Russia temporarily halts gas supply to Armenia for planned maintenance

May 1 2023
Reuters

May 1 (Reuters) – Russia temporarily halted gas supplies to Armenia on Monday for four days to conduct planned maintenance on a major gas pipeline, Gazprom Armenia said in a statement.

Russia is Armenia's main gas supplier, shipping 2.6 billion cubic metres to the country last year.

In a statement, Gazprom Armenia – a subsidiary of Russia's state-controlled gas giant Gazprom (GAZP.MM) - said it was temporarily suspending gas exports from 8 a.m. local time (0400 GMT) on Monday May 1 until 8 p.m. (1600 GMT) on Thursday May 4.

It said maintenance work was being carried out on a section of the 'North Caucasus-Transcaucasia' gas pipeline in Russia's southern Stavropol region and that it would use reserves to continue supplying gas to consumers in Armenia.

Reporting by Jake Cordell; Editing by Kirsten Donovan
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/russia-temporarily-halts-gas-supply-armenia-planned-maintenance-2023-05-01/


Reuters: Armenian, Azerbaijani ministers hold talks in US over Karabakh dispute

May 1 2023
Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Washington on Monday as part of efforts to ease friction between the South Caucasus rivals.

Tensions have flared anew after Azerbaijan installed a road checkpoint at the start of the Lachin Corridor, the only route linking Armenia to the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh territory.

Karabakh is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan, but home to mostly ethnic Armenians. Azerbaijan committed to keeping the route open as part of a Russian-brokered ceasefire in 2020 that ended a six-week war between the two countries.

Azerbaijan said it had established the checkpoint in response to what it said were Armenian weapon supplies to Nagorno-Karabakh. Yerevan denies that charge.

The talks – bilaterals between Blinken and each foreign minister as well as a three-way discussion – were not expected to yield a breakthrough.

A senior State Department official said Washington's "goal is to make sure that the ministers are able to sit down and talk to each other … But it's most important that the two of them are able to continue their negotiations."

Washington previously said it was "deeply concerned" by Azerbaijan establishing the checkpoint.

The official also said the United States was disappointed Russia had taken a negative view of the meeting taking place in Washington.

The stand-off is seen as a test of Russia's resolve to mediate disputes in the region. Armenia – formally an ally of Russia through a mutual self-defence pact – has repeatedly called on Moscow to use its peacekeeping force to stop what it calls Azerbaijan's "gross violation" of the peace deal.

The parties have agreed to hold talks in Moscow at some point in the future, though no date has been set yet.

Negotiations over a longer-term peace deal between the two sides after another military flare-up last year quickly stalled as Armenia pushed for the European Union and France to have a bigger mediating role, but Azerbaijan rejected.

(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk and Daphne Psaledakis in Washington D.C., and Jake Cordell in Tbilisi; Editing by Nick Macfie and Hugh Lawson)

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/armenian-azerbaijani-ministers-hold-talks-in-us-over-karabakh-dispute/ar-AA1aBc2x?ocid=Peregrine

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https://www.jpost.com/international/article-741784

TAAL’s Anti-Racism Town Hall Panel Included Six Leading LA County Officials


For Immediate Release

Sunday, May 7, 2023

 

Media Contact: Vic Gerami

310.880.8563

[email protected]

 

 

 

Six Leading Elected Officials were Panelists

on High Profile Town Hall to Address 

Rising Anti-Armenian Racism in LA County

 


Truth And Accountability League’s (TAAL) Town Hall,

‘Stand TAAL to Hate,’ was a partnership with the

LA County Commission on Human Relations’ LA vs. Hate,

with Onni Group as Presenting Sponsor

 

 

 

Los Angeles — Leading LA County elected officials, dignitaries, civic leaders, and community members gathered on Thursday, May 4, for the Truth And Accountability League (TAAL) anti-racism Town Hall at the Glendale Central Library

 

TAAL’s town hall, ‘Stand Taal to Hate,’ partnered with the LA County Commission on Human Relations’ LA vs. Hate. Moderated by TAAL’s founder & Chair, Vic Gerami, the event addressed the rise in anti-Armenian hate crimes in LA County, including the anti-Armenian flyers posted in Glendale in March and similar ones in Beverly Hills a month earlier, calling for the massacre of Armenians, and general hate incidents against different groups. 

