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Court acquits Diyarbakır lawyers tried for Armenian genocide, Kurdistan remarks

Feb 22 2022

A Turkish court has acquitted current and former administrators of the Diyarbakır Bar Association who stood trial over references to the “Armenian genocide” and “Kurdistan,” Turkish Minute reported.

They were charged with insulting the Turkish nation and inciting hatred and hostility among the people.

The nine defendants acquitted by the Diyarbakır 13th High Criminal Court included Diyarbakır Bar Association President Nahit Eren and the association’s former president, Ahmet Özmen, MA said, adding that the charges were based on reports and statements released by the association between 2016 and 2018.

According to Mezopotamya, in two of those reports, which were issued on April 24, 2017 and April 24, 2018, the association used the term “genocide” when referring to the mass killings of Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1916.

Armenians — supported by historians and scholars — say 1.5 million of their people died in a genocide committed under the Ottoman Empire during World War I.

Turkey accepts that both Armenians and Turks died in huge numbers as Ottoman forces fought czarist Russia but vehemently denies a deliberate policy of genocide and notes that the term had not been legally defined at the time.

In one of the statements the association condemned the temporary suspension from parliament of Osman Baydemir, a former lawmaker for the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), for using the word “Kurdistan” during a speech in parliament.

The statement released on Dec. 18, 2017 was titled “Punishing [use of the] _expression_ Kurdistan is shameful, unacceptable!” Mezopotamya said.

At the latest hearing of the lawyers’ trial, which started on Nov. 18, 2020, the court acquitted all nine defendants of the charges, also ordering the payment of TL 10,250 ($740) to each of them.

The decision would seem to indicate that using the words “Armenian genocide” and “Kurdistan” does not constitute a crime.

The Turkish bureaucracy and the public remain overly sensitive to the word “Kurdistan” and the tri-colored Kurdistan flag, which in some cases have been associated with “treason and terrorism” linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and the EU.

More than 40,000 people, including 5,500 security force members, have been killed in four decades of fighting between the Turkish state and the PKK.

There have been cases of people being arrested for wearing Kurdistan T-shirts, activists detained for waving Kurdistan flags and students interrogated for tweeting pictures of the flag.

The websites of Turkey’s Presidency and Ministry of Foreign Affairs as well as the state-run Anadolu news agency refer to the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq as Kurdistan.

Turkish press: Turkish lawmaker calls for closure of Armenian nuclear power plant

Muhammet Emin Avundukluoğlu   |14.02.2022


ANKARA

Turkiye's Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) lawmaker Yasar Karadag on Monday called for the closure of the Metsamor nuclear power plant in neighboring Armenia.

"The Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant should be immediately shut down in order not to experience the Chernobyl disaster, which caused the death of nearly 40 thousand people in 1986," Karadag, the lawmaker from eastern Igdir province, told reporters in parliament.

According to him, Metsamor was constructed with the old Russian technology.

Metsamor is the most dangerous of the 443 nuclear plants in the world, the lawmaker said.

"In a possible major earthquake, the radiation emitted by the Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant will make our provinces of Igdir, Kars, Van, Agri, and Erzurum (south of the border) uninhabitable," he said.

Metsamor, first launched in 1976, is just 16 kilometers (10 miles) from Turkey's eastern border with Armenia and produces about 40% of the country's electricity.

Both Turkey and Azerbaijan have repeatedly raised objections to the project as they believe it does not meet international safety standards.

Metsamor continues to draw criticism from Turkish officials as Armenia has decided to extend its operations until 2026.

RA NA convenes extraordinary meeting in connection with ratification of so-called "Shusha Declaration" by Azerbaijani, Turkish parliaments


Feb 15 2022
Naira Badalian

ArmInfo.On February 23, at 12:00, the National Assembly of Armenia will gather for an extraordinary meeting in connection with the ratification of the  so-called "Shusha Declaration" by the parliaments of Azerbaijan and  Turkey.

An extraordinary meeting will be convened on the initiative of the  deputies of the Hayastan opposition faction.  The faction proposes  the National Assembly to issue a statement condemning the  ratification of the "Shusha Declaration", which, in particular,  proposes the National Assembly "to express deep concern over the  ratification by the parliaments of Azerbaijan and Turkey of the  declaration signed on June 15, 2021 in Azerbaijani-occupied Shushi by  the presidents of Turkey and Azerbaijan ".

