​UN court orders Azerbaijan, Armenia not to aggravate dispute

My Journal Courrier
Dec 7 2021

UN court orders Azerbaijan, Armenia not to aggravate dispute

Dec. 7, 2021

FILE – Ethnic Armenian soldiers walk along the road near the border between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, Nov. 8, 2020. Judges at the United Nations’ top court ordered Azerbaijan on Tuesday Dec. 7, 2021, to protect all the prisoners it captured during the country’s war last year with neighboring Armenia, to prevent incitement of racial hatred against Armenians and to punish vandalism of Armenian cultural heritage.File/AP

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Judges at the United Nations’ top court ordered Azerbaijan on Tuesday to protect all the prisoners it captured during the country’s war last year with neighboring Armenia, to prevent incitement of racial hatred against Armenians and to punish vandalism of Armenian cultural heritage.

The orders came at an early stage of a pair of cases Armenia and Azerbaijan filed at the International Court of Justice that are linked to last year’s war over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

The court also ordered both sides to “refrain from any action which might aggravate or extend the dispute before the court or make it more difficult to resolve.”

Judges planned to rule later Tuesday on Azerbaijan’s request for the court to order Armenia to halt the laying of landmines, to provide Azerbaijan with minefield maps to assist clearance efforts and to take measures to halt incitement by Armenian groups of racial hatred and violence against Azerbaijani citizens.

Both cases stem from simmering tensions over Nagorno-Karabakh that boiled over into a 2020 armed conflict that more than 6,600 people dead. The region is within Azerbaijan but had been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since the end of a separatist war in 1994.

Rulings by the world court are final and legally binding. The court is expected to take years to issue final rulings in the two cases.

https://www.myjournalcourier.com/news/article/UN-court-orders-Azerbaijan-Armenia-not-to-16681732.php

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​How a Highlands community helped survivors of Armenian earthquake

B B C News

Dec 7 2021

How a Highlands community helped survivors of Armenian earthquake


By Andrew Thomson
BBC Scotland


IMAGE SOURCE,LARINA BICHAKHCHYAN
Image caption,
Larina Bichakhchyan was 14 when the earthquake hit in 1988

Larina Bichakhchyan’s life changed forever when she survived an earthquake disaster in the then Soviet Union in 1988.

And 33 years later she has been recalling how support she received from a small community in the Highlands of Scotland helped her recover and inspired her future career path.

About 25,000 people were killed in the Spitak Earthquake on 7 December 1988.

Larina was 14 and at school when the 6.8 magnitude tremor struck tearing the building apart and destroying her home.

She was later to benefit from a fundraising and exchange programme set up by pupils and teachers at Dingwall Academy in the Highlands.

‘There was nothing left, only ruins’

Larina was in her maths classroom in the Armenian city of Gyumri when the earthquake hit.

She said: “We were all shocked and paralysed as we didn’t know what was going on until we saw the desk legs from the classroom above hanging through the ceiling.”

Larina and her classmates fled through crowded corridors as the building collapsed around them.

Many children were killed by falling rumble but Larina managed to get outside to safety.


IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
About 25,000 people were killed in the Spitak Earthquake on 7 December 1988

She made her way home through streets that were now almost unrecognisable due to the scale of destruction.

She said: “There was nothing left, only ruins. It was like Hell. I couldn’t even imagine this scene in the worst horror movie.

“Along the streets there were corpses lying and you heard people crying from under the ruins.”

“When I finally reached my home there was no-one there from my family.

“But then I saw my father running to me. It was like a miracle. Together we climbed on the ruins and started calling out for my mum.”

Larina and her family lived on the fifth floor of an apartment block. Like all the other buildings on the street it had been completely destroyed.

Larina and her father feared the worst because they knew her mother had been at home when the earthquake hit, but they heard her crying out from under the rubble. She had been badly injured and was trapped.

Larina said: “We started with our own hands to dig into the ruins. Some other men rushed to help us and together we were able to at last get her out.”

Larina’s mother was the only survivor from the building. Later that day they were reunited with Larina’s sister and injured brother.

