Turkish Press: 3 Azerbaijani soldiers killed in attack by Armenian forces in East Zangezur

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Burc Eruygur

ISTANBUL

Three Azerbaijani soldiers were killed on Tuesday during an attack by Armenian forces in the Lachin district of the East Zangezur region.

"On April 11, at around 4.20 p.m. (1220GMT), units of the Armenian armed forces fired at the opposite positions of the Azerbaijani Army in the direction of Lachin district from their positions located in the direction of the Digh settlement of the Gorus region, using various caliber weapons," said a statement by the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry.

The statement said the Armenian side continued to fire at Azerbaijani positions in the region using mortars and large-caliber weapons and that retaliatory measures taken by Azerbaijani forces resulted in "a significant number of losses" on the opposite side.

"Currently, there is relative calm in the mentioned direction, operational conditions are under the full control of our units," the statement further noted, adding that three servicemen were killed while preventing the Armenian side's "provocation."

In an earlier statement, the Defense Ministry urged the public to "exercise caution and refer only to official information."

Separately, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a statement that such "provocations," in the backdrop of calls from the international community for negotiations on a peace agreement, show Armenia is "not interested in the peace process" and that these are accompanied by "politically provocative actions and statements."

"Armenia's provocations against Azerbaijan, violating the norms and principles of international law, not only violate the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Azerbaijan, but also seriously threaten regional peace and security," the statement said, adding that Azerbaijan will continue to take "all necessary measures."

It also called for Armenia's actions to be "rejected and condemned by the international community in a serious manner."

Relations between the two former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

In the fall of 2020, in 44 days of clashes, Azerbaijan liberated several cities, villages and settlements from Armenian occupation. The Russian-brokered peace agreement is celebrated as a triumph in Azerbaijan.

Putin discussed with Pashinyan situation around Karabakh, Baku-Yerevan peace treaty

 TASS 
Russia – April 7 2023
The press service of the Armenian government also reported that Pashinyan and Putin discussed the unblocking of transport communications in the South Caucasus

MOSCOW, April 7. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed over phone on Friday the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh and the preparation of a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Kremlin press service reported.

"Discussions on various aspects of the current situation around Nagorno-Karabakh continued," the statement said. The Kremlin noted that the importance of implementing the 2020-2022 agreements of the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, "including those related to ensuring security and stability on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, restoring economic and transport ties in the North Caucasus and preparing a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan" was reaffirmed.

"In addition, some topical issues of bilateral relations were touched upon," the press service of the Russian leader reported after the conversation, which took place at the initiative of the Armenian side.

The press service of the Armenian government also reported that Pashinyan and Putin discussed the unblocking of transport communications in the South Caucasus.

This is Putin and Pashinyan's fourth phone conversation since the start of this year, the previous one being held on March 13. The last telephone conversation between the Russian president and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev took place on March 16.

The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the highland region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory that had been part of Azerbaijan before the Soviet Union break-up, but primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, broke out in February 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. Russia has repeatedly acted as a mediator in resolving the situation between Baku and Yerevan, including hosting talks between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan. With the mediation of Moscow in November 2020, a statement on the full cessation of hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh was adopted. According to the document, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides stopped at the occupied positions, a number of areas came under Baku's control, and Russian peacekeepers were deployed along the line of contact and in the Lachin corridor. Subsequently, the leaders of the three countries adopted several other joint statements on the situation in the region.

Aleksander Čeferin wins new term as UEFA president

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 15:52, 5 April 2023

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, ARMENPRESS. Aleksander Čeferin, president of European football’s governing body UEFA, was reelected unopposed for a new four-year term on Wednesday.

First elected in 2016, Čeferin was chosen by acclamation during the organization’s annual Congress in Lisbon. As with his first reelection in 2019, Čeferin was the only candidate.

“It really means a lot to me, it is a great honor but mainly it is a great responsibility towards you and towards football,” Politico quoted him as saying Wednesday. “I will do my best not to disappoint you and to disappoint football.”

