Armenpress: Armenian Foreign Minister extends condolences on death of former Ambassador of Dominican Republic

 12:26,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 26, ARMENPRESS. The former Ambassador of the Dominican Republic to Armenia, Hans Dannenberg Castellanos, has died.

Castellanos served as Ambassador of the Dominican Republic to Armenia from April 2022 until early 2023, when he was appointed Ambassador to Canada.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan offered condolences to the late ambassador’s family.

“Deeply saddened to learn of untimely passing of former Ambassador of the Dominican Republic to Armenia Hans Dannenberg. His relentless efforts aimed at building stronger bilateral ties, including opening of diplomatic office in Yerevan, will be always remembered. Condolences to his family & friends,” FM Mirzoyan said on X.

Netanyahu outlines 3 prerequisites for peace

 13:56,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 26, ARMENPRESS. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wrote an op-ed Monday outlining three prerequisites for peace in the region: the destruction of Hamas, the demilitarization of Gaza and the beginning of a deradicalization process of Palestinian society.

In an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, Netanyahu said once those three requirements are met, “Gaza can be rebuilt and the prospects of a broader peace in the Middle East will become a reality.”

Explaining the goal to destroy Hamas, Netanyahu notes Hamas’s leaders have vowed to repeat the Oct. 7 attack “again and again,” writing, “That is why their destruction is the only proportional response to prevent the repeat of such horrific atrocities. Anything less guarantees more war and more bloodshed.”

Netanyahu pledged to “continue to act in full compliance with international law” in destroying Hamas, but he noted the difficulty in doing so, as he claimed Hamas frequently uses “Palestinian civilians as human shields.” Netanyahu emphasized Israel tries to minimize civilian casualties, outlining ways he said it does so.

“Unjustly blaming Israel for these casualties will only encourage Hamas and other terror organizations around the world to use human shields. To render this cruel and cynical strategy ineffective, the international community must place the blame for these casualties squarely on Hamas,” Netanyahu wrote.

Israel has come under significant criticism for the type of bombs it has dropped in Gaza, with some arguing it could do much more to limit civilian casualties, according to The Hill.

Asbarez: Armenia Will Take Over Eurasian Economic Union Chairmanship in January

Leaders of the Eurasian Economic Union countries in St. Petersburg, Russia on Dec. 25


Pashinyan Warns of ‘Politicizing’ the EEU

Armenia will take over the rotating chairmanship of the Eurasian Economic Union from Russia, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced in St. Petersburg on Monday as the Russia-led bloc convened its annual summit.

“We hope for the support and effective cooperation of the member states in the implementation of the tasks set before us. It is symbolic that the presidency of Armenia coincides with the tenth anniversary of the signing of the Treaty on the EAEU,” Pashinyan said in his address to the summit.

Pashinyan’s arrival in St. Petersburg on Monday ended his and the Armenian government’s effective boycott of the Russia-led groups’ previous summits.

During his address to the EEU summit, Pashinyan decried attempts to politicize the economic bloc’s activities based on what he called “geopolitical” reasons.

Citing the EEU’s founding treaty signed by Russia, Armenia and the other member-states in 2013, Pashinyan said that the EEU must not have a “political and especially geopolitical agenda.”

“We continue to regard [the EEU] as such and to develop partnership within the framework of our economic cooperation in this context, seeking to thwart all attempts to politicize Eurasian integration,” Pashinyan said. “The EEU and its economic principles must not correlate with political ambitions.”

“The basic freedoms of trade and integration cannot and must not be limited due to political considerations. This would definitely lead to an erosion of the fundamental principles of the union,” he added.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 12/27/2023

                                        Wednesday, 


Armenian FM Keeps Linking Peace Deal With Border Delimitation

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan speaks at a news conference in 
Yerevan, .


An Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty should contain a concrete mechanism for 
delimiting the long border between the two South Caucasus nations, Foreign 
Minister Ararat Mirzoyan insisted on Wednesday.

The border issue has been one of the main sticking points in ongoing talks on 
the treaty. Hikmet Hajiyev, a top foreign policy adviser to Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev, said last week that Baku believes "the border 
delimitation issue should be kept separate from peace treaty discussions." 
Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov likewise noted afterwards that the 
treaty cannot “ensure a 100 percent solution to all issues.”

“It is extremely important for us that the future delimitation process is 
predictable and its principles, its foundations are fixed in the peace 
agreement,” said Mirzoyan. “For us, a reference to [concrete] maps would be such 
a way of ensuring that predictability without predetermining the results [of the 
process.]”

