NDP, Bloc call for sanctions on Azerbaijan following assault on former breakaway region - Action News
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Politics

NDP, Bloc call for sanctions on Azerbaijan following assault on former breakaway region

The federal NDP and the Bloc Qubcoisare calling onthe Trudeaugovernment toimpose sanctions on Azerbaijan in response to itsmilitary incursioninto Nagorno Karabakh last week an event that has drivenclose to 30,000 of the disputed enclave's ethnic Armenians to neighbouring Armenia.

Everything is on the table Foreign Affairs MinisterMelanie Joly

Several people are shown in the bed of a truck being driven down a road.
Refugees queue in vehicles near the border town of Kornidzor, arriving from Nagorno-Karabakh, on September 26, 2023. Hundreds of vehicles were heading to Armenia from Nagorno-Karabakh on September 26, 2023, following Azerbaijan's lightning offensive against the separatist enclave, an AFP team at the scene said. (Alain Jocard/AFP/Getty Images)

The federal NDP and the Bloc Qubcoisare calling onthe Trudeaugovernment toimpose sanctions on Azerbaijan in response to itsmilitary incursioninto Nagorno Karabakh last week an event that has drivenclose to 30,000 of the disputed enclave's ethnic Armeniansto neighbouring Armenia.

"We recognize that Canada doesn't play a huge role in this [geographical] area. But this is something we can do, this is something the Canadian government can do, to express our dismay, to express that we are seeing civilians being targeted," Heather McPherson, the NDP's foreign affairs critic, told CBC News.

She and NDP MP Alexandre Boulericelast week co-authored a letter to Foreign Affairs Minister Mlanie Jolypushing for sanctions.

"As you know, there is no military solution to this conflict. Only diplomatic pressure and comprehensive dialogue will result in a long-term solution," the MPswrote, adding the government should consider "targeted sanctions on Azerbaijani individuals and entities responsible for violations of international law and human rights abuses in the region."

"Canada's sanctions regime has its faults," said Bloc Qubcois foreign affairs critic Stphane Bergeron during a debate in the House of Commons on Tuesday. "But it is an efficient way to place pressure on foreign governments.

"What are we waiting for to sanction Azerbaijan for its inadmissible behaviour toward not only Armenia but its civilian population of Nagorno Karabakh?"

About a fourth of the 120,000 ethnic Armenians who consider Nagorno-Karabakh their ancestral home have fled the region since last week.

A long history of conflict

The territory is considered part of Azerbaijan under international law but has amajority Armenian population.

Azerbaijan and Armenia fought two wars forcontrol of the region in the early 1990s and in 2020. Ethnic Armenians prevailed in 1994 with the help of Russiaand installed a de facto government.

With Turkey's backing, Azerbaijan retook large swaths of Nagorno Karabakh and surrounding territories three years ago. That44-day battle endedafter 6,000 deaths whenMoscow brokered a ceasefire agreementbetween Armenia and Azerbaijan and installed its own peacekeeping force.

But last year, Azerbaijan launchedan economic blockade of the LachinCorridor, a mountainous passage that is the only land route between Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh.

Afterthe region's population was largely cut off from food and medical supplies for close to 10 months,Azerbaijan announced an "anti-terror" operation last week that it saidwouldtarget military infrastructure. Butlocal authorities reportedcivilian population centres being attackedand local journalists on the ground reported civilians being killed by bombs.

A person stands amid the rubble of a destroyed building as a missile is seen lodged in the ground.
Javid Ismayilov picks up a teapot from the debris, next to a missile in the ground, in front of what remains of his house in the town of Terter, Azerbaijan on September 24, 2023. (Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty Images)

Overwhelmed Armenian authorities announced they would be handingtheir army's weapons overto Azerbaijan and would enter into negotiations about terms ofsurrender.

Armenian authorities said at least 200 peoplewere killed in two days ofbombing.

