How Azerbaijan’s Victory in Karabakh Compares to Israel’s War in Gaza

Jewish Press
Jan 30 2024

Azerbaijan succeeded in reclaiming Karabakh and its seven Azerbaijani districts with a decisive military victory, last year, while Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is still engaged in an all-out effort to defeat Hamas and free an estimated 130 Israeli hostages. Why was Azerbaijan so successful, while Israel is still struggling to defeat Hamas?

Nurit Greenger, founder and President of the US-Az Cultural Foundation, explained: “Israel is fighting a terror organization, not a country. Azerbaijan fought a country.”
“Armenia did not intend to kill every living Azerbaijani. They only wanted to occupy Karabakh. Hamas wants to murder, decapitate, and burn every living Jew, and destroy the country. They don’t comply with international law, and Israel must comply with the same laws,” Greenger said.

She added: “The Armenians did not dig tunnels. They only destroyed what was above ground and planted landmines, making sure that if they could not keep it, everything would be destroyed.”
“Also, the president of Azerbaijan did not depend on American favors. He wanted his land back and fought for it. In Israel, they faced the October 7 massacre because they gave back Gaza, and put the enemy in their bedroom,” Greenger said.

According to her, “Israel is not successful because the world does not care if Hamas kills five million Jews. They don’t sanction Qatar and Iran, who prop them up. Israel is not only fighting a terror organization but the whole world.”

John Spencer, head of urban warfare at West Point, proclaimed: “The rate of progress of the IDF, above and below the ground, is historically fast. The campaign in Gaza cannot be compared to any other campaign in modern military history in terms of the magnitude of the challenges it poses, perhaps and only perhaps if we go all the way back to World War II. Considering these immense challenges, the number of IDF casualties is also historically low. Hamas’s strategy is based on time and tunnels. They hope that Israel will use up the time at its disposal in the tunnels.”

Elnur Enveroglu, deputy editor-in-chief of Azernews, agreed the conflict in the Caucuses is different than Israel’s war with Hamas: “Both religious and national ideology play a driving force here. At the same time, the social, ethnic, and overall living conditions of each region are different. Besides, the issue of Palestine and Israel rests on historical and especially religious doctrines.”

Enveroglu suggests this is not the case in the Karabakh conflict: “Azerbaijan’s victory over Armenia can be explained by several factors:
Azerbaijan, being an occupied country, had set all its goals for the freedom of its land. In the last 30 years, Armenia developed a sense of self-confidence by falling into the euphoria of the First Karabakh War, while Azerbaijan did the exact opposite. For example, Azerbaijan had reliable allies such as Turkey, Pakistan, and Israel, something Armenia did not have.”

Enveroglu added: “I believe that both Azerbaijan and Israel should gather all their efforts and take decisive steps for peace. We cannot wait for someone to come and make peace for us, because each side serves its own interests. Although Armenia tries to avoid peace, Azerbaijan will spare no effort to ensure security in the region. Some people once called the liberation of Karabakh a utopia. But it was possible. I believe that Israel and Azerbaijan will be able to achieve peace as successful partners.”

https://www.jewishpress.com/indepth/opinions/how-azerbaijans-victory-in-karabakh-compares-to-israels-war-in-gaza/2024/01/30/

[Lebanese] Justice minister, Armenian Ambassador discuss latest developments

Lebanon – Jan 30 2024

NNA – Caretaker Minister of Justice, Judge Henry Khoury, on Tuesday welcomed the Ambassador of Armenia to Lebanon, Vahagn Atabekyan, accompanied by the Second Secretary at the embassy, Stepan Gevorgyan.

Discussions during the meeting addressed the general developments in Lebanon and the region, as well as ways to activate bilateral relations between Lebanon and Armenia, especially in terms of legal cooperation. Additionally, they discussed enhancing the implementation of bilateral agreements between the two countries in the judicial field.

MTS dumps Armenian unit

Developing Telecoms
Jan 30 2024

Russian operator group MTS offloaded its Armenian unit MTS Armenia to Cyprus-based Fedlico Group after finally gaining regulatory approval.

Interfax reported, the sale is for 100% of MTS Armenia, as well as the sale of the MobiDram payment system, a wholly owned subsidiary of MTS Armenia.

MTS gained regulatory approvals from the State Commission for the Protection of Economic Competition and the Public Services Regulatory Commission (PSRC), which threatened to scupper the deal last year. 

The PSRC approved the deal in mid-November and this is the second attempt from the Russian operator group to sell MTS Armenia. The first attempt was in spring 2023, which was rejected without a reason. 

"The transaction is a continuation of implementing the MTS Group's transformation strategy aimed at further developing the ecosystem and core business in Russia. When there are favourable offers, MTS sells non-core assets or assets with limited potential for growth in value, directing the proceeds to developing key ecosystem business in Russia," said MTS in a statement to Interfax.

MTS Armenia recorded RUB1.1 million (US$12,300) in operating profit and RUB3.4 million (US$38,000) revenue in Q3 2023, up from RUB606,000 and RUB1.9 million respectively. 

Armenia Denies Extradition Request for Gay Chechen Man Wanted by Russia

Jan 30 2024

A court in Yerevan on Tuesday rejected Russia’s request to extradite a man who fled the republic of Chechnya after being tortured because he was suspected of being gay, an LGBTQ+ rights group said.

Salman Mukaev was detained by security services in his native Chechnya in 2020, after which he was subject to interrogation and torture, according to SK SOS, which helps LGBTQ+ people in Russia's North Caucasus.

Under torture, he was forced to admit to having a romantic relationship with his male friend and agreed to “cooperation” with the authorities by luring gay men online into meeting him and then reporting them to the police. 

Mukaev fled to Armenia following his release from detention but has been unable to leave the country after Russian authorities opened a criminal case against him and issued a warrant for his arrest. 

An Armenian court denied Russia’s request to extradite him, ruling that LGBTQ+ people “are not safe in Chechnya, and in Russia, their rights may be violated due to homophobic laws,” according to SK SOS. 

Likewise, the Armenian court made note of Russia’s Supreme Court ruling that designated the so-called “international LGBT public movement” as a banned “extremist” organization.

“These official processes are de facto an incentive for society to legalize violence and other forms of persecution of members of the LGBT community,” SK SOS cited the court ruling as saying. 

According to SK SOS, the court also granted Mukaev asylum and refugee status in Armenia. 

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2024/01/30/armenia-denies-extradition-request-for-gay-chechen-man-wanted-by-russia-a83910

Prospect for Armenian workers in Greece advances

Jan 30 2024



On Tuesday, the Ambassador of Armenia to Greece, Mr Tigran Mkrtchyan, met with the Minister of Migration and Asylum of Greece, Mr Dimitris Kairides.

During the meeting, Mkrtchyan informed the minister of the geopolitical situation in the South Caucasus following Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2023. They also discussed issues related to the development of bilateral relations, including migration mobility.

The Greek minister expressed his solidarity with the Armenian people, underlining the cultural and historical commonalities between the two peoples and stressing the high level of bilateral relations.

In addition, within the framework of the meeting, an agreement was reached to intensify further activities aimed at developing bilateral relations.

According to a source from the Ministry of Immigration and Asylum, the two officials discussed concluding a bilateral transnational labour mobility agreement to allow Armenians to work in Greece.

The discussion with the migration minister comes only a day after Mkrtchyan met with First Deputy Speaker of the Greek Parliament Giannis Plakiotakis.

During the meeting with Plakiotakis, the Ambassador expressed his gratitude for the establishment of a Greece-Armenia friendly group in the Greek Parliament, highlighting the effective activity of the two friendly groups, the effective application of parliamentary diplomacy toolkit.

The Ambassador notified Plakiotakis about the latest regional developments, the current state of Armenia-Azerbaijan negotiation process, highlighting the role of the EU in establishing peace and stability in the region.

