Sports: Milan, Inter eye Mkhitaryan

News.am, Armenia
Dec 13 2021

Reigning Italian Serie A champions Inter, as well as Milan are interested in the services of Armenia captain and Roma midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan, calciomercatonews reports.

Both Milan clubs want to acquire the 32-year-old footballer—whose current contract with Roma is expected to run until the end of this season—for free.

Roma have chosen a strategy of making their squad younger, and therefore it is unlikely that Mkhitaryan will play in Rome next season.

International Studies expert: Armenia authorities refuse any anti-Turkish process

News.am, Armenia
Dec 13 2021

The Armenian authorities refuse any anti-Turkish process. International Studies expert Suren Sargsyan wrote about this on Facebook. He added as follows:

"I believe you have noticed that Armenia’s authorities do not join any formal or informal anti-Turkish platforms, international alliances and formats. It is as a result of this very refusal that the [Armenian] authorities are in search of mediators, with a request to normalize relations with Turkey. This is a fact that cannot be denied.

“What is more worrying, however, is that the [Armenian] authorities have also stopped in any way resisting and in any way opposing and countering Turkey. Opposing in international relations is typical even of friendly but rival countries in order to advance personal interests. And this means giving up all opportunities having against Turkey, at some phase being deprived of all tools during the negotiations, remaining in the field of unilateral concessions.

"In fact, Armenia has ceased to be a headache for Turkey, whereas Turkey has not ceased to consider Armenia an enemy."

Opposition ‘Armenia’ Faction MP: Parliamentary speaker is making statements that pose danger to foreign policy

News.am, Armenia
Dec 13 2021

Opposition 'Armenia' Faction MP: Parliamentary speaker is making statements that pose danger to foreign policy

Surprisingly, some people took the demand for the resignation of Speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia Alen Simonyan very hard. The secretary of the opposition "Armenia" Faction, Artsvik Minasyan, said this at Monday’s traditional briefings in the National Assembly.

The MP is certain that in the international arena the parliamentary speaker is making statements that pose a danger to Armenia’s foreign policy. “Simonyan is making statements on Armenian prisoners of war, before which the government has responsibilities. The first thing that the government is obliged to do is to organize the return of the POWs to their homeland. However, the parliamentary speaker is making a statement that not only causes mental pain and suffering, but also causes harm to our country’s defensibility. This might even be organized by the top political leadership,” Minasyan clarified.

According to the opposition MP, the recent brawl in parliament clearly showed that the head of the legislature isn’t following and doesn’t attach importance to observance of the established procedure.


Yerevan Municipality spokesperson: Director of city’s bus operating company resigns

News.am, Armenia
Dec 13 2021

Director of Yerevan Bus CJSC Elbak Tarposhyan has submitted his resignation letter, Spokesperson of Yerevan Municipality Hakob Karapetyan reported on his Facebook page.

“Summing up the results of the events with respect to public transportation in Yerevan today, we inform that:

– Drivers are back to work after discussions that the relevant subdivisions held with the drivers of buses under the subordination of Yerevan Municipality;

– The ongoing improvement of the working conditions of drivers is on the agenda of Yerevan Municipality, and the municipal authorities have already taken and will continue to take active steps in this direction;

– The municipal authorities are consistently making transport reforms that are of vital importance for our capital, creating safe, modern, comfortable and dignified transport for citizens of Yerevan. The potential problems and obstacles can’t distract the municipal authorities from implementing their goal,” Karapetyan wrote.

Why did the police summon Armenia ex-MP Ruben Hakobyan?

News.am, Armenia
Dec 13 2021

Former deputy of the National Assembly of Armenia Ruben Hakobyan was summoned to the police station to give an explanation today.

After exiting the police station, the deputy told reporters that he had been summoned for the speech that he gave during parliamentary hearings in the National Assembly.

“The police viewed that I had made offensive remarks in my speech. They set aside about eight offensive remarks that were mainly about the Prime Minister’s persona. I didn’t give an explanation. I just said that the obscene swear words that the Prime Minister used against the opposition during the election campaign are even somewhat milder than my statements. I gave the investigator advice to not overlook justice because one of the main rules of justice is that any criminal case needs to be observed in the cause-and-effect relationship. The second golden rule is that the police need to prove that I am guilty,” he said.

Touching upon the law criminalizing swear words, Hakobyan declared that this is a slap to democracy.

International Court of Justice Rules Azerbaijan Must Stop Destroying Armenian Cultural Heritage in Artsakh

Dec 7 2021
The ruling points to major implications for protection of all cultural heritage during peacetime.

