Armenia Constitutional Court ex-judge: Berdzor, Aghavno, Sus residents of Artsakh can petition to ECHR

NEWS.am
Armenia – Aug 12 2022

The residents of Berdzor, Aghavno, and Sus communities of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), who are forced to leave their homes, can petition to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) against their own government, or demand compensation. Alvina Gylumyan, former judge of the Constitutional Court of Armenia, said this during a discussion held on Friday.

But if there is a process of dispossession of homeland, then this, according to her, is a different issue.

“For other aspects, we should wait for August 25 and see how the situation will develop,” Gylumyan emphasized.

The former judge of the Constitutional Court of Armenia concluded that the goal of many human rights organizations throughout their activities is to achieve power.

“Now they have become part of the [Armenian] authorities and, naturally, they do not carry out human rights activities. Therefore, it is important to form a civil society which will not become part of the new authorities by a change of power, but will remain in its place”, Gylumyan added.

Take a trip to Jerusalem: Cooler, drier climate for Israel’s hot summer


Aug 13 2022


Armenian artisanal crafts
(photo credit: MEITAL SHARABI)

Allow me to state the obvious: Summers are hot in Israel. Very hot. And yet in Jerusalem, where the climate is dry, the air can be much more comfortable – especially at night. If you have a 24-hour block of time available this summer, I highly recommend spending your next getaway in Jerusalem. 

My recent trip to the capital began at the Montefiore Windmill in Mishkenot Sha’ananim, which overlooks the Old City. The windmill was originally built in 1858 as a flour mill, but today the site functions as a tourist attraction and includes a small museum. At the museum, you will learn about the story of Sir Moses Montefiore, who initiated and raised the money for the construction of the windmill. 

The site also functions as a wine-tasting room and visitor center for the Jerusalem Vineyard Winery. The winery’s vineyards are spread all around Israel – including Samaria, Judea, the Jerusalem Hills and the Carmel. All the wines produced from these grapes can be tasted at the Jerusalem visitor center, along with light refreshments. 


The Jerusalem Winery, which was founded in 1870, produces four million bottles of wine a year and offers five series, each of which includes between three and six strains. The wines, which have a mehadrin kashrut certification, have won many prizes. 


Wine tasting: 20 minutes. NIS 30 per person. 

Next on our itinerary was a special guided tour of the New Gate in the Old City. It is called thus since it is not quite as old as the other gates, which were constructed along with the outer wall in the 16th century. At the end of the 19th century, this newer gate was added at the behest of Christians who were hoping to alleviate travel for pilgrims making their way between the holy Christian sites inside the Christian Quarter and their residences north of the Old City, including the Russian Colony and the Chapel of Notre Dame. Up until then, the pilgrims would exit the Old City from either the Jaffa Gate or the Damascus Gate, but then in 1889, Sultan Abd Al-Hamid agreed to construct a new gate, as long as the gate would be named after him. (It was named after him, but the “New Gate” was the more popular name.)

Our tour of the Armenian Quarter was led by Yael Livni, who works with an organization called This Is Jerusalem, which is managed by Dana Hafzedi. During the tour, we were entranced by stories about the people who lived within the walls of the Old City in previous generations. Afterwards, we were offered tastes of delicacies from various Jewish communities. 

Every Wednesday in August at 7:30 p.m., guests are treated to interesting lectures and fascinating performances. Every Thursday in August, from 5 to 8:30 p.m. there are children’s shows, street performances, creative workshops and a wide variety of activities for the whole family. 


Details: www.thenewgate.co.il.

Just 120 meters from the New Gate, to the left, you’ll find the lovely shop owned by George and Doron Sandroni, who create handmade Armenian artisanal crafts. For 40 years, they have been using traditional methods, without any modern technology, to create tiles and kitchen crafts. Visitors are welcome to watch them work – it’s quite fascinating. And if you ask George about his personal story, he’ll be happy to tell you all about his life. Even better, you can join a two- or three-hour workshop and learn how to paint ceramic objects using age-old techniques. They’ll then place your piece in the kiln, after which you can take your work of art home. 

