Artsakh civilian injured in Azerbaijani shooting

panorama.am
Armenia –


One Artsakh civilian was injured in Azerbaijani shooting last night, Armenia’s new Human Rights Defender Kristine Grigoryan said on Thursday.

“I am in constant contact with Artsakh’s ombudsman and prosecutor general. Yesterday, there were intensive shootings in the direction of Khramort village of the Askeran region and Karmir Shuka and Khnushinak villages of the Martuni region. During the day, the shootings in the direction of Khramort were accompanied by the criminal acts of exerting psychological pressure against the civilian population by issuing "warnings" in Armenian language over a loudspeaker for the population to leave the village,” she said in a statement.

“The criminal act against the civilian population intensified overnight in the direction of Khramort village, where Azerbaijani forces used mortars, as a result of which one civilian was wounded. The enemy also demonstratively accumulated heavy equipment (tanks) near the village. For safety reasons, women and children were evacuated overnight to a more secure place, however, according to the information provided by my colleagues, they have returned to the village in the morning," the ombudsperson noted.

Grigoryan denounced the ongoing criminal policy of the Azerbaijani military-political leadership.

“It is evident that the ultimate goal of such acts is to evict Artsakh Armenians from their settlements as part of Azerbaijan's ongoing policy of Armenophobia and ethnic hatred," she stated.

"On the other hand, the irresponsible conduct of the Azerbaijani state is aimed at damaging the reputation of the Russian peacekeeping mission and undermining the enormous efforts made to ensure the peaceful life of the civilian population.

"Today, I will pass information on these incidents to the relevant international organizations and embassies,” reads the statement.

Armenian FM stressed importance of implementing humanitarian missions by international organisations in Artsakh

ARM INFO
Feb 28 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. On February 28, within the framework of the High-level session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan met  with UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi.

As the press service of the RA MFA reports, the interlocutors  commended the dialogue established between Armenia and the UN High  Commissioner for Refugees. Minister Mirzoyan noted that as a country  directly affected by enforced displacement, Armenia has always  supported the efforts of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees  towards protecting the rights of victims of enforced displacement.  

The humanitarian issues created in Nagorno-Karabakh after the 44-day  war were touched upon. Minister Mirzoyan drew his colleague's  attention to the need for the creation of conditions for the  repatriation, security and protection of the rights of the Armenians  of Artsakh who were forcibly displaced from their residences due to  the Azerbaijani aggression.  

The Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan particularly stressed  the importance of implementing humanitarian missions by international  organisations in Artsakh, including the UN High Commissioner for  Refugees, considering unacceptable the politicisation of this issue  by Azerbaijan and the creation of artificial obstacles.  

Armenia reports over 290 daily COVID-19 cases

Save

Share

 11:14, 21 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. 293 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the last 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 415,757, the Armenian Ministry of Healthcare reported.

16 people died from COVID-19 complications, bringing the total death toll to 8338.

3192 tests were conducted on February 20.

1474 people recovered (total 392,080).

As of February 21, the number of active cases stood at 13,749.

Azerbaijan urges UNESCO to send a mission to Armenia


Feb 17 2022


  • JAMnews
  • Baku

UNESCO mission to Azerbaijan and Armenia

During a video conference of French President Emmanuel Macron, President of the Council of the European Union Charles Michel, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on February 4, 2022, an agreement was reached to deploy a UNESCO mission to Azerbaijan and Armenia.

No dates for the mission have been announced yet. But the other day a UNESCO representative said that the organization is preparing a mission to Nagorno-Karabakh. According to political observer Agshin Karimov, the sudden efficiency of the organization, which, for 20 years, has refused to send its mission to Karabakh, is surprising.


  • Ex-Transport Minister: benefits and drawbacks of Armenian-Azerbaijani railway are yet to be seen
  • Op-ed: Azerbaijan may conduct a counter-terrorist operation in Karabakh
  • Tensions rise amid latest exchange of statements between Foreign Ministries of Armenia and Azerbaijan

The Ministry of Culture of Azerbaijan has issued a statement regarding the agreement to send a UNESCO mission to Armenia and Azerbaijan in the near future.

“As you know, on Armenia’s territory there are samples of the rich historical, cultural and religious heritage of Azerbaijanis who have lived in Armenia for centuries. According to statistics given back in 1869 in the document “Caucasian Calendar for 1870”, published by the Governorate of Caucasian Russia, there were 269 mosques in the Irevan province alone. In addition to mosques, this list also includes the Khan’s palace in Irevan, the walls of the Irevan fortress, numerous baths, caravanserais, tombs, cemeteries, etc. that existed on the territory of modern Armenia.

