Permanent Representative: Azerbaijan must realize that Karabakh will never be its part

Arminfo, Armenia
March 7 2020
Alexandr Avanesov

ArmInfo. Azerbaijan must realize that Karabakh will never be its part, Albert Andryan,  Permanent Representative of the Artsakh Republic to the Russian  Federation, told the Federal News Agency in an interview. 

According to him, Artsakh made its choice, for which it paid a very  high price. There is no return to the past. And this should be  realized as a fact. "But constantly fighting with each other is not a  thing. You just need to understand that we, like them, like everyone  else, have the same right to life, to free existence, movement and  development. Therefore, I think that anyway, sooner or later the  peace between us must be established. If we all manage to understand  this and step through the pressure that turns out to be from the side  of the people of war, then we can cross this line and sign the peace.  And the faster we do this, the faster we will get a chance to develop  more harmoniously and systematically. If we do not understand this,  all the same, sooner or later there will be people who will initiate  this war again. Azerbaijan must recognize the independence of  Karabakh, which did not done on the initiative of some leaders – the  residents of Karabakh paid for it with their blood. The main thing is  that Baku understands this, recognizes it, and further we will live  in a neighborly way. Maybe there will be settlements with  cohabitation. After all, we were living together!>, The permanent  representative noted.

He also called that it is necessary to cross this line. "We need to  overcome ourselves and understand that the confrontation lasting all  these years is a dead end. It will not lead to anything. We will  constantly destroy each other. We do not need to fight: we want to  live peacefully and calmly. They are building up their military  power. We forced to do the same: The current situation is the result  of the war they imposed on us, "Andryan said, recalling the  background of the issue.

According to him, a referendum was held in Artsakh at the time. "The  people expressed a desire to live separately. That state (USSR) no  longer exists, those laws no longer exist. But it was precisely under  those laws that we withdrew from Azerbaijan, which was part of the  USSR. We wanted to join Armenia. We must not forget that  nevertheless, initially the issue has been addressed just like this:  to secede from Azerbaijan and become part of Armenia. This is Miatsum  (an idea based on the demand of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh to  annex the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region inhabited by Armenians  to Armenia, FNG Ed. note).  And this issue has not been removed from  the agenda. But these are purely our internal problems. They imposed  a war on us. Today we demand independence. How we will live and where  we will go are our internal issues, Armenia and ours. And they do not  concern either Azerbaijan or the rest of the world, "the Permanent  Representative said, adding that regardless of who will be in power  in Armenia, Armenia and Artsakh have one position." And it is  unchanged: it was from the very beginning and will be so until the  end. Because this is the only right position. And there is no  disagreement between the leadership of Armenia and the leadership of  Artsakh. There is only one position: Karabakh, Artsakh should be  independent and continue to decide its own fate, "the Permanent  Representative summed up.

Armenian Ombudsman held a meeting with Secretary General of Council of Europe in Strasbourg

Arminfo, Armenia
March 5 2020

ArmInfo. On March 5, in Strasbourg, Ombudsman of Armenia Arman Tatoyan held a working meeting with the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Marija Pejcinovic Buric. This was reported by the press service of the Office of the Defender  of Human Rights.  

At the meeting wide range of issues related to both the situation  in Armenia and the human rights protection system as a whole were  discussed. In particular, judicial legal reforms in Armenia, the fight against torture, the prevention of ill-treatmentin closed institutions  and human rights defender activities in this area.  Particular mention  was made of the protection of human rights in the armed forces, the  rights of military families and the growing role of women in the armed  forces. Arman Tatoyan praised the program implemented by the Council of Europe in Armenia in cooperation with the human rights defender and the Ministry of Defense.

Issues related to the rights of women and children, preventing  violence against them, as well as involving women in public life were  also discussed at the meeting. Questions were also raised regarding  offensive and degrading comments on social media.

The Secretary General noted the importance of co-operation between  the Council of Europe, commending the role of Ombudsman in protecting  human rights.

Asbarez: Crashing the Constitution to Crush a Court


Garen Yegparian

BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

For many months, there has been chatter in the Republic of Armenia (RoA) regarding amending its constitution. And, come to think of it, that chatter extended all the way back to when it was last reworked four-five years ago. There have been concerns all along about having a prime minister with too much power, a product of the shenanigans of the previous regime.

