly pay for it 
in cash. It urged the farmers to sell off their wheat stocks.

The authorities are facing growing calls to introduce bread coupons and thus 
reduce waiting lines formed outside bakeries and shops.

The Armenian government warned in July that Karabakh is now “on the verge of 
starvation.” It urged the international community to put stronger pressure on 
Azerbaijan to lift the blockade.

The United States, the European Union and Russia have repeatedly called for 
renewed commercial and humanitarian traffic through the sole road connecting 
Karabakh to Armenia. Baku has dismissed their appeals.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev made clear on Saturday that he will not bow 
to the international pressure. Visiting the town of Lachin close to Karabakh’s 
lifeline road, Aliyev said Baku’s actions are aimed at “fully restoring 
Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.”

“Nothing can force us to deviate from our path,” he said.




Three More Karabakh Men Arrested By Azerbaijan (UPDATED)

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

A view of the Azerbaijani checlpoint set up in the Lachin corridor, June 23, 
2023.


Three residents of Nagorno-Karabakh were detained by Azerbaijani security forces 
on Monday while traveling to Armenia through the Lachin corridor.

Karabakh officials said that the young men, identified as Alen Sargsian, Vahe 
Hovsepian and Levon Grigorian, were “kidnapped” at the Azerbaijani checkpoint 
blocking the corridor as they were escorted by Russian peacekeepers along with 
other Karabakh civilians.

One of the officials, Artak Beglarian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that the 
peacekeepers are negotiating with the Azerbaijani side to try have them freed. 
Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, held an emergency session of his 
security council later in the day.

“Azerbaijan is continuing its genocidal policy towards the people of Artsakh, 
once again violating international humanitarian law,” read a Karabakh statement 
issued shortly after the detentions.

The Azerbaijani authorities did not immediately comment on the arrests. But 
media outlets linked to them reported that the three Karabakh Armenians are 
suspected of being members of a Karabakh football team that had “disrespected” 
the Azerbaijani national flag in a 2021 video posted on social media.

Beglarian said he “cannot confirm” that Sargsian, Hovsepian and Grigorian played 
for that youth team based in the Karabakh town of Martuni. “All three of them 
are students of Armenian universities,” he said.

In any case, added Beglarian, the Azerbaijani allegations are “absurd” and aimed 
at intimidating Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population opposed to the restoration 
of Azerbaijani control over their region.

Another Karabakh man, Vagif Khachatrian, was arrested at the Azerbaijani 
checkpoint in late July while being evacuated by the International Committee of 
the Red Cross (ICRC) to Armenia. The 68-year-old was taken Baku to stand trial 
on charges of killing and deporting Karabakh’s ethnic Azerbaijani residents in 
December 1991, at the start of the first Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

Karabakh’s leadership rejected the “false” accusations and demanded 
Khachatrian’s immediate release. The Armenian Foreign Ministry likewise 
condemned Khachatrian’s arrest as a “blatant violation of international 
humanitarian law” and “war crime.”

The ministry condemned the latest detentions as well. It described them as a 
further indication that Baku intends to “avoid dialogue with Nagorno-Karabakh by 
all means and continue instead his policy of ethnic cleansing.”

Khachatrian is the first Karabakh patient arrested by the Azerbaijani 
authorities during regular medical evacuations organized by the ICRC after Baku 
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. They 
are escorted by Russian peacekeepers.



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.

 

The California Courier Online, August 31, 2023

The California
Courier Online, August 31, 2023

 

1-         Pashinyan’s
Gross Misconduct Dishonors

            Everything
Armenians Hold Sacrosanct

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Armenian
community calls on Kim Kardashian to speak up for Artsakh

3-         Three
Artsakh Armenian Students Kidnapped

             by Azerbaijan while Crossing Lachin
Corridor

4-         Wagner chief
Prigozhin, Armenian officer among 10 dead in Russia jet crash

************************************************************************************************************************************************

 

1-         Pashinyan’s
Gross Misconduct Dishonors

            Everything
Armenians Hold Sacrosanct

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

 

Not a day passes without Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan
making a new blunder.

This is what happens when a yellow journalist becomes the
head of government. Most Armenians, blinded by their utter dislike of the
former leaders, welcomed him initially with open arms.

