Contracts will be signed with volunteers, including the state structures of Armenia

  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Volunteering in Armenia

Armenia is reforming legislation regarding volunteering. The government has approved a bill according to which volunteers will work on contract and their work will be counted as experience in the relevant field.

The Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs has already developed an electronic platform where volunteers and job offers can easily find each other.

“One of the main goals of this law is to support the formation of an active civil society and increase the role of social responsibility,” Deputy Minister Ruben Sargsyan said.


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According to the draft law on volunteer work, everyone who is 16 years old will be able to offer their services. If those who have not reached this age want to volunteer, organizations will need to obtain the consent of their parents or guardian.

State and non-profit structures – foundations, public organizations, unions – will be able to attract volunteers to their work. Profitable organizations will be able to attract volunteer employees in the event that only the state acts as the owner of the structure.

“One of the mandatory requirements for attracting volunteers is the signing of an agreement, which will indicate for what purpose and for how long they are involved,” Sargsyan said.

The law will not apply to volunteer structures created to protect the country.

The bill does not establish an upper age limit. Ruben Sargsyan notes that any structure that attracts volunteers is obliged to provide them with work corresponding to “their strengths and physical capabilities” and create the necessary working conditions.

Moreover, it is planned to remove age restrictions from the Labor Code in the near future.

At least 5,100 people have lost their jobs due to the difficult economic situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The law provides for regulations and mechanisms that will allow students to gain work experience in the professional field in parallel with their studies.

Those who apply for volunteer work requiring professional skills will be required to provide organizations with documents confirming their competence in this field — diplomas, documents confirming special education.

The project provides for unified regulations for volunteering:

  • clear rules for separating voluntary work from illegal work, which will also help reduce “shadow employment”, that is, the number of unregistered workers;
  • the ability to quickly attract a large number of volunteers in emergency situations, including in the work of government agencies;
  • obtaining professional experience as a result of voluntary work, which will also contribute to employment.

While earlier organizations that involve volunteers in their activities did not provide guarantees for reimbursement of expenses, after the adoption of the law this will be a mandatory condition.

Volunteer’s expenses for travel, accommodation, daily allowance and all expenses associated with this work are subject to compensation.

“Of course, a volunteer does this not for personal gain or income, but in order to be useful to society. But his rights must also be protected,” Sargsyan said.

A JAMNews pictorial overview of some segments of trade relations between Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaikjan

According to Sargsyan there was no shortage of volunteers in Armenia. He recalled that during the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, during the 2020 war and in the post-war period, many people were actively doing volunteer work.

The work of citizens who showed good will went unnoticed due to a gap in the legislation. That is, their rights were not protected; they did not have, for example, guarantees for reimbursement of their costs.

“An attempt to adopt such a law was also made in 2006, 2010, 2015, 2017, but we did not reach the goal. Until now, we have not had a legal act that would solve the problems of volunteer movements and structures,” he said.

EBRD and EU help grow businesses in Armenia

By Nina Tsintsadze

More than 70 small and medium-sized  enterprises (SMEs) in Armenia have already invested in greener technology and boosted their competitiveness thanks to a joint financing programme of the EBRD and the European Union (EU).

The EU4Business-EBRD Credit Line, active in Armenia since 2021, targets companies that wish to replace old technology with more energy efficient updates, enhance product quality and boost competitiveness at home and abroad.

The programme offers EBRD loans along with EU grant incentives, which target small firms through local financial institutions. A total of €14.5 million in loans was extended to small businesses for 89 investment projects over the past two years. Currently five Armenian commercial banks are involved in the programme.

Upon successful investment, companies in sectors ranging from manufacturing to agriculture, and from food and beverages to medical services, receive up to 15 per cent cashback financed by the EU under its EU4Business initiative.

Let us meet some of them

Yerevan Chocolate Company tells a delicious story. With decades of experience in the chocolate-making business, the company makes the lives of local and international customers in around 20 countries that much sweeter. When entering their premises, one finds it difficult to resist their large selection of chocolate truffles, bars and other confectionary.