 

The panel included Glendale Mayor Daniel Brotman, Glendale Police Chief Manuel Cid, Chief of Staff Joseph F. Iniguez from the LA County District Attorney’s Office, State Commissioner Sam Kbushyan, West Hollywood Mayor Sepi Shyne, and the Executive Director, L.A. County Commission on Human Relations Robin S. Toma, Esq.

 

The Town Hall was also live-streamed on TAAL’s website, with ONNI Group as the Presenting Sponsor. The panel discussed creating awareness, educating the public, and finding solutions to the rising anti-Armenian racism, Armenophobia, and hate incidents against various minorities in Los Angeles. 

 

‘The recent anti-Armenian flyers posted around LA County, home to hundreds of thousands of Armenian-Americans, remind us that we must be vigilant about racism, hate acts, and propaganda. It’s unfathomable that on the heels of the Armenian Genocide anniversary, Armenians are terrorized by flyers around schools and churches that call for the extermination of Armenians,’ said Vic Gerami, founder of TAAL.  

 

He added, ‘But we mustn’t allow the hate of a few to create division, pin us against each other, and get us stuck in the problem. The Truth And Accountability League is focused on the solution. We want to bring together, not only members of the Armenian community, but everyone to create awareness, educate, and find answers. Our panel of leaders and experts will discuss ways to handle malice that aims to victimize, dehumanize, and diminish us. Hate acts affect everyone, regardless of ethnic background, race, religion, sexual orientation, or gender identity. TAAL’s Town Hall is a forum to empower everyone.’ 

  

Gerami worked closely with the LA County Commission on Human Relations, its LA vs. Hate program, and executive director Robin S. Toma to produce this first-of-its-kind Town Hall. 

 

‘The Armenian American community is such an essential part of our LA County community, but the amount of discrimination and negative stereotyping they’ve experienced is too often understated because it is underreported,’ said Robin S. Toma, Executive Director of the LA County Commission on Human Relations. ‘I look forward to sharing the data we collect on acts of hate in our county, and most importantly, what we are doing with LA vs. Hate to increase reporting and eradicate hate in all our cities and neighborhoods.’ 

 

‘Stand TAAL to Hate’ is a Town Hall to benefit every group that has experienced racism, been subject to hate crimes, and defamation, along with LA’s Armenian community, which has been a target of such acts more frequently in recent years. With its nearly 40% Armenian community, Glendale is the perfect crossroad for such an event.

 

Glendale Mayor Daniel Brotman said, ‘I am proud to be the Mayor of Glendale, a city rich with diversity, including one of the largest Armenian diaspora communities in the world. The Jewel City has zero tolerance for racism, hate acts, and defamation. I strongly condemn the recent anti-Armenian flyers and work with Glendale Police and community leaders to find the perpetrator.’

 

He continued, ‘I’m honored to be a panelist for the Truth And Accountability League’s Town Hall. I applaud Vic Gerami and his team for launching a community outreach campaign to create awareness, educate, and empower not only the residents of Glendale but all of LA County.’

 

We’ve also witnessed the former president of the LA City Council, Nury Martinez, make a racist statement about a colleague that was caught on tape. The prevalence of the problem led the Burbank Board of Education to revise its anti-racism statement and update the board policy to stand in solidarity with Armenians. 

 

‘I look forward to participating in the Truth and Accountability League Town Hall in May. Coming together to discuss hate, accountability, and transparency is a powerful act of solidarity and progress. This will be a great opportunity to educate our community on the efforts law enforcement is making to address these challenges, as well as to learn, share, and work together towards a more equitable future,’ said Manuel Cid, Chief of Police, Glendale Police Department.

 

The audience had a chance to submit questions in writing before the start of the town hall. Gerami read a few of the questions and allowed the panelists to answer them.

 

‘As district attorney of Los Angeles County, home to more than 200,000 Armenians, I’m immensely proud to represent the largest Armenian population in the United States and the greatest number outside of Armenia itself,’ District Attorney George Gascón said. “Our Armenian community makes tremendous academic, artistic, altruistic, and many other contributions to our region.’ 

 

He continued, ‘These hate-filled flyers that incite violence are abhorrent and must be condemned. My office takes hate crimes very seriously, filing 86 percent of the hate crime cases referred to us, far above the statewide average of 54 percent. I commend TAAL for becoming an antidote for the poison that is racism and holding this important Town Hall to promote equality and protect human rights.’