"The declaration was signed by the Turkish-Azerbaijani  military-political union within the concept of "One nation, two  states." Although the document states that it is not directed against  a third party, nevertheless, its content is entirely directed against  the Republic of Armenia and Artsakh, against the Armenian people.  It  fixes the strategic goals of the two states that carried out a 44-day  aggression against the Republic of Artsakh – against the  self-determination of the people of Artsakh, the sovereignty of the  Republic of Armenia, the territorial integrity and rights of the  Armenian people, who survived the genocide "and scattered around the  world," MP from Hayastan faction Andranik Tevanyan stated.

It is noted that the wording on the "Zangezur corridor" used in the  declaration shows that Turkey and Azerbaijan reach public agreements  on the implementation of joint expansionist programs.

The authors of the statement condemn the agreement of the two states  to fight against the international recognition of the Armenian  Genocide by distorting the content of the issue and bringing it into  the field of historical research.

The "Shusha Declaration" is based not on the UN Charter or security  principles adopted by the OSCE, but on the "ethnic security"  approach. This is contrary to the basic norms of international law.  According to the Law on International Treaties of 1969, all  international treaties of the Vienna Convention that are contrary to  the peremptory norms of general international law are void and cannot  have international legitimacy.

The National Assembly declares that the "Shusha Declaration" with its  provocative and destructive nature is unacceptable for the Republic  of Armenia. This is a serious challenge to regional and global  security, does not contribute to the peaceful development of our  region, contradicts the normalization of Armenian- Turkish relations  on the principle of "without preconditions" and raises serious doubts  about the real behavior and intentions of official Ankara," the  document says.

Sons of Azerbaijani Strongman Vasif Talibov Received Millions From Money Laundering Systems

OCCRP

Sons of Azerbaijani Strongman Vasif Talibov Received Millions From
Money Laundering Systems

Feb. 20, 2022

[Having opened bank accounts with Credit Suisse, Barclays, and other
foreign banks, Rza and Seymur Talibov received over $20 million in
suspicious wire transfers, even as the people of the Azerbaijani
exclave of Nakhchivan suffered under their father’s dictatorial rule.]

Key Findings

    The Talibov brothers’ bank accounts received dozens of wire
transfers from shell companies that were part of the Azerbaijani and
Troika Laundromats, two massive money laundering systems previously
uncovered by OCCRP.

    A financial crime expert who reviewed the transactions found
multiple red flags for money laundering that he said banks should have
noticed.

    In subsequent years, the brothers bought up properties in Dubai
and Georgia worth an estimated $63 million.

In late 2007, two young Azerbaijani brothers received an infusion of
cash just in time for the holidays.

But this wasn’t pocket money. Nineteen-year-old Seymur had $40,000
transferred to his personal bank account on December 27. On the same
day, his 25-year-old brother Rza got $95,000 of his own.

As an explanation, both transactions listed simply the word “textile.”
This was strange, since these were not corporate accounts — and the
brothers had no known connection to any textile business.

It didn’t end there. Within months, Seymur and Rza both started to
receive more cash, in much larger bank transfers — up to $500,000 at a
time, often in implausibly round figures. The listed reasons for the
transfers expanded to include “metal,” “metal parts,” and “electrical
equipment.” By the end of 2012, they had received over $20 million in
total.

Clearly, these weren’t ordinary transactions. But then, these were not
ordinary brothers.

Seymur and Rza are the sons of one of Azerbaijan’s top officials:
Their father, Vasif Talibov, is the ruler of Nakhchivan, an autonomous
exclave located between Iran, Turkey, and Armenia.

Talibov has led Nakhchivan with an iron fist for more than 26 years.
Under his rule, detainees have been subject to beatings and vicious
torture. Dissidents have been forced into psychiatric hospitals. He
has also used his power to silence independent media: Journalists and
activists who criticized his rule have faced pressure, arrest, and
exile.

Now, through an analysis of several leaks of banking data and property
records, OCCRP can show that the Talibov family enriched itself from
questionable sources even as Nakhchivan’s people suffered.

