Azerbaijani press: World’s superpowers not interested in resolving Karabakh problem – ISESCO

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The world’s superpowers are not interested in resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,ISESCO Director General Abdulaziz Othman Altwaijri said Friday, APA reported.

 

According to him, although the UN adopted four resolutions on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, none of them has been fulfilled.

 

“The resolutions also point out that the aggressor must immediately withdraw from the occupied territories of Azerbaijan,” said the ISESCO chief.

 

Abdulaziz Othman Altwaijri said the Islamic world, faced with severe hardships, should work together to overcome all these difficulties.

 

“The main reason behind this severe situation in our region is that superpowers of the world do injustice by not observing international law. Sometimes they aggravate the situation rather than make an effort to solve the problem. If the UN Security Council fails to ensure peace and security in a region and fulfill its duty, what should we expect from other organizations?!” he added.

 

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict entered its modern phase when the Armenian SRR made territorial claims against the Azerbaijani SSR in 1988.

 

A fierce war broke out between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan. As a result of the war, Armenian armed forces occupied some 20 percent of Azerbaijani territory which includes Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent districts (Lachin, Kalbajar, Aghdam, Fuzuli, Jabrayil, Gubadli and Zangilan), and over a million Azerbaijanis became refugees and internally displaced people.

 

The military operations finally came to an end when Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in Bishkek in 1994.

 

Dealing with the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is the OSCEMinsk Group, which was created after the meeting of the CSCE (OSCE after the Budapest summit held in December 1994) Ministerial Council in Helsinki on 24 March 1992. The Group’s members include Azerbaijan, Armenia, Russia, the United States, France, Italy, Germany, Turkey, Belarus, Finland and Sweden.

 

Besides, the OSCE Minsk Group has a co-chairmanship institution, comprised of Russian, the US and French co-chairs, which began operating in 1996.  

 

Resolutions 822, 853, 874 and 884 of the UN Security Council, which were passed in short intervals in 1993, and other resolutions adopted by the UN General Assembly, PACE, OSCE, OIC, and other organizations require Armenia to unconditionally withdraw its troops from Nagorno-Karabakh.

Turkish press: Over 200 journalists targeted globally by Russian hackers, report says

ASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS
Published12 hours ago

Kyiv Post chief editor Brian Bonner, right, and other journalists work at their desks in Kiev, Ukraine, on Friday, Dec. 8, 2017. (AP Photo)

Russian television anchor Pavel Lobkov was in the studio getting ready for his show when jarring news flashed across his phone: Some of his most intimate messages had just been published to the web.

Days earlier, the veteran journalist had come out live on air as HIV-positive, a taboo-breaking revelation that drew responses from hundreds of Russians fighting their own lonely struggles with the virus. Now he’d been hacked.

“These were very personal messages,” Lobkov said in a recent interview, describing a frantic call to his lawyer in an abortive effort to stop the spread of nearly 300 pages of Facebook correspondence, including sexually explicit messages. Even two years later, he said, “it’s a very traumatic story.”

The Associated Press found that Lobkov was targeted by the hacking group known as Fancy Bear in March 2015, nine months before his messages were leaked. He was one of at least 200 journalists, publishers and bloggers targeted by the group as early as mid-2014 and as recently as a few months ago.

The AP identified journalists as the third-largest group on a hacking hit list obtained from cybersecurity firm Secureworks, after diplomatic personnel and U.S. Democrats. About 50 of the journalists worked at The New York Times. Another 50 were either foreign correspondents based in Moscow or Russian reporters like Lobkov who worked for independent news outlets. Others were prominent media figures in Ukraine, Moldova, the Baltics or Washington.

The list of journalists provides new evidence for the U.S. intelligence community’s conclusion that Fancy Bear acted on behalf of the Russian government when it intervened in the U.S. presidential election. Spy agencies say the hackers were working to help Republican Donald Trump. The Russian government has denied interfering in the American election.

Previous AP reporting has shown how Fancy Bear — which Secureworks nicknamed Iron Twilight — used phishing emails to try to compromise Russian opposition leaders, Ukrainian politicians and U.S. intelligence figures, along with Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta and more than 130 other Democrats.

Lobkov, 50, said he saw hacks like the one that turned his day upside-down in December 2015 as dress rehearsals for the email leaks that struck the Democrats in the United States the following year.

“I think the hackers in the service of the Fatherland were long getting their training on our lot before venturing outside.”