 

CA State Commissioner Sam Kbushyan, an Armenian-American, believes in tackling the problem head-on. He’s been a long-time community organizer and Mayor Karen Bass’ Transition Team member.

 

‘It’s been shocking to see anti-Armenian flyers advocating Genocide against Armenians in Glendale and across LA County. We must all condemn this bigotry in the strongest terms. While our families and loved ones in Armenia and Artsakh are under assault by Azerbaijan, LA County’s Armenian community is being terrorized by hate, defamation, and propaganda,’ said State Commissioner Sam Kbushyan.

 

He added, ‘Vic Gerami and his team at the Truth And Accountability League have taken a proactive step in organizing a Town Hall in Glendale to create a safe place for the community to address this ongoing matter. I look forward to being on the panel and serving the greater LA community.’

 

West Hollywood Mayor Sepi Shyne, who has an impressive track record for supporting the Armenian community, including sponsoring Gerami’s TAAL resolution for West Hollywood to formally recognize the Republic of Artsakh in 2021 and condemning Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh and ethnic cleansing of 120,000 Armenians said, ‘I am honored to participate in the Truth And Accountability League’s Town Hall and be a part of a panel with distinguished LA County leaders. As a person of color, a woman, and a lesbian, I know racism all too well. I’ve seen the damage caused by hate crimes, defamation, and dehumanization of different communities. So, it’s important for me to speak up, create awareness, and show solidarity while there’s been an increase in anti-Armenian hate acts in Los Angeles,’ said West Hollywood Mayor Sepi Shyne.

 

She continued, ‘I commend Vic Gerami and TAAL’s work in proactively standing up against hate and educating the public about hate acts and what they can do about it. I steadfastly stand in solidarity with the Armenian-American community during these difficult times.’

 

Vancouver-based urban development company Onni Group with multiple projects in Los Angeles and a long track record of benevolence was the Presenting Sponsor of the town hall. 

 

‘At the Onni Group, we are committed to helping communities thrive where we conduct business. We take pride in supporting local events and organizations that contribute to our communities in the greater Los Angeles Area, including Glendale,’ said Duncan Wlodarczak, Chief of Staff, Onni Group.

 

He continued, ‘I applaud the Truth And Accountability League and Vic Gerami for gathering city leaders to discuss an important topic that affects everyone. Our company is thrilled to participate in the event and give back to the community.’

 

Click here to watch the town hall’s video, and click here for photos from the event. For additional information, visit TAAL’s website, TruthAndAccountabilityLeague.org. Please click here for the panelists’ photos.

 

 

About TAAL

 

TAAL is a 501©3 non-profit advocacy organization founded in 2020 due to a significant increase in anti-Armenian racism, defamation, hate crimes, and Armenophobia. We monitor and confront bias, disinformation, propaganda, and slander of the Armenian people and culture at the media level, including social media, academics, intelligentsia, and public policy.

 

Our Mission

 

To protect human rights, promote equality, combat racism where it appears and exists, stop the defamation and threats of violence against people of Armenian ethnicity, educate the community about racism, bias, and discrimination, achieve worldwide recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and end the crime of Genocide for all people across the world.

 

 

About the LA County Commission on Human Relations

 

The Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations is dedicated to promoting positive human relations in our richly diverse, multicultural county. The Commission works to develop programs that proactively address racism, homophobia, religious prejudice, linguistic bias, anti-immigrant sentiment, and other divisive attitudes that can lead to intercultural tension, hate crimes, and related violence. Partnering with law enforcement, schools, cities, community-based organizations, youth, academics, policy makers, businesses, and other leaders, the Commission brings key players together to resolve immediate intercultural conflicts and to work toward the longer term aim of eradicating bias and prejudice.

 

LA County’s Human Relations Commission has a legacy that dates back more than 75 years to shortly after the so-called “Zoot Suit Riots” displayed serious, long-standing human relations concerns. This incident, during which large numbers of mostly White young men in the military clashed with local young men of color for three days in the streets of LA, served as a wake-up call to county residents. In January, 1944, the County Board of Supervisors established a Committee for Interracial Progress. Two years later it was renamed the Committee for Human Relations. Following national recognition for its effective work to improve intergroup relations, the Committee became an official agency of County government in 1958 and was renamed the Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations. The Commission is among the oldest and largest of its kind in the US.

