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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

Detained UNM Members Released, Trial Postponed


The trial of United National Movement members Nika Melia, Bacho Dilidze and Zviad Kuprava, who were arrested during the incident in Gldani, has been postponed until 23 October at 12:00. The detainees were released from the courtroom.

Irakli Edzgveradze, a deputy from the United National Movement in the Tbilisi City Council, was attacked in Gldani, near his home on September 22. According to him, more than 30 people physically attacked him.

Following the attack on Edzgveradze, the situation on the ground became tense. During the confrontation between the United National Movement members and the law enforcement officers, the police arrested three UNM members Nika Melia, Zviad Kuprava and Bacho Dolidze.

Ministry of Interior has claimed that they, as well as other participants in the confrontation with police prevented the law enforcement officers from carrying out their duties, resisted them and verbally and physically assaulted them. According to the Ministry of the Interior, the police officers sustained various injuries as a result of the confrontation. The police arrested three people under the Code of Administrative Offences. Administrative proceedings were also initiated against those who obstructed and resisted law enforcement officers in the performance of their duties.

The investigation into the attack on the police officers during the performance of their duties is being conducted under Article 353 Prima of the Criminal Code of Georgia.


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Aliyev y Pashinián se reunirán el 5 de octubre en Granada bajo los auspicios de la UE


Archivo - Ilham Aliyev y Nikol Pashinyan en una reunión con Vladimir Putin de anfitrión en una imagen de archivo

Archivo – Ilham Aliyev y Nikol Pashinyan en una reunión con Vladimir Putin de anfitrión en una imagen de archivo – Europa Press/Contacto/Mikhail Klimentyev/Kremlin P

MADRID, 24 Sep. (EUROPA PRESS) –

El primer ministro de Armenia, Nikol Pashinian, y el presidente de Azerbaiyán, Ilham Aliyev, se reunirán el 5 de octubre en Granada para abordar la negociación de un tratado de paz entre ambos países, según ha confirmado este domingo el Consejo de Seguridad de Armenia.

También estarán presentes el presidente de Francia, Emmanuel Macron; el canciller alemán, Olaf Scholz, y la presidenta de la Comisión Europea, Ursula von der Leyen, según recoge la Radio Pública de Armenia.

El secretario del Consejo de Seguridad armenio, Armen Grigorian, viajará el próximo martes a Bruselas para preparar esta cita. Allí se reunirá con el asesor de la Presidencia azerí, Hikmet Hajiyev. También se previsto reunirse con asesores de Macron, Scholz y del presidente del Consejo Europeo, Charles Michel.

La región de Nagorno Karabaj es un territorio de unos 4.400 kilómetros cuadrados en el Cáucaso Sur reconocido internacionalmente como parte de Azerbaiyán, si bien la mayoría de esta zona del país ha estado gobernada por la autoproclamada república de Artsaj –respaldada por Armenia–, desde la Primera Guerra de Nagorno Karabaj, entre 1988 y 1994.

Tras la ofensiva azerí de 2020 y el ataque relámpago del pasado 19 de septiembre en la que en un solo día las fuerzas de Azerbaiyán lograron un alto el fuego que incluye el desarme y la retirada de las fuerzas proarmenias de Nagorno Karabaj.


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Nagorno-Karabakh says no agreement yet with Azerbaijan on guarantees or amnesty – Reuters


Nagorno-Karabakh says no agreement yet with Azerbaijan on guarantees or amnesty – Reuters
19:19, 22 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 22, ARMENPRESS. Nagorno-Karabakh authorities said on Friday that there were no concrete results yet from talks with Azerbaijan on possible security guarantees or an amnesty that Baku is supposedly proposing, Reuters reports. 

“These questions must still be resolved,” David Babayan, the advisor of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh Republic) President Samvel Shahramanyan told Reuters. “There are no concrete results yet.”

“The situation is difficult – humanitarian questions need to be resolved. Agreement has been reached for a humanitarian convoy to come from Armenia via the Lachin corridor,” Babayan said.

Asked whether or not the Armenians of Karabakh were on the move, Babayan said there was no large-scale movement of people as the region was effectively under siege.

