Al Jazeera [Turkey for the first time disputes Greece’s sovereignty over its east Aegean islands which were meant to remain demilitarised.] By John Psaropoulos Feb 8, 2022 Athens, Greece – As NATO confronts Russia over security in Europe, renewed tension between Greece and Turkey is gnawing at the alliance’s eastern heel. In letters sent to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres last July and September, Turkey for the first time disputed Greece’s sovereignty over its east Aegean islands, “over which sovereignty was ceded to Greece on the specific and strict condition that they be kept demilitarised,” in the words of Turkey’s permanent representative, Feridun Sinirlioglu. Greece absorbed the islands of Limnos, Samothrace, Lesvos, Samos, Chios and Ikaria from the Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars of 1912-13. It was officially awarded sovereignty over them in the Treaty of Lausanne of 1923. Another treaty drawn up in London in 1914 had made Greek possession of the islands conditional on their demilitarisation. Turkey says that since the Lausanne Treaty makes reference to the 1914 treaty, it implies the same conditionality. Greece rejects that interpretation. Has Greece militarised the islands? The Lausanne Treaty said Greece could not build naval bases, fortifications or large concentrations of troops on the islands. Greece has never built naval bases on the islands, and has denied it has placed disproportionate forces there. But Greece did start putting forces on the islands in the 1960s, as inter-communal relations broke down on Cyprus between Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots, complicating Greek-Turkish relations. In 1974, Turkey invaded Cyprus after a Greek-backed coup attempt on the island. Greece reacted by reinforcing the troops on its Aegean islands. “You have a revisionist neighbour who’s invaded every adjacent state. It’s sat in Cyprus for 48 years. It’s illegally invaded Syria and Iraq. I don’t think Turkey’s record suggests we can drop all concern that it can do the same [in the Aegean] if it thinks it can get away with it,” Konstantinos Filis, director of the Institute of Global Affairs at the American College of Greece, told Al Jazeera. According to Lieutenant General Andreas Iliopoulos, former commander of the Supreme Military Command of the Interior and Islands (ASDEN), “Turkey is annoyed that Greece has forces on the islands at all, and hasn’t left them vulnerable to invasion. “The only weapons there are defensive, short-range weapons of the national guard in accordance with the Lausanne Treaty, which can’t harm anything in Turkey. Greece can’t launch any offensive action against Turkey from the islands.” Iliopoulos says it is Greece that has reason to worry. “Turkey has formed the 4th Army in [Izmir], with landing units capable of invading the islands. This has created an obvious threat. Greece has to have enough security forces to ensure that there is a deterrent to a Turkish invasion.” Is it really about security? Greek-Turkish differences are not presently about land, but water. They currently each have six nautical miles (11km) of territorial water in the Aegean, but the UN Convention on the International Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), concluded in 1982 and ratified by 158 countries, says states may claim up to 12 miles (about 20km). Greece, with its thousands of islands, would find itself in possession of 71.5 percent of the Aegean. “Any extension by Greece of its territorial waters beyond the present six [nautical] miles in the Aegean would have serious implications for Turkey. As such, any decision by Greece in that direction cannot be taken in a vacuum, as if Turkey does not exist,” said Turkish ambassador to Athens Burak Özügergin, in written responses for this article. Greece has said territorial water is a sovereign right under UNCLOS and not subject to negotiation with third parties. What Greece will talk about is the continental shelf, which grants a country sovereign rights beyond territorial waters to mine undersea mineral wealth. This has been a bone of contention since 1973, when Greece discovered the Prinos oilfield in the north Aegean. Tension rose again in 2014, when a seismic survey in the Ionian Sea and south of Crete suggested that Greece could be sitting on 70-90 trillion cubic feet (2-2.5 trillion cubic metres) of natural gas, with recoverable reserves estimated at $250bn at today’s high prices. In 2016, Greece leased four major offshore concessions and three onshore to oil majors ExxonMobil, Total and Repsol, with Greece’s Energean and Hellenic Petroleum included as partners. During the same period, Turkey spent almost a billion dollars buying or building two seismic survey ships and three drill-ships – a clear indication that it was not going to be left behind in the race to hydrocarbon wealth. Greece’s proposal is to settle boundaries by arbitration at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) at The Hague. Turkey has rejected the proposal, because the ICJ enforces UNCLOS, and Turkey is one of a handful of countries that have not signed it and do not abide by it. Turkey has claimed that since Greek sovereignty of the islands is disputed, Greece cannot claim a continental shelf