Nagorno-Karabakh Ombudsman demands Russian peacekeepers and ICRC to return kidnapped students

 17:54,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS. Nagorno-Karabakh (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 Nagorno-Karabakh 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.

The three men 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 Nagorno-Karabakh 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.

“We’ve numerously said that the illegal checkpoint installed near Hakari Bridge is a direct and undeniable threat to the protection of the physical existence and fundamental rights of the civilian population of Artsakh. The kidnappings of Vagif Khachatryan and Alen Sargsyan are undisputed proofs that the so-called checkpoint has turned into an instrument for serving criminal arbitrariness, through which civilians are arbitrarily kidnapped and deprived of freedom by Azerbaijanis. A population of 120,000 people is being kept in blockade, deprived of humanitarian access and the opportunity of protection of the basic human rights. The international legal and political guarantees of both the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Russian peacekeepers are insufficient for the protection of the rights of Artsakh population, including for ensuring the free and safe movement. Taking into consideration the obligations assumed by these two actors, the Human Rights Defender demands from them to take all available measures to ensure the security of humanitarian movement of the Artsakh population and the immediate return of the kidnapped persons. Without the presence of such guarantees the transfers of civilians must be stopped,” Stepanyan said.

The facts will be presented to international organizations.

President of Nagorno-Karabakh convenes Security Council session to discuss measures for returning kidnapped citizens

 20:00,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS. President of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Arayik Harutyunyan has 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 today 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.

AW: St. Gregory Church announces 46th Annual Armenian Fall Festival

INDIAN ORCHARD, Mass.—St. Gregory Armenian Apostolic Church is excited to announce its 46th Annual Armenian Fall Festival will be held on Saturday September 30 from 12-5 p.m. at 135 Goodwin Street. A vibrant celebration of Armenian culture, featuring an immersive experience of food, music, dance and community engagement, the festival is free and open to the public with free parking. 

“We are thrilled to have the opportunity to share our rich history, culture and heritage through food, music and dance,” said Tanya Garibian, chair of the Board of Trustees. “Through these festivals, we celebrate our survival and growth since the Armenian Genocide 100 years ago. Join us as we share that growth, celebration, resilience and hope.”

Indulge in homemade Armenian meals either at the festival or as take-out. Select from shish kebab, losh kebab, chicken kebab, spinach boreg and more. These authentic dishes, prepared fresh and grilled on site, showcase our rich culinary tradition. Explore a delightful assortment of homemade pastries, such as choreg, kourabia, paklava, kadayif, bourma and jars of tourshi (pickled vegetables), among other treats, all available for purchase. 

A live Armenian band will serenade attendees while traditional Armenian dancing takes place, offering a firsthand experience of our cultural traditions. This event is a testament to the unity, resilience and hope that the Armenian community embodies. Please join us!

For more information, visit www.saintgregoryarmenianchurch.org or contact Claudia Muradian-Brubach at 413-209-1439 or [email protected].




Kim Kardashian’s community cordoned off by Armenian Protesters pleading for humanitarian aid

Aug 27 2023
By Web Desk

Kim Kardashian is now facing a new call to action on the global stage. 

On a recent Saturday, a gathering of Armenian-American protesters made their presence felt at 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 impactful demonstration, protesters prominently displayed Armenian flags and brandished signs with powerful messages, such as 'Kim, Speak up for Artsakh' and 'Kim, Your People Need You.' 

The choice to target the Kardashian clan was not arbitrary but rather due to their 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.

Now, the world watches as they are called upon to use their platform for advocacy once again, this time in the face of an international humanitarian crisis.

For several weeks now, protesters have been causing traffic disruptions across the greater Los Angeles area, all in a bid to draw attention to what they describe as a persistent crisis in the Republic of Artsakh, a region home to approximately 120,000 ethnic Armenians. 

Their claims revolve around an alleged crisis sparked when the Azerbaijani government initiated a blockade on the sole road connecting Artsakh with Armenia in December. 

https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1104320-kim-kardashians-community-cordoned-off-by-armenian-protesters-pleading-for-humanitarian-aid

Joe Manganiello unveils Armenian calligraphy tattoo

GEO.TV
Aug 27 2023

Amid the ongoing divorce with actress Sofia Vergara, Joe Manganiello, 46, revealed a fresh forearm tattoo this week. 

