Asbarez: Aztag Daily Editor Discusses Supporting Lebanon’s Armenian Community

July 8, 2020

Shahan Kandaharian is the editor-in-chief of the Beirut-based Aztag Daily newspaper

BY HOURY MAYISSIAN
From The Armenian Weekly

Lebanon is grappling with its worst economic crisis in decades. The Lebanese pound, for many years pegged to the US dollar has significantly lost its value, leading to wide-scale inflation and unemployment.

At 150 percent, Lebanon has the third highest public debt-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio in the world. According to official statistics, in August last year unemployment stood at 25 percent, although numbers have sharply risen since. It is estimated that almost half the population now lives below the poverty line.

As an integral part of Lebanese society, the Lebanese Armenian community has also been significantly impacted by this severe economic decline, coupled with an increasingly deepening political crisis. In this interview with Shahan Kandaharian, editor-in-chief of Aztag Daily—the publication of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) in Lebanon—we delve into this interrelated political and economic crisis, its impact on the Armenian community and what you can do to help.

Houry Mayissian: Lebanon has faced its fair share of economic and political turmoil. However, the current economic crisis has plunged the country into a new low and unprecedented hardship for a significant proportion of the population. How is the current crisis different?

Shahan Kandaharian: The current economic crisis in Lebanon is connected to the pressures and challenges faced by the country’s banks. In the absence of other industries such as mining, large-scale production and tourism, Lebanon’s banking system has been one of the main pillars of the country’s economy. Facilitating this have been the principles of easy and free money transfers, as well as account anonymity. This has largely encouraged foreign investment over the years.

In recent months, banks started imposing restrictions on the amount of US dollar transfers and withdrawals. Details previously not requested were made mandatory. These were the first steps in a gradual tightening of conditions ultimately leading to a significant devaluation of the Lebanese Pound, which for years and throughout many political and economic ordeals had maintained its stability against the US dollar.

The government has tried to adopt certain economic measures to help stabilize the Lebanese pound against the US dollar. However, their efforts haven’t borne fruit, because the exchange rate that is being set is often not being implemented on the black market due to a significant shortage of and demand for the US dollar. This is highly problematic in a country with a “dollarized” economy. The US dollar has been used interchangeably with the national currency for many years, and even salaries for many employees are set against the US dollar. The result has been skyrocketing inflation and unemployment, and predictions for the future are quite dire.

Of course, there is the political context to all of this. In today’s highly interconnected political and economic world order, any country that dares to “come out of line” becomes, in the first instance, subject to economic sanctions. Lebanon is currently under economic siege.

H.M.: What are the political factors driving this economic siege?

S.K.: The political knots of this siege are mainly three. The first is related to the political neutralization of Hezbollah, the Iran-backed, anti-Israeli Lebanese political party. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and various American delegations that have visited Lebanon in recent times have clearly indicated that an organization they consider to be terrorist should not be represented in Lebanese government and politics.

The second issue is the Israeli-Lebanese maritime dispute over oil and gas exploration in the eastern Mediterranean, including demarcation, drilling and usage rights.

The third relates to Trump’s so-called “deal of the century,” also known as his Middle East peace plan, which refuses Palestinian refugees the “right of return” to homes lost to Israel in previous conflicts. While Lebanon is not explicitly mentioned in the plan, the country has a significant number of Palestinian refugees, many of whom remain stateless.

As you can see, all three issues are related to Lebanon’s relations with the state of Israel, in an agenda that is being driven by Washington. Unfortunately, for now there seems to be no prospect that the ensuing economic and financial embargo might end any time soon.

H.M.: In the face of this tightening economic siege as you call it, large scale protests erupted in the country following a government proposal for new taxes on petrol, tobacco and VoIP calls in October last year. Initially peaceful, these protests turned violent. How and why did this happen?

S.K.: This tightening economic siege has provided fertile ground for large scale civic protests. At first they focused on social issues and were largely peaceful, with people gathering to sing, eat and dance together. This movement encompassed groups that subscribe to different political ideologies and agendas – from the far left and the environment to the far right.

However, it did not take long for these protests to turn political, with demands for snap parliamentary elections, the resignation of the government and the abolition of Lebanon’s confessional system. In this regard, it started to seem like they were part of a bigger plan or agenda that is being pushed forward. The methods the protestors were using also changed, increasingly becoming more violent and reverting to hooliganism, the destruction of shops, cars, etc.

Yielding to pressure, the government resigned in late October, paving the way for a government made of technocrats, who were not members of any political party – a key demand by the protestors. Nonetheless, this transition to a technocratic government was only partial, as new government members had their political and religious affiliations and loyalties.

It was under these conditions that Lebanon reported its first case of COVID-19 in early February. It should be said that while the pandemic became another challenge for the country to grapple with, the enforced strict lockdown somewhat stabilized the political situation in the country.