for them either. “Greece cannot, vis-à-vis Turkey, rely on its title under the [Lausanne Treaty] for the purposes of a maritime boundary delimitation,” wrote Sinirlioglu. Greek observers believe Turkey’s disputation of sovereignty is an elaborate way of avoiding a Hague arbitration. “The issue of demilitarisation of Aegean islands is being put forward for the first time as a precondition to go to The Hague. It is also being connected to sovereignty for the first time,” Greek former Foreign Minister Yiorgos Katrougalos told Al Jazeera. “Turkey is piling on the issues in order to avoid talking about the real issue, which is maritime zones,” Katrougalos says. “Turkey has an irregular view of international law, and because it knows it’s in a minority of one … it spends its time exerting pressure through power moves.” Such a power move came on on January 31, 2020, when the Turkish seismic exploration ship Oruc Reis entered what Greece considers its continental shelf, northeast of Crete. A Greek frigate monitored it for about 24 hours before it left. The government downplayed the incident, saying foul weather had caused the Oruc Reis to veer off course, but the Oruc Reis returned repeatedly in the summer of that year, conducting what experts considered a comprehensive sounding of the seafloor between Crete and Kastellorizo. The Turkish move had military consequences. The full Greek and Turkish navies deployed across the Aegean, and a collision of frigates in August of that year, could have sparked a conflict. Since then, Greece and Turkey have pursued mutually incompatible settlements with third parties. In 2019, Turkey and Libya claimed maritime jurisdiction over the sea bed between them, claiming a swath of what Greece considers its continental shelf – a deal the United States denounced as “unhelpful” and “provocative”. The following year, Greece and Egypt concluded a maritime boundary agreement over the same waters. While it followed the precepts of international law, Ankara claimed the move was “null and void”. A senior Greek diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity said Turkey’s east Aegean gambit is a legal dead-end with a political aim. “Turkey is trying to redefine its relationship with Greece in a way that suits its interests. Greece seeks to settle maritime borders. In return, Turkey is attempting to create an asphyxiating situation for Greece by disputing Greek sovereignty in the east Aegean,” the diplomat told Al Jazeera. As long as maritime borders remain an open issue subject to political and military grandstanding, the potential for a Greek-Turkish conflagration, deliberate or accidental, is also likely to remain.
Author: Lara Chatinian
Parliament expands family survivor benefits for military
10:43, 9 February, 2022
YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 9, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian parliament unanimously approved the bill by ruling Civil Contract party MP Hayk Sargsyan seeking to expand the military’s family survivor benefit beneficiaries.
The Insurance Foundation of Servicemen pays compensations to family members of servicemembers of the Armed Forces who die or go missing while in service. By the new law, if the servicemember doesn’t have parents, a spouse or children, then their sister, brother or grandparents are eligible to receive the compensation.
The bill passed with 92 votes in favor, 0 against.
Moreover, if a servicemember was factually in “marital relations” but didn’t have a marriage certificate, then the person with whom the servicemember was in these relations is eligible for the compensation.
Best Armenian wines to be presented in Moscow
13:47, 7 February, 2022
YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 7, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s deputy minister of economy Arman Khojoyan and head of the Industry Development department at the ministry Armen Yeganyan departed for Moscow, Russia, to get acquainted with the activity of the Armenian pavilion presented at the Prodexpo international exhibition for food and beverages, the ministry said.
The Armenian officials are expected to meet with the representatives of the Russian ministry of industry and trade, agricultural-industrial bloc of the Eurasian Economic Union, X5 Group, etc.
They will also attend the Armenian Wine Days event.
Wines of 15 Armenian companies will be presented at the exhibition at the initiative of Vine and Wine Foundation of Armenia.
Judiciary crisis: Opposition MP Taguhi Tovmasyan addresses European ambassadors, CoE leaders
Armenia’s judicial system is in “deep crisis”, which has strong political overtones, Taguhi Tovmasyan, an MP from the opposition With Honor faction and head of the parliament’s Standing Committee on Protection of Human Rights and Public Affairs, said in a message addressed to European ambassadors and the Directorate General Human Rights and Rule of Law of the Council of Europe.
"Recently, our country has repeatedly recorded blatant encroachments on the judiciary by the authorities, including cases of disciplinary proceedings and criminal prosecution against unwanted judges. According to experts, the process of the illegal arrest of judge Boris Bakhshiyan has now started," she said in her address on Saturday.
