Lemkin Institute: Statement on Aliyev’s Recent Holocaust Analogy

Mar 12 2026
Statement on Aliyev’s Recent Holocaust Analogy 
March 12, 2026

The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention expresses grave concern over recent remarks by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in which he compared Armenian political detainees and prisoners of war to Nazi leaders convicted at the Nuremberg trials. During a 13 February interview with France 24 TV channel, Aliyev stated: “[c]alling for the release of the former [Nagorno-]Karabakh leaders is the same thing, even worse. Their crimes are worse than what the Nazis did during World War II.” Aliyev then argued that requests that he release Armenian detainees are akin to asking the Allies to free Nazi officials before their sentences. This statement is particularly dangerous in the context of the Israel-U.S. war of aggression against Iran, which has catapulted Azerbaijan into a position as a critical wartime ally, granting President Aliyev even greater impunity than he has thus far enjoyed.

Aliyev’s comparison does not reflect historical reality. It distorts it. It weaponizes it.

Aliyev’s comments were made just a few days after his meeting with U.S. Vice President JD Vance, in which Vance raised the issue of releasing Armenian hostages still being held by Baku. Aliyev’s comments demonstrate his ongoing disrespect for U.S. leadership, whose small requests on behalf of Armenians he routinely dismisses. His rhetoric is further a prime example of “mirroring,” a common tactic used by leaders accused of serious abuses of international law. While there is absolutely no credible evidence that any of the Armenians currently being held by Baku have committed any crimes, much less crimes against humanity and genocide (some of them are in fact POWs that Azerbaijan was supposed to return to Armenia in 2020), Aliyev and his government stand accused by credible observers and international legal experts, including at the Lemkin Institute, of genocide and crimes against humanity for conduct in Nagorno-Karabakh.

In September 2023, Azerbaijan’s military attacked and invaded the Republic of Artsakh, a de facto independent state with a population that was 99 percent Armenian, resulting in the forced displacement of the entire population of the region – more than 100,000 Armenians. Independent experts, including former International Criminal Court Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo, have determined that Azerbaijan’s prior 10-month blockade and the September military assault demonstrated genocidal intent. The Lemkin Institute’s 127-page report, Risk Factors and Indicators of the Crime of Genocide in the Republic of Artsakh: Applying the UN Framework of Analysis for Atrocity Crimes to the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict, published on 5 September 2023, discusses Azerbaijan’s genocidal intent towards Artsakh Armenians in detail. The International Association of Genocide Scholars later also found that Azerbaijan had committed acts of genocide against Armenians. As part of its attack, Azerbaijan took many officials in the Artsakh government hostage. They have since been subjected to inhumane conditions of detention and show trials.

The Lemkin Institute considers President Aliyev to be the leader of a genocidal state – a state whose institutions are suffused with genocidal ideology, whose policies are formed by genocidal agendas, and whose genocidal rhetoric serves as an important ballast for domestic legitimacy. President Aliyev has institutionalized genocidal Armenophobia across state agencies and public life. Before 2023, he frequently referred to Armenians as “dogs,” “jackals,” “rabbits,” and terrorists in public speeches. After the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, he built a “Trophy Park” in Baku to celebrate Azerbaijan’s supposed victory in the war, which included dehumanizing wax models of dead and dying Armenian soldiers with exaggerated, grotesque features that Azerbaijani visitors were encouraged to mock. Being one of the most openly and unapologetically racist acts of the 21st century, the Trophy Park garnered some attention and criticism in the Western world, and Azerbaijan was forced to remove the figures. However, the Trophy Park itself remains, as does the genocidal Armenophobia that informed it.

It appears that in exchange for a green light from the international community to invade Artsakh, the Azerbaijani President has had to tone down his Armenophobic rhetoric. Now, instead of shouting epithets, he pursues false charges against the Armenians still in his control and justifies his illegal actions by comparing them to Nazi war criminals and architects of genocide. The only “crime” committed by the Armenian representatives of the former Artsakh government being held in Baku is that they exercised their right to self-determination and sought to protect the Armenian residents of the enclave – whose presence dates back four thousand years – from Azerbaijani aggression. Unfortunately, the leaders of the world seem all too willing to countenance international crimes from the now respectable genocidal dictator whom their appeasement has enabled, even granting him the honor of hosting COP29 in 2024.