Things began to crystallize after Prime Minister Pashinyan’s announcement on December 30. A committee of experts was to be established. But soon, another policy target of the current regime converged – the struggle to take control of the Constitutional Court. By early February, seven of the nine member court had clearly been named as the targets of an April 5th referendum featuring only one amendment to the country’s constitution. It would force the seven out of office.

Immediately the demonization of the court, already underway, started to get louder. It was accused of putting “limits on the people’s power” and being a “terrible and direct threat to democracy”… plus, anyone opposing this process was accused of being “anti-state”! This crusade against the court has been adeptly packaged as part of the ongoing (oft-abused term) “revolution” that began in Spring, 2018 and anyone opposed to the changes became, by extension, anti-revolutionary. All of this demagoguery somehow evokes George Orwell’s “Animal Farm” for me.

This run at the Constitutional Court is also reminiscent of U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s (FDR) attempt to increase the size of the U.S. Supreme Court from 9 to 16 judges and pack it with supportive appointees. He was well intentioned in that the court was obstructing efforts to lift the country out of the Great Depression. But, that would have set a bad precedent, politicizing the judicial system. He was thwarted and that helped restore the country to a course of increasingly solid rule of law.

Pashinyan and his My Step bloc had been deriding the seven, and especially the court’s current president, as corrupt. In fact, a pro-government news outlet recently reported that an investigation of that judge and his godson had been completed and made it seem like charges against them were in the making. Pursuing this kind of investigative and legal path to removing one or more corrupt judges from the Constitutional Court would have been completely reasonable, appropriate, and an enhancement of the rule of law in the RoA.

Instead, Pashinyan has opted for a route that actually undermines the rule of law. At the most obvious level, the process is unconstitutional based simply on the fact that the constitution calls for a review by the Constitutional Court of constitutional amendments prior to their being placed before the voters in a referendum. Pashinyan and the parliament, with its My Step majority, have decided to bypass this requirement. This requirement, found in Article 169 Section 2 of the RoA Constitution struck me as strange, but it is the law of the land. By circumventing it in order to consolidate power, Pashinyan and My Step are behaving much like their corrupt predecessors and others in history, worldwide, who have come to power riding a wave of popular support based on promises of a better life who are then faced with the very real and large challenge of delivering on their promises.

In this light, you can see the irony of their assertions about the seven targeted judges being holdovers from the previous regime of the Republican Party who still do the latter’s bidding! Even if this is true, and I would not be at all surprised if it is, the way to correct the problem is NOT the one chosen by Pashinyan. After all, he is just as much a holdover of a previous regime as any of the judges. Remember, he is Levon Ter Petrosian’s protégé and has some dark chapters in his civic/political/public life, too. But, he seems to have come around to a better path. Why take a step backward into the corrupt, fast-and-loose-with-the-law approach of his predecessors.

Is it not possible that even the seven judges appointed by previous regimes will now behave properly (if they weren’t before) since they are free of the pressure that those formerly in power could apply?

Is there not supposed to be a system of checks and balances among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government? Doesn’t this look like a power grab by the executive and legislative branches at the expense of the judicial?

Isn’t the judicial branch supposed to be the defender of the rule of law, the staid and plodding guardian of a country’s constitution and laws, even at times when citizens may be worked up over various, legitimate, issues and problems leading them to want to circumvent law and procedure to more rapidly achieve their desired goals, thus undermining the very rule of law?

Do not My Step and Pashinyan realize that using tactics which vilify one sector of society ultimately serves to divide it and runs counter to their message of national unity?

Should Pashinyan and My Step, as proponents of democracy, not WANT an opposing pole of power in government to serve as a check on them should they fall into the trap of abusing power? That can happen and has happened to even the most well intentioned of public servants.

Besides, who’s to say the judges who will replace the seven will be any better? An opposition news source reported last week that one of the two Constitutional Court judges appointed since Pashinyan/My Step came to power has not completed his duties because of travel in pursuit of personal business. As a result, the court has not delivered verdicts in a number of cases.

It is a time of peril for the RoA. If this route is taken and followed to its conclusion, the country could easily fall into the same downward spiral that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union and the country’s re-independence when the corrupt system was established under its first president’s watch. There is no doubt in my mind that given the popularity still enjoyed Pashinyan and My Step, they will succeed on April 5, setting them on a path of unchecked rule.

Let’s raise our voices in defense of the very process of positive change initiated two years ago by Pashinyan and our compatriots who took to the streets to reclaim their rights and dignity as citizens. Let’s remind the current regime of its responsibility and help it step back from the brink. Let’s make Pashinyan the Armenian FDR!