Of course, it was to be expected that as life starts returning to normal post COVID-19, these protests would restart and we’ve been seeing this in recent weeks. In these renewed protests, Hezbollah’s disarmament is also becoming a theme. It seems that new fault lines are appearing in Lebanese society and politics, aligned with a shifting geopolitical order on a wider scale.

H.M.: A very complex situation on all fronts. What has been the impact on the Armenian community – both on a personal and organizational level?

S.K.: All of this has had a very heavy toll on Lebanese society, and by extension the Armenian community. While we don’t have official statistics, alarming figures are often being reported regarding unemployment trends. While some of these figures may be exaggerated, on a daily basis we are witnessing the closure of many companies, shops and workplaces, paving the way to rampant unemployment.

Community organizations are also bearing the brunt as declining income levels have led to staff cuts and shift reductions. The impact on community organizations is very important and cannot be emphasized enough. The Lebanese Armenian community has provided a unique environment for the development of human resources through our many community schools, the only Armenian university in the world (Haigazian University), the Hamazkayin Higher Institute of Armenian Studies, as well as the Catholicosate of Cilicia, through its spiritual and religious education.

This is also true for the preparation of political cadres specially through the ARF and its affiliated structures and organizations. Our professionally staffed offices such as the youth affairs office, and publications such as PakinGaydzerTroshag and others have played a unique role in this regard.

Our community and party organizations and structures are characterized by a level of professionalism that is unique to the community. When these organizations are impacted by the economic crisis and if this ultimately leads to cuts or downsizing, then this process of developing human resources will also be affected. In this regard, supporting our community and its organizations should also be a pan-Armenian, pan-Diasporan and pan-ARF agenda, because the cadres developed here have not only served our own community but the worldwide Diaspora.

The Diaspora’s support is essential to ensure we can keep up this mission. The Lebanese Armenian Diaspora has a key role to play, as it knows very well the impact and capabilities of our community in preparing manpower for the entire Diaspora.

It is a very, very tough time, and as I mentioned before it is difficult to visualize how we can come out of this crisis. The donation drives that are being organized outside of Lebanon are critical. They should not be seen only as a contribution to the Lebanese Armenian community, but as an investment in the development of human resources for the entire Diaspora.

H.M.: There are many fundraising campaigns currently underway in various communities across the Diaspora. Can you provide details of how some of these funds are being used? 

S.K.: These funds are mainly being directed towards providing basic needs such as food and medicine to vulnerable community members, through the ARF Central Committee’s Coronavirus Crisis Committee. The Committee was formed in the initial days of the pandemic to educate community members, assist in prevention efforts, distribute protective gear such as masks, sanitizers, etc. The Committee also assisted with the medical needs of infected community members.

Fortunately, Lebanon is considered one of those countries, where the response to COVID-19 has been quite efficient. The Ministry of Health was very organized from day one and the population, with some exceptions, displayed a high level of social responsibility. We don’t know how many community members got infected with COVID-19, but sadly we have had three deaths.

From the Coronavirus Crisis Committee’s work on the ground, it became apparent very quickly that there is also an urgent need for access to basic goods. Soon the Committee started working on this front as well, assisting thousands of families with no income through the provision of food boxes or vouchers, medications and hospital care costs when required.

Of course, coordinating this requires large sums of money, especially because the crisis is ongoing and we have to continue providing this level of basic emergency aid for as long as required. We would not be able to do this without the support of other communities in the Diaspora.  

H.M.: What additional support does the community need right now?

S.K.: Our immediate priority is emergency relief. If this crisis is prolonged, however, we will need a coordinated effort to support community organizations.

To give you an example, Aztag Daily is currently being published in four pages – a significant reduction from our long-established 10-page daily newspaper. After COVID-19 we started working with minimum staff due to social distancing requirements. With many of these restrictions over, we can now gradually increase our staff count and number of pages. However, this requires additional budgets – keeping in mind that income from paper sales, ads, community announcements and donations has decreased. To boost income, we have been selling our searchable, digitized archives of 90 years to different organizations across the Diaspora. We have also called on our readers overseas to donate to the paper online.

Of course, all community organizations will be impacted long term. The most vulnerable in this regard are our schools due to parents’ inability to pay tuition fees. This kind of support requires careful study and planning of how we can optimize community organizations, how and where funds can be raised, etc. This is a process we have already started looking into.

H.M.: When asked about the situation in Lebanon and its impact on the community during a recent session of the National Assembly, Foreign Affairs Minister Zohrab Manatsakanyan said, “Armenia can’t remain indifferent towards the difficulties faced by the Lebanese Armenian community. Through our diplomatic representatives we are in constant contact with all community organizations and we will continue that dialogue… Armenia has been and will continue to be the motherland of every Armenian who decides to live here. We will continue to work in this regard and prepare the necessary foundation…” From your knowledge on the ground, what has been the response of the Armenian government thus far?