Beyond mirroring, President Aliyev’s remarks are illustrative of another common and very effective tactic employed by genocidal states – what psychologists call DARVO: Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender. Aliyev denies credible allegations of atrocity. He attacks Armenians as supposed war criminals. He then reverses reality by portraying Azerbaijan as the real victim and Armenians as existential threats. Such rhetoric does more than increase tensions. It encourages people to see genocide as justified.

Aliyev’s remarks constitute a dangerous form of genocide denial. In a few sentences that diminish the Holocaust, he simultaneously denies the destruction of Armenian life in Nagorno-Karabakh. He denies responsibility for the mass forced displacement his government engineered. And he inexcusably minimizes the Holocaust by abusing its memory as cover for his overall genocidal aims in the South Caucasus. The Holocaust, it must be remembered, was a systematic attempt to annihilate European Jewry and is one of the most comprehensive and all-encompassing genocides in human history. Six million Jews were murdered by the Nazis and millions more people were killed in the global war that the Nazis started. It is impossible for any international crime to be “worse than” the Holocaust, or, to quote Aliyev, “worse than what the Nazis did.” Invoking it to justify the continued detention of Armenian prisoners who were defending their homeland diminishes the Holocaust’s unique history and moral weight.

Genocide prevention requires accuracy. It does not allow leaders to use false comparisons to distract from present abuses. The international community must push back against President Aliyev’s ongoing genocidal rhetoric against Armenians and sovereign Armenian territory in order to support clarity within discussions of genocide. It must not tolerate his genocidal denial.

The continued detention and prosecution of Armenian prisoners in Azerbaijan raise serious concerns under international humanitarian law. The Third Geneva Convention requires humane treatment and prohibits coercive prosecutions of prisoners of war. Throughout the entire process of the trial, there has been evidence of torture of the Armenian prisoners by the relevant Azerbaijani agencies. Amnesty International and others have expressed concerns over the rights of the captured former leaders of Artsakh, particularly in terms of their right for fair trial. Azerbaijan must either release these detainees or provide transparent legal proceedings consistent with its international obligations.

History shows that perpetrators of atrocity often rely on extreme rhetoric to legitimize extraordinary measures. They cast targeted groups as criminals, terrorists, or existential enemies. They invoke past traumas to justify present repression. They frame collective punishment as a moral necessity. Such patterns function as early warning indicators of further abuse.

The Lemkin Institute calls on the Azerbaijani government to cease its dehumanizing, genocidal rhetoric against Armenians, to refrain from using the Holocaust to justify its crimes, and to release all Armenian prisoners immediately. Since President Aliyev has himself stated that he will not do this, the international community must pressure him to do so. Coordinated pressure must be placed specifically on the person of President Aliyev, who relies a great deal on the good graces of the Western world in particular for his continued power. If the Western world does not act and continues to embolden the Azerbaijani President, they will face even worse problems down the road. The greater the impunity extended to President Aliyev, the more he will seek to realize his dreams of a “Greater Azerbaijan” encompassing the current independent Republic of Armenia.

Genocide prevention requires clarity. Leaders who project their own actions onto victims promote mass atrocity rather than address it. They undermine justice rather than uphold it. The international community must not allow historical memory to be manipulated in service of ongoing genocidal agendas.

Opposition MP: Azerbaijan consistently advances its goals while Armenian autho

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 13 2026

Opposition MP Tigran Abrahamyan stresses that Azerbaijan has made no official statements regarding the incursion of its troops into Armenian territory or the occupation of Armenian border areas, adding Baku has expressed no willingness to negotiate the issue.

In a social media post on Friday, Abrahamyan, who represents the Pativ Unem faction, pointed to Azerbaijan’s significant investments in fortifications and infrastructure in the territories it currently controls, arguing that such spending suggests Baku does not expect to withdraw from those areas in the near future.

