Armenian Foreign Minister presents peace efforts to Belgian counterpart in Brussels

 12:51, 16 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirozyan has met with his Belgian counterpart Hadja Lahbib in Brussels.

As a follow-up to their meeting in Yerevan in August, FM Mirzoyan and FM Lahbib comprehensively discussed bilateral relations, Armenia-EU partnership expansion, current projects and the regional agenda.

The foreign ministers were pleased to note the high-level political dialogue and the opening of the resident embassy of Belgium in Yerevan. They also discussed issues concerning strengthening cooperation in trade, IT, culture, people-to-people contacts and other areas.

Both sides attached importance to the ongoing steps in the direction of strengthening Armenia-EU partnership.

The latest developments pertaining to regional security were also discussed.

Speaking about Armenia’s vision for establishing peace and security in South Caucasus, the Armenian Foreign Minister stressed the importance of strong support by the international community to the principles of the statement adopted during the Granada summit.

FM Mirzoyan presented the Crossroads of Peace project developed by the Armenian government, outlining its opportunities for countries in the region and beyond. Armenia’s eagerness in unblocking regional routes, based on principles of sovereignty and jurisdiction, reciprocity and equality, was reiterated.

FM Mirzoyan briefed his Belgian counterpart about the Armenian government’s crisis response measures for properly receiving the more than 100,000 forcibly displaced Armenians who've fled Nagorno-Karabakh as a result of Azerbaijan’s campaign of ethnic cleansing. He highlighted international support for addressing the needs and rights of the Armenian refugees of NK. The involvement of international organizations in the direction of protecting Armenian historic-cultural heritage in Nagorno-Karabakh was emphasized.

Zeina Mina visits Armenia to discuss bid to host 2027 Francophonie Games

 14:12, 16 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. Chief of Staff of the Prime Minister’s Office Arayik Harutyunyan has held a meeting with a delegation led by Zeina Mina, the Director of the International Committee of the Francophonie Games (Les Jeux de la Francophonie).

Zeina Mina expressed condolences on the passing of Christian Ter-Stepanian, the Representative of Armenia to the International Organization of Francophonie. Mina said that Ter-Stepanian’s passing is a great loss not only for Armenia but also for the International Organization of Francophonie.

Mina thanked the Armenian government for submitting a bid to host the 2027 Francophonie Games  and congratulated Armenia on its active participation and medal wins at this year’s games in Kinshasa, the Prime Minister’s Office said in a readout.

During the meeting the sides discussed a number of issues related to Armenia’s bid and hosting the games in Armenia. The members of the delegation presented their observations and recommendations on the venues for organizing the games, noting that a high-level hosting of the 2027 Games is important also in terms of it being the 10th anniversary games.

According to a preliminary assessment by the delegation, Armenia’s infrastructures are rather developed, and the high-level of organization of recent events, including the 2018 La Francophonie Summit in Yerevan, is a testament that hosting the 2027 Games in Armenia will be successful.

Harutyunyan said that the Armenian authorities are committed to organize the event on the highest level and if Armenia’s bid is confirmed the authorities will make every effort in this direction in close collaboration with the International Committee of the Francophonie Games.

Azerbaijan: Parliamentarians confirm security of Armenian residents of Karabakh written

Nov 19 2023

 One of the polling stations our team, comprised of international editors and journalists, visited was located within a community of those people displaced after Armenia’s invasion of Karabakh. I was expecting to see something like a refugee camp, what I found however was something else altogether.

What we found was a settled and safe community with all the amenities one would expect of any town or city in Azerbaijan, or indeed, anywhere in western Europe.

I was able to talk with older members of the Azerbaijan community, including one gentleman, a former schoolteacher,  who was present when on February 26th 1992, Armenian forces in Khojaly murdered 613 civilians, including 106 women and 63 children. 

With tears in his eyes he asked me “what could I do to stop it? I was a teacher, I didn’t even have a rifle.”

Whilst younger members of the community, born in Azerbaijan, have fully integrated into the wider society, helped by preferential educational programmes, the older members were united in one aim: to return to their homes, their lives, all stolen during the illegal annexation by Armenian forces, backed by Russian troops and tanks.