 

Each County Supervisor appoints three Commissioners who serve multi-year terms. The 15-member Commission meets each month. A staff of professional and support personnel in the County’s Department of Workforce Development, Aging, and Community Services executes the Commission’s programmatic work. The Commission’s signature projects include the annual Hate Crime Report and the annual John Anson Ford Human Relations Awards which recognize exemplary practices and exceptional leadership in human relations work.

 

 

About Onni Group

 

For over half a century, Onni has been building communities for people to live, work, and play. Our success reflects our commitment to our employees and partners, and our dedication to quality construction, innovation, sustainability, and customer satisfaction. Our expertise expands across North American cities such as Los Angeles, Seattle, Chicago, Phoenix, Toronto, and Vancouver.

 

We’ve constructed over 15,000 new homes, own and manage more than 11,200 rental apartments, built more than 18.4 million square feet of office, retail, and industrial space, and have an additional 28 million square feet of space in different phases of development. Employing thousands of people across North America, Onni is one of the continent’s largest and most established developers of real estate.

 

It’s our more than 50-year track record of delivering award-winning, high-quality developments that makes Onni a trusted brand. At Onni, we understand that our business is dependent upon our customers and the communities we serve. It is why we believe so strongly in planning for the future and giving back to those communities through long-lasting relationships that span over generations.

 

We believe the culmination of our passion for building world-class urban communities, quality design, innovation and sustainability, yields exceptional communities and experiences where our customers live, work, and play. It’s our commitment to living well. It’s a celebration of community, today and for the future.

 

 

About Vic Gerami

 

Vic Gerami is an award-winning journalist and the editor + publisher of The Blunt Post. Gerami is also the host and co-producer of the national headline news + politics program, THE BLUNT POST with VIC on KPFK 90.7 FM (Pacifica Network). 

 

Most recently, Gerami wrote, directed, and produce the journalistic documentary feature film, ‘Motherland,’ about Azerbaijan’s, Turkey’s unprovoked genocidal attack on Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) in 2020 and the massacre of 5,000+ people, and the two nations’ ongoing campaign of hate, violence, and disinformation against the indigenous Armenians. Here is a sneak peek at the film’s 5-minute sizzle.

 

Today reaching national and international audiences, Gerami first built a foundation of knowledge and skills by learning the media industry during his years at Frontiers Magazine, followed by positions at LA Weekly and Voice Media Group

 

Gerami’s radio program, TBPV, covers national, regional, and local headline news, politics, and current events, and Gerami offers analysis and commentary. He also interviews a high-profile member of Congress or other high-profile public figures on each show. His recent guests include Congressman Adam SchiffSenator Bob MenendezCongresswoman Jackie SpeierGovernor Howard DeanCongresswoman Katie PorterCongressman Brad ShermanCongressman Mike LevinCongresswoman Maxine Waters, Congresswoman Judy ChuLA District Attorney George Gascon, among many others. You can listen to all the interviews here

 

Gerami is also a contributor to some of the most prominent publications in the nation, including Windy City Times, Bay Area Reporter, Armenian Mirror-Spectator, The Advocate, The Immigrant Magazine, GoWeHo, Destination Luxury, OUT Traveler, The Fight, and among others.

 

The Wall Street Journal featured Gerami as a “leading gay activist” in its landmark 2008 coverage of opposition to Proposition 8, the ballot measure that for years denied same-sex couples in California the freedom to marry. In addition to his years of volunteer work as a leading advocate for marriage equality, Gerami served as a Planning Committee member for the historic Resist March in 2017. 

 

In 2015, Gerami was referenced in the landmark Supreme Court civil rights case, Obergefell v. Hodges, in which the Court held in a 5–4 decision that the fundamental right to marry is guaranteed to same-sex couples by both the Due Process and the Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

Armenpress: U.S. Treasury Secretary warns of ‘constitutional crisis’ if Congress fails to act on debt

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 09:53, 8 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 8, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Sunday warned that a failure by Congress to act on the debt ceiling could trigger a "constitutional crisis" in the United States that also would call into question the federal government's creditworthiness, Reuters reported.

Yellen sounded the alarm over possible financial market consequences if the debt ceiling is not raised by early June, when she has said the federal government could run short of cash to pay its bills.

