Food Crisis Sparks Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict at UN Over Nagorno-Karabakh

Aug 17 2023


UNO: In a poignant scene of urgent deliberation, Armenia and Azerbaijan engaged in a heated confrontation during an emergency UN Security Council meeting on Wednesday. At the heart of their dispute lies the fate of 120,000 lives hanging in the balance within the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Armenia stands as the voice of these imperiled individuals, insisting that Azerbaijan's unyielding blockade has precipitated a profound humanitarian catastrophe.

The Lachin Corridor, a slender lifeline connecting the mainly Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia itself, has been rendered inaccessible since July 15th. What was once a path for hope, unity, and sustenance has transformed into a barrier, leaving the people of Nagorno-Karabakh trapped in a grim struggle for basic necessities: food, medicine, and even electricity.

The roots of this conflict stretch back through decades of strife and tension. Nagorno-Karabakh, while geographically part of Azerbaijan, has long been the focus of a fierce ethnic and territorial struggle. The region and its surroundings slipped from Azerbaijan's grasp in the wake of a separatist conflict, with ethnic Armenian forces gaining control, backed by Armenia's military. A tenuous armistice brokered by Russia in 2020 redefined the landscape, returning control to Azerbaijan but leaving the Lachin Corridor as the sole conduit linking Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia.

As the UN Security Council convened, impassioned pleas echoed through the chamber from nations worldwide. They implored Azerbaijan to unlock the path that could save lives. Even the International Court of Justice's orders resounded, guiding their call to reopen the corridor. A unanimous chorus rose, urging Armenia and Azerbaijan to transcend their nearly three-decade-long enmity, to seek a diplomatic resolution for the greater good.

Although the Security Council refrained from issuing an official statement, the meeting's chair, US Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, emphasized the significance of the unified demand for the Lachin Corridor's reopening. Yet, words alone are not enough, as the urgency of action takes center stage.

Edem Wasornu, the UN's humanitarian coordinator, brought a stark reminder to the council's attention. The International Committee of the Red Cross, the sole international entity granted access to the region, reported their inability to deliver essential aid since June 14th. The corridor's closure starkly violates international humanitarian law, which mandates the swift provision of assistance to those in need.

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Armenia's Foreign Minister, Ararat Mirzoyan, painted a chilling picture of the consequences of this blockade. He spoke of a region brought to its knees, its economy stilled, livelihoods shattered, and its vulnerable members—women, children, and the elderly—forced into lengthy queues just to secure sustenance. Even the flow of electricity, a fundamental lifeline, has been severed since January 9th.

Mirzoyan invoked a haunting phrase, "starvation is the invisible genocide weapon." He quoted a report suggesting that the blockade amounts to a genocidal act, a fate that could extinguish a community within weeks. He issued a plea, urging the Security Council to live up to its mandate of preventing such horrors, to act now before it's too late.

Yet, Azerbaijan's UN Ambassador, Yashar Aliyev, vehemently denied the allegations. He framed Armenia's claims as a calculated political maneuver, aimed at undermining Azerbaijan's sovereignty. Aliyev justified the roadblock as a means to safeguard his nation's integrity, preventing illegal military activities and the flow of arms.

The room was charged with emotion as both sides presented their narratives. Each delegation painted a different reality, each with its share of suffering and responsibility. Amid the impassioned exchanges, a single truth emerged—human lives hang in the balance, waiting for a resolution to break the cycle of despair.

Silvio Gonzato, the European Union's deputy UN ambassador, voiced a plea that transcended the political fray. Humanitarian access, he implored, should never be caught in the crossfire of politics. He reminded the council that the Lachin Corridor's reopening was more than a political act—it was a lifeline for the innocent, a promise of hope amidst desolation.

As the meeting drew to a close, the world watched with bated breath. The clash of emotions, the weight of responsibility, and the call for compassion echoed in the hearts of those present and the millions they represent. And as the delegates dispersed, the question lingered: could diplomacy bridge the chasm of decades-old conflict and prevent the impending catastrophe?"