In this context, the Ambassador thanked Greece and the European Union for the support provided to the needs of those displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh.

Referring to bilateral relations Ambassador Mkrtchyan stressed the importance of giving a new boost to economic relations, activation of mutual visits.

In turn, the Greek Parliament Deputy Speaker noted the high level of cooperation between the two countries, emphasising that the Greek Government is ready to lead Armenia in all possible directions.

Referring to regional developments, the Deputy Speaker reaffirmed Greece’s position, condemning all manifestations of violence in the context of Nagorno-Karabakh, expressing concern for resolving humanitarian problems, expressing unequivocal support for the territorial integrity and sovereignty of the Republic of Armenia.

At the same time, Plakiotakis expressed his gratitude for Armenia’s firm support on the Cyprus issue.

Fr. Dr. Abraham Malkhasyan’s Historic Visit to Etchmiadzin, Armenia

Hellenic News of America
Jan 30 2024

By Catherine Tsounis

On December 18, 2023, in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, received Reverend Fr. Abraham Malkhasyan, Pastor of the Armenian Church of the Holy Martyrs in the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America (New York). Fr. Abraham, who holds a doctoral degree from Fordham University in the USA, continued his studies at the Department of Religion and Religious Studies of Fordham University under the blessings of His Holiness Karekin II. He successfully defended his doctoral thesis titled “Understanding Disaffiliation in the Armenian Church: A Study of Older and Younger Millennials.” Fr. Abraham also serves as a professor of Theology at St. John’s University in New York.

During the meeting, Father Abraham presented his doctoral work to His Holiness. He emphasized that the purpose of his research is to identify the current challenges faced by young families in actively participating in church life and to find ways to overcome these challenges.

His Holiness, the Catholicos of All Armenians, expressed his satisfaction with Fr. Abraham’s academic achievements and stressed the importance of this work in the field of pastoral theology. He viewed it as an opportunity for clergy to better understand the issues related to the youth within the church.

His Holiness also recognized the significance of clergymen engaging in scholarly activities alongside their pastoral duties, as it enriches their knowledge and ultimately benefits their spiritual service. As a token of appreciation, His Holiness presented Fr. Abraham with a beautiful Pectoral Cross.

The meeting concluded with Reverend Father Abraham presenting His Holiness with a copy of his thesis work and the doctoral diploma.

In addition to his academic pursuits, Fr. Dr. Abraham Malkhasyan, along with sociologist Armen Khachikyan and historian Mikayel Malkhasyan, co-authored the book titled “THE CURRENT STAGE OF THE DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION IN THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA.” This publication delves into the Republic of Armenia’s demographic policy, historical demographic trends, and the impact of significant events such as the 2020 Artsakh War and the coronavirus pandemic on demographic processes. The book analyzes birth and death rates, migration patterns, and their effects on the demographic situation in Armenia.

Greek Americans may wonder why they should learn about the Armenian contribution to their history. Armenians played a unique role in Eastern Orthodoxy and Hellenism, carrying a torch of knowledge throughout the Byzantine Empire’s history. Despite centuries of foreign domination, Armenia’s historical significance has often been overlooked or suppressed. The Byzantine Empire was a multicultural entity where various nations and races were united by the Greek language, civilization, and Orthodox faith, identifying themselves as ROMANS.

Armenians made substantial contributions to the Byzantine Empire, despite this history of neglect. Many Armenians achieved success in various fields within the empire, from bishops and architects to important military figures and even emperors. In fact, one out of every five Byzantine emperors and empresses had Armenian heritage, either in full or in part.

For example, Emperor Heraclius, who began the Heraclean dynasty, was of Armenian and Cappadocian descent. His victory in saving Constantinople was commemorated in the Akathistos Hymn, which recognizes the assistance of the Virgin Mary.

Emperor Basil II, known as “The Bulgar Slayer,” was also of Armenian descent and became one of the strongest Byzantine emperors. His military successes expanded the empire’s territories in the Balkans, Mesopotamia, Armenia, and Georgia.

The Armenian military’s strength was a cornerstone of Byzantine stability and longevity. Armenians played a central role in the Byzantine army from the 5th century onwards.

One significant architectural example of Armenian influence within the Byzantine Empire is Hagia Sophia. After a devastating earthquake in 989 AD, the Byzantine Emperor Basil II enlisted the Armenian architect Trdat (Tiridates) to repair the dome of Hagia Sophia. This magnificent dome, designed by Trdat in the 10th century, remains intact to this day.

Armenians carried the Greek language, civilization, and Eastern Orthodoxy, making them integral to the Byzantine Empire’s cultural and religious fabric.


Armenia Finds Piecemeal Help From the UN to Manage Azerbaijan’s Aggression, It Says

Jan 30 2024

YEREVAN, GORIS and MEGHRI, Armenia — On Sept. 19, 2023, Narine Mirzoyan had just finished classes at the secondary school where she taught Armenian language and history. “I came home and was changing my clothes,” she said. “It was around 1 o’clock. I took off my blazer and from four sides they started to bomb. And two of my kids were still at school.” Azerbaijani troops had launched a major offensive and were advancing rapidly.

Mirzoyan and her family lived in the village of Ashan, in the breakaway Republic of Artsakh, an ethnic Armenian region of Azerbaijan that had been under Armenian control since Armenia battled Azerbaijan for the territory, also known as Nagorno-Karabakh, after the fall of the Soviet Union, in 1991. Roughly 10 months before the September outbreak, the Azerbaijani government had imposed a siege, depriving the region of food, oil, gas, electricity, Internet and, in some areas, phone service.

Mirzoyan’s 10-year-old daughter, Anna, said she first noticed the effect of the siege when she couldn’t have sugar with her tea in the morning. More food became scarce, and she was forced to do homework by candlelight in notebooks recycled from blank pages of ones from years past.

Panicked but focused, Mirzoyan picked up her children on Sept. 19 at school and took them to a bomb shelter next to a kindergarten, while her husband, Arsene Vartanyan, was attempting to escape military fire at a lookout post near the border with Azerbaijan, which had been attacked as well. About 60 other people from their village and surrounding ones gathered in the kindergarten and the bomb shelter for several days before someone came with enough fuel for the family to fill their car. The villagers — and the Vartanyan/Mirzoyans — left for the regional capital of Stepanakert, a one-hour journey that took all day, where they stayed in a student dormitory.

The next morning, as Azerbaijani forces closed in on Stepanakert, Mirzoyan and her family drove 28 hours to the mountainous town of Goris in the Republic of Armenia, along with more than 100,000 other Armenians from Artsakh who fled their ancestral land. Strollers, suitcases and furniture that Armenian families couldn’t take with them lined the empty streets of Stepanakert, known as Khankendi to Azerbaijanis; in some cases, cooked meals were left on kitchen tables, a testament to how fast the Armenians had to flee the coming Azerbaijani assault. The government of the Republic of Artsakh officially resigned on Sept. 28, ending more than 2,000 years of continuous Armenian presence in the region.

Both the Armenian national government and the European Union labeled the forced displacement of the entire Armenian population “ethnic cleansing.” Alice Wairimu Nderitu, the United Nations’ special adviser on the prevention of genocide, said on Oct. 10, 2023, “I call on all efforts to be made to ensure the protection and human rights of the ethnic Armenian population who remain in the area and of those who have left, including the right to return, which should be prioritized.” Yet Nderitu’s statement has had seemingly little effect on the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Other experts went further than Nderitu, however, placing the violence within the long history of Armenia’s suffering.

“The people of Artsakh were the only group of Armenians until September of this year that had never been moved off their land,” said Eric Hacopian, a political consultant and analyst in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital. “It’s the second genocide, 180 years later, pretty much done by the same people, with the same onlookers.”

Former International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo used the same language even before the September military offensive, writing in August: “there is an ongoing Genocide against 120,000 Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Artsakh.”