S.K.: The Armenian Ambassador in Lebanon is continuously consulting with community leaders on the various financial, educational and security challenges facing the community. It is worth mentioning that the Hayastan All Armenia Fund has made donations to community schools and media outlets. This was a decision made in Armenia and facilitated by the Fund’s local branch as well as the Armenian Embassy. I think other such assistance will follow in the future.

The “Feed Lebanon” initiative

However, the central element of support from the Armenian government will revolve around repatriation, especially once travel resumes between the two countries. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, we had been seeing repatriation intentions among Lebanese Armenians. I think the Armenian government needs to be prepared for this. An important factor to mention here is that many Armenians living in Lebanon are also citizens of Armenia. As such, in addition to supporting Armenian nationals in general, the government has an obligation to care for its citizens – from providing financial support to evacuating them, if and when necessary.

This is a pan-Armenian agenda and should be viewed within the context of the dwindling number of Christians in the Middle East in general. Other Christian communities in Lebanon such as Chaldeans and Assyrians are stateless. Armenians now have a country and a state. This is a very important factor. The government of Armenia needs to start thinking in this direction. This means looking into a repatriation law, but also measures to support people once they arrive. If Syrian Armenians fled war and bombs with limited or no resources, Lebanese Armenians will be fleeing an economic crisis and will find themselves in a weak position in Armenia.

From financial and social assistance to educational issues and repatriation, Yerevan should stand ready to support the community. As community leaders, we are able to assist the government in these discussions.

Houry Mayissian is a communications professional with journalism and public relations experiences in Dubai, Beirut, and Sydney. She has studied European politics and society at the University of Oxford, specializing on the democratic reform process in Armenia as part of its European integration. She is currently based in Yerevan.

Asbarez: White House Policy on Armenian Genocide ‘Unchanged’

July 8, 2020

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany during Monday’s briefing

The White House on Wednesday said that its policy on the Armenian Genocide, or “Meds Yeghern” as it is being called, “remains unchanged.”

“The President has reaffirmed that the Meds Yeghern was a historic atrocity and tragedy for the Armenian people, as well as our commitment to stand with the Armenian people,” a White House official told Asbarez early Wednesday morning.

The clarification of the policy comes two days after the White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany referred to the “Armenian Genocide Memorial” during her daily briefing on Monday when decrying protesters desecrating memorials across the country resulting from the nationwide social justice movement.

“There seems to be a lack of understanding and historical knowledge when the Armenian genocide memorial, remembering victims of all crimes against humanity, including slavery, is vandalized,” McEnany said Monday in an apparent reference to the recent defacing of the Armenian Genocide memorial in Colorado, which is on the grounds of the state’s capitol and was vandalized along with other monuments there during last month’s social justice protests.

“In the wake of bipartisan Congressional recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and in the context of Erdogan’s increasingly open hostility to our U.S. national interests, the Trump Administration is doubling down on the practice of past administrations–Democratic and Republican–by enforcing a foreign gag-rule against honest American remembrance of this crime against all humanity,” said Armenian National Committee of America Executive Director Aram Hamparian.

The Turkish Embassy in Washington on Tuesday claimed that McEnany’s statement was “a slip of the tongue.”

“We believe that the statement by the Press Secretary was an unfortunate slip of the tongue … In any case, these expressions cannot be accepted,” the embassy said in a Twitter post on Tuesday.

[See video]

In the wake of last year’s near-unanimous recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the House and Senate, President Donald Trump chose to close out his first term in office – isolated and alone – as the last remaining American enforcer of Ankara’s gag-rule against honest U.S. remembrance of this crime, when he failed on April 24 to properly condemn as “genocide” the events of 1915.

“Today, we join the global community in memorializing the lives lost during the Meds Yeghern, one of the worst mass atrocities of the 20th century.  Beginning in 1915, 1 and a half million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths in the final years of the Ottoman Empire.  On this day of remembrance, we pay respect to those who suffered and lost their lives, while also renewing our commitment to fostering a more humane and peaceful world,” Trump said in his April 24 statement before calling on Armenians and Turks “reckon with their painful history.”

ANCA’s Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Fellowship Starts Second Summer

July 8, 2020

Roger Williams University International Relations and Philosophy student Tatevik Khachatryan has been named the 2020 ANCA Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Summer Fellow.

Program Celebrates Youth Leader’s Legacy of Service to Homeland and Heritage

WASHINGTON—The Armenian National Committee of America, for a second consecutive summer, has welcomed a Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Fellow into its signature summer leadership training program.