“Classic KGB tactic”

New Yorker writer Masha Gessen said it was also in 2015 — when Secureworks first detected attempts to break into her Gmail — that she began noticing people who seemed to materialize next to her in public places in New York and speak loudly in Russian into their phones, as if trying to be overheard. She said this only happened when she put appointments into the online calendar linked to her Google account.

Gessen, the author of a book about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s rise to power, said she saw the incidents as threats.

“It was really obvious,” she said. “It was a classic KGB intimidation tactic.”

Other U.S.-based journalists targeted include Josh Rogin, a Washington Post columnist, and Shane Harris, who was covering the intelligence community for The Daily Beast in 2015. Harris said he dodged the phishing attempt, forwarding the email to a source in the security industry who told him almost immediately that Fancy Bear was involved.

In Russia, the majority of journalists targeted by the hackers worked for independent news outlets like Novaya Gazeta or Vedomosti, though a few — such as Tina Kandelaki and Ksenia Sobchak — are more mainstream. Sobchak has even launched an improbable bid for the Russian presidency.

Investigative reporter Roman Shleynov noted that the Gmail hackers targeted was the one he used while working on the Panama Papers, the expose of international tax avoidance that implicated members of Putin’s inner circle.

Fancy Bear also pursued more than 30 media targets in Ukraine, including many journalists at the Kyiv Post and others who have reported from the front lines of the Russia-backed war in the country’s east.

Nataliya Gumenyuk, co-founder of Ukrainian internet news site Hromadske, said the hackers were hunting for compromising information.

“The idea was to discredit the independent Ukrainian voices,” she said.

The hackers also tried to break into the personal Gmail account of Ellen Barry, The New York Times’ former Moscow bureau chief.

Her newspaper appears to have been a favorite target. Fancy Bear sent phishing emails to roughly 50 of Barry’s colleagues at The Times in late 2014, according to two people familiar with the matter. They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss confidential data.

The Times confirmed in a brief statement that its employees received the malicious messages, but the newspaper declined to comment further.

Some journalists saw their presence on the hackers’ hit list as vindication. Among them were CNN security analyst Michael Weiss and Brookings Institution visiting fellow Jamie Kirchick, who took the news as a badge of honor.

“I’m very proud to hear that,” Kirchick said.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said the wide net cast by Fancy Bear underscores efforts by governments worldwide to use hacking against journalists.

“It’s about gaining access to sources and intimidating those journalists,” said Courtney C. Radsch, the group’s advocacy director.

In Russia, the stakes are particularly high. The committee has counted 38 murders of journalists there since 1992.

Many journalists told the AP they knew they were under threat, explaining that they had added a second layer of password protection to their emails and only chatted over encrypted messaging apps like Telegram, WhatsApp or Signal.

Fancy Bear target Ekaterina Vinokurova, who works for regional media outlet Znak, said she routinely deletes her emails.

“I understand that my accounts may be hacked at any time,” she said in a telephone interview. “I’m ready for them.”

“I’ve seen what they could do”

It’s not just whom the hackers tried to spy on that points to the Russian government.

It’s when.

Maria Titizian, an Armenian journalist, immediately found significance in the date she was targeted: June 26, 2015.

“It was Electric Yerevan,” she said, referring to protests over rising energy bills that she reported on. The protests that rocked Armenia’s capital that summer were initially seen by some in Moscow as a threat to Russian influence.

Titizian said her outspoken criticism of the Kremlin’s “colonial attitude” toward Armenia could have made her a target.

Eliot Higgins, whose open source journalism site Bellingcat repeatedly crops up on the target list, said the phishing attempts seemed to begin “once we started really making strong statements about MH17,” the Malaysian airliner shot out of the sky over eastern Ukraine in 2014, killing 298 people. Bellingcat played a key role in marshaling the evidence that the plane was destroyed by a Russian missile — Moscow’s denials notwithstanding.

The clearest timing for a hacking attempt may have been that of Adrian Chen.

On June 2, 2015, Chen published a prescient expose of the Internet Research Agency, the Russian “troll factory” that won fresh infamy in October over revelations that it had manufactured make-believe Americans to pollute social media with toxic rhetoric.

Eight days after Chen published his big story, Fancy Bear tried to break into his account.

Chen, who has regularly written about the darker recesses of the internet, said having a lifetime of private messages exposed to the internet could be devastating.

“I’ve covered a lot of these leaks,” he said. “I’ve seen what they could do.”

https://www.dailysabah.com/world/2017/12/22/over-200-journalists-targeted-globally-by-russian-hackers-report-says

Azerbaijani press: Old Turkish rugs draw global interest

Private collectors worldwide have begun investing in antique rugs. 

