Armenia condemns Karabakh ‘blockade’ ahead of peace talks

Al Arabiya, UAE

AFP – Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Thursday urged international unity against Azerbaijan’s “illegal blockade” of the Armenian-populated region of Nagorno-Karabakh, and announced fresh EU-mediated peace talks with Baku.

Azerbaijan said this week it was temporarily shutting the only road linking its breakaway region to Armenia, accusing the Armenian branch of the Red Cross of smuggling.

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The move sparked concerns over a humanitarian crisis in the restive enclave, which is experiencing food shortages and where locals lack access to health services, according to separatist authorities.

Pashinyan on Thursday denounced what he said was an “illegal blockade” of Karabakh, saying it contradicts a ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

The UN’s top judicial body ordered Azerbaijan in February to ensure free movement along the Lachin Corridor, Karabakh’s sole land link with Armenia.

“As far as the illegal blockade of the Lachin Corridor and the deepening humanitarian crisis are concerned, the binding ruling of the ICJ creates a possibility for a greater international consolidation to prevent Azerbaijan’s policy of ethnic cleansing in Karabakh,” Pashinyan said.

Speaking at a cabinet meeting, he also announced the next round of peace talks with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev would be held on Saturday in Brussels under the mediation of European Council President Charles Michel.

“I confirmed my participation in the meeting, and I hope we will achieve progress in our talks on a peace treaty.”

The two former Soviet republics have fought two wars for control of Karabakh, in the 1990s and again in 2020.

Six weeks of fighting in autumn 2020 ended with a Russian-sponsored ceasefire agreement that saw Armenia cede swathes of territories it had controlled for decades.

Under the deal, the five-kilometer-wide Lachin Corridor was to be manned by Russian peacekeepers to ensure free passage between Armenia and Karabakh.

Pashinyan has complained about “problems” with Russian peacekeepers in Karabakh.

https://english.alarabiya.net/News/world/2023/07/13/Armenia-condemns-Karabakh-blockade-ahead-of-peace-talks

US Calls For Armenia, Azerbaijan Dialogue After Road Closure

BARRON’S

The United States called Wednesday for the reopening of the only road linking Armenia with the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

It also called on both Armenia and Azerbaijan to continue dialogue on ending their long-running conflict over Karabakh.

Secretary of State Anthony Blinken spoke with Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev, the State Department said, one day after the country closed the so-called Lachin Corridor.

Blinken “underscored the need for free transit of commercial, humanitarian, and private vehicles through the Lachin corridor,” the department said in a statement.

On Tuesday, Azerbaijan said it was shutting the road, accusing the Armenian branch of the Red Cross of smuggling.

Karabakh has been at the center of a decades-long territorial dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which have fought two wars over the mountainous territory, mainly populated by Armenians.

Since December Armenia has been warning of the risk of a humanitarian crisis in the territory as food and medicine run short due to restrictions on use of the Lachin route.

Blinken also spoke with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and expressed his support for peace talks between the two countries and the need for direct dialogue between them, the department said.

In late June Blinken met in Washington with his counterparts from Armenia and Azerbaijan and reported progress toward ending the dispute but no agreement.

More talks are scheduled for this month under mediation by the European Union.

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Karabakh Separatist Official Urges Russia To Open Corridor To Armenia

BARRON’S

A separatist official in Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan on Thursday called on Russia to allow movement on the only road linking the breakaway region to Armenia.

“I appeal to the Russian Federation… to ensure unimpeded movement, transportation of people and goods along the corridor,” State Minister Gurgen Nersisyan said on social media, warning that “the situation is terrible, in a few days we will have irreversible consequences.”

bur/gw

https://www.barrons.com/news/karabakh-separatist-official-urges-russia-to-open-corridor-to-armenia-b6664c80


Call from Blinken to Aliyev! Support for peace talks with Armenia

India –

In a written statement, US Department of State Spokesperson Matthew Miller said that Blinken reiterated the US “support for the negotiations” between the two countries and emphasized the “need for creativity, flexibility and reconciliation” in the talks.