They had to travel to Georgia to get medical help because local hospitals were overwhelmed.

“We were all really happy to find each other and so it didn’t matter that we had lost everything in the earthquake,” she recalled.

Fundraising efforts



IMAGE SOURCE,MARIANNE DRANSFIELD
Image caption,
Marianne’s family hosted Larina to Scotland

The images coming out of the disaster zone shocked the world.

International fundraising began to help with the rescue mission and provide support to the estimated 500,000 people left homeless in the middle of winter.

Dingwall Academy played a major role in collecting donations in Scotland with staff, including head teacher Alexander Glass and chemistry teacher Dr Kerr Yule, helping coordinate the efforts of pupils.

Ewen Ellen who was the head boy at the school at the time said: “We wrote a letter to every single secondary school in Scotland asking them to try to raise some funds for the Armenian Earthquake.”

In Dingwall there was charity carol singing and a concert. Local businesses and organisations made contributions and children put in their own pocket money.

Ewen said: “We raised over £22,000. I remember an official from the Soviet Embassy coming up to collect the cheque. I guess it was a lot of money back then. I’d like to think it made a difference.”

The Soviet authorities invited a group from Dingwall Academy, including Ewen, to visit Armenia to see the ongoing disaster relief work.

During the trip in August 1989 they went to the village of Nalband, which had been near the epicentre of the earthquake, and laid flowers on the graves of people who had died.

Exchange visit to Scotland

It was a difficult time for Larina and her family.

Left homeless they had gone to live with her uncle in the Armenian capital Yerevan.

The Soviet Union was beginning to disintegrate, power cuts were the norm and many shelves in shops were empty.

Larina, who had started learning English at school, was among a group of Armenian pupils selected to make a return visit to Scotland in September 1990.

She said: “It was a period when I was really down psychologically and it was kind of a boost. I felt so proud and so lucky.

“The most vivid memory I have, and the happiest one, is the greeting by the students and staff at Dingwall Academy when we arrived. We felt so special and I remember there was Scottish music with bagpipes.”


IMAGE SOURCE,BILL IRWIN
Image caption,
The unveiling of a friendship stone near Dingwall

The Armenians were put up in the homes of locals with Larina going to stay with the Ramsay family, near Strathpeffer.

Larina says the whole experience was like a “fairy tale”.

Marianne Ramsay was about the same age as Larina and the pair became friends.

They recently got back in contact for the first time in more than 30 years.

Marianne said Larina was accepted as just another teenager in the house: “I remember she had very few personal belongings with her. I wanted her to have some nice things to wear so my Mum took us shopping and bought her jeans and some nice jumpers.

“I remember feeling really pleased and she was absolutely thrilled.”

‘This warmth has stayed with me’

The Armenian youngsters took part in lessons and were taken on day trips across Scotland.

But the highlight was an outing just a few miles up the road to Knockfarrell where a friendship stone brought from Armenia was erected at a spot known as the Cat’s Back.

Larina said she has incredible memories of this event.


IMAGE SOURCE,LARINA BICHAKHCHYAN
Image caption,
Larina says visiting Scotland marked a turning point in her life

“We were taught how to do a dance to Auld Lang Syne,” she added.

“Next to the stone we were singing and holding each other’s hands. This warmth has stayed with me. I can feel it now.”

In 2001 teachers from Dingwall Academy also took a friendship stone they had made out to Armenia.

Looking back on the trip Larina described it as a turning point in her life.

It inspired her to keep studying English and she now works as an English teacher in Yerevan.

She says: “I really dream about bringing my family to Scotland.

“I am so grateful for what the people there did for us, their kindness and hospitality. They showed us children that we were not alone in this world.”

Aliyev demands Armenia name dates for opening "Zangezur corridor"

PanArmenian, Armenia
Dec 7 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net – Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has demanded that Armenia name the dates for the opening of what he called the “Zangezur Corridor”, threatening with “problems” otherwise.

The Azerbaijani side has on multiple occasions spoken about a so-called “corridor” through the southern Armenian province of Syunik that would connect Nakhijevan to the rest of Azerbaijan. The Armenian side, however, has repeatedly denied being involved in negotiations for the provision of a corridor to Azerbaijan, stressing that they have only agreed to unblock transport communications in the region.