UN court introduces provisional measures for Azerbaijan on Armenia’s request

TASS, Russia
Dec 8 2021
In accordance with the document, Azerbaijan shall also "protect from violence and bodily harm all persons captured in relation to the 2020 Conflict

THE HAGUE, December 7. /TASS/. The International Court of Justice (ICJ), the principal judicial body of the United Nations, obliged Azerbaijan to prevent the incitement and promotion of racial hatred and discrimination against Armenians pending a verdict on the issue, ICJ President Joan Donoghue said on Tuesday.

"In its Order, which has binding effect, the Court indicates the following provisional measures: The Republic of Azerbaijan shall, in accordance with its obligations under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination <…> take all necessary measures to prevent the incitement and promotion of racial hatred and discrimination, including by its officials and public institutions, targeted at persons of Armenian national or ethnic origin," she said.

In accordance with the document, Azerbaijan shall also "protect from violence and bodily harm all persons captured in relation to the 2020 Conflict who remain in detention, and ensure their security and equality before the law" and take all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration affecting Armenia’s cultural heritage.

The court additionally urged both parties to refrain from any action which might aggravate or extend the dispute before the Court or make it more difficult to resolve.

Armenia initiated a court proceeding in the UN International Court of Justice against Azerbaijan in accordance with the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination on September 14. The lawsuit states that "Azerbaijan has been subjecting Armenia to racial discrimination for decades," which included mass murder, torture and other violations. The lawsuit also demands the imposition of temporary provisional measures against Azerbaijan.

On September 24, Azerbaijan filed a counterclaim, accusing Armenia of committing discriminatory actions against Azerbaijanis, on the basis of their nationality and ethnicity. Both sides have demanded compensation and provisional measures to prevent the situation from deteriorating while the cases are being heard.

2 Years After the War, Azerbaijan Still Grappling with Armenia’s Failure to Submit Accurate Landmine Maps

The Jewish Press
Dec 8 2021

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov recently stated that Armenia had not provided his country with all the landmine maps in the Karabakh region.

The 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war was waged between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and a ceasefire agreement was signed ending all hostilities on November 10, 2020.

According to military experts from both Azerbaijan and Armenia, the ground in those areas is covered with “carpets of landmines.” In July 2021, Azerbaijan handed over 15 detained Armenian soldiers in exchange for maps detailing the location of around 92,000 anti-tank and anti-personnel mines in the newly acquired districts. But on August 14, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev claimed that the maps provided by Armenia were only 25% accurate.

“This greatly slows down the process of demining and restoration and this is a great barrier for formerly internally displaced people returning to their native land,” Minister Bayramov stated, adding: “Since the signing of the trilateral statement, several hundred Azerbaijani civilians have been killed or severely injured as a result of landmines planted by Armenia.”

Ayoob Kara, who served as Israel’s Communications Minister in Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, told the Jewish Press: “It’s very disappointing that Armenia has not done this. Everyone supports a resolution to the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The Armenians must understand that human life has a high value. So long as Armenia does not do this, innocent people die for nothing. We must ensure that people aren’t killed by landmines. This is a bad Armenian policy. A solution must be found.”

Ambassador for Peace Dr. Alexsander Shapiro Suliman explained: “Thanks only to President Vladimir Putin, the two sides met in Sochi. There, the President brought both sides to the table and demanded that they end the conflict.”

“Azerbaijan did not start the conflict,” Suliman stated. “It was Armenia who started the conflict. The Azerbaijanis want to make peace, yet this is how they are being repaid.”

Landmine Monitor 2021 reported that the number of landmine victims around the world rose by 20% in 2020, and noted a “strong indication” of landmine use in the 2020 Karabakh War. In Azerbaijan, 70% of the internally displaced refugees want to return to their homes, yet Al Jazeera predicts that it would take 10 years to rid the area of landmines unless all the maps are handed over.

According to Ambassador Suliman, “Azerbaijan won back lands that belonged to them under international law. Today, the Azerbaijanis have managed to build something that the Armenians have not done in 30 years.” Nevertheless, the fact that the landmine maps have not been fully disclosed yet casts a dark shadow over the prospect for peace between the two nations.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister noted that aside from the landmine maps issue, Armenia has not withdrawn all of its soldiers from Azerbaijani territory, stressing that this obstacle to opening up transportation routes to western and eastern Asia has to be eliminated. According to him, allowing his country to expand continent-wide transportation would serve as “a very important confidence-building measure before normalizing the post-Karabakh war situation.”

