Turkis press: UN should probe Armenia’s war crimes in Karabakh: Turkish Commission

An Azerbaijani man named Saire Guliyeva stands near the ruins of his dwelling, Ganja, Azerbaijan, Nov. 28, 2020. (AP File Photo)

The United Nations should appoint a special rapporteur to investigate war crimes committed by Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh, and Armenian officials responsible for the crimes need to be tried by an international court, the Turkish Parliament’s Human Rights Commission said in a report Thursday.

The commission, which visited Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan to examine the situation on the ground, noted that Armenia had intentionally targeted homes, hospitals, cemeteries schools and business compounds to destroy them. It called on the U.N. to immediately appoint a rapporteur to determine war crimes and other human rights violations during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

“The Council of the European Union also needs to include this issue on their agenda,” the report said.

The Armenian military also used cluster bombs, which are indiscriminate in nature and leave unexploded bomblets on the ground that can kill and injure civilians even after attacks are halted.

Moreover, the commission found that civilian settlements in the city of Ganja were targeted twice in ballistic missile attacks.

Ganja was one of the most targeted Azerbaijani towns in the most recent conflict. The first Armenian attack on the region took place on Oct. 4, when a missile hit the city and killed one person and injured 30 others. The second attack took place on Oct. 8, during which many residential buildings were damaged, however, no loss of life was incurred. Then, on Oct.10, only a day after Russia brokered a cease-fire between the warring sides, Armenia attacked for the third time. An Armenian Scud missile hit an apartment complex in Ganja, completely destroying it. During this attack, the city’s infrastructure was heavily damaged as well. In the attack, 10 civilians were killed and 40 others were injured, including women and children. A total of 95 buildings were damaged, impacting the lives of approximately 205 people. The fourth and final attack took place on Oct.17. After the firing of the Armenian Scud missiles, three massive explosions rocked the city. These attacks were conducted in densely populated areas.

“As findings on the ground confirm, the civilian and military leaders who pushed Armenia into this war need to be tried by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes against civilians and their damage needs to be compensated,” the report said.

Turkey’s Ombudsman Institution had previously prepared a similar report on Armenia’s war crimes and human rights violations against Azerbaijan.

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

Clashes erupted on Sept. 27 and the Armenian Army continued attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces, even violating humanitarian cease-fire agreements for 44 days.

Baku liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages from the Armenian occupation during this time. On Nov. 10, the two countries signed a Russian-brokered agreement to end fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.

The truce is seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia.

Photo exhibition titled “Armenian Genocide” held in Tbilisi, Georgia

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 15:50,

YEREVAN, APRIL 14, ARMENPRESS. A photo exhibition titled “Armenian Genocide” was held in the Freedom Square of Georgia’s capital Tbilisi, the Armenian Embassy in Georgia reported on Facebook.

Photos depicting the Armenian Genocide, the Baku and Sumgait massacres, as well as the Armenian cultural monuments which were subject to the Azerbaijani vandalism in Artsakh and Nakhijevan were displayed at the exhibition.

The exhibition has been organized by the Armenian Community of Georgia NGO.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

 

Protesters in Berlin Demand Release of Armenia POWs

April 7, 2021



Armenian and German human rights advocates held a silent protest in front of the Azerbaijani Embassy in Berlin on Tuesday to demand the release of Armenian prisoners of war and other detainees, reported Armenia’s Public Radio.

Organized by the Vernatun Deutschland German Armenian grassroots movement, the protest urged official Baku to release Armenian POWs and other captives being held in violation of the Geneva Conventions and the trilateral statement signed on November 9 between Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan.

The group said it would stage weekly protests until all Armenian prisoners of war have been released.

“The consequences of war, including those of war crimes such as the use of mercenaries, the kidnapping of civilians, the beheading and murder of prisoners of war, the use of outlawed ammunition, the murder of civilians, the use of phosphorus bombs to burn forests, and the bombing of civil structures are still evident today,” said the organizers.

