Armenian writer Mıgırdiç Margosyan laid to rest

BIAnet, Turkey
April 17 2022

The author passed away on Saturday at the age of 84. Politicians, local governors, journalists and writers attended the funeral.

The funeral of Armenian writer Mıgırdiç Margosyan was held today (April 7) at the Kumkapı Patriarchate Church in Fatih, İstanbul.

Several politicians, local governors, journalists and writers attended the funeral. After the ceremony, Margosyan was laid to rest at the Şişli Armenian Cemetery.

Photo: Surp Haç Tıbrevank Armenian High School/Twitter

Republican People's Party (CHP) deputies Sezgin Tanrıkulu and Turan Aydoğan, Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) deputies Garo Paylan and Züleyha Gülüm, Labor Party Chair Ercüment Akdeniz, Princes' Islands Mayor Erdem Gül, Kadıköy Mayor Şerdil Dara Odabaşı, DİSK Basın İş union Chair Faruk Eren, and writer Şeyhmus Diken were among those who attended the funeral.

Margosyan passed away on Saturday (April 2) at the age of 84.

Writer and novelist. He was born in Diyarbakır's Hançepek Neighborhood (The Neighborhood of Giaours) on December 23, 1938.

He graduated from the Philosophy Department of İstanbul University Faculty of Literature. Between 1966 and 1972, he was the manager and a teacher of philosophy, psychology and Armenian language and literature at the Surp Haç Tıbrevank Armenian Church in Üsküdar, İstanbul.

Later, he quit teaching and went into business. He continued his literary works without interruption.

Some of the Armenian stories he wrote for Marmara newspaper were made into a book entitled "Mer Ayt Goğmerı" (Our Neighborhood) in 1984. With this book, he was granted the Eliz Kavukçuyan Literary Award in Paris in 1988.

Aras Publishing House published several other books by Margosyan. Compilations of his articles for Evrensel and Agos were also published as books.

His last book, The Journal of God (Tanrı'nın Syir Defteri), was published in 2016. (AÖ/VK)

F18News: NAGORNO-KARABAKH: Second ECtHR finding against Armenia on entity’s religious freedom

FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVzRkKBng$
 

The right to believe, to worship and witness
The right to change one's belief or religion
The right to join together and express one's belief

=================================================

Tuesday 29 March 2022
NAGORNO-KARABAKH: Second ECtHR finding against Armenia on entity's
religious freedom

On 22 March, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) found that
Nagorno-Karabakh had violated the rights of Jehovah's Witnesses by refusing
from 2009 to register their community in the entity. The ECtHR ordered
Armenia – as exercising "effective control" there - to pay compensation.
Jehovah's Witnesses and some Protestant communities are still denied
registration. Armenia's Representative to the ECtHR has not stated what
steps Armenia will take to end the violations.

NAGORNO-KARABAKH: Second ECtHR finding against Armenia on entity's
religious freedom
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2728__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsXipFpNMQ$
 
By Felix Corley, Forum 18

For the second time, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) in
Strasbourg has ruled that Armenia is responsible for a violation of the
right to freedom of religion or belief in the ethnic Armenian-controlled
unrecognised entity of Nagorno-Karabakh. A 22 March judgment found that
Nagorno-Karabakh had violated the rights of Jehovah's Witnesses by refusing
since 2009 to register their community in the entity under the local
Religion Law. The Court ordered the Armenian government to pay compensation
to the Jehovah's Witness community.

Some Protestant churches have since 2009 similarly been denied registration
in the entity. The leader of one such church told Forum 18 on 29 March 2022
from the entity's capital Stepanakert that although the church wants
registration, "it is not the time to discuss this", given the acute
military situation. "Everyone is helping to defend the country."

Although the registration denials in the ECtHR judgment related to 2009,
2010 and 2012, Jehovah's Witnesses told Forum 18 that they still do not
have the compulsory registration in Nagorno-Karabakh. However, neither
Protestant nor Jehovah's Witness communities have been raided or fined in
recent years (see below).

Denial of legal status denies communities the possibility to as communities
rent or buy properties for meetings for worship, employ clergy, or engage
in other normal community activities.

The ECtHR rejected Armenia's argument that it had "no jurisdiction" over
Nagorno-Karabakh. Among the cases the ECtHR cited to reject Armenia's claim
was a July 2021 judgment in the case of Jehovah's Witness conscientious
objector Artur Avanesyan, jailed in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2014 (see below).

In its 2021 judgment in Avanesyan's case, the ECtHR rejected Armenia's
claim that it had no jurisdiction over Nagorno-Karabakh, pointing out that
it exercised "effective control" there. "The obligation to secure the
rights and freedoms set out in the [European] Convention [on Human Rights]
in such an area derives from the fact of such control, whether it be
exercised directly, through the Contracting State's own armed forces, or
through a subordinate local administration," the ECtHR declared (see
below).

