35th Universal Periodic Review: UK statement on Armenia

UK Government
Jan 30 2020

The UK delivers statement on Armenia at the 35th Session of Universal Periodic Review (UPR), sharing recommendations to improve their human rights record.

The United Kingdom welcomes Armenia’s positive progress since its 2015 review, and the Government’s commitment to wide-ranging reforms. In particular, we acknowledge Armenia’s conduct of elections in December 2018. We also welcome Armenia’s advances in media freedom, however we remain concerned about reported incidences of hate speech and attacks against LGBT individuals.

The UK welcomes Armenia’s progress in adopting legislative reforms towards gender equality and combatting violence against women.

We recommend that Armenia:

  1. Ratify the 2014 protocol to the ILO Forced Labour Convention of 1930 (P029);

  2. Adopt an open, merit-based process when selecting national candidates for UN Treaty Body elections;

  3. Sign the Global Pledge on Media Freedom, and commit to international efforts to create a safer environment for journalists worldwide as a member of the Media Freedom Coalition.


Analyst: Pro-Western organizations will want to replace Armenia PM after a while

News.am, Armenia
Jan 30 2020

15:39, 30.01.2020
                  

Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan doesn’t fit in the long-term plans of certain pro-Western non-governmental organizations, and so, it is definitely likely that when the rating of the head of government starts dropping after a while, those NGOs will want to try to replace Pashinyan with someone who will complete their assignments with more pleasure. This is what analyst of the Voice of People Club and leader of the For Social Justice Party Arman Ghukasyan told reporters today.

According to him, the activities of those organizations are aimed at undermining the foundations of society and serve the interests of foreign countries and organizations. “What is troubling is the fact that the Fifth Column is carrying out activities within state bodies, particularly through deputies and deputy ministers. For instance, one of the deputies of the ruling My Step Alliance has received a $210,000 grant from a pro-Western organization. There are also others who have received large amounts of funding, including Styopa Safaryan, who recently became the president of the Public Council, and they are advancing different agendas, including propaganda for the Istanbul Convention and discrediting of security forces. It is safe to anticipate more aggressive and synchronized statements and actions from people who pose a threat to our country’s national security,” Ghukasyan stated.

The other analyst of the Club, deputy leader of the For Social Justice Party Tsovinar Kostanyan stated that in addition to the Soros funds and organizations, there are also other organizations that are only the visible part of the “iceberg”. “There are many other organizations that are leading an anti-state policy to deepen Armenia’s cooperation with Russia,” she said.

Armenia Parliament Deputy Speaker: Constitutional Court subject will be closed in 1-2 months

News.am, Armenia
Jan 30 2020

20:18, 30.01.2020
                  

The subject related to the Constitutional Court will be closed in the next one or two months. This is what Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia Alen Simonyan told reporters today.

“I’m not saying Hrayr Tovmasyan will be or won’t be president of the Constitutional Court in two months. I’m saying this is a legal procedure…Hrayr Tovmasyan shouldn’t have been the president of the Constitutional Court at all, but that’s a different story. I said the problem will be solved in one or two months,” he stated.

Alen Simonyan urged not to rule out the fact that the issue will be solved through constitutional reforms and said he believes constitutional reforms can be developed in 1-2 months as well.

EBRD plans to invest about $100,000,000 in Armenia in 2020

News.am, Armenia
Jan 30 2020

23:06, 30.01.2020
                  

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) plans to invest nearly 100,000,000 Euros in Armenia this year. This is what Head of the EBRD in Armenia Dimitri Gvindadze told reporters today, adding that this is an approximate number and that the real amounts may be up to 90,000,000 or 150-200,000,000.

“A lot depends on our opportunities in the financial sector and the real sectors of economy, as well as sustainable investments,” Gvindadze said.

According to the EBRD’s strategy on cooperation with Armenia, in addition to the conventional spheres such as finance and energy, the Bank will actively explore the opportunities for cooperation in the sectors of transport and infrastructures, tourism and real estate, trade and agriculture, as well as information and telecommunication technologies.

Armenia official: Crisis in judicial system must be resolved by constitutional amendments

News.am, Armenia
Jan 30 2020

16:12, 30.01.2020

YEREVAN. – The overall crisis in Armenia’s judicial system, in particular the Constitutional Court (CC) crisis, can and must be resolved by constitutional amendments. Minister of Justice Rustam Badasyan said this in a conversation with journalists today.