Selected through a competitive selection process, this year’s fellow, Tatevik Khachatryan, is a double major at Roger Williams University in International Relations and Philosophy. Her participation in the ANCA’s Leo Sarkisian Internship Program represents a living tribute to the memory of Maral Melkonian Avetisyan, a devoted youth leader whose community activism and commitment to the Armenian homeland continues to inspire new generations of young Armenian Americans.

“I am deeply honored and thankful for being chosen to serve in the memory of Maral Melkonian Avetisyan. The development of future professional endeavors through the opportunities and skills gained this summer, will allow me to live up to her goals to follow her aspirations and make myself as well as all Armenians proud. It is vital for me, as an Armenian ambassador, to advocate for the Armenian Cause and bring the experiences gained through the LSI to my local community and those around me.”

“We see, in Tatevik’s talents, intellect, and energy, Maral’s spirit, her contagious devotion to her homeland and heritage,” ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “Maral – in her short time with us – touched so many lives, and continues to inspire so many spirits. We are blessed by her memory and the commitment of her entire family to the future of our community and cause.”

“We are, once again this year, deeply gratified to see Maral’s kind and caring spirit in a new generation of young Armenians – devoted to their homeland and committed to the proud heritage of our nation,” said Maral’s brother Raffi, on behalf of their father Ara, mother Haikanouche, and the entire Melkonian and Avetisyan families. “Tatevik – like Lucine last year – represents the very best of our Armenian tradition.”

Khachatryan has been an active member of the Providence, RI Armenian community since coming to the United States sixteen years ago – attending Armenian school, dancing with Hamazkayin, and serving in the Providence “Varantian” Armenian Youth Federation chapter and local Homenetmen scouting and sports groups. At school, she serves as vice president of the student body and president of the Model United National and Model Arab League teams. She took second place in the Rhode Island National History Day competition traveled to Washington, DC for a presentation on the Armenian Genocide.

The Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Summer Fellowship runs concurrently with the ANCA Leo Sarkisian Summer Internship Program, now in its 35th year.

Lifelong Armenian community advocate Maral Melkonian Avetisyan

Maral Melkonian Avetisyan: A Legacy of Service to the Armenian Cause
Born on Jan. 12, 1983, in Silver Spring, MD, Maral was always the delight of her parents Ara and Haikanouche Melkonian and older brother, Raffi. She attended St. Catherine Laboure from Kindergarten to 5th grade; St. Martin Catholic School from 6th through 8th grade; then graduated from Good Counsel High School and received her Bachelor of Arts in English language and literature in 2007 from the University of Maryland, College Park.

Maral was a proud graduate of the Greater Washington, DC area’s Hamasdegh Armenian School, and devoted her volunteer time to organizations including Homenetmen, Armenian Youth Federation (AYF), AYF Camp Haiastan, Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), Armenia Volunteer Corps (AVC), and Birthright Armenia.

She led by example from the very beginning, holding multiple executive positions in the AYF D.C. “Sevan” Juniors and “Ani” Seniors and attending Camp Haiastan both as a camper and a counselor.  At just 13 years of age, her poem, “When I Wake Up,” published in The Armenian Weekly, encapsulated her commitment to helping the children of Armenia. “When I wake up, I look forward to tell people to help Armenia,” wrote young Maral, who continues “When I wake up, I hope a child from Armenia gets food.” She ends with a rallying cry to her generation, “I got up. I am ready to fight for Armenia.”

In Homenetmen, she inspired fellow Scouts as a khmpabed and traveled to Armenia in 1998 and 2002 to participate in the worldwide jamborees. In 2006, she would return to the Homeland, this time through the AYF, AVC, and Birthright Armenia, to spend the summer working with children at the Naregatsi Art Institute in Artsakh and the Khnko Aper Children’s Library in Yerevan. In 2007, she went back for a second consecutive summer, this time as director of the AYF Armenia Internship Program.

A picture of the Maral Melkonian Avetisyan outdoor sports facility in Arajamugh, Artsakh

Upon her return to the U.S., as she explored career opportunities, Maral interned at the ANCA.  In time she met and married a true kindred spirit—Tigran Avetisyan—and they, together, embarked on a journey of faith and fulfillment that was sadly cut short on April 13, 2015.

In addition to supporting the ANCA’s educational and youth development programs, Maral’s family have shared her powerful legacy of devotion to community and cause through their support for her beloved Camp Haiastan and most recently through the establishment of a soccer field in the village of Arajamugh in the Republic of Artsakh.

Mr. and Mrs. Ara and Haikanouche Melkonian and Ara Melkonian’s sister, Seta Melkonian-Mangassarian, participated last year in the dedication ceremony for the outdoor sports facility, built through the efforts of the Armenian Cultural Association of America (ACAA) Artsakh Fund.  Maral’s legacy and the sports facility in her honor were spotlighted in the ACAA online commemoration of the 28th Anniversary of the Shushi Liberation.

