Asbarez: Azerbaijan Sets Up Commission Tasked with Destroying Armenian Cultural Heritage

The Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shushi is being dismantled by Azerbaijanis

Azerbaijan’s government has set up a special commission with this specific task of destroying Armenian cultural heritage sites in Artsakh and presenting them as having an Albanian origin.

Azerbaijan’s Culture Minister Anar Karimov told local media that this commission comprises specialists who know the history, culture, and heritage of Albania.

“Armenians have left traces on our monuments. Now we are gathering evidence in this regard,” Karimov said, adding that the policy of Azerbaijan’s authorities is to identify Armenian churches as Albanian.

“Work is being done in this regard with international experts in the field of Albanian Studies,” Karimov said adding that plans are underway to invite those “experts” to Azerbaijan.

“The next phase will be to go—with local and international experts—to the areas where the Armenianized Albanian monuments are locate. All the facts will be documented and presented to the international community,” Karimov said.

Since the end of military actions in 2020, Azerbaijani authorities have categorically refused to allow UNESCO representatives to enter Armenian territories under their control, presumably to bide time to alter and falsify traces of Armenian heritage.

The issue of the destruction of Armenian cultural heritage in Artsakh was taken up on Friday by Jean-Christophe Buisson, the deputy editor of the French Le Figaro newspaper, who took to Twitter to call Azerbaijan’s effort “cultural genocide.”

His social media post was prompted by an announcement by Oliver Varhelyi, the European Commissioner for Neighborhood and Enlargement, who held meetings in Baku and praised EU’s energy partnership with Azerbaijan.

“While Azerbaijan continues its cultural genocide of the Armenian heritage in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) without anyone reacting (especially not the French government or UNESCO), the EU welcomes its energy partnerships with Baku,” Buisson wrote on Twitter on Friday.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/04/2022

