Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

Expert: Israel uses Azerbaijan as a range

June 25, 2017 By administrator

Israel uses Azerbaijan as a range YEREVAN. – Israel is using Azerbaijan as a range for weapons, military expert Arkady Grigoryan believes.

His comment came in response to Armenian News – NEWS.am request to comment on the Azerbaijani and Israeli media reports.

“In fact, based on publications, it turns out that the Azeris used Spike earlier than its development was completed in Israel. On the other hand, it is very likely that Azerbaijanis are simply bluffing, giving out old versions for newer ones,” the expert said.

At the same time, he believes that the Israeli side will not point to Baku’s tricks, as Azerbaijan’s use of Israel-made weapons has a double advantage: Azerbaijan is both a testing ground and a means of advertising.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Israel, Karabakh, range

Another Azerbaijan Fake news The Azerbaijani media present a man who speaks very badly Armenian as an Armenian soldier

June 21, 2017 By administrator

Azerbaijan fake NewsAzerbaijani media together with the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense have presented the video footage of a soldier who, according to them, is “A soldier of the forces of the Minister of Defense of Armenia”. This man with a jerked Armenian presents himself as the soldier Zaven Karapetyan born on 16 November 1974 in the village of Dovegh in the Noyemberian region of northern Armenia. He says he lives there in Dovegh. He also claims to be a soldier engaged in the Armenian Army and participated in a “terrorist attack” against Azerbaijani positions. The problem is that Samvel Grigoryan, the mayor of the village of Dovegh, told the Armenian media that this man presenting himself by the Azeri as Zaven Karapetian is an unknown in the village …

Earlier, the Armenian Ministry of Defense had also denied the information of the arrest of this one that the Azeris were presenting as an “Armenian military”. Conclusion: Azerbaijan once again uses disinformation to hide its own losses in its attacks on Armenian positions in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, fake news

What ISIS does today we witnessed in the 90s in Azerbaijan, Armenian refugee says

June 19, 2017 By administrator

The refugee crisis is worsening worldwide every year, becoming a tool to destroy entire civilizations, Mariam Avakian, Coordinator at the Assembly of Armenian Refugees from Azerbaijani SSR, told a press conference on Monday.

“What is going on in ISIS today, we saw in Azerbaijan during the 90s. That was a genocide that has yet to be properly characterized by the two Armenian states. Due to that Genocide, entire native Armenian settlements were stripped of their population with some 660 thousand Armenians displaced and spread all over the globe,” Avakian said.

In her words, Armenian refugees forcibly displaced in Azerbaijan visit the Embassies of foreign states every year in Armenia to restore their rights. A similar visit is planned on the upcoming Friday at the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan.

Avakian noted that the Armenian refugees have the same problems as most of Armenians added to that their refugee status and the lack of permanent place of residence.

“Karabakh” committee member, the Head of a department at the Institute of Oriental Studies of the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia Aleksan Hakobyan, present at the press conference, noted the issue of the refugees is not a pressing topic in Armenia which is unjustifiable.

He informed that a Gardman or Shirvan Geology Museum is planned to be opened in Nor Hachn, Abovyan, or Charentsavan towns of Armenia to feature characteristic items of historical and cultural heritage of the Armenians who used to live in those territories. In Hakobyan’s estimates, the museum will cost 5-6 million AMD annually for the state budget. The museum would register all the refugees from Baku and other cities of Azerbaijan as well as collect unique materials they managed to take with them while fleeing Azerbaijan.
Mariam Avakian went further suggesting building a town for refugees at a lowland near Vorotan river, noting most refugees living abroad would invest in the project to come into life.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, comon enemy, ISIS

Artsakh President says Azerbaijani crimes would not remain unpunished

June 18, 2017 By administrator

azerbaijan must not go unpunished abakh,azerbaijan, Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan visited today a section on the republic’s east borderline, got acquainted with the course of the service and situation there.

The Information department at the President’s Office reported, during the consultation held with the command staff of one of the military units the President touched upon the latest cease-fire regime violations by Azerbaijan qualifying them as a terrorism and a gross violation of international law.