Azerbaijan denies such claims. President Ilham Aliyev has framed his government’s actions as counterterrorism. “The terrorists were punished,” he said in an address to the nation on Sept. 20, 2023. “The bloodsucking leeches have already been completely exposed and surrendered.”

Although 77 percent of the Nagorno-Karabakh region was populated by ethnic Armenians by the fall of the Soviet Union, the territory remained within the internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan. Armenia took control of the land in the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, from 1988 to 1994, after the population there voted to secede from Azerbaijan and unify with the nascent Armenian state. The fighting was vicious, and both sides said the other committed massacres. The result was that all ethnic Armenians fled Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan, an exclave on Armenia’s southwestern border, and all ethnic Azeris fled Nagorno-Karabakh.

Aliyev has said on numerous occasions that his recent actions were meant to restore sovereignty lost in the First Nagorno-Karabakh War and to enact justice for violence against Armenia.

What can the UN do?

Armenia, a landlocked country of 2.8 million people, has turned to the UN and its wide-ranging agencies and programs for some help. The UN system’s overall piecemeal response to Armenia’s requests, however, reflect how hard it can be for a small country — stuck in conflict, with few resources and ambivalent alliances with big powers, like Russia — to advocate for itself successfully. Lacking a single go-to resource in the UN to manage its enormous needs, Armenia must fend for itself.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan presented a “Crossroads of Peace” plan in October. It would open seven border crossings with Türkiye and Azerbaijan, stipulating that “all infrastructures, including roads, railways, airways, pipelines, cables and power lines, operate under the sovereignty and jurisdiction of the countries through which they pass.” But Azerbaijan has made counterdemands that could breach Armenia’s territorial sovereignty. So far, UN mediation is nonexistent.

Armenia made many appeals to the International Court of Justice in the run-up to September 2023, for example, to stop the blockade on Nagorno-Karabakh. On Feb. 22, 2023, the ICJ ruled that the “Republic of Azerbaijan shall, pending the final decision in the case and in accordance with its obligations under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, take all measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.”

The binding ruling was reaffirmed in an order in July, but the UN Security Council, divided politically between the United States and Russia, did not enforce it. Although France, another permanent Council  member, showed interest in introducing a resolution on the matter in the fall, the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel and Israeli response on Gaza became the top diplomatic priority for Western nations. The Armenian crisis was sidelined.

Armenia’s deputy foreign minister, Vahan Kostanyan, told PassBlue in an interview in November that his country was working with the UN to help Artsakh refugees, who number about 100,000.

“We have been closely cooperating with our international partners, UN agencies and different countries,” he said, talking from Yerevan, the capital. “With UNHCR [UN High Commissioner for Refugees], we made a joint humanitarian appeal to allocate some money; according to the UNHCR estimations, for the first six months, at least $97 million will be needed.” Yet there is no updated information on the agency’s website about the appeal.

Beyond the urgent needs of the refugees, the government is working with the UN refugee entity and other partners to manage the long-term needs of integrating the 100,000 people into Armenia.

“We need to understand how we’re going to accommodate people and provide long-term shelter,” Kostanyan said. “So big housing projects should be implemented, projects to increase opportunities in our labor market, to do some additional competence trainings. There are working groups set up in the government, and two deputy prime ministers are in charge of different components: one for realization of the projects we have and the other for donor coordination. We’re working closely with UNHCR on this matter.”

Beyond refugee integration, Armenia is working with the UN more reliably on development matters. “The UN is a key development partner for Armenia when it comes to implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals,” Kostanyan said. “Armenia is planning to submit its voluntary national review on the SDGs. We are one of the champions because not many states are already submitting the third one. UN is a partner for us in the fight against corruption.”

Kostanyan said that the country would run for a seat in the UN Human Rights Council, which Armenia thinks will help it navigate the fallout from the September war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“We were a member from 2020 to 2022,” he said of the Human Rights Council. “Now we’re going to run for another term in the Council in the upcoming year, because we believe this is an important platform for us and in general for tackling human rights issues. We believe that we have quite a good record on human rights protection, democracy and rule of law, which makes us a credible candidate.”

“The UN Human Rights Council has big importance for us,” he added. “We believe that some of the issues are very relevant and they should be discussed at the Council.”

While the ethnic Armenian refugees displaced in 2023 find their footing amid severe shortages in housing, jobs, education and other sectors in Armenia, the government and its population are concerned that Azerbaijan, bolstered by its resounding military success, could strike again. Azerbaijan has faced few consequences on the international stage for the accusation of ethnic cleansing, which some experts argue encourages more violence.

The country did not lift the blockade on the Lachin corridor — a mountainous road in Azerbaijan linking Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia — after the ICJ ruling. Despite the forced displacement that occurred in September, Azerbaijan was named in December as host country of COP29, the UN’s annual climate change conference, to be held this year, conferring international legitimacy, if not acceptance, of its recent actions.

Armenia’s borders with both Türkiye in the west and Azerbaijan in the west and the east have been closed since 1993. Aliyev has said on numerous occasions about opening the “Zangezur Corridor,” referring to a land corridor along the Iranian border in Armenia’s southern Syunik province, which separates Azerbaijan proper from its landlocked western exclave, Nakhichevan.

During an April 2021 interview with state TV, Aliyev stated that “we are implementing the Zangezur corridor, whether Armenia likes it or not. If they do, it will be easier for us to implement; if not, we will enforce it. Just as before and during the war, I said that they must get out of our lands or we will expel them by force. And so it happened. The same will apply to the Zangezur corridor.”

On Jan. 11, 2024, Aliyev reiterated the claims, saying on state TV that Armenia “must give us unimpeded passage between Zangilan and Ordubad. This is their obligation. I have already said and I would like to say again that cargo, citizens and vehicles traveling from Azerbaijan to Azerbaijan should pass freely without being subjected to any inspections or customs administration.” Zangilan and Orbudad are towns on the eastern and western Azerbaijani borders with Armenia.

Armenia’s current borders were defined after the Soviet Union’s collapse. Although they resemble the borders of the former Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic, Armenia’s borders with Azerbaijan have never been fully demarcated. The territory itself, like the rest of the southern Caucasus region, was the site of centuries of battles for supremacy among Armenians, Türks, Persians, Arabs, Byzantines and Mongols.

Today, a confluence of interests among Azerbaijan, Türkiye and Russia has laid claim to a “Zangezur” corridor. The ninth clause of the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire agreement, signed on Nov. 9, 2020, by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, President Aliyev and Russian President Vladimir Putin, indicated: “The Republic of Armenia shall guarantee the security of transport connections between the western regions of the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic in order to arrange unobstructed movement of persons, vehicles and cargo in both directions. The Border Guard Service of the Russian Federal Security Service shall be responsible for overseeing the transport connections.”

The clause is the documented basis for a joint Azerbaijani, Russian and Türkish push to reopen the Soviet-era railway that ran from Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital, to Nakhichevan (through Armenia) and force the railway and a corresponding road to be under the control of the Russian Federal Security Service (formerly, KGB). But with Azerbaijan having violated the rest of the ceasefire agreement when it seized Nagorno-Karabakh in September, Armenia has rejected the idea of establishing a “corridor” on its own soil that would be outside its control.

A hollowed-out railway station remains in the far southern Armenian town of Meghri, near the border with Iran and Nakhichevan, where thousands of passengers from across the Soviet Union used to transit. Now, broken-down trains, emblazoned with the Communist Party hammer and sickle symbols, gather cobwebs in the valley along the Aras River, which forms the border between Armenia and Iran. The ticket office is still intact, while tickets from over 30 years ago gather dust and a broken monument of a Soviet woman faces the rusted tracks.