                                        Friday, February 4, 2022
European Leaders Organize Fresh Talks Between Aliyev, Pashinian
Armenia - French President Emmanuel Macron holds a video conference with 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and 
European Council President Charles Michel, February 4, 2022.
French President Emmanuel Macron and European Council President Charles Michel 
held a virtual meeting with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan on Friday.
The video conference came about two months after Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s two face-to-face meetings with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
which were separately hosted by Macron and Michel in Brussels.
“They took stock of progress achieved since the [December] meetings held in the 
sidelines of the Eastern Partnership Summit, in particular recent releases of 
detainees, ongoing joint efforts to search for missing persons, as well as the 
upcoming restoration of railways tracks,” Macron and Michel said in a joint 
statement on the video conference.
“The heads of State and Government agreed that this meeting offered a valuable 
opportunity to discuss a wide range of issues,” added the statement.
Pashinian’s office reported that the four leaders discussed efforts to reduce 
tensions along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and open transport links between 
the two South Caucasus states as well as international organizations’ access to 
Karabakh.
“Prime Minister Pashinian stressed the need for a long-term settlement of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and the signing of a peace treaty under the aegis of 
the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group,” it said.
Neither statement mentioned any concrete agreements reached by Aliyev and 
Pashinian.
The two leaders pledged to de-escalate border tensions and restore 
Armenian-Azerbaijani rail links at their December 14 trilateral meeting with 
Michel. But they failed to patch up their differences on the status of a highway 
that would also connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave via Armenia’s 
southeastern Syunik province.
Belgium - European Council President Charles Michel meets with Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Brussels, 
December 14, 2021.
Aliyev said ahead of the Brussels talks that people and cargo passing through 
that “Zangezur corridor” must be exempt from Armenian border controls. Pashinian 
rejected the demand.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry said late on Thursday that Yerevan has presented 
Baku with new proposals regarding “the opening of the roads.” The ministry 
spokesman, Vahan Hunanian, did not disclose them.
“We have not received any response from the Azerbaijani side to these proposals 
yet,” Hunanian said in written comments. “Armenia is ready to start implementing 
these proposals as soon as possible.”
The comments came in response to Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov’s 
claims that Yerevan is obstructing the launch of the cross-border transport 
links. Hunanian said the claims are “paradoxical” in light of what Pashinian 
stated earlier on Thursday.
Pashinian announced further progress towards the planned construction of the 
45-kilometer Syunik railway. He said senior Armenian and Russian officials 
discussed “practical” details of the project on Wednesday.
Next Turkish-Armenian Talks Set For February 24
        • Tatevik Sargsian
Armenia - Armenia's deputy parliament speaker Ruben Rubinian (left) and Turkish 
diplomat Serdar Kilic.
Turkish and Armenian envoys will meet in Vienna on February 24 for the second 
round of negotiations on normalizing relations between their countries.
The two sides announced the date and venue of the meeting in identical 
statements issued late on Thursday. They said nothing about its agenda.
The Turkish daily Sabah reported last month that Ankara would like the talks to 
be held in Turkey or Armenia.
The first meeting between Serdar Kilic, a veteran Turkish diplomat, and Ruben 
Rubinian, a deputy speaker of the Armenian parliament, took place in Moscow on 
January 14. The foreign ministries of the two neighboring nations described the 
talks as “positive and constructive.” They said the special envoys agreed to 
continue the dialogue “without preconditions.”
Armenia’s Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan on Wednesday voiced cautious optimism 
over the success of the process welcomed by Russia, the United States and the 
European Union.
Earlier, the Turkish government invited Mirzoyan and Rubinian to an 
international conference that will be held in Turkey in March. Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian signaled last week that Yerevan will likely accept the 
invitation.
Ankara has for decades linked the establishment of diplomatic relations with 
Yerevan and the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border to a resolution of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan. Turkish Foreign Minister 
Mevlut Cavusoglu has repeatedly made clear that his government will coordinate 
the Turkish-Armenian normalization talks with Baku.
“We will naturally continue to advance the course and all stages of these 
meetings through a dialogue with our Azerbaijani brothers,” Cavusoglu’s deputy, 
Yavuz Selim Kiran, said on Thursday.
Speaking at an event in Ankara marking the 30th anniversary of the establishment 
of Turkish-Azerbaijani diplomatic relations, Kiran noted the resumption this 
week of charter flights between Istanbul and Yerevan.
Armenian Opposition Won’t Field Presidential Candidate
        • Karlen Aslanian
Armenia - Senor lawmakers from the opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances 
talk during a parliament session in Yerevan, August 24, 2021.
The two opposition forces represented in Armenia’s parliament have decided not 
to nominate a candidate for the new president of the republic who will be 
elected by lawmakers in the coming weeks.
In a joint statement released on Friday, the Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances 
slammed the presidential candidate fielded by the ruling Civil Contract party 
and said they do not want to legitimize his almost certain election.
The candidate, Vahagn Khachatrian, has served as minister of high-tech industry 
in Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s cabinet since August. Khachatrian was 
officially nominated on Wednesday ten days after former President Armen 
Sarkissian unexpectedly stepped down.
Civil Contract controls enough parliament seats to install the 62-year-old 
economist as head of states. He will have largely ceremonial powers.
The opposition statement claimed that Khachatrian is a partisan figure who does 
not correspond to constitutional provisions requiring the presidency to be a 
“really neutral institution consolidating the society.” It said such 
consolidation is especially necessary now that Armenia is facing “extremely 
serious internal and external challenges.”
“But this regime, which has put the country on the brink of destruction and 
split the society, decided to stick to its practices and to be guided by only 
parochial, rather than national, interests,” added the statement.
Hayastan and Pativ Unem therefore “will not participate in any way in the 
election of the president of the republic,” it said.
Speaking with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service later in the day, Khachatrian said he 
regrets the opposition decision. He expressed readiness to meet with opposition 
leaders and discuss their concerns.
Asked whether he will try to win the backing of opposition lawmakers ahead of 
the vote, Khachatrian said: “I just don’t know ways of doing that.”
New Poll Finds Growing Pessimism In Armenia
Armenia - A view of Yerevan and Mount Ararat, 17 February 2013.
Armenians have grown more pessimistic since last year’s parliamentary elections, 
with only one in three of them thinking that their country is on the right track 
now, according to a U.S.-funded opinion poll.
The nationwide poll released this week also found that most of them do not 
expect major economic benefits from the possible opening of Armenia’s borders 
with Turkey and Azerbaijan.
It was commissioned by the Washington-based International Republican Institute 
(IRI), financed by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and 
conducted by an Armenian polling organization in late November and early 
December.
According to IRI, 46 percent of 1,512 randomly interviewed people felt that 
“Armenia is heading in the wrong direction,” up from 34 percent in the previous 
survey conducted last July shortly after the snap elections won by Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party. The capital Yerevan had the 
highest percentage of such respondents.
The proportion of those who anticipate positive change in the country fell from 
41 percent to 34 percent in that period. It stood at 62 percent in late 2019.
Civil Contract won the June 2020 polls with about 54 percent of the vote, 
according to their official results. Pashinian regularly cites that victory in 
response to opposition criticism of his policies and accusations of misrule.
The latest IRI poll suggests that 61 percent of Armenians believe their country 
is “governed in the interest of some groups,” rather than the majority of the 
population. Just under a fifth of those polled were “very satisfied” with the 
work of the prime minister’s office, with another 30 percent only “somewhat 
satisfied.”
Of all state institutions, the office of the outgoing human rights ombudsman, 
Arman Tatoyan, had the highest approval ratings, followed by the Armenian 
police, local governments and the military.
Tatoyan has been increasingly critical of Pashinian’s administration, accusing 
it of undermining judicial independence and bullying opposition groups that 
defeated the ruling party in recent local elections.
Respondents were also asked about what they see as the key challenges facing 
Armenia more than one year after the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Their most 
frequent answers were “territorial, border issues” (28 percent) and “national 
security” (15 percent).
Armenia - An Armenian soldier stands guard on the border with Azerbaijan, 
November 12, 2021.
“With the recent Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and a history of military 
confrontation in the region, Armenians are understandably concerned about 
national security and threats along the [Armenian-Azerbaijani] border,” said 
Stephen Nix, director of IRI’s Eurasia Division. “They would like to see a 
resolution to these long-standing territorial issues.”
Pashinian, who is blamed by his political opponents for Armenia’s defeat in the 
six-week war, has repeatedly promised to usher in an “era of peaceful 
development.” He has stressed the importance of having economic links with 
Azerbaijan and Turkey, saying that they will significantly benefit the Armenian 
economy,
The IRI poll shows most Armenians do not share the prime minister’s view. 
According to its findings, only 5-6 percent of them think that the economic 
impact of open borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey will be “definitely positive.”
More than two-thirds of respondents described Turkey as “the greatest economic 
threat to Armenia.”
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Armenpress: COVID-19 Armenia: 47% of administered tests came back positive in last 24 hours