“The Lachin corridor does not work as it should,” he said. “At the present time, other questions need to be resolved.”

“The situation is very difficult: the people are hungry, there is no electricity, no fuel – we have many refugees.”


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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

Armenian PM Says Armenians May Flee Karabakh, Blames Russia


Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Sunday the likelihood was rising that ethnic Armenians would flee the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh and blamed Russia for failing to ensure Armenian security.

If 120,000 people go down the Lachin corridor to Armenia, the small South Caucasian country could face both a humanitarian and political crisis.

“If proper conditions are not created for the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh to live in their homes and there are no effective protection mechanisms against ethnic cleansing, the likelihood is rising that the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh will see exile from their homeland as the only way to save their lives and identity,” Pashinyan said in address to the nation.

“Responsibility for such a development of events will fall entirely on Azerbaijan, which adopted a policy of ethnic cleansing, and on the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh,” he said, according to a government transcript.

He added that the Armenian-Russian strategic partnership was “not enough to ensure the external security of Armenia.”

Last week, Azerbaijan scored a victory over ethnic Armenians who have controlled the Karabakh region since the dissolution of the Soviet Union. An adviser to the leader of the Karabakh Armenians told Reuters earlier on Sunday that the population would leave because they feel unsafe under Azerbaijani rule.

Russia had acted as guarantor for a peace deal that ended a 44-day war in Karabakh three years ago, and many Armenians blame Moscow for failing to protect the region.

Russian officials say Pashinyan is to blame for his own mishandling of the crisis, and have repeatedly said that Armenia, which borders Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan and Georgia, has few other friends in the region.

“The government will accept our brothers and sisters from Nagorno-Karabakh with full care,” Pashinyan said.

Pashinyan has warned that some unidentified forces were seeking to stoke a coup against him and has accused Russian media of engaging in an information war against him.

“Some of our partners are increasingly making efforts to expose our security vulnerabilities, putting at risk not only our external, but also internal security and stability, while violating all norms of etiquette and correctness in diplomatic and interstate relations, including obligations assumed under treaties,” Pashinyan said in his Sunday address.

“In this context, it is necessary to transform, complement and enrich the external and internal security instruments of the Republic of Armenia,” he said. 


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Erdogan To Meet Azerbaijani President On September 25


Local residents cook food in a street in Stepanakert in Nagorno-Karabakh on September 22. As Baku's forces tighten their grip on the breakaway Azerbaijani region, concern has been mounting over the plight of ethnic Armenian civilians trapped there.

Local residents cook food in a street in Stepanakert in Nagorno-Karabakh on September 22. As Baku’s forces tighten their grip on the breakaway Azerbaijani region, concern has been mounting over the plight of ethnic Armenian civilians trapped there.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has told his Caucasus nation on the heels of a bruising defeat for allies in a breakaway region of Azerbaijan that while Baku and Russian peacekeepers bear responsibility for protecting ethnic Armenians there, if necessary his government “will welcome our brothers and sisters of Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia with all care.”

In a televised address to his nation of around 3 million, Pashinian also seemingly delivered a barb to Russia and Moscow-led efforts at regional security.

“The attacks carried out by Azerbaijan against the Republic of Armenia in recent years lead to an obvious conclusion that the external security systems in which we are involved are not effective from the point of view of the state interests and security of the Republic of Armenia,” Pashinian said.

Pashinian and many Armenians blame Russia — which traditionally has served as Armenia’s protector in the region — for failing to use its peacekeeping force to protect ethnic Armenians in Karabakh.

Armenia is a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), which Russia has tried to position as a counterweight to NATO, although as recently as this month its armed forces were conducting exercises with U.S. forces.

Pashinian has been on rocky political footing since overwhelming Azerbaijani forces retook much of the territory in and around Nagorno-Karabakh held for decades by ethnic Armenians in a six-week war in late 2020 that led to a Russian-brokered cease-fire.

Then this week the breakaway leadership in Nagorno-Karabakh was thrashed by a lightning Azerbaijani offensive that led Baku to declare victory in returning its sovereignty to the territory.