Given the rapid pace of technological change in the chocolate industry, the company has decided to invest in new equipment through Armswissbank, which allowed them to rigorously follow EU standard food safety requirements to ensure chocolate making is several times more efficient and create safe conditions for its workers.

Another beneficiary of the EU4Business-EBRD Credit Line is the dairy company Tamara and Ani, a business that helps customers look after their bone health by producing calcium-rich products, along with ice cream and soft drinks. The company is now looking to make a positive contribution to the environment by investing in solar panels via a loan from Ameriabank for reduced energy bills and a less harmful impact on the environment.

Asedl is one of the largest glass processing manufacturers in the Caucasus, turning houses into cosy homes. But the company goes beyond households: they also provide their windows, doors, partitions, glass floors and much more to businesses amid the construction boom in the country.

With financing from the EU4Business-EBRD Credit Line through Armswissbank, the company has further modernised their production by investing in automotive equipment that minimises human contact with glass, making the production process safer and the final product of the highest quality. With support from the EBRD’s Advice for Small Businesses and funding from the EU, the company is also introducing the Kaizen business philosophy to improve the efficiency of its production facility.

‘’We are delighted to witness the tangible results of the investments that translate into better products, growth and improved working conditions,” said George Akhalkatsi, Head of the EBRD Yerevan Resident Office, at an event dedicated to presenting progress to date of the programme.

‘’We are continuing our work in close partnership with local commercial banks and the European Union to further boost the competitiveness and economic integration of Armenian SMEs. Our aim is to make local companies greener, and more competitive on local and international markets.’’

”We are excited to be part of this program supporting the green transition and competitiveness of Armenian SMEs. Investing in new and notably green technologies will not only improve the environmental performance of key economic sectors, but will also prepare SMEs to be more resilient and adapt to the transition towards a greener economy. The latter is an area where the EU will do much more in the coming years to support Armenia,” said Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin, Head of EU Delegation to Armenia.

Beyond Armenia, the EU4Business-EBRD Credit Line is active in Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine. So far, over 1,300 SMEs have benefited from this regional programme, and more are due to benefit in the future.

Deadly clashes in Karabakh can trigger new conflict escalation

 eureporter 
by Guest Contributor

The ongoing tensions in the Karabakh region between Azerbaijan and Armenia threaten post-conflict stability and reconciliation. The unwillingness of Armenia to sign a post-war peace treaty with Azerbaijan recognizing the territorial integrity of both states increases future conflict risks in the region. During the post-war period, several deadly clashes happened in the Karabakh region and at the Azerbaijani-Armenian border – writes Shahmar HajiyevSenior Advisor at the Center of Analysis of International Relations.

The end of the long-lasting war between Armenia and Azerbaijan opened up new opportunities for both countries to start economic cooperation and reconciliation. After signing the November Declaration and agreeing to a ceasefire, the key challenge became a post-war peace treaty between two South Caucasus countries. However, all recent developments show that Yerevan is seemingly unable to accept that Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan, as it is recognized in UN resolutions.

It is worth noting that one of the fundamental mechanisms for maintaining peace and security is the demarcation and delimitation of the state borders between Azerbaijan and Armenia.  The first official agreement on border delimitation and demarcation between Azerbaijan and Armenia was reached during the meeting in Sochi, Russia in November 2021. Both countries agreed to work towards the creation of a bilateral Commission on the delimitation of the state border. There was another agreement between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan during the meeting mediated by European Council President Charles Michel in Brussels in April 2022. According to Charles Michel, “the two sides agreed that their respective foreign ministers would work on the preparation of a future peace treaty that would address “all necessary issues”.

During the post-conflict period, Azerbaijan started this process using Soviet maps and GPS. However, despite all agreements between the parties, the Armenian government is not keen on solving this important issue. On the contrary, the official position of Baku is the sooner this critical issue can be resolved, the faster parties would be able to ensure stability and security. Azerbaijan has already proposed basic principles for normalizing bilateral relations, and for Azerbaijan's mutual recognition of territorial integrities, and the inviolability of internationally recognized borders of both states are the key criteria.

