Syrian clarinetist and visual artist collaborate on La Jolla stage to explore the idea of ‘home’

La Jolla Light
March 27 2022

Syrian clarinetist and composer Kinan Azmeh vividly remembers watching the 2011 uprising in his homeland on TV from New York. The violent government response left many dead and began a huge exodus of refugees.

“I can’t describe the magnitude of that,” said Azmeh, who became an American citizen last year. “I wasn’t able to write for a year. I continued to play — that’s how I pay my rent. But it severely affected my creative process.”

Azmeh broke his unwanted hiatus by composing a single song, “A Sad Morning, Every Morning,” which he shared with visual artist Kevork Mourad, his longtime friend.

Mourad, an Armenian-Syrian American, animated the song, which can be found on YouTube. “A Sad Morning” was the cornerstone of what became “Home Within,” a unique collaboration of music and visual art created live onstage.

The La Jolla Music Society is bringing “Home Within” — one of two Silkroad Ensemble tours this season — to the Baker-Baum Concert Hall at La Jolla’s Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center on Sunday, April 3.

In an unusual format, Azmeh and five other Silkroad musicians will perform as Mourad works at an easel, with his drawings projected on the screen behind them.

“Syria inspired ’Home Within,’ but this project encourages investigating the larger concept of ‘home,’” Azmeh said. “Is home the place you grew up and have memories of? Or is it a place you’d like to contribute to?

“I’ve always said Syria belongs to all of humanity. The events in Ukraine, visually there are similarities. Tragedies do repeat.”

(Piotr Poloczanski)

The Silkroad musicians accompanying Azmeh and Mourad are bassist Shawn Conley, cellist Karen Ouzounian, oud player Issam Rafea, percussionist Shane Shanahan and violinist Layale Chaker. Chaker and Azmeh are married and live in Brooklyn, N.Y. They take their 1-year-old son with them on tour.

Azmeh said it took about a year for him and Mourad to build the piece from the 3½-minute “Sad Morning.” Sections of the piece are improvised.

“I’m a collaborator,” said Azmeh, who on March 15 was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a member of the National Council on the Arts. “Part of it is driven by the clarinet, which is a single-line instrument. If I want to harmonize, I need another player.

“Music is unique in that we can all talk and listen to each other at the same time. I did write the music for this but gave time for the musicians to bring their own stories. Not just the musicians — Kevork will say something. I like to play with the fine line between composer and improviser.”

Azmeh, who performed in San Diego in 2019 with the string quartet Brooklyn Rider, acknowledged that the tragic situation from which “Home Within” springs “puts me back in deep emotions every time we play it. We hope it will open a window to investigate more. Our job to create art, but also to document history.”

“I hope someone in the audience is from Ukraine,” he added. “The concert ends on an optimistic note. I believe we can rebuild something. Art can heal the human soul.”

Azmeh and Mourad are longtime members of the Silkroad Ensemble, the performing part of Silkroad, which was founded in 1998 by acclaimed cellist Yo-Yo Ma. He saw the history of the ancient Silk Road trade route linking Asia and Europe as a model for exchanging ideas and innovations.

Silkroad has four music-oriented components: creation of new music, social impact initiatives, educational partnerships and the Silkroad Ensemble, a diverse collective that performs worldwide.

In 2017, the ensemble won a world music Grammy Award for the album “Sing Me Home,” which features Azmeh as a clarinetist and composer.

“Silkroad is a collective of communicators who think larger than themselves,” Azmeh said. “Whether they play, dance or do spoken word, they are all thinkers trying to make sense of the world.”

When: 7 p.m. Sunday, April 3

Where: Baker-Baum Concert Hall, Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center, 7600 Fay Ave., La Jolla

Information: (858) 459-3728, ljms.org ◆

 

How Does Armenia Normalize With Turkey Without Betraying Its Past?

March 29 2022

Farzad Bonesh

Published March 28th, 2022 – 11:05 GMT

Past Relationships

Turkey was one of the first countries to recognize Armenia’s independence, but differences between Yerevan and Ankara over issues such as borders, the 1921 Kars Treaty, and the 1993 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict virtually stalled relations.

Following the Nagorno-Karabakh war and the occupation of the territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan by Armenia, Turkey closed the land borders of the two countries, and the two sides’ diplomatic or trade relations were severed. Efforts by the two neighboring governments to break the stalemate in relations began in 2010 with a process called football diplomacy. The two sides also signed protocols for the establishment of diplomatic relations, but there were significant internal, regional and international conflicts and challenges to the normalization of relations, which ultimately led to the failing normalization of the relations.


A new round of relationship normalization

For the first time since 2009, efforts have been made to revive relations between Turkey and Armenia in the past year. In August 2021, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan mentioned “positive public signals from Turkey” and his readiness to send a positive signal.

Therefore, after Armenia and Turkey announced their readiness to start talks between the two countries, they appointed special representatives for the talks. They then agreed in Moscow and Vienna to continue talks without preconditions with the aim of fully normalizing relations.

In this regard, during the first visit of a high-ranking Armenian official to Turkey in a decade, the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Turkey recently discussed in Antalya ways to normalize relations between Ankara and Yerevan.