Speaking about a rug-kilim auction held in London last month at Sotheby’s Auction House, a rug expert at the auction house said: “It is like when the value of paintings by a deceased artist increases. Old rugs began leaping forward in the antique market because the number of such rugs is gradually decreasing. They are included in private collections and have become an investment tool.” 

In the latest auction, a Seljuk-era kilim (179×69 cm), which was made in the 13th century, was put up for auction with an estimated price of 28,000 British pounds but was sold for 309,000 pounds. (Photo 1)

(Photo 1)

A rug (229×110 cm) from the Central Anatolian province of Konya’s Karapınar district, which was made at the end of the 17th century and considered “mystic and legendary” in rug publications, was auctioned for 309,000 pounds as the estimated price was 40,000 pounds. (Photo 2)

(Photo 2)

A silvery rug (255×182), made in the 20th century in Hereke by Armenian masters for the Ottoman palace, found a buyer for 175,000 pounds. (Photo 3)

(Photo 3)

Although the estimated price was 5,000 pounds, a Konya rug in madder color (255×182) from the 17th century was sold for 125,000 pounds (photo 4), while another Konya rug from the same century found a buyer for 112,500 pounds. (Photo 5) 

(Photo 4)

(Photo 5) 

An Uşak rug (270×230), often seen in the Renaissance-era Italian painter Lorenzo Lotto’s paintings and known in the world as the “Lotto rug” (photo 6-7), was auctioned for 81,250 pounds. 

(Photo 6)

(Photo 7)

A highly damaged two-piece Sivas rug (Photo 8) was on auction for 5,500 pounds but was sold for 50,000 after a long battle. 

(Photo 8)

 

Many rugs, kilims and prayer rugs were sold in the auction, too. 

Colorful and decorated Turkish rugs, which began reaching to Europe in the 13th century, have continued being a source of inspiration for painters until the 18th century. 

Both the rugs and the paintings depicting these rugs were placed in European palaces, museums and churches. It is the same in the auctions in England and the U.S. 

Following the Seljuk rugs, Turkish rugs had their heyday in the 16th century in the western province of Uşak and its vicinity. Until recently, there were one or two weaving looms at homes in Uşak. Especially young girls with thin fingers used to weave these rugs. The number of knots changed between 90,000 and 170,000 on each square meter. 

Sümerbank, founded by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of modern Turkey, in 1933, gave looms to girls to weave rugs and bought some of them. But Sümerbank now does not exist, ever since it was dismissed from its historic building in Ankara’s Ulus district. Which institute can continue this success of Sümerbank? What happened to those rugs? Do unemployed and talented girls know how to weave rugs?

Paintings depicting the Uşak rugs made by Johannes Vermeer, the Dutch painter of the famous “Girl with a Pearl Earring” painting, later became inspiration for other painters. The most famous work by Vermeer after this one was “The Music Lesson.” (Photo 9) 

(Photo 9) 

It is not known if the woman, who is playing the harpsichord, is the wife or the music teacher of the man, who is listening to her music. But the magnificent Uşak rug in the painting is fascinating. In her own work, Uşak local painter Nurcan Perdahcı highlights this rug. (Photo 10) 

(Photo 10) 

I wonder which of our readers have these priceless historic rugs. Which of them keep these rugs stored and use the machine-made rugs they see on TV commercials? Will we able to pass the magnificent Turkish rug business to the future generations? Why are rugs in mosques being stolen and smuggled abroad? These are questions I am curious about.

rug, turkish, sotheby’s, auction

India will sell radars to Armenia

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Armenia is interested in acquiring battlefield radars and long-range artillery weapons from India.

This is reported by the Indian news agency Hindustan Times.

The source states that India intends to increase the volume of arms exports in 2018.

The country is negotiating with Saudi Arabia, Jordan, UAE, Myanmar and Armenia for the supply of helicopters, radars, tanks, and missiles.

Issues related to the implementation of the Armenia-EU agreement were discussed in the government

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The main directions of the Armenia-EU cooperation agenda were discussed during the working consultation held today at Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan. In particular, a number of issues related to the implementation of the RA-EU Comprehensive and Extended Partnership Agreement were discussed.

“An interdepartmental commission is being formed, which will be headed by the RA Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of International Economic Integration and Reforms Vache Gabrielyan: We need to agree specifically on how to move forward and clearly define what each of us should do,” Prime Minister Karapetyan said. 

Deputy Prime Minister Vache Gabrielyan presented the outline of actions and measures planned by sectors, and RA Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Karen Nazaryan reported on the upcoming works and programs within the framework of the RA-EU cooperation agenda, which derive from the logic of a number of fundamental documents related to bilateral partnership.