Price: NIS 150 per personDetails: 050-599-1121


After finishing the Armenian artisanal craft workshop, we continued straight, and then turned left, where we encountered Elia Photo, a quaint shop that was established by Elia Kahvedjian. There, you’ll see historical photographs that were taken in Israel during its pre-state days. There are photos that extend from 1860 until the present time. 

Kahvedjian, a genocide survivor from Armenia, was only five when he saw 163 family members murdered before his very eyes. American aid agencies gathered any orphaned children they found and sent them to orphanages around the world. That is how Kahvedjian ended up in Nazareth. One of his teachers at the orphanage was a photographer, and through him Kahvedjian learned photography. In his store, visitors can see photographs that were taken as far back as 1920. 

When he turned 16, Kahvedjian moved to Jerusalem and opened up his own photography studio, which burned down in the 1948 riots. Luckily, he was forewarned about the attack and was able to escape to safety with his most precious photographs. In 1949, he reopened his business at 14 Ma’alot al-Hankah, where the shop is located to this day. 

When we entered the shop, we noticed the pungent metallic-like odor of film developers, which immediately took me back to earlier days. Kahvedjian passed away at the age of 89, and since then, his grandson has been managing the business. On the walls of the shop, you can see photographs of famous figures, such as Ze’ev Jabotinsky and Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, as well as other figures who played a role in the establishment of the State of Israel. In short, a visit to Elia Photo is a must. 


Details: (02) 628-2074

The tour of the Old City continued on to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, where we heard fascinating stories, then for a lunch of tasty kebabs, and short stops at a number of quaint spice and gift shops along the way. 

From there, we continued on toward the Inbal Hotel, one of the capital’s finest hotels, for a short rest and a dip in the pool. This was a fantastic way to cool down quickly. The spacious hotel offers high-quality service, and its breakfast spreads are incredible. 

After our short rest, we attended the Food Truck Festival, taking place every Tuesday through Thursday until August 25, from 6-11 p.m. in the Hinnom Valley. Have a taste from a selection of food trucks, separated into dairy and meat sections (not too much available for vegetarians, unfortunately.) There is also a DJ spinning. Prices range from NIS 30-40. The evenings are organized by the Jerusalem and Heritage Ministry, Jerusalem Municipality, Jerusalem Development Authority and Kapayim.

Translated by Hannah Hochner. 


https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-714490












Turkish press: Azerbaijan accuses Armenia of targeting military positions in Karabakh

A view of the newly rebuilt village of Agali in the district of Zangilan on July 19, 2022. (AFP)

As tensions rise in the Karabakh region, Azerbaijan on Monday said Armenia targeted its military positions 10 times over the past 24 hours.

In six of the incidents, Armenian forces opened fire “from positions in the direction of the Basarkechar, Garakilsa and Gorus regions” on Azerbaijani military units “stationed in the direction of the Kalbajar and Lachin regions,” the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said in a statement.

“The other four cases were recorded as a result of periodic fire opened by the use of sniper rifles and various caliber weapons on the Azerbaijan Army positions, stationed in the direction of the Kalbajar, Goranboy and Fuzuli regions, by members of an illegal Armenian armed detachment in the territory of Azerbaijan, where the Russian peacekeepers are temporarily deployed,” the statement said.

The ministry said there was no loss of personnel or military equipment, adding that the Azerbaijani military took “adequate retaliatory measures” in all cases.

It reiterated that the “Armenian military-political leadership bears all responsibility for the recent tension that occurred on the Azerbaijani-Armenian state border, as well as in the territory of Azerbaijan, where the Russian peacekeepers are temporarily deployed.”

Tensions have flared since an Azerbaijani soldier was killed by Armenian fire last week in the border region of Lachin, pushing Baku to launch a retaliatory operation against Armenian forces in Karabakh.

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

During the conflict in the fall of 2020, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages that had been occupied by Armenia for nearly three decades.

The fighting ended with a Russian-brokered agreement on Nov. 10, 2020, which was seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia.

However, the cease-fire has been broken several times since then.

