Amnesty International Activists around the world will take part in an extraordinary array of creative campaigns to mark 1,000 days of imprisonment of human rights defender Osman Kavala, in Turkey. The Free Osman Kavala campaign has organized a series of activities to draw international attention to the case. Osman Kavala has been in pre-trial detention in Silivri High Security Prison in Istanbul since his arrest on trumped-up charges on 1 November 2017. Amnesty International supports the campaign. “Osman Kavala remains in prison despite the ruling of the European Court of Human Rights that emphatically concluded that he must be released immediately, finding his prosecution and imprisonment to be driven by an ulterior motive –silencing him and civil society. We will not stop until he walks free and this unbearable injustice ends,” said a spokesperson from the Free Osman Kavala Campaign. Over the last 1,000 days Osman Kavala has been been held under three baseless charges. In February 2020 he was acquitted of one charge, only then to be accused of ‘espionage’ in March. This was a barely concealed attempt to circumvent a ruling by the European Court of Human Rights that his detention was unlawful. “We have been deeply moved by the outpouring of creativity in support of Osman Kavala across the global. People from all over the world are determined not to let this darkly symbolic day pass unnoticed,” said Milena Buyum, Amnesty International’s Turkey Campaigner. “As well as petitions and campaigning actions, people have created animations and operas, artworks and films. These are not individual expressions of solidarity but part of a collective worldwide call on Turkey to end the relentless crackdown on dissenting voices, and to free Osman Kavala.” Links to ACTIONS, EVENTS AND OUTPUTS follow here.
Author: Yeghisabet Vorskanian
Israel should rethink its relationship with Azerbaijan – opinion
Azerbaijan, a close ally of Turkey and fellow denier of the Armenian Genocide, has actively sought the eradication of the region’s indigenous Armenian inhabitants and traces of their millennia-old civilization, says an article published by The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday.
Azerbaijan’s burgeoning relationship with Israel has long been predicated on the false narrative that Azerbaijan is a “country of tolerance.” Azerbaijan has often paraded the existence of a small, but vibrant, Jewish community in the country as a testament to its commitment to diversity and tolerance.
However, Azerbaijan, a dictatorship based on petrodollars that has been ruled by the same family for over a half-century, is anything but that.
Throughout Soviet occupation, the Azerbaijani SSR denied cultural, political, linguistic and economic rights to the Armenians of Artsakh (also known as the Nagorno-Karabakh) and Nakhijevan, and in the late 80s and early 90s, Azerbaijani authorities started to engage in government-backed pogroms and massacres of Armenians in Azerbaijan to suppress calls for Artsakh’s independence. These pogroms also targeted Jewish communities, which began to flee Baku en masse in response to the increasing incidents of harassment.
Azerbaijan’s assault on the region’s Armenians ultimately culminated in a full-scale war which ended with a ceasefire that effectively secured the establishment of an independent and democratic Artsakh.
For the last 30 years, the Azerbaijani government has frequently deployed rhetoric advocating for the ethnic cleansing of Armenians in Artsakh and the Republic of Armenia itself – regularly referring to Armenians as enemies of the state – and denying the thousands of years of Armenian civilization in the region.
Throughout the early 2000s, some 28,000 Armenian cultural monuments in Nakhijevan were destroyed by Azerbaijan as part of an unprecedented cultural genocide. Independent reports have also found that Armenophobi – or anti-Armenian sentiment – has become so entrenched in government, media, and state institutions that an entire generation of Azerbaijanis have grown up listening only to hate speech towards Armenians.
This dissemination and inculcation of hatred has incited shocking incidents of violence against Armenians, including that of Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani soldier who murdered a sleeping Armenian soldier during a NATO English-language training program in Hungary.
Over the course of this week, Azerbaijan has engaged in major acts of aggression against the Republic of Armenia itself, targeting civilian populations with heavy artillery and drones. In Azerbaijan, tens of thousands came to the streets chanting “Death to Armenia” and calling for a war with Armenia. These scenes, the result of the Azerbaijani government’s decades of propagating Armenophobia, are all too reminiscent of the virulent antisemitism expressed in neighboring Iran.
The institutionalization of state-sponsored racism towards Armenians should be an immediate cause of concern for any nation that has not only experienced genocide, but continues to struggle against the promulgation of racist and discriminatory rhetoric by those who deny it its fundamental right to exist. But in addition to Azerbaijan’s flagrant disregard for minority rights, the country has also long worked against the strategic interests of Israel.
Azerbaijan has been found to have funneled substantial amounts of money into sanctioned Iranian businesses as part of the “Azerbaijani Laundromat” corruption scandal.
Similarly, Azerbaijan’s major oil pipeline is 10% owned by Iran – allowing the country to bypass international sanctions and to profit from Azerbaijan’s oil industry.
Additionally, despite its overtures to Israel with respect to weapons contracts, oil supply and the monitoring of Iran, Azerbaijan has succumbed to regional pressure when it comes to issuing political support for Israel – particularly in the forum of the UN.
Azerbaijan has also refused to open an embassy in Israel due to regional pressure. On the other hand, Armenia has consistently taken tangible steps towards good faith relations with Israel – including a commitment to establish an embassy in Tel Aviv.
Given that Armenia has been made partially reliant on Iran due to the fact that 80% of its borders are under illegal blockade by Turkey and Azerbaijan, it is clear that – unlike Azerbaijan – Armenia will not succumb to the pressure of malign regional actors when it comes to building relations with Israel.
Armenia, like Israel, has long fought for its very right to exist in a hostile region of states that would revel in its destruction, and has – against all odds – established vibrant democratic states in a sea of dictatorships.