In my heart I felt that they were unlikely to ever return home. But now they are returning.

A group of Azerbaijani parliamentarians recently visited Brussels, taking time to meet with journalists, to discuss how his country sees future relations with Armenia.

Tural Ganjaliyev, who chairs the EU-Azerbaijan Parliamentary Cooperation Committee, explained that despite the events of the past those Armenians who had settled in Karabakh were welcome to stay.

He explained that those who fled when Azerbaijani troops reclaimed the territory would be welcomed back, pre-empting a ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the matter given on Friday (Nov. 16th).

He also pointed out that whilst Azerbaijan encouraged Armenians to stay, the Armenian military called on them to leave.

The ICJ has ordered Azerbaijan to submit a report within eight weeks on the progress on the return of Armenians.

The Azerbaijani government has launched a website for Armenians who had left Karabakh to register to return, Mr. Ganjaliyev explained, however Armenia has blocked access to it.

“We hope the Armenians will come back”, he told journalists. 

We also ask the Armenian authorities to establish a way for the 300,000 Azerbaijanis who were expelled in the 1980s to come back, it should be a two-way street. We will invite or allow UN missions, at least according to my view, to come frequently to visit this region to assess the facts on the ground”.

Vugar Bayramov – who sits on Azerbaijan’s Parliamentary Committee for Economic Policy, Industries and Enterprise – pointed out that an end to the frozen conflict that has destabilised the region for decades could have a massively positive impact not only on the economies of Azerbaijan and Armenia but also Georgia because the three countries of the South Caucasus could form a strong single market.

Azerbaijan, Georgia and potentially Armenia form part of the Middle Corridor trade route which links Asia and Europe via the Caspian Sea, the South Caucasus and Turkiye.

Mr Bayramov spoke of how an east-west transport route would benefit Armenia, both in terms of its own logistics and by helping to build a sustainable peace.

“If there is communication between Azerbaijan and Armenia, then of course, it will ensure a lasting and sustainable peace for the region” he said.

That will need time, he acknowledged, but the normalisation process could be fast. He envisaged a future where Azerbaijan invested in Armenia, much as it currently does in Georgia and Turkey.

https://eutoday.net/azerbaijan/

Azerbaijani Press: Supporting Armenia, France is complicit in its crimes against humanity

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Nov 19 2023

The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs hastily made a statement about the decision of the International Court of Justice dated November 17, 2023, trying to create the impression that the decision was in line with France's position.

Azernews reports that the information has been released in the statement of the Western Azerbaijan Community.

"French diplomacy is well aware that the decision of the International Court of Justice only lists the steps that Azerbaijan is already taking. Azerbaijan ensures the rights of all people living in its territory, regardless of their ethnic and religious affiliation. Azerbaijan should clearly state its policy regarding the right of return of Armenians who moved from the Garabagh region.

Therefore, France's intervention in this matter is inappropriate, baseless, and provocative.

It would be good if France directed its remarks to itself and to the Armenian government, which does not even theoretically agree to the return of the expelled Azerbaijanis. By unconditionally supporting Armenia, France is complicit in its crimes against humanity, including the violation of the right of return of Azerbaijanis.

The Western Azerbaijan Community will continue to expose France's attempts to advance its nefarious neo-colonial goals in the region by abusing the sublime value of human rights," it was said in the statement.

Senate Passes Armenian Protection Act of 2023, Menendez Shows Strong Support

Shore News Network
Nov 19 2023

JERSEY CITY, N.J. – In a significant move, the U.S. Senate has passed the Armenian Protection Act of 2023, receiving commendation from Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.). The act aims to halt military aid to the Azeri government, accused of committing genocide against the Armenian community in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Senator Menendez, a vocal advocate for the legislation, expressed his satisfaction and ongoing commitment to the cause. He emphasized the systematic and brutal nature of the atrocities committed against the Armenians, advocating for sanctions against those responsible.

Menendez is currently facing federal bribery and corruption charges. The Department of Justice has alleged Menendez is a foreign agent of Egypt.