Political analyst: During the discussion between the heads of Armenia and Azerbaijan, the statements of the Prime Minister were not very convincing

Arminfo, Armenia
Feb 17 2020

ArmInfo. During the discussion in Munich between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, the statements of the Prime Minister were not very convincing. Political  analyst Alexander Minasyan stated this at a press conference on  February 17.

He noted that such discussions should be well prepared, as it is very  different from the closed-door meeting when it is not known what was  being discussed. Here, in fact, a press conference at which the heads  of two states present their arguments and viewpoints on a very  important issue for the countries.

According to the political analyst, Pashinyan's arguments about  Tigran the Great and the revolution in the country are very weak, the  most interesting is that even the moderator after these statements by  the prime minister was puzzled. "In fact, this kind of argument is  not to the liking of countries like the USA and Russia, the EU will  not like it either, since during the above period of time many states  didn't exist either, which, in turn, could wounded their self-esteem.  And since Pashinyan decided to bring these arguments, they could be  presented more tactfully so as not to cause a negative reaction,  "Minasyan emphasized, noting that it did not make sense to go so deep  into history. The expert noted that the legal side of this issue was  no less important than the historical one. Indeed, in the legal  aspect in the 20th century, Karabakh's independence from Azerbaijan  was confirmed three times, in particular, in 1918, in 1920 and in  1991.

 "The fact that the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group are visiting  Karabakh suggests that they recognize Artsakh as a party to the  conflict. In this situation, Karabakh should not wait for the demands  of Baku, but must put forward its own conditions. And it would be  right for Azerbaijan to apologize to Armenians for the massacre of  the Armenian population in Azerbaijan and Karabakh, "Minasyan noted.  As for the tragedy in Khojaly, the expert noted that according to the  position of the Armenian side, the Popular Front of Azerbaijan bears  all responsibility for what happened, since it was the  representatives of this organization that carried out the massacre of  the civilian population.

It should be noted that on February 15, during a security conference  in Munich, a discussion took place between Prime Minister of Armenia  Nikol Pashinyan and  President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev. Aliyev, in  particular, noted that Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan and the  settlement of the conflict is possible only if it is returned to the  AR. He also added that Artsakh's belonging to Azerbaijan is  recognized by the international community, and it is an integral part  of Azerbaijan. Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan, reacting to these  attacks of Aliyev, advised the latter not to go so deep into history,  recalling that not only before our era, but also in the later period,  the Azerbaijani people in the Caucasus did not exist in principle.  

"If President Aliyev wants to delve deeper into history, then I can  remind him that during the time of the Armenian king Tigran the  Great, there was no country called Azerbaijan in the South Caucasus.   Armenians, Georgians, but not Azerbaijanis lived here historically,"  he added. The prime minister said:  "Karabakh was never part of  independent Azerbaijan. It was included in Azerbaijan only during the  existence of the Soviet Union. Therefore, when we talk about the  territorial integrity of the state, we must first decide which state  is in question," he said , recalling that Artsakh withdrew from the  Azerbaijan SSR and the Soviet Union in the same way as the Azerbaijan  SSR from the USSR. "

Art: Iranahayer Exhibition: Iranian-Armenian artists display works in Tehran

Payvand, Iran
Feb 17 2020
02/16/20

Report by Tehran Times; photos by Sara Abdollahi, Borna News

The Mehrsun Art Gallery in Tehran is showcasing a collection of works by a group of prominent Iranian Armenian artists in an exhibition entitled "Iranahayer".  Armenian Ambassador Artashes Tumanyan, Music Museum of Iran Managing Director Ali Moradkhani and Iranian Artists Forum director Majid Rajabi-Memar attended the opening ceremony of the exhibit on Friday.

Speaking at the ceremony, Tumanyan said that the exhibit features the deep relations between the two nations of Iran and Armenia. 

Armenian Archbishop of Tehran Sebouh Sarkissian, also attending the ceremony, said that the exhibit shows that people of Iran and Armenia have long been friends, and added that the exhibit is a dialogue of the two nations through art.

Setrak Nazarian, Sirak Melkounian, Vahik Hartounian Levon Haftvan and Loris Tjeknavorian are among the artists whose works have been put on display at the exhibit.

The exhibit will be running until April 5 at the gallery located on North Karegar St., near Forsat St. 