Fortunately, Pashinyan’s popularity has plummeted from 80%
five years ago to 13% last month. Over the years, various Armenian polls have
indicated a steady decline in his ratings. Nevertheless, he remains in power
and refuses to resign, especially after his calamitous mismanagement of the
2020 war, resulting in the loss of most of the Republic of Artsakh
and the deaths and injury of thousands of Armenian soldiers.

Pashinyan has made so many mistakes that it is hard to
mention them all. His biggest blunder was recognizing the Republic
of Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan,
thus dishonoring the sacrifices of thousands of dead and wounded Armenian
soldiers. He had no right ‘to gift’ Artsakh to Azerbaijan,
since the territory of the Republic of
Artsakh did not fall under the
jurisdiction of Armenia.

Among Pashinyan’s many other blunders are: swinging a hammer
in the air during the electoral campaign in 2021, threatening to bash the heads
of his political rivals and lay them on the asphalt. He then disparaged Armenians’
long-held devotion to Mt. Ararat, and criticized two of Armenia’s most
cherished state symbols: the coat of arms and national anthem.

More recently, Pashinyan complained about the 1990
Declaration of Armenia’s Independence, the
initial document that paved the way for the establishment of the Republic of Armenia, after seven decades of
Communist rule. He wrongly stated that the Declaration of Independence fomented
conflicts with Azerbaijan
and Turkey
which is at odds with his ‘peace agenda.’

The Declaration of Independence had referred to the 1989
unification act adopted by the legislatures of Soviet Armenia and the
autonomous region of Nagorno-Karabagh. It had also declared that the Republic of Armenia
supports the “international recognition of the 1915 Genocide in Ottoman Turkey
and Western Armenia.” Subsequently, Armenia’s
constitution referred to the Declaration of Independence.

Last week, on the occasion of the 33rd anniversary of the
Declaration of Independence, Pashinyan stated: “A critical analysis of the text
of the Declaration shows that we eventually chose a narrative and content based
on the formula that made us part of the Soviet Union; namely, a confrontational
narrative with the regional environment that was to keep us in constant conflicts
with our neighbors.”

Pashinyan misinterpreted the Declaration of Independence
from the Soviet Union as being “based on the formula that made us part of the Soviet Union.” His faulty explanation is the exact
opposite of what the text actually stated.

Pashinyan went on to push forward his unrealistic and
defeatist ‘peace agenda’ to normalize Armenia’s
relations with Azerbaijan
and Turkey.
He does not seem to understand that begging for peace does not lead to peace.
This is simply a formula for more humiliation and war. While blindly pushing
for peace, he contradicted himself by stating that Azerbaijan is committing genocide
against Artsakh Armenians. How can genocide and peace coexist?

Pashinyan’s many criticisms indicate that he is opposed to
all symbols and values of the independent Republic of Armenia.
His eventual goal is to appease Azerbaijan
and Turkey by eliminating
all references to Artsakh and giving up the pursuit of genocide claims from Turkey.

In the meantime, Pashinyan has completely forgotten the
dozens of Armenian prisoners of war who have been detained and tortured in Baku since the 2020 war.
Not only he has taken no action to liberate them, but has not even mentioned
them. This is the result of his failure to have Armenia
and Azerbaijan
simultaneously exchange all their prisoners of war, as stated in their 2020
agreement. Instead, right after the war, Pashinyan released all Azeri prisoners
in return for a small number of Armenian prisoners.

Furthermore, after occupying most of Artsakh,
Azerbaijan has taken over
parts of the territory of the Republic
of Armenia. Pashinyan has
made no effort to dislodge the enemy. Protecting Armenia’s borders is one of the key
responsibilities of the Prime Minister.

Pashinyan’s security agents silence all those who disagree
with his defeatist ‘peace plan,’ whether they live in Armenia or the
Diaspora. Patriotic Armenians and non-Armenians who support the Armenian Cause
are banned from visiting Armenia,
while the inhabitants of Armenia
are harassed and arrested if they dare to protest or criticize Pashinyan. In
the meantime, Turkish denialists and extremist grey wolf members are free to
roam Armenia and insult the
memory of Armenian Genocide victims at the Genocide Memorial in Yerevan.

This is the exact opposite of what a democratic country
should be, where freedom of _expression_ is the basic right of the people.
Regrettably, a man who came to power claiming to establish democracy and
democratic freedoms has done the exact opposite. All powers and decision-making
authority is concentrated in the hands of one man who consults no one and
listens to no one. Neither the Ministers nor the Parliament nor the President
nor the courts have any say in Pashinyan’s autocratic decisions.