The negotiations on the issue should not take place "with a gun to the head of the American people", Yellen told the ABC program "This Week."

President Biden has asked Congress to raise the debt ceiling with no conditions. The Republican-led House of Representatives last month passed a bill that would raise the government's $31.4 trillion debt ceiling, but the measure included sweeping spending cuts over the next decade that Biden and his fellow Democrats oppose.

Biden is preparing to meet on Tuesday at the White House with Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and top congressional Democrats to discuss the issue.

"It's Congress's job to do this. If they fail to do it, we will have an economic and financial catastrophe that will be of our own making," Reuters quoted Yellen as saying.

"And we should not get to the point where we need to consider whether the president can go on issuing debt. This would be a constitutional crisis," Yellen added, alluding the delineation of powers of the executive and legislature under the U.S. Constitution.

Biden has steadfastly said he will not negotiate over the debt ceiling increase, but would discuss budget cuts after a new limit is passed. Congress has often paired debt-ceiling increases with other budget and spending measures.

Washington regularly sets a limit on federal borrowing. Currently, the ceiling is equal to roughly 120% of the country's annual economic output. The debt reached that ceiling in January and the Treasury Department has kept obligations just within the limit, but by July or August, Washington could have to stop borrowing altogether.

Under that scenario, shockwaves could ripple through global financial markets as investors question the value of U.S. bonds, which are seen as among the safest investments and serve as building blocks for the world's financial system.

Wagner to get ‘as much ammo as we need’ – Prigozhin

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 10:33, 8 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 8, ARMENPRESS. The Russian private military company Wagner Group, which is fighting Ukrainian troops in the Donbass city of Bakhmut – called Artyomovsk in Russia – has been promised enough ammunition to continue the battle, RT reported citing the company's head, Yevgeny Prigozhin.

The statement comes after Prigozhin warned that his fighters would be forced to pull out of the city on May 10 unless ammunition shortages are addressed by Russia’s Defense Ministry.

In a voice message posted on his Telegram channel, Prigozhin said that Wagner received “a military instruction … in which we were promised as much ammunition and weapons as we need to continue our activities.”

“We were told that we can carry out activities in Artyomovsk as we deem necessary,” Prigozhin added.

He also said that Army General Sergey Surovikin, the deputy commander of Russia’s military operation in Ukraine, was tasked with “making all decisions related to the military activities of Wagner PMC in coordination with the Defense Ministry.”

PM Pashinyan to meet with Aliyev in Brussels – FT

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 10:30, 8 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 8, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan will hold a meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on May 14 in Brussels, Financial Times reported citing officials with knowledge of preparations.

European Council president Charles Michel will host the meeting on Sunday, Financial Times reported.

The Brussels meeting is an “important sign of progress”, one of the three officials told Financial Times on condition of anonymity as it is not yet public, adding that the EU and US efforts were “mutually reinforcing” and “complementary two-track processes”.

There are also plans for the three leaders to hold another meeting on June 1 with German chancellor Olaf Scholz and French president Emmanuel Macron on the sidelines of the European Political Community summit in Moldova, two of the officials told Financial Times.

Tourism in Armenia grows over 80% in Q1

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 11:37, 8 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 8, ARMENPRESS. 451,850 tourists visited Armenia in the first three months of 2023 – 81,2% more than in 2022’s Q1, according to official data released by the Statistical Committee.

Most of the tourists – 237,040 – are citizens of Russia, followed by Armenian citizens living abroad – 74,186.

53,707 citizens of Georgia and 25,458 citizens of Iran also visited Armenia in the reporting period.

Furthermore, visits from Turkey grew more than twice – with 2,712 citizens of Turkey having visited Armenia in January-March (2,2 times more than last year).

Chinese Foreign Minister to visit Germany, France and Norway

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 12:44, 8 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 8, ARMENPRESS. Chinese foreign minister Qin Gang will visit Germany, France and Norway from May 8 to 12.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry announced the visit on May 8.

“At the invitation of German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna and Norwegian Foreign Minister Anniken Huitfeldt, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Qin Gang will pay a visit to Germany, France and Norway from May 8 to 12,” Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin said in a .

