Armenia’s Ombudsman expresses concern over Azerbaijani actions to Office of CoE Human Rights Commissioner

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
 Monday
Armenia's Ombudsman expresses concern over Azerbaijani actions to
Office of CoE Human Rights Commissioner
YEREVAN, JULY 24, ARMENPRESS. Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman
Tatoyan held a phone conversation with the representative of the
Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe (CoE) over the
shelling of bordering villages of Armenia’s Tavush province by the
Azerbaijani forces on July 20-22, 2017, the Ombudsman’s Office told
Armenpress.
Ombudsman Tatoyan expressed concern that the Azerbaijani armed forces
are targeting mainly civilians and their property, shell the schools,
kindergartens, houses of the village, especially at the times of the
day when the possibility of causing danger to civilians’ life and
health is higher.
The Ombudsman stated that the international community must publicly
condemn the targeted actions against civilians.
According to the agreement reached between the Ombudsman and the
Office of the CoE Commissioner for Human Rights, the data on the
recent shelling towards bordering Chinari, Barekamavan villages of
Tavush province and their consequences will be summed up and submitted
to the Commissioner.

ANC: Ruling Republicans readying Armenia for Sargsyan’s premiership

PanArmenian, Armenia
July 24 2017


ANC: Ruling Republicans readying Armenia for Sargsyan’s premiership

PanARMENIAN.Net - Deputy chairman of the Armenian National Congress (ANC) Levon Zurabyan said that president Serzh Sargsyan is the most active representative of the ruling Republican party (RPA), while prime minister Karen Karapetyan has gone by the wayside.

According to Zurabyan, the RPA is thus preparing Sargsyan for premiership.

In response to a question about whether Sargsyan would like to become a PM or would rather remain the chairman of the ruling party, Zurabyan said such a scenario is easy to predict.

All the steps that the ruling party has taken are interconnected, the former opposition lawmaker said, citing the constitutional reforms, which he said enabled Sargsyan’s regime to reproduce.

“Afterwards, they falsified the parliamentary elections and created the staff they wanted,” Zurabyan said during an iterview on Armenia TV.

The Armenian opposition has been insisting on some clarity about the position of the prime minister after Sargsyan’s term as president ends in 2018. Various RPA officials used to say that Karapetyan will continue heading the cabinet, but opinions come to vary lately.

eng/news/244762/

First train on Turkish section of Kars – Tbilisi railway

Railway Gazette

24 Jul 2017

TURKEY: A ceremonial first train ran on the Turkish section of the Baku – Tbilisi – Kars railway corridor on July 19, carrying Minister of Transport, Maritime & Communication Ahmet Arslan as well as Georgia’s Minister of Economy and the CEOs of the national railways of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan. The officials also inspected the tunnel across the Turkey – Georgia border as part of their visit.

‘We hope that this line, together with the Marmaray tunnel in Istanbul, will significantly increase the importance of the railway in this region, between Asia and Europe’, said Arslan. ‘This railway will increase co-operation in this region and expand trade.’

The 849 km BTK programme of route modernisation and new construction is designed to create a rail corridor from the Caspian Sea to Europe. This will replace the former route through Armenia which has been out of use since the Turkey – Armenia border crossing was closed in 1993.

The BTK project includes the construction of 110 km of new standard gauge line from Kars via the border at Kartsakhi to Akhalkalaki in Georgia, where there will be facilities for gauge changing and transhipment between the 1435 mm and 1520 mm networks. Özgün Yapı & Çelikler has built the 76 km section within Turkey under a YTL12·2bn contact. From Akhalkalaki 153 km of unused 1 520 mm gauge line to the junction at Marabda is being rehabilitated.

Completion of the corridor is expected later this year. The BTK route is expected to carry up to 500 000 TEU/year, and an agreement has now been reached for the construction of a freight terminal in Kars. Although the route is primarily intended to carry freight, Stadler is supplying Azerbaijan’s national railway ADY with a fleet of gauge-changing sleeping cars for a planned Baku – Istanbul passenger service.

  • A detailed article on the Baku – Kars – Tbilisi railway project and its role in the wider development of Eurasian transport corridors appeared in the June 2017 issue of Railway Gazette International magazine, which subscribers can access in the digital archive.