COVID-19 Armenia: 47% of administered tests came back positive in last 24 hours

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 11:11, 4 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. Nearly half of COVID-19 tests administered in the last 24 hours came back positive.

4192 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed over the last 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 383,458, the Armenian National Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

10 people died, bringing the COVID-19 death toll to 8075.

2510 people recovered (total 346,224).

8857 tests were administered (total 2,762,988).

The number of active cases reached 27,614.

Smoking ban to take effect March 15

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 12:36, 4 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. Starting March 15, smoking and the use of all other tobacco products, including substitutes, will be banned in all public food facilities in Armenia.

The smoking ban will be enforced in both indoor and outdoor restaurants, cafes, bars and other similar venues, the Ministry of Healthcare said.

Opposition will not nominate candidate for President of Armenia

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 12:40, 4 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. The opposition “Armenia” and “I Have the Honor” factions of the Parliament will not nominate a candidate for the President of the Republic and will not take part in the election of the new President.

“We have discussed the appropriateness of nominating a candidate, however in such situation we consider it wrong and unacceptable to participate in the legitimation of that election, even indirectly”, the “Armenia” bloc said in a statement on social media. “Based on these confirmations, the “Armenia” and “I Have the Honor” factions of the National Assembly decided not to take part in the election of the President of the Republic in any way”, it added.