The new ink, a tribute to his Armenian heritage, was showcased in an August 22 Instagram post by Ruben Malayan, a calligrapher who conceptualized and scripted the design rather than a tattoo artist.

The lengthy caption of the post read, "My latest work, so far largest in scale. Հրեշտակ (Angel) for @joemanganiello, who I am sure will wear it with pride! Բարով մաշես: @rubenmalayan. #armeniancalligraphy and thank you @serjtankian for making the connection!"

Manganiello positioned his forearm prominently in the photo, alongside Bubbles, the dog that Vergara allowed him to keep. 

The calligraphy-style font, meticulously crafted by Malayan, showcased the Armenian word 'Հրեշտակ', translating to 'angel' in English, according to the calligrapher.

The image depicted Manganiello in a waist-up shot, clad in a short-sleeve black t-shirt.

Manganiello's connection to his Armenian heritage runs deep through his maternal lineage, as his great-grandmother Terviz "Rose" Darakjian is a survivor of the Armenian genocide. His pride in his roots has been a recurring theme in his public statements over the years.

Young Lebanese Armenians Fight To Preserve Their Historic Identity

The Media Line
Aug 27 2023

Survivors of the 1915-1916 Armenian genocide settled in Beirut and have grown into a community of 156,000. Their young people are working to preserve the unique dialect of their historical homeland, Western Armenia, now part of Turkey

Multicultural Lebanon has many communities, especially in the capital, Beirut.

Wanderers who cross the city’s northeastern bridges enter a different world. Signs change from Arabic to Armenian, and the Armenian flag flies alongside the Lebanese one in front of government buildings. Gold jewelry stores line the streets, many named after cities in what was once Western Armenia, the Armenians’ historical home, now part of eastern Turkey.

A century ago, survivors of the 1915-1916 Armenian genocide arrived in Beirut with little but their trauma. They were initially quarantined for 40 days in the northeastern Karantina neighborhood, next to the port, before being permitted to establish homes along the nearby Beirut River.

The center of the Armenian diaspora is the northeastern Beirut suburb of Bourj Hammoud, Armenian-Lebanese analyst Yeghia Tashjian told The Media Line. This remains true even though more ethnic Armenians live in Glendale, California, than in Lebanon.

According to Minority Rights Group International, 156,000 people of Armenian Christian origin live in Lebanon today, roughly 3% of the country’s population.

Lebanon was the first Middle Eastern country, and the first in the Arab League, to recognize the Armenian genocide, which took place in the last years of the Ottoman Empire.

In the Armenian genocide, Ottoman forces killed an estimated 660,000 to 1.2 million Armenians, either directly in massacres or by forced marches into the desert. Up to 200,000 Armenian women and children were also forcibly converted to Islam and placed in Muslim households. The attacks ended more than 2,000 years of Armenian civilization in what was then Western Armenia, now Eastern Anatolia in Turkey. Over 30 countries have recognized the events as genocide.

In 2000, the Lebanese parliament voted to commemorate the genocide’s anniversary, and since then, the country has honored Armenia’s victims each year on April 24.

Young Lebanese Armenians now meet regularly at the Zavarian Student Association, in the center of Bourj Hammoud. The association is named after pre-genocide Armenian political leader and co-founder of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Simon Zavarian, who together with eight other scholars established a student association at the American University of Beirut in 1904.

A bust of Armenian political leader and co-founder of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Simon Zavarian, at the Zavarian Student Association, Bourj Hammoud, Lebanon, July 11, 2023. (Andrea López-Tomàs/The Media Line)

“In Lebanon, we don’t feel 100% Lebanese, but in Armenia, we don’t feel Armenian,” said a group member identified only as Zaven.

Zaven and his friends are concerned with preserving the Western Armenian language.

“We are losing it because only the diaspora uses this form of Armenian,” he said, adding that those living in what is now Armenia speak the Eastern Armenian dialect.

“The Armenian community is very institutionalized,” said another member, Tahjian. “Schools, cultural and political centers are very important” in helping Lebanese Armenians remain attached to their national identity, he said.

Beirut is home to the first and only Armenian university outside Armenia. Haigazian University was established in the 1950s by the Union of Armenian Evangelical Churches in the Near East and by the Armenian Missionary Association of America.

Though we are Christians, others see us as a bridge between Muslims and Christians in Lebanon

“The churches played an important role in building Western Armenian identity here in Lebanon, and this has continued,” Tahjian said.

“Though we are Christians, others see us as a bridge between Muslims and Christians in Lebanon.”

