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New Armenian-Azerbaijani meeting follows Yevlakh talks, Artsakh President participates


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Following the negotiations in Yevlakh, new contacts between Armenia and Azerbaijan have taken place. Journalist Tatul Hakobyan shared this development on his Facebook page.

“On September 22, the President of Artsakh, Samvel Shahramanian, traveled from Stepanakert to Shush, where he met with the head of the State Security Service of Azerbaijan, Ali Nagiyev.

I won’t delve into the details of this meeting, but I’d like to highlight the significance of such contacts during these challenging times. It’s regrettable that the Artsakh authorities recognized the importance of direct communication only after our people experienced another tragedy. That’s all for now,” he wrote.

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Throw the book at them


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Even as Republican-led book banning gets more aggressive, there are growing indications that the GOP may not be content to stop there. Pulling literary works from shelves and denying individuals the freedom to make their own decisions about what to read is one thing. However, some Republicans are taking things a dangerous step further, as they throw gravitas out the window while they play with fire.

This weekend, Missouri State Senator Nick Schroer posted a photo on X (formerly Twitter) showing him and fellow Republican State Senator Bill Eigel using flame throwers at the recent St. Charles County Freedom Fest in Missouri, an event organized by the St. Charles County Republican Central Committee. “Burning down the swamp!” he wrote. Soon, someone posted a video, leaving many to wonder if the two legislators were burning books or just cardboard boxes.

According to Eigel, no books were harmed in this Fahrenheit 451-style display of hate, which was accompanied by cheers, chuckling, and chants of “Let’s go, Brandon!” However, that does not mean that book-burning is off the table. In a subsequent statement, Eigel, who is running to be Missouri’s next governor, wrote that his actions show “what I am going to do to the leftist policies and RINO corruption of the Jeff City swamp.” He then threatened that if the wrong books make it into Missouri schools “to try to brainwash our kids,” then “I’ll burn those too – on the front lawn of the governor’s mansion.”

Schroer similarly warned on Facebook that “now that I think of it, this action is a precursor of what’s to come when the leftwing makes its way into the Missouri Senate.” In response, Democratic Missouri House Minority Leader Crystal Quade, who is also running for governor, slammed these Republicans for using flamethrowers “to intimidate folks they disagree with,” claiming that they “view their jobs as a joke while real people suffer from their cruelty,” according to a report from the Kansas City Star.




A new report this week from the American Library Association (ALA) reveals that so far this year (from January 1 through August 31), 695 attempts to censor library materials and services have been reported and 1,915 challenges to unique titles have been documented. Last year’s figures in the same reporting period had been the highest, but the number of books challenged this year has surpassed the record by 20%. Of course, it’s still not enough for some Republicans.

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Russia“s Lavrov calls West “empire of lies,“ dismisses grain-deal revival bid


2023-09-23T18:50:35Z

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov smiles as he arrives to hold a news conference at United Nations headquarters in New York City, New York, U.S., April 25, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Saturday dismissed the West as an “empire of lies” and said the latest U.N. proposals to revive the Black Sea grain initiative would not fly because they do not deliver on promises made to Moscow.

Lavrov spoke after a week of intense global diplomacy at the annual gathering of world leaders at U.N. headquarters in New York where Ukraine and its Western allies sought to drum up support for Kyiv as it fights against Russia’s invasion.

In a letter to Lavrov last month, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres outlined four measures the U.N. could facilitate to improve Russia’s grain and fertilizer exports in a bid to convince Moscow to return to the Black Sea deal, which allowed Ukraine to export grain through the corridor and helped address a global food shortage.

“We explained to the Secretary General why his proposals won’t work. We don’t reject them. They’re simply not realistic. They cannot be implemented,” Lavrov said.

He said a 10-point peace plan promoted by Kyiv was “completely not feasible” and that the conflict would be resolved on the battlefield if Ukraine and the West stuck to it.

Lavrov added that Moscow left the Black Sea grain initiative because promises made to Russia – including on removing sanctions on a Russian bank and reconnecting it to the global SWIFT system – had not been met.

Russia quit the deal in July, a year after it was brokered by the U.N. and Turkey to combat a global food crisis that the U.N. said was worsened by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – both leading global grain exporters.

Ukraine exported nearly 33 million metric tons of grains under the pact, which the U.N. said benefited poor states by helping lower food prices more than 20% globally.

Lavrov did not cross paths with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy who appeared in person at the U.N. Security Council earlier in the week for the first time since Russia’s invasion to appeal for support against Moscow.