The passage of this act highlights the U.S. Senate’s stance on human rights violations and its commitment to protecting vulnerable communities. Senator Menendez stressed the importance of standing in solidarity with the Armenian people, aligning with the broader goals of U.S. foreign policy centered on human rights.

This development marks a significant step in addressing the long-standing conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh and reflects the U.S. government’s resolve to intervene in matters of international humanitarian concern. The legislation’s impact on U.S.-Azerbaijan relations and its broader geopolitical implications are yet to be seen.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have agreed on basic peace treaty principles, says Armenian PM

Canada – Nov 19 2023

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been able to agree on the basic principles for a peace treaty but are still "speaking different diplomatic languages", Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Saturday, according to Russia's TASS news agency.

The two countries have been at odds for decades, most notably over the breakaway Azerbaijani region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which Baku's forces recaptured in September, prompting a mass exodus of ethnic Armenians from it.

    But Pashinyan said there had been some progress in talks over a peace treaty even though he was cited as saying that the two countries still often struggled to agree on some things.

    "We have good and bad news about the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process," TASS quoted Pashinyan as saying in Yerevan.

    "It is good that the basic principles of peace with Azerbaijan have been agreed.

    "This happened through the mediation of the head of the European Council Charles Michel as a result of my meetings with Azerbaijan's president in Brussels," Pashinyan said.

    "The most important bad news is that we still speak different diplomatic languages and very often do not understand each other," Pashinyan said.

    Pashinyan said Armenia had also proposed swapping all Armenian prisoners for all Azerbaijani prisoners, TASS reported.

    Reporting by Alexander Marrow Editing by Andrew Osborn


    Twice in two months: Pro-Palestinians set fire to Jewish center in Yerevan, Armenia

    Jerusalem Post
    Nov 19 2023
    By MARK FISH

    Last night (Wednesday), insurgents set fire to the synagogue in Yerevan, Mordechai HaNavi, Armenia’s only synagogue. This is the second attack on the synagogue in two months. The first attack took place one and a half months ago, and in both cases, the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) claimed responsibility, as reported on their Telegram channel in Armenian and English. Both arson attacks were first publicized with video clips of the incidents on their channel, together with manifestos, which stated the reasons for these attacks, as well as new threats.

    In October, the pro-Palestinian group called its attack a “warning”: “Our successful operation on 3 October in Yerevan is just the beginning.” The second time, they boasted of a “successful operation against the Word Jewish Center,” that “conducts espionage in the interests of the Zionist junta of Tel Aviv and Aliyev.”

    According to their announcement, the arson attack is related to the situation in Gaza. “We commenced our activity three days before Operation Al-Aqsa Storm. Our second operation was a repetition of the success of the Palestinian resistance, and was carried out in solidarity with the Palestinian and Lebanese resistance movements against the Zionists.” ASALA claims that Israel exercised the “annihilation of thousands of children, women, and elderly” in Karabakh, a region of Azerbaijan that was returned to Baku following a 30-year period under the rule of the unrecognized separatist government.


    ASALA said that they “fully support the Palestinian and Lebanese resistance” since they claim that Israel was behind the activity. According to their statement, the group also put up posters in Yerevan and other Armenian cities containing the emblems of Hamas and Hezbollah “which show that we have a common enemy.”

    The manifesto contains a new threat, which states that “If the Zionist regime does not cease their armed attacks on the Armenian quarter of Jerusalem, and the confiscation of Armenian church property, our next operation will take place outside Armenia.” Their statement alludes to the lease of land in Jerusalem belonging to the Armenian Patriarchate for the construction of a hotel.

    Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, the President of the Conference of European Rabbis, said that “In less than two months the Great Synagogue has been vandalized for the second time. A group of insurgents is harming the Jews in the name of a terror organization that beheads babies, and brutalizes and murders the elderly and the helpless. We must put an end to this. Jewish blood is not cheap. I demand that President Vahagn Khachaturyan arrest the members of ASALA and outlaw the group in light of its support for the murderous Hamas-Daesh terror organization. I expect the Armenian government to reinforce security for the Jewish community due to the war in Israel. Without an appropriate response, Jewish blood will be spilt in the streets and the Armenian government and its leader will be held accountable.