Today, deadly clashes and the illegal transit of Armenian armed forces and weapons to Karabakh seriously damage peace initiatives and the reconciliation process. It is worth noting that only during March and April did two serious clashes had happened, which led to causalities on both sides. On March 5, 2023, two Azerbaijani servicemen and three Armenian officials were killed after Azerbaijani troops stopped an Armenian convoy suspected of carrying weapons to Karabakh. After closing Lachin Road to the illegal transit of weapons, Armenians started using illegal roads for weapons supply to Karabakh.

Another bloody escalation happened on April 11, 2023, at the Azerbaijani-Armenian border near Tegh village. Following the armed clashes, several Armenian and Azerbaijani servicemen were killed and injured. These clashes show that the peace in the region is very fragile and as the conflict enters its new stage, future big escalations or even full-scale war could happen on the ground.

In addition, at the start of this month, one of the soldiers of Azerbaijan who went missing due to the poor weather conditions at the border of the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic with Armenia was severely beaten. The camera footage shows a moment a group of Armenians beat and torture the Azerbaijani soldier, and this is against Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War.

 All these incidents happened while Baku and Yerevan were continuing discussions on the post-war peace treaty and reconciliation process. Noteworthy, on March 1, 2023, officials from Azerbaijan met representatives of ethnic Armenians residing in Azerbaijan’s Karabakh region. The meeting was held at the headquarters of the temporary Russian peacekeeping mission located in the town of Khojaly. Key issues such as the reintegration of the Armenian residents of the Karabakh region into Azerbaijani society were discussed between the parties. After that meeting, Azerbaijan invited representatives of Karabakh Armenians for the second round of talks in Baku. Representatives of Karabakh Armenians refused to meet with Azerbaijani colleagues in Baku and again emphasized ambitious targets for independence. However, on 27 March, the Azerbaijani authorities re-invited representatives of the Karabakh Armenian community for a meeting to discuss re-integration issues. It is obvious that Armenian side is not willing to accept the Azerbaijani proposal to discuss reintegration issue, which is key for durable peace. 

Today, the key question is: what is the problem, and why cannot the parties sign a post-war peace treaty to support sustainable peace in the region? In answering this question, it is important to note that unwillingness of Armenia to recognize territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and start delimitation/demarcation of the state borders is the key challenge. In addition, illegal military transportation from Armenia to the Karabakh region is another challenge for security and stability in the region.

April 11 Azeri attack was repelled first of all by Armenian military – senior MP on Moscow’s statement

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YEREVAN, APRIL 14, ARMENPRESS. A senior lawmaker has said that Russia played some role in neutralizing the April 11 Azeri aggression but that it was repelled first of all as a result of the Armenian military’s actions.

On April 12, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said that Russian troops and Border Guards in Armenia took measures to de-escalate the situation on April 11 near the village of Tegh where an Azerbaijani attack left four Armenian troops dead and six wounded.

“I don’t question Maria Zakharova’s words, that Russia participated in some format, but, nevertheless, it is the Armenian military that fought. If we hadn’t fought, if not for the ultimate sacrifice, the issue wouldn’t have been solved no matter how many phone calls the Russian foreign ministry was to make. The objective was solved first of all as a result of the actions of our military,” MP Andranik Kocharyan (Civil Contract), the Chair of the Parliamentary Committee on Defense and Security Affairs said at a press briefing.

Meanwhile, another Civil Contract MP, Artur Hovhannisyan, who serves as Secretary of the ruling party’s parliamentary faction, commented on Zakharova’s statement that Russia has asked Armenia to explain its planned participation in NATO drills. Hovhannisyan said that Armenia is moving forward with its national interests and is doing everything for increasing the combat readiness of its military.

“Armenia continues warm, friendly and strategic relations with its strategic ally, and continues warm relations also with partners of other countries and is doing everything for the benefit of the development and increase of combat readiness of the Armenian military,” he said.