Leaked banking records show that the millions Talibov’s sons received
came from shell companies associated with the Azerbaijani and Troika
Laundromats, massive money laundering schemes discovered by OCCRP.
Previous investigations showed that Azerbaijani elites, including a
cousin of President Ilham Aliyev, benefitted from one of these
systems. Now the powerful Talibov family — which is also connected to
the president by marriage — can be added to the list.

The data obtained by reporters doesn’t show what the Talibovs did with
the money they received. But soon after the transactions began, they
started spending.

In 2008, the elder Talibov brother, Rza, his mother, a cousin, and
several businessmen founded a bank together.

Four years later, just as the Laundromat transactions reached their
peak, Rza bought two adjacent buildings in the Georgian resort town of
Batumi that he converted into a five-star hotel. Rza, Seymur, and
their sister Baharkhanim — who also received nearly a million dollars
from Laundromat companies — have also acquired about a dozen
properties in Dubai, including a luxurious villa, a 12-floor apartment
hotel, and multiple individual apartments. In total, their properties
are worth an estimated $63 million.

Azerbaijan's Totalitarian Fortress

In Nakhchivan, Vasif Talibov’s word is law. He has ruled over the
isolated territory through fear and violence for years — and hardly
any news gets out.

This is despite Vasif Talibov’s official salary of less than $26,000
per year and his sons’ own low-paying government jobs. (Rza is a
migration service official and Seymur is a member of the Nakhchivan
parliament.)

In fact, their family’s political status should have subjected their
financial transactions to greater scrutiny. The bank accounts where
they received their millions were held with major financial
institutions in multiple countries, including Emirates NBD, Barclays,
and Credit Suisse. It is unknown whether any of the transactions were
flagged as suspicious.

Graham Barrow, an independent financial crime specialist who reviewed
the transactions, said the brothers’ accounts should have been flagged
given their questionable origins and the Talibovs’ status as
politically exposed persons.

“[The banks] should do what’s known as adverse media screening,” he
said. “They should see whether their client has been involved in any
potential criminal activity or suspicious activity and they should
monitor them. It’s called enhanced monitoring.”

“It’s ridiculous. Those round figures, it’s just stupid. I mean,
nobody does business that way.”

In response to inquiries from OCCRP and Süddeutsche Zeitung, Credit
Suisse said it could not comment on individual client relationships
and rejected “allegations and inferences about [its] purported
business practices.” (Click here to read the bank’s full response to
the Suisse Secrets project).

Two other banks where the Talibovs held accounts that received
questionable funds, Vontobel and Emirates NBD, said that they could
not comment on client relationships but that they complied with the
law.

Barclays and members of the Talibov family did not respond to requests
for comment.

“A World Upside-Down”

Vasif Talibov has ruled over Nakhchivan for so long that it’s hard to
imagine the territory without him. But his beginnings were modest: In
the late Soviet years he was the head of a department at a local
garment factory.

His ticket to power turned out to be his marriage to Sevil Sultanova,
whose mother’s uncle was a senior Soviet official named Heydar Aliyev.

As the country neared collapse in 1990, Aliyev returned from Moscow to
his home region of Nakhchivan. Having nowhere else to stay, he
temporarily lived with Talibov in his two-bedroom apartment.

He returned the favor the following year. After being elected chairman
of Nakhchivan’s parliament, Aliyev made Talibov, then in his early
30s, his head assistant.

“When I chose Vasif Talibov for this position, I knew many of his
characteristics,” Aliyev said later. “He was very young. Inwardly, I
thought for a while that it would be difficult because of his youth.
But he proved that a person who is loyal to his homeland, nation and
people, regardless of age, can do great things.”

In 1993, Aliyev became president of newly independent Azerbaijan. And
with his backing, Talibov’s star continued to rise. In 1995, not long
after being elected to both the Azerbaijani and the local Nakhchivani
parliaments, he became chairman of the latter.

This position, to which he has regularly been “reelected” every five
years, makes him the republic’s absolute ruler, able to appoint
ministers, push laws through a pliant parliament, control the justice
system, and run the security agencies.