Art: Uncovering the Photographer Behind Arshile Gorky’s Most Famous Painting

HYPERALLERGIC
March 30 2023
Art

As we pursue photographer Hovhannes Avedaghayan a fascinating picture begins to emerge of him and the world of which he was part.
Shushan and Vostanig Adoian, Van, c. 1911, photographed by uncredited photographer (image courtesy Dr. Bruce Berberian and The Arshile Gorky Foundation)

Around 1911, mother and son Shushan and Vostanig Adoian visited a local photography studio in Van, a heavily Armenian city near the eastern border of the Ottoman Empire. There, they sat for a portrait, one they might send to Setrag Adoian, her husband and his father, in the United States. The absence of that man from the portrait is palpable. It is but the first of many absences and disappearances to disturb a photograph that in time became a memorial object and then artistic source material. Indeed, the portrait seems almost haunted by its own disappearance, its fading as an autonomous object with its own particular orbit and history as it is overtaken by these other narratives. But could autonomy be regained, and a link to its own world reforged? 

In later years Vostanig, by that time a migrant to the United States and an artist using the name Arshile Gorky, was reunited with the photograph and used it as source material for two canvases, monumental pieces that he worked on over a period of decades, and for a great number of drawings that served as studies for the two canvases, as well as navigations of and negotiations with the image of his younger self beside his (by then late) mother. The two canvases are now in major US public art collections: the National Gallery of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. The photograph is in a private collection but belongs no less to the world of art, for it has become part of an art historical narrative.  

Hrag Vartanian made just this point at the commencement of Fixed Point Perspective, an ongoing project convening a number of artists to individually and collectively explore the heritage of Ottoman studio photography. As he observed of Gorky’s The Artist and His Mother artworks, “When we discuss the series, we focus on the avant-garde style of the painting and drawing. But what about the photography?” What might we learn, he went on to ask, when we actively contemplate photographs, and indeed search for the photographer responsible for the image of the Adoians? With these key questions, he proposed the Adoian portrait as offering a path into a wider history and culture.  

Of course, a focus on the photographer can often severely circumscribe a photograph. “What was Egypt will become Beato, or du Camp, or Frith,” wrote Douglas Crimp just as the art market was beginning to sink its teeth into photographs, recategorizing and redefining them in the process. Yet the Adoian portrait has not suffered this fate — because an Ottoman Armenian studio photograph does not fit easily into a Eurocentric market-led art history of photography, and because, of course, art has already overtaken it via other means, Gorky the artist now appearing almost as the creator of his own boyhood image. To turn to the photographer in these circumstances has an unusually liberatory potential. It offers the opportunity to untether the photograph from its present moorings, so that it might spiral, in Allan Sekula’s words, not “inward toward the art-system” but “outward toward the world.”

Thus we are faced with both a photograph and a set of questions. Our starting point as we endeavor to spiral outward is the small space of the studio in which the Adoian photograph was made. Identifying the space is hampered by the photograph’s blurred and murky backdrop, and yet with close study, we can begin to match its backdrop with that of contemporaneous studio photographs from Van. Its design is akin to a cloister scene, depicting a series of columns and arches. Most interesting of all is a detail lying outside the frame of the Adoian picture but visible in other photographs, a view of a path — a winding path no less — leading up to a twin-peaked mountain.  

Also found on other photographs is the name of a photographer, Hovhannes Avedaghayan. As we pursue Avedaghayan through his pictures and the scant mentions of him in a variety of sources — from memory books (houshamadyan) to commercial business listings — a fascinating picture begins to emerge of him and the world of which he was part, the world from which the Adoian portrait hailed.

Avedaghayan was born in 1863 in Van, just as change was afoot in the Armenian world. Above the city, at the monastery complex of Varakavank in the foothills of the twin-peaked Mount Varak, Mgrdich Khrimian, the recently appointed vartabed (abbot) was at work on a series of radical teachings and publications that sought to situate Armenian life in a distinct Armenian geography, and to draw attention to the poverty and oppression faced by the largely rural Armenians who dwelt in those lands, as well as the plight of those forced to migrate. Varakavank became a symbol of a new sense of Armenian identity, one based not just in religion but also in a shared language, history, culture, and, perhaps above all, a shared ancestral homeland — a homeland in need of rescue. 