In the statement, “Minister Blinken underlined the need for free passage of commercial, humanitarian and private vehicles through the Lachin corridor. He emphasized that both sides should maintain the positive momentum in the negotiations for a lasting and dignified peace.” statements were included.

Foreign Minister Blinken stated on Twitter that he had also met with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Blinken shared, “Yesterday I spoke with Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashian to reiterate my strong support for the ongoing efforts to achieve peace with Azerbaijan. The only way to a lasting peace in the South Caucasus is through direct dialogue and diplomacy, and I am determined to help facilitate it.” had used the words.

https://morningexpress.in/call-from-blinken-to-aliyev-support-for-peace-talks-with-armenia/

US Department Of State Believes Armenia, Azerbaijan Narrowed Differences On Peace Deal

URDUPOINT

 (@FahadShabbir) 

The US Department of State believes that a peace pact between Armenia and Azerbaijan is “within reach” after they narrowed the number of issues that remain to be resolved, Spokesperson Matthew Miller said

MOSCOW (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 13th July, 2023) The US Department of State believes that a peace pact between Armenia and Azerbaijan is “within reach” after they narrowed the number of issues that remain to be resolved, Spokesperson Matthew Miller said.

Miller was asked Wednesday to clarify what his Department meant by saying that “the peace is within reach,” “agreement is within reach” following the June talks between the foreign ministers of the two rival nations in Arlington.

“We have meant when we say it’s within reach is that they have made significant progress on a number of issues. Even in the last meeting, they narrowed the number of issues that remain unresolved,” he told a news briefing.

“And so we think with a dwindling number of issues to resolve, the agreement’s within reach, but that involves � that of course would involve both parties being willing to compromise,” Miller added.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke separately with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan this week to express continued US support for the Armenia-Azerbaijan talks and stress the need to keep up the positive momentum toward a durable peace in the South Caucasus.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought two wars over Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian-majority region wedged in between the two countries where both have a military presence. The decades-long conflict reignited in fall 2020, marking the worst escalation since the 1990s. Hostilities ended in a Russia-brokered ceasefire and deployment of Russian peacekeepers to the region.

https://www.urdupoint.com/en/world/us-department-of-state-believes-armenia-azer-1722905.html

Armenian Airline Operates First Flight to IKIA

Financial Tribune, Iran

Fly Arna Airlines operated its first flight from Armenia to Imam Khomeini International Airport on July 11, according to Mohammad Reza Fardi, the acting deputy head of Imam Khomeini International Airport.

Fardi added that the airline will operate the flights twice a week.

Fly Arna is the third Armenian airline that operates flights from Armenia to IKIA, the news portal of the Ministry of Roads and Urban Development reported.

https://financialtribune.com/articles/domestic-economy/119153/armenian-airline-operates-first-flight-to-ikia

We Remember Dr. Richard Hovannisian, 90, an Esteemed Historian and Chronicler of the Armenian Genocide

Wed, 07/12/2023 – 12:10pm

The USC Shoah Foundation mourns the passing of our friend Dr. Richard Gable Hovannisian, a scholar who devoted his life to chronicling the 1915 Armenian Genocide and donated the more than 1,000 survivor and witness testimonies he amassed to the USC Shoah Foundation. He was 90.

Born to Armenian Genocide survivors in Tulare, California, in 1932, Dr. Hovannisian was initially discouraged from learning his parents’ language and knew little about Armenian history.

After receiving a B.A. in History from UC Berkeley and an M.A. and Ph.D. from UCLA, Dr. Hovannisian joined the UCLA faculty in 1962 and later—inspired by his travels to the Middle East—founded the university’s first Armenian history programs.

In 1969 he created the UCLA Armenian Genocide Oral History Project, an initiative for his students to record and transcribe audio interviews with Armenian Genocide survivors, primarily in the Los Angeles area. Over the next 50 years, Dr. Hovannisian and his students amassed more than 1,000 testimonies in what is believed to be the largest collection of its kind in the world.