    Rabbi Zamir Isayev, rabbi of the Georgian Sephardic community in Azerbaijan and a member of the international division of the European Conference of Rabbis said in response: “A few weeks before the first attack, I warned of the likelihood of action against the Jews due to their close relations with Azerbaijan. The return of Karabakh to Azerbaijani rule and the dissolution of the unrecognized republic using military units, which are forbidden according to agreements, ignited the fire of hatred against the Jews with the unfounded claim of Israeli responsibility for events in the region.  


    “Again we are witness to insurgents who see relations strengthening between Israel and Azerbaijan; supporters of the Armenian separatist regime in Karabakh, who launched an attack on the European Jewish community, which only intensified following the Swords of Iron War.

    “I am sorry to see this materializing, but it was expected, since a discourse of hate always turns into acts of violence. The desecration of a synagogue anywhere in the world is a serious crime and under no circumstances should such a barbaric act be accepted without an appropriate response. We must not give in to threats and we utterly reject any such threat to inflict damage to Jewish holy places.”

    This article was written in cooperation with Shuva Israel



    Armenia Turns to Iran To Reduce Energy Dependence on Russia

    Nov 19 2023

    • Armenia and Iran's trade is expected to rise to $1 billion by next year, enhancing their economic relationship.
    • Iran aims to reduce Armenia's energy dependence on Russia, offering alternatives like extended gas-for-electricity deals.
    • The cooperation faces challenges due to differing views on regional issues and the presence of external actors in the South Caucasus.

    As Armenia gradually turns away from its traditional strategic ally, Russia, it is tentatively exploring deeper partnerships with the likes of France and the United States.

    And then there is Iran. 

    Tehran and Yerevan have enjoyed cordial – even warm – relations since the early 1990s. That entente now looks poised to develop yet further, but geopolitics makes this a complicated proposition.

    The appeal of this development is most evident in the numbers.

    As Armenian Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan told Armenian Public Television in an interview aired on November 14, trade between Armenia and Iran is booming. Where the countries traded $350 million worth of goods in 2021, the expectation is that this figure will rise to $1 billion by next year, he said.

    Grigoryan sees this as more than a question of generating prosperity.

    "Economic relations between the two countries are important from the standpoint of security," he said.

    Another interview from a few days earlier, this time given by Iran's newly appointed ambassador to Armenia, Mehdi Sobhani, to independent Yerevan-based news outlet CivilNet, offered more context for that perspective.

    Sobhani hinted at the idea of Iran reducing Armenia's energy dependence on Russia. In a mutually advantageous deal, the two countries agreed in August to extend an existing deal whereby Armenia provides Iran with electricity in return for natural gas supplies. This arrangement has been in place since 2009 and was due to end in 2026, but will now be rolled on, in an apparently enhanced form, until at least 2030.

    "Thanks to that agreement, we will be able to increase imports of electricity from Armenia to Iran in exchange for gas, triple or even quadruple it," Sobhani said.

     While this idea is promising, Russia can still play the spoiler.

    The Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, the very instrument that could be used to wean Armenia off Moscow's gas, has belonged to Russian gas giant Gazprom since 2015. Russia has precedent in constraining the potential of this route.

    Even as the pipeline was being designed, Moscow successfully insisted that its diameter be limited to 700 millimeters – less than the originally intended 1,420 millimeters – as a way to ensure no excess volumes of Iranian gas would be sold onward to third countries. This technical fix limited the pipeline's volume to 2.3 billion cubic meters per year. Ultimately, Gazprom bought Armenia's entire gas distribution infrastructure outright.

    It is not only energy that is being traded, though.

    To expedite other human and commercial exchanges, a vital cross-border highway running through Armenia's southern Syunik region is undergoing a major upgrade. In October, the Armenian government awarded a $215 million contract to two Iranian companies – Abad Rahan Pars Iranian International Group and Tounel Sad Ariana – to do the work. Once finished, the road will enable motorists to drive from Agarak, on the Iranian border, and continue some 32 kilometers northward across mountainous terrain over 17 bridges and through two tunnels.

    The politics is where it begins to get complicated.