Hovhannes Avedaghayan, Varakavank, Van, c. 1910.; image published in Vasbouragan, Venice: St. Lazzaro Mkhitarian Dparan, 1930 (image public domain)

There is evidence to suggest that Avedaghayan himself saw Varakavank as a kind of spiritual home. The only photograph thus far traced to which he applied his name by hand to the front depicts Varakavank and an assortment of figures: clergy of the monastery, teachers and students of the attached school, and what might be a group of visiting pilgrims. (In other photographs the name appears as a print label on the reverse sides of mounts.) Another handwritten note is in the skies above: “To you, oh my beautiful nest of Varak, I fly across the infinite expanse.” The words are taken from a poem by Khoren Khrimian, Mgrdich Khrimian’s nephew and director of the Varakavank school. The poem expresses the yearnings of a migrant for his home, yearnings that Avedaghayan understood.  

As a young man Avedaghayan left his native Van for the Russian Caucasus, part of a defining pattern of Armenian migrancy. There he became involved with the emergent Armenian Revolutionary Federation, known as the Dashnaktsuthiun (Federation), or simply Dashnaks, founded in Tiflis (now Tbilisi) in 1890. The Dashnaks are thought to have been inspired, in part, by a famous speech in which Mgrdich Khrimian blamed the lack of reforms in the Ottoman East on Armenians’ use of peaceful petitions rather than violent weaponry. Thus revolutionary activity became another defining feature of Armenian life — giving definition, it is important to note, not because revolutionary involvement was widespread among Armenians, but because the activity that did exist would play a decisive part in the unfolding of Armenian history. Avedaghayan’s role in the group at this time is unclear but we do know that he was arrested by the Russian authorities (suggesting that his role was potentially an active one) and exiled along with other political prisoners to the notorious penal colony on the island of Sakhalin, off the Siberian coast.

At some point around the turn of the century, Avedaghayan succeeded in escaping from Sakhalin, returning to his home in Van by way of a long journey through Japan, China, India, and Iran. (Were this the life of a European or American photographer, such as the aforementioned Beato, du Camp, or Frith, this would be the stuff of legend.)

Photograph of Arshile Gorky, “The Artist and His Mother” (c. 1926-42) at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC (photo © and by Carolina Miranda, used with permission)

Back in Van, Avedaghayan established what appears to be the city’s first photographic studio. Photography came to Van a little later than in other comparable cities of the region, but followed a familiar pattern of arriving via an Armenian with imported technology and techniques, and largely serving the Armenian community. Avedaghayan’s clientele broadly resembled that of other Armenian studios of the Ottoman East. He pictured a cross-section of local society — families, businesspeople, clerics, and students — but wealthier Vanetsis were predominant.

Studios served Armenian communities, responding to their particular needs — those of a dispersed people. A number of Avedaghayan’s photographs relate, like the Adoian portrait, to the migratory phenomenon. The regional migrations of the sort that Avedaghayan had embarked upon had been part of Armenian life for generations. But by the late 19th century, a new global movement had come to dominate, in which Armenians crossed continents in search of economic opportunity and security, and the US was the favored destination. Photographs such as the Adoians’ were threads that tied people together, part of a global exchange between those who had left their ancestral homelands and those who stayed behind. They brought people together in another sense, to gather around them, to look and converse, to tell stories, and to remember loved ones. Photographs were the objects around which families, friends, and communities adhered, in and between the Old and the New World.   

The flower in Vostanig’s hands is a motif repeated across many of Avedaghayan’s migrant photographs, evidently placed there by the photographer to serve as signs and gestures of love and friendship for the photographs’ intended recipients. As photographic technologies and techniques were similar from one city to the next, perhaps only in such small details can we begin to observe a particular individual at work behind the lens.