Blue Mosque in Yerevan. Photo: Report

We hope that the upcoming UNESCO mission will be able to conduct a detailed study, monitoring and documentation of the heritage belonging to the Azerbaijani people on the territory of Armenia”, the agency said in a statement.

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia is trying to distort the agreements reached in connection with the visits of UNESCO missions to Azerbaijan and Armenia. We condemn another attempt by Armenia to evade the fulfillment of its obligations”, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“As for the technical mission of UNESCO to Azerbaijan, the Azerbaijani side welcomes its implementation from the first day.

All preparatory work for the implementation of the mission in the shortest possible time was agreed in a bilateral format between Azerbaijan and UNESCO.

For more than 20 years, Azerbaijan has persistently appealed to the organization and sent numerous letters with calls to carry out this mission. Unfortunately, the mission was not carried out, and Armenia was the only culprit. UNESCO itself confirmed this fact in its 2005 report. Thus, the organization stressed that the Azerbaijani lands are under the occupation of Armenia, and admitted that it was Armenia that prevented the visits.

As for the UNESCO mission to Armenia, the Azerbaijani side has repeatedly informed this organization and the international community about the facts of the destruction in Armenia of the cultural heritage belonging to the Azerbaijani people.

Azerbaijani non-governmental organizations have recently provided UNESCO with detailed information about these destructions, including photographs and other evidence.

We believe that it is necessary to send a mission to Armenia to investigate the facts presented to UNESCO by the Azerbaijani side. We hope that this time the Armenian side will abandon the policy of obstructing the international mission in the territories that were previously under occupation, and will create conditions for the implementation of this mission”, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Representatives of non-governmental public organizations of Azerbaijan appealed to UNESCO with a request to “investigate the cultural genocide committed by Armenia against the heritage of the Azerbaijani people on the territory of this country”.

The appeal was sent to UNESCO Director General Audrey Azoulay.

“We are asking you to send an expert group to Armenia to assess the current state of the centuries-old cultural and historical heritage of the Azerbaijani people. We hope that Armenia, which has assumed this obligation, will not interfere with the implementation of the UNESCO mission, and as a result of its objective report, the whole world will know about the actions committed against the heritage of the Azerbaijani people”, the appeal says.

The Coordination Council of the Netherlands-Belgium Azerbaijanis, Association Dialogue France-Azerbaïdjan, L’Association culturelle D’Azerbaïdjan en France à Nantes), the BENELUX Azerbaijanis Congress, the Azerbaijan-Dutch Association Odlar Yurdu (Azerbaycan-Nederland “Odlar Yurdu” vereniging) and a number of other NGOs stated in their appeal that “as a result of the targeted policy pursued by Armenia , the centuries-old cultural heritage of the Azerbaijani people on the territory of the Republic of Armenia is under the threat of complete destruction.

The NGOs informed that “ethnic cleansing and forced eviction of Azerbaijanis from Armenia were accompanied by the destruction of their cultural monuments”.

“As a result of the mass deportation of Azerbaijanis from their native lands, which began at the beginning of the 20th century, not a single Azerbaijani remained in Armenia. In 1988 alone, more than 250,000 Azerbaijanis were expelled from their native lands and became refugees.

Armenia deliberately erased all traces of the residence of Azerbaijanis, who are autochthonous in these territories, destroyed, appropriated and changed the cultural heritage of the Azerbaijani people, also replacing the ancient toponyms in these areas with Armenian ones”, the appeal says.

“During a video conference of French President Emmanuel Macron, President of the Council of the European Union Charles Michel, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on February 4, 2022, an agreement was reached to deploy a UNESCO mission to Azerbaijan and Armenia”, political observer Agshin Karimov noted.

“However, according to UNESCO representative Thomas Mallard, the organization is working on sending an independent technical mission to Nagorno-Karabakh.

The _expression_ “Nagorno-Karabakh” is already a mistake made by this person. But one might think that Mr. Mallard has not yet had time to make adjustments to his vocabulary in connection with the new realities in the South Caucasus.

But be that as it may, this statement of the UNESCO representative causes sharp discontent in Azerbaijan.

Firstly, what does the representative of this organization mean by the phrase “Nagorno-Karabakh”. Such a geographical unit no longer exists. And his statement is nothing but disrespect for the sovereignty of Azerbaijan.

Secondly, since when did UNESCO start making political statements?

