James Adomian hosts a night of big laughs at UCB, ‘All for Armenia’

LA Weekly
Nov 16 2023

Benefit shows can be slogs. But All for Armenia, a comedy show on Friday, Nov. 3rd at the Upright Citizen’s Brigade Theater, was anything but. It managed to raise money for a vital cause while also being very, very funny. 

The show was hosted by comedian and master impressionist James Adomian, who along with producers Sam Varela of Naked Comedy, Chris Tcholakian of the Everything Now Show and stand-up Armond Gorjian, put together a stellar lineup of comics and character performers, jammed into two hours.

All proceeds for the show went to All for Armenia, a nonprofit that provides humanitarian aid to the estimated 100,000 Armenians displaced from the Nagorno-Karabakh region, also known as Artsakh, after being pushed out by neighboring Azerbaijan. All told, the show raised over $1,700.

Adomian kicked off his hosting duties with a short set that included his best-in-the-biz Bernie Sanders impression and musings about his (one-quarter) Armenian-ness.

There wasn’t a dud in the program that followed, with stand-ups Aparna Nancherla, Nate Craig, Chris Estrada, Alice Wetterlund, River Butcher and character performer Alyssa Limperis all bringing their A-game, with punchy sets that delivered the goods.

The charming comic Mary Basmadjian gave us a gut-busting look into the trials of dating as an Armenian woman. Guy Branum didn’t shy away from the topic at hand in a brilliantly dark set that tackled, among other things, the popularity of genocide.

Actor and LA radio legend Phil Hendrie also performed in character, and in a moment of nostalgia for the LA talk radio faithful, gave us a spot-on Tom Leykis impression. Leykis, the shock jock from the 90s and aughts, infamously tweeted, “Angelenos don’t give a SHIT about Armenia” — a sentiment quickly debunked if you talk to anyone from LA.

Lory Tatoulian was a showstopper, reprising her character Sossi Hayrabedian, a Ross Dress for Less-clad Armenian running for president, who harangued the crowd and left us in tears. And Reggie Watts closed out the night with his signature bizarre observational stylings.

We talked with Adomian afterwards about what it meant to produce a show benefitting the Armenian cause.

“We’re seeing all this bad news in the last two months, and in the last three years, from Armenia and Artsakh — the ethnic cleansing that happened, the massacres, the torture, at the hands of Azerbaijan,” Adomian told us. “And people don’t know what to do besides retweet something or like an Instagram post. So it was really nice to give people a chance to help directly with the refugees from Artsakh.”

It’s been a grim few years for the Armenian community globally and locally — LA County is home to the largest concentration of Armenians outside of Armenia. 

Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of disputed territorial claim, has been de-facto governed by ethnic Armenians as the independent Republic of Artsakh following a 1994 war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Armenians have been living there thousands of years and made up a large majority of its population.

In 2020, the neighboring oil-rich and authoritarian Azerbaijan, backed by Turkey, launched an offensive that took effective control of the region. In the ensuing years, they blockaded the region and terrorized Armenians living there with documented accounts of torture. 

Then in September of this year, Azerbaijan fully invaded Artsakh and ethnically cleansed it of its Armenian population, forcing an estimated 100,000 its Armenians to flee to Armenia — a massive number considering Armenia has a population under 3 million — resulting in a humanitarian crisis.

The events are a stark parallel to the Armenian Genocide, perpetrated by Turkey, which started in 1915 and resulted in the killing of over 1 million Armenians, primarily through death marches. Both Turkey and Azerbaijan deny the Armenian Genocide.

But you’d be loath to find any of this in newspaper headlines or on cable. With wars in Ukraine, Africa, and now, the Middle East, there has been little to no coverage of Armenia’s turmoil in our media.

“There’s next to zero news coverage outside of like KTLA locally,” Adomian explains. “The State Department has a shameful policy of just playing both sides. And so the Armenians have been very depressed worldwide, feeling like there’s no support from any quarter — ganged up on by Turkey and Azerbaijan and Russia together, and the United States and Canada doing nothing.”

“But then you realize on the street, among the real people, wherever there are, people love them and like them and want to support them. So we don’t have a lot of support at the highest levels of media, state departments and other foreign ministries and other countries, but we do have a lot of support with real people.”

Adomian thanked the UCB Theatre where he has performed since it opened in 2005. “When the ethnic cleansing started, they were very, very accommodating, and then the conversation started immediately about doing a fundraiser there.”

For a benefit with such a bleak backdrop, it felt good to laugh. And it definitely helped that the show was stacked with comedians who can do what comedians do best — make light in darkness.

“It was a little bit emotional for me because it was the first time I got to see firsthand — not just on the internet, but in person — people come out who weren’t Armenian to support the Armenians in a time of great tragedy and crisis,” Adomian reflected. “And I was kind of amazed that nobody was afraid to laugh and have a good time. It was a fun night.”


https://www.laweekly.com/james-adomian-hosts-a-night-of-big-laughs-at-ucb-all-for-armenia/

Georgia impressed by ongoing defense reforms in Armenia

 14:39,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has met with Minister of Defense of Georgia Juansher Burchuladze, who is on an official visit in Armenia.

The Armenian Prime Minister said that relations with Georgia continue to develop dynamically and that expansion of cooperation is taking place in various areas, which is of great importance and a priority for the Armenian government, the Prime Minister’s Office said in a readout.

Juansher Burchuladze thanked for the warm reception and spoke about partnership with the Armenian Ministry of Defense. The Georgian Defense Minister said he’s impressed by the ongoing reforms in the defense sector in Armenia.

Issues related to cooperation and exchange of experience in security and defense, as well as regional peace and stability were also discussed.

Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister participates in the 2nd Summit of Foreign Ministers "Voice of the Global South"

 21:26,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. On November 17, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia Paruyr Hovhannisyan participated in the 2nd Summit of Foreign Ministers "Voice of the Global South" on the topic "Global South and One Development", the foreign ministry said.