What did mark Avedaghayan’s studio as different was his involvement in a more unusual, clandestine form of picture-making. He had not entirely left the revolutionary life behind, and served as a photographer for Dashnak activists in the Van region. Revolutionary groups, especially the Dashnaks, specialized in visual propaganda. They understood the role photographs could play in gathering people together as communities — their images of revolutionary heroes can be approached as one large nation-building enterprise. They understood, too, the vast narrative potential of photographs; the one they encouraged was of heroic and righteous struggle against oppressive overlords, and photographs proved instrumental in forging mythic, larger-than-life personas for activists.  

Hovhannes Avedaghayan. Khisarji Kevork’s family, Van, 1910s (image courtesy Armen Shahinian collection)

Such figures, in the end, became all too much the instruments of fantasy. The presence of some revolutionaries in the eastern provinces gave the Ottoman government a pretext for the wholesale removal of Armenian populations in 1915, under the cover of war. It was an utterly violent removal, undertaken via massacre and forced migration to the unforgiving climes of the Syrian desert. And it was the violent removal of not only people but also their culture and history.  

Van was one of the few places where Armenians defended themselves against these machinations. Avedaghayan was certainly involved in defending the city’s Armenian sections — as were practically all Armenians, even the young Vostanig — and there is a distinct probability that he was involved in creating the photographs of that defense. Thousands of Vanetsis were saved — but they would never again dwell in their homeland. More than 100,000 of them subsequently marched eastward on foot; two-thirds reaching their destination in the Caucasus. Though some managed to travel further still, the vast majority stayed, under very difficult conditions. Shushan Adoian died in 1919 in Yerevan amid a sea of starving refugees from the Ottoman Empire; Vostanig sailed for the US in 1920; Hovhannes Avedaghayan lived in Baku, where he died in 1923 at the age of 60.

Thus to uncover the maker of the Adoian photograph is also to uncover part of the often shrouded, ignored, and misrepresented history and visual culture from which it emerged. This is possible because Armenians occupied a highly visual world. Theirs were lives lived with, among, and through photographs and other images.

What can be said of the visual culture of the Ottoman Armenian photographic studio? My own assessment is that it is difficult to make a case for Avedaghayan’s photographs, and indeed those produced by comparable local studios, as formally distinctive or innovative. A globalized medium, photography replicated its forms across the world, its methods being imported into each new place as surely as were its technologies. Studying photographs collectively rather than individually helps to lay bare this essential truth. Ottoman Armenian studio photography required the intervention — and idiosyncratic vision — of a Gorky to turn one of its number from a repetitious or “unoriginal” example into something of interest to the art world.

However, Armenian-made photographs are distinctive in a sense, for they were made in and circulated through a distinctive milieu. Their forms and conventions might have been familiar, prosaic, perhaps even hackneyed at times, and yet they took on new life and meaning when created and deployed in the unique circumstances of the Armenian world.

And they carry the searing mark of unique lives. Take the Adoians. When they posed before Avedaghayan’s lens, Shushan and Vostanig were taking part in the same process as hundreds of others before them. Yet they did so in order to speak of their own lives, to declare their uniqueness. The particularity of the photograph lies not in pose or composition but in those lives. It is an object that not only records life but plays a role and has a force within it. Armenians visiting studios tended to understand this about photographs, their power, their promise, their possibility. 

Aram Jibilian’s limited edition poster project for Fixed Point Perspective, which includes the following images, “Ottoman Armenian Figure in an Empty Landscape”(2017), backdrop painting by Simon Agopyan, 1910, and “Dust in the Bellows” (2017), backdrop photograph by unknown Ottoman Armenian photographer, 1912. (image courtesy the artist)

Today, photographs can possess these qualities still — but only if we allow them. The artists involved in Vartanian’s Fixed Point Perspective project work with Ottoman Armenian photographs. This does not position photographs as passive objects, raw source material (in the way the Adoian portrait is regularly perceived in relation to Gorky’s The Artist and His Mother series). Rather, these contemporary artists work with Ottoman Armenian photographic culture in acts of engagement and renewal, even what we might call collaboration with long-gone studio photographers and their subjects. This is what is frequently misunderstood about Gorky’s works — they were created in partnership and part of their power has its source in the original photograph, and the studio and culture from which it sprang. 

