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EU calls for investigation into Artsakh helicopter downing

November 13, 2014 By administrator

184752The European Union has called for an investigation in an incident in which a military helicopter belonging to Nagorno Karabakh was shot down by Azerbaijan.

A statement issued by the European External Action Service (EEAS) said “it is essential that all sides show restraint and avoid any actions or statements which could escalate the situation. Furthermore, we call for an investigation into this incident.”

In its’ statement the European Union reiterated its full support to the efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group and its three Co-chairs. It said “both sides have to strictly respect the ceasefire, to refrain from the use of force or any threat thereof, and to resume efforts towards a peaceful resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.”

Mi-24 helicopter of the Nagorno Karabakh army was shot during a training flight as result of ceasefire violation by the Azerbaijani armed forces on Thursday, Nov 12, at about 1pm local time. According to the NKR Defense Ministry, the attack took place not far from the line of contact. Three people on board were killed.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: downing, EU, helicopter, investigation, Karabakh

Armenian President arrives in Karabakh (video)

November 13, 2014 By administrator

184770Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan has arrived in the Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) Republic on a working visit, a day after a military helicopter belonging to the NKR army was shot down by Azerbaijan during a training flight.

Accompanied by NKR leader Bako Sahakyan and Defense Minister of Armenia and Karabakh, President Sargsyan will visit a number of military units.

The armed forces of Armenia and the Nagorno Karabakh Republic are currently holding joint drills, which involve 47,000 people.

 

Source:PanARMENIAN.Net

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian President, arrive, Karabakh

The helicopter shot down by Armenian Azeri near Agna (Aghdam) was not armed as Yerevan

November 12, 2014 By administrator

arton105226-400x300The consequences for Azerbaijan of rising tension in the conflict will be painful for her and the military leadership of Azerbaijan will be held accountable. Statement just to make Ardzroun Hovhannisyan, the spokesman of the Armenian Army after helicopter Mi 24 Armenian killed by Azeris on the front of the Nagorno-Karabakh is almost Agna (Aghdam) today at about 13h45 to Aghdam and that killed the first informations- -according to 3 Armenian soldiers. Ardzroun Hovhannisyan also claimed that the helicopter was in training and was not armed. “Studying the wreckage of the aircraft testify,” he said. While Armenian spares wanted to head toward the downed helicopter, Azeris kept the fire to prohibit emergency access. The helicopter pilot was Major Sergei Sahakian. The identity of the other members of the crew chief Lieutenant and Lieutenant Azad Sahakian Sarkis Nazarian.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, helicopter, Karabakh

Azeris shoot down Artsakh army helicopter

November 12, 2014 By administrator

November 12, 2014 – 16:43 AMT

184727A Mi-24 helicopter of the Nagorno Karabakh army was shot during a training flight as result of ceasefire violation by the Azerbaijani armed forces at about 1pm local time.

According to the NKR Defense Ministry, the attack took place not far from the line of contact. At the moment, Azeris continue firing in the direction of the site.

Investigation is underway.

Citing its sources, Razm.info reported that 3 servicemen were killed.

According to Haqqin.az, the helicopter fell down at the territory controlled by Azerbaijan and caught fire.

The Armenian forces of Armenia and the Nagorno Karabakh Republic are holding join drills , which involve 47,000 people.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Azerbaijan, helicopter, Karabakh, shot down

30,000 soldiers involved in major military maneuvers of the armies of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh

November 11, 2014 By administrator

arton105183-480x318The armed forces of Armenia and the Republic “sister” Nagorno-Karabakh began November 6 an extensive program of military maneuvers very large scale is called “Unity 2014”. According to the Ministry of Defence Karabakh over 30,000 soldiers involved in the military operations in 1550 with guns, 600 tanks, anti-tank weapons in 1300, 3000 military vehicles, helicopters and hundreds of other military equipment to attack. These maneuvers that progress “according to plan” aimed at improving the ability of troops and the use of military material in simulated combat situations.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Karabakh, maneuvers, military

Azerbaijan Moderates Stance At Paris Karabakh Talks

November 5, 2014 By administrator

F940DB56-C219-4201-8039-61D59A4407CA_w640_r1_sFrench President Francois Hollande (center) stands with his counterparts, Azerbaijan’s İlham Aliyev (left) and Armenia’s Serzh Sarkisian before their talks in Paris on October 27.