“It would also bring enormous economic benefit to all sides,” Foreign Minister Bayramov added, “It will contribute to the development of cooperation and create unprecedented opportunities for the entire region.”

Editor-in-Chief of National Defense Magazine Igor Korotchenko noted recently that during the recent summit in Sochi, President Vladimir Putin told Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan that the two sides in the conflict should create transport corridors, restore the routes, and launch the process of demarking the borders, rather than engage in such obstructionist policies.

“Armenia, a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), has found itself in complete military-political isolation,” putin warned Pashinyan, noting that “Both the CSTO itself and its member states do not intend to encourage Armenian military adventures and provocations.”

International court orders Armenia and Azerbaijan to curb racial hatred

EurasiaNet.org
Dec 8 2021
Joshua Kucera Dec 8, 2021
Azerbaijani deminers clear territory retaken in last year's war with Armenia. (photo: ANAMA)

An international court has ordered Armenia and Azerbaijan to “prevent the incitement and promotion of racial hatred” against one another, and for Azerbaijan to protect Armenian cultural sites on its territory and to ensure the safety of Armenian prisoners who remain in its custody more than a year after the end of last year’s war.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague declined, however, to order the more concrete requests from the respective sides: from Armenia, that Azerbaijan release the prisoners and shut down a racist post-war “military trophy park,” and from Azerbaijan that Armenia hand over all maps of the land mines it has laid on Azerbaijani territory.

The rulings were made in response to twin lawsuits in the court, both filed in September, alleging violations of the International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD). The court is likely to take years to weigh in with a final ruling on the claims, but on December 7 issued its response to each side’s request for provisional measures that the other should take in order to prevent urgent continuing harm.

It is unclear what the practical impact of the provisional measures will be, as neither side acknowledges that it is promoting racial hatred, while Azerbaijan denies that the cultural sites in question are in danger (or sometimes that they are Armenian at all) and that it is abusing the prisoners. There is in effect no enforcement mechanism to ensure that the sides carry out the measures ordered of them.

Both sides presented the rulings as a victory.

The court “granted almost all the provisional measures requested by Armenia against Azerbaijan, and rejected the majority of Azerbaijan’s requested measures,” Armenia’s representative at the ICJ, Yeghishe Kirakosyan, wrote on Twitter. “Armenia welcomes the orders and looks forward to their practical implementation by Azerbaijan and its high-ranking officials.”

Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that it would comply with the measures related to racial discrimination, “which reaffirm existing treaty obligations that Azerbaijan takes seriously and is committed to upholding.”

Baku’s statement did not acknowledge the provisional measure on Armenian cultural sites, instead focusing on the positive: “With respect to the Court’s indication of provisional measures requested by Armenia, we note that the measures related to repatriation of detainees, as well as the closure of the Trophy Park in Baku, requested by Armenia have been rightfully rejected by the Court.”

The CERD is one of the few treaties to which both Armenia and Azerbaijan are both parties, making it a rare international forum in which they could potentially find legal support for the various post-war grievances they hold against one another. Accordingly, each side sought to present its case in terms of racial discrimination.

On the issue of the Armenian prisoners, the court ruled it was not “plausible” – one of the key legal tests to determine whether a provisional measure is warranted – that they remained in custody because of their national or ethnic origin. It did, though, say that the inhuman and degrading treatment that the Armenian side documented was plausibly the result of the prisoners’ origin. Similarly, it found plausible the claim that Armenians’ rights were being violated by Azerbaijan’s vandalization and desecration of Armenian cultural heritage sites.

As for the trophy park, the court’s ruling suggested that the Azerbaijani government had already taken steps to remove the most offensive exhibits – a move that had not been previously acknowledged by Baku.

On October 15, about a month after Armenia filed its suit with the ICJ, Azerbaijani news website Mikroskop reported that models depicting Armenian soldiers using stereotyped facial features, as well as a display of helmets purportedly from Armenian soldiers killed during the war, had been removed from the park. A park official told Mikroskop that the removal was only temporary, for repairs.

But Azerbaijan’s lawyers at the ICJ said that the removal was in fact permanent.

“[T]he Court takes full cognizance of the representation made by the Agent of Azerbaijan during the oral proceedings regarding these exhibits, namely that mannequins depicting Armenian soldiers and displays of helmets allegedly worn by Armenian soldiers during the 2020 Conflict have been permanently removed from the park and will not be shown in the future,” the court wrote in its ruling. The court was shown two letters from the director of the park which reportedly indicated that “[t]he mannequins and helmets will not be displayed at the Military Trophy Park or the Memorial Complex/Museum in the future.”