Azerbaijan subsequentlyreopened the corridor toArmeniaand hasallowed some supply trucks to travel toward Nagorno Karabakh.

The International Committee of the Red Cross has announced that over the last week, it has "evacuated nearly 50 people with urgent medical needs, and delivered 66 metric tons of wheat, medical supplies, diapers and 1,500 litres of fuel to power generators at medical facilities."

People are seen inside a bus.
Refugees from the Nagorno-Karabakh region arrive by bus at a checkpoint in the village of Kornidzor, Armenia on September 24, 2023. (Irakli Gedenidze/Reuters)

But despite assurances from Azerbaijani officials that civilians would not be harmed, local journalists have reported displacedcivilians sheltering in public buildings with no food or electricity in the region's capital, Stepanakert. Locals have gathered in great numbers at the city's unused airport and areasking Russian peacekeeping forces for help.

Citing what he called deliberate starvation tactics, former International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo has accusedAzerbaijan of committing genocide.

The government of Armenia has accused Azerbaijan of ethnic cleansing.

Sanctions possible, Joly says

On Tuesday, when pressed by opposition members about sanctioningAzerbaijan,Foreign Affairs Minister Mlanie Joly told the House of Commons that "everything is on the table."

"When it comes to sanctions, we always want to act together with other countriesbecause it is important to put pressure on the concerned country," she said."Use of sanctions is something that can be very efficient.

"We have been following this very closely and we continue to call on Azerbaijan to stop the hostilities. There must be freedom of movement for humanitarian supplies and aid, and civilians must be protected."

A white woman sits at a table and prepares to speak at a government hearing.
Minister of Foreign Affairs Mlanie Joly says sanctions are possible but Canada would prefer to act in concert with other countries. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Joly added all parties involved in the 2020 ceasefire agreement must honour their commitmentsand said she has raised these issues at international bodies, includingthe United Nations General Assembly last week.

She said Canada firmly supports a comprehensive peace treaty, addingOttawa has committed to sending two experts to a recently launched European Union peacekeeping mission in Armenia.

The European Union has a memorandum of understanding with Azerbaijan onpurchasing oil and gas from Baku. The EUsigned the deal in July 2022 as a means of weaning itself offRussian energy supplies.

The EU and the United States have made aid commitments to the streams of refugees arriving in Armenia over the past week.Joly's department did not provide an answer when asked if Canada would follow suit.

Azerbaijan calls MPs' statements 'extremely concerning'

CBCNews asked theEmbassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan for their reaction to the MPs' demands for sanctions. In a statement, a spokesperson did not directly comment on those calls.

"Azerbaijan has already begun to provide necessary help to local Armenians to build better social and humanitarian life," the statement said. "Any interference in Azerbaijan's actions in this regard would be counterproductive to establishing peace in the region."

The spokesperson alsoquestionedwhy NDP MPs have never commemorated the killings of Azerbaijanis or mass displacements from Nagorno Karabakh during the war in the 1990s. It called the New Democrats'statements "extremely concerning."

"No country, including Canada, would acceptthe continuous militarization of illegal groups on its territory," the statement said, echoing the official Azerbaijani viewthat does not recognize the legitimacy of the local Armenian authorities inNagorno Karabakh.

"Azerbaijan has already begun to provide necessary help to local Armenians to build better social and humanitarian life."

The embassy also pointed to public addresseslast week by the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia. Azerbaijan's PresidentIlham Aliyevpledged that the rightsof Karabakh Armenians "will be guaranteed ... Educational rights, cultural rights, religious rightsand municipal electoral rights, because Azerbaijan is a free society."

Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyansaid on September 21 that"there is no direct threat to the civilian population of Nagorno Karabakh." In the same address, however, he claimedthat Azerbaijan was trying to removeNagorno Karabakh's Armenian population.

On the same day, speaking at the United Nations Security Council, Pashinyan's Foreign Affairs Minister Ararat Mirzoyan warned of ethnic cleansing and said the international body was on the brink of another failure.