On a hill overlooking Meghri, along a rocky path dotted with pomegranate trees and houses with balconies hung with vertical strings of persimmons drying in the sun, sit two stone structures built about a hundred meters and 200 years apart. One was built in the 1700s, and the other in the early-20th century, as lookout points to spot Ottoman and Persian invaders. Today, the lookouts have renewed relevance as the threat of attack from Azerbaijan and the Azerbaijani exclave Nakhichevan, behind the western mountain range nestling the Meghri valley, looms large.

Azerbaijan has long desired a physical connection between its main territory and Nakhichevan, and Türkiye wants a link between its own country and Azerbaijan, connecting the two ethnic-Türkish countries while giving Türkiye easy access to ports in the Caspian Sea and the larger Türkic world. Analysts see many reasons for Russia’s eagerness to control a land corridor across Armenia, including a secure, sanctions-evading transport path for sensitive goods.

“There is one type of goods that is too risky to trade through the Black Sea, where there are NATO countries, there is Ukraine, there is Georgia, etc,” said Areg Kochinyan, president of the Yerevan-based Research Center on Security Policy think tank. “And that’s weapons and ammunition. To do that, you would need a connection between Turkey and Azerbaijan and through Azerbaijan to Russia. That’s exactly why Russians are so interested in controlling this part of Armenia to have secure land road connecting themselves with the Turks.”

A Russian betrayal?

Most people in Armenia now view Russia with extreme suspicion after what they consider as a painful betrayal by the biggest regional power. According to the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire agreement, 1,960 Russian peacekeepers were deployed to protect the demarcation line and the Lachin corridor, the only route that supplied goods to Nagorno-Karabakh. Those same Russian peacekeepers stood by when Azerbaijan seized the corridor and Azerbaijani troops marched on Stepanakert, pushing the ethnic Armenians into exile. For many people who fled, the betrayal was personal.

“For the last 70 years, we believed Russia has been our closest ally, so that’s where the disappointment comes in,” Syunik’s deputy governor, Hayk Harutyunyan, said in an interview.

Narine Mirzoyan, who escaped with her family from Nagorno-Karabakh in September, is more realistic. “When the Russians came, people were saying that there wouldn’t be any war because of Russians,” she said. “But as they say, blessed is the person who relies on God, and cursed is the person who relies on man.”

Mirzoyan is now living with her family in Goris, a town of 10,000 people, and where the 100,000 or so refugees transited though in a matter of days in their exodus from Nagorno-Karabakh. Characteristic of the southern Syunik region, old Russian Ladas ply Goris’s tree-lined cobblestone streets, near the Zangezur Mountains.

Many households grow their own fruit, like persimmons, apricots and figs. In August, Goris is home to an annual mulberry festival. Despite the sudden influx of people from Nagorno-Karabakh, no refugee camps were set up in the village to accommodate the newcomers because something more welcoming kicked in: Armenia’s solidarity system during national distress. The exodus illustrated both the deep suffering the Armenian people continue to endure, experts and residents say, and the quick mobilization of the nation to ensure the safety of those who needed emergency shelter.

“It’s basically the picture of our society that we didn’t let the refugee camp thing happen,” Areg Kochinyan of the Yerevan think tank said.

Marietta, the owner of an Airbnb in Goris who offers guests warm flatbread with diced herbs and greens as well as tea, hosted a family of 12 from Nagorno-Karabakh for 25 days in her flat in a Soviet-era apartment building. The walls in her apartment are covered in messages from contented visitors from around the world. She met the family of 12 when war broke out in 2020, after the father of the family died in a fuel-depot explosion and the family moved to Goris temporarily. They all became extended members of Marietta’s own family over time, and she called the Goris kids every day for three years, after they returned home. When war came again, the family sought refuge with Marietta again. “Every person had to do that, and they would do that,” she said.

Arpine Hovhannisyan, a psychologist in Goris who runs the Cooperation Arch, an organization providing services to older people, became a first responder to help the flow of refugees, ensuring they had beds, clothes and food when they arrived. During the few days that the refugees flooded in and the weeks thereafter, she worked up to 24 hours at a time “and didn’t feel tired,” she said. “When you come home, you look at the clock all the time to see when you can go back, because you know that every second that you are there, you can help with something.”

Feeling abandoned 

For the people forced to abandon their homes, the wounds remain open. Many of the older generation fought in the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, and almost everyone had already lost members of their families or had been seriously affected by conflict. Some had been displaced many times and must find new homes and livelihoods.

“Their whole life they’ve been going into a bunker, trying to build a house even if it might get destroyed at some point,” Valentin Mahou-Hekinian, the south Caucasus regional coordinator for the French NGO Médecins du Monde, said. “So, it’s not a population that was living peacefully and suddenly a bomb arrived, and they’re traumatized. It’s deeper than that.”

The pain has led in many cases to anger at an international system perceived as rubber-stamping ethnic cleansing.

“We believed in international law. We believed in human rights,” Gegham Stepanyan, the current human rights ombudsman of the exiled government of Artsakh, said. “We were organizing huge demonstrations in Stepanakaert, gathering 60 to 70,000 people, which is more than 50 percent of our population of Artsakh/Nagorno Karabakh. And we believed that maybe it can change something, maybe it will change the stance of international committee, maybe they will see and realize that these people want to live freely. It didn’t change anything in this immoral and unprincipled international order. The laws are just dust that everyone is blowing on our eyes.”

Another recent ICJ ruling, issued Nov. 17, 2023, ordered Azerbaijan to “ensure that persons who have left Nagorno-Karabakh after 19 September 2023 and who wish to return to Nagorno-Karabakh are able to do so in a safe, unimpeded and expeditious manner,” although Armenians from the region say they do not feel safe under Azerbaijani rule.

“We prefer to leave everything that we have — everything, literally,” Stepanyan the ombudsman said. “My father is a refugee from Fizuli [in Azerbaijan], he came to Stepanakert, he built three houses, he had a shop in Stepanakert, and we left everything there. Now we have nothing here in Yerevan. But we prefer to come to Yerevan and live here and lose everything than to be subjugated. This is the core issue.”

Vahan Kostanyan, the Armenian deputy foreign minister, has implored various UN bodies to play a greater role in resolving the conflict but his efforts have been met with limited results.

“The UN Secretariat and UN agencies have quite big portfolios and toolboxes that can be helpful to address both short-term and long-term issues with people from Nagorno-Karabakh,” Artak Begralyan, the former human rights ombudsman of the exiled government of Artsakh, agreed.

“Given, for example, the Kosovo precedent, or other examples, that based on the right to self-determination and the genocide history, and the need of prevention of a new genocide, it’s important to have, for example, UN peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh, UN administration in Nagorno-Karabakh and a transitional justice, to have final settlement of the conflict,” he said.

“At the lower level, there are lots of things to do by the UN, including a mission to Nagorno-Karabakh to record human rights violations, humanitarian support — both emergency response and long-term response — some donor conferences, protection of our cultural heritage, implementation of the ICJ orders,” he added. So far, these plans have not been enacted, possibly because of direct or implied pressure from Russia, but also because Western powers view Armenia as a lower priority that can be sacrificed for crises they deem more pressing.

“Despite Armenia’s repeated warnings about the need for concrete and practical action, including the dispatching of a UN interagency needs-assessment and fact-finding mission to Nagorno-Karabakh, the United Nations failed to respond to the numerous and gross violations of the international humanitarian law and human rights law,” a spokesperson for the Armenian foreign ministry told PassBlue.

As a member of the Kremlin-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and host to 10,000 Russian troops, half of whom are stationed at a base in Gyumri, a city in northwest Armenia, and the other half scattered around the county, including the borders with Iran and Azerbaijan, Armenia remains — on paper — a Russian ally. But politicians and analysts say this relationship is likely to end soon.

“The security architecture and the security philosophy that we had didn’t work,” Kostanyan the deputy foreign minister told PassBlue. “When our sovereign territory was attacked, the traditional partners and the CSTO were silent. They didn’t even come up with a political statement that our sovereign territory was attacked. In the same way, Russian peacekeepers, who had a duty clearly put on paper to protect the people of Nagorno-Karabakh from existential threat, acted as an observer when ethnic cleansing happened.”