He has now ruled for nearly three decades, outlasting his original
patron, Heydar Aliyev, and now enjoying a similarly close relationship
with his son, Ilham, who succeeded him to the presidency.

The local media in Nakhchivan heaps praise on Talibov’s rule. “Today
is HIS day,” wrote the local news agency Nuhcixan on his 60th
birthday, describing him as “the great patriot, resolute, courageous,
as well as humanist,” but also “extremely humble.”

Internationally, the headlines are somewhat different, often focusing
on the draconian rules Talibov has imposed — like his instruction for
local citizens to read Hemingway, or his bans on hanging laundry on
balconies or civil servants wearing patterned tights. Foreign outlets
have also reported on his crackdowns on journalists and dissidents.

This has earned Nakhchivan a variety of nicknames: Opposition
activists call it the “North Korea of Azerbaijan,” while the Norwegian
Helsinki Committee described it as “Azerbaijan’s Dark Island.”

On visiting the territory, a U.S. diplomat wrote to his superiors in
Washington that the region was Talibov’s “fiefdom.”

“Nakhchivan is a world upside down,” the diplomat wrote.

The Talibovs’ Tight Grip

The Talibovs’ stranglehold on Nakhchivan is not just political. It is
widely assumed in Nakhchivan that the family dominates the local
economy, and experts have described them restricting imports, driving
competitors out of business, and even putting residents to work
harvesting their produce.

According to an exiled Nakhchivani, many products in the territory are
sold under the brand Gamigaya, a group of companies widely assumed to
belong to the family. The Gamigaya holding has also built or renovated
dozens of public facilities across Nakhchivan, including ministry
buildings, hospitals, universities, and a mosque.

Little documented proof of the Talibovs’ connection to this group of
companies — or to Cahan Holding, another omnipresent local
conglomerate — has ever emerged. In 2014, Rza Talibov described
himself on Facebook as Gamigaya’s chairman. But no company ownership
records are available to show who actually owns either conglomerate.

Instead, the Gamigaya and Cahan holdings are run by two businessmen
associated with the Talibovs named Vugar Abassov and Emin Uchar.

Abassov and Uchar partnered with Rza Talibov, his mother, and a cousin
in the only business in which they have ever been documented to be
shareholders: Nakhchivanbank, a local financial institution founded in
2008. The bank has since stopped disclosing its shareholders, leaving
it unclear whether the family is still involved, though Rza’s sister
Baharkhanim is a member of its supervisory board. If they are still
part owners of the institution, it is unclear how much they may be
earning.

The Laundromat Millions

But despite this lack of public records, leaked bank data from
Switzerland — part of the international Suisse Secrets investigation —
allowed reporters to document some of their wealth for the first time.
At their maximum in March 2011, the records show, Seymur’s Credit
Suisse account held $7.3 million, and Rza’s held $9.3 million.

The Suisse Secrets Investigation

Suisse Secrets is a collaborative journalism project based on leaked
bank account data from Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse.

The data was provided by an anonymous source to the German newspaper
Süddeutsche Zeitung, which shared it with OCCRP and 46 other media
partners around the world. Reporters on five continents combed through
thousands of bank records, interviewed insiders, regulators, and
criminal prosecutors, and dug into court records and financial
disclosures to corroborate their findings. The data covers over 18,000
accounts that were open from the 1940s until well into the last
decade. Together, they held funds worth more than $100 billion.

"I believe that Swiss banking secrecy laws are immoral,” the source of
the data said in a statement. “The pretext of protecting financial
privacy is merely a fig leaf covering the shameful role of Swiss banks
as collaborators of tax evaders. This situation enables corruption and
starves developing countries of much-needed tax revenue.”

Because the Credit Suisse data obtained by journalists is incomplete,
there are a number of important caveats to be kept in mind when
interpreting it. Read more about the project, where the data came
from, and what it means.

Because these figures only show the account balance at one point in
time, it’s impossible to know how much money passed through the
accounts over the years. But both brothers’ account numbers also
appear in two other leaks of banking data previously obtained by
OCCRP.

They show that, between 2007 and 2012, Rza and Seymur’s accounts at
Credit Suisse and several other banks received over a hundred separate
wire transfers worth a total of $20.5 million from two shell
companies, Murova Systems and Continus Corporation.