A 9 November 2020 tripartite agreement between Azerbaijan, Armenia and
Russia ended a bitter 44-day war between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces
over control of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding territories which saw an
estimated 6,500 people killed and major Azerbaijani advances. Renewed
clashes broke out on 25 March 2022.

Ashot Sargsyan, the 63-year-old Head of the Religion and National
Minorities Department of the Culture and Youth Ministry, wrote the 2009
"expert opinion" justifying refusal of the Jehovah's Witness application
(see below).

Sargsyan claimed to Forum 18 from Stepanakert on 28 March 2022 that "we
respect all the rights of all citizens" and said Armenia would pay the
compensation. He then refused to discuss the registration denials since
2009, pointing to the heightened state of conflict with Azerbaijan. "We
have war now. I am at the General Staff with my gun" (see below).

Yeghishe Kirakosyan, Armenia's Representative to the European Court of
Human Rights, was not in the office in Yerevan on 28 March. Forum 18 asked
him in writing the same day whether Armenia will pay the compensation to
Nagorno-Karabakh's Jehovah's Witness community ordered by the ECtHR and
what steps the Armenian authorities will take to ensure that the
Nagorno-Karabakh authorities will end the violations of the community's
rights (see below).

Despite the 2021 ECtHR judgment that the jailing of Avanesyan for refusing
compulsory military service had violated his rights, Nagorno-Karabakh has
still not introduced a civilian alternative for those who cannot
participate in the military on grounds of conscience. Avanesyan had
declared his willingness to conduct such an alternative (see below).

Registration denials

Nagorno-Karabakh adopted a new Religion Law
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1236__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsViYJXb2Q$
 ) in December 2008,
which remains in force. The Law included a ban on unregistered religious
activity; state censorship of religious literature; the requirement for 100
adult citizens to register a religious community; an undefined "monopoly"
given to the Armenian Apostolic Church over preaching and spreading its
faith while restricting other faiths to similarly undefined "rallying their
own faithful"; and the vague formulation of restrictions, making the
intended implementation of many articles uncertain.

The Law gave religious communities six months to register or re-register
after it came into force in January 2009.

Nagorno-Karabakh's Jehovah's Witness community sought registration under
the Religion Law at least three times, firstly on 22 June 2009. On 6 July
2009, officials handed the community an "expert opinion" prepared by Ashot
Sargsyan 
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1371__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsUGGH8YLg$
 ), then Head
of the government's Department for Ethnic Minority and Religious Affairs.

Sargsyan claimed that Jehovah's Witness "ministers (preachers) use a number
of methods of psychological influence on believers" and that the activity
of certain "active members" in Nagorno-Karabakh "since 1993 (especially
during the war years) has amounted to weakening and disrupting the defence
of the country at war" because of their refusal to participate in any
military activity.

The State Registry Department of the Justice Ministry then rejected the
registration application on 3 August 2009 on the basis of the "expert
opinion".

The Jehovah's Witness community challenged the denial of registration in
the local courts but without success
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1371__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsUGGH8YLg$
 ). During one hearing,
Sargsyan told the court: "No one accepts Jehovah's Witnesses as a
[religious] organisation but as a sect, fake organisation." He added: "The
State Registry Department refused to register Jehovah's Witnesses based on
our conclusion, and I consider that that was right."

Case goes to European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR)

In July 2010, Nagorno-Karabakh's Jehovah's Witness community submitted its
case over the denial of registration to the ECtHR in Strasbourg
(Application No. 41817/10 
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-216366__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsXdvaxGew$
 )).
It had to lodge its case against Armenia as Nagorno-Karabakh – as an
unrecognised entity – cannot join the Council of Europe and is thus not
subject directly to the jurisdiction of the ECtHR.

At the same time the community pursued a second registration application,
again in vain. A third application in 2012 was also unsuccessful.

Particularly in 2010, officials raided and fined Jehovah's Witness
communities in several towns, as well as communities of Protestants
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1437__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsXrV44yfA$
 ), for meeting for
worship without registration.

Neither Protestant nor Jehovah's Witness communities have been raided or
fined in recent years.

ECtHR finds registration denial a violation

In March 2018 the ECtHR asked the Armenian government about the case. After
considering the case in private on 1 March 2022, the ECtHR issued its
judgment (Application No. 41817/10
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-216366__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsXdvaxGew$
 )) on 22 March.

The ECtHR found that Armenia had violated the right of Nagorno-Karabakh's
Jehovah's Witness community by failing to ensure that it was not
arbitrarily denied registration.

"Relying on a number of cases decided by the International Court of
Justice, [the Armenian government] argued, in particular, that States
providing support to unrecognised entities could not be held responsible
for specific actions undertaken by agents of the local administrations of
those unrecognised entities." The ECtHR did not accept this, citing a
number of earlier judgments.

These included a July 2021 judgment in the case of Jehovah's Witness
conscientious objector Artur Avanesyan, jailed in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2014
(see below).