Mutual motivations for normalizing the relationships

A set of geopolitical, political, economic, regional and international reasons are considered by Turkey and Armenia to reduce divergence and start the process of normalization of relations.

Armenia is a landlocked country between Georgia, Turkey, Iran and Azerbaijan. Continued tensions with Turkey have led to the closure of much of the country’s borders and its geopolitical isolation. Therefore, for the optimal use of the geopolitical and geoeconomic potentials of the country, normalization is necessary. With the end of the embargo on the import of Turkish goods, Armenia can reduce the smuggling of goods and boost trade through customs. Normalization and opening of borders can also increase exports to Turkey.


The geopolitical situation in the South Caucasus has changed since the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. With Moscow not strongly supporting Yerevan in the recent Nagorno-Karabakh war, Armenia has strong political will to achieve full normalization of relations with Turkey and peaceful and sustainable development in the region. Therefore, in general, considers it positive.

In fact, Armenia is relying on public opinion polls to normalize relations with Turkey, while not wanting to be left out of regional energy and transportation projects. Normalization of relations with Turkey also promises to strengthen Armenia’s hit economy and reduce its dependence on Russia. It is also expected that if Turkish-Armenian relations return to normal, there will be a greater chance for peace in Nagorno-Karabakh.


Turkey has broader reasons for reconciliation with Armenia. In recent years, Ankara has been isolated and sanctioned by the European Union and the US Congress, but a severe recession has prompted Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to contact former enemies such as the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

The normalization of relations with Armenia will also help Ankara improve its bad relations with the West, especially in the wake of President Biden‘s recognition of the Armenian genocide. Joe Biden has previously called on Erdogan to open the country’s borders with Armenia. Therefore, Ankara’s efforts to satisfy Washington and Brussels can be very useful for Turkey in various dimensions.

On the other hand, rebuilding relations between Turkey and Armenia could reduce Russia’s influence in the South Caucasus and reduce Armenia’s dependence on Iran, in Turkey’s favor.

Turkey’s new and more influential role in the South Caucasus, after its enormous assistance to Azerbaijan, could be in line with the normalizing relations with Armenia by reopening regional transit and trade routes. Ankara seeks stronger political unity of the Turkish republics. In the meantime, the normalization of relations can help in opening of the regional transport corridor through the territory of Armenia and the connection of Turkey with Azerbaijan.


Unlike in 2009, Azerbaijan “fully” supports the normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia. As Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said: “Azerbaijan is pleased with the actions we are taking.” In addition to these efforts, the establishment of “unconditional” diplomatic relations could lead to the reopening of the joint Turkish-Armenian border for wider trade in Turkey’s dire economic situation.

Also, while most opposition parties, even the MHP in Turkey, are in favor of repairing relations with Armenia, the normalization process has a better chance. The two countries can benefit from restarting regular flights. The opening of the borders will also have a positive effect on the communication of the people, the reduction of tensions and historical differences, and the transition from the Turkish-Armenian divide.

Obstacles to normalization of relations:

Positive signals continue to normalize relations, with the highest level reached between the two countries in the past 12 years, but several factors have raised concerns about a repeat of the past.

Armenia suffered a bitter defeat in the war with the Azerbaijani army, which was provided, trained and supported by Turkey.

The Pashinyan government has faced public criticism since the recent Nagorno-Karabakh war. Public opinion, nationalists, the Armenian opposition, and parliamentary opposition factions in Armenia are fiercely critical of the negotiation process and are concerned about the cost of resolving disputes.


Negative views, historical background of at least a hundred years since the First World War have negatively affected the mentality of the people of the two countries.

In addition to the unresolved issues regarding the political situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Azerbaijan-Nakhchivan-Turkey corridor project, and the close relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan based on the “one nation, two states” and Conflict on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border as of January 2022 model may block the negotiations again.

The massacre of Armenians in the Armenian version is completely different from the version of the Turkish government. In the official version of the Turkish government, the claim of massacre and extermination of all Armenian deportees is far from the historical and objective facts and it does not describe the events of 1915 as “genocide”.


The denial of the Armenian genocide has had a profound effect on both nations and their relations. Armenians’ diaspora (with more than 7 million people in more than 100 countries) are highly influential in making demands and putting pressure on the Turkish government.

 They are trying to recognize genocide. However, Turkey is also pursuing easing pressure for international recognition of the Armenian genocide and explicit recognition of the current borders between Armenia and Turkey. But in the Armenian diaspora, the normalization of relations regardless of their demands is a betrayal of the history and nation of Armenia, and the need for both sides to respect each other’s territorial integrity means putting away the “Western Armenia” and the idea of a Greater Armenia to Armenians.

Although Russia has emphasized on its support for diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey, Moscow does not want the future to be to the detriment of its peacekeepers and its geopolitical role in the region and Armenia. Also, any normalization process should not be against Iran’s geopolitical and economic interests.

vision

So far, the Armenian and Turkish governments have taken a pragmatic approach to normalizing relations, and the issue of genocide is not on the agenda as it was in 2009. In fact, the goals and motives of Turkey and Armenia can overcome historical differences. Also, the process of bilateral normalization of Armenia and Turkey is not necessarily related to the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, the legal consequences of genocide, etc., but removing the major obstacles to relations requires several steps.