“If those territories were to be returned in one, two or three years, why would Azerbaijan spend such large sums there?” he wrote.

Abrahamyan criticized the Armenian authorities, saying the government’s response has largely been limited to occasional brief statements referring to the uncertain process of border demarcation between the two countries.

“Unlike the local authorities, Azerbaijan is consistently setting and advancing its agenda,” he said, adding that these developments are unfolding “at the expense of Armenian interests”.

Artsakh parliament speaker says Pashinyan government not authorized to speak f

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 13 2026

The speaker of the Artsakh National Assembly states the Armenian government has never been authorized by the Artsakh people to represent them or treat the territory as a bargaining tool in political negotiations.

In a statement released on Friday, Artsakh parliament speaker Ashot Danielyan criticized comments made by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in recent appearances before the European Parliament and at press briefings, saying they were based on “ignorance and falsehood” about Artsakh and the Karabakh movement.

Danielyan said the remarks had angered thousands of displaced Artsakh Armenians who have not accepted the occupation of Artsakh carried out through crimes against humanity.

“The people of Artsakh have never authorized the current authorities of the Republic of Armenia to speak on their behalf or to treat Artsakh as a bargaining chip,” he said.

Danielyan also defended the historical Karabakh movement, saying attempts to portray it negatively cannot discredit the people’s “heroic struggle for freedom and peace.”

He argued that the authority of any government, including Armenia’s, is limited to its own borders and that making decisions affecting another state’s population violates fundamental principles of international law.

Danielyan questioned the characterization of recent developments as a peace process, asking why Azerbaijani troops remain on 240 square kilometers of Armenian territory and why around 150,000 displaced Armenians from Artsakh have not been able to return to their homes.

He also cited Armenian detainees held in Baku and destruction of Armenian cultural and historical heritage in Artsakh.

Danielyan said presenting a distorted version of the Karabakh movement before European lawmakers, who in recent years adopted resolutions condemning Azerbaijan’s actions and Turkey’s involvement, shows “disrespect toward that institution”.

He further criticized attempts to frame the conflict as merely a territorial dispute, saying that for decades the people of Artsakh pursued self-determination in full accordance with international law and with support from international organizations.

According to Danielyan, changing international attitudes toward the issue in recent years has been influenced not only by geopolitical developments but also by the Armenian government’s approach to Artsakh.

“The inalienable right of the Artsakh people  to self-determination, to return to their homeland, live safely and determine their own fate cannot disappear through lies and distortions,” he said.

Danielyan added that Artsakh’s elected institutions would continue to pursue “all legal means and mechanisms” to restore the violated rights of Artsakh Armenians with support from individuals and groups concerned about the issue.

Pashinyan calls Declaration of Independence a ‘conflict charter’

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 13 2026

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said the country’s Declaration of Independence should be removed from a new constitution, describing it as a “declaration of conflict” rather than of statehood.

In a live broadcast on Friday, Pashinyan argued that the 1990 document was rooted in the Nagorno-Karabakh movement and territorial claims, rather than the security and welfare of Armenian citizens. “It’s not a declaration of independence, but of conflict,” he said.

The prime minister warned that continuing the Karabakh movement would inevitably lead to “new war”, while abandoning it would open the path to peace. He framed Armenia’s political debate as a choice between a “peace party” and a “war party,” urging voters to decide the country’s direction in upcoming elections.

“Peace will grow stronger every day, and Armenia’s independence and sovereignty will grow stronger every day,” Pashinyan declared, positioning his Civil Contract party as the only force advocating for a constitution without reference to the declaration.

Levon Ter-Petrosyan predicts ‘capital overhaul’ if opposition wins elections

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 14 2026

Former Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrosyan believes the country could undergo a major transformation if the opposition wins the upcoming elections.

“I believe if the opposition secures victory in the upcoming elections, a true capital overhaul will take place in the country,” Ter-Petrosyan said in a message addressed to participants of the 5th Congress of the Armenian National Congress.

The message was read aloud during the congress by Avetis Avagyan, a board member of the party.