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1110443.html?fbclid=IwAR3oksQ-nLaKzohZ3UPff8p7qR1y1aZ17tXJIRkFKZpjMKhueQG-KKHdpqk

China threatens EU with countermeasures over possible sanctions against its companies

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 12:35, 8 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 8, ARMENPRESS. China will protect its interests in the event of EU sanctions against seven Chinese technology companies due to their supply of equipment to Russia, the Chinese Foreign Ministry’s spokesman Wang Wenbin announced on Monday.

"If media reports turn out to be true, such actions by the European side will seriously undermine mutual trust and cooperation between the EU and China," TASS quoted Wenbin as saying at a press briefing.

When asked to comment on the information that seven Chinese companies could soon come under EU sanctions due to the supply of equipment to Russia he replied: "The European side should not make a mistake, otherwise Beijing will be forced to resolutely protect its rationally justified legal rights.".

The Financial Times earlier reported that Brussels has proposed sanctions on Chinese companies for supporting Russia for the first time since the war in Ukraine began.

Seven Chinese businesses accused of selling equipment that could be used in weapons have been listed in a new package of sanctions to be discussed by EU member states this week, according to FT.

Turkish intel agency MIT uses journalism to mask undercover agents, assets and informants

May 1 2023

Turkish intelligence agency MIT has been using journalism as a cover to infiltrate and collect intelligence in other countries, dispatching its agents and assets as reporters to engage in spying, several sources familiar with the modus operandi of MIT told Nordic Monitor.

“Mostly it was reporters who worked for state news agency Anadolu and Turkish Radio and Television [Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu, TRT] who were tapped as assets by MIT,” said one source who had served in a senior position in Turkish military intelligence. The source, who spoke anonymously for fear of repercussions from the Turkish government, said these reporters regularly filed reports and coordinated their work with their handlers.

Yahya Bostan, the news coordinator for Anadolu, is one of those who work for Turkish intelligence. He had previously worked as news coordinator for TRT News for four years between 2017 and 2021. Before moving to the state-funded media, he was employed by the Sabah newspaper, owned by the Turkish president’s family. Bostan often writes articles praising MIT in his weekly column for the Islamist Yeni Şafak daily.

Bostan was red flagged during a 2011-2014 terrorism probe into Iran’s Quds Force network in Turkey and listed as a suspect by prosecutors. He was put under surveillance and his phones were tapped by prosecutors who secured court warrants to determine Bostan’s clandestine connections. The investigation revealed he was regularly in contact with several high-profile Quds Force operatives. Prosecutors also discovered he was coordinating his activities with Nuh Yılmaz, a senior MIT official known for his anti-Israel and pro-mullah regime views who had worked for an Iranian-funded Turkish publication in the 1990s. The Quds Force probe was killed by the government of then-prime minister and current president Recep Tayyip Erdogan in February 2014 after it exposed a number of senior officials’ links to Quds Force cells.

 

Judge’s warrant authorizing the wiretapping of Yahya Bostan’s phone in the IRGC Quds Force probe: 

“Assets in the opposition media are quite valuable in helping the intelligence agency run its influence campaign to shape the national debate around certain issues effectively,” said another source who asked that his name to be withheld for security reasons. The perceived opposition journalists run fewer risks for triggering red flags during clandestine work, the source underlined.

Documentary evidence and leaks in recent years revealed by Nordic Monitor have confirmed what the sources described, presenting a distinguishable pattern of this modus operandi.

Using journalism as a cover in overseas operations to gather intelligence is perhaps more valuable for the agency than using it for domestic operations in Turkey, where it has more resources and assets in friendly territory. Journalists’ access to foreign government institutions and officials as well as people and entities in the nongovernmental corporate and nonprofit sectors provides a valuable avenue for gathering intelligence for MIT.

 

Secret document filed by Turkish prosecutor Adem Özcan asking the the court to authorize a wiretap for Quds Force suspect Yahya Bostan: 

In many cases, press credentials were used to mask clandestine operations that would otherwise run the risk of exposure and trigger closer scrutiny by host countries’ intelligence services. In some cases journalists who want to register in host countries or with international organizations are required to provide credentials from Turkish embassy press sections, which come in handy for managing and coordinating MIT’s operations.

In one recent case, a MIT agent was caught in Ukraine in 2019 when he was posing as a journalist to monitor the extradition proceedings of Nuri Gökhan Bozkır, an ex-military officer and arms smuggler who provided arms to jihadists in Syria on behalf of the Erdogan government. During a hearing at an Ankara court on February 12, 2023 , Bozkır related how an intelligence officer showed up to a hearing in Kiev in 2019. When court officials questioned the agent’s credentials, he claimed to be a Turkish journalist but was later found to be an intelligence officer and was escorted from the courtroom.