For 20 years now, Azerbaijan has been persistently seeking to send a UNESCO mission to the territories of Azerbaijan, which were then still under the occupation of the Armenian armed forces. Countless calls and letters went unanswered.

But UNESCO itself in a report for 2005 admitted that Armenia does not allow sending a mission to Karabakh. The refusal to have the mission deployed there mission was justified by the fact that these territories of Azerbaijan were under the occupation of Armenia, and Armenia was not allowing the mission to arrive.

In short, during the years of the occupation of Azerbaijani territories, UNESCO did not attach much importance to Azerbaijan’s appeals, and now it demonstrates amazing one-sided efficiency.

Mr. Mallard notes that it is unacceptable to turn the topic of cultural heritage into a political tool. And he himself demonstrates political hypocrisy, trying to quickly respond to the appeal of only one side”, the political observer .

https://jam-news.net/azerbaijan-urges-unesco-to-send-a-mission-to-armenia/

Yerevan hosting discussion on ‘Azerbaijani Armenophobia as an international threat to Armenianness’

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Feb 19 2022

A public discussion, entitled  is being held in Yerevan.

Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) Foreign Minister David Babayan, and the First Ombudsperson of Armenia, human rights activist Larisa Alaverdyan are among the speakers.

Also, a booklet, entitled "Propaganda of Armenophobia in Azerbaijan among school-age children," will be presented during this discussion.

Freedom House Again Blasts ‘Degradation Of Democratic Norms’ In Armenia

A man is dragged by Armenian police during an anti-government protest in Armenia in Feb, 2021

YEREVAN (Azatutyun.am)—U.S. democracy watchdog Freedom House has criticized the Armenian authorities for continuing to prosecute citizens accused of insulting state officials.

In a weekend statement, it again said that the practice testifies to a “clear degradation of democratic norms” in Armenia.

Amendments to the Armenian Criminal Code passed by the country’s government-controlled parliament last summer made “grave insults” directed at individuals because of their “public activities” crimes punishable by heavy fines and a prison sentence of up to three months. Those individuals may include government and law-enforcement officials, politicians and other public figures.

The Armenian police have launched more than 260 criminal investigations stemming from the amendments that took effect in September amid strong criticism from local and international human rights groups. Many of those cases reportedly target people accused of offending Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

One of them became last week the first person convicted under the new legislation. A court fined him 500,000 drams (just over $1,000) for swearing at Pashinyan in a phone call with a police officer.

“We are concerned with the first conviction of an Armenian citizen under a new law criminalizing ‘serious insults’ of government officials,” read the Freedom House statement. “This shows a clear degradation of democratic norms and creates a chilling effect for free _expression_ in Armenia.”

The U.S. watchdog already called for a repeal of the Criminal Code articles shortly after the authorities began enforcing them in September. Armenian officials dismissed those calls.

Vladimir Vartanyan, the pro-government chairman of the parliament committee on legal affairs, again defended the amendments on Monday.

“We have to understand that freedom of speech has limits,” said Vartanyan. “We have to understand that there are some expressions that absolutely do not fit into the legitimate boundaries of free speech. Insults definitely don’t.”

The controversial amendments have also been condemned by the Armenian opposition. Opposition leaders say that Pashinyan himself has relied heavily on slander and “hate speech” before and after coming to power in 2018.

All forms of slander and defamation had been decriminalized in Armenia in 2010 during then President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule.

What problems are facing children with disabilities and their parents. Videoblog from Armenia


Feb 4 2022


  • Angela Harutyunyan
  • Yerevan

What problems do children with disabilities and their parents face in Armenia? JAMnews spoke with the family of Narek – one of more than 8,000 children with disabilities living in Armenia. According to his mother, some of the numerous problems their family is facing are simply impossible to solve.

Watch the video report at 

COVID-19: More than 1300 new cases confirmed in Armenia

Save

Share

 11:09, 25 January, 2022

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMNENPRESS. 1332 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the past 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 353,731, the Armenian National Center for Disease Control and Prevention said.

4 people died, bringing the COVID-19 death toll to 8032.

155 people recovered (total 334,549).

5713 tests were administered (total 2,685,238).

As of January 25 the number of active cases stood at 9625.

Turkish press: Turkish defense industry thrives as Akıncı UCAV inks 1st export deal

The unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) Akıncı is seen in the air during its second test flight, Tekirdağ province, northwestern Turkey, Aug. 19, 2020. (Photo by Baykar via DHA)

The Turkish defense industry, which has increased its export performance in recent years and aims to be among the top 10 in the world within five years, has recently signed the first export contract for the state-of-the-art unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) Bayraktar Akıncı, one of the company's newest products.