“Whatever solution we find now, that solution cannot be a 100% basis for restoring public trust in the entire judicial system,” the minister said. “There is time until February 27 for early retirement [of the serving CC judges]. (…) If no one applies for early retirement, there will be no tragedy from it. If anyone applies, it is half a step towards resolving the crisis.”

Badasyan stressed that the current criminal case against CC president Hrayr Tovmasyan should not be linked to the resolution of the CC crisis.

“No one is insured and has no absolute immunity from any criminal prosecution,” he added, in particular.

Badasyan said that the newly formed constitutional reform commission will look at the constitutional directions outlined in the judicial-legal strategy.

And asked if they plan to change the model of government in Armenia, the minister said: “The government does not plan, and the prime minister has made it clear.”

Acting Police Chief: I want to serve Armenia, wherever it may be

News.am, Armenia
Jan 30 2020

17:04, 30.01.2020
                  

YEREVAN. – I will perform my duties until the last moment; I will do it with high responsibility. Armenia’s Acting Police Chief Arman Sargsyan stated this in a conversation with journalists, after his meeting today with members of the majority My Step faction in parliament.

Asked if the Prime Minister had already offered to appoint him the Chief of Police, he replied: “If it is not yet decided whether I will stay or not, why should there be an offer? If it happens, it means I’m not going to stay.”

And asked if he would like to be appointed Chief of Police, Sargsyan responded: “I want to serve Armenia, wherever it may be.”

Recognition of Armenian Genocide is precondition for peaceful society in Turkey

AHVAL News
Jan 30 2020

Last year, Garo Paylan, a Turkish Armenian member of parliament for the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), was awarded for contributions to the fight for democracy and human rights in Turkey and around the world. This year, historian Taner Akçam, one of the leading authorities on the Armenian Genocide, was the guest of honour at the 7th annual dinner of the Coordinating Council Of The Armenian Organizations in France (CCAF). 

The event brought together around 500 personalities from media and business and several local and national political leaders, alongside French President Emmanuel Macron. Akçam, a professor of Armenian genocide studies at Clark University in Massachusetts, is one of the first Turkish intellectuals to acknowledge and openly discuss the Armenian Genocide. While most historians agree the mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman forces during World War One constituted genocide, Turkey says thousands were killed on both sides of bitter fighting in eastern Anatolia.

The professor, whose last book has just been translated into French by the prestigious CNRS editions, has been applauded by the audience for having worked since more than 30 years on the recognition of the 1915 genocide by his country. Macron praised the struggle of the Turkish historian, and his passion to “denounce the denial” of the Turkish state. 

“One cannot build any great history on a lie, no great policy can be based on revisionism or denialism,” French President said in his address to the Armenians of France.

In a sharp and moving speech, Akçam had set the tone, calling out to Western leaders for their permissiveness towards Turkey. 

“In truth, the ties between denial and contemporary political problems are strong and cannot simply be ignored. This is something that most European and U.S. politicians fail to understand and is the reason most Western states pay lip service to the recognition of the Armenian genocide, while simultaneously continuing their business-as-usual relationship with Turkey. It reminds me a little bit of Mafia bosses who attend church every Sunday, yet continue their criminal activities the moment they exit the building,” Akçam said, causing a murmur among attendees.

Denial is not only about an ideological approach to the past, nor is the demand for recognition of historical crimes merely an _expression_ of a moral conviction regarding past events, according to the historian. 

“Denialism is a structure, one that cannot simply be relegated to past atrocities. The denialist structure has produced and continues to nurture policies in present. In this regard, it would be appropriate and reasonable to compare Turkish denialism with the racist Apartheid regime of South Africa,” he said.

Akçam maintained that Turkey’s acknowledgement of the atrocities of its predecessor, the Ottoman empire, is a precondition for its people to be able to live in peace and tranquillity, not only with one another but with the other people of the region. 

“Those who forget their past are condemned to relive it,” as  Italian Jewish writer Primo Lévi wrote in If This Is a Man.

Macron seemed that he received the message. Earlier in the afternoon, he denounced “Turkey’s provocations ” in the eastern Mediterranean and the deployment of Turkish-backed Syrian mercenaries to Libya in violation of the ceasefire after a meeting with the Greek prime minister. His relations with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan have been particularly tense for the past few months. After Macron’s criticisms toward NATO’s ineffectiveness to stop Ankara’s recent Syria offensive, claiming that the alliance experiencing a “brain death”, the French president had been targeted by his Turkish counterpart. 