Turkey must face a reckoning for its crimes in Iraqi Kurdistan

Ahval
David Phillips
July 8, 2020
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is pursuing a neo-Ottoman
agenda to expand Turkey’s borders, attacking Iraqi Kurdistan and the
Kurds in northern Syria under the guise of fighting terrorism.
Turkey’s actions are also intended to undermine U.S.-mediated
reconciliation talks between Kurdish factions. Erdoğan opposes Kurdish
unity and has vowed to strangle Kurdish peace and progress lest they
challenge Turkey’s hegemonic interests.
The United States should strongly condemn Turkey’s aggression,
including the recent incursion by Turkish forces into Iraqi Kurdistan.
Erdoğan should be held responsible for violating Iraqi sovereignty, as
well as war crimes by Turkey and its jihadist proxies. It is, however
unlikely that U.S. President Donald Trump will criticise one of his
favourite dictators.
The Kurds must document Turkey’s war crimes, making the case for
accountability to a future U.S. administration. Columbia University’s
research team has collected data on incursions by Turkey in Iraqi
Kurdistan in 2020. The following is a partial account of Turkey’s
crimes:
    January 7: A Turkish air strike kills two people in the Gara
region of Iraqi Kurdistan.
    February 29: Six people are killed during air strikes in the
Metina and Gara regions.
    March 9: Halide Tari, a leader of the women's branch of the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), killed in Qandil.
    March 13: War planes strike the Bradost region of Sidekan, bombing
Khalifa and Geli Reş villages.
    March 26: The Turkish Defence Ministry reports killing eight PKK
members in the Haftanin region of Iraqi Kurdistan.
    April 15: Galya Bekir, a top leader of the PKK, assassinated by
Turkey’s National Intelligence Agency (MİT).
    April 17: A Turkish drone strike against the Makhmour refugee camp
east of Mosul kills two female refugees.
    May 4: War planes bomb Sinine village in the Bradost region,
destroying the road leading to the village.
    May 26. A cross-border action by the TSK in Duhok province wounds
a 13-year-old girl.
    May 27: Turkish war planes target a vehicle, killing five people
in Mawat town, north of Suleimani province.
    May 30: Turkish airstrikes kill 60-year-old Jalal Nuradin and his
32-year-old son Ahmed, and wounding one person in the village of
Hetuta on the outskirts of Amedi district.
    June 7: Turkish bombardments cause huge fires in mountainous areas
in northern parts of the Kurdistan Region, near the villages of Siran
and Meragarsh in Erbil's Soran district.
    June 15: Turkish war planes attack several locations in the
Shingal district, and other locations close to the Makhmour refugee
camp, which is hosting Kurdish refugees from Turkey. Eighteen Turkish
planes targeted Shingal, Makhmour, Gwer, and Erbil, reaching the
Sharqat district nearly 200 km from the Turkish border.
    June 19: Four civilians killed in a Turkish airstrike on Sheladize
district in Duhok province.
    June 21: Turkish air strikes in Duhok province land 1 km away from
Christian community of Bersv and three Yezidi camps, causing extensive
property damage.
    June 25: Air strikes in the Bradost sub-district in northern Erbil
province hit communities near Mount Zararan, causing widespread fires.
    June 25: Air strikes target Sidakan areas in Erbil’s ​​Soran district
    and Kuna-Massi, a picnic area in Sharbazher district in Sulaimani
province, killing and wounding family members on holiday.
Turkey justifies it aggression as counter-terrorism against the PKK.
On May 25, Turkey’s Defence Minister Hulusi Akar boasted that 1,458
PKK militants had been killed in cross-border operations since the
beginning of 2020.
In reality, civilians bear the brunt of Turkey’s aggression. Hundreds
of civilians have been killed and at least 115 border villages have
been evacuated.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has condemned
Turkey’s attacks. Its chair Gayle Manchin has called on Turkey “to
immediately cease its brutal air strikes in Sinjar, Iraq and to
withdraw any ground troops - who represent a dangerous escalation of
violence in an already-fragile area.”
Rep. Eliot Engel, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee,
concurred on Twitter: “I strongly condemn the Turkish air strikes &
ground operations near Kurdish and Yazidi civilian areas...This type
of reckless endangerment of civilian lives is unacceptable, especially
for a NATO ally.”
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo responded by parroting Turkish
propaganda, calling on Turkey, Iraq and the Kurds to work together in
the fight against terrorism.
The Iraqi government ignored Pompeo, protesting Turkey’s violations of
its sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Former Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, a Kurd, warned in a Twitter post:
“The recent Turkish military incursion into Iraqi Kurdistan in the
Zakho region is a very serious geopolitical development. The intensity
of the attack is alarming. Calls by Turkish leaders to revive
historical claims of Mosul province are even far more disturbing.”
Kurds are not the only victims. Many Christian villages in Zakho and
Yazidis in Sinjar fled Turkey’s attacks. Women and children have been
Turkey’s primary victims in Makhmour.
Turkey should face a reckoning for its crimes. Fighting so-called
terrorism does not entitle Turkey to slaughter civilians.
 