Azerbaijani schoolbooks promote hate towards Armenians, warns Ombudsman

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 14:00, 4 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan presented an evidence-based emergency report on the new developments and dangers of the Azerbaijani state-sanctioned Armenophobic policy in the post-war period.

“The Azerbaijani authorities are advocating hate towards Armenia and Armenians,” warned Tatoyan.

He said that this Azerbaijani state-sanctioned policy of hate is based on two fundamental pillars: studies show that religious-fuelled hate is now added to the ethic-based hatred.

“Azerbaijani schoolbooks advocate hate and animosity against Armenians. They display their superiority against Armenian people. Their authorities even change the affiliation of churches, falsely claiming that they are Albanian,” Tatoyan said.

The Ombudsman also presented the dangers of this policy in other countries, and between the two peoples in other countries around the world. He warned that this Azeri strategy is dangerous for other countries as well.

“During the war, Azerbaijani and Turkish groups were attacking Armenians in the United States, in France and elsewhere around the world, several buildings were vandalized and there is undeniable evidence proving this,” he said.

“After the 44-day war the poet Vahid Aziz, who holds the title of People’s Poet of Azerbaijan, said that ‘Armenians can’t create anything other than chaos, they are immoral nation’. This is concrete evidence that Azerbaijan finds these kinds of statements commendable,” Tatoyan said, presenting the Azerbaijani authorities’ conduct promoting hate, which are virtually identically being displayed by cultural, sports and other public figures in the society.

Speaking on the peace-loving statements from the Azeri side, Tatoyan warned that these statements are just a cover for the outside world.

Armenian deputy PM receives new German Ambassador

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 14:00, 4 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan received newly-appointed Ambassador of Germany to Armenia Viktor Richter, the government said in a news release.

At the beginning of the meeting deputy PM Grigoryan congratulated the Ambassador on appointment and wished him a productive work. He said the government of Armenia is ready to assist the Ambassador in the development of the Armenian-German relations.

Both sides emphasized the presence of potential in the bilateral commercial relations which is not fully utilized and discussed the possible ways of deepening the cooperation between Armenia and Germany. In this context deputy PM Grigoryan presented Armenia’s advantages as a member state of the Eurasian Economic Union, and the opportunities opening for the German business.

The German Ambassador said there is a good base for the mutual partnership based on which it’s possible to develop the partnership.

The officials also highlighted the activity of the GIZ and KfW in Armenia.

The Armenian government’s reforms in healthcare, education and social protection spheres were also discussed. In this respect the deputy PM highlighted the potential partnership with the German partners, particularly, the participation of expert potential to the processes.

Regional developments and the ongoing actions to unblock the transportation communications in the region were also touched upon during the meeting.