Armenia & Georgia develop relations based on common interest, Nalbandian and Janelidze exchange letters

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
 Monday
Armenia & Georgia develop relations based on common interest,
Nalbandian and Janelidze exchange letters
YEREVAN, JULY 24, ARMENPRESS. Armenian foreign minister Edward
Nalbandian and his Georgian counterpart Mikheil Janelidze, Vice Prime
Minister, minister of foreign affairs, exchanged messages on the
occasion of 25th anniversary of establishment of diplomatic relations
between Armenia and Georgia, the foreign ministry told ARMENPRESS.
In his message, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of
Armenia mentions that the twenty five years are just a drop in the
bucket of the centuries-old chronology of our two nations. However, in
the modern history of the two countries, that have regained their
independence, this past quarter of a century defines an important
phase of establishing and enhancing interstate friendly relations, a
period that has been filled with significant achievements and
successes.
Edward Nalbandian stresses, that Armenia is determined to exert joint
efforts in further strengthening and developing the relations based on
this traditional ties, adding that it will be possible to make full
use of the existing opportunities in a more efficient manner, once the
whole potential of our bilateral relations is explored. The Foreign
Minister of Armenia highlighted that Armenians of Georgia play a
significant role in strengthening the traditionally friendly
Armenian-Georgian relations and serves as a bridge between our two
countries.
Concluding the message Foreign Minister of Armenia expresses the
confidence that through effective cooperation the Ministries of
Foreign Affairs of Armenia and Georgia will continue to make their
important contribution to the development of relations between the two
countries.
Foreign minister of Georgia notes that over the last two decades,
since regaining the independence, Georgia and Armenia have developed
relations, based on mutual understanding and common interests.
Minister states, that two countries have already achieved a
significant progress in various directions, with many more
opportunities ahead.
Mikheil Janelidze commends the existing relations between two people
and close ties between the two countries fully comply with the
traditional friendship between two nations and are based on solid
historical foundation and the mutually shared principles of freedom
and democracy.
Foreign Minister of Georgia emphasized with satisfaction the close and
effective cooperation of the Ministries of Foreign Affairs of Georgia
and Armenia, and confirms the readiness to undertake all the necessary
efforts to further strengthen our cooperation in bilateral and
multilateral formats.

RPA lawmaker doesn’t rule out any scenario as to Armenia PM’s post

PanArmenian, Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net – Lawmaker from the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) Karen Bekaryan said he doesn’t rule out any scenario surrounding the prime minister’s post in 2018 after Serzh Sargsyan’s term as president ends.

Bekaryan cited three elements in the issue.

“From a legal viewpoint, there is no problem,” he said, according to RFE/RL Armenian Service.

“The second element is the determination of the political majority by the ruling party: relevant candidates and some clarity will be introduced when the right time comes.”

“Also, there is the third element which refers to certain individuals, including the current president, and more particularly, his willingness and political decision concerning his next stop,” Bekaryan added.

Asked about the possibility of Sargsyan remaining at the helm of the country as the chairman of the ruling party, the lawmaker said he doesn’t rule out any scenario as RPA has yet to launch discussions over the matter.

Earlier, Deputy chairman of the Armenian National Congress (ANC) Levon Zurabyan said that president Sargsyan is the most active representative of the ruling Republican party (RPA), while prime minister Karen Karapetyan has gone by the wayside. According to Zurabyan, the .

Armenian Genocide Reparations: An Absolute Must

Armenian Weekly

I found the article “Before We Talk about Genocide Reparations, There Is Another Accounting Due” by Henry Theriault an intellectually challenging read that raised several questions in my mind.

His philosophy background, vast experience, and involvement in issues related to genocide, and unique thought process and reasoning have resulted in a distinct approach and conclusions. I had to read the article several times to comprehend his argument. And even though I felt I agreed with some of the points he made, I cannot agree with his conclusion (or what I understood it to be).

Mount Ararat (Photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

Dr. Theriault says he believes and clearly states that reparations are just. But he strongly expresses his opinion that it is not the right time for action to be pursued because any compensation would be misused: “Political elites will enrich themselves instead of using it for what is desperately needed by the general population.”