Sports: ​2023 European Weightlifting Championships preview: Schedule, key information & athletes to watch

2023 European Weightlifting Championships preview: Schedule, key information & athletes to watch
The tournament, which counts towards Olympic qualification, will see some of the top weightlifters in the world compete at the competition in Yerevan, Armenia.

One of the most highly-anticipated events on the weightlifting calendar is scheduled to take place this weekend (15 April), as the best weightlifters in Europe travel to Armenia to compete at the 2023 European Weightlifting Championships.

In addition to the prestige of finishing on the podium at one of the biggest weightlifting competitions on the planet, the tournament will play a key role in the Olympic qualifying process for Paris 2024; to be eligible to participate at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, athletes must participate in a minimum of three major competitions (in addition to fulfilling other prerequisites) – the European Weightlifting Championships can serve as one of those major competitions.

Here are the top things to know about the upcoming competition in Armenia.

When are the 2023 European Weightlifting Championships?

The championships are scheduled to take place in Yerevan, Armenia between 15 – 23 April 2023. This is the first time in the history of the European Championships that the competition will be held in Armenia.

What is the competition schedule for the European Weightlifting Championships?

The preliminary schedule shows athletes in the women's first three weight classes opening the championships on 15 April, with the subsequent eight competition days seeing both men and women take part.

Medals will be awarded in the following weight classes:

Women: -45kg, -49kg, -55kg, -59kg, -64kg, -71kg, -76kg, -81kg, -87kg, +87kg

Men: -55kg, -61kg, -67kg, -73kg, -81kg, -89kg, -96kg, -102kg, -109kg, +109kg

Athletes to watch

More than 350 weightlifters from 40 nations will take part in the championships this coming weekend, including several world, European and Olympic champions. Among the names to keep an eye on are:

Lasha Talakhadze (Georgia, Men's +109kg)

Two-time Olympic gold medalist (Rio 2016, Tokyo 2020), six-time world champion, six-time European champion, world record holder in the snatch, clean and jerk and total in the men's +109kg category.

Emily Campbell (Great Britain, Women's +87kg)

Olympic silver medalist (Tokyo 2020), two-time European champion, two-time world championships medalist.

Antonino Pizzolato (Italy, Men's -89kg)

Olympic bronze medalist (Tokyo 2020, -81kg category), three-time European champion, world championships bronze medalist

Loredana Toma (Romania, Women's -71kg)

Four-time European champion, two-time world champion.

Criticism of Russia and the CSTO by the Armenian authorities

  • JAMnews

Criticism of CSTO by Armenian authorities

After the refusal of the Russian military bloc CSTO to help Armenia in May 2021, when the country’s authorities for the first time announced the invasion of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces into its sovereign territory, the question of the effectiveness of the organization had already arisen. Yet they tried to avoid talk of withdrawing from the Collective Security Treaty Organization. On the contrary, the country’s leadership has repeatedly suggested that, perhaps, “the CSTO is leaving Armenia.”

The “Caucasian Knot” has prepared a report on what happened in recent years, how Armenia reacted to the inaction of Russia and its allies in the CSTO military bloc, acting under its leadership. What follows are excerpts.


  • “Russia’s military presence does not guarantee the security of Armenia” – Pashinyan
  • “Staying with Russia is a greater risk for Armenia than alliance with the US.” Opinion
  • Mirzoyan-Lavrov meeting in Moscow

Nikol Pashinyan accused the CSTO of not properly responding to the actions of the Azerbaijani military in the Sotk-Khoznavar sector in May 2021.

On May 27, on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border in the Sotk-Khoznavar section, six Armenian soldiers were taken prisoner while performing engineering work. Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan regarded this as a kidnapping, since the soldiers were on their territory. Since May 12 the Azerbaijani armed forces have advanced several kilometers deep into the sovereign territory of Armenia and still have not retreated, despite Armenia’s demands.

“The way the CSTO reacted to what happened was a failure for the organization itself. Contrary to existing procedures, the CSTO has not yet decided to conduct monitoring at the site, justifying the long-standing fears of the Armenian public that an organization important for the security of Armenia will not do anything at the right time,” Pashinyan said in the spring of 2022.