In his address, Ter-Petrosyan wished the congress participants success and productive work, expressing hope that they would achieve the desired outcome in the forthcoming parliamentary elections. He also commended their efforts to form alliances ahead of the vote.

Armenian economist warns consumption-driven economy fuels inflation, poverty

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 14 2026

Armenia’s heavy reliance on consumer spending is driving inflation and poverty rather than sustainable growth, economist Mikayel Melkumyan warned at a policy forum in Yerevan.

Speaking at a debate hosted by the “New Project: Economic Wave” initiative on Saturday, Melkumyan, a professor of economics, said more than 90% of Armenia’s GDP is tied to consumption. “An economy built almost entirely on consumption cannot deliver development,” he said. “This model inevitably fuels inflation and poverty, no matter how much wages or pensions are raised.”

Melkumyan unveiled a 10-point plan aimed at rebalancing the economy toward investment and production. The proposals include creation of 10 tax-free industrial zones across Armenia’s regions, raising the minimum wage from 75,000 drams to 120,000 drams within two years, launching a streamlined “one-stop” program to attract investors, indexing pensions and salaries ahead of inflation, cutting turnover tax for small and medium enterprises to 1%, reducing gas and electricity tariffs by 10%, halving property tax rates, granting loan amnesty on penalties for debts up to 3 million drams, building cold storage, packaging, and warehousing facilities in every region and making higher education free of charge.

He stressed the need for industrial development outside the capital. “We need to study the state of enterprises in the regions, take stock and give businesses the tools to operate with industrial mortgages. It is time to move activity out of Yerevan and build up the regions,” Melkumyan said.

Pashinyan accused of fighting ‘Karapetyan’s image’ as court extends his house

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 14 2026

Armenia’s Anti-Corruption Court has extended by one month the house arrest of businessman and philanthropist Samvel Karapetyan, the prime ministerial candidate of the opposition Strong Armenia party.

Party council member Narek Karapetyan denounced the decision, alleging that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was seeking to compete “only against Karapetyan’s image” in the upcoming elections, describing the government’s approach as “fighting against a shadow”.

“But despite this, he will lose even this fight,” Karapetyan said, promising that the party would soon unveil its next steps. He insisted that “in three months, Samvel Karapetyan will be Armenia’s prime minister”.

Armenian MP warns government pressure increasing ahead of June 7 elections

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 14 2026

Armenian opposition lawmaker Tigran Abrahamyan said on Saturday that government pressure on political figures and public personalities had intensified ahead of the June 7 parliamentary elections, warning that the effects of these measures would become more visible in the coming period.

“Because of the use of the authorities’ repressive mechanisms, there are currently not only political prisoners in detention facilities, but also dozens of individuals under house arrest, administrative supervision, travel restrictions, or bail conditions,” he wrote on Facebook on Saturday.

The Pativ Unem faction MP added that many others were being drawn into lengthy court proceedings.

According to Abrahamyan, the strategy was not newly introduced but had been consistently applied against figures and media personalities whose activities the authorities consider politically threatening.

“The government pressure has undergone transformations ahead of June 7, and its wave and impact will become apparent in the near future,” he wrote.

Economist warns of ‘financial time bomb’ in Armenia’s banking system

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 14 2026

Economist Aghasi Tavadyan warned that a “major financial time bomb” has already been planted in Armenia’s banking system due to a surge of money flowing into banks and the rapid expansion of lending.

Speaking at the panel discussion “Proposal for Armenia: A New Economic Policy” organized by the New Project: Economic Wave initiative on Saturday, Tavadyan said the influx of funds forced banks to deploy the money somewhere in the economy, primarily by issuing more loans.

“As a large volume of money entered the banking system, banks had to put it to work somewhere,” Tavadyan said. “They have done so largely by expanding lending.”

According to data he presented, the share of mortgage loans in Armenia’s total loan portfolio has risen sharply over the past decade and a half. In 2008, mortgages accounted for just 8% of the portfolio. Today they make up about 24%,marking a threefold increase.

