Armenia deputy police chief: Number of escorting on Goris-Kapan motorway section has increased

News.am, Armenia
Nov 1 2021

We first provide security on the Goris-Kapan road section, then carry out escorting; especially now the number of escorting is growing due to weather conditions. Deputy chief of police Ara Fidanyan on Monday told this to reporters at the National Assembly of Armenia.

"Not only at that section, but in general we have an issue with the number of police officers. Nonetheless, we are able to organize with the help of other services, and so far we have not had any problems. You know that there were some accumulations of trucks there, quite a large-scale work is being done in that section," he added.

And to the remark that the Azerbaijanis had recently stopped an Armenian citizen, had inspected for a long time, and hit his car on the aforementioned motorway section, the deputy police chief said: Regulation should be implemented here on the basis of international documents; that is, there is an arrangement that the police deal in case of road incidents on the [road] section that is not considered in the territory of the Republic of Armenia."


In the Armenian pantry

Oct 28 2021

Various dehydrated fruits sold at Gum Market, the covered market in Yerevan, one of the mandatory destinations in Armenia (all photos from David Egui)


For its magic landscapes and monasteries, Armenia is a fairy tale country worth putting at the top of your wish list right away, we were saying. But its food and wines are worth discovering and tasting too.

As often the case with many countries that were under the thumb of the Soviets, the new generations have the desire of giving value to ingredients, recipes and preparations pre and post-USSR (1936-1991) since the culinary basin of Armenia (if you exclude sea fish which is almost absent) is the _expression_ of a microclimate very similar to the Mediterranean one.

The Valley of Ararat is a gigantic basin of vegetables (especially in the spring) and fruits (summer): apricots, even dehydrated, are a sort of national emblem almost as much as the sacred lavash (see photo below). Tomatoes and cucumbers, marvellous in season, are available almost everywhere throughout the year (from greenhouses). In the autumn apples, quince, and persimmon but also cabbage, potatoes, walnuts and other nuts are very popular. Among herbs, parsley, coriander, dill and basil are the most common; as for pomegranates, you can find their grains almost everywhere.

Among the local specialties, there's the ubiquitous trout from Lake Sevan, prepared in all sorts of ways, as well as crayfish (from freshwater as Armenia has no access to the sea). Other popular dishes include dried beef basturmadolma (fermented cabbage leaves), baklavalahmajo (a sort of Armenian pizza), chickufta (a sort of steak tartare) and harisa (a delicious type of porridge). The diet is rich in pork, duck, lamb and lots of cheese (usually not mature). The soviet influence is clear in dishes like salat vinaigrette as well as in the common use of the classic trio of potatoes, sour cream and vodka.

Like Georgia, Armenia claims its role as the world cradle of wine. Which one of the two countries first began is a futile argument. For sure, in the Areni cave, there are proofs of rites of cannibalism, with tastings of blood and wine, dating from over 6 thousand years ago. A custom that can be found in ancient paintings, in which heaven is often depicted as a vineyard. In the few wineries we visited, the European wine making style (small and large barrels) prevails on amphoras (which are much more popular in Georgia).

Below, you can find fragments and protagonists of an intense 3-day trip. The Armenian pantry would deserve a much deeper exploration.


Armenian News note: go to the link below for more photos.

https://www.identitagolose.com/sito/en/98/29328/zanattamente-buono/in-the-armenian-pantry.html






Substitute for General Affairs of Holy See’s Secretariat of State visits Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan

Substitute for General Affairs of Holy See’s Secretariat of State visits Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan

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 13:45,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. Substitute for General Affairs of the Secretariat of State at the Holy See Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan to pay tribute to the memory of the innocent victims, the Armenian foreign ministry said.

Photos by Tatev Duryan

Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra will arrived in Armenia on a two-day official visit.

He will take part in the official opening of the Vatican’s Apostolic Nunciature in Armenia.

He is scheduled to meet with Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

‘Sincere will’ on Azerbaijan standing before Armenia-Turkey normalisation – Erdoğan

Oct 26 2021

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Tuesday said there would be "no obstacle to the normalisation’’ of Turkey-Armenia relations if Yerevan demonstrates a sincere will with Azerbaijan.

Erdoğan made the remarks during a joint press conference with Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev following an opening ceremony for an airport in Nagorno-Karabakh, Duvar news site reported.

The Turkish president said the environment was "more favourable than ever before" for lasting peace and progress towards normalization between Azerbaijan and Armenia,  noting that Karabakh’s borders must be determined and mutually recognized with Azerbaijan and its neighbours.

Turkey provided crucial military support to Azerbaijan during its conflict last year with Armenia over the disputed region of Karabakh. The conflict came to an end after a truce was brokered by Russia that allowed Azerbaijan to maintain swathes of Nagorno-Karabakh and deployed Russian peacekeepers to the region. 