"The Court reiterates that a refusal by the domestic authorities to grant
legal-entity status to an association, religious or otherwise, of
individuals amounts to an interference with the exercise of the right to
freedom of association," the judgment declared. It rejected Armenia's
contention that denial of registration had not affected the community's
rights, pointing to the "instances of interference with the community
life", including with the 2010 fines.

The ECtHR said Sargsyan "openly showed his negative predisposition towards
the applicant". It added that his 2009 "expert opinion" used to deny
registration was "based on conjecture uncorroborated by fact".

"The Court observes that the expert opinion did not mention the name of a
single individual who had allegedly fallen victim to the techniques of
psychological manipulation indicated," the judgment noted. "Nor was there
any specific evidence to support the allegation that Jehovah's Witnesses
were engaged in improper proselytism within the meaning of the Court's
case-law."

The ECtHR also stressed that "it is now the Court's settled case-law that
opposition to military service, where it is motivated by a serious and
insurmountable conflict between the obligation to serve in the army and a
person's conscience or his deeply and genuinely held religious or other
beliefs, constitutes a conviction or belief of sufficient cogency,
seriousness, cohesion and importance to attract the guarantees of Article
9" of the European Convention on Human Rights ("Freedom of thought,
conscience and religion").

The ECtHR noted that, despite Jehovah's Witness attempts, local courts
"never examined in substance" the grounds for refusal of registration.

Financial compensation, but will registration denials end?

The ECtHR ordered that Armenia pay Nagorno-Karabakh's Jehovah's Witness
community compensation of 4,500 Euros, plus 1,000 Euros in costs, a total
of 5,500 Euros (3 million Armenian Drams, 53,000 Norwegian Kroner or 6,000
US Dollars). The compensation is payable in the three months after the
court judgment is deemed final (three months from 22 March, unless Armenia
challenges the decision).

Ashot Sargsyan, Head of the Religion and National Minorities Department of
the Culture and Youth Ministry, wrote the 2009 "expert opinion". He claimed
to Forum 18 from Stepanakert on 28 March 2022 that "we respect all the
rights of all citizens". He said Armenia would pay the compensation. He
then refused to discuss the registration denials since 2009, pointing to
the heightened state of conflict with Azerbaijan. "We have war now. I am at
the General Staff with my gun".

Yeghishe Kirakosyan, Armenia's Representative to the European Court of
Human Rights, was not in the office in Yerevan on 28 March. Forum 18 asked
him in writing the same day whether Armenia will pay the compensation to
Nagorno-Karabakh's Jehovah's Witness community ordered by the ECtHR and
what steps the Armenian authorities will take to ensure that the
Nagorno-Karabakh authorities will end the violations of the community's
rights. Forum 18 had received no response by the end of the working day in
Yerevan of 29 March.

Jailed for refusing compulsory military service

Nagorno-Karabakh has jailed Jehovah's Witnesses for refusing compulsory
military service on grounds of conscience. It has also jailed Baptists for
refusing to swear the military oath or handle weapons on grounds of
conscience 
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1463__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVBOYCoeg$
 ) while
serving in the military.

The Military Conscription Office in Askeran called up for military service
local Jehovah's Witness Artur Avanesyan
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2014__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVvxyzw0w$
 ) in January 2014 when
he was 18 years old. That same month, he wrote to the Military Conscription
Office setting out his inability to conduct military service on grounds of
conscience. As alternative civilian service was not available in
Nagorno-Karabakh, he offered to do it in Armenia (like most ethnic Armenian
residents of Nagorno-Karabakh, he held an Armenian passport).

On the day he sent his letter, Avanesyan moved to the town of Masis near
Yerevan in Armenia, as he feared the Military Conscription Office would
reject his application and bring a criminal prosecution against him.

In February 2014, Askeran Regional Prosecutor's Office opened a case
against Avanesyan under Article 347, Part 1 of Nagorno-Karabakh's 2013
Criminal Code. This punishes: "Evasion from regular military or alternative
service call-up, training exercise or mobilisation, without any order
defined by Legislation as grounds for exemption, is punished with arrest
for a maximum term of two months, or imprisonment for a maximum term of
three years."

Following his move to Armenia and anticipating a positive resolution,
Avanesyan applied for alternative civilian service in February 2014 with
the Military Conscription Office in Masis.

While hoping to appear before Armenia's alternative service board,
Avanesyan was instead summoned on 14 July 2014 to report that day to
Yerevan's Central District Police Station. When he arrived at the station,
police from Nagorno-Karabakh were waiting for him. They arrested him and
took him to Nagorno-Karabakh.

Jehovah's Witnesses insisted to Forum 18
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2014__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVvxyzw0w$
 ) that Avanesyan's
arrest by Nagorno-Karabakh police at Yerevan's Central District Police
Station and immediate deportation to Nagorno-Karabakh was illegal.