Armenian Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan stated in September 2022 that Yerevan expects “military and military-political assistance” from the CSTO, but is not receiving it. According to Grigoryan, Armenia needs support from the CSTO to protect its own sovereignty and withdraw the Azerbaijani Armed Forces from Armenian territory. “This was our demand to the CSTO, and it has not yet been fulfilled. Naturally, this does not satisfy us,” Grigoryan said.

A day before the CSTO summit in Yerevan, the political scientist presented his view on Armenian-Russian relations, the expediency of membership in the CSTO, Armenia’s to reform the army and establish new military partnerships.

If Russia and other allies do not begin to fulfill their obligations, Armenia may withdraw from the CSTO, Pashinyan said in September 2022. “To put it differently: there are fears that Armenia will leave the CSTO, and my answer was that there are fears that the CSTO will leave Armenia. This is not a play on words,” Pashinyan said.

In September 2022 Pashinyan accused the Kremlin of “speculating on facts” with respect to Armenia and voicing “excuses” instead of real actions.

According to Pashinyan, during the discussion of security issues in the CSTO, he received clear assurances that the Armenian border was a “red line” for the organization, but “it turned out that red lines exist only in words.”

“This is important not only for Armenia, but also for the CSTO. After all, if you say that there is no border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, then there is no CSTO, because the CSTO has a zone of responsibility, which is defined by borders. If there is no border, then there is no area of responsibility, if there is no area of responsibility, then there is no organization,” Pashinyan said.

Criticism of CSTO by Armenian authorities

Personae non gratae in Armenia – On the banning of Margarita Simonyan and Aram Gabrielyanov, Russian journalists of Armenian origin

On November 23, 2022, Pashinyan refused to sign the declaration of the Collective Security Council (CSC) of the CSTO and the draft decision on assistance to Yerevan. The reason was a lack of a clear political position of the organization on the issue of Azerbaijan’s actions. At a CSTO summit, Pashinyan reiterated that, despite the guarantees of collective protection, Armenia was subjected to armed aggression by Baku.

“Over the past two years, Armenia has been subjected to aggression by Azerbaijan at least three times. It is depressing that Armenia’s membership in the CSTO did not deter Azerbaijan from aggressive actions and that, in fact, until today we have not been able to reach a decision on the CSTO’s reaction to this aggression. These facts cause great damage to the image of the CSTO both inside and outside our country,” Pashinyan said.

He added that he considers the lack of reaction of the CSTO to the actions of Azerbaijan the main failure of Armenia’s presence in this organization. He recalled that during mass protests in Kazakhstan in January 2022, it took the CSTO only one day to reach a decision on the deployment of troops, and this largely helped to extinguish the unrest and avoid a coup.

70 Armenian servicemen went to Kazakhstan as part of the CSTO peacekeeping contingent dispatch to Kazakhstan, causing an outrage in Armenia which never recieved aid from the bloc depsite several appeals

On November 27, 2022, the CSTO offered Armenia a set of support measures. After analyzing them, Pashinyan stated that

  • they “do not contain specifics and political assessments” of the escalation of the conflict on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan,
  • without these assessments, the CSTO observers have nothing to do on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

“The aggression against the sovereign territory of Armenia from May 2021 to September 13, 2022 was doubly painful because our security allies left us alone, preferring to remain in the status of a passive observer or offering the status of an active observer as an alternative,” Pashinyan said.

According to him, Armenia expects two things from the CSTO — the definition of the CSTO’s area of responsibility and a clear assessment of Azerbaijan’s actions on the border with Armenia.

“We are offered assistance, including military-technical assistance. First, it is not clear what kind of assistance is being offered. In addition, to accept this assistance without clear assessments would mean accepting the status quo that exists on our borders. To accept the monitoring mission of the CSTO without clear assessments from the CSTO will mean fixation and resignation to the status quo,” Pashinyan concluded.