Earlier on 2 February, Armenia’s Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) approved a request of Prosecutor-General Artur Davtyan to allow the law enforcement authorities to prosecute and arrest Bakhshiyan, a judge of the Syunik Court of General Jurisdiction. The decision came days after Bakhshiyan ruled to release jailed opposition figure and war veteran Ashot Minasyan on bail.
Tovmasyan highlighted that there is no convention or international law that would allow judges to be prosecuted for their rulings.
She cited Article 3 of Armenia’s Constitution, which says: “The respect for and protection of the fundamental rights and freedoms of the people are the duty of the public authorities. The inalienable dignity of the human being constitutes the integral basis of his or her rights and freedoms.”
"Such steps have nothing to do with the establishment of democratic institutions, they indicate political problems and a deep crisis in the country.
“Assessing the situation and predicting the possible consequences for our state, as well as being guided by our country’s commitments to international organizations for the observance of democratic principles and human rights, I expect you to give a fair response and make a proper and objective assessment of the situation," Tovmasyan noted.
French MP to Azerbaijani ambassador: Who bombed civilians and churches in Artsakh?
French lawmaker Valérie Boyer took to Facebook on Wednesday to respond to the allegations of Azerbaijani Ambassador to France Rahman Mustafayev.
“Contrary to what the Azerbaijani ambassador to France says, I am not insulting his country, I am simply telling the truth.
Which countries threaten French politicians, in particular Valérie Pécresse?
Who bombed civilians and churches in Artsakh?
Which countries use forbidden weapons against Armenians?
Which countries do not return prisoners of war?
Which countries call our Armenian allies "dogs"?
Which countries recruit jihadist mercenaries?
Which countries threaten peace by attacking the sovereign territory of Armenia?
Azerbaijan and Turkey! That’s what I wanted to recall this morning when addressing the France-Artsakh Friendship Circle,” she wrote.
The France-Artsakh Friendship Circle was established on March 19, 2013. It includes politicians, MPs and senators.
Armenian alpine skier tests positive for Covid-19, likely to miss the Olympics
Armenian alpine skier Harutyun Harutyunyan has tested positive for Covid-19 and will not leave for Beijing, President of Armenia’s Ski Federation Gagik Sargsyan told Armenpress.
Sargsyan and coach Arsen nersisyan have also tested positive.
Members of the delegation were required to pass coronavirus tests for three days before leaving for Beijing. Sargsyan and coach Arsen nersisyan also tested positive.
“Even if the test result is negative a few days later, we will still not be able to reach Beijing because there is a flight problem. The teams leave for the Olympic Games by charter flights, the last flight was on January 31. We have asked the National Olympic Committee to somehow arrange the departure of alpine skier Harutyun Harutyunyan to Beijing, he is expected to start on February 12.” Sargsyan said.
Other skiers Mikayel Mikayelyan, Katya Galstyan and Angelina Muradyan are in Beijing. Coaches Artur Mikayelyan and Alla Mikaelyan are also there.
The delegation is led by Armen Grigoryan from the Olympic Committee.
Turkish press: New US ambassador presents credentials to President Erdoğan
- January 26 2022 16:53:00
The United States’ new ambassador to Turkey, Jeffrey Lane Flake, presented his credentials to President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Jan. 26.
Flake, a former Republican senator, arrived in Turkey on Jan. 7 , replacing David Satterfield, who will serve as the U.S. special envoy to the Horn of Africa.
Flake, a long-term Republican politician from Arizona, had been critical of former President Donald Trump and was rewarded by Democrat Joe Biden who took office at the White House after the November 2020 elections.
Flake’s nomination was approved at the Senate in October. He took his oath at a ceremony in early December with the participation of Vice President Kamala Harris. “I am happy to be here. I thank you very much for this nice reception,” Flake told reporters on Jan. 7.
In the meantime, Satterfield has been appointed as the U.S.’s new special envoy to the Horn of Africa, replacing Jeffrey Feltman.
Satterfield, one of the most experienced career diplomats, was serving in Ankara since August 2019.
“Ambassador Satterfield’s decades of diplomatic experience and work amidst some of the world’s most challenging conflicts will be instrumental in our continued effort to promote a peaceful and prosperous Horn of Africa and to advance U.S. interests in this strategic region,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a message on Jan. 6.
