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The perpetrators of a 1992 massacre by Armenian forces in the town of Khojaly in Nagorno-Karabakh which left over 600 people dead should be punished, the head of the World Azerbaijani Congress said Wednesday.
Asif Kurban said in a statement that Armenian armed forces, terrorist groups and the 366th Motorized Rifle Regiment of the Soviet Army committed an unprecedented genocide against civilians by violating all international legal norms and human rights.
Kurban said 613 people were killed and 87 were left disabled.
"The images that were taken at that time and the stories of the survivors of the massacre show that there was a real genocide in Khojaly.
“Also, a document presented by 30 members of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe signed on April 26, 2001, the report prepared by the Memorial Human Rights Organization on Khojaly and the reply letter of UN Human Rights Organization President Holly Cartner to the Armenian representative in 1997 prove that the Armenians committed genocide in Khojaly,” he added.
Underlining that the parliaments of 15 countries and 16 state assemblies in the US recognized the genocide, he called on all parliaments to do the same.
"The 'modern' world of the 21st century is still silent and ignoring the Khojaly massacre,” he said, adding Armenia violated its obligation to prevent genocide and the actions of its perpetrators since it had effective control over those who carried out the actions in Khojaly.
“As the World Azerbaijani Congress, we consider what was done in Khojaly a violation of many conventions such as the 1949 Geneva Conventions, the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,” it said, demanding that the perpetrators be punished.
It said the failure to ensure that those responsible for the Khojaly genocide are held accountable before the law will pave the way for new genocides that may be committed by Armenians in the future.
Nagorno-Karabakh
On Feb. 26, 1992, with the Soviet Union just dissolved, Armenian forces took over the town of Khojaly in occupied Karabakh after battering it using heavy artillery and tanks, assisted by infantry.
The massacre is seen as one of the bloodiest atrocities by Armenian forces against Azerbaijani civilians in the Upper Karabakh region, which was liberated by Azerbaijan forces last fall after decades of occupation.
The two-hour Armenian offensive on Khojaly killed 613 Azerbaijani citizens – including 106 women, 63 children and 70 elderly people – and seriously injured 487 others, according to Azerbaijani figures.
Some 150 of the 1,275 Azerbaijanis that the Armenians captured during the massacre remain missing. In the massacre, eight families were completely wiped out, while 130 children lost one parent and 25 children lost both parents.
Relations between the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.
New clashes erupted on Sept. 27, 2020, and ended with a Russian-brokered truce six weeks later.
Baku liberated several strategic cities and nearly 300 of its settlements and villages from the Armenian occupation during this time.
Before this, about 20% of Azerbaijan's territory had been under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades./aa
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) said Wednesday that its digital pass will enable travelers to securely control their health data and share it with relevant authorities.
“Efficient digital management of health credentials is vital to restart. Manual processes will not be able to cope with volumes once the recovery begins,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s director general and CEO, at a virtual press conference.
The pass will verify if passengers have taken COVID-19 vaccines and tests needed to enter a country.
“Digital solutions must be secure, work with existing systems, align with global standards and respect data privacy. In developing the IATA Travel Pass, these are fully in focus,” he said.
The Travel Pass details come at a time when IATA said airline financial prospects are worsening as governments tighten travel restrictions.
"Burning a further $75 billion to $95 billion this year is not something that the industry will be able to withstand without additional government relief. And the expectation that the industry will not turn cash-positive until 2022 is yet another reminder of the severity of the crisis,” said de Juniac.
He said the past weeks had seen more airlines sign-up to trial the IATA Travel Pass regarding health credentials.
IATA said airlines that have signed up include Air New Zealand, Copa Airlines, Etihad Airways, Emirates, Qatar Airways, Malaysia Airlines, RwandAir, and Singapore Airlines.
IATA said that to re-open borders without quarantine and restart aviation, governments need to be confident that they are effectively lessening the risk of importing COVID-19.
A system is needed to inform passengers on what tests, vaccines, and other measures they require before traveling, details on where they can get tested, and giving them the ability to share their tests and vaccination results, it added./aa
At least nine asylum seekers were rescued by the Turkish Coast Guard off the country's western coast on Wednesday.
The Coast Guard Command said on its website that the group of asylum seekers traveling in a rubber boat had been pushed back to Turkish waters in the Aegean Sea by Greek authorities.
Acting on a tip off, a rescue vessel was sent to the group and converged on it off the Foca district of Izmir province.