On the issue of the mine maps, the court also ruled that Armenia’s actions or inactions vis-à-vis planting land mines did not fall under the CERD’s remit.

“The claims relating to rights/obligations deemed not plausible under CERD at this phase (POW release, landmine removal) remain part of the case but face a (very) uphill battle going forward,” tweeted Mike Becker, an international lawyer at Trinity College, Dublin.

Also deemed plausible by the court were Azerbaijan’s claims with respect to “Armenia’s failure to condemn the activities within its territory of groups that, according to Azerbaijan, are armed ethnonationalist hate groups that incite violence against ethnic Azerbaijanis.” In its complaint, Azerbaijan had singled out one particular group, the paramilitary organization VoMA.

“The big take-home for Armenia is the protection of cultural sites. No big take-home for Azerbaijan, but it did get the order on Armenia to prevent racial hate speech in its territory,” tweeted another human rights lawyer, Gabriel Armas-Cardona of the University of Leipzig. “This was always going to be hard for Azerbaijan. CERD is an old-school territory-based human rights treaty. Now that Armenia doesn't control any territory in dispute, Azerbaijan doesn't have much it can claim under CERD,” he added.

“We are really happy with the court’s decision,” Sheila Paylan, an international law expert who advised the Armenian side in the lawsuit, told Eurasianet. “Even though they didn’t specifically order the release of the [prisoners of war], a large majority of the judges affirmed that their rights need to be preserved and that there is cause for concern.”

In the longer term, however, the roughly parallel rulings could benefit Azerbaijan, said Kamal Makili-Aliyev, an international lawyer at Malmö University. Makili-Aliyev has argued that Armenia’s case could have implications, under the emerging “responsibility to protect” doctrine, for the Armenian side’s efforts to gain international recognition for Nagorno-Karabakh, the territory at the heart of the conflict between the two sides.

The recent ruling makes that less likely, he told Eurasianet.

“The court acknowledged that there is a possibility that CERD was violated by both parties,” he said. “This weakens the Armenian hand somewhat, because 'responsibility to protect' is policy (not law) and relies on higher moral claims. If Armenia is also found to be in breach of the CERD, its moral claims are substantially diminished.”

 

With additional reporting by Ani Mejlumyan.

Armenia opposition aides claim they were ‘attacked’ by ruling party MPs

Dec 8 2021
 8 December 2021

Reporters attempt to take interviews in the immediate aftermath of the incident. Still from video via News.am

Three aides to opposition MPs claimed to have been physically assaulted by the ruling party’s MPs and their staffers in the office of a deputy speaker of parliament.

Shortly after the incident, one of the three opposition aides, Gerasim Vartanian told reporters that they had been attacked in the office of the Deputy Speaker of Parliament Ruben Rubinyan. 

Syune Gevorgyan, an aide to Ishkhan Saghatelyan, deputy speaker from the Armenia Alliance, the country’s largest parliamentary opposition faction, said on 7 December she witnessed the incident. 

Gevorgyan claimed she recognised Civil Contract MPs Vahagn Aleksanyan and Hrachya Hakobyan — the brother-in-law of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan —  and Sisak Gabrielyan, among the alleged assailants. 

In his initial comments to the press, Hrachya Hakobyan confirmed that a physical altercation took place, but denied that he participated in it. ‘When I arrived, it had already begun’, he told reporters. ‘I don’t know who is to blame.’

In another interview, he said that the opposition aides had been disrespectful towards him and Civil Contract MP Sisak Gabrielian.

He also claimed that one of the Armenia Alliance aides in the altercation had been accused of participating in the ‘attempted murder’ of then-parliamentary speaker Ararat Mirzoyan during the 10 November 2020 riot in Yerevan

Armenia Alliance MP Aram Vardevanian has condemned the violence as ‘preplanned’ by the ruling party.  He claimed that the ruling party MPs had invited the opposition one the false pretence of  ‘drinking coffee’.

Speaking in parliament on 8 December, Armenia Alliance faction head Seyran Ohanyan described the incident as ‘hooliganism’ that ‘will not be forgotten’.  

Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) has launched an investigation into the incident.

Parliamentary brawls between the opposition and ruling party took have erupted repeatedly since the June 20 elections.

The Special Investigative Service had launched an investigation into an August brawl when opposition MP Vahe Hakobyan and fellow opposition MPs brawled with ruling party MPs during a parliamentary session. As of yet, no charges have been laid.

In a previous parliamentary clash later that same month, opposition MP and former Minister of Defence Seyran Ohanyan threw a bottle of water at ruling party member Hayk Sargsyan for calling previous defence ministers ‘traitors’.