Romanian Foreign Minister briefed on Nagorno-Karabakh humanitarian crisis

 21:16,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, ARMENPRESS. On August 17, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan had a telephone conversation with Luminița-Teodora Odobescu, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Romania.

Ararat Mirzoyan emphasized that the humanitarian crisis, resulting from Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor, is deteriorating in Nagorno-Karabakh hour by hour, presenting in detail the serious problems created for the 120,000 population of Nagorno-Karabakh and especially for the vulnerable groups, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Minister Mirzoyan noted that since December 2022, the discussions of the two sessions of the UN Security Council, as well as the appeals made so far by various governments and international bodies show that the civilized world has a common understanding of the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. Nevertheless, resolution of the crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh requires the international community to take clear steps in order to implement the legally binding Orders of the International Court of Justice of February 22 and July 6 and to restore free and unimpeded movement in both directions through the Lachin corridor.

Reiterating the position of the Armenian side on establishing stability in the region, Minister Mirzoyan noted that by escalating the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan threatens the efforts of Armenia and the international community in that direction.

Armenpress: Armenia and China discuss launching direct flights

 21:38,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, ARMENPRESS. The Chinese Ambassador to Armenia, Fan Yong, has said that discussions are underway with Armenia on organizing direct flights between the two countries.

Speaking at a press briefing, Ambassador Fan Yong also said that the two countries are developing investment cooperation in the financial integration sector based on mutually beneficial grounds, and are ready to deepen it.

“According to statistics, China’s investments in Armenia comprise approximately fifty million dollars, whereas Armenia’s investments in China comprise fifteen million dollars. Certainly, I can’t say that these are large numbers, but I think we can work around it,” the Ambassador added.

Equating Lachin Corridor to Other Routes is ‘Unacceptable,’ Says Artsakh Foreign Minister

Sergey Ghazaryan is Artsakh's foreign minister


Equating the importance of the Lachin Corridor to any alternative route, such the road connecting Aghdam to Stepanakert is “unacceptable,” Artsakh Foreign Minister Sergey Ghazaryan said Thursday.

Ghazaryan was commenting on the special session of the United Nations Security Council of Wednesday, during which several country representatives said that other alternatives should be considered when speaking about providing humanitarian assistance to Artsakh.

The proposal to utilize the Aghdam-Stepanakert highway is a scheme being advanced by Baku that completely cuts off Armenia from Artsakh as Azerbaijan continues to blockade the Lachin Corridor.

“We are concerned that some countries attempted to equate the Lachin Corridor and other transport routes. This goes against the parameters enshrined in the trilateral statement of November 9, 2020,” Ghazaryan said Thursday during a virtual press conference held with Armenia and non-Armenian media.

Ghazaryan said that using the Aghdam-Stepanakert road for humanitarian assistance will “legitimize Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin corridor.” He added that Azerbaijan has created this situation and the international community should see through Baku’s attempts to come off as “humanitarian” and find it unacceptable.

He voiced gratitude to representatives of countries who clearly articulated Azerbaijan’s actions and the Lachin Corridor blockade, saying that UN Security Council members have the tools to prevent Azerbaijan’s genocidal policy.

Ghazaryan said that imposing sanction and other diplomatic measures are within the purview of the UN Security Council member states.

Artsakh’s foreign minister also discussed the issue of dialogue between Stepanakert and Baku, saying that such discussions must take place within the accepted norms and through international mechanisms to ensure that they comply with international law.

International Community Must Realize Lachin Corridor Opening Will Prevent Genocide, Pashinyan Says

A convoy of truck carrying humanitarian aid to Artsakh is not being allowed passage through the Lachin Corridor


A day after the United Nations Security Council discussed the humanitarian crisis in Artsakh, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan issued a challenge to the international community saying that countries should realize that the opening of the Lachin Corridor “will prevent genocide.”