At the same time, solving historical, legal, territorial problems, changing the direction and view of the people of the two countries is not easy and is not possible in the short term. But if marginal and historical preconditions are not met for normalization, the reopening of embassies and the opening of passages will be available in the short term.

Armenia Seeks Russia Aid in Nagorno-Karabakh Flare-up

March 29 2022

Armenia urged Moscow on Monday to remove Azerbaijan’s troops from an area of Nagorno-Karabakh policed by Russian peacekeepers in the latest flare-up of a bitter territorial dispute in Russia’s backyard.  

Armenia’s Foreign Ministry rejected Russian claims of a full withdrawal by Azerbaijan troops from a village in Nagorno-Karabakh, a largely Armenian-populated territory that’s recognized internationally as part of Azerbaijan. They also called for an investigation into the actions of Russian peacekeepers.

The Russian Defense Ministry said Sunday that Azeri troops had withdrawn after a recent incursion. 

“We consider it important to conduct a proper investigation into the actions of the [Russian] peacekeeping contingent during this entire period of the incursion of Azerbaijani units,” Armenia’s Foreign Ministry said, repeating previous calls. 

“We expect Russian peacekeeping forces in Nagorno-Karabakh to take concrete measures to stop the incursion of Azeri units into the peacekeepers’ area of responsibility and the withdrawal of Azeri armed forces,” it added.

Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry denied withdrawing from the disputed area. 

“There have been no changes in the positions of the Azerbaijani army in the village of Farrukh and in the surrounding heights, which are part of the sovereign territory of our country,” it said.

Armenia said that three of its soldiers were killed and 15 wounded in clashes last week. Azerbaijan did not report any casualties. 

Ceasefire violations have been common since the two ex-Soviet countries ended a six-week war in 2020 that claimed more than 6,500 lives.

Armenian officials have linked recent clashes to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and pro-government Azeri media seeking to discredit the Russian peacekeeping contingent. 

Russia deploys more peacekeepers to halt ‘Azerbaijani advance’ in Nagorno-Karabakh

March 29 2022
 29 March 2022

Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh. Photo via Telegram.

Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh have ‘deployed reserves’ in order to ‘block further advancement by the Azerbaijani army’ near the village of Parukh (Farukh).  

Azerbaijani forces had appeared to have withdrawn from Parukh by Tuesday, and Russian peacekeeping forces are currently stationed in the village. According to officials in Stepanakert (Khankandi), Azerbaijani forces remain stationed on the Armenian side of the line of contact including on a key strategic height near the village. 

Residents of Parukh were evacuated prior to the Azerbaijani advance and remain unable to return home.

Around 2,000 Russian peacekeepers were deployed to the conflict zone as part of the tripartite agreement brokered by Russia to bring an end to the 2020 Second Nagorno-Karabakh War.

The latest deployment by Russia was preceded by a statement on 26 March from the Russian Ministry of Defence accusing Azerbaijan of violating the agreement. They called on the Azerbaijani army to ‘retreat to its previous positions’, and leave the ‘zone of responsibility of the Russian peacekeeping contingent’. 

Tigran Grigoryan, a Yerevan-based political analyst, reported that in spite of the withdrawal of the Azerbaijani military from Parukh,  there had been a large military build-up near the Karaglukh height, one of the contested hills in the recent clashes.

‘It’s not about dozens of soldiers but a few hundred’, Grigoryan told OC Media

Just recently, Azerbaijani troops, according to Grigoryan, were freely passing through Parukh despite the presence of Russian peacekeepers, which makes the return of the village’s residents — who were forced to evacuate on 22 February — impossible. 

‘For now, the possibility of [military] escalation in that area is very high’, Grigoryan said.

On the evening of 24 March, the Azerbaijani military crossed the line of contact separating Armenian and Azerbaijani forces in Nagorno-Karabakh and entered Parukh and the surrounding areas. Three soldiers from the Nagorno-Karabakh Defence Forces were reported killed, and 14 wounded in clashes with Azerbaijani troops.

According to officials in Stepanakert and Moscow, Azerbaijan utilised Bayraktar combat drones during the engagement, though Baku has denied the claims. 

In response to a statement by Russia’s Ministry of Defence, the Azerbaijani Defence Ministry redirected accusations of violating the tripartite declaration toward Armenia.

‘The complete withdrawal of the remnants of the Armenian army and illegal Armenian armed groups from the territory of Azerbaijan has not yet been implemented’, the statement reads. ‘It is Armenia, not Azerbaijan, that violates the provisions of the declaration.’

According to point four of the tripartite declaration, Russian peacekeepers were to be deployed alongside the ‘withdrawal of the Armenian troops’. 

Armenia has argued that this referred to their withdrawal from seven districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh which were handed over to Azerbaijan. The declaration also does not explicitly mention the Nagorno-Karabakh Defence Forces, which are made up of local residents.

Despite denying that they violated the tripartite declaration, the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence admitted to the advances made by the Azerbaijani army across the line of contact into Parukh and ‘surrounding heights’ which they wrote, are ‘sovereign territories of our country’. The Ministry also denied that their troops had withdrawn from ‘those positions’.

‘Our army is in full control of the operation’, the statement reads. 