    Although Iran consistently affirmed Azerbaijan's sovereignty over the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, it has nevertheless often seemed to quietly back Yerevan's interests.

    This is playing out at present in wrangling over the so-called Zangezur Corridor. After the Second Karabakh War in 2020, Azerbaijan regained large swathes of territory, including its entire frontier with Iran. Baku began speaking again then of its desire to push ahead with developing a transportation route across the very southern edge of Armenia – the Zangezur Corridor – so as to bridge its mainland territory with its exclave of Nakhchivan.

    What Tehran has advanced is an alternative. In early October, Iran broke ground on a bridge that would facilitate faster transit between mainland Azerbaijan and Nakhchivan through its own territory, thereby notionally eliminating any need for an Azerbaijani corridor through Armenia.

    Iran is operating in this situation out of a position of strategic self-interest. It is eager to prevent a physical corridor at its northern periphery that would unite the Turkic world and potentially cut off its access to Armenia and points further north.

    In this month's interview, Sobhani forcefully reiterated Iran's opposition to the Zangezur Corridor.

    "Our position on that matter has been declared at such a level that no one can change it," he said, according to CivilNet's English translation. "This is the position of the Supreme Leader of our revolution, who has stated very clearly that we do not accept and do not tolerate any border or geopolitical changes."

    Iranian and Armenian interests diverge, however, when it comes to the presence of extra-regional actors in the South Caucasus, including on the subject of mediation with Azerbaijan.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian was explicit on this point when he recently stated: "The presence of foreigners in the region not only does not solve the problems but complicates the situation."

    Armenia increasingly favors U.S. and EU mediation, but Tehran would like to see matters settled exclusively by regional players. Iran has accordingly welcomed a 2021 initiative to establish a 3+3 format for talks that would involve the three South Caucasus nations – Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia – and the three adjacent regional powers – Russia, Turkey, and Iran.

    Several meetings have already been held in this format, most recently on October 23 in Tehran. But little seems to have come of them. (The format is in any case misnamed since it is actually 3+2 as Georgia has never agreed to participate in it.)

    Elsewhere in his interview, Ambassador Sobhani offered general words of support for the 100,000 or so ethnic Armenians displaced by Azerbaijan's September offensive.  

    "We believe the rights of the people of Karabakh should be ensured. The rights of every person from Karabakh should be ensured. They must have the opportunity to exercise their rights. This is a reality that no one, including Azerbaijan, can ignore," he said.

    Even though he did not indicate that Iran had any particular policy regarding these people, the very mention of Karabakh drew the ire of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry. 

    "[W]e consider the position of the Iranian Ambassador against our territorial integrity and sovereignty as a provocation. We expect Iran to prevent such steps, which are inappropriate to the spirit of our relations, as well as to take necessary steps regarding the opinions voiced by the Ambassador," it said.

    By Lilit Shahverdyan via Eurasianet.org

    https://oilprice.com/Geopolitics/International/Armenia-Turns-to-Iran-To-Reduce-Energy-Dependence-on-Russia.html 

    Pashinyan: Armenia, Azerbaijan Speak ‘Different Diplomatic Languages’

    Voice of America
    Nov 19 2023
    9:57 PM
    • Associated Press

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said Saturday that his country and Azerbaijan are speaking "different diplomatic languages" even though they were able to agree on the basic principles for a peace treaty.

    Azerbaijan waged a lightning military campaign in September in the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh. The offensive ended three decades of rule there by ethnic Armenians and resulted in the vast majority of the 120,000 residents fleeing the region, which is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan.

    Addressing the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Pashinyan said it was "good that the basic principles of peace with Azerbaijan have been agreed upon." The principles include Armenia and Azerbaijan recognizing each other's territorial integrity.

    But Armenian state news agency Armenpress quoted Pashinyan as going on to say, "We have good and bad news about the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process." He said that Azerbaijan did not publicly comment on the agreed-upon peace outline announced last month, making him question its commitment and fostering what Pashinyan described as an atmosphere of mistrust.

    Rhetoric by Azerbaijani officials that he said included referring to Armenia as "Western Azerbaijan" leaves the door open for further "military aggression" against Armenia, the prime minister said.