Lebanon’s Armenian community remained largely neutral during the Lebanon civil war of 1975 to 1990, focusing on protecting Armenian homes and neighborhoods and not fighting others.

Lebanon’s Armenian community has six guaranteed seats in the Lebanese parliament and one ministerial position in government. Five of those six seats are allocated to the Armenian Orthodox community and one to Armenian Catholics.

Armenians in Lebanon have been deeply impacted by the country’s current economic crisis, with its falling currency, soaring inflation, and high unemployment, all of which have led to a thriving black market.

“The financial crisis, corruption, and sometimes discrimination against Armenians has pushed many to detach themselves” from the country, Tashjian said.

Although no official data exists, Lebanese Armenians in Bourj Hammoud say many Armenians have left the country.

However, the Zavarian Student Association youngsters do not want to leave. Despite the lack of electricity, widespread poverty, and political dysfunction, Lebanon is their home.

Meeting room of the Zavarian Student Association, Bourj Hammoud, Lebanon, July 11, 2023. (Andrea López-Tomàs/The Media Line)

“We would have to learn a new language [if we moved to Armenia], and we would feel very far away from what we have always known,” Zaven said.

The Crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh: “A Creeping Genocide”

Aug 27 2023

A humanitarian catastrophe is looming in Nagorno-Karabakh. The government of Azerbaijan is blocking the region: food, medicine and hygiene items have not been allowed to be delivered to the area for a good two months. Not even the Red Cross is allowed into the region. Azerbaijan wants to bring the region under Baku control – the ethnic Armenians in the region want it

The contribution  appeared first Tichy’s insight.

A contribution by David Boos.

https://www.breakinglatest.news/news/the-crisis-in-nagorno-karabakh-a-creeping-genocide/

Macron On Karabakh: It’s No Longer Time For Diplomacy

Aug 27 2023

By PanARMENIAN

French President Emmanuel macron has commented on the blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh), maintaining that “it’s not longer time for diplomacy.”

“Our diplomacy is clear but the time is not for diplomacy. I deplore it and I condemn it. We have always said that we are there for the sovereignty of the people,” Macron said, adding that the question of Nagorno-Karabakh is complicated.

“France condemned the 2020 war and organized several humanitarian operations. Today, we are doing everything so that an agreement allowing a lasting peace and the safety of peoples and cultures is found between Armenia and Azerbaijan. This peace treaty is a necessity, but it must comply with international law.”

Macron said, however, that he would be carefule when using the term “genocide” to describe the situation in Karabakh.

“We have a humanitarian situation which is not acceptable, especially for the Lachin corridor. France’s role is to maintain pressure on humanitarian access, and we are making efforts to achieve this. In particular, we continue to take all useful initiatives to ensure that food and medicine are sent and that free access to Nagorno-Karabakh is ensured.”

The French President added that Armenia itself is threatened as well.

Since December 12, 2022, the sole road connecting Nagorno Karabakh to Armenia – the Lachin Corridor – has been blocked by Azerbaijan. Baku tightened the blockade on June 15, 2023, banning emergency relief supplies that were carried out by Russian peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross through the sole road connecting Karabakh to Armenia and the outside world. The move aggravated the shortages of food, medicine and other essential items experienced by the region’s population. On August 15, Karabakh Human Rights Defender’s office reported the first case of death from starvation.

https://www.eurasiareview.com/28082023-macron-on-karabakh-its-no-longer-time-for-diplomacy/

Georgia and Armenia are complicated havens for Russian LGBTQ émigrés

EurasiaNet.org
Aug 19 2023
Andrea Palasciano Aug 18, 2023

Oksana Polovinkina vividly remembers the thrill of dancing at a drag ball last December in a Tbilisi club. She had just fled to Georgia with her girlfriend, seeking an escape from repression in Russia.

“Being in the crowd, it truly felt like a community,” Polovinkina recalled in a phone interview recently. “Just for a brief moment, I felt like I was in a beautiful dream.”

A half-year after that exhilarating moment, however, the 26-year-old Russian software specialist could only look on in “disgust” as a right-wing mob violently disrupted Tbilisi’s pride fest in early July. Festival organizers denounced the perpetrators as “Putinist” and accused the Georgian Dream government of being complicit in “the well-planned operation.”