See more photos by Sara Abdollahi, Borna News

Armenian president felicitates Iranian Leader, president on Islamic Revolution anniv.

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Feb 11 2020

TEHRAN, Feb. 11 (MNA) – President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian sent congratulatory letters to Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani and Leader of Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei on the 41st anniversary of the victory of the Islamic Revolution.

“The close political and economic cooperation between Armenia and Iran continues also today thanks to the deep friendly traditions. I am confident that the Armenian-Iranian relations will steadily strengthen and develop. Today, when the world is facing numerous challenges, the preservation and development of stable and mutually beneficial relations between Armenia and Iran are important”, the Armenian President said in his letter addressed to his Iranian counterpart.

In the letter addressed to Ayatollah Khamenei, the Armenian President said, “I believe that the respect towards each other’s religion and culture, accompanied with a political dialogue, contributes to the establishment of peace and stability in the region.”

President Armen Sarkissian praised the Armenia-Iran developing cooperation in numerous areas. He wished the Leader good health and success, and peace and prosperity to the good people of Iran.

MNA/PR

Italy declares state of emergency to prevent coronavirus spread after two confirmed cases

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 15:03,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. The Italian government has declared a state of emergency after two Chinese tourists tested positive for the novel coronavirus, PM Conte’s office reported.

Late on Thursday, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced that two Chinese tourists who were visiting Italy had contracted the virus, adding that the government had decided to close air traffic to and from China.

The two Chinese tourists were put in an isolation unit of Rome’s Spallanzani institute.

Authorities are trying to track their contacts to prevent a further spread.

The World Health Organization has declared that the coronavirus outbreak that has killed 213 people in China now constitutes a global public health emergency.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenian parliament convenes extraordinary sitting

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 18:36,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. The National Assembly of Armenia has convened an extraordinary sitting, ARMENPRESS was informed from the official website of the parliament of Armenia.

By the decision of President of the National Assembly Ararat Mirzoyan and the initiative of the MPs the extraordinary sitting will take place on February 6 at 11:00.

The sitting will address mainly constitutional issues.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

Turkish Press: Agos Newspaper: Hrant Dink, Your Hope and Dreams is Our Legacy

BIA News Desk, Turkey
Jan 19 2020
Agos Newspaper: Hrant Dink, Your Hope and Dreams is Our Legacy
On the 13th anniversary of journalist Hrant Dink’s assassination, the headline of Agos newspaper reads, “Your hope and dreams is our legacy.” Selahattin Demirtaş, Osman Kavala and Ahmet Altan have also written for the late journalist from prison.
İstanbul – BIA News Desk

To mark the 13th anniversary of the assassination of its founder and Editor-in-Chief Hrant Dink on January 19, Agos newspaper has come out with the headline "Your hope and dreams is our legacy."

Businessperson and human rights defender Osman Kavala, the only arrested defendant of Gezi trial; Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) imprisoned former Co-Chair Selahattin Demirtaş; and arrested journalist Ahmet Altan have also written a piece in memory of the late journalist.

Having lost his life in an armed attack in front of Agos newspaper in Şişli, İstanbul on January 19, 2007, founder and Editor-in-Chief of Agos newspaper Hrant Dink will be commemorated in several cities and countries on the 13th anniversary of his assassination this Sunday.

Next to his picture taken by Sebati Karakurt, the newspaper has commemorated Hrant Dink in following words:

"It has been 13 years since Hrant Dink, the founder and Editor-in-Chief of our newspaper, passed away in a racist murder. These 13 years passed and are still passing with a search and request for justice, especially in the murder case.

"Over these 13 years, there has, unfortunately, happened no significant development that would reveal the ones who planned this dark murder, especially the ones within the state.

"It was only nine years after the murder that public officers were put on trial. Though some relations have been uncovered and the curtain of mystery has parted even a little in the case that continued for almost four years, there are still no effective investigations and the ones who paved the way for his murder and caused himto be targeted are not put on trial. The state is still resisting.

"However, the words and dreams of Hrant Dink are growing with each passing day. For the past 13 years, more and more people in Turkey and abroad have been attentively listening to the words of Hrant, they come to know his world and feel the same with him by visiting the Memory Site, which was opened last year. The hope and dreams of Hrant are guiding us."