Turkey: Plan to Divide, Undermine Legal Profession

Human Rights Watch
Draft Law Reduces Leading Bar Associations’ Authority, Leads to
Creation of Rival Groups
July 8, 2020
(Istanbul) – The Turkish government’s plan to allow for multiple bar
associations appears calculated to divide the legal profession along
political lines and diminish the biggest bar associations’ role as
human rights watchdogs, Human Rights Watch and the International
Commission of Jurists said today. The current bar associations have
not been consulted, and 78 bars out of 80 signed a statement opposing
the plan.
Human Rights Watch and the International Commission of Jurists have
published a question and answer document explaining the draft law,
scheduled for a vote in parliament in the coming days. The document
outlines the government-led effort to reduce the influence of leading
bar associations, reflecting the executive’s growing dissatisfaction
with the bar associations’ public reporting on Turkey’s crisis for
human rights and the rule of law.
“Turkey’s prominent bar associations play a key role in defending fair
trial rights and scrutinizing human rights at a time when flagrant
violation of rights is the norm in Turkey,” said Hugh Williamson,
Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The
government move to create multiple bars and dramatically cut leading
bars’ representation at the national level is a clear divide-and-rule
tactic to diminish the bar associations’ authority and watchdog role.”
The proposed amendments provide that in provinces with over 5,000
lawyers, a group of at least 2,000 lawyers can establish alternative
bar associations. In big cities such as Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir,
several bar associations could be established. The amendments would
also greatly reduce the representation of the largest bar associations
at the national level within the Union of Turkish Bars, the
Ankara-based umbrella body with significant financial resources it
controls and distributes to provincial bars.
The fact that the vast majority of elected legal profession
representatives oppose the move and that the likely impact will be to
greatly diminish the authority of leading provincial bars that have
been critical of certain government initiatives demonstrates that the
aim of the proposed change is to shield the government from justified
criticism, Human Rights Watch and the International Commission of
Jurists said.
Drastically cutting the number of delegates from large bar
associations representing thousands of lawyers to the national Union
of Turkish Bar Associations would reduce the influence of the large
bar associations in electing the national group’s president and
participating meaningfully in other decision-making functions.
A provincial bar association with fewer than 100 lawyers, such as
Ardahan in northeastern Turkey, for example, would be represented by 4
delegates, compared with 3 at present. But a bar association such as
Izmir in western Turkey, with over 9,500 lawyers, which sends 35
delegates, would be entitled to only 5. Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir
Bar, which represent 55 percent of the lawyers in Turkey, would be
entitled to only 7 percent of all delegates within the national union.
The atmosphere of conflict in which the draft law has been introduced,
its timing, and the lack of consultation with the bar associations
themselves provides credible grounds for great concern and skepticism
over the government’s motives, the groups said. Over the past year,
Turkey’s presidency and government have made public statements
strongly criticizing leading bar associations in response to the bars’
legitimate expression of concerns about Turkey’s rule of law crisis
and executive interference in the justice system. The government has
reacted strongly against the bars’ scrutiny of its failure to uphold
human rights obligations through bar association publication of
reports on torture, enforced disappearances, and other rights abuses
ignored by the authorities.
For these reasons, the government’s proposed amendments are clearly
designed to achieve a political purpose unrelated to an effort to
advance or strengthen standards in the legal profession, Human Rights
Watch and the International Commission of Jurists said. The
government’s move is politically divisive and will contribute to
undermining the appearance of independence and impartiality in the
justice system.
“The government should immediately withdraw the current proposed
amendment and embark on a process of full consultation with bar
associations,” said Roisin Pillay, director of the Europe and Central
Asia Programme at the International Commission of Jurists. “The
government’s plan as it stands will only deepen mistrust in Turkey’s
justice system as lacking independence by dividing the legal
profession along political lines. This could have disastrous long-term
consequences for upholding the role and function of lawyers and for
fair trial rights.”
 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/08/2020