The UN Security Council held a session on the expulsion of ethnic Armenians from the region on Sept. 21, 2023, but never issued a formal statement.

Miroslav Jenca, the assistant secretary-general for Europe, Central Asia and Americas in the UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, told the Council that day: “The developments of the past few days should be seen in the context of the broader pattern of regular ceasefire violations. A genuine dialogue between the Government of Azerbaijan and representatives of the region . . . is the only sustainable way forward.” He emphasized the UN Secretariat’s readiness to support peace efforts, conduct humanitarian needs assessments and provide assistance.

But a spokesperson for the Armenian foreign ministry told PassBlue that “the UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs has not been engaged in organizing peace negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan.”

Tilting westward

The Pashinyan government, which rose to power on the back of a popular democratic movement against a corrupt Kremlin-allied administration, has intensified a popular Western pivot after Russia’s inaction in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“I don’t think that this government has any possibility to go back to the Russians,” Areg Kochinyan, the think tank analyst in Yerevan said. “Armenia is fully in. Armenia wants as much cooperation and as much integration into the Euro-Atlantic community as possible.”

According to numerous analysts and politicians with direct knowledge of the situation, Western powers are slowing Armenia’s integration into the Euro-Atlantic orbit because their attention is more focused on the raging Gaza and Ukraine wars. Some in the West are also concerned that a hasty Armenian exit from Russian-led organizations like CSTO, CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) and the Eurasian Union could create even more problems between Russia and the West.

Nonetheless, the Western pivot “is going at a pace that’s unimaginable,” Eric Hacopian the Yerevan analyst said.

Before Pashinyan was prime minister, it was difficult to imagine Armenian defense officials contemplating weapons purchases outside the CSTO framework. But in October 2023, Armenia bought radars and signed an agreement to buy Mistral air defense missiles from France, which is home to the largest Armenian diaspora in Europe. In November, France shipped at least 21 armored personnel carriers to Armenia.

Aliyev refused to attend a EU-led peace negotiations in October, citing France’s presence at the talks and the “anti-Azerbaijani atmosphere.” The talks have not moved forward.

Aliyev said in November that the sale of French military equipment “prepares the ground for the start of new wars in our region.” Azerbaijan expelled two French diplomats in late December, while France expelled two Azerbaijani diplomats soon after.

Unsurprisingly, the Kremlin has reacted angrily to Armenia’s cozier relations with Western countries. In September, Russia’s foreign ministry issued a statement claiming that “a frenzied anti-Russian campaign has swept the Armenian media at the behest of the authorities.”

It added: “We are convinced that the Armenian leadership is making a huge mistake by deliberately attempting to sever Armenia’s multifaceted and centuries-old ties with Russia, making the country a hostage to Western geopolitical games.”

Armenia is trying to strike a balance between what it sees as its future and the geopolitical realities of the south Caucasus, where Russia’s proximity and influence is an enduring fact. Some days, Armenia’s peace plan, proposed in October, looks like a well-thought-out strategy that could end the hostilities, observers say. Sometimes relations with Russia look like they’re on the mend, for example, when Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said in a change of tone in late December that “all difficulties [in relations between Russia and Armenia] are temporary and will be overcome if political will is present.”

Other days, the Western turn looks like it could risk antagonizing Russia further and threaten the nearly century-long security ally for a Western alliance that has never lent its full support to Armenia and could drop its budding closeness if more urgent matters arise, like EU countries securing Azerbaijani gas or making a deal with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of NATO member Türkiye.

“We are too eastern for the West, and seen as traitors in the Russian world,” Syunik deputy governor Harutyunyan said.

Azerbaijan has become more important to the West since it began exploiting major oil and gas deposits in its territory in the mid-1990s. Since the start of full-scale the war in Ukraine, in February 2022, European leaders have courted Aliyev for more fuel output to Europe. Azerbaijan is also Israel’s only Muslim-majority ally in the region. Israeli weaponry and intelligence systems aided Azerbaijan in its recent takeover of Nagorno-Karabakh, while Azerbaijan provides Israel with 40 percent of its energy needs. Israel also uses the country as a safe haven to spy on Azerbaijan’s southern neighbor and Israel’s mortal enemy: Iran.

The Armenian government is scouting for potential allies and partners around the world. “The Armenian spirit is strong, but if you as a human can lift 60 kilograms and they give you 100 kilograms, you won’t be able to lift it. You will fall under it. Now, we are knocking at everyone’s door and asking to lift this 100-kilogram weight together,” Bagrat Zakaryan, the mayor of Meghri, situated near Iran, said. (Relations between Iran and Armenia are friendly.)

Armenia has found a willing partner in India, which is looking for a shipping route for its goods to the Black Sea and to counter Azerbaijan’s growing alliance with Pakistan. Since 2022, Armenia has bought rocket launchers, artillery systems, ammunition, drones and anti-drone systems from Indian defense companies. The Armenian defense minister visited the United Arab Emirates in November 2023 with the goal of “developing defense cooperation,” while in September, Armenian troops conducted joint exercises with American soldiers in Armenia.

Its defense rebuild is underway, but reshaping a modern military is a multiple-year project and time is a luxury the country can’t afford as it contends with its increasingly antagonistic neighbors. “Our solutions are a midterm or long-term perspective, while our problems are of short-term perspective,” Areg Kochinyan the analyst said. “We have the money, we have the will, we have the allies to build up our capabilities. We just don’t have the time.”

Knowing that the country is challenged on the battlefield for at least for a few more years, the Armenian government is pushing hard for its Crossroads of Peace deal. Besides proposing to open seven border crossings with Türkiye and Azerbaijan and stipulating issues of crucial infrastructure, the plan states that “each country, through its state institutions, ensures border, customs control and security of all the infrastructures,” signaling a clear rejection of the Zangezur corridor.

Although Pashinyan has called the peace plan “realistic,” Aliyev has ruled out any deal that doesn’t include the Zangezur corridor. He stated to the press on Jan. 11 that “people and goods from Azerbaijan to Azerbaijan must pass through without any inspection. Otherwise, Armenia will forever remain a dead end. If the route I mentioned is not opened, we do not intend to open the border with Armenia in any other place.”

Another major stumbling block is that Pashinyan’s administration no longer trusts Russia as a guarantor of any pact.

Top Armenian officials continue to say that peace is possible, yet few people on the ground share that faith.

“Azerbaijan and Turkey are not interested in peace with Armenia. They don’t want Armenia to exist and Armenians to exist as a subject of international law,” Artak Begralyan, the former human rights ombudsman for the exiled Artsakh government, said. “That’s why their policy, even the peace agreement, if it’s signed, will be a way to reach their strategic goal just didn’t happen a few months ago.”

Certainty is missing. “There is a lack of trust on both sides, and I don’t think we will have any positive steps towards that in the near future because the generations that remember both what Azerbaijan did to Armenians, and people living in Azerbaijan who remember their relatives who were killed during the war with Azerbaijan by Armenians,” Harutyunyan of Syunik said.

Many Armenians view Azerbaijan as an extension of Türkiye and the recent siege as the latest bout of ethnic Türkish aggression in the centuries-long history of violence in the region. Some refer to “Turks” when speaking both of Türkish and Azerbaijani people and do not hide their animosity. “I will die if Turks come take over my home and drink tea in my home. And if I’m dead, I will turn over in my grave,” Georgy Mkrtchyan, an 80-year-old retiree living in a village outside Meghri, said.

Vladimir Vardanov, the founder and director of VOMA, a Yerevan group that trains civilians in military practices, uses similarly visceral language to connect recent events to the past.