Speaking at his weekly cabinet meeting, Pashinyan said that Wednesday’s UN Security Council session “exposed Azerbaijan’s lies.”

He said that the fact that Azerbaijan has blockaded the Lachin Corridor and as a result of which a humanitarian crisis is underway were important aspects to be affirmed by the international community through the UN Security Council meeting.

Pashinyan also said noted that several country representatives emphasized the importance for Azerbaijan to adhere to the February ruling by the International Court of Justice, which ordered Baku to “ensure the unimpeded movement” along the road.

The prime minister said through the UN Security Council, the international community collectively called on Azerbaijan to end the blockade.

“Now we can note that the truth about the illegal blockade of Lachin Corridor and the resulting humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh has been voiced in the highest international body. And the international community made a collective call upon Azerbaijan to end the illegal blockade of Lachin Corridor,” Pashinyan said, explaining that Baku’s claims that a blockade is not taking place were exposed.

He added, however, that the affirmation by the Security Council has not yielded any results since “22 trucks with over 400 tons of humanitarian aid are still blocked at the entrance of Lachin Corridor, waiting for the chance to deliver the essential goods to Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Pashinyan also pointed to the ongoing targeting by Azerbaijani forces of farmers in Artsakh.

“On one hand Azerbaijan has blocked the 100 tons of flour sent by the Armenian government for Nagorno-Karabakh, and on the other hand it doesn’t allow the people of Nagorno-Karabakh to harvest their own grain for flour,” said Pashinyan.

“This is yet another fact that substantiates the narrative by international experts that Azerbaijan is committing genocide against the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh through starvation, therefore the opening of the Lachin Corridor must be viewed as a step aimed at genocide prevention. I think the international community should focus on this matter,” Pashinyan told his cabinet.

The best solution of the situation would be the lifting of the illegal blockade by Azerbaijan and launching Stepanakert-Baku dialogue within the framework of an international mechanism, Pashinyan added, saying that Armenia is committed to “peace agenda” and called on Baku to not take steps that would hinder this “historic chance for establishing peace.”

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/17/2023

                                        Thursday, 


Armenian PM Makes First Trip To Syunik By Plane


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is being greeted by local officials in 
Kapan, Syunik, after arriving by plane. .


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Thursday made his first visit to the 
country’s southern Syunik province by plane.

The Prime Minister’s Office said Pashinian traveled to Kapan on board a small 
passenger plane ahead of the start of regular flights between Yerevan and this 
Syunik town next week.

It said that on the trip Pashinian was accompanied by Minister of Territorial 
Administration and Infrastructure Gnel Sanosian.

Syunik Governor Robert Ghukasian, Kapan Mayor Gevorg Parsian and other officials 
reportedly welcomed the prime minister at Kapan’s recently renovated airport.

A video posted by the Prime Minister’s Office showed Pashinian touring the 
airport to inspect its conditions.

According to the report, a demonstration Yerevan-Kapan flight will take place on 
August 19 on the occasion of Kapan’s day, after which regular flights will be 
scheduled beginning next week.

The first test passenger flight from Yerevan to Kapan was operated in late April 
to become the first such flight since the 1990s, barring one private flight made 
in 2017.

The Civil Aviation Committee said then an Armenia-registered L-410 passenger 
plane (made in the Czech Republic) designed for 19 passengers successfully 
landed at Kapan’s Syunik Airport after a 48-minute flight from Yerevan’s 
International Zvartnots Airport. It described that flight as a “truly historic” 
event.

Kapan is situated some 190 kilometers to the southeast of capital Yerevan not 
far from the border with Azerbaijan. The runway of its airport stretches along 
the border and at one point is situated less than a hundred meters from it.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh for 
decades. Tensions along their restive border have persisted despite a 
Russia-brokered ceasefire that stopped a deadly six-week Armenian-Azerbaijani 
war in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020.