The nations share a history dating back millennia, with Jerusalem being home to the first Armenian diaspora. So integral to the cultural milieu of Jerusalem, the Armenians occupy their own quarter of the Old City, separate from the Christian Quarter. Both nations are bound by the tragedy of genocide and survived its unimaginable horrors.
Israel and Armenia are bound in many intangible, human ways that have prospered despite Israel’s refusal to recognize the Armenian Genocide, and its partnership with Azerbaijan.
Israel has chosen to take Azerbaijan at face value, accepting its oil in exchange for arms that have been deployed against Armenian civilians in ongoing border confrontations.
Israel knows first-hand the challenges Armenia faces, and has long fought against the type of state-sponsored racism Azerbaijan propagates.
The two nations share an ancient history, and are bound by their experiences as long-stateless diasporic people whose resilience has allowed them to not merely survive, but to prosper. In light of this, it’s time for Israel to rethink its relationship with Azerbaijan.
Wounded resident of Armenia’s Chinari says he and other villagers won’t give up
Government gives privilege to investment program on building solar power station in Armavir province
12:12, 9 July, 2020
YEREVAN, JULY 9, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government approved the application by SUNENERGY LLC, enabling the company to use the privilege of exempting imported technological equipment, their components and raw materials from the customs duty within the frames of the investment program.
The products imported by the company will be used for constructing a solar power station in Armavir province.
Nearly 1 billion 77 billion drams will be invested for the project.
It is expected to create 5 permanent and 50 temporary jobs with 110,000 AMD average salary on the sidelines of the project.
The annual electricity production volume will comprise nearly 126 million drams.
The cost of the products to be imported comprises 115.3 million drams. The privilege on exempting from the customs duty is 8 million drams.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
President of Artsakh comments on Turkey’s decision on converting Hagia Sophia into mosque
12:37,
YEREVAN, JULY 11, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan commented on the decision of the Turkish authorities on granting Hagia Sophia a status of a mosque.
“By the decision of granting a status of a mosque to Hagia Sophia the Turkish authorities reaffirmed their denialist and xenophobic attitude towards civilizations. And every response of superpowers with Christian values on this topic is very much like the sigh of a sick and helpless person, as long as there is the denial of the Armenian Genocide, the Armenian-Turkish closed border, the genocidal acts by Turkey in the Middle East”, the Artsakh President said on Facebook.
Turkey’s top administrative court on July 10 annulled the 1934 government decree that turned Hagia Sophia into a museum, paving the way for Hagia Sophia to be reconverted into a mosque.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
Sports: Armenia joins UEFA’s PlayMakers
Armenia has joined the UEFA PlayMakers, inspired by Disney Company.
UEFA PlayMakers is a sports activity that delivers a fun and safe introduction to learning football, for 5-8 year old girls, through movement, play, and the magic of Disney storytelling.
Armenia is one of the first countries to be involved in this program. The launch will take place in March 2021.
30 centers will be opened in Armenia (2 centers in each region, 10 centers in Yerevan).
Two Armenian coaches will undergo a training before the program's launch.
Pashinyan says main strategy should be learning to live with COVID-19
18:27, 1 July, 2020
YEREVAN, JULY 1, ARMENPRESS. Each citizen can reduce the death statistic of COVID-19 by avoiding to be infected or infecting others, ARMENPRESS reports PM Pashiyan said in a briefing following the session at the Commandant’s Office, adding that it’s just necessary to preserve anti-pandemic rules.
‘’Unfortunately, we have not been able so far to solve our main strategic issue in the context of COVID-19, and our main strategic issue is learning to live with coronavirus. What does this mean in practice? Each of us has to try to organize his daily life in a way to be able to avoid being infected or infecting others with coronavirus’’, Pashinyan said, adding that many new cases continue to be recorded on daily basis.
523 new cases of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) have been registered in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 26,065.
515 more patients have recovered. The total number of recoveries has reached 14,563.
10 people have died in one day, raising the death toll to 453.
The number of active cases stands at 10,900.
The number of people who had a coronavirus but died from other disease has reached 149 (2 new such cases).
So far, 111,665 people have passed COVID-19 testing.
Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan
COVID-19: Stable situation now, but no guarantee that this stability will be maintained – Armenia PM
18:14,
YEREVAN, JUNE 22, ARMENPRESS. The situation with the novel coronavirus in Armenia remains serious, although there is quite a stable situation, but the problem is that there is no guarantee that this stability will be maintained, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at an online daily briefing on COVID-19.
“The epidemiological situation in Armenia connected with the novel coronavirus, unfortunately, still remains serious. Although we can state that we have quite a stable situation, but the problem is that we do not have a guarantee that this stability will be maintained. And our only tool remains to strictly follow the anti-coronavirus rules by all residents of Armenia as much as possible. And we continue holding broad awareness-raising campaign so that our compatriots will follow the three simple anti-coronavirus rules”, the PM said.
He said the task they have put forward is being solved, and the prices of face masks are declining in the market. And the prices become cheaper every week. The next direction which the government of Armenia is moving on with is the healthcare capacity development in order to provide high-quality services to the coronavirus infected patients as much as possible. Pashinyan also reminded that Armenia received large number of oxygen devices at the expense of the state budget resources.
According to the latest data, the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Armenia has reached 20,588, out of which 9,131 have already recovered. At the moment the number of active cases is 10,980. The death toll has reached 360.
Reporting by Anna Grigoryan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
More than 90 arrested at Armenia protest during clashes
Jun 14, 2020 6:33 PM
<em class="wnDate">Sunday, 11:33 AM EDT</em>Updated:Jun 14, 2020 10:23 PM
<em class="wnDate">Sunday, 3:23 PM EDT</em>