Aliyev on Tuesday announced that Ankara and Baku have "a lot of projects" in Nagorno-Karabakh.

"We stand shoulder to shoulder with Turkey," Aliyev said. "We were together during the whole war and  we are (here) together today."

Diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia have been suspended since 1993 because of Armenia’s Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan, which Turkey sided with Baku. The Armenian-Turkish border has also remained closed, since then. But the two sides in recent months have been exchanging positive messages.

Erdoğan in August said his country was ready to normalise relations with the Armenia after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that Turkey had been sending “positive signals” to his country and that Yerevan would respond in kind.

Why is the road to The Hague accessible to Armenia/Azerbaijan but not to Cyprus/Turkey?

Oct 24 2021
Tasoula Hadjitofi visits fenced off Famagusta after it was partially openedBy Tasoula HadjitofiAs a resident of The Hague in the Netherlands, I have become familiar with the international courts which have transformed this historic Dutch city into an international center dedicated to peace and justice.  I have also been inspired by the humane culture of The Hague that reflects the civilized values espoused by renowned Dutch scholars.  These include Erasmus who believed that the value of justice is that it “restrains bloodshed, punishes guilt, defends possessions and keeps people safe from oppression.”My residence in The Hague began after I experienced the bloodshed, the loss of possessions and the insecurity caused by the armed invasion of my country, Cyprus, in 1974.  That invasion resulted in the occupation of my birthplace of Famagusta.  Having been forced out of my home in Famagusta and having thereby become a war child, I have used my adopted new home city to seek peace and justice for my semi-occupied country and my war-ravaged birthplace.  My philosophy has rested on a simple idea.  Only justice may bring authentic peace to the people of Cyprus, thus enabling them to move on and find harmony within themselves.

In practice, some of the main roads to justice pass through The Hague.

On the one hand, The Hague is synonymous with key instruments of international humanitarian law.  These include the 1899 Hague Conventions with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War, the 1907 Hague Regulations annexed to the 1899 Conventions and the 1954 Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict.

On the other hand, The Hague is where the International Court of Justice (ICJ) was established in 1945, where the onetime International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was established in 1993 and where the International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002.

To my frustration, however, the 1899 Hague Conventions, the 1907 Hague Regulations and the 1954 Convention have all been flouted in Turkish-occupied Famagusta and in so many other parts of Cyprus.  Just as frustratingly, Turkey, the main perpetrator of injustice in Cyprus, has tried to block the road to justice via The Hague.

Unlike Cyprus and 72 other states, Turkey has failed to make any declaration recognizing the compulsory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) established in The Hague in 1945.

Furthermore, unlike Cyprus and 122 other states, Turkey has not become a state party to the 1998 Rome Statute which established the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague in 2002; Turkey has not even signed the Statute.

As for the UN Security Council, despite establishing the ICTY in The Hague, it has failed to create any similar international criminal tribunal in either The Hague or elsewhere to deal with the countless unpunished international crimes committed in Cyprus.

It was in this climate of impunity that I have undertaken voluntary work to repatriate some of the thousands of icons, frescoes and other cultural artefacts which have been looted and illegally exported from the occupied area of Cyprus before being “sold” on the international market.  This work has exposed me to a timeless truth: if law enforcement officers have the will to enforce the law through the courts, it is possible to provide a measure of justice to my homeland, even if this is limited to the retrieval and return of stolen artefacts.

During his tenure, Chrysostomos I, the late Archbishop of the autocephalous Greek Orthodox Christian Church of Cyprus, trusted me enough to supply me with the very best lawyers worldwide to work as advisors. Together, we ensured that the repatriation of cultural artefacts followed civil litigation, criminal proceedings or an appropriate method of alternative dispute resolution but NEVER through the purchase of looted items.

An example of a successful outcome is the one brought about by the protracted Lans case in the Netherlands.  The case eventually resulted in the Dutch authorities recovering four 16th Century icons taken from the wooden iconostasis of the Monastery of Antiphonitis in Turkish-occupied Kyrenia District.  The four icons were duly returned to Cyprus with the happy news announced during an international conference organized in September 2013 by Walk of Truth, the not-for-profit foundation instituted by me in The Hague.  As a gesture of respect for my work, the Peace Palace in The Hague was made available for this purpose.