UCI professor, wife fund $100,000 endowment for Armenian Studies graduate students
Diran Apelian, UCI Distinguished Professor of materials science & engineering, and his wife, Seta, a retired orthodontist, recently funded a $100,000 endowment to support graduate students in UCI’s Armenian Studies Program. The couple is committed to keeping Armenian history and the Western Armenian language alive.
“The program itself, and what it stands for, is critical for the survival of the Western Armenian language,” said Diran Apelian. “We want to make sure that the Western Armenian language is sustained, and that, more importantly, young people who are in need will have the resources enabling them to study.”
Between 1915 and 1923, the Ottoman Empire systematically killed over a million Armenians in what is known as the Armenian Genocide. Survivors, including the Apelians’ ancestors, fled to safety and created new communities in the Middle East, Europe and the Americas. Compounding that diaspora, another byproduct of the Armenian Genocide is that the survival of the Western Armenian language is in jeopardy – UNESCO declared it an endangered language in 2010.
Western Armenian is rarely taught intergenerationally, with fewer descendants of genocide survivors who live outside of Armenia learning the language. UCI’s Armenian Studies program offers two years of instruction in Western Armenian. UCI’s School of Humanities has both undergraduate and graduate programs in Armenian history and a minor in Armenian Studies.
UCI’s Center for Armenian Studies hosts a variety of events to the community and public, including film screenings and book talks. It is led by Houri Berberian, professor of history and Meghrouni Family Presidential Chair in Armenian Studies. “The Apelians’ generous support will be a tremendous help to our graduate students as they pursue their research,” said Berberian. “Because of the far-reaching nature of academic publishing and dissemination of knowledge, the scholarship they produce will have a wide impact beyond the here and now.”
About the UCI’s Brilliant Future campaign: Publicly launched on Oct. 4, 2019, the Brilliant Future campaign aims to raise awareness and support for UCI. By engaging 75,000 alumni and garnering $2 billion in philanthropic investment, UCI seeks to reach new heights of excellence in student success, health and wellness, research and more. The School of Humanities plays a vital role in the success of the campaign. Learn more by visiting: https://brilliantfuture.uci.edu/uci-school-of-humanities/
Armenia opposition faction: European structures are engaged in cover-up
The European structures are engaged in covering, said in a statement released by the parliamentary faction of the opposition Armenia bloc.
"During the unleashing of the 44-day war, during the Azerbaijani-Turkish aggression, the use of force, gross violations of international humanitarian principles by Azerbaijan during the war, while there are still Armenian prisoners of war, the ongoing aggression against the territory of the Republic of Armenia after the war, hostile rhetoric, continued use of force and the threat of force, European structures have been busy and engaged in cover-up. And in any reaction to these facts, they are trying to put a sign of "equality" between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which is simply ridiculous. It is noteworthy that with a lesser violation of rights than the illegal detention of prisoners of war, the same body came up with a proposal for specific restrictions (sanctions) against the state, and in this case sends a message to Azerbaijan and Turkey about impunity," they noted.
"PACE did not react in any way to the use of administrative resources and other violations recorded during the pre-election period and on election day, the illegal arrest of three opposition deputies, the unconstitutional restriction on the movement of opposition deputies, and political persecution.
"PACE actually did not react in any way to the unconstitutional practice of confiscation of the system of electronic sighting of courts, which was carried out by the executive branch about eight months ago, when all cases are now signed by “hand”, or to the facts of ignoring the will of voters in elections to the local self-government bodies and in the post-election period.
"PACE considers the new restrictions on freedom of speech "democratic" and does not even notice cases of violation of the rights of journalists in the National Assembly.
The factual circumstances of all the listed problems were presented to PACE on November 4, 2021, both orally and in writing," the statement reads.
Ombudsperson candidate: Security zone on Armenia-Azerbaijan border should not be fetishized
The security zone on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border should not be fetishized. Security should not be cut off from people, making it a separate topic of discussion. Kristine Grigoryan, former Deputy Minister of Justice and only candidate for the post of the new Human Rights Defender (ombudsperson), said this during the debates on the matter of electing a new ombudsman at the Monday’s sitting of the National Assembly of Armenia, when answering the MPs' questions.
According to her, the matter is first of all about the safety of the people.
"The process of [border] demarcation and delimitation in Azerbaijan is quite complicated and complex. There is also a political component in it. Nonetheless, it is very important that human rights issues also underlie it. For example, if we pay attention to the practice of international organizations—in particular, the OSCE—we can see that, issues related to ensuring the normal functioning of the population are also considered equal to the solution of political issues there," Grigoryan explained.