The next day, Avanesyan was placed in pre-trial detention and brought
before Mardakert Court.

At the end of his trial at Mardakert Court on 30 September 2014, Judge
Spartak Grigoryan rejected Avanesyan's insistence that he was innocent of
any crime and sentenced him to 30 months' imprisonment
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2014__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVvxyzw0w$
 ) under Criminal Code
Article 347, Part 1. His appeal was rejected in November 2014. The Supreme
Court rejected his further appeal the following month.

Avanesyan was sent to serve his sentence in the prison in Shushi, a city
then under the control of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Nagorno-Karabakh's then Human Rights Ombudsperson described Avanesyan to
Forum 18 in November 2014
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2014__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVvxyzw0w$
 ) as "a criminal who
must pay the price for his crime".

ECtHR finds jailing of conscientious objector a violation

Avanesyan lodged his case to the ECtHR in Strasbourg in March 2015
(Application No. 12999/15 
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-211259__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVuovpqww$
 )).
He had to lodge his case against Armenia as Nagorno-Karabakh – as an
unrecognised entity – cannot join the Council of Europe and is thus not
subject directly to the jurisdiction of the ECtHR.

On 6 September 2016, authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh released Avanesyan
from Shushi prison under a general amnesty, Jehovah's Witnesses told Forum
18. He had served 26 months of the 30-month prison sentence.

The ECtHR finally asked questions of the Armenian government in February
2018. 

After considering the case in private on 15 June 2021, the ECtHR issued its
judgment on 20 July 2021. The judgment became final on 20 October 2021.

The ECtHR found that Armenia had violated Avanesyan's rights by jailing him
for refusing to conduct military service.

The ECtHR rejected Armenia's claim that it had no jurisdiction over
Nagorno-Karabakh, pointing out that it exercised "effective control" there.
"The obligation to secure the rights and freedoms set out in the [European]
Convention [on Human Rights] in such an area derives from the fact of such
control, whether it be exercised directly, through the Contracting State's
own armed forces, or through a subordinate local administration," the ECtHR
declared.

The ECtHR found that, while Nagorno-Karabakh had – unlike Armenia -
chosen not to introduce a civilian alternative to compulsory military
service, "Armenia was responsible for the acts and omissions of the 'NKR'
authorities and was under an obligation to secure in that area the rights
and freedoms set out in the Convention".

The ECtHR ruled that Avanesyan's rights under Article 9 ("Freedom of
thought, conscience and religion") of the European Convention on Human
Rights had been violated.

The ECtHR ordered that Armenia pay Avanesyan compensation of 9,000 Euros,
plus 1,500 Euros in costs, a total of 10,500 Euros (5.6 million Armenian
Drams, 100,000 Norwegian Kroner or 11,500 US Dollars). The compensation
became payable in the three months after the court judgment was deemed
final on 20 October 2021.

Forum 18 was unable to find out from Yeghishe Kirakosyan, Armenia's
Representative to the European Court of Human Rights, what steps Armenia
will take to ensure that Nagorno-Karabakh protects the rights of
conscientious objectors to military service.

No alternative civilian service

Despite urging by local Jehovah's Witnesses and civil society organisations
in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh has refused to introduce
a civilian alternative to compulsory military service. Officials argue that
such an alternative service would undermine the entity's need to defend
itself.

Since Avanesyan's release from prison in September 2016, no conscientious
objectors have been jailed in Nagorno-Karabakh, human rights defenders told
Forum 18.

After years of jailing conscientious objectors and judgments against it
from the ECtHR, Armenia finally introduced an alternative civilian service
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1844__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsWYrUw7Rw$
 ) in May 2013.

Despite judgments against it from the ECtHR, Azerbaijan has rejected calls
for it to introduce a civilian alternative to compulsory military service
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2695__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsV8lKHhaA$
 ) and has repeatedly
jailed conscientious objectors. Azerbaijan committed to the Council of
Europe to introduce such a civilian alternative service by January 2003.
(END)

Full reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in
Nagorno-Karabakh
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?query=&religion=all&country=22__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsWackE_wQ$
 )

A personal commentary by Derek Brett of Conscience and Peace Tax
International on conscientious objection to military service and
international law in the light of the European Court of Human Rights' July
2011 Bayatyan judgment
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1597__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsXUU86DvA$
 )

Forum 18's compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in
Europe (OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1351__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsXsjnq85Q$
 )

Follow us on Twitter @Forum_18 
(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://twitter.com/forum_18__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVlMkqgug$
 )

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(https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.facebook.com/Forum18NewsService__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!5x4MjQ8Le5TUV8IZdzZKh0WqVdj4HrGZVsrwYkgjci5PjXqyjtlMGsVJh6cX3g$
 )

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PM Pashinyan to hold phone talk with Putin

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 17:17,

YEREVAN, MARCH 25, ARMENPRESS. President of Russia Vladimir Putin said he will hold a phone conversation with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan today, on March 25, TASS reported.