“Compliance with the ceasefire agreement on the release of prisoners of war is an essential step in securing peace in the region. Otherwise it is to be feared that the prisoners’ lives will be misused as a bargaining chip and put at risk in order to occupy further territories, sometimes even within the recognized territories of Armenia, which could lead to further instability,” the organizers explained.

Armenian prime minister’s advisor sacked

Panorama, Armenia
April 6 2021

Armenia’s Prime Minster Nikol Pashinyan has signed an order to dismiss Arshak Karapetyan as his advisor.

“Guided by Article 9 (Part 10) of the law “On Public Service”, I hereafter decide to relieve Arshak Karapetyan of the post of advisor to the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia,” the decision said. 

Earthquake reported in Armenia’s Shorzha

Aysor, Armenia
April 3 2021

Armenia’s Emergency Situation’s Ministry’s Seismic Protection Service recorded magnitude-1.9 earthquake in Armenia, on Aril 3 at 1:03pm local time, 4 km northeast of Shorzha town in Gegharkunik Province and 10 km beneath the surface.

The seismic activity measured magnitude 2 to 3 at the epicenter.

The quake was felt in Shorzha village of Gegharkunik with magnitude 2.

Turkey will further toughen its hostile stance against Armenia, historian says

Panorama, Armenia
March 30 2021

Tukey will further toughen its hostile stance towards Armenia since the latter is in the role of a “beggar” and has the status of a defeated state, Doctor of History Hayk Demoyan, a former director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, told Panorama.am in an interview on Tuesday.

His comments came in response to a question whether or not he believes Turkey will someday change its aggressive policy towards Armenia after Monday’s statement of Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian that, “I don’t think that Turkey will never change its anti-Armenian attitude.”

“It will further toughen, because we have assumed the role of a beggar and are in the status of a loser. There is no obstacle for Turkey, it only seeks one thing – to fulfil its main pan-Turkish agenda,” the historian said.

Addressing the rumors about removing the issue of the Armenian Genocide recognition from the international agenda, Demoyan said: “I am not surprised; this is exactly what all this is leading to. Turkey wins with the use of a very cheap and high-quality option, without spending any resources, and, what is most striking, setting preconditions on the defeated authorities.”

The historian attached importance to Syunik Province as Armenia’s “trump card” to overcome the current situation. 

“There is a way out: to consider Syunik as a trump card, while today we are on our knees, bending our backs and ready to surrender Syunik. Meanwhile, all the pressure is for the sake of this corridor [through Syunik], while the government wants to use it as a bargaining chip. The most powerful and important thing is the 40-kilometer Syunik mountains,” he added.

Armenian FM stresses need for immediate return of POWs from Azerbaijan at meeting with his Russian counterpart

Panorama, Armenia
April 2 2021

On the sidelines of the meeting of the CIS Council of Foreign Ministers in Moscow, Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian held a meeting with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov on Thursday, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said in a press release. 

During the private talks, the FMs discussed a wide range of issues related to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, including the implementation of the 9 November 2020 and 11 January 2021 trilateral statements and latest developments. In this context, Aivazian stressed the need for the immediate repatriation of Armenian prisoners of war (POWs) and hostages being held in Azerbaijan in gross violation of their obligations under the tripartite statement.

Ara Aivazian expressed deep concerns over the deliberate targeting of Armenian cultural and religious monuments in the areas that fell under the control of Azerbaijan, highlighting the urgency of taking measures to protect the heritage.

The top diplomats thoroughly addressed a wide range of issues on the agenda of the Armenian-Russian allied cooperation and the forthcoming schedule of high-level contacts.

The foreign ministers of the two countries also exchanged views on multilateral cooperation.

Andranik Simonyan appointed deputy director of National Security Service

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 10:44,

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. Andranik Simonyan has been appointed deputy director of the National Security Service of Armenia.