In a 2011 interview with the UCLA Daily Bruin, Dr. Hovannisian described his motivation in capturing the experiences of as many Armenian Genocide survivors as possible.

“I grew up with that generation of survivors, and I thought they’d be around forever,” he said. “Then I looked left, and I looked right, and they were disappearing.”

In 2018, Dr. Hovannisian entrusted the Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection to the USC Shoah Foundation in order that the interviews be preserved and made publicly available in perpetuity. The collection consists primarily of full-life histories which illuminate Ottoman-Armenian life, the Genocide and post-Genocide era, and the diaspora experience. Survivors are from all over the Ottoman Empire, and many interviewees are from the former Russian and Persian empires. Testimonies are mostly in Armenian and English, with some in Turkish and Spanish.

To date, more than 600 testimonies have been integrated into the Visual History Archive (VHA), where they are searchable with keywords at access sites around the world.  Indexers are currently working to integrate the remaining testimonies into the archive.

Speaking at a USC event in 2019, the esteemed academic described the cumulative force of the 1,040 testimonies he and his students recorded.

“The quality of these interviews is mixed. One interview may not be that great, but when you put them together, it’s in the collectivity of the testimony that you have the strength of it. It’s with the collectivity of it that you feel the real horror, the terror, of what genocide is, and how extensive it can be from one end of a country to another. And how cruel it can be. Cruelty after cruelty after cruelty.”

The Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection joined the 330 testimonies that had been donated to the USC Shoah Foundation by filmmaker J. Michael Hagopian and the Armenian Film Foundation in 2010. Together they constitute the largest non-Holocaust-related collection in the USC Shoah Foundation’s 56,000-strong VHA.

USC Shoah Foundation Finci-Viterbi Executive Director Chair Dr. Robert J. Williams spoke of the importance of Dr. Hovannisian’s donation and his contribution towards the understanding of the Armenian Genocide.

“Dr. Hovannisian’s illustrious career as a historian bequeathed an important and unparalleled legacy,” Dr. Williams said. “Thanks to his foresight, and the significant partnership he developed with the USC Shoah Foundation, the Visual History Archive now contains more than 600 Armenian testimonies that scholars, researchers, and others around the world can use in their work for many years to come.”

The USC Institute of Armenian Studies issued a statement Tuesday praising a man they described as “a titan in the field of Armenian Studies.”

“[Dr. Hovannisian] lived the life of a public intellectual,” the statement said. “He became a historian with a mission—to promote the study of the Armenian Genocide as a consequential 20th-century event. His research and publications cemented the place of the first Republic of Armenia in Armenian history and world history…His name has been omnipresent in academia for nearly seven decades, making space for Armenian scholars at institutions once out of reach.”

Over the course of his distinguished career, Dr. Hovannisan authored a number of books including Armenia on the Road to Independence (1967), The Republic of Armenia, Volumes I-IV (1971-1996), and The Armenian Holocaust (1980).

He was a Guggenheim Fellow and served on the board of directors of organizations including Facing History and Ourselves, the International Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide, and the Society for Armenian Studies, which he co-founded.

In 1998 Dr. Hovannisian was honored by the president of the Republic of Armenia with the Movses Khorenatsi medal and in 2002 received the Republic’s Medal of St. Mesrop Mashtots. He was also highly active in political commentary and a voice for the Armenian diaspora in Los Angeles and across the United States.

Dr. Hovannisian is survived by his children, Raffi, Armen, Ani, and Garo, all of whom are active in the Armenian community. Raffi is a politician in Armenia and the country’s first foreign minister and Ani produced The Hidden Map, a documentary about her journey to her ancestral homeland, which aired on PBS in 2021.