The Armenian government has insisted, at least until now, on using specific 
Soviet military maps for that purpose. Baku rejects the idea backed by the 
European Union.

Speaking at a joint news conference with Iran’s visiting Foreign Minister 
Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, Mirzoyan said the conflicting sides continue to 
discuss the “possibility of incorporating maps” into the peace accord.

“We don’t have the final text of the agreement,” he said. “Therefore, nobody can 
tell what the end result of the negotiations will be.”

Armenian parliament speaker Alen Simonian indicated last Friday that Yerevan 
could agree to sign the treaty before the border delimitation. Armenian 
opposition leaders expressed serious concern over such a possibility, saying 
that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government is ready to make more 
concessions to Baku without securing anything in return.

Pashinian and other Armenian officials themselves suggested this summer that 
Aliyev wants to leave the door open for future territorial claims to Armenia. 
Some Armenian analysts believe this is the reason why Aliyev keeps delaying 
further negotiations mediated by the United States and the European Union.

Mirzoyan on Wednesday listed the “avoidance of high-level meetings” among 
“negative signals” coming from Baku. He said at the same time that Yerevan hopes 
the Azerbaijani side will adopt a “more constructive” stance in the coming weeks.




Iran Insists On ‘Regional Guarantors’ Of Armenia-Azerbaijan Peace


Armenia - Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian speaks at a news 
conference in Yerevan, .


Armenia and Azerbaijan should rely on Iran, Russia and Turkey, rather than 
“outside forces,” in trying to negotiate a peace deal, Iranian Foreign Minister 
Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said during a visit to Yerevan on Wednesday.

The peace process appeared to be a key focus of his talks with Armenia’s Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian and Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan. Amir-Abdollahian 
discussed the issue with his Azerbaijani and Russian counterparts in separate 
phone calls on Tuesday.

Amir-Abdollahian said that he discussed with the Armenian leaders Iran’s 
possible role in Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran wants to see peace and stability [in the South 
Caucasus] ensured without the interference of outside forces and believes it can 
be achieved only with the help of regional guarantors,” he told a joint news 
conference with Mirzoyan held after the talks.

He said that the so-called “Consultative Regional Platform 3+3” involving 
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Russia and Turkey is the most suitable format of 
doing that.

The foreign ministers of the five states held their first multilateral meeting 
in Tehran in October. Georgia has refused to join the platform launched in 
December 2021 in Moscow, citing continuing Russian occupation of its breakaway 
regions.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi told Pashinian last week that “extra-regional 
countries” must not be allowed to intervene in unresolved disputes in the South 
Caucasus. Raisi thus reaffirmed Iran’s strong opposition to Western presence in 
the region, which is shared by Russia.

By contrast, Pashinian’s government is now pinning hopes on U.S. and European 
Union efforts to broker an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty. Mirzoyan on 
Wednesday praised Iran’s strong support for Armenia’s territorial integrity but 
gave no indications that Yerevan would like Tehran to replace the Western powers 
as a mediator.

“I want to emphasize that the Islamic Republic of Iran supports the territorial 
integrity and sovereignty of Armenia,” Amir-Abdollahian said in Yerevan. He 
reaffirmed Tehran’s support for the Armenian government’s position on transport 
links with Azerbaijan.

During his meeting with Pashinian, the Iranian minister also praised the current 
state of Armenian-Iranian relations, saying that they are deepening in various 
areas.

“Our assessment is that the two countries are on the right track,” Pashinian’s 
press office quoted Amir-Abdollahian as saying.




Kocharian’s Corruption Trial Ends Without Verdict

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian greets supporters during his trial, 
Yerevan, February 25, 2020.


A court in Yerevan ended the marathon trial of former President Robert Kocharian 
on Wednesday after he agreed to plead the statute of limitations despite 
strongly denying corruption charges leveled against him.

Kocharian, who ruled Armenia from 1998-2008, was first arrested in July 2018 
shortly after the “velvet revolution” that brought Nikol Pashinian to power. He 
initially faced only charges stemming from a 2008 post-election crackdown on 
opposition protesters in Yerevan.

The ex-president was subsequently also charged with receiving a $3 million bribe 
from an Armenian businesswoman. He, his former chief of staff Armen Gevorgian 
and two retired army generals, went on trial in May 2019. They all rejected the 
accusations as politically motivated. Kocharian claimed that they are part of a 
“political vendetta” waged by Pashinian.