The project’s contemporary artists have produced their artworks in conversation, in solidarity, with their century-old partners. Photographs thus continue to bring people together, to bind the fractured world. One piece in particular has a powerful hold on my mind, Aram Jibilian’s print work “Ottoman Armenian Figure in an Empty Landscape,” in which the studio portrait of an Armenian man becomes his ghostly apparition in the Armenian homelands. It speaks of the disappearance of a people and their culture, their absence from the land and from history, and the way in which that absence can haunt us through photographs. But it also speaks of a return from nothingness — a reappearance. It is the sort of return that can occur only when we open our eyes and both converse and commune with the past.

Pashinyan’s son assaulted, says Speaker of Parliament

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 11:26, 3 April 2023

YEREVAN, APRIL 3, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s son, Ashot Pashinyan, has been assaulted, Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan said Monday.

Simonyan revealed Ashot Pashinyan’s assault a day after being assaulted in downtown Yerevan himself.

“Yesterday Ashot Pashinyan was assaulted too. A few days before that, an ARF Member of Parliament attacked and punched Vladimir Vardanyan, the Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on State-Legal Affairs, some ARF [occurrence] commits a provocation from 100 meters away against the Speaker of Parliament in downtown Yerevan, and yesterday an attack against the Prime Minister’s son also took place. This is a series of organized provocations, and I am sure that the traces lead beyond our country’s borders, and the legal and political reaction to this will take place swiftly. Armenia will remain a democracy and will develop its democracy, there will be peace in our region,” Simonyan said on social media.

On April 2, the Speaker of Parliament was allegedly involved in an altercation with a passerby in Yerevan.

The passerby, Karen Mkrtchyan, a Diaspora-Armenian and registered ARF member, said on social media that he saw Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan in central Yerevan and called him a “traitor”. Mkrtchyan claimed that Alen Simonyan allegedly ordered his security detail to restrain him, and then Simonyan allegedly spat on his face.

Simonyan later issued a statement, acknowledging that an incident took place but neither confirming nor denying the alleged spitting.  He said that insults against the legitimate authorities of Armenia will receive a legitimate reaction.

Russian Deputy FM and Ambassador of Azerbaijan discuss the prospects of normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations

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 19:44,

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. On March 31, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin met with Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador of Azerbaijan to Russia Polad Bulbuloghlu, ARMENPRESS reports, Russian MFA informed.

The Russian Foreign Ministry stated that during the meeting, among other issues, a number of regional issues were discussed, including the prospects for the normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations according to the trilateral agreements reached between the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Der Matossian Publishes New Book on ‘Denial of Genocides in the Twenty-First Century’

“Denial of Genocides in the Twenty-First Century” book cover


The University of Nebraska Press announced the publication of “Denial of Genocides in the Twenty-First Century,” an edited volume on denial of genocides by Bedross Der Matossian.

The edited volume is the first book that analyzes the nature of denial of genocides in the twenty-first century from an interdisciplinary and comparative perspective.  While the denial of the Armenian Genocide represents the classic case of genocide denial in the modern period, other genocides of both the premodern and the modern periods have seen their share of denialism.

This edited volume discusses the ongoing denial mechanisms of some of the most horrendous genocides of the premodern and modern periods. There is no genocide in the course of history that has not been denied by states or non-state actors, often including “professional” historians and pseudo-historians.

Throughout the twenty-first century, genocide denial has evolved and adapted with new strategies to augment and complement established modes of denial. In addition to outright negation, denial of genocide encompasses a range of techniques, including dispute over numbers, contestation of legal definitions, blaming the victim, and various modes of intimidation, such as threats of legal action. Arguably the most effective strategy has been denial through employing intentional misinformation.