President Sahakyan stressed that such crimes would not remain unpunished.
Defense minister Levon Mnatsakanyan, other officials accompanied the President during the visit, the release said.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Karabakh

Azerbaijani Spy Scandal Leaves Trail Of Dead Suspects, “wave of arrests on espionage charges”

June 16, 2017 By administrator

azerbaijan spy ScandalWithin days of being swept up in a wave of arrests on espionage charges last month, at least four Azerbaijani soldiers and a retired military officer died in custody. The circumstances of their deaths are shrouded in secrecy.

Azerbaijan’s government and military have refused to comment on the deaths, news of which emerged shortly after authorities in May announced the spy scandal.

Journalists who initially reported on the deaths have been warned by the Prosecutor-General’s Office to stop. And most relatives of the dead soldiers are reluctant to speak to journalists, with some expressing fear about their own safety if they do.

The silence, Baku’s poor human rights record, and the way Azerbaijan’s military hastily buried the soldiers without letting relatives see their bodies, have fed rumors that the suspects were tortured to death while being interrogated.

Spying For Armenia

The spy scandal came to light on May 7 when a joint statement was issued by the State Security Service, the Prosecutor-General’s Office, the Interior Ministry, and the Defense Ministry.

It said authorities had “opened a criminal case against a group of military personnel and civilians in Azerbaijan” on charges of “treason against the state.”

The statement said members of the spy ring had worked for the intelligence services of archrival Armenia “at various times in the past” and “for their own interest.”

It also said they provided “state secrets” to Armenia, which Azerbaijan has been locked in conflict with over Nagorno-Karabakh for decades. The two countries fought a bloody war in the 1990s over the breakaway region of Azerbaijan, which is populated mainly by ethnic Armenians and is now controlled by Armenian-backed separatists.

Secretive Arrests

Azerbaijan’s authorities have not named any individuals accused in the spy case or specified how many suspects were arrested and charged.

But Ilham Ismayil, a former State Security Service officer, told RFE/RL that a total of 42 people were arrested in raids during May — mostly in the Terter region.

Ismayil told RFE/RL that the spy scandal stemmed from an incident in late 2016 when a group of Armenian military officers allegedly were allowed to cross from Nagorno-Karabakh and travel behind Azerbaijan’s front lines with the help of Azerbaijani officers.

He said some Armenian officers were given Azerbaijani military uniforms to wear and that they traveled to the center of Terter — a city that was heavily damaged by Armenian forces during the Nagorno-Karabakh war in the early 1990s.

State Security Service chief Madat Guliyev said the roundup of spy-ring suspects was ordered by President Ilham Aliyev after investigators under Guliyev’s command provided evidence to both the president and the Defense Ministry. Based on that evidence, the Defense Ministry took action.

Neither the State Security Service nor Azerbaijan’s government has publicly disclosed the nature of the intelligence the suspects allegedly provided to Armenia.

And, so far, there have been no public court hearings for any of the suspects.

Suspicious Deaths

Yadigar Sadiqov, a politician from the opposition party Musavat, has suggested that the deaths in custody of so many suspects just days after their arrests is highly suspicious.

“We don’t believe they died of natural causes,” Sadiqov wrote in a May 20 opinion column for the Baku-based online newspaper Bastainfo.com.

Sadiqov also suggested many people in Azerbaijan assume the suspects were tortured to death, noting that “across social media, there are people saying the government was justified to torture and kill” them.

In each case, the suspects were detained in raids close to the contact line that separates Armenian-backed and Azerbaijani forces near Nagorno-Karabakh.

Within days, their dead bodies were returned to their home villages and buried by soldiers who did not allow relatives to see them.

Opposition media in Azerbaijan that have reported about the deaths and burials have been officially warned they would be prosecuted for revealing “state secrets” if they published any more information about the spy case that wasn’t officially released by state institutions.

With the exception of a cousin of one dead soldier who spoke only on condition of anonymity because he feared retribution from authorities, relatives of the deceased suspects have refused to talk to RFE/RL or other media organizations.