How much the Talibov children received from the Laundromat companies.

Both companies were identified as money laundering vehicles by Bosnian
prosecutors who looked into them as part of a human trafficking
investigation.

The leaked records from Credit Suisse also suggest an intriguing
connection to Cahan Holding: The powers of attorney on both Seymur and
Rza’s personal bank accounts were held by two Cahan employees.

These shell companies, which never did any substantive business, were
part of the Azerbaijani and Troika Laundromats, two massive money
laundering systems uncovered in previous OCCRP investigations.
Laundromats are essentially groups of connected shell companies that
send money around and around to each other, using many separate fake
transactions to obscure its origins.

“That’s incredibly unusual,” said Barrow, the financial crime
specialist who reviewed the transactions, explaining that they
contained multiple warning signs.

Most obviously, he said, was the origin of the money: shell companies
that registered no real business activity.

“Second problem, every single one of those payments is a round
figure,” Barrow said. “Business isn’t conducted that way. … Banks are
supposed to have monitoring in place that picks up on round figure
sums and flags them as suspicious.”

“And the other [suspicious] thing is when somebody is apparently doing
a massively wide variety of different businesses,” he said. “We saw
textiles and electronics going through the same company accounts. What
company does that? It makes no commercial sense whatsoever.”

For politically connected people, Barrow said, banks have a “legal
duty to do enhanced due diligence. Enhanced due diligence to establish
the source of wealth.”

But the money kept flowing, with the three Talibov children receiving
more and more until 2012, the last year that appears in the records.

An Inner Circle with Laundromat Access

Rza and Seymur Talibov weren’t the only members of the family to
receive money from the Laundromats. In 2012, an account held by their
sister, Baharkhanim Talibova, received $900,000 from Murova Systems
and another offshore shell company. Vasif Talibov’s nephew, Elnur
Talibov, received $77,000 from Murova Systems in his own Credit Suisse
account. The shell company also paid his tuition at College Du Leman,
an international boarding school in Geneva. And Vugar Abassov, the
Talibovs’ business partner, received $5.8 million from Murova and
Continus.

“Getting Acquainted” with Batumi

That January, Vasif Talibov paid a three-day visit to the seaside
Georgian resort city of Batumi, in the autonomous republic of Adjara.
According to the press office of the local government, his goal was to
“get acquainted with the economic and tourist[ic] potential of the
region.”

His elder son Rza, who accompanied him on the official trip, soon made
a personal real estate investment in the city, buying a historical
building just a few blocks from the beach for $1.5 million.

A few months later, Adjara representatives visited Nakhchivan and
signed a memorandum of economic cooperation between the two regions.

Afterwards, Rza wasted no time snapping up an adjacent 19th-century
building from the government through a special agreement with the
Adjara economic ministry. Though it was valued at over half a million
dollars, he was charged only a symbolic amount of sixty cents to
acquire it, in the interests of redevelopment. Rza also bought out
several people who already owned space in the building for another
$1.2 million.

He then merged the two buildings together to open a five-star hotel,
Divan Suites Batumi. According to an announcement by the city
administration, he would spend $10 million on its construction.

Rza also paid over $6 million to have a company owned by Emin Uchar,
who co-founded Nakhchivanbank with the family, build him an elite
villa in the city’s exclusive Green Cape neighborhood.

But the bulk of the family’s acquisitions were in Dubai.

By 2020, Vasif Talibov’s sons had acquired 11 properties in the
Emirate worth a total of at least $45 million today, including a
12-floor luxury hotel. According to a leak of real estate data
obtained by the non-profit research organization C4ADS, both brothers
held Emirati identification cards, indicating that they had residency
there.

None of these extravagant properties appear on the brothers’ social
media accounts. Unlike some other children of authoritarian rulers,
Seymur and Rza avoid displays of conspicuous wealth on their social
media pages, posting instead about their love for their country, their
father’s achievements, and their devotion to President Aliyev.

In one Twitter post last year, Rza shared a quote from Aliyev in large
block letters, apparently designed to underscore the regime’s
frugality.

“Our traditions, values, and lifestyle are our assets,” he wrote.

He didn’t mention the other ones.