“Armenia and the whole world saw that no one could stop us. During the war, there were those who wanted to stop us, and these were quite powerful circles, but they could not stop us,” Aliyev said on Monday, December 6.

“I told them to tell us the date when our lands will be liberated and we are ready to stop. I say the same words today. Announce the date when the Zangezur corridor will be opened, and there will be no problems․”

According to him, “it is not too late, they [Armenia] must accept our conditions and put an end to the insincere approach to roads and communications.”

  In a spring interview with AzTV, Aliyev had said said: “The creation of the Zangezur corridor fully meets our national, historical and future interests. We are implementing the Zangezur Corridor, whether Armenia wants it or not. If Armenia wants it, then the issue will be resolved easier, if it does not want it, we will decide it by force. Just as before and during the war, I said that they must leave our lands, or we will expel them by force. And so it happened. The same will be the fate of the Zangezur corridor  

US defense spending bill points to four specific Azerbaijani transgressions

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 7 2021

A radically scaled back 2022 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)- the result of tense partisan gridlock in the US Senate – stripped out hundreds of amendments, including several provisions backed by the Armenian National Assembly of America (ANCA).

A pro-accountability provision that remained in the final measure calls for a “Report on Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict,” ANCA reports.

While not (as it should) calling out Azerbaijan’s aggression by name, this legislative language does point to four specific Azerbaijani transgressions:

1) US parts discovered in Turkish Bayrakdar drones deployed by Azerbaijan against Artsakh
2) Azerbaijan’s illegal detention and torture of Armenian POWs
3) Jihadist mercenaries recruited by Turkey to fight alongside Azerbaijan against Artsakh
4) Ongoing Azerbaijani violence and violations of agreements and international law

Last month Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez (D-NJ) introduced amendment that would end US presidential waiver authority of Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act/

The amendment (#4177) was one of three amendments to the Senate version of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that deals with US aid to Azerbaijan as well as Azerbaijani and Turkish war crimes committed against Artsakh and Armenia during the 2020 war. 

Senator Menendez also offered a second amendment (#4150) to the NDAA which called for a joint State Department and Defense Department report on Turkey’s use of US technology in its Bayrakdar drones, with a special focus on whether their sale to third countries, like Azerbaijan, violates US export laws. 

A third amendment (#4251) introduced by California Senator Alex Padilla (D) called for a joint State Department and Defense Department report, in response to Azerbaijani war crimes during the 2020 Artsakh war, including the use of US technology during the attacks; the use of white phosphorous, cluster bombs, and other prohibited munitions; and the hiring of foreign mercenaries.

33 years after the devastating earthquake in Spitak

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 7 2021

December 7 marks the 33rd anniversary of the devastating earthquake in Spitak. The earthquake hit 40% of the territory of Armenia, densely populated regions with 1 million people.

The cities of Spitak, Leninakan (now Gyumri), Kirovakan (now Vanadzor) and Stepanavan, as well as hundreds of villages were totally or partially destroyed. Twenty-five thousand people were killed, 500 thousand were left without shelter. 17% of the buildings were destroyed, the work of 170 industrial companies was halted.

Immediately after the earthquake Armenians all over the world united and offered comprehensive support to the Motherland. “SOS Armenie,” “Aznavour for Armenia” and tens of other organizations were created. Many Diaspora Armenians rushed to Armenia, bringing food, clothes and medicine.

Many of them – doctors, psychologists, constructors, architects – stayed in Armenia and personally participated in the rescue works.

A number of countries of the world continued to support Armenia years after the earthquake.  Italians built a whole dwelling district in Spitak, Norwegians built a hospital, which was named after great humanist F. Nansen.

A school built by Englishmen was opened in Gyumri. Prime Minister of Great Britain Margaret Thatcher participated in the opening ceremony.

Armenia movie wins gold at Tokyo Film Awards

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 7 2021

The Armenian movie Light Drops directed by Arman Chilingaryan has been awarded the Golden Winner prize for Best Frama at Tokyo Film Awards, the Armenian Embassy in Japan informs.