 

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2-         Armenian community calls on Kim
Kardashian to speak up for Artsakh

 

(The International News)—On Saturday, August 26, a group of
Armenian-Americans gathered outside the entrance to the exclusive Hidden Hills
community in Calabasas, California, where the 42-year-old reality
star resides with her children. This gated community also houses several other
members of the celebrity family, including sisters Kourtney, Khloe, Kylie
Jenner, and their mother Kris Jenner.

During this demonstration, protesters displayed Armenian
tricolor flags and brandished signs with messages, such as ‘Kim, Speak up for
Artsakh’ and ‘Kim, Your People Need You.’

Kardashian has strong familial ties to the community. Kim’s
late father, Robert Kardashian, was a third-generation Armenian-American, thus
grounding their connection to the Armenian heritage.

Kim, along with her sisters Kourtney and Khloe, embarked on
a journey to Armenia
in 2015 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide.

 

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3-         Three Artsakh Armenian Students
Kidnapped

            by Azerbaijan
while Crossing Lachin Corridor

 

YEREVAN
(Armenpress)—Artsakh authorities are unable to contact two students who were
taken into interrogation by Azeri border guards in the Lachin Corridor’s
illegal Azeri checkpoint, the Artsakh Human Rights Defender Gegham Stepanyan
said in a statement.

Another student was kidnapped by Azeri border guards and
taken into an unknown direction, Stepanyan said.

All three men are students of universities in Armenia; they were among 170 others who were
being transported by Russian peacekeepers from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia on
August 28. The 22-year-old student, Alen Sargsyan, was kidnapped by the use of
force by Azeri border guards.

Another 5 persons were taken into an interrogation room
where they were questioned by Azeri border guards on various issues, such as
their purpose of visiting Armenia,
the economic situation in Armenia
and Artsakh and others.

Stepanyan said the border guards had pre-arranged lists of
persons. Two people who were on this list—Vahe Hovsepyan and Levon
Grigoryan—did not cross the illegal checkpoint but Nagorno-Karabakh authorities
are unable to contact them.

President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan convened a Security
Council meeting to discuss the measures taken by his administration to
determine the fate of the men kidnapped by Azerbaijani border guards and return
them home.Harutyunyan and the officials also discussed the situation in
Artsakh, possible developments and the tasks of the authorities, his office
said in a statement.

“President Harutyunyan informed the participants of the
session about the steps taken in the direction of determining the fate of the
citizens of Artsakh Republic who were kidnapped by Azerbaijan and
returning them home. The situation in Artsakh, possible developments and tasks
of the authorities for withstanding the daily worsening humanitarian disaster
and solving security issues were discussed,” Harutyunyan’s office said.

According to Azerbaijani media reports, the arrested
Armenians are football players of the Martuni Avo club who have been wanted by
Azerbaijani law enforcement agencies since 2021 for allegedly “dishonoring” the
Azerbaijani flag. They face a 10-day jail term.

 

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4-         Wagner chief
Prigozhin, Armenian officer among 10 dead in Russia jet crash

 

(Armenpress)—A business jet crash in Russia has
killed ten. Wagner Mercenary Group chief Yevgeny Prigozhin was on the passenger
list, authorities say.

The Embraer business jet crashed in the Tver region, all on
board were killed, Russisn media quoted the Emergency Ministry as saying.

“The Embraer plane was flying from Sheremetyevo to St. Petersburg. There
were three pilots and seven passengers on board. All of them died,” the source
said.

The emergency services told TASS that the bodies of four
people had been found.

It was noted that the plane burned down when it hit the
ground, it was in flight for less than half an hour.

Yevgeny Makaryan was also with Prigozhin in the plane that
crashed in Tver marz. According to Russian media, he was a former district policeman,
joined Wagner HRC in 2016, and fought in Syria. Makaryan was 38 years old
and lived in the Chelyabinsk
region.

On June 24, Prigozhin and his mercenary forces staged a
dramatic uprising against Russia’s
Vladimir Putin. However, the rebellion was dramatically called off before the
rebels reached the capital city.

The potential coup could have dramatically impacted Armenia and
Artsakh, if Russian Peacekeepers withdrew from Artsakh, leaving Armenians there
vulnerable to Azeri attacks. Any Russian withdrawal from the region, including Armenia, could threaten Armenia’s protection from attacks by Azerbaijan and Turkey.

 

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