The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Serzh Sarkisian and Ilham Aliyev, met in Paris on October 27 for a further round of talks under the aegis of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group tasked with mediating a peaceful solution to the deadlocked conflict over the future status of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

Few observers seriously believed that the Paris talks would yield significant progress, let alone a breakthrough, in resolving the conflict. But by the same token, neither was it widely expected that Azerbaijan would soften its negotiating position, as it did with regard to confidence-building measures.

That shift in the Azerbaijani rhetoric was, moreover, just one of several reasons why the meeting between the two presidents — their third within the past three months — may herald a new phase in the ongoing international effort to mediate a political solution that would at least partially satisfy all three parties to the conflict.

The Paris talks took place at the initiative of French President Francois Hollande, and represented a further attempt by France and the United States, in response to the summit convened in Sochi in August by Russian President Vladimir Putin, to reassert the importance of the Minsk Group (which is jointly co-chaired by France, the United States, and Russia) as the sole diplomatic mechanism for mediating the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The Sochi meeting was the first between Aliyev and Sarkisian since November 2013, when the Minsk Group mediated talks in Vienna. Although no formal protocol was signed, the Sochi summit did result in the cessation of exchanges of fire along the Line of Contact separating the Armenian and Azerbaijani armed forces that had claimed at least 20 lives in the preceding weeks.

At the same time, President Putin as host took the opportunity to stress the “special and particularly close” rapport between himself and his interlocutors. All three were born and came to maturity in the final decades of the Soviet Union. Russian commentator Sergei Markedonov has made the point that Putin enjoys good personal relations with both Aliyev and Sarkisian.

Back To ‘Basics’

In response to Putin’s exercise in unilateral diplomacy outside the framework of the Minsk Group, a meeting was hurriedly organized on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Wales between Aliyev and Sarkisian, neither of whom had originally planned to attend. (Unlike neighboring Georgia, neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan aspires to NATO membership.)

The Newport meeting between the two presidents was mediated personally by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in a break with the traditional U.S. practice of not engaging senior officials at such a high level with no likelihood of tangible results.

In light of the failure of the conflict sides to iron out their differences with regard to the Madrid Principles for resolving the conflict that have been under discussion since 2007, the Paris talks reportedly focused instead on “basics.” That concept comprises keeping the faltering peace process alive, and continuing efforts, including confidence-building measures, intended to prevent a new flare-up of fighting along the Line of Contact.

That latter objective is all the more pressing given that over the past three years, frustrated by international mediators’ perceived unwillingness to strong-arm Yerevan into unconditionally withdrawing from seven districts of Azerbaijan bordering on Nagorno-Karabakh that Armenian forces seized control of in the early 1990s, Azerbaijan has launched more frequent and more audacious efforts to infiltrate territory currently controlled by Nagorno-Karabakh’s forces. That more assertive stance has fuelled apprehension among the international community that threat misperception and tactical miscalculation could result in a small local exchange of fire spiraling out of control and triggering a full-scale “war by accident.”

The Minsk Group co-chairmen have repeatedly appealed to the conflict sides to reduce the risk of such a conflagration by withdrawing snipers from the front line, which Baku has consistently refused to do. In Paris, however, President Aliyev did agree as a confidence-building measure to “proceed with the exchange of data on missing persons in the conflict under the auspices of the International Committee of the Red Cross.”

Granted, such an exchange of data is unlikely to have a major impact on the ground. But it still represents a softening of the Azerbaijani position: speaking in Baku five months ago, Aliyev commented that  “we keep hearing from the mediating countries about confidence-building measures…. The best confidence-building measure is the withdrawal of the Armenian occupying forces from Azerbaijani lands. There can be no other confidence-building measure.”

In contrast to the co-chairs’ focus on confidence-building measures, Hollande told Aliyev and Sarkisian that the status quo was unacceptable, and appealed to them to demonstrate the political will necessary to prepare their respective populations for the signing of a peace agreement. In that context, Hollande suggested beginning work on drafting a framework treaty, even though points of difference reportedly remain with regard to the Basic, or Madrid Principles, the broad guidelines that have been under discussion since 2006.

That proposal is likely to find favor with Azerbaijan, whose Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov affirmed in March that Baku is ready to sign such a framework document. But drafting it would create problems for Armenia insofar as there is an unwritten understanding among Minsk Group members that representatives of Nagorno-Karabakh (who do not at present participate directly in the Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations) should be involved in that process. James Warlick, the U.S. co-chair, repeated in May that the unrecognized republic should be involved in the ongoing peace talks.