His main argument is that the system and government in Armenia are full of rampant corruption and so they cannot be trusted. He makes a strong indictment by his statement that “the large-scale theft of assets through corruption, privatization and commu-capitalist exploitation of labor is a significant factor in the economic vulnerability and desperation of the Republic today.”

His analysis suggests that the situation is desperate. Admittedly, the points he makes are valid. My intent is not to argue against or question his analysis. However, I still hope and pray that the untenable current situation will change for the better. It has to. What is the alternative? The new government has announced major reforms and changes to governance. Hopefully, they will be implemented. Change is never easy, and it takes time.

Those thoughts led me to think about the Armenian Legal Center for Justice and Human Rights (ALC), announced in Sept. 2016. I feel, as many Armenians do, that reparations are an absolute must. And even though we have a very late start compared with the Jews and Israel (regarding Holocaust reparations from Germany), our cause is equally and clearly as just. Whatever the Turks do or say, the historical facts cannot be erased, altered, or denied.

Therefore, I contacted Kate Nahapetian, Executive Director of the ALC, to get some feedback on questions I had about developments since the ALC’s formation.

I sent Kate the following questions, which she kindly and most graciously answered. Her answers are reproduced verbatim.

***

V.A.: What was the response to requests for contributions/funding? Is the funding adequate to start the work needed?

K.N.: The initial funding for the creation of the Armenian Center for Justice and Human Rights came from the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Endowment Fund, which continues to support the ALC. Following the initial grant, we have received additional donations from individuals. Like so many nonprofits, funding is tight, so we welcome any donations big or small. Seeking reparations in the face of a powerful and intransigent foe such as the Turkish Government is a monumental task. It is not inconceivable, however. There are many examples of previous historical atrocities which were addressed decades later and after previous failed attempts. We currently have one staff member, but rely on many volunteers.

 

V.A.: Have we started to put together a legal team?

K.N.: The ALC has an international board with attorneys and experts on the Armenian Genocide in the US, Armenia, Canada, Austria, Australia, and Lebanon. We have collaborated with and have partnerships with law schools. We have partnered with some of the best law schools in the United States, including the University of Southern California Human Rights Clinic, which is drafting a report on the legal basis for Armenian Genocide reparations, and the George Washington University Law School, with which we cosponsored a talk by Harvard Post-Doctoral Fellow Umit Kurt, highlighting the injustice of Turkish laws used to plunder Armenian wealth during the genocide. We are in continuing communications with international lawyers from Argentina to Germany, in addition to lawyers with successful track records pursuing property claims against Turkey in both Turkish and European courts.

In addition, we have a team of lawyers and law students who have been examining issues surrounding the Treaty of Sevres, the Kars Treaty, and Turkish property laws.

 

V.A.: Is progress being made on legal actions to be taken?

K.N.: We have developed some potential cases and continue to work with international lawyers and clinics to develop innovative strategies for redress.

In addition to the mass murder and destruction of Armenian lives and cultural heritage on lands the Armenians inhabited for thousands of years, the Armenian Genocide was an evil enterprise of industrial, government-sponsored property theft.

The ALC seeks to catalogue the [property] deeds that still exist today. The records exist in Turkey’s land registry, which are virtually impossible to access. When Turkey considered allowing public access to these records as part of its bid to join the European Union, the military quickly intervened and stated that maintaining the secrecy of these records was a matter of national interest. Reports continue that even parties with deeds in hand are prevented from accessing Turkish land records, which would confirm family ownership.

Many individuals across the globe have deeds of family properties in their possession. By collecting all these individual records in one place, the ALC hopes to both learn of potential claims, which can be pursued for reparations, in addition to being a clearinghouse for this information for potential future negotiations.

The ALC’s website (https://armenianlegal.org/) has a link where people can provide documentation of their properties (https://armenianlegal.org/document-preservation-form/), whether it is a deed, sales contract, photograph, or family testimony. The key information we need are the names of the property owners, the town where the property is located, a description of the property, and, if possible, its exact location.

The more documentation we have collected in one place, the stronger our chances of recovery will become. As a community, we are empowered when we collect this information in one place.

***

I am most thankful to Kate for her responses and updates on the work accomplished by the ALC.

This needs to be pursued vigorously, with no hesitation. For it to be successful, and it must be successful, it needs the full active support of all Armenians worldwide, morally and financially. It is a formidable task, but it can be accomplished. We have to make it happen.