In some cases, MIT also positions its agents as press attachés at Turkish embassies, with the foreign ministry providing them with diplomatic credentials. Swiss prosecutors exposed one such situation in 2018 when they issued an arrest warrant for Hacı Mehmet Gani, who worked as press attaché at the Turkish embassy in Bern. Gani and Hakan Kamil Yerge, second secretary at the embassy, were accused of orchestrating a plot to kidnap a businessman who was a critic of the Turkish president. The supposed diplomats fled Switzerland before the arrest warrants were served.

On the home front, MIT has aggressively been pursuing a public information campaign to impact the domestic agenda and create a narrative that would best serve the Islamist government of President Erdogan as well as its militant, neo-nationalist allies. During the two decades of Erdogan’s rule, MIT has taken this operation using journalism as a cover to a new level by overhauling what used to be a low-key press section and turning it into part of a psychological and influence operation (PSYOP) department, recruiting many reporters, photographers and social media influencers.

There is no single program at the agency that coordinates all the agents, assets and informants in media outlets. Instead, multiple departments at MIT have their own group of journalists to handle. Due to compartmentalization and separation on a strictly need-to-know basis at the agency, handlers of journalists for one department may not know which journalists work for another department. The entire picture of who’s who and who works for which department that uses undercover agents in the media is only for the eyes of the MIT chief, Hakan Fidan, an Erdogan confidant.

Only a fraction of MIT agents and assets have been exposed in recent years, and their identities were revealed thanks to court documents, leaks and whistleblowers. It represents only the tip of the iceberg and does not truly reveal the extent and depth of MIT operations in the journalism field.

Perhaps the most notorious case is that of Hayri Birler, who had worked for the Hürriyet. Milliyet and Turkish Daily News (later renamed the Hürriyet Daily News) dailies in Ankara in the 1980s and 1990s. He had been a MIT agent and worked undercover as a journalist for years before he was ordered to leave the media and serve as regional director for the agency in Turkey’s Diyarbakır province. He is now retired.

Nuh Yılmaz is another MIT agent who had worked in the US and Turkey as a journalist before he was appointed head of the agency’s press department in 2013. Yılmaz, a protégé of Fidan, was later promoted to the counterespionage department and plays an instrumental role in influence operations on behalf of the agency.

Yılmaz runs a number of agents, assets and informants in traditional Turkish media outlets as well as online news websites, some of which are obscure and serve to muddy the waters by floating conspiracy theories. The leaked emails of President Erdogan’s son-in-law Berat Albayrak revealed in 2016 that MIT was feeding information to his agents planted in the Sabah daily, owned by Erdogan’s family. Emails from 2012 showed that Abdurrahman Şimşek, Ferhat Ünlü and Nazif Karaman were in the loop and receiving information from the agency.

At the direction of the agency, this trio wrote a book in December 2018 on the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was assassinated by Saudi government operatives at the Saudi Consulate General in Istanbul on October 2, 2018. The information surrounding the murder was provided by MIT, which had bugged the consulate before sending Khashoggi and his Turkish fiancée there as part of the Erdogan government’s move to gain leverage over Saudi Arabia.

Ünlü wrote several books promoting MIT and how the agency has successfully completed espionage operations under Fidan. For several years now, Şimşek has been working with a team of MIT agents in hunting down investigative journalists who fled Turkey to escape wrongful imprisonment by the Erdogan regime. The secret photos, home addresses and daily routines of journalists in the US and Europe, apparently obtained as part of long-running surveillance programs, were published in the Sabah daily by Şimşek and his colleagues in the spy agency.

Another exposure of a MIT agent was made in 2011, when prosecutors investigated a series of terrorist attacks in Istanbul. The police detained dozens of people who were connected to the attacks. One of the detainees was a Turkish photojournalist named Mustafa Özer, who had long been working for Agence France-Presse (AFP). During police questioning Özer revealed his MIT identity and detailed the clandestine infiltration and intelligence-gathering operations he and MIT agents were involved in. He even revealed how MIT directed him to set up a fake news website to make the operations appear to be legitimate journalistic activity.