 

European Parliament calls on EU to actively engage in finding lasting NK settlement

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 14:40, 17 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. In the resolution on the implementation of the common foreign and security policy-annual report 2021, the European Parliament reaffirmed its “unwavering support to the Eastern Partnership (EaP) countries, and in particular as regards their independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity within their internationally recognized borders as well as the respect for the will of the people to decide their own future and foreign policy, free from outside interference”.

The European Parliament also called for the full implementation of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement with Armenia, stressed the need for increased EU and Member State engagement in the South Caucasus for the region’s stability and prosperity as well as to counteract the influence and interference of regional powers.

The EP also called on the EU, its Member States and the Vice President/High Representative to actively engage in finding a lasting settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan on Nagorno-Karabakh and to prevent a further escalation of tensions in the region, notably by pressing Azerbaijan and Armenia to address post-war issues, including the demarcation of borders and the release of all remaining prisoners of war.

The MEPs note that the OSCE Minsk Group remains the only internationally recognized format for the resolution of this conflict, on the basis of the principles of territorial integrity, non-use of force, self-determination and equal rights, and peaceful resolution of conflicts.

The European Parliament also called for the OSCE Minsk Group’s swift return to its mediating role.

Sports: Yerevan to host European Boxing Championship on May 21-31

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 17 2022

Yerevan will host the European Adult Boxing Championship on May 21-31. The Government will allocate 77,768,000 AMD to the Boxing Federation of Armenia for the organization of the event.

Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sports Vahram Dumanyan said considering the traditions of the Armenian Boxing Federation and development directions, the International Boxing Federation has proposed to hold the European Adult Boxing Championship in Armenia.

About 280 athletes are expected to take part in the championship, as well as the participation of their accompanying staff and other delegates, a total of about 350 people are expected to take part.

Armenian ombudsman: School in Artsakh’s Taghavard also targeted by Azerbaijani forces

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 17 2022


Armenia’s Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Arman Tatoyan and his Artsakh counterpart Gegham Stepanyan visited the communities of Taghavard, Karmir Shuka, Aghavno, Khramot and others in Artsakh to collect facts about the crimes committed by the Azerbaijani military against the civilian population.

In a statement summing up the fact-finding mission carried out on February 14-16, Tatoyan says the villages of Taghavard and Karmir Shuka come under Azerbaijani gunfire almost every single day, as a result of which the houses of local residents are damaged.

“Just few days ago, on February 11, Azerbaijani forces opened fire at houses of civilians, damaging walls and roofs of the buildings. Women and children were inside the houses at the time of the shooting. The bullets hit the window of one of the houses, where young children were asleep,” the ombudsman said.

"Azerbaijani soldiers are stationed in close proximity to houses in these communities, at a distance of several hundred meters, and people are fully in their sight,” Tatoyan noted.

Moreover, the ombudsman says the school in Taghavard is under the full observation of the Azerbaijani military.

“Private meetings and discussions with teachers and students revealed that the school also comes under targeted shootings. Moreover, residents said that in Taghavard and Karmir Shuka the Azerbaijani troops are releasing special lights from their positions or vehicles on civilian homes, including inside houses, to terrorize the residents. This frequently happens especially at night or in the evening,” the statement says.

Tatoyan underlines that the Azerbaijani military is constantly preventing the villagers from carrying out agricultural work, opening fire at them, stealing their animals and creating very serious social problems for them.

All this is systematic and has far-reaching plans. The Azerbaijani troops stationed near civilian settlements do everything to create an atmosphere of despair and hopelessness.

“All facts show that the criminal actions of the Azerbaijani servicemen against the civilian population in both Armenia and in Artsakh are identical, with aggressive manifestations in Artsakh.

“It is clear to us that all this stems from the continuous policy of Armenophobia and incitement of enmity towards Armenia and Artsakh by the Azerbaijani authorities,” the ombudsman stated.


Spy scandal in Yerevan: Azerbaijani intelligence recruits Armenian servicemen on social media


Feb 10 2022


  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Spy network in Armenia

The National Security Service of Armenia announced that it had identified and neutralized a spy network operating in the country. It is reported that dozens of Armenian servicemen were involved in it. 19 people have already been detained, some of them have already confessed.