Turkey: Inside, Outside, Upside Down

The Armenian Weekly

Inside, Turkey is a mess.  Corruption is, though I suspect un(der)reported, once again fully present.  Ended is the honeymoon of this century’s first decade when Turkish citizens thought they had brought to power a political party, Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), that was free of the corruption tainting the country’s political elites.  All the leaks about the fishy doings of Erdogan’s family and inner circle can only be the tip of the iceberg we hear about outside the country: think about the cabinet members who had to resign a few years ago, or the Italian connection from a little over a year ago, or the biggie—Daesh/ISIS oil smuggled from Iraq and Syria through Turkey (though this particular item straddles the inside/outside line).  But perhaps the most impishly fun one is Sevan Nişanyan’s escape from unjust imprisonment thanks to Turkey’s long established (dating back to Ottoman times) traditions of being able to bribe your way out of jail.

Erdogan (Photo: R4BIA.com)

Whenever governments start scapegoating sectors of their polity, you can be certain that rot has set inside the country.  Gulen and his supporters are the biggest scapegoat for Erdogan and his coterie.  By using their alleged responsibility for last summer’s coup attempt, Erdogan has tried to further consolidate his power by firing tens of thousands of public employees.  Of course another scapegoat is provided by the country’s minorities.  Armenians have long been the longest-horned devils for Turkey.  But being numerically insignificant, that minority is not as practical.  Meanwhile the Kurds are.  It seems reigniting a civil war with the PKK was worthwhile for Sultan—er, excuse me—President Erdogan.  This way he could have yet another scapegoat/excuse to grab more power.  But, that has led to incidents such as the one from a few days ago where three Turkish soldiers are ambushed and killed, the video for which was released by the Kurds.  How embarrassing is that?

But the scapegoating isn’t all that is being justified by the coup.  The crackdown and accompanying de-democratization inside Turkey are of immense proportions.  Any semblance of independent media is almost gone, even online sources such as YouTube, etc. have been subject to periodic blackouts at Ankara’s behest.  In just the last few weeks we’ve witnessed the arrest of ten human rights activists, including Peter Steudtner, a German who was in Turkey for a digital security conference.  And here’s a dead give-away as to the ridiculous state of fear and harassment being created in Turkey.  Erdogan, while attending last month’s G20 summit in Hamburg, claimed that conference had “the character of a continuation” of last year’s coup!  This is designed to create hysteria and distraction among Turkey’s citizens so they won’t see how bad their current government has become.

All this provides excellent cover for the state’s ongoing property grabs.  Just two weeks ago I wrote about the 50 Syriac properties usurped.  For the past two years, various Kurdish dominated municipalities have lost control of their own governance and land.  Even some Armenian churches have been subjected to re-expropriation, landing those matters in Turkey’s courts.

But the best clue to the decay besetting Turkey and its ruling AKP is the shedding of leadership within the party.  Abdullah Gul and Ahmet Davutoglu, respectively former president and prime minister, are nowhere to be seen.  In his quest for ultimate power and control, Erdogan is sidelining some of the most competent people in the party.  As the circle of leadership shrinks and leaves fewer independent poles of power with which he must contend, Erdogan will become ever more paranoid, tyrannical, and possibly unhinged in his actions.  This bodes ill for Turkey, its citizens, and neighboring countries.

Which, transitions us to the inside/outside cusp.  The oil smuggling and German’s arrest have already been mentioned.  But there’s also Turkey’s questionable base just inside Iraq, supposedly used to fight Daesh/ISI, but really, a form of leverage against the Kurds.  More recently, the movement into Syria of Turkish troops (stationed between the two zones controlled by Kurds) and the attacks by those forces along with Turkey’s puppet “Syrian rebels” against the Kurds are a profoundly problematic development.  It’s almost redundant to remind of Turkey’s arming and supporting various groups in Syria as part of its efforts to overthrow Assad, in cooperation with some of the Gulf States.

Turkey is also messing around on the Nakhichevan front.  Some sort of “free trade” arrangement seems to be brewing.  Even more destabilizing, though is the possible construction of Turkish military bases there and in Georgia.  That could have a very significant impact on the balance of power calculation between Yerevan and Baku.  Plus, Moscow could react since it sees these locations as its sphere of influence.  In the case of Nakhichevan, Tehran, too could react.