In this clip from a 2015 interview, Dr. Hovannisian discusses the emotions expressed by Armenian genocide witnesses in their testimonies

https://sfi.usc.edu/news/2023/07/35336-we-remember-dr-richard-hovannisian-90-esteemed-historian-and-chronicler-armenian

Armenia Demands That International NGOs Have Access To Nagorno-Karabakh

Armenia demanded Wednesday, July 12 that international humanitarian organizations have access to the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh, whose Azerbaijan has closed the only road linking it to Armenian territory, arousing the concern of its inhabitants. “Residents are dying because they don’t have access to health services”, testified to Agence France-Presse Metakse Iakobyan, a 51-year-old resident of Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh. Lucine Gasparyan, 37, said that “store shelves are empty” “We can only buy bread and I can’t imagine what our living conditions will be like in the future. »

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribersNagorno-Karabakh: Azerbaijan blocks the vital axis linking the enclave to Armenia

According to local health authorities, more than one hundred and eighty people including two children “seriously ill” must be urgently transferred to Armenia for treatment. Nagorno-Karabakh human rights defender Gegham Stepanyan described a situation that “empire day by day”and mentioned a risk of ” famine “. He called for a reaction ” very strong “ from the international community.

Referring to acts of “contraband” of the Armenian branch of the Red Cross, Baku announced on Tuesday the “provisional suspension” of passage through the Lachin Corridor. The Armenian Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday that this measure is intended to make the situation “unlivable” for the inhabitants of the region. Since December 2022, Armenia has accused its neighbor of hindering the supply of this secessionist region populated by Armenians and of creating a humanitarian crisis there.

“It is regrettable that during these months the international community and international humanitarian organizations have not been able to obtain access to Nagorno-Karabakh”added the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in its press release, considering that it is “crucial to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe” in this region.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has dismissed Azerbaijan’s smuggling charges and assured that no unauthorized goods were found inside its vehicles in the Lachin corridor. The European Union said on Wednesday that it supports “firmly the crucial role of the International Committee of the Red Cross in the region” and she repeated “his call on Azerbaijan to guarantee the free movement of people and goods through the Lachin corridor”.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh for several decades and have fought two wars for its control, the last of which, in 2020, saw the defeat of Armenian forces.

The World with AFP


https://globeecho.com/news/europe/armenia-demands-that-international-ngos-have-access-to-nagorno-karabakh/

​Dmitry Trenin: “Russia ready for a new format of relations with Armenia”

Armenia –

Dmitry Trenin: “Russia ready for a new format of relations with Armenia”


Dmitry Trenin

Mediamax’s interview with Dmitry Trenin, research professor of the Faculty of World Economy and World Politics at the Higher School of Economics and leading researcher at the Center for International Security of the National Research Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

 

Dmitry Trenin was Director of the Carnegie Moscow Center from 2008-2022.

 

– In your article “Russia’s allied policy: What to do and what to change?” published in late August 2020, about a month before the war, you wrote that Armenia’s value for Russia is not too big. Can we say that after the defeat in the 2020 war, Armenia’s value has further decreased?

 

– I think, first of all, it is not that Armenia has changed, but the general situation in the region. The changes inside Armenia were rather a consequence of what happened during the war and what changed the balance of power in the South Caucasus.

 

Today, Russia’s position has changed not only towards Armenia but the South Caucasus in general.

 

I will not say that a disaster occurred for Russia, but in any case, the changes are serious. Today, Turkey is probably a more significant player in the South Caucasus than Russia. In addition, in the context of the war in Ukraine, Western countries, primarily the United States and partly the United Kingdom, began to attach much more importance to the post-Soviet space in case when they distanced themselves from the 2020 war. In general, this war was very peripheral for the Western political class and, in general, for Western society – little was written about it, little was said or thought about it. But now, after Russia’s involvement in the Ukrainian developments, the West thinks there is an opportunity and a need to expand the geopolitical pressure with access to the Caucasus, Middle and Central Asia.

 

– In the same article you wrote: “The main value of the position on Armenia is in the possibility of maintaining relative stability in Transcaucasia, the balance between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and deterring Turkey’s ambitions. Today, this balance no longer exists.