''The Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia emphasized the importance of initiating such events. Appreciating India's commitment to the implementation of the idea "The world is one family", Paruyr Hovhannisyan emphasized the priority of peace, solidarity and harmony in the world. He added that global challenges caused by the disruption of global supply chains and armed conflicts have severely affected Armenia, leading to the ethnic cleansing of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Deputy Foreign Minister also touched upon Armenia's commitment to function as a connecting node in such channels at the North-South, East-West crossroads and, as a component of the peace agenda, mentioned Armenia's "Crossroads of Peace" project,'' reads the statement.

According to the source, Minister of Foreign Affairs of India Subramanyam Jaishankar, as well as more than fifteen countries representing the "Global South" and states closely cooperating with them participated in the Summit.




RFE/RL Armenian Service – 11/16/2023

                                        Thursday, 


U.S. Senate Adopts ‘Armenian Protection Act of 2023’


The United States Capitol


The United States Senate has adopted a bill that would suspend all military aid 
to Azerbaijan by repealing the Freedom Support Act Section 907 waiver authority 
for the Administration with respect to assistance to Azerbaijan for fiscal years 
2024 or 2025.

The short title of the bill (S.3000) introduced by Senator Gary Peters (D-MI) is 
the “Armenian Protection Act of 2023.”

The bill passed on November 15 will be introduced in the House of 
Representatives, then, if passed, presented to the United States president for 
signing to become a law.

Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act passed along with the adoption of the 
legislation in 1992 bans any kind of direct United States aid to the Azerbaijani 
government. In subsequent years, however, American lawmakers amended Section 907 
to allow presidents to provide military assistance to Azerbaijan for 
counterterrorism operations.

The adoption of the Armenian Protection Act of 2023 came amid a congressional 
hearing on “the future of Nagorno-Karabakh” held the same day.

Speaking to members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee’s Subcommittee on 
Europe, James O’Brien, assistant secretary at the U.S. State Department’s Bureau 
of European and Eurasian Affairs, said that Washington “made clear that nothing 
will be normal with Azerbaijan after the events of September 19 until we see 
progress on the peace track.”

The official referred to Baku’s one-day military operation in Nagorno-Karabakh 
as a result of which virtually the entire local Armenian population – more than 
100,000 people – fled to Armenia.

O’Brien said that Washington canceled a number of high-level visits to 
Azerbaijan in response to that action and that “we don’t anticipate submitting a 
waiver on Section 907 until such time that we see a real improvement.”

Azerbaijan reacted angrily to the remarks by the U.S. State Department official 
that its Foreign Ministry described as a blow to relations between the two 
countries.

It said that Baku would, therefore, not send a delegation to Washington for 
talks between the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia around a peace 
agreement that it said were planned for November 20.




Baku Snubs Washington Over Remarks By U.S. Official


The building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan in Baku (file 
photo).


Official Baku has refused to hold an Armenian-Azerbaijani meeting in Washington 
after remarks by a senior United States official regarded in Azerbaijan as “a 
blow to relations.”

Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement on Thursday 
describing some of the statements made by James O’Brien, assistant secretary at 
the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs, as 
“one-sided” and “biased.”

“A one-sided approach by the United States could lead to the loss by Washington 
of its role as a mediator,” the ministry said, as quoted by Azerbaijan’s APA 
news agency.

“Under these circumstances, it is important to note that we do not consider 
possible to hold the proposed meeting at the level of the foreign ministers of 
Azerbaijan and Armenia in Washington on November 20, 2023,” it added.

Addressing the House Foreign Affairs Committee’s Subcommittee on Europe during a 
November 15 hearing on “the future of Nagorno-Karabakh,” O’Brien said that 
Washington “made clear that nothing will be normal with Azerbaijan after the 
events of September 19 until we see progress on the peace track.”

He referred to Baku’s one-day military operation in Nagorno-Karabakh as a result 
of which virtually the entire local Armenian population – more than 100,000 
people – fled to Armenia.

O’Brien said that Washington canceled a number of high-level visits to 
Azerbaijan in response to that action and that “we don’t anticipate submitting a 
waiver on Section 907 until such time that we see a real improvement.”

Section 907 of the United States’ 1992 Freedom Support Act bans any kind of 
direct United States aid to the Azerbaijani government.

The U.S. official also warned Azerbaijan against using force to open a land 
corridor to its western exclave of Nakhichevan via Armenia. “A transit corridor 
created some other way – by force or with the involvement of Iran – will, I 
think, be met with a very strong reaction and will not be a success,” O’Brien 
said, in particular.

In its commentary the Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs spoke about 
reciprocal steps by Baku after the U.S. official’s statements.

“Concerning the statement that the U.S. has cancelled high-level bilateral 
meetings and engagements, which were initiated by the U.S. with Azerbaijan, and 
that there cannot be “business as usual” in our bilateral relationship,” it 
should be noted that the relations could not be one-sided. Consequently, the 
same approach will be applied equally by Azerbaijan. In these circumstances, we 
consider the possibility of high-level visits from the United States to 
Azerbaijan inappropriate as well,” the Azerbaijani ministry said.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev had withdrawn from multilateral talks 
involving Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian that were scheduled to take 
place on the margins of the European Union’s October 5 summit in Granada, Spain. 
Pashinian had hoped that the sides there would sign a document laying out the 
main parameters of an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty. Baku explained its 
refusal to attend the meeting in Granada by the attitude of France that has been 
supplying Armenia with weapons recently.

The Azerbaijani leader also appears to have cancelled another meeting which EU 
Council President Charles Michel planned to host in Brussels later in October.

Earlier this week, Armenian officials said Yerevan was ready for talks with Baku 
both in Brussels and Washington.

Meanwhile, EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep 
Borrell said on Thursday that Brussels continues to make efforts to restart 
negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan without delay. He said that the 
ultimate goal of the negotiation process is the conclusion of a peace treaty 
between Azerbaijan and Armenia.