Consumer loans remain the largest category and continue to grow, he said. Tavadyan added that roughly 13% of borrowers who have taken out consumer loans are already considered insolvent.

He also pointed to the scale of financial distress among borrowers. Around 300,000 people, roughly one in six members of Armenia’s working-age population, are listed in the banking system’s credit blacklist, he said.

“That is an enormous figure and a serious problem,” Tavadyan said.

The economist also described Armenia’s real estate market as a major area of concern. He noted that 38% of the country’s gross domestic product has been generated by the financial sector, real estate and construction combined.

According to Tavadyan, much of the capital that entered the banking system ultimately flowed into the property market. Demand had previously been driven in part by the arrival of Russian nationals in Armenia and by the forced displacement of Armenians from Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).

But he said recent trends suggest the situation may be reversing.

“We are now seeing the opposite picture,” Tavadyan said. “People are leaving Armenia and emigrating. Liquidity problems are already emerging in this market.”

Over the past year, he added, property prices in Yerevan’s Kentron and Arabkir districts have stopped rising and, according to available data, have even begun to decline.

Tavadyan also warned that international developments could amplify the risks. He pointed to instability in Dubai’s financial and real estate markets following the recent attack on Iran, noting that capital outflows, falling prices and potential corporate bankruptcies there could trigger wider global economic turbulence.

Sonia Shiragian’s un[real] visit to Armenia

MediaMax, Armenia
Mar 14 2026

In December, I “unearthed” the article “Visit to Armenia,” published in The New Yorker in 1963. At the time, I hadn’t read it in its entirety, but I felt it was interesting and sent it for translation.

This week I finally found the time to read the translation – the day after writing this bittersweet column. I had barely gone through a few paragraphs when tears came to my eyes. Sonia Shiragian’s story was so beautiful and moving, so full of love for her father and his friends living in 1930s New York. Maria Sadoyan has translated it in such a way that you simply cannot believe the text was not originally written in Armenian. 

We read Sonia Shiragian’s story in today’s Armenia – an Armenia that Pashinyan calls “real” and does not hide the fact that he has launched an uncompromising struggle against memory. Sonia writes about what Armenians living in New York and dreaming of Armenia felt about a hundred years ago:

My father was not religious, but in speaking of Armenia he used the word “paradise” often. There were two paradises. One was a spot in the heavens above us with which the ancestral homeland could favorably be compared; the other, even more remote-I could, after all, see the sky-was Armenia itself. The two pictures blended in my imagination. Paradise descended to earth, and Armenia became a hallowed place on the roof of the world. There Mount Ararat-a lustrous, fragrant, green gold at its base-reached up so high into the heavenly blue that its peak was always covered by the whitest, purest snow. Noah’s ark had come to rest upon that peak, and there life had started all over again-the animals had marched down the mountain, the people had built fires and danced around Lake Sevan. 

What would those people do if they knew that a hundred years later the mention and depiction of Mount Ararat in the independent Armenia they longed for would become a problem?

I finished reading, wiped away my tears, and began looking for photos for the material. And then I was stunned: it turned out that Sonia Shiragian was the daughter of Arshavir Shiragian, a participant in Operation Nemesis. The very man about whom our Gohar Nalbandyan wrote an article two years ago for her Special Case series – “The most agile ‘fidget’ of Nemesis, Arshavir Shiragian.”

Even back then, looking at Arshavir’s photographs, I thought that the man who executed Jemal Azmi embodied Armenian nobility. And that article mentioned that Arshavir’s daughter had written a moving piece about her father for The New Yorker in the 1960s. Thus, the circle is closed.

Read Sonia Shiragian’s story. Read it and understand that memory and dreams can be killed only if you are willing to put up with it. 

I am more than certain that if Nikol Pashinyan and his teammates read this column, they will first grin, then assume a serious _expression_ and say: “These are emotions, and peace must be built cold-bloodedly.” And I will respond that it is emotions that create states and it is emotions that help states straighten their backs. Study history instead of fighting against it. 

Ara Tadevosyan is the director of Mediamax

https://mediamax.am/en/column/121671/