Criticism of CSTO by Armenian authorities

About the meeting with the participation of Putin in Yerevan and the protest taking place in parallel with the CSTO summit

In December 2022, at a meeting of the Armenian Cabinet of Ministers, Pashinyan criticized the Russian peacekeeping corps for failing to fulfill its obligations, as a result of which a long-term blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh became possible. “Of course, this is due to the actions of Azerbaijan, but this does not change the meaning. This is the key meaning of the presence of Russian peacekeepers – not to allow illegal actions and to keep the Lachin corridor under control,” he said.

At a meeting with Putin on December 27, 2022, Pashinyan again recalled the responsibility of Russian peacekeepers.

“The Lachin corridor has been blocked for almost 20 days. This is the area of responsibility of Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh. And I want to remind you that according to the tripartite statement of the presidents of the Russian Federation, Azerbaijan and the Prime Minister of Armenia, the Lachin corridor should be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. The Republic of Azerbaijan guaranteed the unhindered passage of passengers and cargo along the Lachin corridor. And now it turns out that the Lachin corridor is not under the control of Russian peacekeepers,” Pashinyan said.

Since December 12, 2022, Nagorno-Karabakh has been deprived of communication with the outside world due to the blocking of the Lachin corridor. Azerbaijani activists block the highway in the presence of Russian peacekeepers. 120,000 people have been living under blockade for more than three months, and food shortages have forced the authorities to introduce food stamps for basic necessities.

“If it turns out that Russia, for objective or subjective reasons, is unable to fulfill its obligations, it should apply to the UN Security Council either with a request to endow the Russian military contingent with an international mandate, or send a new multinational peacekeeping mission to Nagorno-Karabakh,” he said. his criticism of Pashinyan’s peacekeepers in January 2023.

“No one denies that the Russian peacekeepers today ensure the safety of the residents of Nagorno-Karabakh, but we also have facts when the Azerbaijanis violated the agreements in the area of responsibility of the peacekeepers, for example, in Parukh, but did not see any reaction from them. In the absence of a reaction, it turns out that the military presence of Russia not only does not guarantee the security of Armenia, but, on the contrary, creates threats to the security of Armenia,” the prime minister said.

Criticism of CSTO by Armenian authorities

On a recent message from the Russian Foreign Ministry on the upcoming EU civilian mission to the Armenian border

On December 27, 2022, Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan stated live on Public Television that Azerbaijan’s invasion of the sovereign territory of Armenia on September 13, 2022, as well as the closure of the Lachin corridor, fit into the framework of Russia’s pressure on Armenia.

According to Grigoryan, this is precisely the reason for the crisis in the Armenian-Russian relations, which has been clearly expressed in recent times. Grigoryan also for the first time confirmed the statements of some Armenian deputies that Russia is forcing Armenia to join the union state. Grigoryan stated that Armenia resists this desire of a strategic ally and receives a response in the form of military pressure.

Interview with Armen Grigoryan for Azatutyun radio on the preconditions for resolving the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan

In January 2023, Nikol Pashinyan stated that Yerevan considers it inappropriate to hold CSTO exercises in Armenia. “The Ministry of Defense of Armenia has already informed the CSTO Joint Headquarters in writing that we consider it inappropriate to conduct exercises in Armenia in the current situation. These exercises in Armenia, at least this year, will not take place,” he said.

On March 13, 2023, Armenia refused to nominate a representative for the post of deputy head of the CSTO 15. On March 14 at a press conference, Pashinyan said that Armenia would agree to the appointment of its representative to the post of deputy secretary general of the CSTO if it was sure that this would strengthen its security. “We will agree that if this position does not come out that we are sending the wrong message to our people, if this will be another factor for security. If this does not happen, then we do not see the point in this position,” the prime minister said.

Commenting on the possibility of Armenia’s withdrawal from the CSTO, Pashinyan replied that the Armenian side would be guided by state interests in this decision. “As for the CSTO. I spoke publicly. It’s a matter of points of view. Can we say that Armenia will leave the CSTO? Perhaps the CSTO will leave Armenia? Or does this whole situation indicate that the CSTO intends to withdraw from Armenia? We are guided by the state interests of Armenia when clarifying, maintaining or changing our position on any issue,” Pashinyan said.