“Denial of Genocides in the Twenty-First Century” brings together leading scholars from across disciplines to add to the body of genocide scholarship that is challenged by denialist literature. By concentrating on factors such as the role of communications and news media, global and national social networks, the weaponization of information by authoritarian regimes and political parties, court cases in the United States and Europe, freedom of speech, and postmodernist thought, this volume discusses how genocide denial is becoming a fact of daily life in the twenty-first century. The volume covers the denial of the indigenous, Armenian, Cambodian, Guatemalan, Rwandan, Bosnian, and Syrian genocides as well as the Holocaust.

“I think this is a unique opportunity to bring together the leading experts of genocide in order to understand what makes the twenty-first century denial of genocides different from those of the earlier period. Despite that fact that other examples of the denial of genocide in this volume are not as sophisticated as the mechanisms used by the Turkish state in denying the Armenian Genocide, nevertheless they use similar techniques in pursing their shameful actions. The techniques include, but are not limited to, using social media, academic platforms, intimidation through legal actions, and disguising denial under the cloak of legitimate scholarship among others. I am sure that the reader will appreciate and benefit from the wide range of cases covered in this volume.” stated editor Bedross Der Matossian.

The list of contributors in the order of their contribution are Bedross Der Matossian, “Introduction: Genocide Denial in the Twenty-First Century”; Robert K. Hitchcock, “Denial of Genocide of Indigenous People in the United States”; Talin Suciyan, “Armenian Genocide and Its Denial: A Comprehensive Tool of Supremacism?”; Marc A. Mamigonian, “Weaponizing the First Amendment: Denial of the Armenian Genocide and the U.S. Courts,”; Eldad Ben Aharon “Coalition Politics and Parliamentary Paralysis: The Armenian Genocide Bill during the Netanyahu Administration, 2009–2021”; Gerald J. Steinacher, “Denying the Shoah: Distorting History in the Twenty-First Century”; Ben Kiernan, “Aversions to Acknowledging the Khmer Rouge Genocides in Cambodia, 1990–2021”; Samuel Totten, “Denial of the Guatemalan Genocide, 1981–2020”; Jelena Subotić, “Regional Political Implications of Bosnian Genocide Denial”; Roland Moerland, “Mainstreaming the Denial of the Genocide against the Tutsi”; Uğur Ümit Üngör and Annsar Shahhoud “A Multifront War of Narratives: The Assad Regime’s Emerging Denialism”; and Israel W. Charny, “Epilogue: Denials of Reality Remove the Capacity to Think Straight and Logically in Order to Feel Protected and Safe.”

Copies of “Denial of Genocides in the Twenty-First Century” are available for purchase from the University of Nebraska Press website. Use code: 6AS23 to receive a 40 percent discount.

Bedross Der Matossian

Bedross Der Matossian is the vice-chair, professor of Modern Middle East History, and Hymen Rosenberg Professor in Judaic Studies at the Department of History at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL). He is the past president of the Society for Armenian Studies. He is the author, co-editor, and editor of six volumes including his latest “The Horrors of Adana: Revolution and Violence in the Early Twentieth Century” (Stanford University Press, 2022).

Armenian Security Service Receives 13 Light Vehicles From Pentagon – Yerevan

March 23 2023

 (@FahadShabbir) 

YEREVAN (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 23rd March, 2023) The US Department of Defense has presented the Armenian National Security Service (NSS) with 13 jeeps within the Proliferation Security Initiative aimed at stopping the trafficking of weapons of mass destruction, the Armenian government announced on Thursday.

"To accept as a gift 13 light utility vehicles and spare parts for them given by the risk reduction bureau of the US Department of Defense within the Proliferation Security Initiative. To assign the transferred property to the National Security Service," the corresponding decree, issued on the governmental website, stated.

It was noted that the vehicles' transfer will allow the NSS border troops to perform the tasks set before them more efficiently.