For me, this was a bitter-sweet moment.  I was, of course, honored to have my work recognized by a conference held in the Peace Palace.  In the words of the Carnegie Foundation, its custodian, the Peace Palace is not only “the worldwide icon” of the notion of “Peace through Law”.  The Peace Palace is also a “temple of peace” which houses the Permanent Court of Arbitration and the ICJ. Nevertheless, despite the recovery of four icons, my home country of Cyprus and birthplace of Famagusta continued – and continues – to face ongoing injustice.  Indeed, in 2014, just a few months after the conference held in The Hague, the injustice deepened when Prime Minister Erdogan transformed himself into President Erdogan and, in that way, tightened his authoritarian hold over Turkey and the Turkish-occupied north of Cyprus.  Since 2014, the cruelties inflicted by the Erdogan regime have worsened and the injustice has deepened even more.

Unsurprisingly, Turkey has gone to great lengths to obstruct almost every road to justice in The Hague.  On 30 September 2021, I was given a fresh reminder of this when the ICJ in The Hague issued a press release confirming that the ICJ, “the principal judicial organ of the United Nations”, would “hold public hearings in the case concerning Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Azerbaijan v. Armenia) on Monday 18 and Tuesday 19 October 2021, at the Peace Palace in The Hague, the seat of the Court.”

The International Criminal Court building in The Hague, Netherlands

At the heart of this new case is the 1965 International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD), to which Azerbaijan and Armenia are state parties.  Article 1.1 of the CERD defines “racial discrimination” as any distinction, exclusion, restriction or preference based on race, colour, descent, or national or ethnic origin which has the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition, enjoyment or exercise, on an equal footing, of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public life.”

Under Article 2.1(a) of the CERD, every state party undertakes to engage in no act or practice of racial discrimination against persons, groups of persons or institutions and to ensure that all public authorities and public institutions, national and local, shall act in conformity with this obligation”.

When, in 1974, I and so many other citizens of Cyprus were forced out of our homes and thereby stripped of our human dignity, were we persecuted because of our national or ethnic origin?  After 1974, were we de facto excluded from our homes for the same discriminatory reason?  In other words, did we become – and do remain – the victims of discrimination and inequality caused by blatant violations of the CERD for which Turkey is responsible and for which Turkey should be held to account?  If so, should the CERD be enforced so that every one of us can claim our legal rights, including those guaranteed by Article 5 such as the right “to freedom of movement and residence within the border of the State”, the right “to own property alone as well as in association with others” and the right “to inherit”?

Since 1974, these and so many other questions should have been referred to one or more courts in The Hague.  Yet, even in relation to the CERD, the road to The Hague has been blocked by Turkey.  Whereas Cyprus signed the CERD in 1965 and became a state party in 1967, Turkey signed in 1972 but did not ratify until 2002.  Crucially, when Turkey ratified the CERD, it did so subject to an unusual “declaration” which Cyprus, Sweden and the UK interpreted as a “reservation”.

Below is the Turkish “declaration”, as published by the UN:

“The Republic of Turkey declares that it will implement the provisions of this Convention only to the States Parties with which it has diplomatic relations. The Republic of Turkey declares that this Convention is ratified exclusively with regard to the national territory where the Constitution and the legal and administrative order of the Republic of Turkey are applied. The Republic of Turkey does not consider itself bound by Article 22 of this Convention [under which ‘Any dispute between two or more States Parties with respect to the interpretation or application of this Convention, which is not settled by negotiation or by the procedures expressly provided for in this Convention, shall, at the request of any of the parties to the dispute, be referred to the International Court of Justice for decision, unless the disputants agree to another mode of settlement’].  The explicit consent of the Republic of Turkey is necessary in each individual case before any dispute to which the Republic of Turkey is party concerning the interpretation or application of this Convention may be referred to the International Court of Justice.”

It is not difficult to see through this “declaration”.  It has clearly been designed to achieve three dubious aims.  One is to prevent Turkey from having to apply the CERD to Cyprus, with which it has not had any diplomatic relations since 1974.  The second is to prevent Turkey from having to apply the CERD to the Turkish-occupied north of Cyprus.  The third is to give Turkey a veto in response to any attempt to use the CERD as the basis of legal proceedings in the ICJ in The Hague.  The end result is yet more discrimination, inequality and injustice.

In view of the above, I respectfully call upon the Government of Cyprus, the EU and the UN to answer the questions I have raised above.  I also call upon each of them to answer a number of additional questions.  What has each done to push Turkey into complying fully with the CERD?  What has each done to protect my rights – and those of so many other victims of discrimination – under the CERD?  What has each done to hold Turkey to account for its multiple ongoing violations of the CERD?  What has each done to unblock – or to find a way around – the road to justice in The Hague?  Put another way, what has each done to fulfil the vision of Erasmus by ensuring that justice “restrains bloodshed, punishes guilt, defends possessions and keeps people safe from oppression”?

I end with a personal plea addressed to the Prime Minister of my adopted country, the Netherlands, which has given me so much over the years.