“When the CSTO Secretary General arrived in Armenia in 2022, he told me that the CSTO was concerned that Armenia would leave the organization. I said that this concern is out of place, but there is another concern that the CSTO may withdraw from Armenia. My assessment now is this: the CSTO, willingly or not, is leaving Armenia. And this worries us,” Pashinyan repeated his message.

Criticism of CSTO by Armenian authorities

Armenia refused the quota for the post of Deputy Secretary General of the CSTO. What does this mean and what could be the consequences? Political observer Hakob Badalyan does not believe that Armenia will have to “pay dearly” for this decision

Armenian President Vahagn Khachaturian also talked about the problems in Armenian-Russian relations.

“Armenian-Russian relations are at a strategic level, and Russia is the guarantor of Armenia’s security, but, unfortunately, we have had problems lately, especially after the events of September 13, 2022. The September attack was made precisely on the territory of Armenia, Russia and the CSTO were supposed to provide military assistance to Armenia. Azerbaijan advanced nearly 10km in different places, and this was the case when both the CSTO members and Russia had to provide us with military assistance,” Khachaturian said.

According to him, in Yerevan Russia was also expected to take political actions at that time. “Neither one nor the other has happened yet. Of course, in fairness, it should be noted that Russia also participated in the negotiations on the cessation of hostilities, but US Secretary of State Blinken, French President Macron and the head of the EU Parliament Charles Michel also took an active part in them,” Khachaturian noted in January 2023.

On February 24, 2023, Armen Grigoryan called “non-recognition of the borders of Armenia by the CSTO” as a serious problem.

“As you know, the CSTO does not recognize the borders of Armenia, and there is a serious problem here, because if there is no border, there is no responsibility. We raised this issue and hope that at some point this issue will be resolved,” Grigoryan said.

He recalled that in accordance with the Almaty Declaration, which is taken as the basis for resolving the issue of delimitation and demarcation, the administrative borders of the former Soviet republics are accepted as interstate borders.

“And here we can clearly say that there is a border between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Perhaps a certain part is not demarcated, and we do not know where the line clearly runs, but it is a matter of a few meters. And the sovereign territory of Armenia with an area of 29,800 square meters. km is known. If there is a will, then this territory can be protected. But the lack of will makes it impossible to protect Armenia,” he added.


https://jam-news.net/criticism-of-csto-by-armenian-authorities/

Second Azerbaijani soldier captured in Armenia

 

The second of two Azerbaijani soldiers who entered Armenia last week after allegedly getting lost has been captured. A video shared on social media shows the soldier stating that he ‘shed Armenian blood’, while another shows him being beaten by Armenians after capture. 

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry announced that two Azerbaijani soldiers, Agshin Babirov (born in 2004) and Huseyn Akhundov (born in 2003) got lost due to poor visibility and poor weather from the border area between Nakhchivan and Armenia ‘a few days’ before 10 April. 

According to independent Azerbaijani outlet Meydan TV however, the uncle of one of the soldiers claimed they went missing on 5 April. 

The first soldier, Huseyn Akhundov, was found and detained on 10 April by residents of the village of Ashotavan, in Syunik Province. Agshin Babirov was found on Thursday near the village of Achanan, around a 90 kilometre walk from Ashotavan and 40 kilometres from the border with Nakhchivan. 

Rumours that the soldier was responsible for the murder of a 56-year-old security guard at the Kajaran copper-molybdenum mine in Syunik on Wednesday started circulating online shortly after his capture.

People from the village where the soldier was captured and the head of the Kajaran community, Manvel Paramazyan, told RFE/RL that the murdered guard’s phone was found on the Azerbaijani soldier. 

According to Paramazyan, the guard had received seven gunshot wounds. 

However, Armenian law enforcement agencies have stated that while investigation of the murder is underway, they have no information yet suggesting that the Azerbaijani soldier was connected to the incident. 

Both Azerbaijani soldiers are being held at the police department in Kapan, Syunik. 