 

– Actually, Russia cannot play this game anymore. For many years it had the opportunity to act as a balancer and believed that it could – as the Americans do in the Middle East – sell weapons to one and the other, control the situation in the zone of extinguished or frozen conflict and thus maintain its position in the South Caucasus, not allowing regional powers such as Turkey and world powers such as the United States or even China enter the region. Now Russia does not have such an opportunity, so there can be no talk of any balance between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

 

At the same time, Russia is interested that a solution be found to the problem of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations. Peace creates more opportunities for Russia than war. If earlier it was possible to say that Russia benefited from this conflict, although I think this is not quite true, now it hopes that a peaceful settlement will create some conditions: first of all, by intensification of economic relations, creation of new transport opportunities, including through the territory of Armenia. We should also keep in mind that the relations between Russia and Georgia have warmed up a bit recently. This is also an interesting factor.

 

– How fair is the opinion that the fate of the South Caucasus is decided not in the region itself, but in Ukraine? In the sense that after the outbreak of war in Ukraine, Russia does not want or is unable to play the role it had in the first post-war phase.

 

– I agree with that point of view. But when we say that everything depends on the outcome, we assume that the outcome is somewhere close. But the outcome is very far away, we are probably talking about years. The conflict in Ukraine may freeze on some point for a while, but it will not change the state of hybrid war between Russia and the West. The situation will remain in limbo without a clear final outcome for a long time.

Dmitry Trenin

 

Obviously, priorities have now changed a lot, and we have to mobilize resources in the most important areas. The luxury that Russian foreign policy used to have will no longer exist.

 

– And the need for Russia to take into account Turkey’s interests in the region will only grow?

 

– Of course, Turkey remains a very important country for Russia, and the need to take Turkish interests into account, of course, remains. I would also add that Russia has obvious interests in Azerbaijan, and these interests have grown: I mean the North-South corridor which is also one of the connecting threads between Russia and the economies of the Near and Middle East, India, Iran. This is also of strategic importance for Russia. With Europe no longer being Russia’s main economic partner, there is a need to interact more closely with Azerbaijan. The importance of Armenia as a military outpost in relation to Turkey is much smaller in the current conditions. This does not mean that Russia has stopped being interested in Armenia and would like to close this “unpromising direction”. There is nothing of the sort. There is a willingness to work with the government that exists in Armenia, understanding its aspirations and its limitations.

 

– Many people in Yerevan ask: in light of the difficult situation Armenia is in, and the growing importance of Turkey and Azerbaijan for Moscow, what can Armenia do, to gain competitive advantages and become more interesting for Russia?

 

– I repeat that Russia has no wish to reduce its presence in Armenia. Armenia today is not a “burden” or “ballast”. In the current circumstances, it is important for Russia to maintain allied relations with Armenia through the CSTO and the EAEU. For this, the relations should be more pragmatic. There is a thing which, if does not disturb the Russian side but somewhat annoys it. This is the resentment against Russia in Armenian society. I believe that Russia does not deserve such criticism. Russia is being asked to, so to speak, harness for Armenia, while Armenia is not going to harness for Russia. Such moments of tension, in my opinion, can be significantly reduced in the case of more pragmatic, more open and more honest relations. I think that Russia is ready for such a new format of relations, which would not be the relations of boss and client, as it was seen by many in Moscow and Yerevan, but the relations of two countries linked by common interests, historical and demographic ties.

Dmitry Trenin

 

You talk about Armenia’s difficult situation. Russia is also in a very difficult situation, with a huge number of sanctions and other forms of pressure from the West. The situation in Russia is quite difficult. It has to wage a hybrid war against the collective West, and I would like Russian partners and allies to understand this, just as Russia understands Armenia. Russia did not obstruct the choice of the Armenian people in 2018, it agreed to live with the government the Armenian people chose. Whatever Putin thinks of the notorious “Sorosians”, he is working with Nikol Pashinyan and quite closely.

 

– You mentioned the CSTO, which, instead of acting as a guarantor of Armenia’s security, today is actually one of the main irritants in Armenian-Russian relations.