The coup charges against the defendants were dropped after Armenia’s 
Constitutional Court declared them unconstitutional in 2021. Kocharian and 
Gevorgian continued to stand trial for the alleged bribery.

Anna Danibekian, the judge presiding over the trial, closed the case without 
acquitting or convicting Kocharian. She argued that Kocharian has invoked the 
statute of limitations that expired in May this year.

Kocharian refused to make such a plea at the time, saying that he will keep 
fighting for his formal acquittal. One of his lawyers, Mihran Poghosian, said he 
has changed his mind because he now needs to go abroad for an urgent medical 
examination. In recent weeks, Danibekian has repeatedly declined to allow 
Kocharian to leave Armenia, Poghosian told reporters.

Kocharian was last released from custody on bail in June 2020. The end of his 
trial means that the bail money worth 2 billion drams ($5 million) will be 
returned to his daughter Gayane. The presiding judge also unfroze the 
69-year-old ex-president’s assets.

Kocharian, who now leads Armenia’s largest opposition alliance, would not go to 
jail even if he was found guilty.




Russia ‘Not Worried About’ Armenia’s Eurasian Union Presidency


Russia - President Vladimir Putin greets Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
during a CIS summit in St. Petersburg, .


Russia said on Wednesday that it is looking forward to Armenia’s upcoming 
presidency of the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) despite heightened tensions 
between the two states.

Yerevan will take over the year-long rotating presidency on January 1. This was 
reaffirmed by the leaders of five ex-Soviet states making up the Russian-led 
trade bloc during a summit in Saint Petersburg on Monday.

Speaking during the summit, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stressed that his 
government regards the EEU as a purely economic organization that must not have 
a “political and especially geopolitical agenda.”

“The EEU and its economic principles must not correlate with political 
ambitions,” Pashinian said without elaborating.

His remarks highlighted Yerevan’s deepening rift with Moscow and efforts to 
forge closer links with the European Union and the United States.

Speaking during a news briefing, the Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria 
Zakharova, was asked whether Moscow is worried about the Armenian presidency of 
the EEU in light of those remarks and Armenian leaders’ broader criticism of 
Russia.

“Russia’s interaction with Armenia within the framework of the Eurasian Economic 
Union is built on a pragmatic and mutually beneficial foundation,” replied 
Zakharova. “We can see that Yerevan is drawing significant dividends from its 
participation in the union. Despite some ambiguous statements by representatives 
of the republic mentioned by you, we are building a constructive, depoliticized 
dialogue with our Armenian partners as well as with the other EAEU member 
states.”

“The prime minister of this country, speaking at the December 25 meeting of the 
Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in Saint Petersburg, announced Yerevan’s focus 
on fully achieving EAEU objectives in the medium and long term,” she said, 
adding that Moscow supports Pashinian’s stated intention.

Russia accounts for over 95 percent of Armenia’s trade with the rest of the EEU 
and 35 percent of the South Caucasus nation’s overall commercial exchange, 
compared with the EU’s 15 percent share in the total.

Russian-Armenian trade has skyrocketed since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and 
the resulting barrage of Western sanctions against Moscow. Armenian exports to 
Russia tripled in 2022 and nearly doubled in January-September 2023.




Aliyev, Pashinian Talk During CIS Summit

        • Shoghik Galstian

Russia - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev attend a CIS summit in Saint Petersburg, .


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian spoke with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on 
Tuesday during a summit of the leaders of ex-Soviet states in Saint Petersburg, 
an Armenian government spokeswoman said.

The official, Nazeli Baghdasarian, said they discussed the “Armenian-Azerbaijan 
peace agenda” during their “unofficial contacts” there.

“The discussions took place in a bilateral format,” Baghdasarian added without 
giving further details.

It was Aliyev’s and Pashinian’s first face-to-face conversation since 
Azerbaijan’s September 19-20 military offensive that restored Azerbaijani 
control over Nagorno-Karabakh and forced the region’s population to flee to 
Armenia.

The two leaders previously met in Brussels in July for talks hosted by European 
Union Council President Charles Michel. Aliyev twice cancelled more such talks 
which Michel planned to organize in October.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov similarly withdrew from a November 
20 meeting with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan in Washington. Baku 
accused the Western powers of pro-Armenian bias and proposed direct negotiations 
with Yerevan.

Pashinian suggested on December 18 that Aliyev may be dragging his feet on a 
peace treaty with Armenia sought by the EU and the United States.