Dear Prime Minister Mark Rutte,

 

Will you and the Government of the Netherlands please request the Government of Cyprus, the EU and the UN to answer the questions I have raised above?  Will you please take all other necessary steps to champion the twin causes of peace and justice – for the sake of Cyprus, Europe and the whole of humanity?  And will you please sponsor any necessary changes to Dutch legislation to enable these noble causes to be achieved in practice?  If so, you will honor the memory of Erasmus and enhance the good name of my adopted city, The Hague, where I live so happily as a Dutch national with my family.

Yours sincerely

Tasoula Hadjitofi 

 

 Tasoula Hadjitofi is a human rights advocate and cultural campaigner whose expertise is cultural heritage preservation. She’s the founding president of the Walk of Truth and the author of the 2017 book “The Icon Hunter”.

If we lack a strongly protected border, migration may periodically occur in Artsakh, lawmaker says

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 23 2021

"We used to loudly declare that the state firmly stands behind the soldier, however, the condition of our servicemen standing on the border today remains concerning," lawmaker from Artsakh parliament's "Justice" faction Davit Galstyan said on Saturday at a press conference. In his words, some of the troops on combat duty spend the night in tents which is a disgrace, since thanks to their service people in Armenia and Artsakh have a peaceful life. 

"This attitude toward our servicemen on the border is unacceptable and at present all means should be directed to the frontline," said Galstyan. "We have voiced on numerous occasions that our citizens may not build own life only through the benefits from social programs. If we lack a strongly protected border, the migration from Artsakh may periodically occur," stressed the Artsakh lawmaker. 

He added that social assistance programs should be in the form of investments in Artsakh, otherwise they would further promote migration.

Opposition MP: Ombudsman’s statements are in Armenia’s interest, but they might not be pleasant for authorities

News.am, Armenia
Oct 22 2021

Every faction of the National Assembly of Armenia can nominate its candidate for the position of Human Rights Defender. This is what deputy of the opposition “Armenia” faction of the National Assembly Aram Vardevanyan said during a conversation with Armenian News-NEWS.am today.

Yesterday Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan declared that Tatoyan [Human Rights Defender of Armenia] acted as a counterrevolutionary and that there are only a few months left until the end of his term of office.

According to Vardevanyan, state officials started putting this into circulation when Tatoyan was talking about the fact that the Azerbaijani Armed Forces are committing a crime by being located on the borders of Armenia.

“Instead of supporting the Human Rights Defender and reaffirming his positions, the government officials started criticizing him and even questioned the reliability. This is embarrassing. This again shows that the statements of the incumbent authorities and the statements of Azerbaijan and Turkey are very interestingly combined. Since last night, Azerbaijani presses have been stating that the Human Rights Defender should be criticized and make references to Armenia’s government officials for substantiating the criticism,” he said.

 Vardevanyan noted that Tatoyan is carrying out a fact-finding mission, and the facts are used as arguments on different international platforms.

“The facts are exclusively in the interests of Armenia. A fact that is in the interests of Armenia might not be pleasant for the incumbent authorities, but that’s a different story,” he added.

Ambassador presents Armenian POW issue to UK MPs

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 10:33,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 21, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s Ambassador to the United Kingdom Varuzhan Nersesyan met with Catherine West and James Murray, members of the Labor Party of the House of Commons and the UK-Armenia All-party parliamentary group, the Embassy of Armenia in the UK said in a statement on social media.

During the meeting, the Ambassador first thanked the MPs for their constant support to Armenia and Artsakh, especially during the 2020 war, and for voicing and supporting Armenia’s approaches in the UK Parliament. The Ambassador presented in detail the latest regional developments, Azerbaijan’s ongoing aggressive actions against Armenia, and the possibilities of resuming the negotiation process.

Varuzhan Nersesyan attached special importance to the issue of repatriation of POWs, who are kept in Azerbaijani prisons contrary to all international humanitarian norms. The Ambassador also presented the need to preserve the Armenian historical and cultural heritage of Artsakh, emphasizing the importance of expressing a clear position of international partners in this issue.

The parties also discussed the Turkish factor and the negative regional impact, which was vividly reflected in Turkey’s direct involvement in last year's war in Artsakh.

The Ambassador and the members of the UK House of Commons highlighted the development of the Armenian-British relations, emphasizing the role of parliamentary diplomacy in that process and the activation of ties between the parliaments of the two countries, the organization of mutual visits and cooperation on various issues.

Armenian-Chinese cooperation in the defense sector discussed in Yerevan

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 15 2021

Defense Minister of Armenia  Arshak Karapetyan received on Monday Military Attaché of the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China to Armenia Senior Colonel Sun Tszilun.

As the press department at the ministry reported, the parties discussed the course and perspective of bilateral cooperation in the defense sector.  

Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan praised the level of cooperation between the ministries of defense of the two countries, the source said.