Asked if Russia would send more peace-keepers to Nagorno-Karabakh, a separatist Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan, Lavrov said that would be decided on the ground.

Lavrov said he would visit Pyongyang next month to continue negotiations with his counterpart there off the back of recent agreements made by Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Moscow.

Lavrov accused the West of a neo-colonial mindset in its overtures to the Global South to win backing for Ukraine in the war. Instead, Lavrov spoke of a “global majority” that was being duped by the West, which he described as an “empire of lies”.


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The fall of Nagorno-Karabakh


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After 32 years, the de facto independence of the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh is reaching its end.

The tense and often-violated ceasefire that had governed the region since the end of the 2020 Second Karabakh War was overwhelmingly violated by Azerbaijan around 1pm local time on Tuesday. Azerbaijani military units, which had been gathering near the line of contact in Nagorno-Karabakh and on the borders of Armenia for weeks, launched a massive assault across all areas of the Nagorno-Karabakh frontline.

Artillery, precision missile strikes and airstrikes struck the beleaguered units of the Artsakh Defence Army, as the breakaway region’s military forces are known, while Azerbaijani infantry launched an offensive on the ground.

24 hours later, it was all over. Weakened by nine months of siege and starvation, without any supply lines to the outside world and hopelessly outmatched by Azerbaijan’s modern military, the president of the Republic of Artsakh, Samvel Shahramanyan, announced that his government had accepted the demands of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. The Artsakh Defence Army would be dissolved, its weapons would be handed over, and the region would, finally and definitively, come under Azerbaijani control.

In a sense, all of this was expected. Nagorno-Karabakh and its ally, Armenia, had suffered a devastating defeat in the 2020 war. Much of Nagorno-Karabakh had been captured – around 75% of the lands held by Karabakh Armenians before 2020 were conquered by Azerbaijan or ceded to them in the ceasefire agreement. The Armenian army, reeling from its losses, had been forced out of the conflict, left struggling to repel even the Azerbaijani incursions into Armenia itself.

The nine months of Azerbaijani blockade that began in December 2022 had been met with indifference from the international community, with ‘urges’ and ‘calls’ for Azerbaijan to reopen the Lachin Corridor – Nagorno-Karabakh’s single lifeline to the outside world – but no consequences when Azerbaijan refused to do so, ignoring even the International Court of Justice ruling on the matter.

The Russian peacekeeping mission, entrusted with ensuring that road remained open and active, similarly demurred from any real attempts to unblock it. Aliyev clearly read these signals – that there would be no consequences for violating yet another tenet of the 2020 ceasefire – and sent his army in for the kill.

Massive casualties

At the time of writing, so much is still unclear. The 24-hour war involved massive casualties: Nagorno-Karabakh’s authorities have confirmed over 200 dead and 400 wounded from their side, a number that is sure to rise as more bodies are found, while Azerbaijani social media reports place the number of Azerbaijan casualties at over 150.

What exactly happens next is anyone’s guess, including the people of Nagorno-Karabakh themselves. In the wake of the Azerbaijani assault and subsequent capture of numerous villages and key roads, tens of thousands of the region’s 120,000 inhabitants have been displaced. Stepanakert is overrun, with every public building hosting dozens of families; the city’s airport, the site of the main Russian peacekeeping base, is an even more dire site, with thousands of civilians now encamped there in the open air, having fled from the Azerbaijani soldiers who captured their villages.

Other areas are entirely isolated: the towns of Martuni and Martakert, Nagorno-Karabakh’s second- and third-largest settlements, are surrounded by Azerbaijani forces, their populations unable to escape and with little known about their condition. 

In this near-total information blackout, with no independent media access and limited internet connectivity, rumors of Azerbaijani atrocities have spread. One woman claimed that Azerbaijani troops had beheaded her three young children in front of her; another said that the same had happened to a Karabakh Armenian soldier. A woman named Sofik, from the Karabakh village of Sarnaghbyur, described in video testimony how Azerbaijani artillery bombardment of her village had killed at least five children and wounded 13 more.

There is little verification or ability to confirm these claims, but there is ample precedent for them: Azerbaijani troops have previously filmed themselves beheading elderly Karabakh Armenian civilians, have executed groups of POWs, and indiscriminately bombarded Karabakh settlements. In the coming days, videos of atrocities committed over the past few days are likely to come to light.

The ultimate fate of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh is similarly unclear. While Azerbaijani officials have said that civilians will be allowed to stay there unharmed, few, if any, of the locals believe them.