Russia has been very critical of the Western peace efforts, saying that they are 
primarily aimed at driving it out of the South Caucasus. On December 6, Moscow 
rebuked Yerevan for ignoring its recent offers to organize more 
Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations and warned that Pashinian’s current preference 
of Western mediation may spell more trouble for the Armenian people.

It is not clear whether Russian President Vladimir Putin tried to hold a formal 
trilateral meeting with Aliyev and Pashinian on the sidelines of Tuesday’s 
Commonwealth of Independent States summit. The Kremlin did not signal such 
attempts in the run-up to the summit.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Asbarez: Pashinyan, Aliyev Discuss Peace Process in St. Petersburg

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan (right) with President Ilham Aliyev in St. Petersburg, Russia on Dec. 26 (screen capture from Ria Novosti)


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan on Tuesday discussed the peace process between their countries during a meeting in St. Petersburg, Russia on the margins of a Commonwealth of Independent States summit.

Pashinyan’s press secretary Nazeli Baghdasaryan told Azatutyun.am about the “informal meeting,” saying the talks were “bilateral, meaning the two leaders talked without a third country mediator — in this case Russia — president.

“Issues related to the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace agenda were discussed. The discussions were in a bilateral format,” Baghdasaryan said, without elaborating.

It was the first time the two leaders were meeting since Azerbaijan’s large-scale attack on Artsakh in September, which forced the displacement of more than 100,000 Artsakh residents. Aliyev and his foreign minister, Jeyhum Bayramov, canceled scheduled meetings in Brussels and Washington, respectively, scheduled after the September attack.

Earlier on Tuesday, Russian media outlets circulated a short video showing Pashinyan and Aliyev shaking hands during an excursion to the Tsarskoe Selo State Museum and Heritage Site in Saint Petersburg as CIS leaders entered the venue ahead of the unofficial CIS summit.

President Vladimir Putin of Russia had invited the leaders of CIS countries — Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan — to discuss issues not in a meeting format, but during an excursion in the palace-park complexes of Saint Petersburg.

Pashinyan also met with President Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, who last month hosted a meeting of the Collective Security Treaty Organization in Minsk. The Armenian prime minister did not attend that gathering.

The Kremlin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told Russia’s Channel One television that the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan have expressed interest in signing a peace deal.

“They are ready to conclude peace negotiations, issue a joint document, to sign the peace treaty,” Peskov said.

Why the Armenian exodus from Nagorno-Karabakh may not end Azerbaijan’s ambitions

CNN
Dec 27 2023

By Christian Edwards, CNN

CNN —

Standing on the deserted streets of Nagorno-Karabakh on the 20th anniversary of his inauguration, Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev said he had achieved the “sacred goal” of his presidency: reclaiming the land taken from his father.

Azerbaijan had for decades been haunted by the loss of Nagorno-Karabakh, a tiny Caucasian enclave home to one of the world’s most protracted conflicts. Armenians herald it as the cradle of their civilization, but it lies within Azerbaijan’s borders, like an island in unfriendly seas.

As separate Soviet republics, Azerbaijan and Armenia played nice under Moscow’s watchful eye. But as that empire crumbled, Armenia, then the ascendant power, seized Nagorno-Karabakh from its weaker neighbor in a bloody war in the 1990s.

The defeat became a “festering wound” Aliyev promised to heal. But he grew frustrated by diplomatic talks that he believed aimed only “to freeze the conflict.” After decades of “meaningless and fruitless” summits, from Minsk to Key West, he changed his tack.

Brute force stepped in where diplomacy had failed. While the conflict remained frozen, Azerbaijan had transformed. Now oil-rich, backed by Turkey and armed to the teeth, it reclaimed a third of Nagorno-Karabakh in a 44-day war in 2020, stopped only by a Russian-brokered ceasefire.

But the agreement proved brittle and, in September, Azerbaijan struck again. Unable to resist its military might, the Karabakh government surrendered in just 24 hours. The region’s ethnic Armenian population fled within a week, an exodus the European Parliament said amounted to ethnic cleansing – an allegation Azerbaijan denies. “We brought peace by war,” Aliyev told a forum this month.

Whether that peace will be a lasting one is unclear. In Azerbaijan, many fear that the ethnic nationalism and vow of territorial reunification on which Aliyev built his legitimacy is more likely to find new targets than to dissipate.

And in Armenia, which was left exposed by its weak military and absent allies, the state is struggling to absorb more than 100,000 Karabakh refugees, many of whom say they cannot adjust to their new lives.