U.S. Official Says Next Few Weeks ‘Critical’ In Armenia-Azerbaijan Talks

        • Heghine Buniatian

James O’Brien (file photo)


The coming weeks will be critical in negotiations between Armenia and 
Azerbaijan, a U.S. State Department official told a congressional hearing on 
November 15.

James O’Brien, assistant secretary at the department’s Bureau of European and 
Eurasian Affairs, said that Washington is pursuing a peace agreement between 
Yerevan and Baku as he spoke to members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee’s 
Subcommittee on Europe meeting on the subject of “the future of 
Nagorno-Karabakh.”

“The next few weeks will be critical in testing the parties’ willingness to go 
from good intentions to saying “yes”, because we all know that “yes” is the 
hardest word to get in a negotiation,” he said.

The U.S. diplomat did not say what specific agreements were on the table. He 
only emphasized that Washington remains “deeply engaged.”

“We’ve made clear that nothing will be normal with Azerbaijan after the events 
of September 19 until we see progress on the peace track. So we’ve canceled a 
number of high-level visits, condemned the actions… We don’t anticipate 
submitting a waiver on Section 907 until such time that we see a real 
improvement,” O’Brien said in reference to Baku’s military operation in 
Nagorno-Karabakh that resulted in the virtually entire local Armenian population 
fleeing their homes and moving to Armenia.

As for Azerbaijan’s demands that Armenia give it a land corridor to its western 
exclave of Nakhichevan, the U.S. diplomat said that it is Washington’s position 
that “no use of force is acceptable.”

“A transit corridor built with the involvement and consent of Armenia can be a 
tremendous boom to states across the region and the global markets that will 
receive access to these goods. A transit corridor created some other way – by 
force or with the involvement of Iran – will, I think, be met with a very strong 
reaction and will not be a success. That’s a simple choice,” he said.

O’Brien said that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, with whom he had a 
meeting in Paris last week, “seems willing to take chances for peace.”

“The question really is whether [Azerbaijani] President [Ilham] Aliyev is 
willing to do that. And he has said he is. So now is the moment, because the 
challenge always for a power that feels stronger – and I think it’s fair to say 
Azerbaijan feels that it has the oil and gas revenues, the relationships, the 
ability to have some options – the challenge is always when it’s time to cash 
the options in and commit to one path for the future,” he said, adding that the 
United States is also “talking a lot with Turkey,” a close ally of Azerbaijan, 
on that matter.

“We’re trying to lay out a path that makes clear the benefits that come from 
peace and the costs that come with choosing to wait further. And really the 
decision will be on whether he [Aliyev] says “yes” or “not”, and we want that to 
happen in the next few weeks,” he said.

According to O’Brian, peace will enable Armenia and Azerbaijan to reduce the 
influence of Russia and Iran in the region, on the other hand, to increase 
cooperation with the West.




Pashinian Says Mutual Distrust Stalls Signing Of Armenia-Azerbaijan Peace Deal

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addressing parliament (file photo)


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has cited mutual distrust as the main factor 
stalling the signing of a peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan as he 
addressed a parliament session in Yerevan on Thursday.

Speaking on next year’s budget, Pashinian said that it will more than double the 
amount of spending on the military as compared to 2018 when his government first 
came to power. But at the same time he gave assurances that the increase in 
military spending will be “in preparation for peace rather than war.”

According to Pashinian, citizens’ feeling secure is the most important guarantee 
of peace and stability.

“I am sure that all our neighbors are convinced that we have no intention of 
attacking anyone, and in that regard, I do not consider the concerns expressed 
about the acquisitions by our armed forces to be sincere. It is the duty of 
every sovereign nation to strengthen its army, which is something that we are 
doing. In the last 10 years Azerbaijan’s defense spending was on the average 
three times higher than Armenia’s and continues to be such,” he said.

Recently, in presenting an increase in his country’s military budget, 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stated that they “have to increase the 
military budget to a record level, because even after Armenia’s defeat in the 
war we see danger from it.”

In this view Pashinian said that while Armenia and Azerbaijan have basically 
agreed on key principles, the lack of trust between the two countries remains 
the main reason why the signing of a peace agreement is being stalled.

“Because every time we see in the statements and certain actions of Azerbaijan, 
and, perhaps, Azerbaijan sees in our statements and some of our actions, 
intentions to abandon these arrangements and plan aggressive actions, which has 
a negative impact on the text version of the peace agreement,” Pashinian said.

Pashinian also stressed that Yerevan’s political will to sign a peace agreement 
with Azerbaijan in the coming months remains “unshakable”, but said that there 
were a number of issues to clarify.

“One is the formulation of a mechanism for overcoming possible 
misinterpretations of the content of the peace agreement, the other is the 
creation of security guarantees so that no escalation be possible after the 
signing of the peace agreement,” he said.

Pashinian emphasized again that key principles have been agreed upon with 
Azerbaijan, saying that it happened during negotiations, in particular, during 
the tripartite meetings held in Brussels on May 14 and July 15 of this year.

The Armenian prime minister laid down these principles: “Armenia and Azerbaijan 
recognize each other’s territorial integrity, with the understanding that the 
territory of Armenia is 29, 800 square kilometers, and the territory of 
Azerbaijan is 86,600 square kilometers. The Alma-Ata Declaration of 1991 is a 
political basis for border delimitation between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In fact, 
there is an understanding that the maps of the General Staff of the USSR Armed 
Forces from 1974 to 1990 should be used for border delimitation. Armenia and 
Azerbaijan have no territorial claims to each other and undertake not to advance 
such claims in the future either. Regional transport links should be reopened on 
the basis of sovereignty, jurisdiction, reciprocity and equality of the 
countries.”




Armenia Reaffirms Willingness To Take Part In Trilateral Meeting In Brussels


Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanian (L) and Deputy Secretary 
General/Political Director of the European External Action Service Enrique Mora, 
Brussels, .


Armenia has reaffirmed its willingness to take part in trilateral talks with 
Azerbaijan in Brussels to be held with the mediation of European Council 
President Charles Michel as the second high-level Armenia-EU Political and 
Security Dialogue session took place in the Belgian capital on Wednesday.