Armenian Prime Nikol Pashinyan stated in a speech on Thursday that a mass evacuation was “not plan A nor plan B,” and that he hoped the Karabakh Armenians would still be able to live a “safe and dignified” life there, but that Armenia was ready and able to accept 40,000 families if the need arose.

More despair than revolution

The view of Nagorno-Karabakh’s residents is a sharply different one. Ashot Gabrielyan, a local teacher who has documented life in Nagorno-Karabakh under the blockade, summed up the local community’s views in an Instagram post on Friday. “We, the people in Artsakh, need a humanitarian corridor to leave [to Armenia],” he wrote. “We are not ready to live with a country [Azerbaijan] which starved us, then killed us. We NEED to leave.”

The catastrophic situation has understandably led to political unrest in Armenia itself. On Tuesday night, as the Azerbaijani offensive into Nagorno-Karabakh was still going strong, thousands gathered in Yerevan’s Republic Square, a common spot for demonstrations in the capital. The clashes reached a rare level of violence, with police deploying stun grenades against the crowd at one point; 16 policemen and 18 civilians were wounded in the event.

But the mood was more despair than revolution. While many of those in attendance demanded the resignation of the government, few had any suggestions for what should be done differently.

“Nikol [Pashinyan] led us to this horrible situation, this catastrophe,” said Tigran, one of those in attendance. “He must resign.” Another attendee, Daniella, a 20-year old student from Nagorno-Karabakh, had a different take. “I don’t know what [the government] can even do [about this],” she said. “My family are still there [in Karabakh] and I’m very worried for them, but I don’t know that violence here [in Yerevan] will help anything,” she said.

The public paralysation is exacerbated by Russia, which has come out staunchly against the Armenian government and sought to pin the entire blame for the present tragedy in Nagorno-Karabakh on Pashinyan. A series of Kremlin media guidelines for Russian state media was leaked to the Russian opposition outlet Meduza, in which Russian government publications are instructed to blame the Azerbaijani assault on “Armenia and its Western partners”.

Mass public outrage at Russia and its absent peacekeepers in both Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh has been fanned further by posts by top Russian propagandists such as Margarita Simonyan and Vladimir Solovyov, who shared identical Telegram posts suggesting that Armenians should overthrow the Pashinyan government.

Armenian journalist Samson Martirosyan summed up the mood succinctly in a Twitter post. “Most people in Armenia don’t know what to do, caught between Pashinyan and [the] opposition. By going to protests, you would stir up chaos, which serves Russia and Azerbaijan. Not going would mean silently agreeing with Pashinyan’s disastrous policies,” Martirosyan wrote.

Meanwhile, the 120,000 inhabitants of Nagorno-Karabakh await the outcome of the surrender negotiations currently taking place between their leadership and that of Azerbaijan in the Azerbaijani city of Yevlakh.

There are few reasons for optimism: Nagorno-Karabakh presidential advisor David Babayan said on Friday that there were “no concrete results” from Baku on either security guarantees for the population of Karabakh or regarding amnesty for its soldiers and leaders, all of whom Azerbaijan regards as criminals and terrorists.

The Azerbaijani army currently sits at the entrances to Stepanakert, poised to enter. It is difficult to imagine the scenes that will result when that happens.

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Smoke and mirrors


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There is something both fascinating and deeply twisted in watching what is being done to Non-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy right now. Look — Kevin’s job was always on thin ice. We knew that in time he’d be swallowed up, unable to handle the differing demands of his caucus.

But still – so soon? Kevin McCarthy is now going through what I refer to as the “psychological warfare” stage of his speaker-ship. Psychological warfare. It is often used in times of war. What is happening in the House IS a sort of war.

Matt Gaetz has been the leader in tormenting McCarthy. On and on he goes, like he is McCarthy’s personal fire=breathing dragon, no end in sight. The motion to remove Kevin left in a bathroom was, in my opinion, no accident.

This is because Matt Gaetz seemingly despises Kevin so much that this is just the type of stunt he’d pull. It’s all a part of the game of psychological warfare. Why has the notion to vacate the chair not been done yet?

Because they want Kevin to suffer, to ruminate, to obsess. They want the desperation of Kevin to fester inside him for as long as it can. And by “they” I refer to the alt-right crazies in the House of Stupid. Because Gaetz is not in this alone, he has help.

As Kevin squeals like a pig and takes incoming from everywhere, his legislation is failing. He tried to put forth a bill to fund the Defense Department. It failed. So what did ole Kev do? He sent his caucus home! This will likely give Kevin some breathing space to hatch a new scheme to save his job.