But the most jaw-dropping news on the inside/outside cusp of the last few days is the exposing, by Turkey’s semi-official Anadolu news agency, of the location of ten U.S. bases in the Kurdish zone, along with troop counts.  I did read one assertion that this was news gathered on the ground by the agency, but I do not believe it.  As a D.C. think tank’s representative already said, “It’s hard not to see this as a f— you” to the U.S.

Moving outside of Turkey, we have an endless series of gaffs, arrogant actions, and utterly unacceptable behaviors.  The easiest example to cite is the shooting-down of a Russian plane by Turkey a year and a half ago.  But that has, for now, been set aside by both countries after some groveling by Erdogan/Turkey.  But given both’s interests, these two countries will never trust each other.  I suspect that but for the Ukraine situation, Russia might have started a mini-war with Turkey over the plane incident.

Outside, in Europe, we have witnessed the cessation of Turkey’s acceptance process into the European Union.   A few months ago, Erdogan was barred from holding public rallies in Germany and Holland.  After the German parliament’s Armenian Genocide recognition, a series of responses between the two countries has now escalated to the point that Germany is withdrawing its troops from Turkey’s Incirlik NATO base.  All along, some fairly harsh (on the diplomatic scale) words have been exchanged.  Remember, Germany and Turkey (Ottoman) were allies in WWI.  In WWII, Turkey was quietly supporting Germany.  Hundreds of thousands of Turks live in Turkey.  Yet we have this impressive level of discord between the two.  Let’s also not forget the manipulation of Syrian (and other) refugee flows by Turkey for use as leverage against Europe—noting that one of the main causes of the Syrian refugee crisis is Turkey itself.

Outside of Turkey, there are lots of suspicious or untoward activities.  Why does Turkey need military bases in Sudan and Qatar?  Why does Turkey transgress into Greek airspace and waters dozens and dozens of times a year?  What about the thuggery of Erdogan’s bodyguards in various countries (thankfully, the U.S. Congress has acted to bar some arms sales as a result of the recent beating of peaceful demonstrators by those goons)?  I can’t help but wonder if Turkey didn’t have a hand in the shipping of arms to terrorists on Azerbaijani diplomatic flights (recently exposed by a Bulgarian reporter and brought to the Armenian world’s attention by Harut Sassounian), particularly those emanating from Bulgaria.

Cleary, not only is Turkey living in an upside down “universe” of its own government’s making, but that same government is trying to turn the neighboring states topsy-turvy with dangerous, destabilizing, actions and provocations.  The sheer terror Ankara experiences whenever Kurds make any gains is also a dangerous factor that can lead to foolhardy moves on Turkey’s part.  Plus, the grandiose aspirations of restoring Turkish influence in formerly Ottoman held lands can lead to very dangerous situations, fraught with the likelihood of much bloodshed and injustice.

We must develop a plan to diplomatically isolate Turkey and do justice to all its residents by developing a “version 2” of the Sykes-Picot agreement that Ankara lives in dread of.  We must make the world see how risky are Turkey’s continued existence in its current form and the resultant behaviors on the international scene.  Armenia, Cyprus, Greece, Iran, Iraq, and Syria (in alphabetical order) are all currently targets of Turkish mischief.  One could even add Israel to the list.  Only Bulgaria and Georgia are not currently negatively impacted by Turkey among its immediate or very (geographically) very proximate neighbors.

We have to cleverly, quietly, achieve or ends, and, as a fringe benefit, assist our neighbors who live at the foot of the Armenian Plateau.

Blogger Lapshin’s extradition not on agenda yet, advocate says

Panorama, Armenia

The extradition of Russian-Israeli blogger Alexander Lapshin, who was sentenced to 3 years in prison by the Baku Court of Grave Crimes in Azerbaijan, is not on the agenda yet, Lapshin’s advocate Eduard Chernin announced, according to RIA Novosti.

The advocate explained that his extradition is not possible at the moment since the court ruling has not entered into force, adding that the defense has not decided yet to appeal the verdict or not.