The meeting co-chaired by Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanian and 
Deputy Secretary General/Political Director of the European External Action 
Service Enrique Mora, “confirmed the mutual interest of Armenia and the EU to 
further enhance political dialogue and cooperation in the areas of foreign, 
security and defense policy.”

“The EU reiterated its unequivocal support to the sovereignty, territorial 
integrity (29,800 square kilometers) and inviolability of borders of Armenia and 
welcomed Armenia’s readiness for closer cooperation with the European Union,” a 
joint press release issued by the parties said.

“The unacceptability of the use, or the threat of use of force, was strongly 
highlighted. The parties stressed the absolute necessity of establishing durable 
peace and stability in the South Caucasus,” it added.

According to Armenia’s Foreign Ministry, “the EU expressed support to the 
normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan based on the 
principles of mutual recognition of territorial integrity and inviolability of 
borders based on the 1991 Almaty Declaration, border delimitation based on 
relevant USSR General Staff maps that have been provided to the sides, and the 
unblocking of regional communications based on respect for the sovereignty and 
jurisdiction of either country, on the basis of reciprocity and equality.”

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
were scheduled to meet on the fringes of the EU’s October 5 summit in Granada, 
Spain. Pashinian had hoped that they would sign there a document laying out the 
main parameters of an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty.

However, Aliyev withdrew from the talks at the last minute. He also appears to 
have cancelled another meeting which EU Council President Michel planned to host 
in Brussels later in October.

Secretary of Armenia’s Security Council Armen Grigorian recently met with Toivo 
Klaar, the EU’s special representative for the South Caucasus, and also 
confirmed that Armenia is ready to continue negotiations with Azerbaijan in the 
format proposed by Brussels.

A senior EU official told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service last week that Michel and 
other EU representatives were holding separate discussions with Yerevan and Baku 
in an effort to reschedule the trilateral meeting for December. Although no 
agreement has been reached so far, the summit may take place next month, said 
the official who did not want to be identified.

At the second high-level session of the Armenia-EU Political and Security 
Dialogue the parties also discussed the possibility of extension of the EU’s 
border-monitoring mission in Armenia, as well as “non-lethal support to Armenia 
through the European Peace Facility.”

The parties said that the rights and security of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians, 
including their right to return, should be ensured.

The first session of the Armenia-EU Political and Security Dialogue took place 
in Yerevan in January. Its next session is also due to take place in Yerevan in 
2024.




West Accused Of ‘Trying To Tear Armenia Away From Russia’


Maria Zakharova, an official representative of the Foreign Ministry of Russia 
(file photo)


A senior Russian official has accused the West of “trying to tear Armenia away” 
from Moscow, drawing parallels between Ukraine and the South Caucasus nation.

“The West has a beastly grip on Armenia after it failed its policy in Ukraine,” 
Maria Zakharova, an official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, 
said during a press briefing on Wednesday.

“The West, whose plans in the Ukrainian direction have completely failed, has 
grabbed onto Armenia with the same beastly grip, trying to tear it away from 
Russia,” she continued.

Zakharova referred to the latest steps of the Armenian leadership, including 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s refusal to attend an upcoming summit of the 
Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization in Minsk, the expansion of 
Western arms supplies to Armenia, and “the friendship of Yerevan and Kyiv” as to 
“links of the same chain.”

“Only, it seems to me that this is a chain of enslavement,” the Russian 
diplomatic representative said.

Zakharova further claimed that it is “recommendations from the West” that 
prevent the Armenian leadership from completing the work on unblocking transport 
links in the South Caucasus.

She noted that representatives of Moscow, Yerevan and Baku involved in a 
trilateral working group achieved “significant progress” in June regarding the 
restoration of a railway link between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

“But again, something prevented the Armenian leadership from finalizing the 
agreements on paper. We know very well what prevented it – it was the “good” 
advice of the Western friends of the current leadership in Armenia,” Zakharova 
said.

The official representative of Russia’s Foreign Ministry denied any pressure on 
Armenia in the matter, but reminded that under the 2020 and 2021 trilateral 
agreements it is Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) that is to exercise 
control over transport links between Azerbaijan and its Nakhichevan exclave that 
would pass via Armenia.

Officials in Yerevan have not concealed their frustration with Russia, 
considering that as a formal ally it has failed to fulfill its obligation to 
Armenia to secure its borders and protect its sovereign territory against 
incursions by Azerbaijan.

Tensions between Armenia and Russia rose further after Azerbaijan’s September 
19-20 military offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh that led to the exodus of the 
region’s virtually entire ethnic Armenian population. Armenia, in particular, 
blamed Russian peacekeepers deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh under the 2020 
ceasefire agreement between Moscow, Baku and Yerevan for failing to protect the 
local Armenians.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian defended the policy of his government 
aimed at “diversifying security relations” as he spoke in parliament on 
Wednesday.

“We are looking for other security partners. And we are looking for and finding 
other security partners, we are trying to sign contracts, acquire some 
armaments. This is our policy,” the Armenian leader said.

Despite the provision in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire agreement that 
Russia’s FSB is to exercise control over future “transport communications” via 
Armenia, it is increasingly being viewed in Yerevan as a moot point given the 
failure of the Moscow-brokered deal to protect ethnic Armenians in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

In their public statements officials in Yerevan have insisted that it is the 
Armenian side only that should exercise control over all transport links passing 
through Armenian territories.

The Armenian government recently set up a special unit at the National Security 
Service tasked with ensuring the safe transit of people, goods and other cargo 
through the country.

Zakharova said that the latest reaction of Armenian authorities to the matter 
came as a surprise to her. “Russian border guards have been protecting Armenia’s 
borders with Iran and Turkey for many years in accordance with bilateral 
agreements,” she said.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

U.S. Senate unanimously adopts bill blocking military aid to Azerbaijan

 12:43,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Michigan Senator Gary Peters (D-MI) led the unanimous U.S. Senate passage of the “Armenian Protection Act of 2023” (S.3000) which aims to block all U.S. military assistance to Azerbaijan by removing President Biden’s authority to waive Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act for Fiscal Years 2024 and 2025, the ANCA reports.