Alas, all the lamentations of Kevin for his “job” will not save it. This is because Kevin continues to show weakness. And he continues to give the crazies determined to take him down, the reaction they want.

And there is something else. The job was never his in the first place. You’ve heard the expression, I am sure, “Smoke and Mirrors.” Smoke and mirrors refer to something that isn’t real, that’s an illusion, that is unpleasant.

Kevin McCarthy’s job is not, and was never reality. It isn’t real. He is not a leader. The group taunting him let him think he was. They gave him the gavel. But one gavel does not a speaker make as we see.

They knew his weaknesses, and for Kevin, that title — Speaker of the House — was ALWAYS his weakness. He sold everything but the kitchen sink to GET that title. Dorian Gray would be proud. But smoke and mirrors coupled with psychological warfare can be VERY effective. Kevin does not understand that he’s already lost. His speaker days were numbered from the beginning. They had to be.




This is because he is in a battle against people with no souls, no moral compasses, and indeed no hesitation in teasing Kevin, playing with Kevin, mocking Kevin – before pushing him overboard forever. And that, my friends is NOT smoke and mirrors.

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First Red Cross aid convoy heads to Karabakh since Azerbaijan retakes region


2023-09-23T15:38:48Z

Armenian fighters have begun handing over their weapons, Russia’s defense ministry has said, following a military operation by Azerbaijan. David Doyle has more.

An aid convoy of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) headed to Nagorno-Karabakh on Saturday, the first since Azerbaijan retook the breakaway region three days ago, as ethnic Armenians there complained of being abandoned by the world.

The Armenians of Karabakh, which is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan, were forced to declare a ceasefire on Sept. 20 after a lightning 24-hour military operation by the much larger Azerbaijani military.

Under the terms of the ceasefire, Russia’s defence ministry said the Armenian fighters had begun handing over their weapons to Azerbaijan – including more than 800 guns and six armoured vehicles – under Russian supervision. Moscow has about 2,000 peacekeepers in the area.

Azerbaijani officials resumed talks on Saturday with Samvel Shahramanyan, the head of the self-styled Republic of Artsakh, as the Armenians call Karabakh, Azerbaijani media reported, but no further information was immediately available.

The mountainous region is home to around 120,000 Armenians, many of whom have been without adequate food or fuel supplies for months due to an effective blockade by Azerbaijani forces.

Russia said it had delivered more than 50 tonnes of food and other aid to Karabakh.

The ICRC said it had supplied 28,000 diapers as well as blankets and fuel. A Reuters witness saw a small ICRC aid convoy approaching Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan on Saturday afternoon but then journalists were ordered to leave the vicinity before the trucks crossed the frontier.

More than 20 other aid trucks, bearing Armenian number plates, have been lined up along a nearby roadside since July. Azerbaijan said at the time this convoy amounted to a “provocation” and an attack on its territorial integrity.

Azerbaijan wants to integrate the long-contested region of Karabakh and has promised to protect the Armenians’ rights but says they are free to leave if they prefer. Armenians say they fear they will be persecuted if they stay.

Azerbaijan’s interior ministry said on Saturday its main task was ensuring the safety of the Armenian civilian population and that it was providing them with tents, hot food and medical assistance.

“We are also working on issuing documents to the Armenian population, passports and so on,” ministry spokesman Elshad Hajiyev told Reuters. “There are already people who have applied to us.”

U.S. Senator Gary Peters, who visited the Armenia-Azerbaijan border on Saturday, said the situation in Karabakh required international observers and transparency from Azerbaijan.

“I think the world needs to know exactly what’s happening in there,” Peters, a Democrat from Michigan, told reporters. “We’ve heard from the Azerbaijani government that there’s nothing to see, nothing to worry about, but if that’s the case then we should allow international observers in to see.”

Armenia, which lost a 2020 war to Azerbaijan over the region, has prepared space for tens of thousands of Armenians from Karabakh, including at hotels near the border, though Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan says he does not want them to leave their homes unless it is absolutely necessary.

Azerbaijan launched its “anti-terrorist” operation on Tuesday against Nagorno-Karabakh after some of its troops were killed in what Baku said were separatist attacks.

The Karabakh region was more militarised than Baku realised, Hikmet Hajiyev, foreign policy adviser to Azerbaijan’s president, said on social media on Saturday, publishing a list of weapons and ammunition that had been seized in the past three days, including four tanks, 300 explosives and 441 mortar shells.

Accounts of the fighting were chilling.

Armenui Karapetyan, an Armenian in Karabakh, said he was now homeless, holding just a few possessions and a photograph of his 24-year-old son who died in 2020, after leaving his home in the village of Kusapat.