The Karabakh Armenians, however, take a far tougher stance than their counterparts in Yerevan with regard to some of the Madrid Principles, especially the proposed withdrawal of Armenian forces from the seven occupied districts of Azerbaijan contiguous to Nagorno-Karabakh. De facto Prime Minister Ara Harutiunian went so far as to dismiss the Madrid Principles as “unacceptable to us.” He argued that “the liberated territories” that used to be populated by Azerbaijanis are vital for the region’s security and economic development.

What Does Russia Want?

The primary and most immediate threat to either finalizing the Madrid Principles or drafting a full-fledged agreement is, however, uncertainty and suspicion over Russia’s intentions in the South Caucasus in the wake of its annexation of Crimea. Not only does Moscow have little real incentive to push for a breakthrough in the peace process; its interests may be better served by either maintaining the current status quo or by exploiting an expansion of tension.

Furthermore, the current pressure Moscow is exerting on the breakaway Georgian region of Abkhazia to sign a new Treaty on Union Relations and Integration may herald a more assertive Russian policy toward its southern neighbors.

Granted, Russia currently has no leverage over Nagorno-Karabakh comparable to that it can bring to bear on Abkhazia or South Ossetia. But deliberately provoking a resumption of full-scale war between Armenia and Azerbaijan could provide such leverage, albeit at horrendous cost to the entire region.

Alternatively, Russia may either downgrade its participation in the Minsk Group mediation process to the level of collusion, rather than cooperation, or even, as veteran U.S. analyst Paul Goble has suggested, make a concerted effort to exclude France and the United States from that process in order to become the chief intermediary between Yerevan and Baku. That, Goble writes, would give Moscow the whip hand in determining outcomes, and simultaneously reinforce Putin’s vision that Russia can and must be the dominant power in the post-Soviet space, and that other countries must not interfere there.

— Liz Fuller and Richard Giragosian

Tags: Nagorno-Karabakh

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Karabakh

Karabakh court issues details from Azerbaijani saboteurs’ video recordings

November 2, 2014 By administrator

saboteursThe court hearing of the criminal case into the two members of an Azerbaijani intelligence-gathering sabotage team continued Friday at the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR), or Artsakh, capital city Stepanakert Court of First Instance.

At this hearing, the court issued details from the video recordings which the Azerbaijani saboteurs had made.

Artsakhpress reported that to Prosecutor Karen Gabrielyan’s question to defendant Dilham Askerov as to why he had earlier stated that they had not come across any soldiers when crossing the Karabakh-Azerbaijan border in the case when it was noted in the respective video recording that the Azerbaijani soldiers were telling them that, as if, they would die of starvation in the Shahumyan Region of Karabakh, whereas there is a lot of food here, the defendant denied this fact saying that he had not made any such comment, or video recording.

Askerov, who is also charged with the murder of Smbat Tsakanyan, also denied the prosecution’s evidence, according to which, meaning Tsakanyan, he had said in another video recording that they have picked up and are taking along with them a nearly twenty-year-old “piggy,” whom they cannot yet release, but Shahbaz Guliyev is watching over him.

Askerov agreed that even though the examination of his automatic weapon and the dead body of this Armenian teen prove to his guilt, he denied his involvement in the murder.

It is also noteworthy that Dilham Askerov has given contradictory testimony. On the one hand, he stated that Hasan Hasanov had picked up his automatic weapon wherewith they had killed Tsakanyan, and on the other hand, he noted that he had not exchanged his weapon with none of the sabotage team members.

According to the NKR Police, Azerbaijani citizens Shahbaz Guliyev (born in 1968), Dilham Askerov (born in 1960), and Hasan Hasanov, who was shot by law enforcement agents at the spot, illegally crossed the state border of Karabakh armed with a weapon and ammunition on June 29. The three entered the territory of the Shahumyan region of Karabakh as enemy spies to collect information and carry out espionage tasks.

On July 4, they kidnapped and murdered the citizen of Karabakh, 17-year-old Smbat Tsakanyan, whose body was found on July 15 with gunshot wounds in the forest at Shahumyan region. In addition, in the evening of July 11, on Vardenis-Karvachar highway Hasanov killed the resident of Yerevan Sargis Abrahamyan (born in 1971), and severely wounded the resident of Armenian Dzoraghbyur village Karine Davtyan.

Hasanov was armed and resisted during the arrest; as a result, he was neutralized by the NKR special forces. The two others, Shahbaz Guliyev and Dilham Askerov, were arrested and detained.