Turkey and China keep relations on track despite Uighur dispute

Middle East Eye
[With its economy in tatters, Turkey is taking a pragmatic approach
that puts its cash flow first]
By MEE Corespondend
Published Feb. 5, 2022
The ties between Turkey and China seem to be on the up and up, if the
warm exchanges between their top diplomats are any indication.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been engaging in a friendly
dialogue with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, encouraging China
to invest in Turkey. Turkey's economy is in serious need of cash, and
Ankara's relations with the West are on the rocks.
While Beijing's Uighur policy is still causing tension between the two
nations, so far the intermittent war of words between them has not
been a major threat to their cooperation.
Despite once calling Beijing's policy towards its Uighur Muslim
population "almost a genocide," Erdogan's more urgent tasks these days
include tackling the soaring inflation and unemployment rates in
Turkey brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, as well as looking
ahead to next year's election.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, after his first meeting in
2022 with his Chinese counterpart, shared some key points from their
talks.
"We evaluated economic cooperation opportunities.
"We conveyed our views, expectations and sensitivities regarding the
issues on our agenda, especially the Uighur Turks," Cavusoglu said in
a tweet, in that order.
Last year, Turkey and China celebrated 50 years of diplomatic
relations, and, according to a Turkish envoy, the "tragedy" of the
pandemic has brought the two countries "even closer".
"We regard the Turkey-China diplomatic ties not merely as a
government-to-government relationship, but as an indispensable
exchange between two ancient civilisations acting as the westernmost
and easternmost gateways to Asia," Abdulkadir Emin Onen, Turkish
ambassador to China, said in a statement published by the Chinese
state news outlet CGTN to mark the occasion.
Turkey, aware that cooperation with China is currently vital for its
economy, is handling the Uighur issue with kid gloves.
Mutually beneficial relations
Ankara's relations with Beijing have been on a rollercoaster ride.
Frosty for decades, the ties have improved rapidly in recent years as
Turkey has gravitated away from its Nato partners to embrace
non-western countries, including Russia.
Now, as Ankara tries to recover its fragile economy from the impact of
the coronavirus pandemic, and as tensions with Washington persist,
it's no longer shy about seeking China's support.
Unlike many other countries, Erdogan has refused to ask for assistance
from the International Monetary Fund. Talks on a swap deal with the US
Federal Reserve have so far not yielded results, and there is reason
to doubt that Turkey would meet the criteria for such an arrangement.
Exports and tourism have risen on the back of a cheap currency,
narrowing the trade deficit. However, the central bank is bleeding
dollars to prop up the lira, which recently hit a record low.
Turkey was Nato's wayward member, then came the crisis in Ukraine
Another main reason for the economic difficulties is Turkey's tense
relationship with the West, as European Union countries and the United
States are criticising Turkey for violating basic human rights and the
rule of law. That even prompted the US to impose a limited number of
sanctions in 2018 and pushed Turkey closer to Russia and China.
"China stands to help fill the role as a global-power ally. Erdogan
needs as many [allies] as he can get while the lira collapses," said
Richard Kraemer, a non-resident scholar in the Frontier Europe
Initiative in the US-based Middle East Institute.
Furthermore, China is providing healthcare assistance to its partner.
More than 10 million people in Turkey have been vaccinated with
CoronaVac, the Covid-19 shot developed by the Beijing-based Sinovac.
Kraemer thinks that Turkey's cooperation has been crucial for China, too.
"In matters of trade or the military, Turkey remains of considerable
geopolitical significance," he told Middle East Eye.
According to Kraemer, Turkey, located on a key route for China's Belt
and Road Initiative, has a cultural understanding that runs from the
western Balkans to the Zagros mountains, and that's an important asset
to China.
In 2010, the Chinese premier visited Ankara and concluded a strategic
cooperation agreement. Since then, trade has increased significantly,
with a flurry of big-ticket infrastructure deals.
In 2016, the two countries signed another memorandum of understanding
for the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route for containerised
rail transport from China to Europe. The first China-bound cargo train
from Turkey departed in December 2020, arriving in Xi'an in just two
weeks, halving the travel time for shipment of goods. The unofficial
name given to the railway is "The Metal Silk Road".
Erdogan himself has visited Beijing a number of times, including in
2017 for a large international forum devoted to the Belt and Road
Initiative.
Global power shift
The courtship seems to be paying off. According to Turkish Trade
Ministry and Turkish Statistical Institute data, between January and
November 2021 China was at the top of Turkey's import partners list,
and 16th on its export partners list. Between 2016 and 2019, Chinese
investment in Turkey approached $3bn.
As well as rail transport, China and Turkey are cooperating on
seaborne freight, as China owns 65 percent of the Kumport container
terminal in Istanbul, the third-biggest port in Turkey, acquired for
$950m.
Joint transport investments have also seen a Chinese consortium take a
51 percent stake in the third bridge on the Bosphorus, Yavuz Sultan
Selim Bridge.
However, this consortium has been shaken by one of the stakeholders'
decision to withdraw in the summer of 2021. The reason for that was
not made public, but diplomatic sources in Ankara told MEE that it was
purely about the Chinese company's business interests, and it was not
a significant step back for economic relations.
Around the same time last year, a new $3.6bn swap agreement was signed