According to the NSS statement, the network was created by foreign intelligence services. In the video, which was distributed by the press service of the department, one of the officers, in his testimony, clarifies that he met “with employees of the special services of Azerbaijan” on Facebook.


  • Karabakh official accuses HALO Trust of spying for Turkey
  • Armenian parliament speaker accused of being ‘Turkish agent’, NSS refutes
  • The ‘fake news epidemic’ in Armenia and the attempts to put an end to it

The SNB report describes how the spy network was created. It is said that in order to reduce the risk of exposure, fake accounts of supposedly Armenian women were opened on social media with personal photographs. Those women would then itroduce themselves to Armenian officers.

All employees of foreign intelligence services were fluent in Armenian, these “network acquaintances were transformed into close relationships.” Then the servicemen were offered to provide information about the armed forces of Armenia for a certain remuneration.

In particular, they were asked about the location of troops, the number and types of military and engineering equipment, details about the personnel and command staff of military units, the deployment of defensive structures.

The attention of the special services was attracted by the Armenian military, who, according to their official status, had access to this kind of information. The recruits transmitted both information known to them and found out additional information that was of interest to the intelligence officers who contacted them. The data was transmitted using mobile applications.

The National Security Service of Armenia assessed the behavior of the citizens of Armenia involved in the agent network as “treacherous actions against their state”.

The department reports that the identities of the recruited officers were established “as part of large-scale operational actions”. These are the military, who held various positions in the Armed Forces, who had access to documents containing official state secrets. The National Security Service assures that the volume and nature of the transferred information have been clarified, and the transfer of more data has been prevented.

In a statement, the National Security Service of Armenia says that there is all evidence of cooperation with foreign intelligence services “in exchange for paying for a network of agents whose hostile activities were directed against the sovereignty, territorial integrity and external security of Armenia”. Checks were also found confirming the receipt of a fee in foreign currency.

It is reported that during the investigation, more than 30 searches were carried out, official documents were identified and seized, including the original, as well as “objects of significant importance for the criminal case”.


AZERBAIJANI press: FM: Armenia withheld information about mass graves in Azerbaijani lands

By Sabina Mammadli

Baku has said that Armenia withheld information about mass graves on the Azerbaijani territories it previously occupied until their liberation in the 2020 second Karabakh war.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov made the remarks at a conference on the Non-Alignment Movement (NAM) model simulation held at ADA University in Baku.

He said that the mass graves were discovered in the liberated lands.

"Azerbaijan discovered mass burials on the liberated territories, so the assertions of the Armenian side that it has no information about these burials are unacceptable. The statements of the Armenian side on this issue are unfounded, and we are sure that the international community will not accept them," the minister said.

UNESCO mission visit to Karabakh

During the conference, Bayramov stated that Armenia had for decades refused to allow UNESCO representatives to visit Azerbaijan's Karabakh region.

He emphasized that following the second Karabakh war, Azerbaijan and UNESCO began to work together on the issue of conducting research in Karabakh.

"We invited the UNESCO mission back in June and are expecting it to visit. We do not set any restrictions for it," added the minister.

He added that UNESCO can explore both Muslim and Christian monuments.

Bayramov said that Azerbaijan appealed to UNESCO in June, regarding the sending of a mission to the country.

Earlier, Azerbaijan's Culture Ministry expressed hope that the UNESCO mission's work would be significant in terms of detailed study, monitoring, and documentation of the Azerbaijani people's heritage on Armenian territory.

On February 4, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, French President Emmanuel Macron, European Council President Charles Michel, and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a videoconference meeting. During the meeting, an agreement was reached to send a UNESCO mission to Azerbaijan and Armenia.

NAM Youth Network

Speaking of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) initiatives, Bayramov emphasized Azerbaijan's special attention to them and noted the initiatives proposed by the country were adopted in accordance with the principles of this organization.

The foreign minister also mentioned that the NAM Youth Network, which has been involved in the organization's activities since its inception, plans to hold several events in 2022.

“During the celebration of NAM’s 60th anniversary in Belgrade, the Youth Network of NAM put forward a number of proposals,” the Azerbaijani minister added.