The Ministry also accused Russia of violating the ‘essence of bilateral relations’ as well as the Declaration on Allied Interaction, signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on 22 February.  

[Read more: Azerbaijan’s ‘neutrality’ and the Declaration of Allied Interaction with Russia]

 For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.


Amid new tensions, Azerbaijan says ready for peace talks with Armenia

Al-Arabiya, UAE
March 29 2022
AFP

Azerbaijan said on Tuesday it was ready for peace talks with Armenia, after Yerevan urged Baku to negotiate a comprehensive peace treaty amid new tensions over Nagorno-Karabakh.

“If Armenia is serious about a peace agreement, then concrete steps have to be made. We repeat that Azerbaijan is ready for this,” the foreign ministry in Baku said in a statement.

The ministry pointed out that Azerbaijan had proposed that the two countries hold peace talks a year ago.

In 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a war over the long-contested enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh which claimed more than 6,500 lives.

A ceasefire deal brokered by Russian President Vladimir Putin saw Armenia cede swathes of territory to Azerbaijan, and Moscow deploy a peacekeeping contingent to the mountainous region.

Last week, Yerevan and Moscow accused Baku of violating a ceasefire in the Russian contingent’s zone of responsibility.

They accused Azeri forces of capturing the village of Farukh in the Askeran region of Karabakh, where three Armenian soldiers were killed in a shootout last week.

Baku rejected the accusation, insisting the area was part of its internationally recognized territory.

On Monday, Armenia’s security council accused Azerbaijan of “preparing the ground for fresh provocations and an offensive on Nagorno-Karabakh.”

It urged Baku to “immediately start talks on a comprehensive peace treaty.”

Armenia also demanded an investigation into the Russian peacekeeping contingent’s actions during the Azeri “incursion” and urged the Russian force to take “concrete steps” to diffuse tensions.

A major flare-up in Karabakh could pose a challenge for Moscow, at a time when tens of thousands of Russian troops are engaged elsewhere, in Ukraine.

Moscow has deployed some 2,000 peacekeepers in Karabakh and a land corridor linking it with Armenia.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. The ensuing conflict claimed around 30,000 lives.

https://english.alarabiya.net/News/world/2022/03/29/Amid-new-tensions-Azerbaijan-says-ready-for-peace-talks-with-Armenia-

READ ALSO AT

https://www.arabnews.com/node/2052951/world

Armenia’s Ararat Valley – a sacred place for global dialogue

March 29 2022
by GUEST CONTRIBUTOR

The geopolitical mosaic has been going through drastic changes recently. The ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, the continuous Turkish-Azeri aggression and ethnic cleansing against Artsakh and Armenia as well as the rise of Erdoganocracy have signaled a big reshuffle in the world.

Since the dangerous lack of wisdom and leadership on both sides of the Atlantic the world is approaching a tumultuous age of iron curtains and even nuclear arms conflicts. And if one adds the recent advancements in military tech such as the AI or highest-precision arms, we get a grey picture – mankind is in danger. It then becomes clear that an abrupt reversal is necessary to cope with the aforementioned challenges.

When the world and the global political leadership in particular thumbed their noses at the 2020 Turkish-Azeri vicious aggression against Artsakh and Armenia it became clear that mankind will experience permanent violence and aggression in many parts of the planet.

Genocides, ethnic cleansings, partition of countries and societies, rise of terrorism and transnational crimes, the weakening of states and the strengthening of multinationals – what we have got for the 21st century instead of eradicating wars and poverty, rebuilding our planet  and heading to space exploration.

The bleakness notwithstanding, there is a room for change, for a brighter future. The birth of strong global leadership through dialogue has been a rampant pattern in history during dark times. Thus the world is in dire need of an entity to build up trust and dialogue between rivals.

The Armenian nation has been capable of playing that buffer – dialogue window role for centuries. The historical preview of this unique Armenian journey of several millennia was detailed in the May 2021 article titled “The New Armenia – a Russia-Turkey wedge, an East-West buffer”.

The asymmetry of current international relations and the dangers posed by Russia-US rivalry, the severe sanctions on Russia and the flow of millions of refugees from the Middle East, Afghanistan and Ukraine, the permanent aggression against Armenia and Artsakh by Turkey and Azerbaijan must make the world think twice before drawing their policy vis-a-vis Armenia and the 10-million World Armenians.

All of a sudden it turns out that Armenia is one of the fewest countries on Earth that has good political, cultural and civilizational relations with the West and the Rest, including ancient nations such as China, India, Iran and so forth.

This is a geopolitical, cultural, ideological and political capital that the world needs to utilise otherwise it will be late. Instead of focusing on mundane statements regarding Azerbaijan vs Armenia, it is of utmost importance to put forward a big role for Armenia to play in building up a big global dialogue platform.

Moreover, the 10 million World Armenians are everywhere with hundreds of thousands of influencing figures in their host countries who can build dialogue cells and networks. One does not need to invent a new bicycle as there already is one – Armenia and World Armenians.

Last but not least, there are already good examples of Armenia being used as a dialogue between certain countries, businesses and cultures. In the last months of the last year the Americans required the Russian citizens to come and get a visa at the US embassy in Yerevan.

And now, according to some sources, between February 24 – March 22, around 85000 Russian citizens, 4000 Ukrainian citizens, 3500 Iranian citizens entered Armenia, 4500 Russian citizens opened bank accounts in Armenian banks, 938 private entrepreneurs and 268 LLCs were registered in Armenia.

Why can’t we make Armenia a bridge, buffer, window for people of different backgrounds and citizenships to come and settle down here? One should imagine how many businesses, cultures and innovative minds will flourish instead of wiping them out and getting to a stalemate.

The Turks have been trying to be that buffer between the West and the Rest but apparently they have failed (the results are clear) not because they did not want but they did not have that know-how of bridging people. Armenians do have! And in order to make Armenia as a dialogue window the world needs to change its geopolitics in the region.

If not, then we are going to witness a global catastrophe together and all of us are on the same boat.

Ararat valley once was the birthplace of civilisation with Noah landing there, why can’t Ararat valley become the birthplace of the post-Potsdam world order having peace and dialogue as its core values?

There already are think-tanks and even foundations with certain resources that work towards building that Armenia – a dialogue window under the eyes of the holy mountain Ararat. Let’s work closely then.

Vahram Ayvazyan is the Founder & Chairman of the Board of Trustees at the Network State Panarmenian Foundation.  


https://greekcitytimes.com/2022/03/30/armenia-ararat-valley/

NAGORNO-KARABAKH: Second ECtHR finding against Armenia on entity’s religious freedom

March 29 2022

On 22 March, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) found that Nagorno-Karabakh had violated the rights of Jehovah’s Witnesses by refusing from 2009 to register their community in the entity. The ECtHR ordered Armenia – as exercising “effective control” there – to pay compensation. Jehovah’s Witnesses and some Protestant communities are still denied registration. Armenia’s Representative to the ECtHR has not stated what steps Armenia will take to end the violations.

For the second time, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) in Strasbourg has ruled that Armenia is responsible for a violation of the right to freedom of religion or belief in the ethnic Armenian-controlled unrecognised entity of Nagorno-Karabakh. A 22 March judgment found that Nagorno-Karabakh had violated the rights of Jehovah’s Witnesses by refusing since 2009 to register their community in the entity under the local Religion Law. The Court ordered the Armenian government to pay compensation to the Jehovah’s Witness community.

European Court of Human Rights courtroom, 8 October 2014
Adrian Grycuk/Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0 PL]

Some Protestant churches have since 2009 similarly been denied registration in the entity. The leader of one such church told Forum 18 on 29 March 2022 from the entity’s capital Stepanakert that although the church wants registration, “it is not the time to discuss this”, given the acute military situation. “Everyone is helping to defend the country.”

Although the registration denials in the ECtHR judgment related to 2009, 2010 and 2012, Jehovah’s Witnesses told Forum 18 that they still do not have the compulsory registration in Nagorno-Karabakh. However, neither Protestant nor Jehovah’s Witness communities have been raided or fined in recent years (see below).

Denial of legal status denies communities the possibility to as communities rent or buy properties for meetings for worship, employ clergy, or engage in other normal community activities.

The ECtHR rejected Armenia’s argument that it had “no jurisdiction” over Nagorno-Karabakh. Among the cases the ECtHR cited to reject Armenia’s claim was a July 2021 judgment in the case of Jehovah’s Witness conscientious objector Artur Avanesyan, jailed in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2014 (see below).

In its 2021 judgment in Avanesyan’s case, the ECtHR rejected Armenia’s claim that it had no jurisdiction over Nagorno-Karabakh, pointing out that it exercised “effective control” there. “The obligation to secure the rights and freedoms set out in the [European] Convention [on Human Rights] in such an area derives from the fact of such control, whether it be exercised directly, through the Contracting State’s own armed forces, or through a subordinate local administration,” the ECtHR declared (see below).

A 9 November 2020 tripartite agreement between Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia ended a bitter 44-day war between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces over control of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding territories which saw an estimated 6,500 people killed and major Azerbaijani advances. Renewed clashes broke out on 25 March 2022.

Ashot Sargsyan, the 63-year-old Head of the Religion and National Minorities Department of the Culture and Youth Ministry, wrote the 2009 “expert opinion” justifying refusal of the Jehovah’s Witness application (see below).

Sargsyan claimed to Forum 18 from Stepanakert on 28 March 2022 that “we respect all the rights of all citizens” and said Armenia would pay the compensation. He then refused to discuss the registration denials since 2009, pointing to the heightened state of conflict with Azerbaijan. “We have war now. I am at the General Staff with my gun” (see below).

Yeghishe Kirakosyan, Armenia’s Representative to the European Court of Human Rights, was not in the office in Yerevan on 28 March. Forum 18 asked him in writing the same day whether Armenia will pay the compensation to Nagorno-Karabakh’s Jehovah’s Witness community ordered by the ECtHR and what steps the Armenian authorities will take to ensure that the Nagorno-Karabakh authorities will end the violations of the community’s rights (see below).

Despite the 2021 ECtHR judgment that the jailing of Avanesyan for refusing compulsory military service had violated his rights, Nagorno-Karabakh has still not introduced a civilian alternative for those who cannot participate in the military on grounds of conscience. Avanesyan had declared his willingness to conduct such an alternative (see below).

Nagorno-Karabakh adopted a new Religion Law in December 2008, which remains in force. The Law included a ban on unregistered religious activity; state censorship of religious literature; the requirement for 100 adult citizens to register a religious community; an undefined “monopoly” given to the Armenian Apostolic Church over preaching and spreading its faith while restricting other faiths to similarly undefined “rallying their own faithful”; and the vague formulation of restrictions, making the intended implementation of many articles uncertain.

The Law gave religious communities six months to register or re-register after it came into force in January 2009.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s Jehovah’s Witness community sought registration under the Religion Law at least three times, firstly on 22 June 2009. On 6 July 2009, officials handed the community an “expert opinion” prepared by Ashot Sargsyan, then Head of the government’s Department for Ethnic Minority and Religious Affairs.

Sargsyan claimed that Jehovah’s Witness “ministers (preachers) use a number of methods of psychological influence on believers” and that the activity of certain “active members” in Nagorno-Karabakh “since 1993 (especially during the war years) has amounted to weakening and disrupting the defence of the country at war” because of their refusal to participate in any military activity.

The State Registry Department of the Justice Ministry then rejected the registration application on 3 August 2009 on the basis of the “expert opinion”.

The Jehovah’s Witness community challenged the denial of registration in the local courts but without success. During one hearing, Sargsyan told the court: “No one accepts Jehovah’s Witnesses as a [religious] organisation but as a sect, fake organisation.” He added: “The State Registry Department refused to register Jehovah’s Witnesses based on our conclusion, and I consider that that was right.”

In July 2010, Nagorno-Karabakh’s Jehovah’s Witness community submitted its case over the denial of registration to the ECtHR in Strasbourg (Application No. 41817/10). It had to lodge its case against Armenia as Nagorno-Karabakh – as an unrecognised entity – cannot join the Council of Europe and is thus not subject directly to the jurisdiction of the ECtHR.

At the same time the community pursued a second registration application, again in vain. A third application in 2012 was also unsuccessful.

Particularly in 2010, officials raided and fined Jehovah’s Witness communities in several towns, as well as communities of Protestants, for meeting for worship without registration.

Neither Protestant nor Jehovah’s Witness communities have been raided or fined in recent years.

In March 2018 the ECtHR asked the Armenian government about the case. After considering the case in private on 1 March 2022, the ECtHR issued its judgment (Application No. 41817/10) on 22 March.

The ECtHR found that Armenia had violated the right of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Jehovah’s Witness community by failing to ensure that it was not arbitrarily denied registration.

“Relying on a number of cases decided by the International Court of Justice, [the Armenian government] argued, in particular, that States providing support to unrecognised entities could not be held responsible for specific actions undertaken by agents of the local administrations of those unrecognised entities.” The ECtHR did not accept this, citing a number of earlier judgments.

These included a July 2021 judgment in the case of Jehovah’s Witness conscientious objector Artur Avanesyan, jailed in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2014 (see below).

“The Court reiterates that a refusal by the domestic authorities to grant legal-entity status to an association, religious or otherwise, of individuals amounts to an interference with the exercise of the right to freedom of association,” the judgment declared. It rejected Armenia’s contention that denial of registration had not affected the community’s rights, pointing to the “instances of interference with the community life”, including with the 2010 fines.

The ECtHR said Sargsyan “openly showed his negative predisposition towards the applicant”. It added that his 2009 “expert opinion” used to deny registration was “based on conjecture uncorroborated by fact”.

“The Court observes that the expert opinion did not mention the name of a single individual who had allegedly fallen victim to the techniques of psychological manipulation indicated,” the judgment noted. “Nor was there any specific evidence to support the allegation that Jehovah’s Witnesses were engaged in improper proselytism within the meaning of the Court’s case-law.”

The ECtHR also stressed that “it is now the Court’s settled case-law that opposition to military service, where it is motivated by a serious and insurmountable conflict between the obligation to serve in the army and a person’s conscience or his deeply and genuinely held religious or other beliefs, constitutes a conviction or belief of sufficient cogency, seriousness, cohesion and importance to attract the guarantees of Article 9” of the European Convention on Human Rights (“Freedom of thought, conscience and religion”).

The ECtHR noted that, despite Jehovah’s Witness attempts, local courts “never examined in substance” the grounds for refusal of registration.

Yeghishe Kirakosyan
Azatutyun.am (RFE/RL)

The ECtHR ordered that Armenia pay Nagorno-Karabakh’s Jehovah’s Witness community compensation of 4,500 Euros, plus 1,000 Euros in costs, a total of 5,500 Euros (3 million Armenian Drams, 53,000 Norwegian Kroner or 6,000 US Dollars). The compensation is payable in the three months after the court judgment is deemed final (three months from 22 March, unless Armenia challenges the decision).

Ashot Sargsyan, Head of the Religion and National Minorities Department of the Culture and Youth Ministry, wrote the 2009 “expert opinion”. He claimed to Forum 18 from Stepanakert on 28 March 2022 that “we respect all the rights of all citizens”. He said Armenia would pay the compensation. He then refused to discuss the registration denials since 2009, pointing to the heightened state of conflict with Azerbaijan. “We have war now. I am at the General Staff with my gun”.

Yeghishe Kirakosyan, Armenia’s Representative to the European Court of Human Rights, was not in the office in Yerevan on 28 March. Forum 18 asked him in writing the same day whether Armenia will pay the compensation to Nagorno-Karabakh’s Jehovah’s Witness community ordered by the ECtHR and what steps the Armenian authorities will take to ensure that the Nagorno-Karabakh authorities will end the violations of the community’s rights. Forum 18 had received no response by the end of the working day in Yerevan of 29 March.

Artur Avanesyan and his mother Svetlana
Jehovah’s Witnesses

Nagorno-Karabakh has jailed Jehovah’s Witnesses for refusing compulsory military service on grounds of conscience. It has also jailed Baptists for refusing to swear the military oath or handle weapons on grounds of conscience while serving in the military.

The Military Conscription Office in Askeran called up for military service local Jehovah’s Witness Artur Avanesyan in January 2014 when he was 18 years old. That same month, he wrote to the Military Conscription Office setting out his inability to conduct military service on grounds of conscience. As alternative civilian service was not available in Nagorno-Karabakh, he offered to do it in Armenia (like most ethnic Armenian residents of Nagorno-Karabakh, he held an Armenian passport).

On the day he sent his letter, Avanesyan moved to the town of Masis near Yerevan in Armenia, as he feared the Military Conscription Office would reject his application and bring a criminal prosecution against him.

In February 2014, Askeran Regional Prosecutor’s Office opened a case against Avanesyan under Article 347, Part 1 of Nagorno-Karabakh’s 2013 Criminal Code. This punishes: “Evasion from regular military or alternative service call-up, training exercise or mobilisation, without any order defined by Legislation as grounds for exemption, is punished with arrest for a maximum term of two months, or imprisonment for a maximum term of three years.”

Following his move to Armenia and anticipating a positive resolution, Avanesyan applied for alternative civilian service in February 2014 with the Military Conscription Office in Masis.

While hoping to appear before Armenia’s alternative service board, Avanesyan was instead summoned on 14 July 2014 to report that day to Yerevan’s Central District Police Station. When he arrived at the station, police from Nagorno-Karabakh were waiting for him. They arrested him and took him to Nagorno-Karabakh.

Jehovah’s Witnesses insisted to Forum 18 that Avanesyan’s arrest by Nagorno-Karabakh police at Yerevan’s Central District Police Station and immediate deportation to Nagorno-Karabakh was illegal.

The next day, Avanesyan was placed in pre-trial detention and brought before Mardakert Court.

At the end of his trial at Mardakert Court on 30 September 2014, Judge Spartak Grigoryan rejected Avanesyan’s insistence that he was innocent of any crime and sentenced him to 30 months’ imprisonment under Criminal Code Article 347, Part 1. His appeal was rejected in November 2014. The Supreme Court rejected his further appeal the following month.

Avanesyan was sent to serve his sentence in the prison in Shushi, a city then under the control of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s then Human Rights Ombudsperson described Avanesyan to Forum 18 in November 2014 as “a criminal who must pay the price for his crime”.

Avanesyan lodged his case to the ECtHR in Strasbourg in March 2015 (Application No. 12999/15). He had to lodge his case against Armenia as Nagorno-Karabakh – as an unrecognised entity – cannot join the Council of Europe and is thus not subject directly to the jurisdiction of the ECtHR.

On 6 September 2016, authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh released Avanesyan from Shushi prison under a general amnesty, Jehovah’s Witnesses told Forum 18. He had served 26 months of the 30-month prison sentence.

The ECtHR finally asked questions of the Armenian government in February 2018.

After considering the case in private on 15 June 2021, the ECtHR issued its judgment on 20 July 2021. The judgment became final on 20 October 2021.

The ECtHR found that Armenia had violated Avanesyan’s rights by jailing him for refusing to conduct military service.

The ECtHR rejected Armenia’s claim that it had no jurisdiction over Nagorno-Karabakh, pointing out that it exercised “effective control” there. “The obligation to secure the rights and freedoms set out in the [European] Convention [on Human Rights] in such an area derives from the fact of such control, whether it be exercised directly, through the Contracting State’s own armed forces, or through a subordinate local administration,” the ECtHR declared.

The ECtHR found that, while Nagorno-Karabakh had – unlike Armenia – chosen not to introduce a civilian alternative to compulsory military service, “Armenia was responsible for the acts and omissions of the ‘NKR’ authorities and was under an obligation to secure in that area the rights and freedoms set out in the Convention”.

The ECtHR ruled that Avanesyan’s rights under Article 9 (“Freedom of thought, conscience and religion”) of the European Convention on Human Rights had been violated.

The ECtHR ordered that Armenia pay Avanesyan compensation of 9,000 Euros, plus 1,500 Euros in costs, a total of 10,500 Euros (5.6 million Armenian Drams, 100,000 Norwegian Kroner or 11,500 US Dollars). The compensation became payable in the three months after the court judgment was deemed final on 20 October 2021.

Forum 18 was unable to find out from Yeghishe Kirakosyan, Armenia’s Representative to the European Court of Human Rights, what steps Armenia will take to ensure that Nagorno-Karabakh protects the rights of conscientious objectors to military service.

Despite urging by local Jehovah’s Witnesses and civil society organisations in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh has refused to introduce a civilian alternative to compulsory military service. Officials argue that such an alternative service would undermine the entity’s need to defend itself.

Since Avanesyan’s release from prison in September 2016, no conscientious objectors have been jailed in Nagorno-Karabakh, human rights defenders told Forum 18.

After years of jailing conscientious objectors and judgments against it from the ECtHR, Armenia finally introduced an alternative civilian service in May 2013.

Despite judgments against it from the ECtHR, Azerbaijan has rejected calls for it to introduce a civilian alternative to compulsory military service and has repeatedly jailed conscientious objectors. Azerbaijan committed to the Council of Europe to introduce such a civilian alternative service by January 2003. (END)

Full reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in Nagorno-Karabakh

A personal commentary by Derek Brett of Conscience and Peace Tax International on conscientious objection to military service and international law in the light of the European Court of Human Rights’ July 2011 Bayatyan judgment

Forum 18’s compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments

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Azerbaijan Provokes Armenian Residents of Artsakh

March 29 2022


03/29/2022 Nagorno-Karabakh (International Christian Concern) – According to Armenia’s Security Council, Azerbaijan is paving the way for new provocations and attacks in the Nagorno-Karabakh (Armenian: Artsakh) region. Since the beginning of March, skirmishes along border lines and humanitarian violations have increased.

Between March 8 and March 19, the gas line into the region was damaged and Azerbaijan did not allow for repairs to be made. After making a concession to allow for repairs, the gas line was cut again on March 21 and was only restored on March 28. Residents of Nagorno-Karabakh were without warm water and gas for heating in freezing temperatures for a significant portion of the month.

On March 24 and 25, Azerbaijani troops also completed four drone strikes near Furukh, an action that was confirmed and condemned by the Russian peacekeeper mission. The borderlines were ignored as Azerbaijan invaded the area. Azerbaijan denied the incidents.

Armenia, a historically Christian nation, and Azerbaijan engaged in a 44-day war in the fall of 2020. Since then, tensions have flared along border zones as Azerbaijan has reportedly promised to erase the Christian heritage from the disputed lands of Nagorno-Karabakh and threatened the remaining Christian residents. The Armenian Foreign Ministry stated that, “the objective of Azerbaijan’s policy of systematic violence and terror against Nagorno-Karabakh is ethnic cleansing of the Armenian settlements in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

https://www.persecution.org/2022/03/29/azerbaijan-provokes-armenian-residents-artsakh/  

Sports: Watch Haaland score two stunning goals for Norway before being forced off injured in a 9-0 win over Armenia

March 29 2022

ERLING HAALAND conjured a dazzling double but limped off before half-time as Norway destroyed ten-man Armenia 9-0.

The Borussia Dortmund goal machine underlined why Manchester City and Real Madrid want him so badly with two contrasting crackers – before he provided a huge injury scare.

Haaland improvised with an outside-of-the-left foot lob when the ball was lifted through to him on the right for a 24th minute opener.

Then the 21-year-old surpassed even that by taking a through-pass on his heel without breaking stride before slipping another deft left-footed finish with his second touch.

But he then promptly crumpled in pain – and was substituted for the second period.

Norway remained rampant, though, with Watford frontman Joshua King completing a hat-trick, including a penalty and Arsenal midfielder Martin Odegaard providing two assists.

All the hosts’ goals came after Kamo Hovhannisyan saw red for Armenia on 17 minutes.

Genk’s Tottenham target Genk midfielder Kristian Thorstvedt and Nurnberg midfielder Mats Moller Dæhli also scored.

Then Haaland’s replacement, Real Sociedad’s Alexander Sorloth pounced for two goals in the last five minutes.

Supreme poacher Haaland has asked Odegaard about life at Real – heightening suggestions City might struggle to persuade him to move to the Premier League.

Manchester United and Barcelona are also not out of the running.

Odegaard said: “We are good friends so we talk about lots of things, like when I was there.

“So yeah we talked about it but it’s not anything special.”

Iran, Armenia stress expansion of energy cooperation

TEHRAN TIMES
Iran – March 29 2022
  1. Economy
March 29, 2022 – 11:10

TEHRAN- Iranian Energy Minister Ali-Akbar Mehrabian and Advisor to Armenian Prime Minister Artashes Toumanian put emphasis on the necessity of expanding cooperation between the two countries in the field of energy in a meeting at the place of Iranian Energy Ministry in Tehran on Monday.

During the meeting, Mehrabian also stressed the need to prepare the conditions for the meeting between the president of Iran and the prime minister of Armenia.

The minister further introduced the capabilities of Iranian companies active in the field of technical and engineering services and the scope of activities of these companies around the world, as well as construction and repair of power plants, construction of hydropower plants and other cases, and suggested bilateral meetings to introduce capabilities and cooperation capacities of the two countries.

The advisor to the prime minister of Armenia, for his part, mentioned the important issues of bilateral cooperation, and discussed constructive decisions for the development of trade and economic cooperation, as well as cooperation in the field of energy.

Toumanian also met Iranian Oil Minister Javad Oji at the place of Iran’s Oil Ministry on Monday.

During the meeting the two sides stressed the expansion of long-term cooperation in the field of energy between the two neighboring countries.

MA/MA