The respective decree has been signed by President Armen Sarkissian based on the proposal of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Prior to the appointment, Andranik Simonyan has been serving as deputy chairman of the Investigative Committee.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Turkish press: Turkic Council eyes forming ‘united states of Turkic world’

Merve Aydogan   |30.03.2021
Secretary-General of the Turkic Council Baghdad Amreyev speaks during an exclusive interview in Istanbul, Turkey on . The intergovernmental organization of Turkic-Speaking States is set to virtually hold an informal summit on March 31, which would prepare the group for an upcoming official summit in Istanbul. ( Elif Öztürk – Anadolu Agency )

ISTANBUL

The intergovernmental organization of Turkic-Speaking States is set to virtually hold an informal summit on March 31, which would prepare the group for an upcoming official summit in Istanbul.

Speaking ahead of the informal meeting exclusively for Anadolu Agency, Secretary-General of the Turkic Council Baghdad Amreyev told the meeting was decided to be held virtually due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Telling that the Turkic Council aims for a united state of the Turkic world, Amreyev said the presidents of Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan are to attend the upcoming summit.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister of Hungary Viktor Orban is to attend with observer country status as an official from Turkmenistan to attend as well.

“It’s the first summit of Turkic leaders, after the [Azerbaijan’s] Karabakh victory. That’s why the significance of this meeting is grown in the eyes of the public,” Amreyev said while adding that the “meeting is going to be an essential point in our efforts for strengthening the unity of Turkic World.”

On the summit’s agenda, the Secretary-General of the Council said Kazakhstan’s ancient city of Turkistan is to be declared as the spiritual center of the Turkic world.

The city with 2,000 years of history was Kazakh Khanate’s capital in the 16th to 18th centuries.

Turkistan, where the well-known Sufi sheik Khoja Akhmet Yassawi lived in the 11th century and was buried there after his death, played an essential role in Central Asia’s Islamization.

It was one of the spiritual, political and commercial centers of the historical Silk Way and started to revitalize after 1991 when Kazakhstan gained independence from the Soviet Union.

“We know the significance of this city [Turkistan] for the whole Islamic world,” Amreyev said while adding that other cities in the Turkic world “like Istanbul, Samarkand, Bukhara, Shusha, Baku, Almaty” in the future may also receive special status.

‘Turkic countries to participate in the rehabilitation of Karabakh’

Furthermore, multilateral cooperation, the situation in the region and the world, ways of strengthening cooperation with neighboring countries and international partners of Turkic Council member states are also to be addressed during the informal summit.

As the meeting will be the first gathering of all Turkic Council leaders following Azerbaijan’s Karabakh victory, Amreyev said the Council’s leaders “will show solidarity efforts towards rehabilitation to reconstruct the liberated territory of Karabakh… Our leaders will exchange views.”

He said that “another also important point is the participation of our private sector in rehabilitation works in the liberated territories of Azerbaijan. We are going to convene the business forum in Baku at the end of April to discuss ways of using the potential of our private sector [towards the rebuilding of liberated lands in Karabakh].”

The former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan experienced tense relations for almost three decades after the Armenian military started occupying Nagorno-Karabakh, internationally recognized as Azerbaijani territory, and seven adjacent regions, in 1991.

When new clashes erupted on Sept. 27, the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces and violated several humanitarian cease-fire agreements.
Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages from the nearly three-decade-long occupation during the 44-day conflict.

Despite the Nov. 10 deal, the Armenian army several times violated the agreement and martyred several Azerbaijani soldiers and a civilian, as well as wounded several others, according to the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry.

The Council under the Secretary-General’s leadership has prepared “Turkic Council Strategy 2020-2025 and Turkic World Vision-2040,” which are to be addressed during the informal gathering on Wednesday, Ameryev said.

With Turkic World Vision- 2040, “which constitutes our roadmap until 2040, we aim for stronger foreign policy coordination, Security cooperation, signing Free Trade Agreements, opening borders in transportation, and strong cooperation between our countries with the language and alphabet in particular,” he said.