Youth Federation President Farid Jafarov and ADA University Vice-Rector Fariz Ismayilzade delivered speeches at the conference's opening ceremony.

Azerbaijan became a member of the NAM in 2011. Azerbaijan was unanimously elected as the NAM's chair for the period 2019-2022 by the NAM leaders in 2016.

In 2021, NAM member countries voted unanimously to extend Azerbaijan's chairmanship for another year, until late 2023.

The NAM was formed in 1961 to defend the interests of developing countries during Cold War During the first three decades after its establishment, NAM was instrumental in promoting decolonization, the formation of new independent countries, and the democratization of international relations.

Azerbaijani press: MFA: Plight of missing Azerbaijanis Baku’s top priority

By Sabina Mammadli

Baku has stated that the plight of Azerbaijanis who went missing during the first Karabakh war with Armenia in the early 1990s is a top priority on its agenda.

Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva made the remarks in response to a query about why Armenia had waited 30 years to share any information about the 4,000 missing Azerbaijanis.

"I would like to emphasize that the Azerbaijani side prioritizes the issue of missing people and will not allow the Armenian side, which is directly responsible for this issue, to remain silent for another 30 years about the fate of over 3,700 missing Azerbaijanis and the location of their mass burial places," Abdullayeva said.

Azerbaijan handed over the remains of over 1,700 servicemen to Armenia immediately after the 44-day second Karabakh war, without expecting any reciprocal action and without receiving any information from Yerevan about thousands of Azerbaijanis who went missing during the first Karabakh war, the spokesperson added.

Abdullayeva said that the discovery of massive graves of Azerbaijanis on the liberated territories and the provision of the international community with evidence resulted in Armenia transferring the remains of 108 of thousands of missing people after 30 years.

She stressed that Armenia had yet to make a statement on the abovementioned subject.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov earlier said that mass graves had been discovered in the liberated lands.

"Azerbaijan discovered mass burials on the liberated territories, so the assertions of the Armenian side that it has no information about these burials are unacceptable. The statements of the Armenian side on this issue are unfounded, and we are sure that the international community will not accept them," the minister said.

On February 8, the Foreign Ministry stated that humanitarian issues were one of the main topics of a virtual meeting attended by French President Emanuel Macron, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, European Council President Charles Michel and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on February 4.

At the meeting, Aliyev underlined that Armenia had to provide information about the mass graves of 3,890 missing Azerbaijani citizens (including 71 children, 267 women and 326 elderly people). The presidents of France and the European Council both supported this issue.

Armenia, which is responsible for determining the fate of about 4,000 missing Azerbaijani citizens, promised to cooperate in this matter.

The ministry stated that Armenia's later denial of its international humanitarian obligations, as well as promises made during the abovementioned meeting, is completely outside the moral, ethical, and legal framework in light of Azerbaijan's discovery and return of the bodies of 1,708 Armenian servicemen.

It should be mentioned that in the 20th century, Armenians perpetrated systematic crimes and atrocities against Azerbaijanis to break the spirit of the nation and annihilate the Azerbaijani people of Nagorno-Karabakh. The Khojaly genocide is regarded as the culmination of Armenian mass murders.

Some 613 Azerbaijanis, including 63 children, 106 women and 70 elders were brutally murdered on the ground of national identity in Khojaly in 1992.

This heinous act was preceded by a slew of others. Armenians set fire to around 20 buildings in the Baghanis-Ayrim village of Gazakh region, killing eight Azerbaijanis. A family of five, including a 39-day-old newborn, were all burnt alive.

Between June and December 1991, Armenian troops murdered 12 and wounded 15 Azerbaijanis in Khojavand region's Garadaghli and Asgaran region's Meshali villages.

Armenian military detachments bombed buses on the Shusha-Jamilli, Aghdam-Khojavand, and Aghdam-Garadaghli routes in August and September of the same year, killing 17 Azerbaijanis and injuring over 90 others.

In October and November 1991, Armenians burned, destroyed, and plundered over 30 settlements in the mountainous area of Karabakh, including Tugh, Imarat-Garvand, Sirkhavand, Meshali, Jamilli, Umudlu, Garadaghli, Karkijahan, and other significant villages.