The experience left Polovinkina deeply unsettled. While Georgia in general offers a far higher degree of individual political and economic freedom than Russia, members of the Russian LGBTQ community who have moved to the South Caucasus country have found the country to be a complicated haven, where they struggle with twin challenges – homophobia and general wariness of Russian newcomers.

While she doesn’t think twice about her decision to leave Russia, where “being gay is basically illegal,” Polovinkina says it’s hard to feel at home in Georgia. She must tread carefully: she can be open about her sexuality, but not too open. 

“The Caucasus is not the most friendly place … but it’s a comfortable place for me to rest,” said Polovinkina, adding that she refrains from engaging in public displays of affection with her partner. “As much as I love it, I want a different life.”

Georgia, along with Armenia, have been a major destination for Russians émigrés amid the Russia-Ukraine war, in part because Russian passport holders don’t need a visa to travel to the two countries. Both also feature more open political systems and a lower cost of living relative to Russia. Polovinkina is one of over 100,000 Russians currently residing in Georgia, with tens of thousands having arrived after the start of the war in early 2022. But in a country with a population of less than 4 million, the presence of so many Russian émigrés, most of whom have settled in Tbilisi, is exerting inflationary pressure on the Georgian economy, thus stoking societal tension. 

“The basic rule is that the older the generation of Georgians [i.e. those who grew up during the Soviet era] is more welcoming of Russians. Young people are very critical, skeptical,” says Polovinkina, adding that she has had several unpleasant encounters with Georgians.

Anti-Russian sentiment has deep roots in Georgia, stretching back to the April 1989 Soviet crackdown on autonomy-seeking protesters in Tbilisi. The brief war fought between the two countries in 2008 compounded the hard feelings. The rapid influx of Russian émigrés over the last 18 months has added a new layer of complexity to the situation, evidenced by the proliferation of anti-Russian graffiti on Tbilisi’s walls.

Russian LGBTQ migrants have generally reported a friendlier welcome in Armenia, but according to international and local human rights organizations, homophobia remains deeply entrenched across the Caucasus. On the NGO ILGA-Europe’s 2023 index, Georgia ranks 35th out of 49 countries surveyed, while Armenia comes in 47th – worse than Russia (46th) and better only than Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Polovinkina is far from the only LGBTQ émigré from Russia looking to keep moving. The South Caucasus is proving to be a temporary stop for many. “Russian queers don’t move here to live here. They come, obtain refugee status, and then move to Europe,” says Leo, a 25-year-old community officer at the LGBTQ organization Pink Armenia, who declines to give his last name.

Some countries, such as Germany, can grant humanitarian visas to members of Russia’s LGBTQ community. But obtaining one is a time-consuming process. The Berlin-based organization Quarteera, which offers support services for Russian-speaking LGBT people in Germany, reported in January having helped over 80 people receive humanitarian visas.

Relations between Russian émigrés and local LGBTQ activist groups are complicated. Locals haven’t exactly rolled out a red carpet for newcomers, while émigrés have tended to be insular and slow to engage with local LGBTQ communities.

“There are Russian LGBTQ activists but they’re possibly only active in their communities. Our organization provides services to people of Russian nationality, if they request them. But we don’t collaborate with any Russian LGBT organizations,” says Ana Aptsiauri, Project Coordinator at Equality Movement, a Georgian NGO for the protection of LGBTQ+ and women’s rights. 

She attributes lingering mistrust to general national security concerns connected to the lingering effects of the 2008 Russian-Georgian war. Some Georgians worry that some émigrés are informers, helping to keep tabs on émigrés’ activities and subtly advance Kremlin priorities. “Do the people who come have links with the current war?” Aptsiauri wondered. “Nobody in Georgia is sure that those who come will have a friendly attitude towards Georgians.” 

Suspicion among Georgian and Armenian activists is heightened by perceptions that Russia funds anti-LGBTQ organizations in both countries. “Russia doesn’t want the Caucasus to enter the European cultural sphere,” says Leo, the Armenian activist. At the same time, he acknowledges that many Armenians are culturally “conservative,” adding that transgender women are often the targets of hate crimes.

Leo adds that the standoffishness of émigrés has been a source of friction. “Russian queers didn’t initially want to integrate with Armenians. They had separate parties. On the dating app Grindr, some explicitly state; ‘no locals, only Russians or visitors.’ These seemingly little things accumulate,” he says. However, he notes that, of late, things are starting to improve, citing a Russian-Armenian dancer who has started organizing parties and hiring Armenian performers.