Picket In Yerevan Demands Action To ‘Ensure Safety’ Of Karabakh Armenians

        • Anush Mkrtchian

A protest in front of the UN office in Yerevan. .


A group of several activists in Yerevan demanded on Thursday that the Armenian 
government take steps to ensure the safety of people in Nagorno-Karabakh who 
experience shortages of food, medicines, fuel and other basic products due to an 
ongoing blockade effectively imposed by Azerbaijan.

The activists who picketed the Government building simultaneously with the 
weekly cabinet session did not elaborate as to how the authorities should 
achieve these goals, but stressed that Armenia must not recognize 
Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan or make other “unilateral concessions” at 
negotiations with Baku.

At the cabinet session Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian spoke about the August 16 
discussions at the UN Security Council of the deepening humanitarian crisis in 
Nagorno-Karabakh brought on by Azerbaijan’s de facto blockade of the Lachin 
corridor, the only road connecting Armenia with the region. He said that they 
highlighted the fact of the closure of the Lachin corridor by Azerbaijan.

Pashinian again urged Azerbaijan to end “the illegal closure” of the Lachin 
corridor and allow the passage of two dozen Armenian trucks with humanitarian 
aid currently stranded near the entrance to the corridor on the Armenian side.

“Azerbaijan, on the one hand, has closed access to Nagorno-Karabakh for 100 tons 
of flour sent by the Armenian government, on the other hand, it does not allow 
the people of Nagorno-Karabakh to harvest the sown wheat [by shooting at 
farmers]. This is yet another fact that substantiates the thesis put forward by 
international experts that Azerbaijan is carrying out a genocide through hunger 
and, therefore, the opening of the Lachin corridor should be considered as a 
step to prevent genocide,” the Armenian prime minister said.

Pashinian reiterated that as the best way of ending the situation Yerevan sees a 
dialogue between Stepanakert and Baku, reaffirming Armenia’s commitment to peace.

Government critics see the kind of position coupled with Pashinian’s repeated 
public statements that Armenia is ready to recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial 
integrity as a blow to the right of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians to 
self-determination. They also claim that Pashinian and his political team 
thereby renege on their election pledge.

Lilit Kocharian, one of the activists who initiated today’s picket, told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that one of their goals was to remind the prime 
minister about his 2021 election pledge of seeking “remedial secession” for 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

“It is under this slogan that he went to the elections, and now he stands up and 
says that he has a mandate and can do whatever he wants. But it is not so. We 
just want to make it clear that he does not have a mandate to hand over Artsakh 
[Nagorno-Karabakh – ed.], he does not have a mandate from Armenia to make 
unilateral concessions at the expense of Armenia and Artsakh, something that has 
been happening for the last three years,” Kocharian said.

She said that before demanding anything from international bodies, they need to 
raise problems in front of local politicians and statesmen, insisting that 
Armenia should be the guarantor of the security of Karabakh Armenians instead of 
handing over the responsibility to Russian peacekeepers.

“These people [Karabakh Armenians] bear passports of citizens of the Republic of 
Armenia, and it is written there who the guarantor of the holders of those 
passports is. It is the Republic of Armenia,” Kocharian said.

Another civil initiative called “Batsum” (Opening) has been collecting dry food 
near the United Nations office in Yerevan for a month, demanding that the 
international organization deliver it to the “besieged Artsakh people facing the 
threat of hunger.”

According to Narek Ayvazian, a member of the initiative group, they monitor the 
stock 24 hours a day, believing that it will eventually reach its destination.

“In any case, we hope that what we have done by raising our voice in support of 
our compatriots in front of international institutions is having some effect, 
including on decision-makers,” Ayvazian said.

The Batsum initiative announced a simultaneous rally in Yerevan, Stepanakert, 
Los Angeles and New York later this week demanding the opening of the vital 
corridor between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.