“The Caspian Turks are our opponents, but the real enemies are Ankara Turks,” he said. “We are dangerous to them because we might ask for what they stole from us back.” Vardanov was referring to the 1916 Armenian genocide, when Ottomans killed up to 1.5 million Armenians and took their homes, land, businesses and money. The official residence of the Turkish vice president, for example (which was the Turkish president’s villa from 1923-2014), was a mansion owned by an Armenian family that was seized after the family fled during the genocide.

Some analysts believe another Azerbaijani attack on Armenia will come soon because Azerbaijan knows that the window of opportunity won’t last and that Russia strongly favors establishing the Zangezur corridor. Analyst Areg Kochinyan argued that a potential action might not be an all-out invasion of southern Armenia but repeated incursions elsewhere in the country. That would enable Russia to grab a mediator role and push for control of the land corridor.

“It’s harder for me to imagine Turkey invading the internationally recognized territory of Armenia,” Kochinyan said. “But Azerbaijan invading other parts and forcing us to ask for the help from the Russians and Russians putting this demand, ‘We will help you, but you have to adopt the corridor’ — this is the way that they’re going to work with it.”

The US is one of the few centers of power that can block Russia from forcing the corridor to be established. The US has condemned Azerbaijan for its action in Nagorno-Karabakh but stopped short of sanctioning the country. In late November, however, the US Senate passed the Armenian Protection Act, which blocks President Joe Biden from issuing a waiver that would give Azerbaijan security help.

For Zakaryan, the mayor of Meghri, the rejection of a Russian, Türkish and Azerbaijani land corridor through Armenia is existential. Armenia has its borders closed with two of its four immediate neighbors, and if Russia controlled its southern border with Iran, it could asphyxiate Armenia.

“The 10-month blockade of Artsakh — it’s the same program that they want to do in Armenia, but on a bigger scale,” Zakaryan said. “The same way they forcefully removed Armenians from Nakhichevan, which is right here behind the mountain, the same happened in Kars, in Ardahan, 200 years ago. History keeps repeating itself without being punished.”

Zakaryan asserted that he was going nowhere. The sweetness of the fruits of Meghri “will become bitter in the mouth for Russia, Turkey and Azerbaijan,” he said. “Meghri must not become a territory controlled by them. We don’t want territories from anyone, we are enough with our territories. We are ready to defend our territories.”

Marietta, the Airbnb owner who hosted Artsakh refugees for weeks, put it plainly. “We don’t need bread, doesn’t need anything else. We make everything ourselves,” she said. “Armenians just need peace.”

This is the second story in a new series this year on small states and multilateralism at the UN, basing “small states” on a country’s population (using the World Bank list or Forum of Small States members or other factors like climate and economic vulnerabilities). The first story featured an interview with the president of the General Assembly. The project is financed by Open Society Foundations.


Joe Penney is a writer, filmmaker and photographer who lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., and Lagos. He directed a documentary, “Sun of the Soil: The Story of Mansa Musa,” about the reign of Mali’s 14th-century king. Penney’s articles and essays have been published by The Intercept, The New York Times, Quartz, Reuters and Paris journals. He was West African photo bureau chief for Reuters, and his pictures have appeared in Geo, Jeune Afrique, Le Monde, The Guardian, The Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal and Time, among others. He has photographed presidential elections in Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Mauritania, Nigeria, Senegal and Sierra Leone as well as the 2012 coup in Mali and the French military intervention in 2013, Mauritanian refugee camps, mining sites in Niger, migrants in the Sahel, counterterrorism campaigns in Cameroon, the 2013-2014 conflict in Central African Republic and the people’s coup in Burkina Faso in 2014. Penney co-founded Sahelien.com, a news company covering the Sahel region, in 2013. In Africa, he has lived in Ivory Coast, Mali and Senegal. He graduated from McGill University in Montreal and speaks English, French and Spanish.

https://www.passblue.com/2024/01/30/armenia-finds-piecemeal-help-from-the-un-to-manage-azerbaijans-aggression-it-says/

Business as usual for EU and Azerbaijan amid Nagorno-Karabakh ‘ethnic cleansing’


Jan 30 2024


EU’s ‘concern’ for ethnic Armenians comes after it signed multi-billion-euro deal with country that persecuted them

Lucy MartirosyanSiranush Sargsyan
, 4.03pm

Before fleeing Nagorno-Karabakh, Lilit Sargsyan managed to save two “sacred” heirlooms: a family-woven carpet, now ripped with age, and earrings crafted with silver coins from her great grandmother’s taraz, a traditional Armenian headpiece.

The 36-year-old single mother and school teacher was among the 150,000 indigenous Armenians forcibly displaced from their homeland in late September, when Azerbaijan violated a ceasefire brokered in 2020 to launch a military offensive on the territory, which is internationally recognised as part of its borders.

“The first thing that affected me mentally was that road, which seemed like a death march,” Sargsyan told openDemocracy. “It was like burying Artsakh [the Armenian name for Nagorno-Karabakh].”

Four months after the attack on Nagorno-Karabakh, it has been reported that barely two dozen ethnic Armenians remain in the territory, which is now under Azerbaijani control – prompting accusations of ethnic cleansing.

“For the people of Artsakh, humanity as such does not exist at all.”

Lilit Sargsyan, forcibly displaced mum from Nagorno-Karabakh

openDemocracy spoke with European and Armenian foreign policy experts and former Nagorno-Karabakh officials who believe international actors including the European Union could have done more to prevent Azerbaijan from exacerbating the humanitarian crisis in the region.

They pointed to two multi-billion-euro energy ‘memorandum of understanding’ (MoU) agreements the EU and its member states signed with oil-rich Azerbaijan in 2022 as part of Europe’s efforts to reduce reliance on Russian gas following its war on Ukraine.

Such agreements, the experts and officials suggested, could have been used to impose sanctions or other “red lines” to hold Baku responsible for its repeated violations of international agreements and humanitarian law.

Instead, they said, the deals have helped to embolden Azerbaijan’s autocratic president, Ilham Aliyev, who has in recent months made further territorial threats to Armenia’s land sovereignty and refused to resume peace talks despite the urging of the EU, which has led mediations since Russia invaded Ukraine.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenians, who have been largely forgotten in the geopolitical chess match of recent years, have been left doubting whether proper international mechanisms will ever be put in place to ensure their safe return home.

Speaking to openDemocracy, Sargsyan pointed out that most countries do not want to “worsen their relations with Azerbaijan in order to save Artsakh”.

“For the people of Artsakh,” she said, “humanity as such does not exist at all.”

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen branded Azerbaijan a “trustworthy, reliable partner” on 18 July 2022, when she signed a commitment to double the country’s annual gas exports to Europe by 2027.

Azerbaijan exported more than €21bn (around £18m) of gas to countries in the EU between January 2022 and the end of November 2023, according to Eurostat data obtained by openDemocracy.

Armenia’s Human Rights Ombudsman’s office made more than 130 public statements warning of threats to ethnic Armenians caused by Azerbaijani military actions in the 18 months before the MoU was signed.

Estonian MEP Marina Kaljurand, who heads the Parliament’s delegation for relations with the South Caucasus, told openDemocracy that the commission had “traded EU values for gas”.

Less than two months after the MoU was agreed, Azerbaijan attacked Armenia’s southern border. More than 200 Armenian troops and 80 Azerbaijani troops were killed or reported missing in the attack. As a result of this aggression, and two other invasions in 2021, Azerbaijan currently occupies more than 150 square kilometres of Armenia’s territory, according to the latter’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

A second, separate energy MoU was brokered between Azerbaijan and two EU member states and one aspiring member state on 17 December 2022, five days after Azerbaijani actors first blocked the Lachin corridor, the only road linking Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. The blockade lasted nine months – right up until the military attack and forced displacement of September 2023 – and caused a grave humanitarian crisis by restricting the flow of goods into the territory.