The unsolved question of the fight against denial has put the idea of a law to penalise denial back on the table. France recognised the Armenian Genocide in 2001, but the contestation of the genocide is not punishable according to the law despite France’s Armenian communities long-standing demand. Attempts to pass a law in this direction failed in 2008 and 2011. A text was finally adopted by the National Assembly and the Senate in 2016, but it was held by the Constitutional Council. The Armenians of France did not accept the decision and their organisations campaigned for a new legislative process. 

“I share your values and your struggles, it remains to find the right legal path to get there,” Macron promised during his speech at the event.

 The views expressed in this column are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect those of Ahval.

Armenia 1st Ombudsman: Such meetings of Armenia and Azerbaijan FMs pose threat to Armenians’ security

News.am, Armenia
Jan 30 2020
Armenia 1st Ombudsman: Such meetings of Armenia and Azerbaijan FMs pose threat to Armenians’ security Armenia 1st Ombudsman: Such meetings of Armenia and Azerbaijan FMs pose threat to Armenians’ security

23:59, 30.01.2020
                  

Such meetings of the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan pose a threat to Armenians’ security. This is what Armenia’s first Ombudsman Larisa Alaverdyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

“Judging from the statement, there was a serious discussion on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue during the meeting of the foreign ministers, in spite of all the statements that Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan was making all this time, saying that Yerevan has no mandate to discuss the issue. This meeting fully refutes the Armenian authorities’ public statements since essential issues were clearly discussed during the 5-hour and 7-hour meetings,” she added.

According to her, based on the text of the statement, one can deduce that the issues that were discussed were issues related to preparing the peoples for peace and creating a basis for future settlement of the conflict.

She added that the claim that there is intensification of the process and that there will be competitive results also entail questions. The first Ombudsman declared that, in terms of law, the process is nothing since Armenia and Azerbaijan have no legal grounds to consider the issue of another state.

From January 28 to 30, in Geneva the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs held separate and joint meetings with Ministers of Foreign Affairs of Armenia and Azerbaijan Zohrab Mnatsakanyan and Elmar Mammadyarov. Based on the results of the meetings, the foreign ministers and the Co-Chairs issued a joint statement.

Azerbaijan responsible for Manvel Saribekyan’s death, ECHR rules

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 30 2020

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled that the Azerbaijani authorities had been responsible for the torture and death of Manvel Saribekyan, an Armenian national who had been locked up in a military police cell in Baku.

The court held unanimously that there had been violations of Article 2 (right to life) and Article 3 (prohibition of torture and ill-treatment) of the European Convention on Human Rights.

The court found in particular that applicants Mamikon Saribekyan and Siranush Balyan had made a prima facie case that their son, Manvel Saribekyan, had died as a result of the violent actions of others, notably personnel at the Military Police Department in Baku, where he was being held. It could not accept the Azerbaijani authorities’ version of events that he had hanged himself.

ECHR obliged Azerbaijan to pay the applicants 60,000 euros jointly in respect of non-pecuniary damage and 2,200 euros in respect of costs and expenses.

Manvel Saribekyan, 20, who resided in the Armenian village of Ttujur, inadvertently strayed into Azerbaijani territory due to bad weather conditions on 11 September 2010 and was taken captive by Azerbaijani officials. He died in the Baku military police cell on 5 October. 


Armenian MP talks about political prisoners and democracy in Azerbaijan at PACE

News.am, Armenia
Jan 30 2020

18:04, 30.01.2020
                  

Today the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) considered the issue of political prisoners in Azerbaijan. Talking about political prisoners in Azerbaijan, deputy of the Prosperous Armenia faction of the National Assembly of Armenia Naira Zohrabyan stated that this has always been one of the big topics being considered by the Council of Europe. She also stated that for years Azerbaijan has tried to overturn the reports that don’t favor Baku through its caviar-loving lobbyists and voiced hope that the independent investigative body of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe will disclose the trace of caviar carriers. Zohrabyan touched upon the issue of democracy in Azerbaijan and cited Aliyev, who has declared that democracy is not an apple that one can easily buy in a market.