between the two countries. Combined with previous deals, the total
reached $6bn in value. Erdogan made the announcement ahead of his
visit to Brussels for the Nato meeting in June, where he met US
President Joe Biden for the first time since the latter was elected.
However, one expert warns that the reality might not be as rosy as it
appears for Turkey, and that the relationship is much more in favour
of China.
"Turkey sees more than $20bn of deficit in its trade with China, and
the deficit increases every year," Nurettin Akcay, a Turkish scholar
who received his PhD from Shanghai University and is an expert on
China-Turkey relations, told MEE.
In addition, foreign direct investment in Turkey fell between 2016 and
2020, from $12.18bn to $6.67bn. "Thanks to the credits and
investments, Turkey turns a blind eye to this disadvantageous
situation," Akcay said.
In the grand scheme of economic expansion, the alliance fortifies
Turkey and China's position against mutual competitors in regions such
as Central Asia, the Eastern Mediterranean and East Africa - namely
the US and the EU.
"Together with Russia, China and Turkey rely on each other to create a
more multipolar world where the political and economic centres are no
longer limited to the West," said Filip Noubel, managing editor at
Global Voices, who lived and worked in Asia for many years.
What about the Uighurs?
The plight of the Uighurs in China has long been an issue for Turkish
nationalists, as the majority-Muslim minority is ethnically and
cultural Turkic and speaks a variation of the same language. The
region of China inhabited by Uighurs is referred to by pan-Turkic
nationalists as East Turkestan.
China has repeatedly denied that it is carrying out abuses of Uighurs,
despite a 2018 Human Rights Watch report that detailed the "mass
arbitrary detention, torture, forced political indoctrination, and
mass surveillance of Xinjiang's Muslims".
Turkey has previously raised concerns about China's treatment of the
Uighurs. In February 2019, the foreign ministry issued a statement in
which it said: "It is no longer a secret that more than one million
Uighur Turks incurring arbitrary arrests are subjected to torture and
political brainwashing in internment camps and prisons. Uighurs who
are not detained in these camps are under heavy pressure."
Later that year, China invited Turkey to send a delegation to the
Xingjiang region to observe how the Uighur minority was being treated.
Beijing has repeatedly urged Ankara to keep its hands off China's
Uighur issues. In his meeting with Cavusoglu in January, Chinese
Foreign Minister Wang Yi issued another reminder.
"It is hoped that the two sides will firstly support each other in
safeguarding their own sovereignty, security and development
interests," Wang said.
There's too much at stake for both sides to allow a conflagration,
according to Kraemer.
"That's why the partnership grew in spite of the recent row on the
Uighur issue, which was put in the freezer for almost 10 years. Could
it happen? The economic and political advantages of increasing
cooperation, particularly in times of a dire lira, are too great for
now."
Tug-of-war in words
During Erdogan's visit to Beijing in 2017, Turkey and China signed an
extradition treaty, which China ratified in December 2020. Turkey has
yet to follow suit. Rights groups fear the treaty could pave the way
for tens of thousands of people to be deported and imprisoned in
internment camps, constituting a "cultural genocide". China says it
would be used for counterterrorism purposes.
However, last year some Uighur activists claimed they were detained by
Turkish police and some were forced to leave Turkey.
In April 2021, the Chinese embassy in Turkey posted a tweet in
response to two politicians who criticised China's treatment of
Uighurs - nationalist Iyi Party chair Meral Aksener and Ankara Mayor
Mansur Yavas.
"The Chinese side steadfastly opposes and strongly condemns any form
of challenge to China's sovereignty and territorial integrity by any
person or power. The Chinese side reserves the right to give a just
response," said the post, which tagged Aksener and Yavas's Twitter
handles as a direct response.
The nationalists in Turkey reacted harshly to the post and, in a rare
move, the Turkish foreign ministry summoned the Chinese ambassador to
inform him that these tweets were not welcomed by the Turkish public.
When asked if the dispute over Uighurs would affect the cooperation on
trade and the economy, Akcay said China could use the economy as a bat
to silence Turkey.
"China doesn't want any country to intervene on the Uighur issue, but
the nationalist and conservative people in Turkey want their
government to play an active role. That's why crises occur from time
to time," he said.
This domestic dilemma might explain why, when last October 43
countries in the United Nations made a call for China to "follow the
rule of law on the Uighur issue," Turkey couldn't abstain from joining
them.
A quarrel ensued between the UN representatives of Turkey and China in
New York. First, China retaliated by blaming Turkey for "violating the
human rights in northeast Syria," a mostly Kurdish-populated region.
Turkey responded by saying that "they wouldn't learn from those who
violate international human rights".
Facing heated calls from the Turkish public and opposition parties,
Erdogan said in November that Turkey was following "the situation of
the Uighur Turks and other Muslim minorities in China's Xinjiang
Uighur Autonomous Region with great sensitivity" and called on the
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, of which Turkey is a member, to
keep track of the situation of Uighurs in China. China's reaction was
minimal and low profile, with its UN deputy representative criticising
Turkey’s air bombardment in Iraq.
"Both Beijing and Ankara regularly use nationalistic arguments to
please their home audience," said Noubel. "The latest developments
around this issue show that in the end, economic pragmatism trumps the
alleged pan-Turkic solidarity when Ankara desperately needs Beijing's
financial or public health assistance."
 