Commenting on the renewed tensions in the Karabakh region, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said Saturday that Karabakh is located within the internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan.

Speaking to journalists about the recent escalation, Erdoğan said, “Azerbaijan naturally does not want any illegal armed elements on its territory.”

“We talked about these in detail with my brother Ilham (Aliyev) two days ago. First of all, we condemn the attack that caused the death of one of our Azerbaijani brothers,” he said.

In January 2021, the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a pact to develop economic ties and infrastructure to benefit the entire region. It also included the establishment of a trilateral working group in Karabakh.

After the conflict ended, Azerbaijan launched a massive reconstruction initiative in the liberated Karabakh region.

In July, Azerbaijan began the process of returning its people to land recaptured from Armenian forces in what Baku calls “The Great Return.” The oil-rich country has vowed to repopulate the liberated lands.

President Ilham Aliyev had for years promised to recapture lands lost in the 1990s and the first returns marked a symbolic moment for Azerbaijan.

Innovation Centers, Business Incubators and more: Details from planned Academic City

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 09:46, 8 August 2022

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. The 2030 Education Development Program approved by the Armenian Government envisages major reforms, with one of the key works being the creation of an “Academic City”.

The Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports Department of Higher and Post-Graduate Education Direction Lusine Grigoryan told ARMENPRESS that now the authorities are discussing all related aspects of the Academic City, from the territory to infrastructures, merging of universities, creation of separate faculties and other issues.

“We are now discussing the issues of the city’s territory, and at the same time the volume of funding. The Academic City implies an area where universities and scientific-research centers will function, enabling students to live, learn, create and research there. This requires infrastructures – dormitories, libraries, modern laboratories, multi-functional lecture halls, innovation and entrepreneurship centers, business incubators and others,” Grigoryan said.

Asked whether or not new universities will be opened or the existing universities will be merged and re-located to the city, Grigoryan said they are now discussing all possible variants.

The area for the Academic City is being considered outside Yerevan.

The basis will be to develop close cooperation between universities and scientific organizations, to increase the research capacity and skills of scientific potential and to raise the efficiency of using innovative ideas.

A goal is set to have high-quality, competitive education also from an international perspective, to create an internationally recognized scientific-research university which will have significant role in the economic development of the country, as well as in technological programs both nationally and regionally.

“A goal is set also to contribute to increasing and strengthening Armenia’s economic competitiveness, security and defensibility through developing high-quality engineering potential and innovative ideas and advanced technologies.”

Anna Gziryan




44th FIDE Chess Olympiad: Armenia to face Azerbaijan

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 09:48, 8 August 2022

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Men’s and Women’s Chess Teams will face their Azerbaijani opponents at the 10th round of the 44th FIDE Chess Olympiad in Chennai, India.

The Men’s Team of Armenia is now ranked 2-3rd in the standings, having 7 victories so far.

The Women’s Team of Armenia is ranked 7th in the standings.

China announces fresh military drills around Taiwan

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 09:50, 8 August 2022

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. China’s military announced fresh military drills on Monday in the seas and airspace around Taiwan – a day after the scheduled end of its largest ever exercises to protest against last week’s visit to Taipei by U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Reuters reports.

China’s Eastern Theatre Command said it would conduct joint drills focusing on anti-submarine and sea assault operations.

Armenian military denies Azeri accusations of shelling positions as disinformation

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 10:19, 8 August 2022

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani authorities are again spreading disinformation falsely accusing the Armenian military in opening gunfire.

“The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry continues spreading disinformation falsely accusing the Armenian Armed Forces in shelling Azerbaijani positions in several directions of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border in the last few days. The situation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border is relatively stable and is under the full control of the Armenian Armed Forces,” the Ministry of Defense of Armenia said in a statement.

Ships resume Taiwan routes even as China continues drills – Bloomberg

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 11:09, 8 August 2022

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. Shipping in the Taiwan Strait showed signs of returning to normal on Monday, though China’s announcement of a new military exercise near the island may spark renewed caution among vessel owners, Bloomberg reports.

More than 40 vessels have transited through China’s drill zone south of Taiwan’s main port since Saturday, according to Bloomberg.