Pashinian Says Fact Of Lachin Corridor Closure ‘Highlighted’ At UN Security 
Council


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks at a cabinet meeting in Yerevan 
(file photo)


The fact of the closure of the Lachin Corridor was highlighted at the highest 
international instance, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on 
Thursday, summarizing the discussion on the humanitarian situation in 
Nagorno-Karabakh held at the UN Security Council in New York the previous day.

Speaking at a weekly cabinet session, Pashinian said: “Of course, it may seem 
strange to the Armenian public that I am stating this as a result of the 
discussion at the UN Security Council, but we must not forget that Azerbaijan 
constantly and continuously insists that the Lachin Corridor is not closed.”

The Armenian premier said that the discussion at the UN Security Council also 
confirmed the existence of a humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh and “the 
fact that the lives and safety of 120,000 people of Nagorno-Karabakh are in 
question.”

“Thirdly, it was emphasized that the decision of the International Court of 
Justice on ensuring uninterrupted movement of people, vehicles and cargo through 
the Lachin Corridor in both directions has not been implemented by Azerbaijan,” 
Pashinian said.

“Now we can state that the truth about the illegal blocking of the Lachin 
Corridor and the resulting humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh has been 
spoken about at the highest international instance. Also, the international 
community has made a collective appeal to Azerbaijan to eliminate the illegal 
blocking of the Lachin Corridor,” the Armenian leader concluded.

While most members of the UN Security Council seem to agree that the Lachin 
Corridor, the only road linking Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, should be 
reopened, it is not clear yet whether the body will adopt a resolution or a 
statement on the matter after two-hour long discussions on August 16.

In his remarks at the meeting held at Yerevan’s request Armenian Foreign 
Minister Ararat Mirzoyan formulated Armenia’s expectations from the UN Security 
Council.

“We expect this Council to condemn the use of starvation of civilians as a 
method of warfare, to call for the immediate restoration of freedom and security 
of movement of persons, vehicles and cargo, in line with the previously reached 
agreements, through the Lachin corridor; to dispatch an independent inter-agency 
needs assessment mission in Nagorno-Karabakh and provide humanitarian assistance 
to the affected population,” Mirzoyan said, in particular.

Azerbaijan’s ambassador to the UN Yashar Aliyev said Armenia’s “allegations 
about famine and genocide are false and fictitious.”

U.S. Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield, who presided over the 
meeting, urged the government of Azerbaijan to restore free movement through the 
Lachin Corridor “so that commercial, humanitarian, and private vehicles can 
reach the population of Nagorno-Karabakh.”

“We also note the possibility of compromise on additional routes for 
humanitarian supplies,” she said.

Baku offers alternative ways of supplies to Karabakh Armenians, notably through 
a road via Agdam, an Azerbaijani-controlled town east of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s de facto ethnic Armenian government rejects the offer, 
considering it as a prelude to the region’s absorption into Azerbaijan.




Most UN Security Council Members Back Lachin Corridor Opening During Discussions

        • Heghine Buniatian

The UN Security Council discusses the humanitarian situation in Nagorno 
Karabakh, New York, .


While most members of the United Nations Security Council seem to agree that the 
Lachin corridor linking Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia should be opened, it is 
not clear yet whether the body will adopt a resolution or a statement on the 
matter after two-hour long discussions on August 16.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan in his speech clearly emphasized the 
expectations of the Armenian side from the UN Security Council that gathered for 
an urgent meeting in New York at Yerevan’s request.

“We expect this Council to condemn the use of starvation of civilians as a 
method of warfare, to call for the immediate restoration of freedom and security 
of movement of persons, vehicles and cargo, in line with the previously reached 
agreements, through the Lachin corridor; to dispatch an independent inter-agency 
needs assessment mission in Nagorno-Karabakh and provide humanitarian assistance 
to the affected population,” Mirzoyan said, in particular.