Around the time Pashinian was addressing the nation on September 24, an adviser to the defeated leadership in Nagorno-Karabakh said virtually all of the territory’s ethnic Armenians will leave for Armenia in a bitter exodus from “our historic lands.”

Davit Babayan, an adviser for foreign policy to the separatist government’s de facto leader Samvel Shahramanian, told Reuters on September 24 that “Our people do not want to live as part of Azerbaijan. Ninety-nine point nine percent prefer to leave our historic lands.”

He said nothing of a time frame and there was otherwise no official position on a possible mass exodus.

Calls have increased in urgency for humanitarian help from the United Nations and the international community since the ethnic Armenian separatists agreed to a Russian-brokered cease-fire after a 24-hour blitz by Azerbaijani military forces on September 19-20.

Baku has repeatedly vowed to ensure the rights of what ethnic Armenians say is around 120,000 locals but the Azerbaijani side says is around half that figure.

“The fate of our poor people will go down in history as a disgrace and a shame for the Armenian people and for the whole civilized world,” Babayan said. “Those responsible for our fate will one day have to answer before God for their sins.”

Azerbaijan again signaled victory in Nagorno-Karabakh while Armenia urged international help to ensure the safety of the local ethnic Armenian population in competing speeches before the United Nations General Assembly, as evacuation and disarmament efforts continue.

Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, meanwhile used his UN appearance to say the two post-Soviet foes have “put things in order” and now it’s time to build “mutual trust.”

The trio of September 23 speeches came as the Yerevan-backed separatists said they were implementing the terms of the days-old cease-fire but concerns continued over the safety of tens of thousands of ethnic Armenians in the territory and with evacuations of the wounded under way.

Azerbaijan and Armenia’s foreign ministers struck opposing tones in their speeches to the UN forum.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Ceyhun Bayramov hailed the success of his country’s September 19-20 military campaign in Nagorno-Karabakh, which is internationally recognized as Azerbaijani territory, as achieving the “goals of anti-terrorist measures.”

“Armenia and its subordinate illegal regime were forced to agree to disarmament, liquidation of all so-called structures and withdrawal of forces from Azerbaijan,” Bayramov said.

In his speech to the UN General Assembly several hours later, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan lamented Yerevan’s repeated calls for greater UN activity to break a nine-month-long de facto Azerbaijani blockade of the region before the latest offensive.

Armenia’s government has distanced itself from the latest cease-fire mediated by Russia’s peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh on September 20, with daily protests targeting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his government.

Mirzoyan accused much larger neighbor Azerbaijan of pursuing a “path of war” and disregarding accepted international principles.

He said the message from Azerbaijan has been that “you can talk about peace, but we can go on the path of war, and you will not be able to change anything.”

Mirzoyan said the latest casualty toll of this week’s Azerbaijani actions were “more than 200 confirmed dead and 400 wounded, including civilians, women, and children.” He said the fates of hundreds more remained “uncertain.”

He also repeated Yerevan’s “imperative” call for a UN mission in Nagorno-Karabakh “to monitor and assess the human rights, humanitarian and security situation on the ground, “with “unhindered access.”

Armenia’s Health Ministry announced on September 24 that ambulances were transporting 23 seriously injured individuals from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenian territory.

In his speech to the General Assembly on September 23, Lavrov said “the time has come for confidence-building measures between Armenia and Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

He said Russia’s peacekeepers would assist, and he accused Western governments of inserting themselves unnecessarily in the Caucasus.

Lavrov said that “Yerevan and Baku actually put the situation in order.”

Nagorno-Karabakh‘s ethnic Armenian separatist leaders said on September 23 said they were implementing the cease-fire, including evacuations of injured civilians to Armenia with the help of Russian peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

The separatists said that, as part of the September 20 agreement, aid was to be delivered from Armenia to Stepanakert — the de facto capital of the breakaway region under ethnic Armenian control — through the Lachin Corridor, for decades the main link between Karabakh and Armenia.

Also as part of the agreement, separatists said, talks would take place on “the political future” of the region, which is suffering from shortages of food, fuel, and electricity.