The Prime Minister instructed the head of each department to analyze the measures provided for by the agreement in the sphere of his/her subordination, to develop an action plan and a road map for their implementation.

We will have an economic growth of more than 6 percent. Serzh Sargsyan

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2017 can be characterized as a year of cooperation between government economic sphere bodies and businessmen. In this regard, all of you should be somewhat satisfied, because when the new RA Tax and EAEU Customs Codes come into force on January 1, you will all see and probably have already made sure that almost all of your suggestions, which were voiced during both formal and informal meetings, have been taken into account there. RA President Serzh Sargsyan said this at the reception for businessmen on New Year’s and Christmas holidays at the presidential residence.


“I am sure that we will have much better results in 2018 than in 2017, because in 2017 enough prerequisites have already been created to close the year with sufficient economic growth. I will not make predictions, but I think we will have an economic growth of more than 6 percent. Thank God, the coefficient of economic activity is high enough. already in 11 months we have had an unprecedented figure of exports equivalent to 2 billion US dollars, which is 20 percent of our GDP. We have never had such a figure. Our trade turnover has already exceeded 6 billion dollars in 11 months, we are talking about foreign trade turnover, but what is extremely important, structural changes have also taken place, because in 2012-2013 we had a foreign trade turnover of almost 6 billion, where, for example, the export of ready-made food was 12-13 percent of that indicator, and now it almost reaches a quarter. This is a very good and important indicator. It is obvious that such indicators have a positive effect on financial and macroeconomic stability,” the president stated.


The head of the country noted that it is the first time in a long period when the Armenian dram does not feel any pressure in December, on the contrary, it is trying to improve its position.


“It’s all interconnected, and I think you have a key role to play in this interconnectedness, so I suggest you all keep working at the same pace or more, especially considering that our new Constitution will come into full force in the spring of 2018. But I expect you, as an important part of our society, to reform your work in many ways. I suggest that in 2018 we all achieve together to bring unofficial, undocumented, circulation to a minimum. We have made a preliminary agreement with the Prime Minister and the government that we will do it so that in 2018 let’s completely regulate the document circulation. This is useful for all of us, for you, for the state, our army and our educators, everyone,” he said.


In the end, Serzh Sargsyan called on everyone to go that way without waiting, without anyone’s prompting.


“We will do our best to ensure that the cooperation is real, not as a checking or, I don’t know, punishing body and a person doing business,” he added.

The year was successful with a number of projects of strategic importance in the energy sector. minister

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According to RA Minister of Energy Infrastructures and Natural Resources Ashot Manukyan, during 2017 it was possible to implement a number of strategically important projects in the field of energy. This was stated in the minister’s message on the occasion of the professional holiday of energy workers.


He noted that with the loan and grant funds provided by the Russian government and with the technical support and direct participation of our partners in the “Rosatom” corporation, the program for the modernization and extension of the operation period of the second power unit of the Armenian nuclear power plant was launched. 

“As a result, we will have an unprecedented level of safety and reliability at the nuclear power plant and a 10 percent increase in production capacity,” he noted.


Continuing to enumerate, the minister said that together with the US partners, it was possible to implement the project for the construction of the Shnogh HPP with a design capacity of 76 MW designed in the Soviet years. Within the framework of the public-private cooperation, the design pre-calculation works have begun, as a result of which we will have another hydropower plant that will make the most full use of the water resources of the Debed River.


In addition, together with the American General Electric Company, modernization works of the Yerevan Thermal Power Station began. As a result, the production capacity of the operating power unit will increase by 7 MW, the efficiency will increase by 1 percent, and the specific fuel consumption will decrease. With the financing of the German development bank KfW, the construction works of the new Armenia-Georgia high-voltage power transmission line and transformer station will start next year. The construction of the second power unit of the Yerevan Thermal Power Plant with a combined steam-gas cycle was started in cooperation with the Italian company “RENCO”, the efficiency of which will reach up to 53 percent.


In addition to this, Minister Manukyan presented, the first three solar plants of production significance were put into operation in the past year, in total 128 solar photovoltaic plants were installed in Armenia. The first product was released by the Solaron factory of solar photovoltaic panels. Although the production volumes of the latter are still small, they are of great importance for the future. Armenia not only did not stay out of technological progress, but also went ahead of many countries in the process of introducing and developing solar technologies.