Describing the 2020-2025 and 2040 documents as roadmaps for the Turkic Council’s cooperation towards the future, Ameryev hopes to for the member states’ leaders to adopt the documents during the formal Summit at Istanbul in autumn as he said the documents would “shape the future of the Turkic world, especially focuses on strengthening economic ties between our member states, reaching the preferential trade agreement.”

Besides establishing an FTA among Turkic Council member states, Ameryev added that “establishing additional mechanisms of our economic cooperation” is also on the agenda.

‘Over ten countries seek observer status’

Telling that the Turkic investment fund is close to being finalized, he noted that the fund is a “very important financial instrument to support many of our small and medium-sized enterprises.”

He further said that the Council is “focusing on developing the existing transportation routes,” and said, “that’s why we started last year, the realization of a ‘green corridor’ between our countries through Azerbaijan.”

The ‘green corridor’ is known as an international fast-track transport line for essential goods.

“In general, the Turkic Council does its best to develop multilateral cooperation in the fields of political, economy, science, culture and education, military, law, environment, energy, transportation, investment and finance,” he said.

On Turkey’s taking term presidency from Azerbaijan by holding the Summit of Turkic Council this year, Ameryev hailed Turkey’s position in the Council and told the country has “always played a very important role in strengthening our cooperation in all fields.”

“I think that Turkey will continue to play a leading role in consolidating unity and cooperation,” he added.

In response to a question on Ukraine’s request to receive observer status at the Council, Ameryev told the Council is “considering now requests that came from our international partners. More than ten countries expressed their intention and wish to be to have observer status.”

“Now we have only one observer country, which is Hungary. In the future, we’ll be having, of course, more observers in our organization. We are currently finalizing the regulations on the topic of observer countries. After it is completed, possibly some time in autumn Summit, we will be able to start to receive observers,” he added.

The Washington Post: Despite State Department’s calls, Azerbaijan still refuses to return Armenian POWs – opinion

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 17:26,

YEREVAN, MARCH 30, ARMENPRESS. Despite a nudge from a senior State Department official, Azerbaijan has so far refused to return Armenian prisoners who were captured during the recent war in Nagorno Karabakh, Columnist David Ignatius said in an opinion published at The Washington Post.

“U.S. officials say that 52 Armenians are still held by Azerbaijan, despite earlier exchanges of prisoners”, the columnist says, adding that Baku claims that these are not participants of the war, but came there after the ceasefire, in late November, and are terrorism suspects, an allegation that Armenia denies.

“Philip Reeker, acting assistant secretary of state for Europe, raised the issue of the captives with Azerbaijan’s foreign minister, Jeyhun Bayramov, during a telephone call in February and requested that the International Committee of the Red Cross be allowed to visit the prisoners. The ICRC was promptly granted access. U.S. officials continued in the following weeks to advocate the release of detainees”, David Ignatius says and quoted the remarks of a senior Biden administration official who said: “We hope to see more detainees released. We’re not negotiating, but we’re urging them to exercise goodwill”.

“Observers had hoped that Azerbaijan might release the Armenian captives as a goodwill gesture at the time of the Nowruz holiday on March 20. But the Armenian detainees remained in custody”, he said.

The columnist also reminds that U.S. Congressmen have also joined the calls for the release of the Armenian POWs. A group led by Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.), the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, introduced a bill March 16 calling on Azerbaijan to immediately release all Armenian POWs and captured civilians.

Human Rights Watch issued a report on March 19 alleging that Azerbaijani forces had abused Armenian POWs after the war, based on interviews with four former prisoners. Elin Suleymanov, Azerbaijan’s ambassador to Washington, said during an interview that Azerbaijan rejected the Human Rights Watch findings but that any serious allegations of prisoner mistreatment would be investigated. 

David Ignatius stated that prisoner issue will gain additional emotional significance in April, connected with the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.