Amnesty International confirms that it has received complaints from sources within Azerbaijan alleging that the soldiers were tortured to death.

But Levan Asatiani, Amnesty International’s campaigner on the South Caucasus, says his organization cannot immediately confirm the torture claims because Azerbaijan has become a “closed country” that blocks the work of international human rights researchers.

“We have not been able to verify those reports regarding soldiers and torture in the military,” Asatiani explained. “But Amnesty International generally has concerns about torture and ill treatment in Azerbaijan — specifically in the penitentiary institutions and the detention facilities.”

He said Azerbaijan has a well-documented history of using torture to induce false confessions from political prisoners who are lawyers, journalists, and opposition activists.

“You could say that the use of torture is a trend in Azerbaijan,” Asatiani said.

Hasty Burials

Namized Safarov, a Baku-based human rights lawyer, told RFE/RL that a retired military officer named Saleh Qafarov was arrested on treason charges in early May at his village of Aydinqyshlaq in the Gabala region.

Safarov said Azerbaijani soldiers returned Qafarov’s body four days later for burial in the village, but Qafarov’s relatives never saw his remains and were not allowed to attend the burial.

Since then, Safarov said, Qafarov’s family has faced “heavy harassment” from other villagers angered by the treason allegations. Qafarov’s children have been expelled from school.

Imran Cabbarov, the head of the local government in Aydinqyshlaq, confirmed that Qafarov died in custody.

“He died and was buried,” Cabbarov told RFE/RL. “Only law-enforcement bodies can talk about it. If he committed such a crime as treason, it would serve him right.”

Bastainfo.com and the Berlin-based independent website Meydan TV reported similar circumstances when the bodies of other suspects in the spy case were returned to their villages.

Temkin Nizamioglu, a 24-year-old lieutenant from the Ordubad region near Azerbaijan’s southern border with Iran, was one of at least three active military officers reportedly arrested in the case.

Nizamioglu was buried in his village of Darkend by Azerbaijani soldiers who returned his body.

“It’s true that his body was brought to the village for burial, and according to the soldiers who brought him, he had heart problems and died in a hospital,” the village’s municipal chief, Raqib, said.

The body of officer Elcin Quliyev was delivered for burial in his town of Terter on May 18 shortly after he was arrested in the spy case.

A cousin of Quliyev, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Meydan TV that the soldiers who returned his body didn’t give the family any details about the cause of his death.

“They just said they were investigating the issue and would inform us about the cause of his death when that investigation is finished,” the cousin said.

Mehman Huseynov, a military officer from the village of Agkend in the Terter region, also died in custody within days of being arrested in the spy case.

Local residents refused to allow Huseynov to be buried in the village cemetery because of the treason accusations against him.

Meydan TV also reported that a 32-year-old soldier named Elcin Mirzaliyev was buried in his village of Shalig in the Ucar region, within days of being arrested in the case.

That report said Mirzaliyev died on May 25 and was returned to his village the next day by soldiers who buried him without allowing relatives to see his body or attend his burial.

The head of Shalig’s municipality, Arif Ahmadov, confirmed that Mirzaliyev was buried but would not give any details about the cause of his death.

There have been anonymous claims on social media that other Azerbaijani soldiers have died in custody after being arrested for treason in the spy scandal.

RFE/RL could not confirm the veracity of those reports or attest to the reliability of the sources.

Written by RFE/RL correspondent Ron Synovitz, with reporting from RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, scandal, spy

Azerbaijani expert: Baku has not recognized Islamic State as a terrorist organization until now

June 13, 2017 By administrator

Azerbaijani expert: Baku has not recognized Islamic State as a terrorist organizationAzerbaijan,“Until now Baku has not recognized Islamic State as a terrorist group,” Azerbaijani expert Ilham Ismail announced, according to a report by Ghafghaz.ir Iranian news agency.

