Today, December 20, is the 9th day of the Azerbaijani siege of Artsakh. Groong and 168.am are continuing their collaboration in producing English-language content to cover the humanitarian catastrophe in Artsakh.
The European Court of Human Rights satisfied the request submitted by Armenia and applied interim measures against Azerbaijan, the office of Armenia’s representative on international legal matters informed.
Open the road of life
In light of the crisis in Artsakh, as 120K Armenians in Artsakh remain blockaded, the co-host of the Groong podcast Hovik Manucharyan talks to Arthur Khachikyan, International Relations expert from Stanford University.
Mr. Fries, where is your response to the crisis. Lilit Beglaryan to EU official
It is part of Azerbaijan’s criminal policy of blocking Artsakh Armenians, isolating them from the outside world, another attempt to suppress the absolute legitimate right of self-determination of Artsakh Armenians in absolute violation of international rules.
The Azerbaijani “environmental activist leaders” who blocked the Artsakh-Armenia road are directly financed by the Azerbaijani government or organizations affiliated with the authorities.
The international community shows unacceptable indifference. Activist from Artsakh
“The oil industry in Azerbaijan has caused a catastrophic environmental situation for decades. However, the people now protesting against Artsakh mines did not do anti-government demonstrations in their country and did not try to raise environmental issues. Moreover, Aliyev’s daughter Leyla coordinates environmental issues in Azerbaijan, and it is clear that this environmental topic is managed vertically from the top,” she said.
The lives of several critically-ill patients at the Stepanakert Republican Medical Center in Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) are in danger as their planned medevac to Armenia has become impossible because Azerbaijan has blocked the Lachin Corridor, the only road linking Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the rest of the world.