 

– I would partly argue with this, saying that the CSTO is of little use to Armenia, but the CSTO does not force Armenia to do anything. CSTO members are Russia’s formal allies, but now when Russia is actually at war with the collective West, they take a neutral position. And Russia accepts this as a fact; no one is demanding that the CSTO be dissolved and no one calls on the CSTO to consolidate around Russia. In this sense Russia acts very adaptively and understands what it can demand from its allies and what it cannot. It is not an ideal tool, of course, but it is a burden that at least does not pull you down. Right, it does not help much either. But leaving the CSTO will bring forth unnecessary losses that will not be compensated. Let’s say Armenia withdraws from the CSTO, what does it mean? Will it become a member of NATO? No, it will not. Will it abandon bilateral military relations with Russia? As I understand it, no, although obviously there are circles that demand the withdrawal of Russian forces. No good alternative is seen for Armenia. Of course, Armenia is the one that determines its own fate, its military-political status, but we should look at the situation from different sides and refrain from emotions. We in Russia also have a lot of emotions not related to the Caucasus and Armenia. This should also be kept in mind.    

 

Ara Tadevosyan spoke with Dmitry Trenin

 

This interview has been prepared as part of a joint project with the Tufenkian Foundation.

Azerbaijan’s Illegal Blockade Causes 30,000 Armenian Children Mental Anguish, Starvation, Trauma [corrected source]

Azerbaijan and its ally, Turkey, have blockaded Artsakh (also known as Nagorno-Karabakh), an Armenian republic in the South Caucasus, since December 12, 2022, in an attempt to force the Armenians to flee their native lands and take over the region. Currently, food supplies are completely cut off from transportation into Artsakh, and there is no fuel or gas. The Azeri military attacks on farmers are ongoing. And the 7-month siege of Artsakh Republic is killing children.

Artsakh has for millennia been an integral part of historic Armenia and has never been a part of independent Azerbaijan. Dating back to the 9-6th century BC, the region was governed by various Armenian kingdoms, and in the 17th Century, it was annexed by the Russian Empire. In 1921, Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin arbitrarily carved out Artsakh and placed it under the administration of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic as an autonomous oblast. Artsakh, however, remained demographically Armenian and preserved its autonomous status despite widespread oppression and discrimination at the hands of Soviet Azerbaijan. On December 10, 1991, Artsakh declared independence as a republic from the Soviet Union – an act which further increased Azerbaijan’s persecution of Artsakh. And this persecution that aims to ethnically cleanse Armenians has reached its culmination in recent years. 

On July 8, in Aghabekalanj village in Artsakh’s Martakert region, three-year-old Leo and six-year-old Gita died of heat and exhaustion in an abandoned car after going to look for their mom, who had gone on foot to search for something to feed them.

Artsakh officials have been warning that supplies of basic goods are dwindling after Azerbaijan closed the Berdzor (Lachin) Corridor to humanitarian shipments on June 15. Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade has since reached a critical point.

During the initial months of the blockade, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and Russian peacekeeping forces were able to deliver humanitarian cargo, including food and medicine, from Armenia to Artsakh.  

In recent months, however, Azerbaijan has been taking additional illegal steps to double down on the blockade and finalize its genocide against Armenians. On April 23, Azerbaijan illegally established a military checkpoint on the Berdzor Corridor on the Hakari River Bridge. 

On July 11, Azerbaijan announced that it would deny the ICRC access to Artsakh through the Corridor after claiming they were used to “smuggle” mobile phones, cigarettes, and fuel into the region.

This decision makes the illegal blockade absolute as the Berdzor corridor is the only path Armenians in the Artsakh region have with the outside world. This means that if somebody gets sick in Artsakh and needs to be transported out, they will die.   

Artak Beglaryan, an advisor to State Minister of Artsakh, reported on July 11:

“Azerbaijan just announced that again forbids the movement of the ICRC through Lachin Corridor to transfer patients and medications. The new pretext is alleged transfers of some small number of non-medical products by ICRC drivers. Now Artsakh is under full siege with 0 [zero] movement.”