Putin announced the call during a meeting with laureates of culture and arts awards.

“I will have the opportunity to convey your warm words about Yerevan today to the Armenian Prime Minister, with whom I will have a phone talk,” TASS quoted Putin as saying at the event.

Armenian oppositionist to French Ambassador: Artsakh can never be part of Azerbaijan

ARMINFO
Armenia –
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. On March 23, the RA NA Vice President Ishkhan Saghatelyan received the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of France to the  Republic of Armenia Anne Louyot and the First Counselor of the  Embassy of France to Armenia Christophe Katsahian.

As the press service of the RA Nareports, welcoming the guests,  Ishkhan Saghatelyan highly appreciated the Armenian-French friendly  relations. "France is one of the most important and friendly  countries of Armenia in Europe. We have permanently seen the support  of France to the Republic of Armenia, and we are concerned about  developing the bilateral relations," the NA Vice President  underlined.

Ishkhan Saghatelyan has presented the situation created in Armenia  and in Artsakh in the post-war period, noting that both Armenia and  Artsakh have the most serious security problems at this moment. After  the ceasefire Azerbaijan continues its threatening rhetoric,  aggression and the policy of evictions of Armenians from Artsakh. In  this context the NA Vice President noted that the Azerbaijani armed  forces invaded the sovereign territory of Armenia in two directions  on the previous year and continue remaining there.

Touching upon the Artsakh problem and the processes going on around  it, Ishkhan Saghatelyan informed that a few days ago they exploded  the pipeline from the Azerbaijani side in Artsakh, putting about  100.000 Artsakh residents before the humanitarian disaster. And plus  to this there are various threats also directed to the residents to  leave the villages. "We greatly highlight the response of the  international community and the distinct assessment to what is  happening. The problem of Artsakh should be resolved within the  framework of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship," the NA Vice  President stressed, adding that this format should be able to be kept  despite the wish of Azerbaijan. "Our position is that Artsakh can  never be part of Azerbaijan," the opposition deputy underlined.

The Ambassador was interested in the relations of the opposition with  the authorities, not nominating candidate for the President of the  Republic by the opposition, the issues of signing a peace treaty with  Azerbaijan, the Armenian-Turkish relations, etc. In her turn,  Ambassador Anne Louyot underscored the Armenian-French high level  relations, emphasized the meetings with the parliamentary opposition.  The Ambassador has informed that France attentively follows the  actions happening on the Armenian- Azerbaijani border.

Regarding the issue of the NK conflict settlement, Anne Louyot has  assured that France maintains its positions within the framework of  the OSCE Minsk Group Co- Chairmanship in order to be able to help  both sides to establish peace and stability in the region. 

Asian Development Bank plans to continue projects in Armenia

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 16:55,

YEREVAN, MARCH 16, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel Sanosyan received the delegation led by Arif Baharudin, the Executive Director of the Board of the Asian Development Bank (ADB).

Sanosyan attached importance to the opportunity to discuss the deepening of ongoing and future cooperation with the ADB. He underscored that numerous and multi-layered projects are being implemented through the ADB in Armenia.

Baharudin noted that Armenia’s economy is recovering in a rather good pace after the pandemic and that the ADB is willing to continue the implementation of projects in Armenia. Particularly, the ADB is inclined to continue the seismic safety improvement project in schools. The ADB is also interested in the southern section of the North-South project, and the cooperation in the energy sector is also highlighted.

Sanosyan’s deputy Kristine Ghalechyan thanked the ADB for their attention and consistency in the projects implemented in the road sector, and presented the projects that are being developed by the ministry.

Sanosyan and Ghalechyan highlighted the construction of the Sisian-Kajaran section of the North-South project and attached importance to the ADB’s involvement in this project. The opportunities for modernizing and implementing solid waste management programs in Armenia were also discussed.

Reuters: Turkish, Armenian foreign ministers meet amid efforts to mend ties





Reuters Antalya 

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan met for talks in southern Turkey on Saturday as part of the neighbours' efforts to mend ties after decades of animosity.

The two met at a diplomatic forum in Antalya. Turkey has had no diplomatic or commercial ties with Armenia since the 1990s but they held talks in January in a first attempt to restore links since a 2009 peace accord, which was never ratified.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

https://www.devdiscourse.com/article/law-order/1959615-turkish-armenian-foreign-ministers-meet-amid-efforts-to-mend-ties

ALSO at

https://nationalpost.com/pmn/news-pmn/turkish-armenian-foreign-ministers-meet-amid-efforts-to-mend-ties

https://www.devdiscourse.com/article/politics/1959644-turkeys-cavusoglu-says-he-had-constructive-meeting-with-armenian-counterpart

https://www.streetregister.com/2022/03/12/turkish-armenian-foreign-ministers-meet-amid-efforts-to-mend-ties-breaking/

Armenia, Artsakh Ombudsmen issue statement over persecution announced by Azeri authorities against President Harutyunyan

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 10:12,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. The statement of the Azerbaijani authorities related to the criminal prosecution of the President of the Republic of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan is a step aimed at concealing their own war crimes, misleading the international community and intimidating the peaceful population of Artsakh, Ombudsmen of Armenia and Artsakh Arman Tatoyan and Gegham Stepanyan said in a statement.