Back in Russia, repression of sexual non-conformity is intensifying. In mid-July, the Russian legislature outlawedgendertransitioningprocedures, annulling marriages in which one person has transitioned and banning transgender Russians from adopting children. As living conditions continue to toughen for LGBTQ people in Russia, more of them are likely to seek refuge in the Caucasus. 

“Of course, it’s better than Russia,” Leo says, referring to the reception LGBTQ émigrés will receive in the Caucasus. “Anywhere is better than Russia right now.”

Andrea Palasciano has worked as a correspondent for AFP for a decade, most recently in Moscow. She is currently in the Knight Bagehot Fellowship in Business Journalism at Columbia University and is completing her MBA.

Armenia Crying Wolf on Lachin Border Crossing Fails To Impress UN Security Council

NewsBlaze
Aug 20 2023


Even at the UN the call is for Armenia to end its permanent victimhood cry and end misconduct in the Karabakh Region. Armenia cried wolf over the Lachin Border Crossing and the Lachin Corridor, but failed to impress representatives in the UN Security Council.

UN Security Council (UNSC) [16 AUGUST 2023-9397TH MEETING (PM)-SC/15384]: “Lachin Corridor Must Be Reopened for Humanitarian Aid, Security Council Hears, as Speakers Urge Armenia, Azerbaijan to Normalize Relations.”

The Lachin corridor, 5 kilometers (3.1 miles) wide, provides access from Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region to Armenia and the rest of the world, and it bypasses the town of Shusha, Azerbaijan. After the 2020 2nd Karabakh war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, according to the Trilateral statement between the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin, the corridor was put under the control of the Russian Federation’s peacekeeping contingent.

The issue however is that Armenia plays the cat and mouse game – English-language idiom that means “a contrived action involving constant pursuit, near captures, and repeated escapes” – in every way it possibly can.

To be able to have a hand on its security, establish control over its own borders, and prevent Armenia’s illegal acts in its sovereign territories, which Azerbaijan witnessed in the past 30 plus years, on April 23, 2023 the Republic of Azerbaijan installed a checkpoint at the Lachin border crossing at the Hakari Bridge.

The question is, why do the Armenians so much object to the Lachin border checkpoint? After all, through this border crossing Azerbaijan has been facilitating Armenian residents’ safe and affirmative passage free movement, according to international law on border crossings between countries. The same applies to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) personnel, as well as the Russian Peacekeeping contingent and humanitarian aid is not in short supply through the border crossing.

As for Armenia, for the purpose of continuing its illegal activities in Azerbaijan’s territories it constantly circulates false claims on the “worrisome and tense humanitarian situation in the region.”

The obvious reason is that for the past thirty plus years of Armenian illegal occupation of the Karabakh region, Armenia was also the master of havoc there. Now there is a new reality on the ground which Armenia refuses to accept. It refuses to accept it lost the war it started three decades ago and that the owner of the land it illegally occupied for decades – Azerbaijan – is back home; Armenia also refuses to accept Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and sovereignty and it wants to continue its hostilities.

First, it did not go well for Armenia’s crying wolf. In all likelihood Armenia expected the UNSC to go along with its false claims and request to condemn Azerbaijan. That did not happen.

Armenia’s PR move in the UN and beyond failed again. It was one more diplomatic defeat of and for Armenia. Sadly, around the world, Armenia told local media that Azerbaijan was carrying out illegal operations against Armenian citizens. They even convinced media that a genocide was either in progress or very likely to happen. That was all a lie.

Speakers at the UN called on both Armenia and Azerbaijan to normalize relations in order to arrive at a peace treaty. For Armenia, this is a hard pill to swallow.

Sérgio França Danese, Brazil’s envoy, reaffirmed his country’s commitment to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Armenia and Azerbaijan, within their internationally recognized borders. He also urged the parties to explore mechanisms to ensure unimpeded humanitarian access to Karabakh, including the feasibility of the Aghdam-Khankendi route, which Armenia opposes with its worldwide propaganda campaign and its imposed series of military and other obstructions for the normal functioning of Aghdam-Khankendi road for the delivery of goods to the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan.

The Brazilian envoy noted the trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, that offers a road map for peacebuilding and called on the parties to adhere to their commitments made at that time and remain engaged in pursuing a definitive conflict’s solution.