Shortly after the second soldier’s capture on Thursday morning, two videos spread widely online. The first allegedly showed Babirov live-streaming from Syunik.

‘By God, we have arrived in Armenia’, says Babirov in the video. ‘We have spilled the blood of Armenians […] If we die, you should know that we are not traitors to the country.’ 

Azerbaijani pro-government media claimed the video was old, from before the soldiers became lost. 

The second shows the soldier on the ground, tied up and being kicked in the face. Images of the soldier around the time of his detention also showed him with blood and bruises on his face, with some shared on Azerbaijani social media appearing to show his captors holding knives while he lies tied on the ground. 

Footage of the soldier’s mistreatment sparked discussion in Yerevan and Baku. 

Diplomatic missions in Baku immediately condemned the incident, with the US Embassy in Baku stating that it was ‘disturbed by a video appearing to depict violence against an Azerbaijani soldier in Armenia’ and urging Azerbaijan and Armenia to resolve outstanding issues through peaceful negotiations. 

The British Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Fergus Auld, added that ‘such treatment is unacceptable under international humanitarian law [and] must be condemned’. 

A number of Armenian civil society activists also condemned the soldier’s mistreatment.

‘While it's important to hold those responsible for the infiltration and murder accountable, it's equally important to recognise that violence toward prisoners is never justified. The mistreatment of the captured Azerbaijani soldier by locals must be addressed’, Andranik Shirinyan, project coordinator for Freedom House in Armenia, wrote on Twitter. 

Some Armenians who condemned the violence argued that forbidding such treatment of Azerbaijani military personnel would allow Armenia to demand that Armenian prisoners of war be treated humanely. 

Since the end of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in November 2020, an unconfirmed number of Armenian soldiers captured in Nagorno-Karabakh have been held in Baku. Azerbaijan acknowledges the capture of at least 30 prisoners, but has not confirmed the exact number, or how many remain alive.

On Thursday, Azerbaijan’s State Commission on Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing Persons appealed to international organisations to ensure the soldiers’ release. 

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry called the footage an example of violence on ethnic grounds by Armenia, and called for ‘relevant international organisations’ to investigate and evaluate the violence, ‘including the violence committed by Armenia against Azerbaijani prisoners of war and civilian prisoners, and 3,890 missing Azerbaijanis over the past 30 years’. 

Breaking a three-day silence from Armenia’s government and law enforcement agencies regarding the Azerbaijani soldiers’ capture, Prime Minister Pashinyan claimed on Wednesday that the first soldier said that they had fled the army. 

‘A soldier of the Azerbaijani army simply ran away from their positions with his comrade due to pressure and humiliation from other comrades’ Pashinyan said during a meeting in parliament.

Pashinyan also stated that the second soldier, who was then still being searched for by law enforcement agencies, had decided to return to Azerbaijan. 

The Prime Minister added that an investigation was needed to discover how the soldiers were able to cross the border. 

He added that the captured serviceman had ‘not yet expressed his desire to return to Azerbaijan. When he tells us [that he does], the issue will be discussed’. 


Armenian top security official meets U.S. Co-Chair of OSCE Minsk Group in Yerevan

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 13:43,

YEREVAN, APRIL 14, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan on April 14 met with United States Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations and United States Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Louis Bono.

Grigoryan presented the provocation committed by the Azerbaijani military on April 11 near the village of Tegh and stressed that the only goal of such actions is to derail the efforts aimed at the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks, Grigoryan’s office said in a readout. In this context, Bono emphasized the need for implementing constructive steps and remaining committed to the peace process to avoid future escalations.

Secretary Grigoryan reiterated Armenia’s commitment to the negotiations process and presented Armenia’s approaches in resolving the existing issues.

Gyumri named 2024 CIS Sports Capital

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 14:14,

YEREVAN, APRIL 14, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian city of Gyumri has been named the 2024 Sports Capital of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov made the announcement.

“A decision has been made that this year, Minsk will be the Sports Capital of the CIS, and in 2024 it will be the Armenian Gyumri,” Lavrov said at a press conference.