“The Azerbaijani authorities have always pursued a policy of isolating Artsakh from the outside world, concealing human rights violations and war crimes against peace by falsifying facts. In doing so, they continue to grossly violate the absolute international requirements of human rights and humanitarian law.

The practice of targeting Armenia’s, Artsakh’s, as well as international public figures, experts and journalists; blackmailing and persecuting them with so-called blacklists is the best proof that the calls and statements of the Azerbaijani authorities about peace are false, are veiled to the outside world with the purpose of concealing their real intentions.

In reality, for years a policy of sponsoring hatred and hostility towards Armenians has been carried out with ethnic and religious pillars as two main grounds, with deep intolerance.

In fact, a genocidal policy has been carried out, which is still going on.

Even in the education system there is a policy of hatred and enmity towards Armenians, ensuring similar reproduction in the future, the spread of hatred in the society (based on facts).

This policy is the source that nurtured and encouraged the atrocities and torture by the Azerbaijani armed forces against the civilian population of Armenia and Artsakh; the ethnic cleansing of the civilian population during the 44-day Artsakh war, with various armed attacks and criminal acts before and after that war.

These are the Azerbaijani authorities that are directly responsible for war crimes against humanity, including destruction of almost all civilian communities in Artsakh, using terrorists and mercenaries to deliberately target, kill 80 and injure 165 civilians, torture Armenian captives; for mutilation of the killed servicemen’s bodies; for depriving the 40,000 civilian population of Artsakh of their homeland and houses, for forcibly displacing them, for desecrating the Armenian historical and cultural monuments in Artsakh, for vandalizing them.

The Azerbaijani authorities are responsible for the internationally unacceptable armed attacks during the COVID-19 pandemic, which paralyzed healthcare systems of Armenia and Artsakh and resulted in sharp increase in deaths.

In the same way, by initiating criminal cases against various public figures, human rights defenders and journalists (including international ones), they tried to cover up the atrocities committed and future atrocities against the peaceful Armenian population of Artsakh.

After the 44-day war, this policy of the Azerbaijani authorities has intensified and took new forms. They do not allow people to rebuild their lives after the war, they constantly try to create an atmosphere of despair for the civilian population through daily criminal encroachments on the security of people, life and other vital rights and other terrorist acts.

The above assessments of the Human Rights Defender of Armenia and the Human Rights Ombudsman of Artsakh are based on reliable, concrete facts and have been included in our numerous reports.

Therefore, the purpose of the persecution announced by the Azerbaijani authorities against the President of the Republic of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan is nothing but to intimidate every person living in Artsakh, to cause panic among the civilian population. Even the wording of the Azerbaijani law enforcement agencies clearly testifies to this goal. This, in turn, means that the persecution is politically motivated; is based on blatant manipulation of facts.

We confidently inform the international community that the Azerbaijani authorities will continue to falsify the facts, misleading with new methods, such as hiding their criminal acts against the civilian population behind calls for peace, until they are held liable for their genocidal policies; subjected to targeted response and punished for their criminal acts”, the Ombudsmen said in their statement, adding that they will send it to international organizations in separate letters.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 18-02-22

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 17:48,

YEREVAN, 18 FEBUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 18 February, USD exchange rate up by 0.62 drams to 479.00 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.18 drams to 544.62 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.02 drams to 6.32 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 1.89 drams to 652.49 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 512.22 drams to 29159.52 drams. Silver price up by 1.77 drams to 363.21 drams. Platinum price up by 575.20 drams to 16616.82 drams.

How Far Will Turkey Go to Support Ukraine?

FP
Foreign Policy Magazine
Feb 18 2022

By Erin O’Brien, a freelance journalist based in Istanbul.

In recent weeks, as Russia positioned more than 130,000 troops along the Russian-Ukrainian border and the United States warned of an imminent Russian invasion, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has emphasized his support for Ukraine. The Black Sea neighbors have become critical trade and defense partners during Erdogan’s time in office, signing free trade agreements in the billions of dollars and lucrative weapons production deals. Turkey also controls Ukraine’s only waterway to the Mediterranean—the Bosphorus—critical for the country’s connection to the global market.

The Turkish president underlined the importance of the partnership and the Ukrainian autonomy that facilitates it in an interview with the Turkish broadcaster NTV on Jan. 26.

“I hope that Russia will not make an armed attack or occupy Ukraine. Such a step will not be a wise act for Russia or the region,” he said.