The overwhelming majority of representatives of the Security Council’s 15 member 
states agreed that humanitarian issues cannot be used as a truncheon to suppress 
the rights of 120,000 people living in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Most of the diplomats clearly emphasized that the Lachine Corridor must be 
opened, while others considered it possible to open other routes as well.

“We urge the government of Azerbaijan to restore free movement through the 
corridor – so commercial, humanitarian, and private vehicles can reach the 
population of Nagorno-Karabakh. We also note the possibility of compromise on 
additional routes for humanitarian supplies,” said U.S. Ambassador to the UN 
Linda Thomas-Greenfield, who presided over the meeting.

The representative of Russia insisted that Moscow presented such a proposal to 
the parties several weeks ago: “On July 25, at the meeting with the foreign 
ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia, the Russian side proposed realistic, 
compromise-based solutions to ease the tension. We are talking about 
simultaneously opening the Agdam and Lachin corridors for the transportation of 
civilians and non-military goods.”

The deteriorating humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh is harming the 
peace process, the European Union ambassador said, stating that the EU border 
monitoring mission in Armenia has recorded a number of ceasefire violations 
along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border in recent months.

Meanwhile, Baku’s official representative categorically denied the accusations. 
“Allegations about famine and genocide are false and fictitious,” Yashar Aliyev 
said.

“Azerbaijan pursues a policy of reintegrating the ethnic Armenians of the 
Karabakh region, considering them as equal citizens, and guarantees for them all 
the rights and freedoms provided by the Constitution of Azerbaijan. We are 
determined to protect our sovereignty and territorial integrity,” the 
Azerbaijani diplomat said.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that after hearing 
the arguments of the parties, as well as the positions of the members of the 
Security Council the text of the resolution or statement may be put into 
circulation in the next 24 hours.




Armenia Says Preventing Genocide ‘Core Duty’ Of UN, Its Security Council


Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan addresses a UN Security Council 
meeting on the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, New York, August 16, 
2023.


Armenia urged the United Nations Security Council to prevent a “genocide” by 
demanding that Azerbaijan immediately restore free transit of people, vehicles 
and goods to Nagorno-Karabakh as the body held an emergency meeting on Wednesday 
at Yerevan’s request.

During the meeting in New York over what Yerevan says is an ongoing blockade of 
the Armenian-populated region of Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan Armenian Foreign 
Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said that Armenia expected the UN Security Council to 
condemn “the use of starvation of civilians as a method of warfare, prohibited 
by international law” and “the unlawful denial of humanitarian access and 
depriving the civilian population in Nagorno-Karabakh of objects indispensable 
to their survival, including willfully impeding relief supply and access for 
responses to conflict‑induced food insecurity.”

“[We expect the Council] to demand full compliance with obligations under the 
international humanitarian law, including those related to the protection of 
civilians, in particular women and children, and critical civilian 
infrastructure; to call for the immediate restoration of freedom and security of 
movement of persons, vehicles and cargo, in line with the previously reached 
agreements, through the Lachin corridor; to ensure full cooperation of the 
parties in good faith with the International Committee of the Red Cross and safe 
and unimpeded delivery of humanitarian assistance; to dispatch an independent 
inter-agency needs assessment mission in Nagorno-Karabakh and provide 
humanitarian assistance to the affected population,” Mirzoyan said.

The Armenian minister emphasized that “these humanitarian issues clearly need to 
be resolved with the international community’s strong intervention before the 
negative consequences result in ethnic cleansing of the people of 
Nagorno-Karabakh.”

“According to the elected representatives of Nagorno-Karabakh, ‘this is a 
deliberately engineered crime, driven by evident genocidal intent. The 
Azerbaijani authorities purposefully instigated the blockade of the Lachin 
corridor, with the knowledge that it would subject the entire population of 
Nagorno-Karabakh to a gradual demise, yet chose to persist with this course of 
action’,” Mirzoyan explained.