“The process of liberalization of the electricity market began, the free market operator was formed, the network rules and the schedule of market liberalization steps were approved. At the initiative of the “Tashir” group of companies, the most large-scale investment program of reconstruction and re-equipment in the electrical networks of Armenia began. The construction works of the 3rd overhead line of high-voltage power transmission between Armenia and Iran have resumed and are in progress. As a result of the implementation of the mentioned programs, the structure of electricity production in our country will change. the specific weight of energy produced from own renewable sources in the country’s internal consumption structure will reach 50 percent, the specific fuel cost for unit electricity production by gas plants will be reduced by more than 20 percent, the specific weight of nuclear energy will increase significantly,” the minister noted, emphasizing that all this will contribute to strengthening Armenia’s energy security. And as an electric energy corridor between Iran and Georgia, the role of Armenia will increase, increasing the potential of electricity export by at least 3 times.


Armenia is also not lagging behind in the development of solar and nuclear technologies. The minister is confident that their application in our country will lead to a qualitatively new level of energy security.


“Last year, Armenia became the chairing country of the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency and, at the same time, submitted an application for the chairing country of the Energy Charter Conference. Our country has once again assured the world that it is committed to continue the peaceful use of nuclear energy, as well as its self-proclaimed goals of “green energy” development, improvement of energy efficiency and energy saving,” added Ashot Manukyan.

The pilots of the Russian base fought battles with MiG-29 fighters against the conventional enemy

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The pilots of the “Erebun” air base of the Russian military base of the Southern Military District deployed in Armenia fought air battles against the conventional enemy’s planes. This was reported by the regional news service.


It is noted that the practical training was conducted under the leadership of the commander of the military unit within the framework of the planned combat training of MiG-29 fighter pilots. Fighter crews carried out joint operations with anti-aircraft defense units, conducted conventional air battles, resisting conventional enemy aircraft attacks. 

During the exercises, the pilots made about 30 scheduled flights, in which about 50 units of military land and aviation equipment and more than 150 servicemen, including pilots, representatives of the engineering and technical staff of military airports and air defense units participated.

The participants of the rally against the ban on the import of right-hand drive cars are near the ministry

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At the moment, members of the Right-Hand Drive Initiative and drivers protesting against the project banning the import of right-hand drive cars are conducting a protest march, the final point of which was the Ministry of Transport and Communications.

According to Gevorg Achemyan, coordinator of the initiative, their only demand is the recall and cancellation of the banning project, after which they are ready to be included in the working group and hold discussions with the ministry on this issue. 

“Any citizen, group or initiative can join our future work, we are open to discussion, during which non-problematic provisions will be developed,” he said, noting that earlier today Minister Vahan Martirosyan had already expressed his willingness to meet with members of the initiative. 

It should be noted that around 100 cars are currently participating in the motorcade, although only 60 should have participated in the rally, because in case of a larger number, the initiative should have received permission from the Yerevan Municipality. Nevertheless, the municipality was properly informed about the protest march.

As VERELQ reported earlier, from April 2018, the import of right-hand drive cars to Armenia will be banned. This is clear and difficult to change in this regard, no protest action or motorcade will stop this. The state, which with such a decision confronts more than 30,000 citizens who own right-hand drive vehicles, is not going to compensate the financial loss of the citizens in any way (the steering wheel must be left-handed to sell) and this issue was not even discussed during the discussion of the project. And it leaves no alternative: to drive the car until the last breath, if it is not possible to sell it, because in the near future it will also be banned with the right-hand drive system. use of funds.

This is a biased and anti-Armenian statement. Sharmazanov to the President of the Paraguayan Congress

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On December 22, RA NA Vice President Eduard Sharmazanov sent a letter to the President of the Chamber of Deputies of the Congress of the Republic of Paraguay, Pedro Lorenzo Aliana Rodriguez, where he expressed his concern regarding the unilateral, anti-Armenian statements regarding the Nagorno Karabakh issue adopted by the Chamber of Deputies of the Congress, in which the reality is distorted and only Azerbaijan’s false approach to the issue is presented, in particular, regarding the 1992 Khojaly events.


The Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly noted.


“This is a biased and anti-Armenian statement that harms the peaceful settlement process. The Armenian military units have nothing to do with the events of Khojaly and could not have. On April 2, 1992, in one of the interviews given to the Russian “Nezavisimaya Gazeta” newspaper, Ayaz Mutalibov, the former president of Azerbaijan, expressed himself best, stating that the tragedy of Khojaly was organized by the Azerbaijani opposition to overthrow him, and Armenians have nothing to do with it.


Eduard Sharmazanov expressed hope that from now on it will be possible to convey to the Paraguayan legislators the position of the co-chairs of Armenia and the OSCE Minsk Group and thus to avoid the adoption of false resolutions.