The bill passed on November 15 will be introduced in the House of Representatives. Then, if passed, it will be presented to the United States president for signing to become a law.

In remarks on the Senate Floor during consideration of the measure, Sen. Peters detailed Azerbaijan’s aggression against Nagorno-Karabakh. “Not only did they blockade the Lachin Corridor for 10 months, creating significant hardships, they also violently attacked innocent Armenians and forced the dissolution of the government of Nagorno-Karabakh on September 20th.”

Noting that President Biden failed to stop military aid to Azerbaijan in the face of their escalating aggression, Sen. Peters urged his Senate colleagues to act. “If we do not take action when countries willfully ignore the terms of our agreements with them, our agreements will become effectively meaningless and toothless,” stated Senator Peters. “I urge my colleagues to join me in holding Azerbaijan accountable for their actions, enforce our agreements with them, and stand with the Armenian people in the face of unprovoked aggression.”

Sen. Peters travelled to Armenia’s southern Syunik region in September to assess the devastating impact of Azerbaijan’s 10-month blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh. “This visit confirmed that we must do more to protect Armenian lives and prevent ethnic cleansing. Increased aid to the Armenian people is critical, and we must stop providing aid to Azerbaijan and impose targeted sanctions on the Aliyev regime,” stated Sen. Peters.

Sen. Peters introduced S.Res.3000 upon his return which received bipartisan support from Senators Robert Casey (D-PA), Bill Cassidy (R-LA), John Kennedy (R-LA), Pete Ricketts (R-NE), Marco Rubio (R-FL), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) in the run up to its unanimous passage.

Two measures in the U.S. House – H.R.5683 & H.R.5686 – if passed, would block U.S. military aid to Azerbaijan by calling for the complete repeal of Presidential waiver authority of Section 907. The measures also urge expanded humanitarian and military assistance to Armenia to address Azerbaijan’s ongoing aggression against Armenia and provide assistance to NK’s forcibly displaced Armenian population.

Armenia signs Second Additional Protocol to the Convention on Cybercrime

 14:35,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Armenia has signed the Second Additional Protocol to the Convention on Cybercrime on enhanced co-operation and disclosure of electronic evidence (CETS No. 224).

The document was signed by Armenia’s Permanent Representative to the Council of Europe Ambassador Arman Khachatryan, in the presence of Marija Pejčinović Burić, the Secretary General of the Council of Europe.

Music with meaning: Bar Harbor band plays for Armenian refugee relief

Maine – Nov 16 2023


    By Nan Lincoln | Special to The Ellsworth American


The Kotwica Band will be performing a concert of international folk tunes to benefit Armenian refugees at Saint Saviour’s Church in Bar Harbor Sunday, Nov. 26 at 2 p.m. Pictured, from left, are: Kevin Stone, Carolyn Rapkievian, David Quinby, David Rapkievian, Eloise Schultz, Frances Stockman and Anne Tatgenhorst.

BAR HARBOR — About 125 years ago, the town of Bar Harbor became galvanized by the plight of the Armenian people, who were being slaughtered in the hundreds of thousands by the Ottoman Turks and forced from their historical homeland, between the Caucuses and the Caspian Sea.

Bar Harbor summer resident Henry Morgenthau, the U.S. ambassador to the declining Ottoman Empire, was the first to sound the alarm about this ongoing genocide. He eventually resigned in protest over what the Turks (eventually joined by the German army at the outset of World War I) were doing in Armenia and the lack of a cohesive, official American response.

In 1897, the Bar Harbor Record reported, “A most interesting lecture was given at the Congregational church by Rev. A. S. Abraham on the Armenian question. The church was filled, and the audience listened with rapt attention to the recitation of the wrongs done the race.”

By 1915, an estimated 1,500,000 Armenians, more than half of the total population living in their ancient homeland, had been massacred and thousands more displaced.

“I am firmly convinced that this is the greatest crime of the ages,” Morgenthau told Congress.

There are some who believe the reluctance of Europe and America to hold the Turks responsible for their war crimes against the Armenians emboldened Hitler to implement his extermination of the Jews. If the world could look the other away at the mass destruction of its oldest Christian nation (301 AD), would it come to the rescue of Europe’s Jewish population? The Holocaust may have been the terrible answer to that question.

If the world’s governments failed to act in time to prevent the Armenian disaster, the American people in big cities and small towns like Bar Harbor did pay attention. According to the Bar Harbor Times, in 1917, the Congregational church donated $91 to Armenian relief; the Sewing Circle voted to contribute its refreshment money, and in 1919, even the Sunday School pitched in $5 a month to support one of the thousands of children orphaned by the Turkish pogroms.

Led by Morgenthau and fellow Bar Harbor rusticator Cleveland Dodge, with the help of author Julia Ward Howe, Charlie Chaplin, child star Jackie Coogan and many others, Americans would raise $116 million in funds and supplies (worth more than $2 billion today).

A century of uneasy peace followed the fall of the Ottoman Empire, including two world wars and the rise and fall of the Soviet Union. On the one hand this exacerbated the tension between the Islamic Turks and the Christian Armenians by creating the Turkic state of Azerbaijan on the large oil- and mineral-rich section of historic Armenian lands bordering the Caspian Sea, and on the other hand managed to prevent further mass slaughter (although not deadly pogroms) with its iron-fisted control of the region.

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, in 1991, Azerbaijan became increasingly emboldened to reclaim the region of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), an autonomous ethnic Armenian enclave within its borders. In 2020, when the world’s focus was on the COVID pandemic, Azerbaijan launched a major attack on Artsakh, creating a new humanitarian crisis as the ethnic Armenian population fled what they fear will be another genocide.

So once again Bar Harbor and area residents at large are being asked to help as they did a century ago when local church congregations and schoolchildren contributed to Armenian relief.