Amnesty rebuffs Congress, urges US to pressure Israel over ‘apartheid policies’

Middle East Eye
[Rights group rejects criticism from US Congress against its report
labelling Israel an apartheid state]
MEE Staff
Feb. 3, 2022
Amnesty International has called on the United States to pressure
Israel "to repeal discriminatory laws and policies" and to "review"
its military aid to the country, days after the rights group released
a landmark report calling Israel an apartheid state.
In a statement, Amnesty's USA chapter appeared to push back against
criticism from members of Congress against the findings of its report
and said Washington was in a "uniquely placed" position to pressure
Israel into repealing certain discriminatory policies that have been
levied against Palestinians in Israel and the occupied Palestinian
territories.
"We encourage all members of Congress to use the full power of their
office to advance human rights for all by calling for a thorough
review of US security aid to Israeli forces to determine whether such
aid has been used in the commission of violations," the rights group
said.
"By conditioning security aid appropriated to Israel on an end to
violations of international humanitarian law and improvements in
respect for human rights.”
The statement comes just a few days after Amnesty labelled Israel an
apartheid state, saying its policies "benefit Jewish Israelis while
restricting the rights of Palestinians".
Amnesty became the latest rights group to join a cadre of
organisations that have used the term to describe Israel's
discriminatory treatment of Palestinians.
The organisation highlighted crimes Israel has committed that fall
under the definition of apartheid, such as the forcible transfer of
Palestinians; Israel's destruction of homes and land owned by
Palestinians; and the imprisonment of thousands of Palestinians
"without charge or trial".
In its report, Amnesty called on the UN Security Council to "impose
targeted sanctions, such as asset freezes, against Israeli officials
most implicated in the crime of apartheid, and a comprehensive arms
embargo on Israel.'
Accusations of slander and misinformation
The report, however, was met with immediate and fierce opposition from
Israeli officials and leaders, as well as the Biden administration
which rejected the apartheid label on Israel, a close and
long-standing US ally.
A number of members of US Congress across both parties also attacked
the report, including Republican Senators Jim Risch; Marco Rubio; and
James Lankford; and Democratic Senators Bob Menendez; Chuck Schumer;
and Congressman Ritchie Torres.
Menendez, who heads the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
accused Amnesty of "slander" and  "misinformation".
Schumer, the Senate majority leader, told Jewish Insider:
"Delegitimizing the existence of the State of Israel – a fellow
democracy and the world’s only Jewish state – as Amnesty does in its
report, brings the parties no closer to peace, but simply hardens the
extremes who do not wish to ever see a two-state solution where
Israelis and Palestinians can live in peace, freedom, security and
prosperity."
Amnesty dismissed the criticism of the report and accusations of
antisemitism levelled at the group.
"Amnesty's research, campaigns, advocacy and statements pertaining to
Israel are focused on the actions of the Israeli government - they are
not, and never will be, a condemnation of Judaism or the Jewish
people," the group said.
"Furthermore, we condemn anyone who would cynically cite our research
as justification for committing anti-Semitic acts of hatred and
violence. Amnesty International condemns anti-Semitism in the
strongest possible terms," the statement said.
 

Turkish Press: Historical Armenian church in southeastern Turkiye set to be restored

Turkish Press
Feb 6 2022