Dilham Askerov is charged for espionage; unauthorized border trespass; kidnapping and violence against a minor, committed by an organized group; murder committed by an organized group motivated by ethnic hatred; attempt of murder of two persons, committed by an organized group, motivated by ethnic hatred. Shahbaz Guliyev is charged for espionage; unauthorized border trespass; kidnapping and violence against a minor, committed by an organized group; murder committed by an organized group motivated by ethnic hatred.

report news.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Karabakh, saboteurs

Armenian, Azerbaijani leaders agree to yet another meeting in New York next year

October 29, 2014 By administrator

French President Francois Hollande called on his visiting Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts to show “political will” to overcome the differences and prepare their peoples for peace as he hosted their talks in Paris on Monday, Oct 27, RFE/RL Armenian Service reported.

President Serzh Sargsyan met his Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev for the third time in less than three months over the Karabakh conflict. After face-to-face talks they were joined by the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – U.S. Ambassador James Warlick, Igor Popov of Russia, and France’s Pierre Andrieu.

Hollande initiated the talks during his tour of the South Caucasus in May, three months before a major outbreak of violence in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone.

Since early August Sargsyan and Aliyev already met twice – through the mediation of Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

According to the Elysee Palace press office, during their trilateral meeting French President Hollande urged Sargsyan and Aliyev to “boost efforts for settling the conflict within the framework of international law and the principles outlined by the Minsk Group”.

The French leader reportedly called it unacceptable to maintain the status quo in the conflict, suggesting that the parties draft a comprehensive peace agreement.

According to the French side, Sargsyan and Aliyev agreed to continue their dialogue that would also include a meeting at the next session of the UN General Assembly in New York next year.

Meanwhile, Co-Chair Warlick positively evaluated the Sargsyan-Aliyev talks.

“I think the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan agree the Paris summit was a positive step. Thanks to Francois Hollande,” he Tweeted on Oct 28.

In late July, early August, Armenia and Azerbaijan appeared to be teetering on the edge of renewed hostilities after an unprecedented escalation of violence at the Line of Contact in Nagorno Karabakh and along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border proper.

At least two dozen servicemen were killed in skirmishes and commando raids.

RFE/RL Armenian Service. Armenia, Azerbaijan Urged To Step Up Efforts On Karabakh Settlement

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: another meeting, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Karabakh

Karabakh: Azerbaijani saboteurs plead partially guilty

October 29, 2014 By administrator

sabatourSTEPANAKERT. – Members of the Azerbaijani sabotage group arrested in Nagorno-Karabakh pleaded partially guilty.

The first hearing into case of Dilgam Askerov and Shahbaz Guliyev was chaired by judge Anatoly Tadevosyan. The defendants’ lawyers – Erik Baghdasaryan and Arkady Israelyan – have been appointed by the state.

During the first day of the trial, identity of the defendants, family status and presence of prior conviction was clarified. It was revealed that Askerov lied in court, hiding 15-day jail term. Meanwhile, Guliyev spent 6 years in jail, and, as he said, was acquitted.

Both defendants said they accept guilt in part. Dilgam Askerov said he does not plead guilty in illegally crossing the border of Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh in 2005 accompanied by Shahbaz Guliyev and twice in 2007, with persons named Raffi and Vagif, and the second time alone with a plan to visit the gravee. At the same time, he accepted the charge of illegally crossing the border in 2014 with Shahbaz Guliyev and Hasan Hasanov. Askerov did not accept charges of espionage as well as kidnapping and murdering minor Smbat Tsakanyan. Meanwhile, the charge of illegal possession of weapons, money theft, documents and cattle were accepted.

Shahbaz Guliyev also pleaded partially guilt. According to Guliyev, in 2005, “he was not aware of the presence of the border”. In 2014, he crossed the border still being unaware of the border.

“Dilgam said there is no one there, and we believed him,” Guliyev said. He also partially accepted the charges of illegal possession of weapons.

“Weapons were given on the border. And in 2005, I was unarmed,” he said, thus contradicting the previous assertion that he did not know of the existence of the border. Charges of kidnapping a minor were not accepted as well (Guliyev is not charged with murder – ed).

“I gave him bread. I was with them [(associates], saw everything, but did not do anything,” the defendant said.

Source: news.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Karabakh, saboteurs

Nagorno-Karabakh to host wine festival

October 20, 2014 By administrator

karabakh-wineThe first wine festival will be held in Nagorno-Karabakh on October 18 in Tokh village of Hadrut Region.

The goal of the festival is to intensify development of communities located in the southern direction and to promote tourism development in NKR.

The festival was initiated by the NKR department on tourism and protection of historical environment, and has key importance in terms of revival of winemaking traditions of Karabakh.

This platform will enable Armenia and Karabakh wine makers to sell and promote their products and exchange experience.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: festival, Karabakh, wine

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