Hande Fırat, the Hürriyet daily’s Ankara bureau chief and anchor of a debate program on CNN Türk, is a MIT operative whose frequent visits to MIT headquarters were exposed in court records and reported on by Nordic Monitor. Her role in a 2016 coup attempt with a staged interview of Erdogan on FaceTime was revealed to be part of a false flag operation planned by the intelligence agency.

Fatih Altaylı, a TV host and editor-in-chief of the HaberTürk daily, has been revealed to be on MIT’s payroll for a long time. The revelation was made by Mehmet Eymür, a retired MIT official who served in senior positions in the agency’s special bureau and counterterrorism and operations departments for many years. According to him, Altaylı was recruited for his links to leftist groups and was regularly invited to MIT headquarters for debriefings and to receive new instructions.

“Altaylı was the number one agent of the MIT Istanbul Regional Directorate when I worked for the agency. He approached the agency [for recruitment] by revealing that he had special relations with some terrorist organizations,” Eymür said. The journalist was using the code name Siyah (Black), according to the intelligence agency’s records.

Tuncay Özkan, a former journalist who is now a lawmaker from the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), is another MIT agent who had for a long time used journalism as a cover. Thanks to his special ties to the agency, Özkan had quickly gone from being a reporter involved in clandestine operations in the 2000s, even running afoul of the criminal justice system, to being the owner of a TV network. Özkan is believed to be one of the Trojan horses in the opposition bloc who maintains close ties with his handler, Şenkal Atasagun, a former head of the intel agency and currently chief advisor to far-right leader Devlet Bahçeli.

A book he wrote titled “Mit’in Gizli Tarihi” (The Secret History of MIT), which was published in 2010, was a special project contracted by MIT to promote the agency.

Mehmet Faraç, who had worked for the leftist, nationalist Cumhuriyet daily until 2010, is reportedly another journalist who works for the intel agency. His links to the agency were revealed during the Ergenekon trials between 2009 and 2012 and were confirmed in November 2021 by Akın Atalay, the former chairman of the board at Cumhuriyet. He currently works for the far-right Yeniçağ news outlet.

The revelations made by two senior MIT officials, Erhan Pekçetin and Aydın Günel, who were captured by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Iraq’s Kurdish city of Sulaymaniyah on August 4, 2017, also provided insight into journalists who work for the agency. Pekçetin was head of the department responsible for ethnic and separatist groups operating outside of Turkey’s borders, while Günel used to manage the human resources department at MIT, responsible for developing human intelligence in the field and bringing in new recruits and informants.

The two said MIT expanded its operations in media outlets after Fidan became the country’s top spy and transferred Yılmaz to the agency, which irritated career intelligence officials. Yılmaz had no intelligence background and had been red flagged for having worked for a radical, Iranian-funded publication in the 1990s as well as for his ties to the Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (İnsan Hak ve Hürriyetleri ve İnsani Yardım Vakfı, or IHH), a jihadist charity organization with links to al-Qaeda and the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

 

Nevertheless, with support from Fidan and the government, Yılmaz was put in charge of running assets in Turkish media outlets. MIT officials also confirmed Fırat’s frequent visits to intelligence headquarters for briefings and debriefings.

According to MIT officials who had been exposed, Çetiner Çetin, a journalist working for Habertürk, and Cem Küçük, who works for the Türkiye newspaper and often appears as a commentator on Turkish TV, are also connected to the intelligence agency.

Unfortunately, there is no oversight of the intelligence agency by the Turkish parliament, and a committee established to oversee of the agency was rendered ineffective and has rarely convened in recent years. The opposition has also failed to raise the use of journalism as a cover for agents on various platforms, largely remaining silent about the revelations in recent years.

Turkish intelligence enjoys broad immunity under amended Turkish law thanks to the Erdogan government and acts with impunity even if it’s breaking existing laws. Erdogan protected Fidan in 2012 when prosecutors discovered that criminals who were terrorizing the streets of Istanbul were on the MIT payroll. In 2014, when MIT agents were busted near the Turkish-Syrian border while illegally trafficking arms for jihadist groups in Syria, Erdogan intervened again to kill the investigation.

https://nordicmonitor.com/2023/05/turkish-intelligence-agency-mit-uses-journalism-to-mask-undercover-agents-assets-and-informants/