Presenting facts and figures, the chronology and consequences of the eight-month 
blockade of the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with 
Armenia and the outside world, Mirzoyan noted: “The report of former 
International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo reflects that it is 
already a genocide that is happening in Nagorno-Karabakh. According to Mr. 
Ocampo, “The blockade of the Lachin corridor by the Azerbaijani security forces 
impeding access to any food, medical supplies, and other essentials should be 
considered a Genocide under Article II, (c) of the Genocide Convention: 
‘Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring 
about its physical destruction. Starvation is the invisible Genocide weapon. 
Without immediate dramatic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in 
a few weeks’.”

The Armenian foreign minister stressed that “the prevention of such a 
catastrophe is a core duty of the United Nations and this Council.”

“I do believe that this distinguished body, despite of geopolitical differences, 
has capacity to act as genocide prevention body and not as genocide 
commemoration, when it might be too late,” he added.

“During the previous months, many of you tried to address the issue of opening 
the Lachin corridor. However, despite all the calls, the commitments undertaken 
by the Trilateral statement from November 9, 2020, the legally binding orders of 
the International Court of Justice the situation did not improve on the ground. 
Quite contrary, Azerbaijan incrementally but consistently severed the blockade 
to the degree of a complete siege of Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia raised its 
concerns on the deepening of the humanitarian crisis as a result of a closure of 
the Lachin corridor in all negotiations with Azerbaijan, which were separately 
facilitated and mediated by the United States, the European Union and Russia. 
And yet to no avail.

“Throughout this time, Azerbaijan’s engagement has been anything but in good 
faith. Back to the first discussion on this issue in the Security Council, 
Azerbaijan denied any responsibility on the actions thereon and even claimed 
that it was not controlling the Lachin corridor. Throughout the past eight 
months, Azerbaijan brought a number of pretexts aimed at justifying its actions. 
First, it was so-called eco-activists with environmental concerns, then baseless 
allegations of transporting arms through the Lachin corridor, furthermore 
military provocations and so on,” Mirozyan said.

“The Lachin corridor has been agreed as a link between Armenia and 
Nagorno-Karabakh and has no alternative. The Lachin corridor should be opened, 
and when it comes to other possible communications, this should be addressed 
within an international mechanism of Baku-Stepanakert dialogue.

“Today I am here to seek the support of this august body in maintaining the 
prospect of reaching just and comprehensive peace and stability in our region, 
which is seriously undermined by Azerbaijan with the humanitarian calamity on 
the ground in Nagorno-Karabakh.

During the last two years, Armenia, with the help of the international 
community, spared no efforts to establish peace and stability in our region. And 
I believe today we still have the opportunity to reach this aim. But the current 
humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh has the full potential to deteriorate 
the prospects for peace in the whole region of South Caucasus and even beyond,” 
the Armenian foreign minister said.



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.

 

Asbarez: Armenia’s Rights Defender Debunks Baku’s Case Against Abducted Artsakh Citizen

Artsakh resident Vagif Khachatryan before being kidnapped by Azerbaijani forces on Jul. 29


The Office of Armenia’s Human Rights Defender on Thursday presented details related to Azerbaijan’s distorted claims against an Artsakh resident who was abducted while being escorted to Armenia by the International Committee of the Red Cross for medical treatment.

Azerbaijani border guards abducted Artsakh resident Vagif Khachatryan on July 29 while the ICRC was transporting him to Armenia for emergency heart surgery. Khachatryan was later remanded into custody and charged with “committing genocide” in 1991, which Azerbaijani prosecutors claiming that he took part in the so-called massacre in Khojaly.

“It is worth noting that Mr. Khachatryan joined the military service on September 1, 1992, only after which he participated in combat operations. Before that Mr. Khachatryan worked as civilian driver in Stepanakert,” a report released by Armenia’s Human Rights Defender on Thursday said.