Russian peacekeeping forces in Nagorno-Karabakh reported that Karabakh separatists had already handed over more than 800 firearms, grenades, mortars, anti-tank guided missiles, and anti-tank missile systems, and the disarmament process would continue over the weekend.

U.S. Democratic Senator Gary Peters, who is leading a congressional delegation to the Armenia-Azerbaijan border, called for international observers needed to monitor the situation and said people in Karabakh were “very fearful.”

“I am certainly very concerned about what’s happening in Nagorno-Karabakh right now. I think there needs to be some visibility,” Peters told reporters.

Azerbaijan has vowed to protect the rights of civilians there.

The offensive was halted on September 20 after Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian leadership accepted a proposal by the Russian peacekeeping mission, although sporadic fighting has been reported.

Baku has said it envisages an amnesty for Karabakh Armenian fighters who give up their arms and seeks to reintegrate the territory’s ethnic Armenian population. Some separatist fighters have vowed to continue to resist Azerbaijani control.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Pashinian in a phone call on September 23 that Washington continues to support Armenia’s “sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity” and that it has “deep concern for the ethnic Armenian population in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

During a special meeting of the UN Security Council after this week’s cease-fire, council members including the United States and Russia called for peace, while Armenian and Azerbaijani officials traded barbs.

During a short but bloody war in 2020, Azerbaijan recaptured much of Nagorno-Karabakh as well as seven surrounding districts that had been controlled since the 1990s by ethnic Armenians with Yerevan’s support.


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Erdogan visits Nakhichevan today


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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is leaving for Nakhichevan at the invitation of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

According to the Turkish Haberturk, meetings of the presidents of Turkey and Azerbaijan and the delegations of the two countries will take place in Nakhichevan to discuss cooperation between the two countries, as well as regional developments.

The Turkish press links Erdogan’s visit with the so-called “Zangezur corridor”.

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23 seriously injured citizens transported to Armenia


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Twenty-three citizens who were seriously wounded because of the recent military operations by Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh were transported from the Republican Medical Center of Stepanakert to Armenia’s specialized medical institutions On September 24, the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia reported.

The transportation of the wounded was carried out through the mediation of the International Committee of the Red Cross, in ambulances provided by the RA Ministry of Health, with the support of the relevant medical personnel.

The wounded people will soon be transported to Armenia’s medical facilities.

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Armenia PM signals foreign policy shift away from Russia


YEREVAN: Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan

on Sunday took a veiled swipe at long-standing ally Russia, calling his country’s current foreign security systems “ineffective”.

Pashinyan’s nationally televised comments signalled a major foreign policy shift away from Moscow, where criticism of Armenia

has also grown.

“The systems of external security in which Armenia is involved are ineffective when it comes to the protection of our security and Armenia’s national interests,” Pashinyan

said days after Azerbaijan’s resounding victory in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Armenia is a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO), a Russian-dominated group comprised of six post-Soviet states.

Like Nato

, the group pledges to protect other members that come under attack.

But bogged down in its own war in Ukraine, Russia refused to come to Armenia’s assistance in the latest Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, arguing that Yerevan itself recognised the disputed region as part of Azerbaijan.

“It has become evident to all of us that the CSTO instruments and the instruments of the Armenian-Russian military-political cooperation are insufficient for protecting external security of Armenia,” he said.

“We must transform and supplement the instruments of Armenia’s external and domestic security, in cooperation with all the partners who are ready for mutually beneficial steps,” Pashinyan said.

He added that Armenia should ratify the so-called Rome Statute, a treaty which established the International Criminal Court, of which Russia is not a part.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin

over his Ukraine policies.

“The decision is not directed against CSTO and the Russian Federation,” Pashinyan said of his desire to join the ICC.

“It comes from the interests of the country’s external security, and taking such a decision is our sovereign right.”


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Russian peacekeepers will escort some families from Artsakh to Armenia


Accompanied by Russian peacekeepers, the families who were left homeless as a result of the recent military operations and expressed their desire to leave the Republic of Artsakh will be transferred to Armenia, Artsakh’s InfoCenter reports.

The Artsakh government will issue information about the relocation of other groups in the near future.