Life in limbo

Nonna Poghosyan fled her home in Stepanakert, Karabakh’s capital, with her husband, twin children and elderly parents. They now rent a small apartment in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital. But Poghosyan, who worked as the American University of Armenia’s program coordinator in Stepanakert, said her mind is still in Karabakh.

“I’m just dying to know what’s happening there in Stepanakert. What’s happening with my house? I envy everybody who breathes the air there,” she told CNN.

Aliyev said the abandoned houses had remained “untouched,” but videos on social media show Azerbaijani troops vandalizing homes.

“I don’t want to imagine it’s been taken by someone else. That’s the house we built for our kids,” said Poghosyan.

Her children were walking home from school when Azerbaijani rockets struck Stepanakert on September 19. Her husband found them on the roadside and took them to a bomb shelter. When they woke the next day, the government – the self-styled Republic of Artsakh – surrendered. Their lives had unraveled overnight.

They fled their home the next week, along with almost all of the population. By then they were starved and exhausted: Nagorno-Karabakh had been blockaded for 10 months after Azerbaijan cut off the Lachin corridor – the only road linking the enclave to Armenia proper – preventing the import of food, medicine and other supplies.

Now, the road along which necessities were stopped from entering was opened to allow the population to flood out. As tens of thousands fled at once, it took Poghosyan four days to drive from Stepanakert to Yerevan, she said – a journey that ordinarily took four hours.

As Armenian citizens, the government in Yerevan welcomed the refugees. But the support it can provide is meager. Poghosyan received a one-off payment of 100,000 Armenian dram (about $250), but she pays 300,000 dram (about $750) in rent. Her family lives off the savings they had put aside for their children’s education, money that will only last a few months.

The dissolution of the Karabakh government has left Poghosyan without child benefits, her parents without their pensions, her husband – a former soldier – without his salary. But she considers herself lucky to have an apartment. “There are people living in cars. There are people living in school basements, playgrounds,” she said.

‘We left our souls there’

Gayane Lalabekyan said she wakes every morning to her new apartment in Yerevan and asks herself if she did the right thing. Many Karabakh Armenians, struggling to come to terms with their new lives, wonder what, if anything, they could have done differently.

“I ask myself, ‘Was it the right move?’” Lalabekyan, an English teacher, told CNN. She is often overcome with guilt for abandoning her homeland, but then remembers the “primitive fear” she felt while fleeing.

“When I see my daughter, her little son; when I see my mother, she’s 72; when I see my son and his wife, they married in July; I see that, if we stayed there, maybe I wouldn’t have them,” she said.

Aliyev said Armenians wishing to remain in Karabakh would have to accept Azerbaijani citizenship. “They had two chances: Either to integrate with the rest of Azerbaijan or to go to history,” he said.

But, after generations of violence, few Armenians believed they could live safely in Azerbaijan and almost none would submit to rule by the government in Baku, despite Azerbaijan’s insistence that no civilians had been harmed in what it called its “anti-terror measures” in the territory.

“Aliyev isn’t a real man, he’s a devil. We can’t trust their promises,” said Lalabekyan. “We can’t live together.”

Karabakh Armenians were supposed to be protected by Russian peacekeepers, which deployed to the region under the terms of the Moscow-brokered ceasefire in 2020.

But the attack came on the heels of a rupture in Armenia’s relations with Russia, after Yerevan grew frustrated that its longtime ally was failing to defend it against Azerbaijani aggression. Feeling it had no choice but to diversify its security apparatus, Armenia began to forge fledgling partnerships with Western countries.

To Russia, the move was a betrayal. It used the opportunity to wash its hands of its needy neighbor. Unable to funnel resources from its military campaign in Ukraine, and unwilling to anger Azerbaijan and Turkey, Russia stood by as the ceasefire it negotiated was shattered – though the Kremlin later rejected criticism of its peacekeeping contingent.

With Russia’s protection absent and Western support merely rhetorical, Karabakh Armenians felt they had no choice but to flee. But accepting this offers scant consolation to Lalabekyan, who said she feels like a stranger in her own country.

“What will we do next? We don’t know who we are. Are we Artsakh citizens or Armenian citizens? We can’t answer this question. We left everything there. We left our souls there.”

The prospect of peace

Some cold-eyed observers argue the plight of the Karabakh refugees may be the tragic price of regional peace. As Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, Armenia’s relinquishment of the enclave was a prerequisite for reconciliation.

But Aliyev has shown little magnanimity in victory. On his first visit to the enclave, he trampled on the Karabakh flag and mocked the Karabakh politicians he had imprisoned as they attempted to flee.