“Today we were thrown out into the street – they made us vagabonds,” Karapetyan told Armenia A1+, a partner of Reuters.

“What can I say? We live in an unfair, abandoned world. I have nothing to say. I feel sorry for the blood of our boys. I feel sorry for our lands for which our boys sacrificed their lives, and today… I miss the grave of my son.”

Thousands of Karabakh Armenians have massed at the airport seeking the protection of Russian peacekeepers there.

Svetlana Alaverdyan, from the village of Arajadzor, said she had fled with just the clothes on her back after gun fights gripped the village.

“They were shooting on the right, they were shooting on the left – we went out one after another, without taking clothes,” she told Armenia A1+.

“I had two sons – I gave them away, what else can I give? The superpowers resolve their issues at our expense.”

Related Galleries:

A man rides a horse along a road near the Armenia-Azerbaijan border outside the village of Kornidzor, Armenia, September 23, 2023. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze

A view shows a border-crossing point on the frontier between Armenia and Azerbaijan and a base of Russian peacekeepers deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh as seen from a road near the village of Kornidzor, Armenia, September 23, 2023. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze

Observers of the European Union stand next to their cars on a road near the Armenia-Azerbaijan border and Nagorno Karabakh region outside the village of Kornidzor, Armenia, September 23, 2023. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze

Russian peacekeepers drive trucks in direction towards the Armenia-Azerbaijan border and Nagorno Karabakh region near the village of Kornidzor, Armenia, September 23, 2023. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze

Gary Peters, a U.S. senator leading a congressional delegation to the Armenia-Azerbaijan frontier to monitor the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, points at a border-crossing point on a road near the village of Kornidzor, Armenia, September 23, 2023. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze

A view shows the Armenian border guard post next to the Azerbaijani border guard post on the road leading from Armenia to Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region, as seen from the outskirts of the village of Tegh, Armenia September 21, 2023. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze/File Photo


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Check Out These Lesser-known Scholarships Available to International Students 


Most students looking to study in the United States are already familiar with prospects for financial aid, but there are some lesser-known scholarships available.

The Times of India has compiled a listing of scholarships — many offered by individual schools — that can benefit students from other countries. (August 2023).

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VOA Newscasts


Give us 5 minutes, and we’ll give you the world. Around the clock, Voice of America keeps you in touch with the latest news. We bring you reports from our correspondents and interviews with newsmakers from across the world.

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Government of Bermuda blames Russian threat actors for the cyber attack


The Government of Bermuda believes that the recent cyberattack against its IT infrastructure was launched by Russian threat actors.

This week a cyber attack hit the Government of Bermuda causing the interruption of internet/email and phone services. The attack impacted all the government departments.

“The Department of Information and Digital Technology (IDT) is working quickly to restore service.” reads the message published on the official account of the government on X.

The public is advised that the Government Is currently experiencing internet/email and phone service interruptions.

All Departments are impacted.

The Department of Information and Digital Technology (IDT) is working quickly to restore service.

— Bermuda Government (@BdaGovernment) September 21, 2023

The Premier of Bermuda and the leader of the Progressive Labour Party Edward David Burt explained during a press conference that the cyber attack also impacted regional governments as well.

Burt added that initial findings emerged from the ongoing investigation suggest that the attack was launched from abroad, likely from Russia.

“Our initial indication is it’s come from an external source, most likely from Russia, and we are working with agencies to make sure that we can identify any particular challenges and make sure that services are restored as quickly as possible.” said Burt. “What we are focused on right now is just making sure that we identify any challenges.”

“It does not at this point in time appear that any data has been taken, so that’s at this point in time but it does appear that systems are affected.” added Burt. “We are trying to identify which systems are affected, which ones are not so that we can return to servicing persons, so people at TCD, people at immigration et cetera, can get the government services which they rely on.”

Deputy Premier and Minister of Home Affairs, the Hon. Walter Roban, JP, MP:, JP, MP, provided an update on the cyberattack:

Government of Bermuda

“As a result of our network interruption, there will be no sitting of the House of Assembly,” a government spokeswoman had confirmed. “It is anticipated that there will be further service disruption today. Investigation into the incident continues and steps to restore service are ongoing.”

“Work to facilitate payroll and vendor payments has commenced, but payment delays are expected. Cashiers are accepting cash and cheques only at this time.”

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Government of Bermuda)

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Kohberger trial is postponed – Bonner County Daily Bee


Kohberger trial is postponed  Bonner County Daily Bee

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