The Kotwica Band, led by David and Carolyn Rapkievian of Bar Harbor, will be giving a concert to benefit Armenian refugees on Sunday, Nov. 26, at 2 p.m. at St. Saviour’s Church in Bar Harbor (41 Mount Desert St.). The concert will feature music from Armenia and the neighboring countries — Poland, Macedonia, Ukraine, Romania and Greece — where many Armenians settled after the last diaspora.

For the Rapkievians it is personal. Carolyn’s Armenian relatives were among those who fell victim to the Ottoman slaughter, and the horrors they endured are part of her family lore. A photograph of her grandfather’s handsome family is not simply evidence of her Armenian heritage but a memento of loss.

“When the photo was taken, my grandfather Hovnan Okoomian had already been sent to America for safety,” Rapkievian said. “My great-grandparents who are pictured seated in the photo were beheaded in front of the children, and the youngest children were killed along with the eldest sister’s husband. The sisters were taken into a harem and raped.”

She says American missionaries eventually helped her surviving family members escape. U.S. missionaries also helped her then-infant maternal grandmother escape by pretending she was their own child and her mother their maid. Sadly, such horrors are no longer a part of the Armenian people’s past.

“Just this past September,” Rapkievian said, “120,000 people — nearly the entire population of Artsakh — fled across the border to Armenia in an arduous three-day exodus to escape attacks on their villages and towns. These refugees, who left behind their belongings, their livelihoods and their lands, are undernourished and have medical needs.

She said Armenia, now a small democratic republic wedged between modern-day Turkey and Azerbaijan, is a poor country and unable to support a refugee crisis of this magnitude.

Rapkievian hopes people will once again rally to support the Armenian people by attending the Nov. 26 concert.

“We hope they’ll enjoy our music, too,” she added with a smile, picking up her drum to resume the rehearsal.

Carolyn and her husband, David, play a variety of instruments themselves including fiddle, guitar, oud (a precursor of the lute), balalaika and drum; they have recruited button accordionist Kevin Stone of Waterville, bass player David Quinby of Sedgwick and three singers, Anne Tatgenhorst of Winterport, College of the Atlantic grad Eloise Shultz and Conners Emerson School eighth-grader Frances Stockman (whose aunt, the late Kirsten Stockman, co-founded with Tatgenhorst the Maine Women’s Balkan Choir).

Kotwica plans to perform 15 songs that speak of love, loss and yearning.

“Many of the songs have a dual meaning,” Rapkievian said. “For instance the first song, ‘Gorani,’ is Armenian and the words are about the loss of love. But it is also about the loss of a homeland.”

As they practice, one can hear that thread of longing, interwoven into often lilting tunes that beg to be danced to and most often are.

“At this Thanksgiving time we are especially thankful for our town’s support of the Armenian people — both in the past and present,” Rapkievien said. “Our songs and our music have survived, and we are thrilled to be able share them and our story with everyone.

“And, yes,” she added, “there will probably be dancing.”

https://www.ellsworthamerican.com/lifestyle/arts/music-with-meaning-bar-harbor-band-plays-for-armenian-refugee-relief/article_92f0bebc-84b9-11ee-b415-331c890ccccf.html













THE HAGUE – The International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivers an Order in the case Armenia v. Azerbaijan

The United Nations
Nov 16 2023

Categories
Meetings & Events / International Court of Justice / Cases / 180 – Armenia v. Azerbaijan
Production Date
17 Nov 2023
Asset Language
English
French
Broadcasting UN Entity
INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE – ICJ
Summary
The International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivers an Order in the case concerning Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Armenia v. Azerbaijan).
Description

The International Court of Justice (ICJ), the principal judicial organ of the UN, delivers, on Friday , its Order on the request for the indication of provisional measures submitted by the Republic of Armenia on 28 September 2023 in the case concerning Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Armenia v. Azerbaijan), at the Peace Palace in The Hague, the seat of the Court. Session held under the presidency of Judge Joan E. Donoghue, President of the Court.

Contact :

Ms Monique Lagerman, Head of Information Department (+31 (0)70 302 2336)

Ms Joanne Moore, Information Officer (+31 (0)70 302 2337)

Mr Avo Sevag Garabet, Associate Information Officer (+31 (0)70 302 2394)

Internet | Website : www.icj-cij.org

Twitter: www.twitter.com/CIJ_ICJ

LinkedIn: International Court of Justice (ICJ)


ANALYSIS: Armenia and Kazakhstan Reveal Cracks in Russian-Led Regional Blocs

Kyiv Post, Ukraine
Nov 16 2023



Armenia’s snubbing of Moscow-led summits combined with Kazakhstan’s leader’s behavior during President Putin’s recent visit may indicate a fundamental change in the existing power dynamic.

By Steve Brown

Russia has tried to maintain control of many of its former Soviet republics through two bodies that are analogous to similar bodies in the West.

The Russian-led Collective Treaty Security Organization (CTSO) is a military alliance formalized in 2002, that attempts to be Russia’s equivalent to NATO with, currently, six members Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, along with Armenia and Belarus.

In an echo of NATO’s Article 5 treaty, CSTO’s Article 4 states: “If one of the Member States undergoes aggression, it will be considered by the Member States as aggression to all the Member States of this Treaty… all the other Member States at the request of this Member State shall provide the latter with the necessary help, including military… in accordance with the right to collective defense pursuant to article 51 of the UN Charter.”

Although it has been in existence for over 20 years, the Article has only been used once when a small force deployed to Kazakhstan in January 2022 to deal with political unrest that Moscow categorized as a coup attempt backed by “foreign terrorists.”

Recent events may be the first signs of the cracks appearing in Russia’s hold over their southern partners.

The other body that Russia has used to retain its influence is the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) a quasi-equivalent of the European Union that calls itself a regional intergovernmental organization.

It was formed in 1991 following the dissolution of the Soviet Union ostensibly to assist its members’ transition into free democratic nations although, the cynic would say it was an attempt by Russia to keep some semblance of control over its former vassal states.