Among those detained is Ruben Vardanyan, former State Minister of Artsakh. Vardanyan’s son, David, described to CNN the “opaque justice system” in which his father is now ensnarled, having been charged with “financing terrorism” and “illegal border crossings,” among other things. Azerbaijan and Armenia have no diplomatic relations, so Vardanyan has been denied consular access. David has only been able to speak to his father once since his arrest on September 27, via a prison phone. “He just said he might be there for a while,” David said.

“If we really want peace in the region between Azerbaijan and Armenia, you can’t have political prisoners still being in jail while a peace agreement is signed,” he said.

In the weeks after the reconquest of Karabakh, Baku canceled peace talks in Brussels and Washington, citing Western bias against Azerbaijan. Meanwhile, its rhetoric around its territorial ambitions has sharpened. Government documents have referred to Armenia as “western Azerbaijan,” a nationalist concept alleging Armenia is built on Azerbaijani land.

Some hope, however, came on December 7 when Azerbaijan and Armenia agreed to a prisoner exchange – a deal brokered without Brussels or Washington, but which was welcomed by both. The US said it hoped the exchange would “lay the groundwork for a more peaceful and prosperous future.” Armenia also removed its block on Azerbaijan’s candidacy to host the COP29 climate conference next year.

Azerbaijan and Armenia agree to prisoner swap and to work towards peace deal

The biggest sticking point, however, will likely be Nakhchivan, an Azerbaijani exclave separated from the mainland by a sliver of southern Armenia. Aliyev hopes to build a “land corridor” that would slice through Armenia, connecting Nakhchivan to Azerbaijan proper.

Aliyev described the so-called “Zangezur” corridor as a “historical necessity” that “will happen whether Armenia wants it or not.”

Armenia is not wholly opposed to the idea, but is refusing to relinquish control over parts of its territory. Last month, it presented a plan to revive the region’s infrastructure, restoring derelict train lines to better connect Armenia with Azerbaijan, Turkey, Georgia, Iran and elsewhere. It hopes to benefit from trade that could not happen during the lengthy hostilities, calling the project the “Crossroads of Peace.”

But Armenia’s preferences may count for little. Aliyev said in December “there should be no customs duties, no checks, no border security, when it goes from mainland (Azerbaijan) to Nakhchivan,” adding that the Armenians should begin construction “immediately at their own expense.”

Aliyev said he had no plans to occupy Armenian territory, stressing “if we wanted, we would have done it.” But, at the same event, he said that the territory had been “taken” from Azerbaijan in 1920 under Soviet rule, and warned Armenia “we have more historical, political and legal rights to contest your territorial integrity.”

Anna Ohanyan, a senior scholar in the Russia and Eurasia program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said Aliyev’s rhetoric had been tempered since the announcement of the prisoner exchange, but “this is largely due to a strong pushback from the US.”

“His aims have not changed: He still needs a rivalry or conflict with Armenia, even after he recovered full control of Nagorno-Karabakh,” Ohanyan told CNN. “Hosting COP29 may keep Aliyev on his best behavior for perhaps a year, but this is not a guarantee that he will play by the international rules. Russia hosted the Winter Olympics in 2014, and annexed Crimea right after.”

Diplomacy may again prove fruitless. Analysts warn of Azerbaijan’s growing military presence around southern Armenia. Olesya Vartanyan, Crisis Group’s senior analyst for the South Caucasus, told CNN “in one of the areas where Azerbaijani forces are located along the border, it would take them very little to cut Armenia into pieces.”

Karabakh Armenians always knew they were caught in the crosshairs of great-power conflict. But, after 30 years of relative peace, they were not expecting things to fall apart so quickly. As a new year beckons, they look ahead to an uncertain future, bereft of homes, possessions, and livelihoods.

“I understand it’s a big game with big countries involved: Russia’s interests, Turkey’s interests, Azerbaijan being a player between all these, Armenia being too weak to withstand. I understand it globally,” said Poghosyan. “But on the level of 100,000 people, it’s a tragedy.”

Iranian FM departs for Armenia for bilateral talks

MEHR News Agency, Iran
Dec 27 2023

TEHRAN, Dec. 27 (MNA) – Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian left Tehran for Yerevan on Wednesday morning to hold bilateral talks with Armenian officials.

The top Iranian diplomat is set to discuss ways of expanding bilateral relations between Tehran and Yerevan in the fields of politics, economy, and culture during his stay on Armenia.