The ICRC issued the following statement about the Azeri allegations:

“Our work along the Lachin corridor is always strictly humanitarian. This essential work, which has allowed more than 600 patients to be evacuated for medical care and for medical supplies, food, baby formula and other essentials to reach healthcare facilities and families, must be allowed to continue. This work is always done with the agreement of the sides and makes a difference to the lives of thousands of people.”

Azerbaijan is creating a humanitarian crisis in Artsakh through a state-sponsored campaign to eliminate the region’s indigenous Armenian population who does not want to be persecuted by Azerbaijan and requests its right to self-determination. The greatest victims of this ongoing siege are 30,000 children, who live in Artsakh. 

Dr. Anzhela Mnatsakanyan, a lecturer at the Chair of Political Science of Yerevan State University, and a researcher at the Edinburgh Peace Institute, told Providence:

“Even though we might think that the children are too small to understand what is going on, the reality is different. Children see their parents stressed; there is little food, and some can’t attend school and kindergartens. I can give an example of my friend trying to explain to her five-year-old granddaughter that she can’t take a bath as there was no hot water back in March. Her granddaughter answered, ‘But you used to have heating.’ Try explaining to a five-year-old that she cannot have ice cream as usual because there is no cream in the whole republic. My other friend hasn’t seen her nephew since December, and they were quite close; it is hard for her to explain to him why she is not visiting and missed his birthday.

“Another friend shared a video of her child playing with her friends. During the play, she said to her friends, ‘You look pale; you need to eat fruit,’ and then complained that there was no fruit in their home as well.

“Let’s remember how scared the children from Artsakh who went to Armenia to participate in the Junior Eurovision Contest were, and then they couldn’t come back home due to the siege. When they eventually had a chance to return, they were physically attacked by Azeri eco-activists and some even lost consciousness.

“A few days ago, a tragedy happened. Two children died because there was no food and fuel, so their mother went to another city on foot to find food. Please remember this is happening in 2023…

“This ongoing nightmare is not only affecting children’s mental and physical health, but is also killing children, even those who were not born yet; I know women who miscarried their children because of stress and the lack of vitamins.”

On his Twitter account, Arman Tatoyan, the former Human Rights Defender of the Republic of Armenia, listed additional facts regarding the Azeri ethnic cleansing in Artsakh. 

Tatoyan noted that since January 9 there has been no electricity in Artsakh. Since March 21, no gas and no humanitarian aid (including food) since June 15.  There has only been limited medications through the ICRC since June 25. Tatoyan added that Azeri-sponsored hatred and the total blockade of Artsakh with 120,000 Armenians is ongoing. 

Narine Karapetian, a mother living in Artsakh, told Providence:

“Fuel shortages and limited transportation make it impossible for children to attend sports and art classes that are far from home. Unfortunately, it has become commonplace for children to be constantly exposed to life-threatening situations. Even when they hear a loud clap of thunder, they stare at us with a puzzled look, expecting us to say, ‘We have to go down to the basement.’

“Children genuinely find happiness when there is light in the house. They often wonder why their peers can travel outside of Artsakh and have new life experiences, especially during the summer, while they cannot.”

Lilit Hovakimyan, a teacher in Artsakh, told Providence:

“From a teacher’s perspective, it is incredibly challenging to educate children in Artsakh about basic human rights and fundamental freedoms when the international community seems to turn a blind eye to the violations happening in their region. As educators, we strive to instill in our students a sense of justice, equality, and the importance of standing up for their rights. However, the ongoing blockade of Artsakh creates an environment of frustration and helplessness.”

Siranush Sargsyan, a journalist based in Stepanakert, the capital of Artsakh, shared with Providence:

“The blockade imposed by Azerbaijan affects everyone in Artsakh, but perhaps children suffer the most. I experienced my childhood during the first Artsakh war [1988-1994] and its consequences have always followed me throughout life. I don’t know if it’s harder for children who are newly born, whose rights are already violated, or for children who already understand what is happening. For small kids, their mothers struggle to find diapers, formula, and other necessities. For kids who understand, they will remember all these hardships throughout their whole lives. Even their games are impacted by the blockade.