    "This seems to us to be preparation for a new war, a new military aggression against Armenia, and it is one of the main obstacles to progress in the peace process," Pashinyan said.

    The OSCE's Parliamentary Assembly opened its fall meeting Saturday in Yerevan, Armenia's capital. On Thursday, the government of Azerbaijan said it would not participate in normalization talks with Armenia that were planned to take place in the United States later this month.

    https://www.voanews.com/amp/pashinyan-armenia-azerbaijan-speak-different-diplomatic-languages-/7360909.html 

    Jerusalem Christians rally round Armenian Church over land deal

    Reuters
    Nov 19 2023
    • Land deal could change the face of old Jerusalem
    • Armenian patriarch signed deal, now says he was misled
    • Armenian community says it will wipe out their history

    JERUSALEM, Nov 19 (Reuters) – The heads of the Christian Churches in Jerusalem issued a rare joint appeal at the weekend, warning that a contested land deal could erase the centuries-old presence of the Armenian community within the Old City.

    The ethnic Armenian community has its own district within the ancient city of Jerusalem under borders drawn by Ottoman rulers – the smallest of the four quarters, which also include highly distinct Muslim, Jewish and Christian neighbourhoods.

    However Armenians say they risk being uprooted by a deal to lease about 25% of their area to developers who want to build a luxury hotel on the site.

    The deal was signed by the head of the Armenian Church in Jerusalem in July 2021, but members of his community said the first they heard of it was when surveyors started work in the area this year.

    He has told his congregation that he was misled and has started legal action to get the contract annulled. The priest who brokered the accord on his behalf was defrocked by the Church Synod in May and he has left Jerusalem.

    Despite the legal challenge, bulldozers arrived last week and started tearing up a carpark, which covers some of the contested land. When protesters blocked the work, armed Israeli Jewish settlers turned up in a failed effort to disperse the demonstration.

    "The provocations that are being used by the alleged developers to deploy incendiary tactics threaten to erase the Armenian presence in the area, weakening and endangering the Christian presence in the Holy Land," the Christian leaders wrote, including the heads of the Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches.

    The Armenian community says the investor behind the land lease deal is an Australian-Israeli businessman Danny Rubinstein, who owns a company registered in the United Arab Emirates – Xana Capital Group. A company sign was posted in the parking lot shortly after the surveyors turned up.

    Rubinstein did not respond to a request for a comment about the project sent via his Linked-In account.

    By tradition, Armenia was the first kingdom to convert to Christianity as a state religion in 301, and although its Church is much smaller than the Greek Orthodox and Catholic Churches, it has parity of rights at Jerusalem's Holy Christian sites.

    At the heart of their Quarter lies the ornately decorated St. James's Cathedral, which dates to 420 A.D., strung with precious lamps and often infused with the haunting singing of its black-cowled monks.

    The Quarter covers a sixth of walled Jerusalem and houses just 1,000 people, a fraction of the Old City's 35,000-strong population.

    Armenian locals say the land lease project would consume not just their carpark, the largest open space in the Old City, but also their community hall, the patriarch's garden, the seminary and five family houses.

    "The Armenians have been here since the 4th Century, but we now risk being uprooted," said Hagop Djernazian, 23, a student, who is part of a group guarding the carpark night and day, with barbed wire strung out to try to keep out developers and settlers. "We are having to fight for our existence," he said.

    Daniel Seidemann, an activist Israeli lawyer who closely monitors the spread of Jewish settlers around Jerusalem, said the project was aimed at expanding the footprint of the Jewish Quarter across half the Old City.

    Israel captured East Jerusalem, including the Old City, from Jordanian forces in a 1967 war. Israel regards the entire city as its eternal and undivided capital. Palestinians want East Jerusalem as the capital of a future state.

    "We are aware of a plan to encircle the outside the Old City with settlement projects. We suspect this Armenia Quarter deal is meant to be a continuation of this plan inside the city walls," Seidemann told Reuters.

    "However, there is so much irregularity surrounding it that there is a good chance the courts will reject it."

    Reporting by Crispian Balmer; Editing by Andrew Heavens