On February 20, Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikyan and US Defense Security Cooperation Agency chief James Hursch discussed military cooperation during the International Defense Exhibition and Conference IDEX 2023 in Abu Dhabi.

https://www.urdupoint.com/en/world/armenian-security-service-receives-13-light-v-1664486.html

Wellington (NZ) council revokes police power to trespass on Anzac Day

Stuff, New Zealand
Richard Noble with his ‘recognise Armenian genocide’ banner that saw him threatened with arrest (File photo).

The Wellington City Council has revoked police permission to trespass people from Anzac Day services held on its property.

It comes after Wellington man Richard Noble arrived at the Ataturk Turkish memorial last Anzac Day carrying a banner with the words "Recognise Armenian Genocide" on it. But a police officer warned him that, if he waved his banner, he would be asked to leave and he would be arrested for trespass if he refused to do so.

Council chief executive Barbara McKerrow had issued recurring Anzac Day permission to police to allow them to trespass from the land, which is owned by the city council.

A statement from the council on Friday said police had told council they no longer needed the delegated trespass powers and McKerrow had since revoked it.

It came after the Independent Police Conduct Authority looked into the police action last Anzac Day following a complaint from Noble.

In February Noble received a letter from the IPCA informing him that police had accepted that the officer's comments to him on Anzac Day were wrong and that they "had the effect of preventing you from undertaking lawful protest activities".

The letter said: "The authority has agreed with police that they will contact you to apologise for the way you were dealt with.

The authority noted that as well as speaking to the officer concerned, police would develop a training package to "further educate frontline staff about their powers and expectations at protests".

Noble on Friday said he was yet to receive the apology. The council revocation was probably a good thing as it removed a “grey area”, he said.

Police retained their usual arrest powers – for example, he could still be arrested for breach of the peace if he made a scene at an Anzac service.

The killing of between 664,000 and 1.2 million Armenian people by the Ottoman – now Turkish – government between 1915 and 1916 is recognised as genocide by 32 countries including the United States, Canada, France, Germany and Russia.New Zealand does not officially recognise it as a genocide.

PACE Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights calls on Azerbaijan to “implement without delay” World Court ruling

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 12:14,

YEREVAN, MARCH 23, ARMENPRESS. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights on March 22 expressed great concern by the humanitarian crisis unfolding due to the ongoing obstruction of the Lachin Corridor. It adopted a statement calling on Azerbaijan to immediately comply with the ICJ order and open the corridor.

Below is the full statement:

“The Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights of the Parliament Assembly of the Council of Europe is greatly concerned by the humanitarian crisis unfolding due to the ongoing obstruction of the Lachin Corridor. This corridor is the lifeline between those living in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, and the Committee fully supports the public statement made by the Parliamentary Assembly co-rapporteurs for the monitoring of Armenia on 24 February 2023, calling for “immediate action” and “the immediate cessation of the unlawful and illegitimate obstruction of the Lachin corridor”. The Committee also calls on the Azerbaijani authorities to implement without delay the measures addressed to it by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) of 22 February 2023 and of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) of 21 December 2022 whose decisions noted the obligation on Azerbaijan under the Trilateral Statement, signed on 9 November 2020, to “guarantee the security of persons, vehicles and cargo moving along the Lachin Corridor in both directions” (Article 6 of the Trilateral Statement).1 The Committee furthermore refers to other international statements addressed to the authorities of Azerbaijan on the same issue, including – the joint statement of the four co-rapporteurs of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe for the monitoring of Azerbaijan and Armenia of December 16, 2022, which states that “Freedom and security of movement of persons and goods must be urgently restored along the corridor. We call on all parties to the Trilateral Statement of 9-10 November 2020 to immediately take the necessary measures”, and – the European Parliament resolution of 19 January 2023 on the humanitarian consequences of the blockade in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

The United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan on February 22 to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions. The Lachin Corridor has been blocked by Azerbaijan since 12 December 2022.