Reflecting on the recent Tehran terror attacks, the Azerbaijani expert in particular said: “Daish (the Islamic State) has been designated as a terrorist organization by Russia and the United States. Until now, it has not been officially recognized as a terrorist group in Azerbaijan. The issue is not related to recognizing the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) or Daish as terror group, but most importantly, fighting such groups.”

To remind, in an interview with Azerbaijani news agency APA (July 2015), Iran’s Ambassador to Azerbaijan Mohsen Pak Ayeen spoke about the possibility of Islamic State finding its way into the Caucasus region, noting the following: “The Islamic State has two targets in the Caucasus. Their first goal is causing threat and creating illiteracy in North Caucasus. Thus, putting pressure on Russia, they want to change this country’s position on Syria and Iraq. Their second target is Azerbaijan, a Shia country, they repeatedly stated it.”

In this respect, Ayatollah Seyed Hassan Ameli, representative of the Iranian Supreme Leader in Ardabil Province, expressed concerns in his report over the Islamic extremist groups operating in Azerbaijan, noting that the presence of the Islamic State terror group in Azerbaijan poses a serious threat to its neighboring Ardabil Province.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, islamic state

Terrorist State of Azerbaijan shells Armenian border villages

June 9, 2017 By administrator

Azerbaijan’s armed forces shelled several border villages in Armenia’s Tavush region on Thursday night, causing minor material damage to several residents’ property.
Speaking to Tert.am, the mayor of Baghanis, Narek Sahakyan, said their community was under fire from 9pm to 10pm. “We have not suffered essential losses; a few house roofs were damaged, and one resident had his house fence hit by a bullet,” he said.

Koti, another village in Tavush, also came under Azerbaijani fire at the same hours, the community’s governor confirmed. “The village suffered damage but not very significant,” he said, adding that the situation in the community is now calm.

Both villages were fired intensively by Azerbaijani troops also in the late hours of Wednesday

Nelly Lazaryan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Azerbaijan, shells, villages

Georgian Furor Erupts Over Azerbaijani Dissident’s Reported Abduction

June 8, 2017 By administrator

Georgian Furor Erupts Over Azerbaijani Dissident's Reported Abduction By Pete Baumgartner

When Afqan Muxtarli stepped out in downtown Tbilisi to buy some bread around dinnertime on May 29, he didn’t think the errand would take him some 600 kilometers away to a dank jail cell in Azerbaijan’s glimmering capital, Baku.

But Muxtarli — an Azerbaijani journalist who fled to Georgia with his family in 2015 after reportedly receiving threats while investigating alleged government corruption — never came home after speaking on the phone with his wife, Leyla Mustafayeva, just a few blocks from where they live with their 3-year-old daughter.

Worried when her husband failed to arrive or answer his phone, she reported Muxtarli missing and police began a search for him on May 30.

That same day, Azerbaijani officials announced he was in pretrial detention in Baku after being charged with trespassing, smuggling, and resisting police after trying to cross the border without a passport and with 10,000 euros ($11,300) in his pocket.

But Muxtarli — a fierce critic of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev — had a much different story to tell.

His lawyer in Azerbaijan, Elcin Sadiqov, said that Muxtarli told him that he had been accosted by four men on his way home in Tbilisi and forced into a car.

Muxtarli, who had once volunteered to be a bodyguard for RFE/RL investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova during her disputes with Azerbaijani authorities, said his abductors tied his hands, beat him, and put a hood over his head before driving toward Azerbaijan.

Muxtarli, 43, told Sadiqov that they changed cars twice before finally reaching the Laqadex-Balakan border crossing, where he was turned over to Azerbaijani officials who, he said, planted the euros on him and then promptly arrested him.

Sadiqov has been able to meet with Muxtarli only once since a court quickly ordered the journalist detained for 90 days as an investigation into his case continues.

Sadiqov said Muxtarli had bruises on his face and thinks he may have broken ribs due to the alleged beating he received from the unidentified men, three of whom he said were dressed as some kind of Georgian security officers.

At first the abductors spoke Georgian, Muxtarli said, but later those in the car were speaking in Azeri to people calling every 15-20 minutes asking for updates on the situation.