The film is about the life in Armenia in 1990s. Tokyo Film Awards is a unique film competition organized by working professionals from film and TV industry. It is mainly focused on short films as its main mission is to promote young talent and their vision.

Armenian researchers publish an academic research on genetic diversity of Armenian grapevine in international journal

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 7 2021

Research Group members of Plant Genetics and Immunology, Institute of Molecular Biology of National Academy of Sciences RA Kristine Margaryan and Garik Melyan have authored an academic research on Genetic diversity of Armenian grapevine published in the scientific journal of Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)  

The study is the first most representative and comprehensive analysis of Armenian grape germplasm and one of the major goals of study was to evaluate the level and relationships of existing genetic diversity across Armenia, aiming to identify genotypes that could provide genetic insights into the Armenian grapevine germplasm structure.

According to the study abstract, the existence of immense grapevine biodiversity in Armeniais strongly linked with unique relief and diverse climate conditions assembled with millennium-lasting cultural and historical context. In the present in-depth study using 25 nSSR markers, 492 samples collected in old vineyards, home gardens, and private collections were genotyped. For verification of cultivar identity, the symbiotic approach combining genotypic and phenotypic characterization for each genotype was carried out. The study provided 221 unique varieties, including 5 mutants, from which 66 were widely grown, neglected or minor autochthonous grapevine varieties, 49 turned out to be new bred cultivars created within the national breeding programs mainly during Soviet Era and 34 were non-Armenian varieties with different countries of origin. No references and corresponding genetic profiles existed for 67 genotypes.

Seyran Ohanyan calls on authorities not to take actions during demarcation talks that could harm Artsakh

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 7 2021

The issues of delimitation and demarcation are sensitive topics which should be addressed in a transparent way, however the authorities avoid making it public and continue deals behind the back of the people, the leader of ‘Armenia’ opposition bloc Seyran Ohanyan stated on Tuesday during a session at National Assembly. Ohanyan reminded that people learn about agreements that have been already reached. 

“The Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression, the occupation of Artsakh territories, the Azerbaijani incursion into the sovereign territory of Armenia, the agenda of delimitation and demarcation talks with Azerbaijan pose an immediate and serious danger to Armenia’s sovereignty and the right of self-determination of the Artsakh people to live in their historical lands. The authorities did utmost to organize a discussion on this very sensitive and important topic of delimitation and demarcation in a closed format,” said Ohanyan. 

The opposition MP reminded about the draft statement authored by opposition lawmakers that asked for full assessment of the actions of the Azerbaijani aggression and demanded the authorities to implement all agreements in line with the acting procedures of the RA legislation. 

Moreover, the statement, which was voted down by members of the ruling faction, also called on authorities not to take actions during demarcation issues that could harm Artsakh.  

ANCA thanks George Clooney for ‘turning down $35 million from Turkish Airlines’

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 7 2021

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) posted a thank-you message to famous actor George Clooney for reportedly turning down $35,000,000 for one day of work advertising Turkish Airlines.

“Turkish airlines – 49% directly owned by Turkey’s toxic Erdogan regime – has been implicated in human trafficking and the cross-border transportation of extremist, jihadist mercenaries,” ANCA posted on its Facebook page. 

In an interview with The Guardian, George Clooney said he had once turned down $35 million from an airline commercial for a single day’s work. Although the actor didn’t specify the airline, it is highly presumed that the company in question was Turkish Airlines, which pays millions of dollars to U.S. celebrities to become spokespeople for its brand.

“I talked to Amal [Clooney’s wife, the international human rights lawyer] about it and we decided it’s not worth it,” explained Clooney, who said their decision came due to the airline being associated with “a country that, although it’s an ally, is questionable at times.”

“So I thought: ‘Well, if it takes a minute’s sleep away from me, it’s not worth it,’” the actor said.

To remind, Amal Clooney was one of the attorney advocating for Armenia in a case regarding the Armenian Genocide that was heard in the European Court of Human Rights in 2016.