Shipping in the Taiwan Strait, a key route for supply chains and commodities, has faced uncertainty and delays since Beijing began military drills i in the wake of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s trip to Taiwan.

Decoder: Armenia in a bind as Ukraine war resets global order

NEWS DECODER
Aug 9 2022

If Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is the earthquake that has triggered geopolitical realignments around the world, the South Caucasus nation of Armenia may be suffering one of the aftershocks.

The country of nearly three million is again slipping into the international spotlight since the Ukraine war erupted in February. Its traditional alignment with Moscow appears to be cooling, and a long-running conflict with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region is flaring, with three killed in a skirmish early this month.

Armenia is facing economic challenges, including record inflation and lingering post-COVID problems, compounded by political troubles.

Between April and June, there were protests over Armenia’s loss of the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war to Azerbaijan and demands for the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan related to the terms of the peace. They echoed earlier demonstrations blaming him for Armenia’s defeat in the 44-day conflict.

It is easy to pay little attention or to even ignore regional conflicts, but they can hold the key to understanding larger political currents in the world. Often, small nations become proxies for competition among stronger powers.

In the post-Ukraine world, alignments are moving quickly. Events in Armenia can tell us a lot about how the West, Russia, Turkey and Iran will act in this new geopolitical landscape.

While bubbling hostilities over Nagorno-Karabakh are regional in nature, the stakes for U.S.-aligned European nations and Russia are global.

Europe needs more energy since it must replace its reliance on Russian natural gas, which Moscow has been more than willing to withhold for political leverage. In July, the European Union proposed a natural gas deal with Azerbaijan.

Russia, meanwhile, needs all the support it can get from other nations. Armenia, which is sometimes described as a hostage of Moscow, is wary that Azerbaijan may take advantage of the fact that all eyes are on Ukraine to press its conflict with neighboring Armenia again.

It will be instructive to see what Turkey — a NATO nation often seen as attempting to reassert its Ottoman Empire influence in the Muslim world — and Iran do.

Another nation to watch is Israel, which has been closely aligned with Azerbaijan since the Soviet Union collapsed. Israel shares military technology with Azerbaijan, in return for what amounts to about 40% of Israel’s oil supply. With its ties to Azerbaijan, Israel has a good perch from which to watch Iran, especially since part of the territory disputed in Nagorno-Karabakh borders Iran.

When Russia invaded Ukraine in February, a little more than a year had passed since the declaration of a Moscow-brokered ceasefire in the second war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. The 44-day conflict killed 6,000 and saw Azerbaijan, with state-of-the-art weaponry paid for by its oil wealth and the help of Turkey and Syrian mercenaries, defeat Armenian forces.

At issue is a long-running dispute in which the majority-ethnic Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh claimed territory inside Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized borders as its own, leading to the first Nagorno-Karabakh war from 1988-1994.

Despite nearly 30 years of diplomacy by Russia, France and the United States, which brokered that ceasefire under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, there has been no lasting solution.

The still-brewing hostilities — and Armenia’s difficult choices — are emblematic of its centuries-long history of being thrashed around by competing empires.

Armenia’s ancient cultural history as a kingdom and the first nation to adopt Christianity underpins fierce ethno-national pride and a strong diaspora. But its history is scarred by memories of a World War One genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. In the modern era, the perpetrator is the antagonist on Armenia’s Western border, NATO member Turkey.

Bounded by Iran to the south, Georgia to the north and Azerbaijan to the east, Armenia’s geographic location has put it, by turns, at the mercy of the Persian, Russian and Ottoman empires.

Those same factors manifested themselves after the Soviet Union collapsed. A client state of Moscow then and for decades after, Armenia has remained part of Russia-led regional organizations and has been a reliable diplomatic ally at the United Nations. Russia is Armenia’s largest trading partner and officially guards its borders and airspace.

What does Ukraine have to do with all of this?