Georgian Outrage

Mustafayeva, Muxtarli’s wife, has dismissed the Azerbaijani version of her husband’s disappearance, adding that he never would have returned to Azerbaijan under the current conditions, knowing that he’d certainly be detained.

“We know the official version of the Azerbaijani side — that Mr. Muxtarli was trying to somehow sneak into Azerbaijan illegally, having left his passport at home,” Ghia Nodia, a Georgia analyst and professor of politics at Ilia State University in Tbilisi, tells RFE/RL. “But the credibility of that version is very low.”

Georgian civil activists, journalists, and ordinary citizens were outraged at the reports of Muxtarli’s delivery to Azerbaijan, with many suspecting the Georgian government’s knowledge if not connivance in the snatching.

“Most people assume Mr. Muxtarli was abducted, and if he was abducted then there are basically two possibilities,” Nodia says. “One that it was some kind of a [covert] deal between the Georgian government and the Azerbaijani government…or it was an Azerbaijani security service operation but supposedly they bribed some Georgian policemen — or maybe there is some kind of in-between: that the Azerbaijanis have hinted that we’ll take care of the business ourselves but you [Georgians] will kind of turn a blind eye to this.”

A group of Georgian journalists put black hoods over their heads and held up signs in support of Muxtarli in a protest in parliament on June 6, one of several demonstrations that have taken place since Muxtarli’s disappearance.

The “black-hood campaign” — in which people photograph themselves hooded or with signs in support of Muxtarli — spread quickly to Twitter and Facebook under the #freeAfgan hashtag.

On June 7, black-hooded journalists appeared unexpectedly on a Georgian TV show, prompting Deputy Interior Minister Shalva Khutsishvili to leave the program.

‘Serious Challenge’ For Georgia

Strong condemnation of Muxtarli’s reported abduction also poured in from Western countries and organizations and international rights groups.

“Azerbaijan has an appalling record of harassing and prosecuting government critics, and we are seriously concerned” about Muxtarli’s safety, Giorgi Gogia, the South Caucasus director at Human Rights Watch, told RFE/RL.

Amnesty International’s director for the South Caucasus, Levan Asatiani, called Muxtarli’s reported kidnapping “a deeply sinister development” for Azerbaijan, a country that he said is well-known for its “crackdown on journalists and human rights defenders.”

Asatiani called for Muxtarli’s immediate release and urged Georgian authorities to investigate the situation and “hold accountable all those involved in this gruesome operation.”

Georgian President Giorgi Margvelashvili said in a statement that Muxtarli’s “disappearance from Georgian territory” was a “serious challenge” for the country.

“Georgia is a regional leader in terms of protection of human rights and journalists in particular,” Margvelashvili said. “Upholding this standard is a matter of our state sovereignty.”

The Georgian government has been less condemnatory of the incident, Nodia says, and is urging people to wait for the probe to conclude before assuming any Georgian officials were involved in Muxtarli’s abduction.

Not-So-Warm Welcome

Many critics also dismissed the government’s offer of Georgian citizenship to Mustafayeva — which she refused, saying her husband is the one who needed a Georgian passport — noting that Muxtarli’s wife had her residency application rejected by Tbilisi just weeks ago.

Mustafayeva is one of several Azerbaijanis living in Georgia to experience such problems in recent months.

“Many [Azerbaijani] dissidents or oppositionists who are in Georgia were pressured to go elsewhere, they were denied residence permits, so…[Georgian officials] really consider this presence of Azerbaijani citizens — which their government considers social enemies — a problem for Georgia and they want to get rid of them,” Nodia says.

Azerbaijani opposition activist Dasqin Agalari, who was recently refused political asylum in Georgia, said that “we are all being politely told to leave the country,” Eurasianet.org reported.

“I think it’s obvious there is some kind of pressure by [Azerbaijan] on the Georgian government, which says, ‘You know we give you oil and gas and you depend on us energy-wise so you should do something about [the dissidents], it is unacceptable that all of our enemies are there and conspire against Azerbaijan,'” Nodia says. “And the Georgian government doesn’t want to alienate the Azerbaijani government. They don’t want to openly harass these people or hand them back to Azerbaijan but they don’t want to make the Azerbaijani government unhappy, either.”