“He [Lapshin] is still being kept at the Baku detention facility since the verdict has not entered into force yet. I am meeting with him in the next week, afterwards it will become clear whether we will appeal the court verdict or not. Lapshin has not made up his mind in this respect yet,” the advocate added.

To remind, Alexander Lapshin was extradited from Belarus to Azerbaijan in February, where he was wanted after visiting the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) and criticizing the Azerbaijani leadership.

Azerbaijani prosecutors launched a criminal case into “repeated public anti-state calls” and “illegal crossing of Azerbaijan’s state border,” punishable with a prison term of five to eight years.

The extradition and persecution against Lapshin was widely slammed by international community as a gross violation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of speech and movement.

On July 20, the Baku Court of Grave Crimes sentenced the blogger to 3 years in prison.


Canadian defence deal with Azerbaijan raises new questions about arms export controls

CBC Canada

By Levon Sevunts – Radio Canada International,
Posted: Jul 24, 2017 2:45 PM ET Last Updated: Jul 24, 2017 2:45 PM ET

A photo of a Canadian-made armoured personnel carrier that are being delivered to Azerbaijan. (Levon Sevunts/Radio Canada International) 

A deal by a Canadian company to export armoured personnel carriers to Azerbaijan and set up a joint production of these military-style vehicles in the oil-rich former Soviet republic is once again raising questions about the efficacy of Canada’s defence export controls.

Toronto-based INKAS Armored Vehicle Manufacturing has signed a deal with Azerbaijan’s interior ministry under which the company has already delivered “a few” Canadian-made armoured personnel carriers (APCs).

The privately owned company has also set up a joint venture with an Azerbaijani firm to produce APCs in Azerbaijan, which has been embroiled in a simmering armed conflict with neighbouring Armenia since the breakup of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, said Roman Shimonov, vice-president of marketing and business development at INKAS.

  • Violence flares up in decades old separatist conflict between Azerbaijan, Armenia

“Azerbaijan is a very unique country in terms of geographic location, in terms of geopolitical challenges, because they are in the middle between Iran and Armenia and Turkey,” said Shimonov, who has also been appointed CEO of the joint venture AZCAN Defence Solutions. “And they have resources, more resources than other countries, and they are looking to be able to have more solutions in terms of defence — and not only defence, they’re looking to protect their borders.”

Shimonov says the company has fully complied with all the government rules for the export of military goods.

“We cannot sell anything without getting a written permit from export control and once we get it, we know that our authorities, our Canadian authorities, have checked and they have approved,” Shimonov said.

The interior of an armoured personnel carrier. A Canadian company has been exporting the vehicle to Azerbaijan, a country with a questionable human rights record. (Levon Sevunts/Radio Canada International)

Global Affairs Canada, the federal department responsible for issuing export permits for military and controlled goods, said “all applications for permits to export dual-use, military and strategic goods are assessed on a case-by-case basis, based on the specific goods and technology being exported, the destination country, and the specific end-use and end-user, amongst other criteria.”

“Regional peace and stability, including civil conflict and human rights, as well as the possibility of unauthorized transfer or diversion of the exported goods and technology, are actively considered,” said Global Affairs spokesperson Natasha Nystrom.

And yet the federal government granted INKAS permits for the export of APCs despite ongoing concerns over Azerbaijan’s poor human rights record.

“Canada and Azerbaijan benefit from cooperation on issues of mutual interest and concern,” Nystrom said. “However, we are concerned with the recurring crackdown on fundamental freedoms in Azerbaijan, particularly with respect to journalists and human rights defenders in the country.”

An explosion of a downed Azerbaijani drone in the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan on April 4, 2016. (Vahram Baghdasaryan/AP)

Groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have criticized Azerbaijan’s human rights record and accused it of a “thorough crackdown on dissenting voices,” as well as persistent reports of torture and other ill-treatment perpetrated by its law enforcement agencies.

  • Human Rights Watch report: Azerbaijan
  • Amnesty International report on Azerbaijan’s human rights record

In November 2015, Azerbaijani police used Israeli-made armoured personnel carriers similar to those produced by INKAS in a controversial security operation that resulted in the death of six people and dozens of arrests in the town of Nardaran, about 30 kilometres northeast of the capital Baku.