Addressing the readers of Agos newspaper from Silivri Prison in İstanbul, Osman Kavala has indicated that he cannot be in Şişli on January 19 to commemorate Hrant Dink this year, as was also the case in the previous two years. Kavala has added the following in brief:

"I will commemorate Dear Hrant by thinking of his picture captured with seagulls and by looking at the seagulls flying over me.

"Commemorating Hrant makes us face the harsh reality of how easy it is for a human to do such evil to another human being, to his or her fellow citizens, to their brothers and sisters.

"But, thinking about Hrant gives us more strength to bear what we go through and to cherish hope. I and the ones who have been unjustly put behind bars have lost our freedom for a while; Hrant has lost his life because of what he wrote and said.

"As long as we live, we will have the opportunity to demand justice and to be hopeful, on our own and with others… On our own and with others, we will keep demanding justice for Hrant, for the honorable people of this country and for everyone. I wish that 2020 would be a year raising our hopes."

Arrested in Edirne Type F Prison, HDP former Co-Chair Selahattin Demirtaş has also addressed a letter to Agos in memory of Hrant Dink.

"We also hear things raising hopes behind bars", Selahattin Demirtaş has said and added, "Wherever there is persecution, there is resistance. If there is resistance, there is hope."

Demirtaş has also shared an anecdote from the year 2001. He has recounted how Dink came to a conference in Diyarbakır briefly as follows:

"My dear friend, I don't know whether you remember it or not… You came to Diyarbakır for a conference in 2001. The State of Emergency was still in effect, it had not yet been lifted. It was very difficult to get a permission for a panel or conference. But, a permission could still be obtained for that conference. We could hardly persuade you.

"Back then, one had to give the identity register copies, residence certificates and criminal records of all speakers to the security directorate before the conference. I was attending to the bureaucratic procedures. We called you and asked for these documents. You were puzzled at first. 'That cannot be right', you said at first. We could hardly persuade you. Because we really wanted that you be our guest in Diyarbakır and attend the conference.

"When the documents of all speakers arrived, we went to the security directorate for the application. The police commander looked at the documents and said, 'So, you are also inviting an Armenian, right?'

"I had always forgotten to tell you after that day. At that time, I realized that some people did not see your humanity, they troubled themselves that you were Armenian."

Arrested in Silivri Prison in İstanbul, writer and journalist Ahmet Altan has also penned an article in memory of the late journalist.

Entitled "A Murder, A Funeral", the article of Ahmet Altan has focused on the role assumed by Turkey in killing of Hrant Dink:

"Some people in secret rooms decided that he was 'guilty'.The first biggest crime of Hrant was that he told Turkey that an Armenian was a human and an Armenian was as desirable as a Turk". (HA/SD)


http://m.bianet.org/english/human-rights/218777-agos-newspaper-hrant-dink-your-hope-and-dreams-is-our-legacy?fbclid=IwAR3ism6u-9DbEYWaktU5jGemQr75SS-jGzPHOJyNz59Fn01-0nb3XS73kfA

Archaeologists discover ancient aqueduct near Khor Virap

Aravot, Armenia
Jan 17 2020

                                                       
                                                        

ԵՌԱԳՈՅՆ.  Archaeologists have discovered an ancient water supply system in Armenia with almost two thousand years of history, reports ArmInfo.

According to director of the Institute of Archeology and Ethnography of the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia Bavel Avedisian, not far from the ancient monastery of Khor Virap, the foundations of an aqueduct – a water conduit for supplying water from sources located above them – were found. In total, within the framework of the Armenian-German program, 20 foundations were found, located over a length of half a mile, Avedisian specified at a press conference on January 14. According to experts, they relate to 114 to 117 AD, and give insight to the water supply system of ancient Artashat.

Avedisian did not exclude the possibility that the aqueduct was used to supply water from the Garni River. According to him, the research will continue in the current year.

Apart from the aqueduct, archaeologists have yet to study another major find: geomagnetic studies have revealed the surviving foundations of large palace buildings in the vicinity of modern Artashat, near the 13th hill. All foundations are now located on privatized lands, which means that, in order to excavate, archaeologists must come to an agreement with the current owners. Avedisian expressed hope that this process will begin this year. The excavations will make it possible to present the ancient Artashat to the scientific community in a completely new way, he explained.

The town of Artashat has a long and rich history, as a settlement in ancient Artashat has existed since the Urartian period. From 190 to 189 BC, Armenia gained independence from the Seleucids. Following independence, its first king was Artashes I, who later founded Artashat (“joy of Artashes”).