“Therefore, the statement by Azerbaijan’s Prosecutor General’s office alleging that Mr. Khachatryan ‘committed a crime in Meshali village as part of a group of Armenian armed formations’ on December 22, 1991, does not correspond with reality. This information is substantiated by archival documents, orders issued by commanders, references documenting his military service, and the testimonies of the members of his family,” the rights defender’s office said.

The rights defender’s office said it also verified and confirmed that there were no outstanding international warrants for Khachatryan’s arrests as was claimed by Azerbaijani prosecutors.

“The Human Rights Defender reiterates that Mr. Vagif Khachatryan was being transported to Armenia under the auspices of the ICRC to receive the appropriate and necessary medical assistance, and was a protected person under international humanitarian law. Hence, depriving him of his freedom is a gross violation of international humanitarian law,” said the statement.

The rights also pointed out that immediately after Khachatryan’s abduction, calls for violence against Armenians, as well as hate-filled statements and threats against the Artsakh resident and his family began circulating in the Azerbaijani media.

“This phenomenon is yet another example of Azerbaijan’s policy of Armenophobia and ethnic hatred. Moreover, the Azerbaijani civil society, including public figures, state officials, as well as mass and social media outlets labeled Mr. Khachatryan a criminal,” the human rights defender’s office said in its report.

“When ethnic hatred is being propagated, and the presumption of innocence is violated, the fundamental human rights of Mr. Khachatryan cannot be guaranteed, and the proper examination of the case in correspondence with the requirements of the fair trial, by an impartial and fair court cannot be ensured,” said the human rights defender’s office.

“The aforementioned provides ample reasons to conclude that the unlawful interference with the fundamental human rights of Vagif Khachatryan by Azerbaijan was/is being carried out in a gross violation of international humanitarian law and international human rights law, considering that universally recognized international legal guarantees and standards are not ensured,” the rights defender’s office added.

Armenian FM holds phone call with Russia’s Lavrov, emphasizes need for effective use of mechanisms ahead of UNSC meeting

 20:12,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, ARMENPRESS. On August 16, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan had a telephone conversation with Sergey Lavrov, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, the foreign ministry said in a press release.

Ararat Mirzoyan emphasized the imperative to prevent the humanitarian catastrophe resulting from Azerbaijan's 8-month-long illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor and the ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Ahead of the emergency meeting of the UN Security Council, Ararat Mirzoyan emphasized the need for effective use of the existing mechanisms and clear steps aimed at lifting the blockade of the Lachin corridor in accordance with point 6 of the Trilateral Statement signed by the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan on November 9, 2020, and the Orders of the International Court of Justice of February 22 and July 6, 2023.




Azerbaijan continues intense disinformation campaign against Armenia, defense ministry warns

 20:30,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry continues to disseminate disinformation, the Armenian Defense Ministry warned Wednesday evening.

“The statement disseminated by the MoD of Azerbaijan that allegedly on August 16, at around 6:20 p.m., units of the Armenian Armed Forces discharged fire against the Azerbaijani combat positions located in the eastern part of the border, does not correspond to reality,” the Armenian Defense Ministry said in a statement.

Azerbaijan released three different fake news reports on August 16: twice falsely accusing Armenia of opening fire on the border and falsely accusing Armenia of an attempted raid. All accusations were denied by the Armenian authorities and described as disinformation.

Dutch legislators call for action to prevent genocide in Nagorno-Karabakh

 22:04,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, ARMENPRESS. The Dutch parliament has addressed urgent questions to the foreign ministry and prime minister to take action, following obligations in Genocide Prevention Convention to prevent ongoing genocide of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Federation of Armenian Organisations in the Netherlands (FAON) reported.

“Thank you, Pieter Omtzigt and almost complete Dutch Parliament Tweede Kamer (House of Representatives) for urgent questions to Dutch MFA and PM for action, following obligations in Genocide Prevention Convention to prevent ongoing genocide of Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh,” FAON tweeted.