This is a sentiment Erdogan has long repeated, particularly since Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, which Turkey still does not recognize. This is done ostensibly in the name of the Crimean Tatar community there, which Turkey views as part of a larger Turkic brotherhood. Crimea was a part of the Ottoman Empire until 1783, when Russia invaded the peninsula and subsequently settled ethnic Russians and displaced ethnic Crimeans there.

In 1944, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin ordered the violent deportation of hundreds of thousands of the remaining Crimean Tatars, an incident Erdogan and many of his supporters liken to the 2014 invasion and annexation by Putin’s Russia. The plight of this community has been a rallying cry for Erdogan in his attempts at pan-Turkic diplomacy and has enabled the strengthening of Turkey’s relationship with Ukraine. In remarks on Feb. 3, he said the Tatars were “kinsmen” who form a “historical bridge of friendship between our countries.”

Staunch support for Ukraine and alignment with NATO could help thaw the relationship and lead to better relations with the West overall.

Erdogan traveled to Ukraine himself in early February to meet with President Volodymyr Zelensky and deepen Turkey’s trade and defense ties with the country. He has offered to act as a peace broker between Moscow and Kyiv. By all appearances, the Turkish president has signaled solidarity with Kyiv in case of a conflict, even selling drones to Ukrainian government forces fighting Russia-backed separatists in the Donbass region.

But that signaling is likely as far as Turkey is willing to go. Despite standing on opposite sides of conflicts around the world—in Syria, Libya, and now Ukraine—Turkey is deeply reliant on its relationship with Russia. The two countries maintain a “competitive cooperation,” according to Asli Aydintasbas, a journalist and senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Turkey relies on Russian natural gas for more than 40 percent of its total natural gas needs and is likely to import more in the wake of a four-year deal signed between the Russian gas giant Gazprom and Turkey’s Botas. Especially in the face of a domestic energy crisis, as prices rise and Iran cuts supply to the country, and Turkey’s ever-worsening relationship with its Western allies due to the country’s human rights abuses, Erdogan is unlikely to threaten a tenuous Russian alliance, even for Turkey’s NATO allies.

Turkey’s support for Ukraine reflects an unease with what seems to be Russian expansion in the Black Sea region. The Ukraine-Turkey relationship is also undergirded by the significant bilateral defense and economic agreements inked by the current Turkish government. Turkey, as of 2021, is the largest foreign investor in Ukraine, with $4.5 billion in annual investment—and trade between the two countries totaling over $5 billion. During their recent meeting in Kyiv, Erdogan and Zelensky signed a free-trade deal that they say will boost trade to $10 billion and vastly expanded defense cooperation.

Ukraine is also a critical partner for Turkey in the production and sale of military weaponry. Since 2018, Turkey has sold Bayraktar TB2 drones to Kyiv, the same equipment that helped enable the Turkish-backed Azerbaijani victory in Nagorno-Karabakh. During their February meeting, Erdogan and Zelensky signed a deal to co-produce Bayraktar TB2s at a production facility in Ukraine that will also include a training facility for Ukrainian pilots.

Bayraktar TB2s have been used in the Ukraine conflict since October 2021, when the Ukrainian government was trading blows with Russian-backed separatists in Donbass. Despite this clearly agitating Russian President Vladimir Putin—he called Erdogan shortly after the drones were deployed—Ankara has not signaled it will stop supplying drones to Kyiv.

“These are revolutionary systems and tactics,” said Matthew Bryza, a former U.S. ambassador to Azerbaijan and now a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. “The fact that they decided to sell them to Ukraine at this tense moment is a powerful sign.”

But the Bayraktar TB2s might not be as effective if the Russians pursue a more traditional invasion with heavy weaponry, like that which is being massed on the border.


Turkish and Ukrainian defense cooperation extends beyond Bayraktar drones. After a previous meeting between the two leaders in October 2020, the countries charted a path toward joint production of a range of defense and security technologies, including more drones and jet engines, a sector in which Ukraine excels. This was widely seen as a move to counter Russia’s power in the Black Sea region, but it also greatly increased Turkey’s defense production capacity for domestic use and export.

Therefore, Turkey would stand to lose a key component of its fledgling defense industry by sacrificing its relationship with Ukraine to appease Putin. Failure to support Ukraine could also lead to the loss of lucrative defense sales to the country, such as the 2020 agreement for Turkey to supply Ukraine with naval defense vessels. As Bryza put it, “This is a business opportunity for Turkey that has national security implications.”

Support for Ukraine also has the effect of ingratiating Turkey with its Western NATO allies, in particular the United States. The United States and many other NATO allies have criticized Turkey for its human rights violations since the attempted coup in July 2016, including the ongoing imprisonment of prominent figures such as Kurdish politician Selahattin Demirtas and philanthropist Osman Kavala and the jailing of hundreds of journalists and opposition figures.