Many observers point to Georgia’s dependence on Azerbaijan for its energy resources and to key Azerbaijani-funded transport and infrastructure deals in the Caucasus country as the reason for Georgia’s apparent pressure on Azerbaijan’s dissidents.

A social-media meme dubbed “Socartvelo” combines the name of Azerbaijan’s state oil company, SOCAR, with the native word for Georgia, Sakartvelo.

Blow To Reputation

The reputation of Georgia — whose citizens were recently granted visa-free travel to the European Union and which seeks to become a full-fledged member of that bloc as well as of NATO — is also taking a hit because of the Muxtarli incident.

“[It] is…a huge scandal that something like this could happen on Georgian soil,” Heidi Hautala, a Finnish member of the European Parliament, told RFE/RL. “I think it is very important to now clarify…through an independent and credible investigation who is…complicit in this horrible abduction.”

She said the European Parliament had a responsibility “to raise this question at the highest level.”

Nodia adds: “I think it is extremely embarrassing for Georgia because…basically [it’s] losing its reputation as an island of freedom in the Caucasus and it looks like…it is caving in to Azerbaijan, to the demands of the authoritarian government of Azerbaijan as well as from Turkey.”

Georgia is also being criticized for closing down a Turkish-run college in the seaport of Batumi late last year after the Turkish government said that institution was linked to the Gulen network, which Ankara accuses of carrying out last year’s failed coup attempt.

RFE/RL’s Georgian Service correspondent Bidzina Ramischwili and RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service contributed to this report

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Abduction, Azerbaijan, Dissident's, Georgia

Karabakh army soldier killed in Azeri gunfire

May 27, 2017 By administrator

karabakh soldier killedThe Nagorno Karabakh Republic Defense Army serviceman Armen Harutyunyan, 21, was lethally injured in Azeri gunfire Friday, May 26,

The soldier was killed in the northern direction of line of contact, at an NKR army unit’s defense position.

An investigation is underway to find out the details of the incident.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Karabakh, Killed, soldier

Turkey seeks more active political role in South Caucasus – Armenian historian

May 23, 2017 By administrator

Turkey joint militaryWith its plans to hold joint military drills in the South Caucasus, Turkey is trying to be politically more active in the region, an Armenian historian and orientalist said today, commenting on the recent developments.
“Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia are conducting joint military exercises in June and September. The trilateral format raises concern as the three countries’ cooperation has extended beyond the economic domain, developing into a political and even military cooperation,” Ruben Safrastyan, the director of National Academy’s Institute of Oriental Studies, told reporters in Yerevan.

Meantime warned of imminent hazards to Armenia, highlighting possible attempts to isolate the country. In his words, the cooperation will change also the regional balance, increasing Azerbaijan and Georgia’s advantages under Turkey’s support.
Safrastyan attributed Turkey’s active policies to the country’s deteriorated relations with the US.
“At meetings with the United States, Turkey raises such issues as the problem of Kurds or the extradition of [Fetullah] Gulen. Yet, we know that the most recent meeting between [Presidents Recept Tayyip] Erdogan and [Donald] Trump bore largely a formal character as it lasted only 20 minutes. Also, the US armed forces have been recently active on the Turkish-Syrian border, which is yet another blow to Turkey. The Turkey-US relations deteriorated further after the delegation led by Erdogan  beat peaceful protestors [in Washington],” he noted.
Safrastyan said he thinks that Turkey is now trying to raise its value for the US, considering the country an important partner.
Addressing the recent developments surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, he praised the OSCE Minsk Group’s recent statement as an attempt to “more objectively evaluate the situation”. “That’s a new trend, a new phenomenon so to speak. I think our diplomacy must do everything possible to maintain and deepen it further,” he added.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Georgia, military, Turkey

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • …
  • 72
  • Next Page »

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in