“I remember a friend’s child playing with toy cars. He lined them up and just watched. When his mother asked why he wasn’t playing, he answered that he was playing – he was waiting with his car in line to get fuel. Some children don’t understand why they can’t eat what they want or why Santa didn’t bring them gifts or why they can’t celebrate their birthdays. Another cruel fact is that children living near the border are under the constant threat of fire; they can hear gunfire from Azerbaijani positions every day and live in fear.

“The sad part of all this is that even if the problems are solved tomorrow, which I find hard to believe, these children will always remember these hardships.”

Mariam Gasparyan, a psychologist living in Artsakh, agrees with Sargsyan’s observations:

“Firstly, children feel the situation as much as the parents, since the safety for the children depends on the safety of the parent. The reaction of parents develops the reaction of the child to the situation. Kids are facing very directly the situation – skipping school due to the blockade and being deprived of their favorite foods. If the parents can’t manage their reactions correctly, then the kids do not react well. But we are in a situation that is out of our control. If the parent has certain needs and she/ he does not know how to meet them, then they cannot help their child feel secure. The longer the blockade lasts, the more one must passively adapt to it, but at the same time the adaptation mechanisms start to weaken.

“Today, the play of the children has changed. In their activities, they are more often imitating blocked roads, the absence of some food and the guards driving nearer. On one hand it is good that the kids are expressing their feelings through games, but on the other hand the situation is so tense and serious that the kids lose carelessness, and they start to combat the situation together with each other, but the levels of perception are very different. As opposed to an adult, when the kids hear that they [Azeris] will come and kill us, they perceive it directly while adults can analyze and think of other options. This brings panic attacks to children who perceive what they hear directly. 

“The child’s feelings are exacerbated and when the situation is stressed, and their fathers go to the frontline, they have increased anxiety, concerns that they will never see their fathers again, they may have frustration and psychosomatic symptoms. When the parents take the child to the psychologist since they cannot do anything about the symptoms. And it is not happening once or twice, but it is constant, resulting in apathy or some elements of disorder, which needs therapeutic treatment. Especially when the kid loses a parent in recent events, their roles change. The child assumes the role of an adult and not of someone playing soccer in the yard, so they understand what they are losing. Childlike things are no longer in the focus of their life.

“The kids need to regain their carelessness, with no feelings of danger, they should be able to believe once again that their parents will be able to protect them.”

Meanwhile, 28 non-governmental organizations from Artsakh published an open letter to the international community on July 10. They said, in part:

“Artsakh is not a ‘territory’ inherited by someone by the right of the strong, but our Homeland, where we have a full and inalienable right to a safe life. Artsakh is not just a handful of 120,000 people, not counting about 30,000 forcibly displaced Artsakh residents, who were expelled from their homes as a result of Azerbaijan’s military aggression in 2020…

“We suggest recalling the history of the Second World War and trying to imagine: would it have been possible to call on Jews to live under Hitler’s Nazi government? Modern Azerbaijan is also a Nazi state in relation to the Armenians, and it is not difficult to make sure of that – in case of an objective look at this issue without unilateral consumption of the Azerbaijani propaganda. Having survived the horrors of the three wars unleashed by Azerbaijan, pogroms, exile, psychological terror, human and material losses, continuing to live with the looming existential threat, the people of Artsakh are demanding to use all existing international mechanisms to prevent ethnic cleansing and genocide carried out by Azerbaijan. In view of the current situation, we demand the presence of representatives of all relevant international organizations in Artsakh.”

Will the world hear this call? Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade on Artsakh has remained ongoing for the past 7 months. Will the US administration finally take a moral step at this historic time and end the second Armenian genocide in Artsakh?

https://providencemag.com/2023/07/azerbaijans-illegal-blockade-causes-30000-armenian-children-mental-anguish-starvation-trauma/