As food, fuel and medical supplies in Nagorno-Karabakh dwindled, Romania and Hungary, as well as EU candidate Georgia, pledged to invest $2.4bn (about £1.9bn) to construct an electric cable from Azerbaijan to Europe.

“These countries signed a billion-dollar deal with Azerbaijan, but the Nagorno-Karabakh people were already suffering,” said Artak Beglaryan, a former adviser to the Artsakh Republic, Nagorno-Karabakh’s self-proclaimed state.

Though the European Commission was not a party to the electric cable MoU, and has not yet agreed to contribute any central funding to the project, von der Leyen met with the leaders of all four countries in Bucharest as they signed it.

A spokesperson for the commission, Ana Pisonero, told openDemocracy: “No EU funding has so far been allocated to the construction of the Black Sea electricity cable between Georgia and Romania, as studies to determine economic and technical feasibility are still ongoing.”

For some in the EU, unease around the bloc’s ties with Azerbaijan increased after the forced displacement of ethnic Armenians in September. Shortly after, the European Parliament passed a resolution that said the situation amounted to ethnic cleansing and demanded a review of the gas agreement and the EU’s relationship with Azerbaijan in general.

MEP Kaljurand, a co-author of the resolution, told openDemocracy that the humanitarian crisis inflicted in Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan’s military attack and the blockade of the Lachin corridor before it is “not behaviour that we expect from [an EU] partner”.

The parliamentary resolution also called for sanctions against Azerbaijani officials over human rights abuses, and questioned whether the country is repackaging Russian gas and exporting it to Europe, following Baku’s separate energy agreement with Gazprom, a Kremlin-owned gas company, in 2022.

The European Commission’s spokesperson for climate action and energy, Tim McPhie, refuted this, telling openDemocracy: “Our understanding is that Azerbaijan is importing up to one billion cubic metres of gas from Russia for its domestic consumption.”

Iskra Kirova, the advocacy director for Europe and Central Asia at Human Rights Watch, described the gas MoU as a “failed opportunity” for the EU, claiming the bloc could have attached conditions, or “red lines”, on human rights and rule of law to the agreement. Instead, she said, it gave Azerbaijan a “purely economic” deal despite concerns over Baku’s human rights record.

The EU has replaced “a dependency on one hydrocarbon-fueled authoritarian regime by cultivating a relationship with another,” Kirova added.

McPhie denied this, saying: “Over the past couple of years, the EU has steadily diversified its gas supplies… in 2023, Azerbaijan provided around 4% of the EU’s total gas imports.”

The parliamentary resolution passed on 5 October by 491 legislators to nine – but the EU is not required to act on it. Days earlier, Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, the EU’s political executive branch with sanctioning power, had denied that the EU turned a blind eye to hostilities by Baku when signing the July 2022 MoU.

“Azerbaijan is a partner today, yes, it’s a partner. That doesn’t mean the relationship is simple,” he said.

Aliyev visited Nagorno-Karabakh less than two weeks after the parliamentary resolution passed. There, he was filmed by state media walking over the Artsakh flag.

“We have returned to our lands, we have restored our territorial integrity, and at the same time, we have restored our dignity,” he said in the clip, vowing to punish officials from the internationally unrecognised Nagorno-Karabakh state, who had been captured by Azerbaijani forces in September.

Tigran Balayan, Armenia’s designate to the EU in Brussels, said: “It’s exactly because of the deals with Azerbaijan that the EU is the best place to exert pressure on Azerbaijan to, first of all, pay the price for cheating, for lying, for not honouring all the commitments and written obligations of the ceasefire agreement and of international humanitarian law.

“Since Azerbaijan has positioned itself as a petrol station, it should be used as a petrol station. But as a petrol station for the needs of the EU and on the principles that the EU will set up.”

But foreign policy and security expert Sossi Tatikyan told openDemocracy that, even if it wanted to, the EU would have struggled to sanction Azerbaijan in the aftermath of the forced displacement of Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh.

There was no “consensus amongst its 27 member states” to do so, she explained. “One of the reasons was that some of its member states get gas from Azerbaijan.”

Italy, Hungary, Greece and Bulgaria imported gas from the country in 2022.

The European Commission’s lead spokesperson for foreign affairs and security policy, Peter Stano, told openDemocracy that “the EU does not compromise on its core principles and values” and that “human rights and the respect of the rule of law remain at the core of the European Union’s relationship with Azerbaijan”.

He added: “The EU believes that respect for basic rights is fundamental for stability and prosperity. For this reason, the EU continues to be engaged in all fora that allow it to raise its concerns with respect to human rights developments in Azerbaijan, including the annual EU-Azerbaijan Human Rights Dialogue.

“The EU continues to closely follow the situation on the ground regarding human rights.”

The EU pledged to give €12m in humanitarian aid to Armenians from Nagorno Karabakh in the aftermath of last year’s mass forced displacement. This money brings the total amount of aid it has given to people affected by the crisis in the territory to €32.9m since the 2020 war.

EU high representative Josep Borrell said the bloc has also “beefed up” its monitoring mission on the Armenian border amid Azerbaijan’s ongoing territorial threats, which it has issued warnings to Azerbaijan over.

Azerbaijani leader Aliyev has demanded Yerevan open the so-called ‘Zangezur corridor’, which runs from Azerbaijan through Armenia to Azerbaijan’s exclave of Nakhchivan. The autocratic leader has also repeatedly made irredentist claims that present-day Armenia is ‘Western Azerbaijan’.

Speaking after a meeting of the Foreign Affairs Council last week, Borrell called Aliyev’s threats “very concerning”. He warned that “any violation of Armenia’s territorial integrity will be unacceptable and will have severe consequences for our relations with Azerbaijan”.

But the commission made no mention of those displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh. The EU’s action on the safe return of families has so far been limited to a brief statement last year demanding Azerbaijan ensures their rights and security, including their right to return home.

Tatikyan told openDemocracy that the bloc must go further, suggesting an EU or UN-led international peacekeeping mission is required, as well as some self-governance of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, and the withdrawal of Azerbaijani armed forces from the territory.

“The safe and dignified return [of ethnic Armenians to Nagorno-Karabakh] would be possible only if certain conditions are put in place,” she said.

Such conditions would require either the consent of Azerbaijan or a United Nations Security Council resolution. The latter, Tatikyan added, would likely be vetoed by Russia due to its increasing alignment with Azerbaijan and complicity in the failure of peacekeeping.

In the meantime, ethnic Armenians remain displaced. Sargsyan, her child and her parents are living with a relative in Khachpar, an Armenian village that’s mostly populated by refugees who have fled Nagorno-Karabakh over the past 30 years.

The family has been there since late September when, having survived Azerbaijan’s nine-month besiegement, they found themselves trapped on the road to Armenia and surrounded by violence.

They fled days after Azerbaijan launched a full-scale military invasion of Nagorno-Karabakh that killed more than 200 soldiers and two dozen civilians, according to a Karabakh official. Azerbaijani forces allowed residents to leave the region only when local Armenian leaders agreed to disband the unrecognised state’s defence forces.

As the mass exodus began, the area’s only remaining fuel depot exploded, killing a further 200 people, including one of Sargsyan’s neighbours who was queueing for petrol. The explosion prompted Sargsyan and her six-year-old daughter, ailing mother, father, relatives and neighbours to cram into three cars and try to escape quickly.

The roads were heavily congested, but after 36 hours they finally made it to Armenia’s southern border, where security guards and aid workers told them they were “lucky” to have “arrived early”. At least 70 people died of severe exhaustion, dehydration, starvation, or a lack of medical supplies while trying to flee the territory, according to Armenia’s investigative committee.

Sargsyan recalls hearing screaming and seeing a lifeless woman crushed between two vehicles amid the panic to get out of Nagorno-Karabakh. It’s an image that still keeps her up at night.

Since then, Sargsyan says she has found life in Armenia difficult. While she has so far received 250,000 drams from the Armenian government as part of a package for all forcibly displaced people, she says she is still struggling to get by without child support.