When Russia seized Crimea in 2014, Armenia backed Moscow publicly and did not cooperate with the EU’s diplomatic efforts. Now, Armenia’s silence over the current war in Ukraine speaks volumes. It abstained from a United Nations Security Council vote demanding Russia withdraw from Ukraine, and from a Human Rights Commission vote to begin an urgent debate on a Ukraine war crimes inquiry.

While Europe has raced to recalibrate its relationships following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Armenia’s peace talks have become another arena for the post-Ukraine geopolitical realignment. Although Russian peacekeepers are on the ground enforcing the ceasefire, France has taken a much more public and active role in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, to Moscow’s frustration.

For some Armenians frustrated with the status quo and Russia’s apparent indifference to the last Nagorno-Karabakh war, it is time to look for different alliances, especially with the strong possibility that the sanctions on Russia will hurt the Armenian economy.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s March phone call with Pashinyan included a barely veiled threat that if Armenia did not comply with sanctions against Russia, it would face Washington’s wrath: “The Secretary highlighted the U.S. commitment, alongside other partners, to continue to hold Moscow and its supporters, including the Lukashenka regime in Belarus, accountable for the Kremlin’s unprovoked and unjustified war against Ukraine.”

So, Armenia now faces:

  • the national security threat that would arise if Moscow pulled its troops out of Nagorno-Karabakh,
  • fallout from sanctions against Russia that will ripple through its economy,
  • potential punishment if it does not cooperate with U.S.-led sanctions,
  • high-stakes talks with Turkey to normalize relations,
  • and pressure from Russia and the West to pick a side.

“We only have two choices here. North or West,” a businessman friend of mine recently told me by phone from Armenia, referring to Russia and the U.S.-European alliance.

“We need the West. If the West wants us, we can do something about it,” he said, referring to calls in some Armenian political quarters for new elections. The West has been silent on the matter, but its default position toward elections is, by and large, to follow the laws of the country in question.

Whether or not there are elections, Armenia will have to walk a fine line as the geopolitical forces around it shift. That is often the story for nations, like Armenia, whose history and geography have been both uplifting and imprisoning.

  1. Is Armenia in Europe or Asia?
  2. What three empires have all had a hand in Armenia’s history?
  3. How does Armenia typify the challenge that smaller nations often face when more powerful ones are competing for influence?

Bryson Hull is vice president of strategic communications and advisory at the HBW Resources consulting firm. He spent 17 years in journalism, reporting on politics, business and wars in nearly 20 countries across Asia, Africa, the Middle East and North America. He has also taught journalism and public speaking at Loyola University-Chicago.

After night outdoor, relatives of Armenian POWs stop their protest

Caucasian Knot
Aug 9 2022
Residents of Armenia, demanding the return of their relatives from Azerbaijani captivity, spent the night near the government building and stopped the action after they agreed to schedule a meeting with the Prime Minister.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that relatives of the Armenian soldiers who were taken prisoner of war (POWs) after the end of hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh have repeatedly held actions demanding their return home. On August 8, they demanded a meeting with Nikol Pashinyan, the Premier.

The participants of the sit-down picket stated that authorities are indifferent to the fate of their relatives.

“We haven’t met the Premier for a year now; he didn’t want to meet us. Time passes, but our guys stay there,” said the father of one of the POWs.

The protesters noted that the POWs’ situation is getting worse day by day.

In the morning, the protesters agreed with an official from the Premier’s office about the end of the sit-in picket. Authorities promised to announce the date of the meeting with the Premier, the “NEWS.am” writes.

In December 2020, a month after the end of the full-scale hostilities in Karabakh, a total of 64 soldiers from several Karabakh combat posts, mostly residents of the Shirak Region of Armenia, were taken POWs. Some of them were returned to their homeland; others were prosecuted in Azerbaijan for espionage, terrorism and illegal border crossing. On May 25, 2022, Pashinyan announced that 39 citizens of Armenia were still in Azerbaijani captivity.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on August 9, 2022 at 12:12 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:
Relatives of Armenian POWs demand a meeting with Pashinyan, Relatives of perished Armenian soldiers achieve open trial on their complaint, Relatives of perished servicemen come out to protest in Yerevan.

Source: Caucasian Knot
Source:
© Caucasian Knot