Turkey has also been booted from the United States’ F-35 fighter jet program over its decision to purchase S-400 missile defense systems from Russia. The U.S. government is currently debating whether to sell F-16 fighter jets to Ankara. Staunch support for Ukraine and alignment with NATO could help thaw the relationship and lead to better relations with the West overall.

However, Erdogan is unlikely to go as far as he did in supporting Azerbaijan directly in its recent war with Armenia. The Erdogan-Putin relationship, Aydintasbas said, is one solidified not by institutions but by a “strong handshake” between two charismatic leaders who tend to shape the state in their image.

Onur Isci, a Russia expert at Bilkent University, attributes this alignment to a belief in Bismarckian realpolitik shared by the Turkish and Russian leaders. Putin and Erdogan, he says, can maintain overlapping and sometimes incongruous alliances because they think of diplomacy in terms of the state and what will directly benefit it.

Each government, in other words, is willing to be patient and wait for a solution to emerge that benefits it most. Often, that solution has pointed to cooperation with the other, leading to an unlikely alliance that serves to challenge the U.S.-led Western world order.


This balancing act has lasted through more than two decades of rule by Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party. There was the bitter and brief Russian-Georgian War in 2008, in which after initially signaling support for its neighbor, Turkey changed tack and tacitly supported Moscow. Then, after Russia invaded Crimea in 2014, an act that Turkey widely condemned, Ankara refused to obey sanctions imposed on Moscow by the United States, Canada, and the European Union. And even after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane in 2015, the two countries were able to revive a working relationship because Erdogan issued an apology; the only sanctions levied by Russia that remained in place were on Turkish tomatoes.

This does not mean that the countries are not willing to retaliate for losses suffered. When 33 Turkish soldiers were killed by Russian-backed fighters in Syria in February 2020, Turkish forces responded by targeting 200 government sites with weaponry and drones and killed 309 Russian-backed Syrian government troops. After two Turkish soldiers were killed in September 2021, Turkey deployed forces to Idlib in northwestern Syria, just days before a meeting between Erdogan and Putin in Sochi. However, the relationship remains intact.

This unlikely balance is further supported by “levers,” as Dimitar Bechev, a Russia-Turkey expert and lecturer at the University of Oxford, described it. Each country can threaten to pull these to keep the other in line.

“It doesn’t take much,” he said. “There are pressure points.”

Turkey will do all it can to avoid coming face to face with Russia.

Putin can threaten a full-blown assault on Idlib, currently surrounded by Russian-backed forces, which could send millions of Syrian refugees over the Turkish border, creating a refugee crisis just before the planned June 2023 elections. Or Russia could threaten to cut off fuel to Turkey, on which it is deeply reliant, particularly in colder months and amid a nationwide natural gas shortage. Turkey could threaten to cut off Russian access to the Bosphorus under the wartime provisions of the Montreux Convention, though it is unlikely.

This balance of power and these threats of destruction all but ensure that if Russia invades Ukraine, and if NATO promises direct military involvement, Turkey will do all it can to avoid coming face to face with Russia.

Erdogan said on Jan. 26 that he is “ready to do whatever is necessary” to avoid war. He has openly offered to mediate the conflict, an offer that Zelensky has expressed enthusiasm for and which Russia, after an initial rejection, said it would consider. “If, as Ukraine, you can get a NATO member state, one that is helping you diplomatically by condemning the annexation of Crimea or by providing drones to the Donbass or by selling you new stealth frigates, that’s a pretty good mediator,” Bryza said. “There is no other NATO member state that Russia would even theoretically agree to be that mediator.”

The question is whether there is still time for mediation. Following his Kyiv trip, Erdogan also invited Putin to Turkey, per Turkish state media. The Kremlin accepted but said dates would be announced following the Beijing Winter Olympics—the same point at which many fear Russia could choose to invade Ukraine if its recent claims of de-escalation are not genuine.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/02/17/how-far-will-turkey-go-to-support-ukraine/

‘Don’t harm science’: Scientific workers protest outside Armenian government

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 17 2022


SOCIETY 13:56 17/02/2022 ARMENIA

Employees of the Scientific Technological Center of Organic and Pharmaceutical Chemistry at Armenia’s National Academy of Sciences on Thursday hold a protest outside the Armenian government building.

They warn that the planned construction of a residential complex near the center will do more harm than good. They held posters reading, "Don't Harm Science!", "Science is Power!", "No Science, No Future!", "Country’s Future is Under Threat!”.

The Green Property Development CJSC plans to construct a multifunctional building in the area of a pool near the Institute of Fine Organic Chemistry located at 26/1 Azatutyan Avenue in the Kanaker-Zeytun administrative district of Yerevan. The company acquired the property in May 2019.

The protesting employees argue that the high-rise complex will threaten the existence of the Scientific Technological Center of Organic and Pharmaceutical Chemistry.

"The scientific center and the residential building in this area are incompatible. Imagine if there are excavators working, how are we supposed to work in conditions of such vibrations and noise," they state.