The stated aims of the organization are: to facilitate and strengthen cooperation in the political, economic, ecological, humanitarian, cultural, and other fields among its member states, who are currently: Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Ukraine.

Although Ukraine ceased active participation in the statutory bodies of the CIS in 2018 in protest at Russia’s annexation of Crimea and continued aggression in the Donbas it has never formally withdrawn from the CIS Free Trade Area, even following Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion.

Recent strains show in the Armenian-Russian relationship

Armenia’s Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, announced on Tuesday that he would not participate in the Nov. 23 CSTO meeting in Minsk, Belarus. Commentators see this as another example of the deteriorating relationship between Yerevan and Moscow.

In 2020 the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Armenian separatist region Nagorno-Karabakh ended with a Moscow-brokered peace plan that included deployment of a Russian peacekeeping force. Armenia became unhappy with the peacekeepers’ reluctance to fulfil their mandate, which was exacerbated by the Kremlin’s refusal to intervene during this year’s outbreak of hostilities.

Pashinyan in turn angered Russia by canceling its hosting of the annual CSTO military exercises, but later held joint exercises with US forces, declined to attend a meeting of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) in Bishkek where Putin made his first trip outside Russia since being indicted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court (ICC) after which Armenia then voted to join the ICC.

According to TASS, Russia’s state media outlet, the former defense minister and head of Armenia’s opposition party, Seyran Ohanyan, accused Pashinyan of threatening the country’s security through this rebuff of Moscow:

“As threats surround us in a complicated military and political situation, not taking part in CSTO events puts Armenia’s security at further risk. We are a member of this alliance. In many cases, Armenian authorities played a part in the deterioration of relations.”

And the Russian-Kazakhstan relationship?

On Nov. 9 at what was called a “routine bi-lateral” meeting between the leaders of Kazakhstan and Russia, Putin was unable, not for the first time, to correctly pronounce Kassym-Jomart Tokayev’s name on several occasions. Perhaps in payback for that and also, in what some commentators have categorized as a power move, gave his closing speech in Kazakh rather than the usual Russian, much to the confusion of the visiting Moscow delegation.

Kazakhstan had earlier hosted a visit by French President Emanuel Macron, as part of his tour of Central Asia, during which deals were agreed in relation to oil and rare earth metals that Kazakhstan has in abundance, as well as pharmaceuticals and aerospace contracts.

With sanctions imposed on Moscow following the invasion of Ukraine having resulted in a major reduction in Russian oil exports to the EU, Kazakhstan is now the EU’s third-largest supplier behind Norway and the US.

At a meeting with President Tokayev, Macron thanked him for not siding with Moscow in its war on Ukraine and commented:

“I don’t underestimate by any means the geopolitical difficulties, the pressures… that some may be putting on you… France values the path you are following for your country, refusing to be a vassal of any power and seeking to build numerous and balanced relations with different countries.”

Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, where Macron traveled on his next visit, have refused to recognize Russia’s annexation of Ukrainian territories and have pledged to abide by Western sanctions against Moscow.

"The European Union isn’t hiding its intentions to restrain Russia in every possible way and push it out of Central Asia and the South Caucasus.” – Sergei Lavrov

A BBC report quoted the Kazakh political analyst Dosym Satpayev, who said the war in Ukraine had resulted in a diminishing of Russian influence in the region. “There is less military co-operation, the perception of Russia since the war has worsened. Central Asian governments are not talking openly about it – but it is happening.”

Russia in turn has voiced concern at the West’s growing commercial and diplomatic activity in the former Soviet nations of central Asia.

Asked for his views on Macron’s visit and comments, the Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Kazakhstan, as a sovereign state, was free to develop ties with any countries, but emphasized his view that Moscow valued its relations with Kazakhstan “very highly.” He then told reporters: “In our turn, we have historical ties, ties of strategic partnership with Kazakhstan, they are our allies and our interests are united in many international bodies.”

Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, took a less conciliatory line. In an interview broadcast on Sunday, he accused the European Union of attempting to drive Russia out of Central Asia. He said the West was trying to pull Russia’s “neighbors, friends and allies” away from it.

“The European Union isn’t hiding its intentions to restrain [Russia] in every possible way and push it out of Central Asia and the South Caucasus,” he said. “These attempts are futile. We have been historically present there and are not going to disappear.”

Nevertheless, a number of commentators suggest these recent events may be the first signs of the cracks appearing in Russia’s hold over their southern partners.

It is not only the EU nations that are focusing on an area they have long neglected. China is becoming ever more active in Central Asia with its “Belt and Road” project. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has also shown growing interest in the region.


Turkey accused of double standard as Armenian journalist’s killer walks free

Nov 16 2023
Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink's murderer walked free in Turkey Wednesday while the government's critics pointed aghast to political prisoners held years beyond the court's authority to keep them.


Amberin Zaman

This is an excerpt from Turkey Briefing, Al-Monitor's weekly newsletter covering the big stories of the week in Turkey. To get Turkey Briefing in your inbox, sign up here.

The assassin of prominent Armenian news editor Hrant Dink was freed late Wednesday for “good conduct” in what critics charge is a further example of the politicization of Turkey’s judiciary under the country’s authoritarian president.

Ogun Samast was released on parole under the terms of an amnesty law passed in July (one that excludes terrorism cases) after spending 16 years and 10 months for the 2007 murder of Dink outside the office of his newspaper, Agos, in Istanbul.

Ozgur Ozel, the newly elected leader of the main opposition Republican People’s Party, blasted the move, saying Samast was “supposed to stay for life.” “We have no words. Any who talks about justice after this is truly heartless,” Ozel noted on X.

“This night is a very bad night. The worst night in recent years,” lamented Alin Ozinian, an Armenian-Turkish journalist. Dink had told Ozinian in an interview, the last prior to his death, “The deep state has put a target on me.”