He will also hold consultations regarding the important issues related to the South Caucasus region in the 3+3 framework.

On Tuesday night, Amir-Abdollahian held separate conversations with his Azerbaijani and Russian counterparts, discussing the developments in the Caucasus and the establishment of peace between the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Republic of Armenia by taking advantage of the capacities of the regional countries.

MP

https://en.mehrnews.com/news/210009/Iranian-FM-departs-for-Armenia-for-bilateral-talks

Iranian top diplomat meets Armenia FM, PM in Yerevan

MEHR News Agency, Iran
Dec 27 2023

TEHRAN, Dec. 27 (MNA) – The Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian met and held talks with the Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and Nikol Pashinyan Prime Minister of Armenia upon his arrival to Yerevan.

Heading a political and parliamentary delegation, the Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian arrived in Yerevan on Wednesday morning to hold bilateral talks with Armenian officials.

Upon his arrival, he was welcomed by the high officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of this country.

The top Iranian diplomat is set to discuss ways of expanding bilateral relations between Tehran and Yerevan in the fields of politics, economy, and culture during his stay on Armenia.

He will also hold consultations regarding the important issues related to the South Caucasus region in the 3+3 framework.

On Tuesday night, Amir-Abdollahian held separate conversations with his Azerbaijani and Russian counterparts, discussing the developments in the Caucasus and the establishment of peace between the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Republic of Armenia by taking advantage of the capacities of the regional countries.

MNA/

Armenia | Nagorno-Karabakh refugees do not “believe in peace” with Azerbaijan

Actual News Magazine
Dec 27 2023

(Noyakert) Before fleeing to Armenia, faced with the advance of Azerbaijani troops, Souren Martirossian had time to take a last look at his orchard in the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.


Published yesterday at 11:12 p.m.

Mariam HARUTYUNYAN

France Media Agency

“The image of our beautiful garden, which I saw for the last time, is etched in my memory: pomegranates and persimmons shone on the trees, under a bright sun,” says this 65-year-old man.

His family, eight people in total, were part of the flood of some 100,000 inhabitants who left this mountainous territory, reconquered in September by Baku thanks to a lightning offensive against Armenian separatists.

Souren Martirossian

This exodus of almost the entire Armenian population from the enclave, at the center of a territorial conflict between Baku and Yerevan for decades, has triggered a migration crisis in Armenia.

On September 19, the first day of the Azerbaijani offensive, “we heard machine gun fire and explosions caused by artillery near our house,” recalls Arevik, Souren’s daughter-in-law.

“At first we thought it was just another skirmish with the Turks,” she explains, referring to the Azerbaijanis, who speak Azeri, a Turkic language.

“But then our panicked village chief came and said we had to run away, because the Turks were already in the outskirts of our village. »

The Martirossian family now lives in a decrepit house in Noyakert, about fifty kilometers from the Armenian capital Yerevan, rented thanks to government aid.

A single day of fighting was enough to convince the Armenian separatists, who had controlled the territory for around thirty years, to surrender.

A major victory for Baku, which thus brought back under its fold this enclave which had until then escaped it.

Souren Martirossian and his family.

For Souren Martirossian, the culprits are obvious: Armenia and Russian peacekeeping troops.

The latter were deployed by Moscow, Armenia’s ally, as part of the ceasefire agreement which ended previous hostilities in the area in 2020.

“Our army fought courageously to protect our homeland, it was Russia and the Armenian government who were defeated in Karabakh,” assures Souren Martirossian.

The separatists agreed to dissolve their self-proclaimed republic at the end of the year, effectively putting an end to the long territorial dispute between Baku and Yerevan.

But their leader, Samvel Chakhramanian, finally retracted last week, to everyone’s surprise.

The announcement may be spectacular, but it will have no concrete effect, because the separatists have been driven out of Nagorno-Karabakh, now under firm Azerbaijani control. And Armenia is unlikely to be willing to support the functioning of a separatist institution on its own territory.

But Samvel Chakhramanian’s statements struck a chord with many refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh, who continue to dream of the independence of their enclave, despite the defeat.

“The children have nightmares all the time, crying at night and wondering when we will come home,” says Arevik.

But, for her, a return is only possible if the “safety” of her children is guaranteed and she is certain of being able to live “completely separated” from the Azerbaijanis.

Armenia and Azerbaijan recently assured that they wanted to normalize their historically execrable relations by signing a peace agreement.

This process, seen as good news by the partners of these Caucasian countries, does not excite the refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh.