Ferit Hoxha, Albania’s envoy, noted that his country welcomes Armenia and Azerbaijan efforts and commitment to a long-term negotiation plan for a comprehensive peace agreement; also the plan to construct a railway connection with the readiness of the European Union to contribute financially to it, however, with the caveat that, “the road is still uphill and bumpy.”

Mr. Hoxha highlighted the tensions near the Armenia-Azerbaijan border and that both countries sharply differ on the Lachin road position’s recent development. He further raised his concern over “a profound lack of trust” between the two rivals and called on both parties to delimitate, demine and demilitarize the border in order to provide the necessary sense of security, avoid accidents and incidents which – given the volatility of the situation – could quickly lead to heightened tensions and clashes.

The Russian Federation envoy, whose country provides the peacekeeping contingency in the region, also called for the delimiting and demarcating of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, and stressed that Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation is unthinkable without reliable security guarantees and the full human rights observance of the Nagorno-Karabakh’s inhabitants. He offered his Government’s compromise-based proposal to de-escalate tensions which entails a parallel corridor opening connection through Aghdam and Lachin.

Turkey’s (Türkiye) delegate emphasized Azerbaijan’s voiced concerns over Armenia’s abuse of the Lachin Corridor by supplying armed groups and conducting illegal mine exploitation – ecological genocide – in Karabakh. The Turkish delegate emphasized Azerbaijan’s obligation to observe humanitarian considerations in its territory, adding that medical evacuations through the road are readily available.

Obviously Armenia presents a humanitarian difficulty in its provocative political campaign to undermine Azerbaijan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

The International Court of Justice rejected Armenia’s recent request for an interim measure of removing the border checkpoint. It also dismissed Armenia’s allegations that the Lachin border checkpoint is illegal.

It must be pointed out that immediately after the end of the 2020 war, Azerbaijan offered logistics and infrastructure to the ICRC for the delivery of goods to the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan. Armenia however rejected and prevented the ICRC from delivering humanitarian assistance.

For almost 30 years Armenia has blatantly disregarded a series of UN Security Council (UNSC) statements that demanded the full, immediate, and unconditional withdrawal of its occupying forces from Azerbaijan. Armenia’s current appeal to the Council is part of a campaign to manipulate and mislead public opinion.

Odiously, Armenia resorted to the “unprecedented action” of using the ICRC to smuggle certain technologies, such as microchips, to the Karabakh region. The ICRC has to acknowledge this, since it is a serious blow to its humanitarian mandate and the possibility of achieving cordial coexistence in the region.

As of the 2020 end of war, residents who consider themselves ethnic Armenians, who remained living in the Karabakh region, are considered residents of Azerbaijan. The Government of Azerbaijan has declared often enough its commitment to guarantee and secure their access to necessary goods and services.

Armenia’s leadership has made some verbal statements recognizing the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, including the Karabakh region. This created a ground for cautious optimism to end the conflict for once and for all.

It is time for Armenia to convert these statements into real action and end the questioning of Azerbaijan’s sovereignty under the pretext of humanitarian needs. Azerbaijan is pursuing a policy of integration of ethnic Armenian residents of the Karabakh region as equal citizens, guaranteeing them the rights and freedoms as set out in Azerbaijan’s constitution and international human rights mechanisms.

After the 2nd Karabakh War ended with Armenia’s defeat in November 2020, Armenia never fully met the commitment it signed on in the November 10, 2020 trilateral statement. Armenia is playing a silly cat-and-mouse game.

I have not been to Lachin nor have seen the border crossing checkpoint but I regularly follow Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry evidential reports and its videos on social media.

It appears that Azerbaijan’s intention is to achieve peace, but Armenia has a different agenda. Armenia uses any means it can find in its magical sack to avoid arriving at a final peace agreement and ending all hostilities. All Armenia is doing is challenging Azerbaijan’s patience.

Azerbaijan created cordial movement conditions for the ethnic-Armenian residents of Karabakh while also considering its security aspects.

Armenian origin people still living in the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan are accompanied by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) staff when crossing the border check-post. There is plenty of food in the Armenian enclave, enough to open restaurants there.

All this proves that Armenia’s claims that the Lachin corridor is blocked by Azerbaijan and the ethnic Armenian enclave is suffering a humanitarian crisis are lies, slander and pure propaganda.

It seems that the ethnic Armenians of the Karabakh region would easily integrate as citizens of Azerbaijan. However, it is obvious that some radical elements within their own intentional subverting agenda are hindering the good intention process.