Samast, who was 17 years old at the time of the murder, was widely believed to be acting in concert with rogue ultranationalists and their allies in the security forces. They viewed Dink as a threat because of his efforts to draw attention to the genocide of more than one million Armenians by the Ottomans in 1915, a taboo topic.

His murder struck a chord and more than 100,000 people, many of whom had not previously heard of Dink, marched at his funeral bearing placards that read “We are all Armenians.”

In truth, Samast was expected to be released earlier — in 2020 — and serve his remaining 1.5 years on parole. However, his discharge was postponed after he was given a separate five-year long sentence for striking a prison warden. The actual miscarriage of justice, legal experts say, stems from the fact that Samast was not prosecuted for Dink’s murder as part of an organized terror network and was sentenced instead for voluntary manslaughter and illegal possession of a weapon.

Erdal Dogan, one of several lawyers who represented the Dink family in the case, commented on the matter to Al-Monitor. “The Turkish justice system that penalizes even the slightest criticism of the government as ‘membership of a terrorist organization’ or ‘terrorist propaganda’ chose to treat the political murder of Hrant Dink that was planned by tens of people, including those serving in state institutions, as an ordinary crime,” he said.

Turkey’s justice system has been repeatedly condemned by international legal bodies, notably the European Court of Human Rights, whose rulings Ankara has considered binding since 1990. Yet in recent years Turkey has repeatedly flouted them, most notably with respect to the court’s demands that Turkish philanthropist Osman Kavala and Kurdish politician Selahattin Demirtas be immediately freed.

Kavala, a dogged proponent of Turkish-Armenian reconciliation, has been in jail since 2017, serving the most severe type of life sentence under Turkish law, on flimsily evidenced charges that he sought to overthrow the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as an alleged instigator of the mass Gezi protests that shook Turkey in 2013. 

Demirtas has been convicted on a raft of similarly specious terror charges, with prosecutors demanding life in a case linked to the Kobani riots that erupted in 2014 in the mainly Kurdish city of Diyarbakir over the government’s perceived support for the Islamic State.

In a further twist, Turkey’s Court of Cassation filed a criminal complaint against the Constitutional Court, the highest court in the land, for having ruled in favor of freeing Can Atalay, a human rights activist jailed in the Gezi case, after he was elected to parliament from a left-wing opposition party in the May elections. Under Turkish law, members of parliament are immune to prosecution and Atalay’s continued detention is deemed unlawful under Article 14 of the Turkish constitution.

Erdogan waded into the debate, calling the Constitutional Court’s ruling “a mistake."

In a September interview with PBS’ “Newshour,” Erdogan called Kavala the “financier” of the Gezi protests and Demirtas “a terrorist who caused the death of more than 200 people.” He said that the original ruling was rightfully upheld. When anchor Amna Nawaz reminded him that the European Court of Human Rights disagreed with his assessment, Erdogan erupted. “You're not going to interrupt me. And respect me. And you are going to respect the judgment of the judiciary as well?” Erdogan fumed. Kavala and Demirtas deny all the charges.

'Dark corridors'

Coming only days before a conference on minority rights in Turkey to be hosted by the Hrant Dink Foundation on Nov. 17, Samast’s release has touched a raw nerve among Armenians worldwide.

Khatchig Mouradian is a professor at Columbia University in New York who was written extensively on the Armenian genocide. He told Al-Monitor, “Sunlight, they say, is the best disinfectant. When Ogun Samast walks free and Osman Kavala remains in prison in two cases that have for years been under global spotlight, one can’t even begin to imagine what happens in the darker corridors of Turkey’s justice system.”

Mouradian contended that Samast’s release is further proof of Ankara’s cavalier approach to purported normalization with neighboring Armenia, with which it has yet to establish diplomatic relations or open its land borders.

In 2020, Turkey played a pivotal role in helping Azerbaijan wrest back territories occupied by Armenia in a previous war and sat on its hands in September as Azerbaijan effectively expelled in less than two weeks nearly the entire Armenian population — more than 100,000 people — of the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, which was until then majority Armenian but formally part of Azerbaijan.

“Over the past three years, Ankara has not displayed a shred of concern for how its words and deeds may impact normalization. Why should it care now? It believes Yerevan has no choice but to stay the course,” Mouradian said.

The case of Gultan Kisanak, the former co-mayor of Diyarbakir who was ousted by the government and jailed in 2016 for her alleged role in the Kobani riots, among other supposed crimes, is one such travesty. She remains behind bars even though under Turkey’s penal code defendants who have not been convicted can only be held for a maximum of seven years. “This is, in essence, an automatic violation of my right to a fair trial. You are aware of this,” she told the presiding judge in a Nov. 12 hearing.  

Borrow books or else

Such violations abound but are rarely noticed as most victims are not in the public eye. Take Mustafa Okcul, who was jailed and sentenced to death in 1993 for membership in the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) at the height of the rebels’ insurgency. His sentence was commuted to life imprisonment in 1999 when Turkey scrapped the death penalty in line with its now moribund efforts to join the European Union. Okcul was due to be freed on good conduct six months ago. However, prosecutors deemed that he had not “borrowed enough books from the prison library” and was therefore not fit to “integrate with society.”

Bunyamin Seker, president of the Free Lawyers’ Association, an advocacy group based in Diyarbakir, is dealing with Okcul’s case along with a host of similar ones. He said that the prison set a cap on the number of books inmates are allowed to borrow and that Okcul’s family would send him books on a regular basis. “The claims are laughable,” Seker noted. “Mustafa had fulfilled all the criteria for good conduct. He had not engaged in any violence when he was arrested.”

From his private meetings with Turkish officials, Seker said he had concluded that “the real reason” Okcul was not being freed was because he refused to denounce the PKK and express contrition. Another of his clients, a university student who was jailed for six years for taking part in an anti-government demonstration, saw her release put off by a year. Authorities cited Emine Erol’s refusal to meet with a prison psychiatrist for the delay. She was finally released two weeks ago.

“The system is riddled with double standards,” Seker told Al-Monitor. “Some are more equal than others before the law.”