Istanbul Defense and Aerospace Cluster Association (SAHA) Chairperson of the Board and drone magnate Baykar General Manager Haluk Bayraktar, evaluating the performance of the sector in 2021 told Anadolu Agency (AA) Sunday that Turkey is yielding positive outcomes of its vision of nationalizing defense and aviation products step by step.

Bayraktar emphasized that the biggest success for the sector this year is the increase in exports achieved with this vision.

The defense and aerospace industry broke a record by exceeding $3 billion for the first time in 2021 and made exports totaling $3.22 billion (TL 43.3 billion).

“The important point here is the development of domestic added value in the export composition, increasing year by year,” Bayraktar said and added that while a strong and independent defense industry is indispensable for Turkey, it is important to strengthen defense and aviation exports to countries with whom Turkey has strategic relations.

"Beyond providing an economic gain, defense exports also provide a suitable basis for establishing strategic relations with the countries to which you export and for the development of all kinds of commercial and social activities with these countries. Therefore, it is of critical importance that the export volume of the sector is effective and sustainable," he said.

Stating that the sector's exports have increased significantly in the last 15 years on a dollar basis, Bayraktar informed that the export volume in the Turkish defense and aerospace sector has grown approximately seven times in dollar terms from 2006 to 2021. The sector also now constitutes around 1% of the world’s total defense and aerospace exports.

“This is a great success,” he said, “currently, 75% of the total exports in this field are still realized by the United States, Russia, France, Germany and China.”

Stating that the main goal of the industry is to increase its market share on a global scale and to be among the top 10 exporting countries, Bayraktar said, “If the export volume continues to develop with this trend, we will be among the top 10 countries in defense exports within five years.”

“Turkey, which has reduced its defense imports by 60% today, will reach an important point in the short and medium-term with export-oriented works, based on the increasing number of companies and projects in our sector,” Bayraktar commented.

He further noted that as SAHA Istanbul, they are endeavoring to develop and produce the main platforms, subsystems and critical components nationally together with 704 companies and to export them.

"We have supported 76 companies' products in creating demand abroad and increasing their competitiveness," he added.

Noting that in 2021 nearly 100 foreign companies participated in the fair, they will continue to ensure that domestic manufacturers meet with foreign companies this year at the SAHA EXPO 2022 fair that will be held on Oct. 25-28.

Bayraktar emphasized that thanks to the steps and efforts taken toward developing domestic unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and UCAVs, both met the needs of the country as well as the technology being exported to the world.

He stated that export contracts were signed with 16 countries for Bayraktar TB2 UCAVs, which completed 420,000 flight hours.

"We have also completed the first export contract of Bayraktar Akıncı UCAV. Within the scope of the contract, we will deliver Bayraktar Akıncı UCAVs and ground systems in 2023. Baykar, which carries out all its projects with its own resources from the research and development (R&D) stage, generates more than 85% of its revenues from exports," he announced.

Bayraktar said, "thanks to these export revenues," Baykar creates R&D resources for platforms such as the high-tech Combat Unmanned Aerial System (MIUS) and Bayraktar TB3.

The Baykar official said that "not so many years ago, Turkey’s defense industry was an industry that looked like a contract manufacturer."

Value-added products developed by Turkey's defense industry, such as armored vehicles, aircraft, naval platforms, ammunition, UAVs and UCAVs – whose intellectual property and industrial rights completely belong to the country – are exported to 169 countries, including NATO and European Union member states.

“Therefore, we strive to establish our route and target with a national focus. We must increase the rate of domestic production in critical subsystems and components as well as the main platforms developed. With the increase in the number of localized products instead of products subject to export licenses, our industry will grow,” he said.

Bayraktar added that the defense and aerospace industry has led to the introduction of many inventions and technologies that make life easier in the fields of the internet, Global Positioning System (GPS) and medicine all over the world, and added that the development in these sectors heralds those technological solutions to contribute more to daily life soon.

"For example, the UAVs used for the early detection of forest fires today may have an active role in extinguishing these fires in the future with further studies being completed," he explained.

CivilNet: “There must be political harmony between Armenia’s president and the government”, Pashinyan

CIVILNET.AM

25 Jan, 2022 10:01

  • In a press conference on Monday, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed President Armen Sarkissian’s decision to resign from his post.
  • Armenia will accept Turkey’s invitation to participate in the Antalya Diplomacy Forum from March 11 to 13.
  • Ankara says it plans to operate flights to Turkey’s different regions from Armenia.