                                        Wednesday, July 8, 2020
Court Orders New Hearings On Tsarukian’s Arrest
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia -- Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian arrives for a court 
hearing in Yerevan, June 21, 2020.
Armenia’s Court of Appeals overturned Wednesday a lower court’s refusal to 
sanction the arrest of Gagik Tsarukian, the indicted leader of the main 
opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK).
One of Tsarukian’s lawyers, Samvel Dilbandian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service 
that it ordered a Yerevan district court to hold new hearings on the arrest 
warrant sought by prosecutors.
Dilbandian insisted that the Court of Appeals stopped short of allowing 
investigators to arrest Tsarukian.
Tsarukian, who is one of the country’s richest men, was charged with vote buying 
immediately after the Armenian parliament dominated by Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s allies lifted his immunity from prosecution and arrest on June 15. 
The National Security Service (NSS) said that he “created and led an organized 
group” that bought more than 17,000 votes for the BHK during parliamentary 
elections held in 2017.
Tsarukian strongly denies the accusations. He and his party maintain that 
Pashinian ordered the criminal proceedings in response to the BHK leader’s June 
5 calls for the government’s resignation. Pashinian and law-enforcement 
authorities deny that the case is politically motivated.
The district court refused to allow Tsarukian’s pre-trial arrest on June 21. 
Both the prosecutors and Tsarukian’s lawyers appealed against that decision. The 
lawyers objected to the court’s conclusion that investigators have grounds to 
suspect that Tsarukian handed out vote bribes.
The prosecutors kept pressing for an arrest warrant even after it emerged on 
June 30 that Tsarukian has been infected with the coronavirus.
Armenian President Wants Power To Appoint High Court Judges
        • Astghik Bedevian
Armenia -- President Armen Sarkissian speaks at a meeting with members of a 
government commission on constitutional reform, Yerevan, July 7, 2020.
President Armen Sarkissian has said that he must be legally empowered to 
appoint, rather than nominate, three of the nine members of Armenia’s 
Constitutional Court.
Under the existing constitutional provisions that came into effect in 2018, the 
president of the republic, the government and the country’s judges each nominate 
three Constitutional Court justices who can then be confirmed or rejected by the 
Armenian parliament.
Sarkissian complained about this “ceremonial” power vested in the presidency 
when he met on Tuesday with several members of a government commission tasked 
with drafting new and sweeping amendments to the Armenian constitution.
“If you ask my opinion, the solution is very simple,” he said. “The president of 
the republic should appoint the three Constitutional Court members reserved for 
him.”
Sarkissian argued that as things now stand now, he may “endlessly” propose 
candidates not acceptable the parliament majority. He said this could 
potentially disrupt the work of the country’s highest court.
Both the current and former parliaments repeatedly rejected Constitutional Court 
justices nominated by Sarkissian in 2018 and 2019. Only one candidate proposed 
by the largely ceremonial head of state has been appointed by the National 
Assembly so far.
Parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan disagreed on Wednesday with Sarkissian’s view 
on the issue. “I think that the existing mechanism [for the appointment of 
Constitutional Court judges] is quite good,” he told journalists.
Mirzoyan noted at the same time that the president can discuss the new power 
sought by him with the commission working on constitutional reform.
“What the president of the republic is proposing requires fresh constitutional 
changes,” he said. “As you know, there is a commission discussing and drafting 
possible constitutional changes, and I think that the president could officially 
or orally appeal to the commission.”
Ousted Armenian Judges Appeal To European Court
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenia -- Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian presides over a court 
hearing, Yerevan, February 11, 2020.
The chairman and three other members of Armenia’s Constitutional Court dismissed 
as a result of government-backed constitutional changes have challenged the 
legality of their removal at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).
They also want the ECHR to have them reinstated at least until a verdict on 
their appeal. The ECHR is expected to decide before the end of this week whether 
to issue such an injunction.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step bloc pushed the controversial 
amendments to the Armenian constitution through the parliament late last month. 
The amendments extended a 12-year term limit to all nine members of the 
Constitutional Court, thereby mandating the immediate dismissal of three court 
justices who had taken the bench in the 1990s. They also stipulate that Hrayr 
Tovmasian must quit as court chairman but remain a judge.
In a joint statement issued on June 25, Tovmasian and the three ousted judges -- 
Alvina Gyulumian, Felix Tokhian and Hrant Nazarian -- said they have no 
intention to resign because they believe the constitutional changes are null and 
void. Tovmasian also said separately that the parliamentary majority’s refusal 
to send the changes to the Constitutional Court for examination before their 
passage was unconstitutional.
The defiant judges appealed to the ECHR in the following days. The 
Strasbourg-based court appears to have acted quickly on the unprecedented legal 
action, sending a number of relevant questions to the Armenian government last 
week.
France - The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, February 7, 2019.
The government answered them in writing on Monday, according to its 
representative to the ECHR, Yeghishe Kirakosian.
Kirakosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Wednesday that the ECHR’s decision 
on the injunction sought by the plaintiffs will likely be announced already this 
week.
The official suggested that the ECHR will not order a freeze on the replacement 
of the Armenian high court judges. “As a lawyer, as someone familiar with 
European Court practices … I don’t think that the court has such powers,” he 
said.
Tovmasian and six other court justices have been under strong government 
pressure to step down over the past year. Pashinian has accused them of 
maintaining close ties to Armenia’s former government and impeding his judicial 
reforms.
Tovmasian and opposition figures have dismissed Pashinian’s claims and in turn 
accused the prime minister of seeking to take control of the country’s highest 
court.
In a written opinion made public on June 22, the Venice Commission of the 
Council of Europe largely backed the amendments in question. However, it 
criticized the Pashinian administration’s refusal to introduce a transitional 
period that would “allow for a gradual change in the composition of the court in 
order to avoid any abrupt and immediate change endangering the independence of 
this institution.”
The Strasbourg-based body also said that the authorities should not rush to have 
Tovmasian replaced by another Constitutional Court chairman.
In a June 26 letter to Tovmasian, Venice Commission President Gianni Buquicchio 
reiterated that the amendments are “not in line” with the commission’s 
recommendations.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