The granting of the export permits also seems to contradict the government’s own export control goals that stipulate among other things that Canadian defence exports “do not contribute to national or regional conflicts or instability.”  

In April 2016, tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia once again erupted into an intense four-day war in contravention of a ceasefire signed in 1994. The Azerbaijani military launched a surprise offensive against Armenian forces that control the breakaway Armenian-populated region of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas.

A local resident walks past police vehicles after a mass protests in the town of Ismailli, 200 kilometres northwest of the capital Baku. (David Mdzinarishvili/Reuters)

In addition, there are almost daily reports of clashes, sniper fire, artillery exchanges and commando raids along the entire line of contact between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces in the disputed region.

According to data collected by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) over the last two decades, Azerbaijan has spent over $30 billion of its oil wealth to rearm and retrain its military, purchasing high-tech weapons and munitions from Russia, Israel, Turkey, Ukraine and Pakistan.

“They feel that part of their land is taken and they want to be competitive in terms of capabilities, and that’s why they’re looking to protect their soldiers and they’re looking for the best product, and when it comes to the best product in our industry, we definitely can offer a lot of solutions, very cost-effective solutions,” Shimonov said.

And yet at the same time, Shimonov claims INKAS doesn’t produce military vehicles.

“We mostly focus on paramilitary and law enforcement solutions,” Shimonov said during an interview at the recent CANSEC defence industry trade show in Ottawa. “Our vehicles are not designed to provide any solution in the military field.”

However, that’s not what the company claims in its sales pitch on its own website.

“The INKAS Sentry APC is designed to be used by military forces, SWAT, and other law enforcement agencies all over the world,” reads the vehicle overview of its Sentry model APC.

“The INKAS Huron APC is a multipurpose tactical vehicle, which is able to protect its passengers in high threat environments within almost any climate condition. The vehicle is designed and equipped to operate in police and military tactical missions, convoy protection and border control all over the world,” reads the overview of its Huron model.

“AZCAN’s new ISR (intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance) vehicle is armed with a Pitbull light remote weapon stations jointly designed by the Israel based companies IAI and General Robotics,” reads the description of the vehicle published in press release at the ADEX 2016 arms show in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku, where Shimonov presented the Sentry APC to President Ilham Aliyev.

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev agreed to purchase armoured personnel vehicles from a Toronto-based company. (Sergei Grits/AP Photo)

“The Pitbull LRWS integrate sensors for automatic detection of enemy targets with accurate and fast counter fire capabilities.”

Cesar Jaramillo, executive director of the peace group Project Ploughshares, said the export permit issued to INKAS illustrates an ongoing problem with Canada’s arms exports control mechanism.

The government needs to take a much closer look at the destination country’s general human rights record and the notion of risk and end use when it makes determinations on issuing export permits for military goods, Jaramillo said.

“Even if it’s on case-by-case basis, I think the general knowledge about problems in a certain country should be again an indicator which cases should merit more scrutiny than others, and I think that countries like Saudi Arabia, Azerbaijan, perhaps, fall into that category of greater scrutiny,” Jaramillo said.

“If the likely end use of any equipment going to Azerbaijan or anywhere else poses or triggers a certain risk, then the export we believe should not proceed.”

Criminal cases launched into Azerbaijan’s targeting Armenian settlements

news.am, Armenia

YEREVAN. – A criminal case has been launched in the Criminal Department of the Tavush Investigative Department of the Armenian Investigative Committee into the shelling by the Azerbaijani armed forces of Chinari village of Tavush province, its kindergarten, destroying and damaging the property of villagers and attempting to kill minors on July 20. 

From 1:00 pm to 6:30 pm on July 20, the Azerbaijani armed forces fired in the direction of Chinari village, targeting peaceful residents, the Investigative Committee informed Armenian News – NEWS.am.

In particular, shots were fired in the direction of a minor (born in 2000) in the Chinari village cemetery, who hid behind a tomb in order to protect himself from the bullets of the adversary and remained there for about two hours.

The village was subjected to lengthy shelling, as a result of which the kindergarten of the village, houses of the villagers, their property and grass heaps were damaged. According to the preliminary data, the incurred loss amounts to more than 12 million AMD.

Five criminal cases have been launched in the Investigative Department of Tavush provincial Investigative Department.