She barely makes ends meet despite working two teaching jobs to pay for physical therapy and rehabilitation classes for her six-year-old daughter, who has a fine-motor disability.

“At least in Artsakh, I received child support of 14,500 drams [roughly £27] per month, which is very little money, but significant for us,” Sargsyan said. “Here, in Armenia, I can’t receive it because I lack proper documents.”

She wants one day to be able to return home to her village, Askeran – though she has little hope of this happening, calling the thought of ever living securely under Azerbaijani rule “a bit absurd”.

“I love my city so much that I know every corner,” Sargsyan said. “Now I have to make sure that I don’t forget, and constantly remind my child so that she also doesn’t forget.”

Additional reporting by Thomas Rowley in London

https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/eu-armenia-refugee-war-azerbaijan-gas-energy-russia-security-rights/

Glendale, city’s queer Armenian community targeted by extremists

Jan 30 2024

Members of the queer Armenian community in Glendale and their friends are bracing for another onslaught of anti-LGBTQ+ smear tactics and misinformation campaigns ahead of the Glendale school district’s election and the March 5 primary.

Violence erupted in June outside a Glendale Unified School District board meeting when anti-LGBTQ+ extremists confronted LGBTQ+ supporters and community members. Many agitators wore matching white T-shirts with the slogan “Leave our kids alone,” and trucks with giant “Leave our kids alone” banners circled the neighborhood.

A few days before targeting the Glendale school district, many of the same extremists demonstrated at Saticoy Elementary in North Hollywood. During both protests, Erik Adamian, executive director of Galas, the LGBTQ+ Aremenian Society, told The Guardian that right wing activists who had been prominent at previous pro-Trump and anti-vaccine rallies across the region – people with documented connections to the Proud Boys and the January 6 insurrection – were in attendance.

Glendale community members, including teachers, students, parents, and elected officials, held a rally on the steps of Glendale City Hall Thursday to confront the rise in extremism and hate groups in the city.

Organizers warned that the hate groups and their candidates want to erase any mention of LGBTQ+ and gender identity from books and materials in Glendale schools and force the LGBTQ+ community back into the closet.

“Our community is for everyone,” they chanted at the rally.

They also held signs in English, Korean, Tagalog, Armenian, and Spanish reading “Our community is for everyone.”

Jordan Henry and Aneta Krypekyan, two ultra-right conservatives and darlings of extremist activists, are candidates for open seats on the Glendale school board.

Both candidates have said their campaigns are about “parental rights,” but that phrase is a dog whistle for anti-LGBTQ+ extremists. It was used by activists at the June 6 protest at the Glendale school board meeting and has been used by anti-LGBTQ+ school board members in Chino Valley, Temecula, and Murrietta.

Krypekyan is endorsed by gsud_parents_voices, an anonymous public Instagram account. It’s filled with misinformation and anti-LGBTQ+ rants.

On Henry’s Instagram account, where he aligns himself with Krypekyan, he goes on an anti-trans rant about the school district.

On Monday, The Guardian published an in-depth article about the “chaos campaigns” in Glendale. It spotlighted the right wing playbook used by the anti-LGBTQ+ activists and how protests quickly escalated.

The reporter shows how these protests are not isolated, but a strategic development with the goal of a “deliberate divide and conquer strategy” by white conservative activists.

And school boards are the pathway for conservatives to trumpet their agenda.

For example, former Trump White House adviser Steve Bannon said on a May 2021 podcast, “The path to save the nation is very simple – it’s going to go through the school boards.”

The first wave of Republican school board organizing had focused on opposition to discussions of racism and discrimination, often presented as an attack on “critical race theory,” an area of legal scholarship that is not typically taught outside of college. In Glendale, several parents and educators said, an anti-critical race theory campaign never really took off. But when local activists had begun raising concerns about the district’s policies regarding transgender kids, gender identity, and discussions of LGBTQ+ identity in elementary schools, they’d hit on a topic that resonated with parts of the community.

Adamian, who’s also a Glendale resident, provides essential context to what’s happening on the ground in Glendale.

Galas had been talking to educators about the hostile climate in the school board meetings throughout 2022 and 2023, Adamian said. But when activists from the organization came to offer support during the volatile protests in June 2023, they were alarmed not only by the hundreds of angry demonstrators and fistfights in the streets, but at the way the battles were being portrayed in the local media as a fight between LGBTQ+ people and Armenian parents – as if queer Armenians simply did not exist.

Even some LGBTQ+ activists had adopted that framing, reacting to the protests as if the Armenian community was one large anti-gay monolith.

John Rogers, a UCLA education professor who has been studying school district “conflict campaigns” nationwide since 2021, told The Guardian that school districts have been achieved real social change about policies on how to treat trans and nonbinary kids, and how to support LGBTQ+ students, and those policies have been on the books for years without much objection. 

Only after the school board campaigns became part of the national political agenda did they suddenly become controversial among parents.

“Nothing was dramatically new, except for the misinformation that was being put into play,” he said.

Artineh Samkian, a USC education professor who is also a Glendale public school parent, told The Guardian that sees the “chaos campaigns” targeting Glendale and other public schools broadly as “an attempt to dismantle trust in public education, and, by extension, dismantle public education.”


Iran, Armenia call for further cooperation

 TEHRAN TIMES 
Iran – Jan 30 2024

TEHRAN- Head of Iran’s Strategic Council on Foreign Relations Kamal Kharrazi held talks on Tuesday with high-profile Armenian officials, including Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, to review the expansion of Tehran and Yerevan ties in several spheres.

Underscoring the vitality of Kharrazi’s visit to his country, Pashinyan expressed optimism that Kharrazi’s visit will open a new chapter for more growth in the development and consolidation of ties between the two nations.

During the meeting, the two officials reviewed numerous issues including bilateral political and economic ties, cooperation in the field of energy and infrastructure, implementation of joint projects and other areas of cooperation as well. 

Other issues pertinent to security, peace and sustainable stability in the South Caucasus were also discussed during the visit.  

Pashinyan hailed Tehran’s positive stance on the “Crossroads of Peace” project, which was developed at the initiative of the Armenian government in a bid to remove infrastructure blockages in the region.

Prior to the visit, Kharrazi met with Armenia’s Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan to talk about the various fields of cooperation between Tehran and Yerevan. 

They also underscored the momentum of mutual coordination in the sphere of energy, infrastructure, economy and the implementation of joint projects to further fortify the friendship between the two nations and maintain stability in the region.

On October 31, 2023, the deputy head of the Islamic Republic of Iran Customs Administration met with his Armenian counterpart in Moscow to discuss boosting cooperation in border issues.

During the talks, which were held on the sidelines of the annual International Customs Forum, the two sides discussed measures to increase the acceptance of trucks importing and exporting commodities and to promote transit on the joint border crossings.

Exchanging information electronically and developing the area of customs in the borders were also among the topics agreed upon by the officials.

The two officials also exchanged views about the acceleration and facilitation of trade affairs between Tehran and Yerevan.

After the talks, the two sides also agreed to hold expert meetings continuously to pursue the implementation of agreements. 

Last year, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian, in a phone call with the Foreign Minister of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Jeyhun Bayramov, exchanged views on the most important issues in bilateral, regional, and international fields.

Amir Abdollahian referred to the depth of Iran-Azerbaijan relations and described the recent meeting between the presidents of the two countries on the sidelines of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA) summit in the Kazakh capital as important, according to the Iranian foreign ministry.

Referring to the recent developments in the Caucasus region, the Iranian foreign minister emphasized supporting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the countries including the Republic of Azerbaijan and Armenia, stressing that the approach is the permanent policy of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Iranian concerns over the international borders in the South Caucasus region has exacerbated since the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war. Since then, Iran has been warning that it will not accept any change in the borders in the region.