First steps: White House spokesperson invokes Armenian Genocide during briefing

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 10:23, 7 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany referred to the vandalism on the Armenian Genocide Memorial during her daily press briefing on July 6, Armenpress reports citing the White House.

In the course of decrying protesters desecrating memorials across the country, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany referred to a memorial to the genocide by its proper name, Massis Post reports.

“There seems to be a lack of understanding and historical knowledge when the Armenian Genocide Memorial, remembering victims of all crimes against humanity including slavery, is vandalized”, Kayleigh McEnany said.

McEnany appeared to be referring to the Armenian Genocide Memorial outside the Colorado state Capitol in Denver, which was vandalized several weeks ago.

Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), also commented, stating: “We may be witnessing, in this one-off statement, the first steps toward an all-of-government recognition of the Armenian Genocide”.

While the two chambers of the US Congress – the Senate and the House of Representatives, have adopted resolutions recognizing and condemning the Armenian Genocide in 2019, the US government still refers to the 1915 killings as “mass atrocities”, refusing to call them genocide.

Kim Kardashian calls for support to small businesses in Armenia affected by COVID-19

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 11:09, 7 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. American-Armenian reality TV superstar Kim Kardashian West calls on to join the fundraising of the Armenia Support Fund to help small businesses in Armenia affected by the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

“Armenia Support Fund has launched a fundraising effort to help small businesses in Armenia struggling as a result of COVID-19. Access to financial aid is not always available and many small, family-owned businesses have reported having to cut production up to 90% in addition to having to let staff go. Consider donating to Armenia Support Fun to help provide grants to these struggling businesses”, Kim Kardashian said in a Facebook post, using  hashtag.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

New hospitals in Armenia to join anti-coronavirus fight

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 11:19, 7 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. New hospitals in Armenia will join the fight against the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), Minister of Healthcare Arsen Torosyan said at a press conference in Armenpress.

“There are very few free hospital beds. We continue this process for already months, although the process of increasing the number of beds continues. And we will have new hospitals that will join the anti-coronavirus fight”, the minister said.

Commenting on yesterday’s 349 new cases confirmed from 1,273 tests, the minister said the number of cases is again low and equal to the number of cases confirmed on Sunday. And this low percentage is mainly linked with the less number of tests conducted. “And the less number is connected with Sunday and Monday. It’s already a long time we see low numbers on Mondays, but the week is just starting and the new cases increase on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and rise in line with our maximal capacity, nearly 2500 tests”, the minister said.

349 new cases of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) have been registered in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 29,285, the healthcare ministry said.

605 more patients have recovered. The total number of recoveries has reached 16,907.

12 people have died in one day, raising the death toll to 503.

The number of active cases stands at 11,711.

The number of people who had a coronavirus but died from other disease has reached 164 (5 new such cases).

So far, 125,088 people have passed COVID-19 testing.

Reporting by Anna Grigoryan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

President of Artsakh receives Armenia’s minister of education

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 11:59, 7 July, 2020

STEPANAKERT, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan received Armenia’s Minister of Education, science, culture and sport Arayik Harutyunyan, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

The President of Artsakh highly valued the level of partnership between the partner structures and stated that the coordinated work of the two ministries is the imperative of the day, and in this context the engagement of the Artsakh specialists to the discussion stages of the upcoming reform programs is very important. He said the current difficulties in the education sector created new challenges, and new approaches are necessary for finding alternative solutions to them.

The Armenian minister thanked the President of Artsakh for the warm welcome, stating that the issues voiced will be included in the joint working discussions between the two ministries.

The meeting was also attended by Artsakh’s minister of education, science and culture Lusine Gharakhanyan.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan