Norway lifts almost all coronavirus restrictions

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YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. Norway will scrap nearly all its remaining COVID-19 lockdown measures as high levels of coronavirus infections are unlikely to jeopardize health services, Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere said on Saturday, Reuters reported.

“We are removing almost all coronavirus measures,” the PM told a news conference. “The coronavirus pandemic is no longer a major health threat to most of us. The omicron virus causes far less serious illness and we are well protected by vaccines.”

Norwegians will no longer need to stay at least one meter (3 feet) apart nor wear face masks in crowded settings. The removal of these measures mean nightclubs and other affected entertainment venues can resume full business.

In addition, infected individuals no longer need to isolate themselves. Instead, they are recommended to stay home for four days.

Travellers to Norway will no longer need to register their arrivals ahead of time and the government is also scrapping the previous requirement for proof of a negative test before departure for some visitors, such as unvaccinated people.

FP: Russia Belongs at the Center of Europe

By Anatol Lieven, a senior research fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft.

Vladimir Putin speaks during a press conference on the second day of the G8 summit venue of Lough Erne on June 18, 2013 in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland. WPA POOL /GETTY IMAGES

The Western attempt to expel Russia from Europe has failed. That there was such an attempt was always implicit in the strategy of seeking to admit every European country but Russia into NATO and the European Union. In this context, the NATO slogan “A Europe Whole and Free” is an explicit statement that Russia is not part of Europe.

But as French President Emmanuel Macron has reminded us, Russia is part of Europe and is simply too big, too powerful, and too invested in its immediate neighborhood to be excluded from the European security order. A continued strategy along these lines will lead to repeated Russian attempts to force its way back in. At best, this will lead to repeated and very damaging crises; at worst, to war.

A structure needs to be created that can defend the interests of NATO and the EU while at the same time accommodating vital Russian interests and preserving peace. The solution lies in a modernized version of what was once called the “Concert of Europe.”

The current security order has reached its limit. Until 2007-2008, the expansion of the EU and NATO appeared to have proceeded flawlessly, with the admission of all the former Soviet satellites in Central Europe and the Balkans, as well as the Baltic states. Russia was unhappy with NATO expansion but did not actively oppose it. Then, however, both NATO and the EU received decisive checks, through their own overreach.

At the NATO summit in Bucharest, Romania, in 2008, the United States and its allies, though denied an immediate Membership Action Plan for Ukraine and Georgia because of the opposition of France and Germany, procured a promise of those countries’ eventual membership. Seen from Moscow, this created the prospect that NATO would include countries with territorial disputes (and in the case of Georgia, frozen conflicts) with Russia; that (as in the Baltic states) NATO would give cover to moves to harm the position of local Russian minorities; and that NATO would expel Russia from its naval base at Sevastopol and from the southern Caucasus.

Later that year, the Russo-Georgian War should have sounded the death knell of further NATO expansion, for it demonstrated beyond doubt both the acute dangers of territorial disputes in the former USSR and that in the last resort Russia would fight to defend its vital interests in the region, and the West would not fight. This is being demonstrated again today by the repeated and categorical statements from Washington and Brussels that there is no question of sending troops to defend Ukraine; and if NATO will not fight for Ukraine, then it cannot admit Ukraine as an ally. It is as simple as that.

The rise of China is the other factor that makes the exclusion of Russia unviable. For this project was developed at a time when Russia was at its weakest in almost 400 years and when China’s colossal growth had only just begun. This allowed the West possibilities that today have diminished enormously, if as seems likely China is prepared to strengthen Russia against Western economic sanctions.

The EU too has reached the limit of its expansion eastward. On the one hand, there is Ukraine’s size (44 million people), corruption, political dysfunction, and poverty (GDP per capita that’s one-third of Russia’s). Perhaps more importantly, EU expansion to eastern Europe no longer looks like the unconditional success story that it did a decade ago.

Romania, Bulgaria, and other states remain deeply corrupt and in many ways still ex-communist. Poland and Hungary have developed dominant strains of chauvinist and quasi-authoritarian populism that place them at odds with what were supposed to be the core values of the EU—and that in some respects bring them closer ideologically to the regime of Russian President Vladimir Putin. After this experience, there is no chance that the EU will admit a country like Ukraine in any foreseeable future.

An acknowledgment of these obvious truths (which are acknowledged in private by the overwhelming majority of Western officials and experts) should open the way to thinking about a new European security architecture that would incorporate NATO and the EU while reducing the hostility between these organizations and Russia. We should aim at the creation of this new system as part of the solution to the present crisis, and in order to avoid new ones.

This requires a return to a more traditional way of thinking about international politics. For a key problem of the West’s approach to Russia since the end of the Cold War is that it has demanded that Russia observe the internal rules of behavior of the EU and NATO without offering EU and NATO membership (something that is in any case impossible for multiple reasons).

In recent years and in the wider world, the U.S. establishment by contrast has loudly announced “the return of great-power politics”—and this is true enough as far as it goes. Certainly the idea of a monolithic “rules-based global order,” in which liberal internationalism acts as a thin cover for U.S. primacy, is now dead.

The problem is that most members of the U.S. establishment have become so wedded to belief in both the necessity and the righteousness of U.S. global primacy that they can see relations with other great powers only in confrontational and zero-sum terms. Rivalry, of course, there will inevitably be; but if we are to avoid future disasters, we need to find a way of managing relations so as to keep this rivalry within bounds, establish certain genuine common rules, prevent conflict, and work toward the solution of common problems. To achieve this, we need to seek lessons further back in diplomatic history.

The essential elements of a new, reasonably consensual pan-European order should be the following: a traditional nonaggression treaty between NATO and the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), by which both sides pledge not to attack the other militarily. As a matter of fact, neither side has any intention of doing so, and to put this on paper would reduce mutual paranoia and the ability of establishments on both sides to feed this paranoia for their own domestic purposes.

Full diplomatic relations should be established or reestablished between NATO and the CSTO and between the EU and the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union. On the basis of this, intensive negotiations should be launched to achieve two goals: new arms control agreements in Europe, starting with nuclear missiles, and economic arrangements that would allow nonmembers of the EU and the Eurasian Economic Union to trade freely with both blocs, rather than forcing on them a mutually exclusive choice of trading partners.

When it comes to the avoidance and solution of conflicts, however, institutions involving all European countries are too large and too rigid to be of much use. The Russian establishment has also decided—not without reason—that these are simply excuses for Western countries to agree to a common position and then present it to Russia as a fait accompli. The need is for a regular, frequent, but much smaller and less formal meeting place for the countries that really count in European security: the United States, France, Germany, and Russia (plus the United Kingdom, if it survives as one state and emerges from its post-Brexit bewilderment).

Such a European security council would have three goals: firstly, the avoidance of new conflicts through early consultation about impending crises; secondly, the solution of existing conflicts on the basis of common standards of realism—in other words, who actually controls the territory in question and will continue to do so; and thirdly, democracy—the will of the majority of the local population, expressed through internationally supervised referendums (a proposal put forward by Thomas Graham).

Finally, a European security council could lay the basis for security cooperation outside Europe. Here, the present situation is nothing short of tragicomic. In Afghanistan, the United States, NATO, the EU, Russia, and the CSTO have an identical vital interest: to prevent that country from becoming a base for international Islamist terrorism and revolution. And for all the greater complexity of the situation, this is also true in the end of the fight against the Islamic State and its allies in the Middle East and western Africa.

Among the other benefits of such a new consultative institution would therefore be to remind both the West and Russia that while Russian and NATO soldiers have never killed each other and do not want to, there are other forces out there that have killed many thousands of Americans, Russians, and West Europeans, would gladly kill us all if they could find the means to do so, and see no moral difference whatsoever between what they see as Western and Eastern infidel imperialism.

Anatol Lieven is a senior fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and the author of Pakistan: A Hard Country. His most recent book, Climate Change and the Nation State, is appearing in an updated paperback edition in September 2021.

Turkey’s Gold Conversion Plan Likely To Falter On Lack Of Public Trust – Analysis

Eurasia Review
Turkey’s Gold Conversion Plan Likely To Falter On Lack Of Public Trust
– Analysis
By James M. Dorsey
Feb. 13, 2022
When Turkish finance minister Nureddin Nebati this week announced
plans to encourage households to convert their gold holdings into
Turkish liras in a bid to shore up Turkish central bank reserves, he
was targeting people like Esra G.
Ms. G., whose last name has been abbreviated to preserve her
anonymity, has had a life-long troubled relationship with gold. When
she was barely three years old, her distaste for it as an adornment
was already so strong that she dumped all her gold rings, bracelets,
necklaces, and earrings into the Bosporus.
Nonetheless, Ms. G. grew up to be an avid collector of gold, including
an assortment of five- and 10-gram Credit Suisse coins. As a young
woman, Ms. G. preferred antique silver jewelry and wouldn’t wear gold
but kept her gold collection under her pillow.
“Gold is a tradition. It grows out of a deep-seated distrust of
governments and currencies and has been handed down from generation to
generation. They didn’t take money. They took gold,” she said. “I’m a
child of that system. … I want the gold where I can touch it and feel
it.”
It is the many people like Ms. G. that Mr. Nebati is targeting. The
minister told investors in London this week that he hoped his scheme
would convert 10 percent of the estimated US$250-300 billion worth of
gold squirreled away in the homes and back yards of Turkey, much of it
by women.
Ayse Esen, head of a leading Turkish gold refinery, shared Mr.
Nebati’s estimate. “We are aware of the fact that there is around
3,000-5,000 tonnes of gold saved under mattresses, which amounts to an
informal economy with a size of $200-300 billion,” Ms. Esen, CEO of
Istanbul Gold Refinery (IAR), said.
According to the World Gold Council, official Turkish gold reserves
dropped from a high of 583 tonnes in July 2020 to 392 tonnes a year
later.
Speaking to Sabah, a pro-government daily, Ms. Esen, probably
unwittingly, suggested that convincing Turks to convert their gold
could prove to be an uphill battle. She noted that a program launched
ten years ago by the refinery and commercial banks had so far netted a
mere 100 tonnes of hidden gold.
Lack of confidence in the government is only part of the problem. As
important is the fact that much of Turkey’s gold hoard is
non-negotiable because it is held in the form of jewelry. Turkey’s
40,000 jewelers turn approximately 150 tonnes of gold into jewelry a
year.
Mr. Nebati reportedly told investors that some 30,000 gold shops would
purchase privately held jewelry as part of his scheme and sell it to
one of five government-contracted refineries that are believed to
include IAR. The refineries would convert the jewelry into bullion
that could be added to the central bank’s reserves.
It’s not clear why Mr. Nebati believes his scheme would work this time
around when earlier attempts failed. One such effort involved creating
a facility that allowed holders of gold to deposit it with banks in
exchange for gold certificates that would have been negotiable on a
gold exchange.
Ms. G., the woman who doesn’t like gold jewelry, vowed already decades
ago that she would never trust a bank with her gold, even though she
doesn’t hesitate to deposit money in a bank.
She, like many Turks, is historically suspicious of authority, and
many of them see hoarding gold not only as a safe investment but also
as a reserve that can’t be taken away from them. It also doesn’t
violate the Islamic ban on interest.
In the early 19th century, Turks hoarded gold to evade Ottoman taxes,
which were based on what taxpayers physically possessed when the tax
collector came around. As a result, Ottoman subjects bought gold and
buried it not to be counted and taxed. Despite the Ottomans’ later
introduction of paper money, Ottoman subjects continued to view gold
as their most secure form of investment because of inflation.
“People did not trust it,” said a gold trader. “The certificate had no
relationship to the gold. It was devalued by inflation, and people
have distrusted paper money ever since. . . . Gold has become a symbol
of distrust of the state.”
“I’ve been in this business for decades and have seen a lot of change.
One thing never changes, and that is gold. Our money is worthless;
gold is much better. Besides that, gold is part of our history,” added
a jewelry repair shop owner.
Trust as much as tradition may prove to be Mr. Nebati’s Achilles heel.
By attracting hidden gold, Mr. Nebati aims to help the government stop
the freefall of the Turkish lira, which lost more than 40 percent of
its value last year and halt the spiralling out of control of
inflation that last month hit 36.1 per cent.
Many blame the crisis on President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
idiosyncratic push to cut interest rates based on his unorthodox
belief that this would lower consumer prices.
As a result, a whopping 75 per cent of respondents in a survey in
December by Metropoll, a Turkish polling company Metropoll, said their
trust in the government’s economic policies had decreased. More than
half of those polled said they disapproved of Mr. Erdogan’s
performance.
Mr. Erdogan has undermined the independence of the Central Bank, fired
three of its governors and other officials opposed to his interest
cuts in the last two years, changed finance ministers four times since
2018, and spun conspiracy theories by blaming a mysterious foreign
interest cabal for Turkey’s economic plight.
Public distrust recently manifested itself further in a wave of
protests over massive electricity price hikes as millions struggle to
pay ballooning bills and inflation threatens to force businesses into
bankruptcy.
Mr. Erdogan has recently suggested that he would halt or slow down the
lowering of interest rates as a series of emergency measures helped
the lira recover some of its value against the dollar.
The measures pushed Mr. Erdogan’s approval rating up by two points to
40.7 per cent in January, still far behind the 54.4 per cent who
evaluate the president’s performance negatively.
Polls show that Mr. Erdogan would lose to Ankara Mayor Mansur Yavas
and Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu – both from the main opposition
Republican People’s Party (CHP) and Iyi (Good) Party Chairwoman Meral
Aksener, at the next elections.
Mr. Erdogan’s numbers hardly project the degree of confidence that Mr.
Nebati is likely to need to persuade his intrinsically skeptical
compatriots from parting with their precious gold.
Said a former Istanbul banker: “People are unlikely to put their
holdings at risk for a scheme that does not guarantee their ability to
preserve whatever wealth they have. Certainly not at a time of
economic turmoil and a widening gap in trust.”
*
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at Nanyang Technological
University's S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle
East Soccer.
 

Turkish Press: ‘Basmala’ found on 195 million-year-old marble discovered in Turkey

Anadolu Agency
Turkish Press: ‘Basmala’ found on 195 million-year-old marble
discovered in Turkey
Feb. 12, 2022
Markings that appear to form the Arabic word basmala ("In the name of
God") were found on a marble slab uncovered in a marble quarry in
Turkey’s Mediterranean province of Antalya.
The discovery was made in the marble business area of Antalya Marble
Industry and Trade Company in Taşkesiği village of the Antalya
Korkuteli district.
The figure that appeared on the stone attracted the attention of
miners while the stone was being processed in the quarry. Removing
dust from the stone, workers noticed the marking appeared to spell
"basmala" in Arabic letters.
The slab was then sent to Suleyman Demirel University in Turkey's
southwestern Isparta province for analysis.
Scientists Fuzuli Yağmurlu, Rasit Altındağ and Nazmi Şengün made an
interesting discovery in their analysis.
While 195 million-year-old remains were found in the content of the
marble, the marking is believed to have occurred naturally.
Bioclastic remains of fossils belonging to sea creatures that lived
195 million years ago during the Jurassic period were found in the
dolomitic limestone that formed the plate.
It was also noted that the remains are concentrated in parts of the plate.
The report said the figures on the plate that formed the word basmala
were completely "natural" formations and the writings were formed as a
result of the fragmentation, deformation and arrangement of the
remains of heart-shaped shellfish over time.
According to a scientific report given by Ahmet Ögke, Dean of Akdeniz
University Faculty of Theology, the Arabic figures on the marble are
the same characters as Basmala mentioned in the Quran.
 

FP: Cultural Desecration Is Racial Discrimination

By Simon Maghakyan, a Ph.D. student in heritage crime at Cranfield University and executive director of Save Armenian Monuments. 

A man in military clothing stands inside the damaged Holy Savior Cathedral in the Nagorno-Karabakh city known as Shushi to Armenians and Shusha to Azerbaijanis, on Oct. 8, 2020.  ARIS MESSINIS/AFP via Getty Images

“Non-existing sites or cemeteries cannot be destroyed.” This is how an ambassador of Azerbaijan responded in June 2021 to an exposé of cultural destruction that employed declassified U.S. intelligence files to geolocate ancient monuments in Cold War-era satellite imagery that were flattened following the Soviet Union’s dissolution.

Last year, the ambassador’s denial of the targeted monuments’ very existence was exhibited by Armenia as evidence of racial discrimination at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which subsequently ordered Azerbaijan, in a decision announced last month, to “take all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration,” while rejecting Azerbaijan’s mirror request against Armenia.

The ICJ’s precedent-setting Dec. 7, 2021, order, which was part of emergency measures in Armenia’s case against neighboring Azerbaijan, to effectively protect Armenian cultural heritage in territories Azerbaijan captured in the 2020 war in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh is good news for all defenders of cultural heritage sites across the world. Until now, as others have pointed out, there has been no effective international mechanism against state actors that threaten the very cultural heritage they are obliged to protect.


A photo from circa 1905, which recently surfaced from a family album of a tsarist Russian military serviceman, shows the Holy Savior Cathedral in the Nagorno-Karabakh city known as Shushi to Armenians and Shusha to Azerbaijanis, 15 years before the initial destruction of its conical dome. On Dec. 7, 2021, the International Court of Justice ordered Azerbaijan, which bombed Holy Savior in 2020 then dismantled its reconstructed dome, to “prevent and punish” destruction of Armenian monuments.Courtesy of Levon Chidilyan

When it comes to state-sponsored erasure of politically undesirable cultural heritage, Azerbaijan’s record is alarming. Starting in 1997, three years after the first post-Soviet war over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, Azerbaijan’s successive father and son presidents decided that the entire Armenian cultural heritage of another region, Nakhichevan, was unfit for existence. By late 2006, Azerbaijan’s government had destroyed all 28,000 medieval Armenian religious monuments of Nakhichevan. The final toll included an estimated 89 medieval churches, 5,840 cross-stones, and 22,000 tombstones.

Today, as a result of the 2020 war, hundreds of Armenian holy places, among them historically and architecturally significant cathedrals, are under Azerbaijan’s control. The destruction of Nakhichevan’s entire Armenian past is not the sole reason why Armenia appealed to the ICJ.

Since the Russian-brokered November 2020 cease-fire between the two countries, as documented by Caucasus Heritage Watch, Azerbaijan has demolished several Armenian cemeteries, including in the town known in Armenian as Mets Tagher and as Boyuk Taglar in Azerbaijani, as well as in the town known as Sghnakh in Armenian and Signaq in Azerbaijani, and pronounced nearly all Armenian churches of the region non-Armenian.

Since the Russian-brokered November 2020 cease-fire between the two countries, Azerbaijan has demolished several Armenian cemeteries.

On Oct. 8, 2020, during the war, Azerbaijan bombed the Holy Savior Cathedral, popularly known as Ghazanchetsots, twice, creating a hole in the roof and injuring foreign journalists. A month later, the cathedral, along with the entire city known as Shushi to Armenians and Shusha to Azerbaijanis, was captured by Azerbaijan, which then launched a predictable renovation of the mid-19th-century building.

Baku decapitated Holy Savior by dismantling its iconic dome under the pretext of renovation in 2021, in a move that reminded Armenians of the pogrom in 1920 that massacred the city’s Armenian population, turning them into a minority there.

Even though the ICJ did not specifically order the rebuilding of Holy Savior’s dismantled dome, Azerbaijan may restore it in the near future to mitigate a harsher decision in the court’s final verdict. But it will likely keep banning Armenian visits to sacred sites, since the Dec. 7 provisional decision did not grant an urgent order for allowing Armenian pilgrimages.


The ICJ’s decision against Azerbaijan has global significance for several reasons. First, it is precedent-setting for sidestepping UNESCO, the United Nations’ ineffective cultural organization that is effectively governed by member states such as China, Saudi Arabia, and Azerbaijan, and instead technically delegating the world’s only body with enforcement power—the U.N. Security Council, which is principally tasked with maintaining international peace and security—with overseeing threatened cultural heritage.

Second, it links deliberate cultural destruction with racial discrimination under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. Third, the decision sends a message to nation-states that sovereignty does not license a government to erase cultural heritage sites. The ICJ ruling, therefore, creates a new, yet narrow, pathway for fighting cultural destruction.

The most obvious beneficiaries of the ICJ decision are persecuted peoples with ethnic ties to a neighboring nation-state. Greece, for instance, could apply to the ICJ under the new ruling to challenge Turkey’s ongoing conversion of Greek cathedrals to mosques. Oppressed and stateless peoples like the Hazaras in Afghanistan, Rohingyas in Myanmar, and Uyghurs and Tibetans in China, whose cultures have been targeted by state actors, on the other hand, are unlikely to benefit directly from the decision given that the ICJ is a legal venue for U.N. member states.

Tying cultural destruction to racial discrimination expands opportunities for protecting threatened heritage.

The decision, nevertheless, could still be cited in non-ICJ legal pursuits. Notably, tying cultural destruction to racial discrimination expands opportunities for protecting threatened heritage, since discrimination does not have to be an intentional act. Indigenous peoples in the Amazon and Niger Delta targeted primarily due to economic development, for instance, could cite the ICJ decision in seeking prevention of and punishment for the destruction of their heritage sites.

The decision would certainly not directly help with situations like the targeting of Assyrian and Yazidi heritage by the Islamic State or the desecration of shrines in Timbuktu, Mali, by Islamist militants, in which perpetrators of de facto sovereign violence are not internationally recognized state actors. But another global judicial body, the International Criminal Court (ICC), could fill this void. The ICC has only prosecuted one case of cultural destruction thus far, in part because its scope is confined to prosecuting individuals for crimes against humanity, genocide, and war crimes.

Nevertheless, in June 2021 the ICC issued a broad policy on cultural heritage, underscoring that “The impact of an attack on cultural heritage may transcend the socio-geographical space it occupies, resulting in a global impact.” The ICJ’s decision will likely embolden the ICC’s new commitment to protecting cultural heritage. But as the new ICC policy notes, documentation and monitoring of cultural destruction can prove to be monumental tasks.

The latter may explain why the ICJ’s provisional decision against Azerbaijan does not specify mechanisms for protecting monuments, including when the erasure is more subtle. It remains unclear, for instance, if and how Azerbaijan will be reprimanded if it fulfills the presidential vow to polish over Nagorno-Karabakh’s countless Armenian inscriptions or if it continues state-sponsored pilgrimages to Armenian sacred sites to rebrand them “Caucasian Albanian.”

The latest such known visit took place one month before the ICJ decision, when a small group of people belonging to the tiny Udi minority, descended from Caucasian Albanians, visited the medieval Spitak Khach church in Hadrut, a region that until late 2020 had been continuously inhabited by Armenians for two millennia.

During their pilgrimage, the Baku-backed visitors, whom pro-government media described as the church’s “real owners,” proclaimed Spitak Khach’s Armenian inscriptions “modern” and “fake,” even though they have been long documented, including through a tsarist-era photograph of the site’s prominent 14th-century cross-stone.

The relabeling of Armenian monuments should not give false hope for their preservation; before their destruction, Nakhichevan’s Christian sites were likewise proclaimed non-Armenian. Commendably, the ICJ decision referenced an international concern regarding Azerbaijan’s rebranding of Armenian monuments as “Caucasian Albanian,” suggesting that less violent forms of cultural erasure, such as cultural misappropriation and historical negationism, can also be racial discrimination under international law.

Since only Azerbaijan-approved visitors are currently allowed to visit its newly gained territories, it might be impossible to monitor the fate of the region’s numerous indigenous inscriptions. It would be easier, on the other hand, to monitor if and how Azerbaijan applies the ICJ ruling to its ongoing so-called renovation of the Holy Savior cathedral visible from a distance both to satellites and to local Armenians, who are now largely concentrated in Russian peacekeeper-protected Stepanakert.

Azerbaijan may already be in violation of the ICJ order to punish cultural destruction: Instead of calling for an investigation, this week the country’s president denied demolishing cemeteries in Hadrut.

Last month’s ICJ ruling is not perfect, especially since it leaves heritage crime monitoring and accountability mechanisms unaddressed. But it is a long-term victory locally and globally, because it confronts the issue of cultural survival—while bringing to account state-sponsored attacks against religious and cultural monuments as forms of racial discrimination.

The author’s recent research for this article was supported by an Armenian General Benevolent Union grant.

Simon Maghakyan is a visiting scholar at Tufts University; lecturer in international relations at the University of Colorado Denver; Ph.D. student in heritage crime at Cranfield University, funded by the Gulbenkian Foundation; and executive director of Save Armenian Monuments. Twitter: 

Kazakh Ambassador met with Minister of High-Tech Industry of Armenia

Feb 13 2022

YEREVAN. KAZINFORM Ambassador of Kazakhstan Bolat Imanbayev met with Minister of High-Tech Industry of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan.

During the conversation, the Ambassador informed about the measures taken by the Government of Kazakhstan to further develop the socio-economic and political situation in the country. Particular attention was paid to explaining the course of economic and democratic reforms of President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, as well as attracting foreign investment and the inviolability of Kazakhstan’s international obligations, the Kazakh MFA’s press service reports. In turn, the Armenian side expressed support for the policy of the leadership of Kazakhstan and readiness to further strengthen mutually beneficial relations between our countries. In this context, the parties discussed issues of developing cooperation in the field of high and space technologies, trade, science, and education. The Minister expressed interest in intensifying cooperation, noting the great potential and growth prospects. At the same time, it was emphasized that bilateral trade has a positive growth trend, which increased by 30% in 2021. During the meeting, the implementation of the Protocol of the 8th meeting of the Intergovernmental Kazakh-Armenian Commission on Economic Cooperation dated May 26, 2021 and the implementation of the agreements reached between the Ministry of Digital Development, Innovation and Aerospace Industry of the Republic of Kazakhstan and the Ministry of High-Tech Industry of the Republic of Armenia were also considered.

Sports: Jose Mourinho to get rid of Henrikh Mkhitaryan again By Lee Hurley

Feb 12 2022

Henrikh Mkhitaryan signed for Roma in 2020 after a year on loan from Arsenal.

Many wondered how it would all go, with Mkhitaryan famously falling out with Jose Mourinho when he was at Manchester United, who was now managing Roma.

Mourinho liked to criticise the Armenian publicly, draining his confidence to such an extent that when he arrived at Arsenal, as part of the Alexis Sanchez deal that took the Chilean the other way, he was but a shadow of the player Arsenal had tried to sign in 2016 before he went to Old Trafford.

So far, Mkhitaryan has played 103 times for Roma (scoring 27 and assisting 26) and he continues to both start and finish matches for Mourinho.

There seem to have been few problems between the pair.

Still, with the 33-year-old out of contract this summer, no new offer has been forthcoming from the Italians.

Mourinho apparently wants to bring in younger players, despite the fact many see Mkhitaryan as having a good season.

Mkhitaryan is believed to have suitors in both Spain and Germany.

https://dailycannon.com/2022/02/jose-mourinho-to-get-rid-of-henrikh-mkhitaryan-again/

Belarusian, Turkish FMs discuss situation around Ukraine

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 16:18,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Ministers of Belarus and Turkey, Vladimir Makei and Mevlut Cavusoglu, discussed the situation around Ukraine during a telephone conversation, the Belarusian Foreign Ministry said.

“Relevant issues of the international agenda were discussed. A special focus was paid on the overload of the global information field with non-reliable information and misinformation, including with open fake news”, the ministry said.

The sides also discussed the commercial and innovative partnership.

Lavrov, Blinken discuss situation around Ukraine over phone

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 16:57,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken held a telephone conversation on Saturday discussing the current developments around Ukraine, TASS reports citing the Russian Foreign Ministry’s statement.

“The minister stressed that the propaganda crusade on ‘Russia’s aggression’ against Ukraine unleashed by the United States and its allies pursued provocative goals, encouraging the Kiev regime to sabotage the Minsk agreements and undertake harmful attempts of resolving the ‘Donbass problem’ with the use of force”, the ministry said as quoted by TASS.

Azerbaijani forces violate rights of Armenia’s border residents on daily basis – Ombudsman

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 17:27,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan had a meeting with acting UN Resident Coordinator in Armenia Lila Pieters Yahia, the Ombudsman’s Office said in a news release.

Arman Tatoyan highly valued the level of cooperation with the UN Resident Coordinator, the Office, and the UN agencies in Armenia, particularly UNDP, UNICEF, UNFPA, UNHCR, as well as the effectiveness of joint programs.

He said that in the past 6 years programs have been implemented relating to freedom of speech, the professional work of journalists, the rights of women, children and persons with disabilities, etc.

Human rights-related issues were discussed during the meeting. Arman Tatoyan presented the problems registered in detention sites and the judiciary.

The Armenian Ombudsman also said that the Azerbaijani armed forces are violating the rights of the border residents of Armenia on a daily basis, by grossly violating the UN demands, therefore, he emphasized that the Azerbaijani troops must be withdrawn in order to guarantee people’s normal life.

Lila Pieters Yahia thanked Arman Tatoyan for the work conducted during his tenure and for the important mission aimed at protecting human rights.