A tenacious hatred, fueled by the two wars between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the enclave, still poisons relations between the two peoples.

“I don’t believe in peace” with the Azerbaijanis, says Boris Doloukhanian, a 65-year-old refugee, whose son was killed during the 2020 conflict.

Susanna and Boris Dolukhanian.

“How could we live alongside Turks who murdered my child? “, he explains. “We must become powerful enough to take back our land by force. »

Boris Doloukhanian says his family was “prosperous” when they lived in Nagorno-Karabakh, where they had several houses, land and even an exotic bird farm.

“We left our paradise behind us,” he regrets.

The three-room apartment near Yerevan where they found refuge is now beyond their means, and the family will have to pack their bags once again.

Boris Doloukhanian’s granddaughter, Rouzanna, 10, hopes that “Santa Claus will perform a miracle so that we can come home.”


Karabakh refugees hold little hope for Azerbaijan peace

Channel News Asia
Dec 27 2023

NOYAKERT: Before fleeing the advancing Azerbaijani troops for Armenia, Suren Martirosyan glanced back one last time at his fruit garden in Nagorno-Karabakh, and the momentary vision has haunted him ever since.

"That image of our beautiful garden, which I saw for the final time, still lingers in my eyes: pomegranates and persimmons gleamed brightly on the trees under the brilliant sun," he said, looking at his calloused hands.

The 65-year-old's family of eight is among more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians who fled Karabakh after Azerbaijan recaptured the long-disputed region in a September lightning offensive against Armenian separatist forces.

The exodus of the entire Armenian population from the mountainous enclave has sparked a refugee crisis in Armenia.

On Sep 19, "we heard machine-gun fire and artillery shells exploding close to our house", said Suren's daughter-in-law Arevik.

"At first, we thought it was just another skirmish with the Turks," she said, referring to Turkic-speaking Azerbaijanis.

"But then our panicked village headman came in and said we must all run away as the Turks were already in the village outskirts."

The Martirosyans now live in a decrepit house they rented thanks to government aid in the village of Noyakert, some 50km from the Armenian capital Yerevan.

After just one day of fighting, Armenian separatist authorities, which had controlled Karabakh for three decades, surrendered and agreed to reintegrate with Baku.

Suren blamed Russian peacekeepers - deployed in Karabakh after Armenia's ally Moscow brokered a ceasefire in autumn 2020 – and the Yerevan government for the fall of the breakaway Karabakh republic.

"Our army fought bravely to protect our motherland, it was Russia and the Armenian government who suffered defeat in Karabakh."

Azerbaijan's victory marked the end of the protracted territorial dispute, which had long been seen as unresolvable.

On Sep 26, separatist president Samvel Shahramanyan signed a decree ordering that the breakaway republic "will cease to exist" by the year's end.

But in a surprise move last week, he rolled back on the announcement in comments given in Yerevan.

The statement appeared to undo a historic move by the separatists to dissolve the disputed territory that was at the centre of two costly wars between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2020 and the 1990s.

It will have no effect on the ground, as Karabakh is now under full Azerbaijani control, and Yerevan is unlikely to support the continued functioning of separatist institutions on its territory.

But Shahramanyan's decision resonated with many Karabakh refugees who still cherish their decades-long dream of secession from Azerbaijan.

"Kids are constantly having nightmares, crying at night and keep asking me when we will return home," said Arevik.

"We will return under the sole condition: if we will be living separately from the Turks, and when our children's safety will be guaranteed 100 per cent."

Arch-foes Armenia and Azerbaijan have said they are close to signing a peace agreement based on the recognition of each other's territorial integrity.

But few among Karabakh refugees share the hope, as deeply-rooted ethnic hatred still poisons relations between Armenians and Azerbaijanis after decades of enmity.

"I don't believe in peace" with Azerbaijanis, said 65-year-old refugee Boris Dolukhanyan, whose son was killed in the 2020 war with Azerbaijan.

"How can we live alongside Turks who killed my child?" he added. "We must become strong enough to retake our land by force."

Dolukhanyan said his family "lived a prosperous life" in Karabakh's main city of Khankendi (Stepanakert in Armenian), where they had several houses, land plots, and a farm of exotic birds.

"We left behind our paradise," he said, adding that they now rent a three-room apartment in Yerevan, which they can no longer afford, and are looking for cheaper housing.

His 10-year-old granddaughter, Ruzanna, said her Christmas wish was for "Santa to make a miracle so that we can return home".

Source: AFP/ec