The asylum seekers were transferred to the provincial migration office after reaching shore.
Turkey has been a key transit point for asylum seekers who want to cross to Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecution.
Turkey hosts nearly 4 million refugees, including over 3.6 million Syrians, more than any other country in the world./aa
The Ministry of Health continues its efforts around-the-clock to expand the vaccination units for medical and technical staff in health areas, such as the Sabah Specialized Medical District which two days ago joined the regions of Farwaniya, Al-Adan and Al-Jahra and inaugurated the facilities to vaccinate health workers against ‘Covid-19’.
Director of Al-Sabah Medical District, Dr. Ahmed Al-Shatti informed the Al-Seyassah daily about 1,000 health workers from the Al-Sabah region had registered via the online platform for vaccination, saying 293 people were vaccinated over two days, confirming the progressive increase in the number of vaccinated people in the region after news spread of the self-experience among doctors, nurses, technicians, engineers, administrators and legal workers in the region and in the central departments as well as from the Department of Health Promotion, Overseas Treatment, Records, Health Information Center, General Medical Council and the Department of Laboratories, as well as other sectors such as agriculture, workshops and medical engineering. The senior official called these medical personnel ‘live ammunition’ we need to confront the coronavirus.
Efforts
He added, “We launched the vaccination unit for medical, technical and administrative personnel in the region two days ago at the Islamic Medicine Center, within the framework of the Ministry of Health’s efforts to increase the number of vaccinations within the target segments of society and to increase the number of the total community percentage of vaccination. He added, the place has been equipped with complementary and concerted efforts exerted by the Islamic medicine center, public health, information technology center, nursing staff, pharmacy, public relations and administration sectors, in concert with media efforts and social media platforms.
He said the working hours at the vaccination unit during the exploratory phase start from eight in the morning until one in the afternoon, and that over the first two days 293 workers were vaccinated, pointing out that the vaccination mechanism depends on registering on the electronic platform and that the registered person can proceed directly to the center for vaccination, noting health professionals from more than 20 hospitals and medical centers received the Covid-19 vaccine.
Al-Shatti called on all workers in the region to register and apply to the Islamic Medical Center for vaccination, taking advantage of the priority of acceptance and spatial proximity. Director of Al Farwaniya Hospital Dr. Mohammad Al-Rashidi said about two thousand people in the Farwaniya health area were vaccinated during the first week of the launch of the Covid- 19 vaccination unit in the region, indicating that the daily average is 310 people, and that the unit works in two shifts — mornings and evenings — for medical staff.
The center provides 4 to 6 vaccination rooms, in addition to a doctor from the preventive health medicine who is present in the observation room, in addition to a reception and statistics office, a resuscitation room, and a reception room that can accommodate 30 people.
The number of people who received the vaccination until yesterday evening reached about 228,000 citizens and residents. This is around 5.3 Percent of the total population in the country, local media reported.
According to sources, the months of March and April are expected to increase the number of vaccinations, especially with the launch of dispersed clinics in more than one health center in more than one region, as well as the continuous services at the Kuwait Vaccination Center.
Authorities reminded the importance of adhering to the health protocols even after taking the vaccine in order to achieve the desired success.
Turkish security forces arrested 130 soldiers on Wednesday in operations centered in the western Izmir province over alleged links to the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO), the group behind the 2016 defeated coup.
Operations were held across 47 provinces in the country, with the Chief Public Prosecutor's Office in Izmir issuing arrest warrants for a total of 148 suspects, 103 of whom were on-duty.
A colonel, as well as lieutenants, majors, captains, sergeants and specialist sergeants were among those sought in the operations against the alleged presence of FETO in the Turkish Armed Forces, according to the prosecutor's office.
The suspects are accused of communicating with FETO's "covert imams" -- senior FETO operatives -- via pay phone.
Twelve of the suspects belonged to the land forces, while 47 were from air force, 18 from the navy, 38 from the gendarmerie, and 19 from the coast guard. Fourteen of the suspects were graduates of military schools that were disbanded after the coup attempt.
FETO and its US-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated coup of July 15, 2016, which left 251 people martyred and 2,734 injured.
Ankara also accuses FETO of being behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through the infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police, and judiciary./aa
Turkey’s presidential spokesperson on Wednesday condemned a statement by the European Union’s lead spokesperson for external affairs over the EU’s support for a Turkish opposition party.
"For once, you could perhaps be concerned about the PKK, a terrorist organization on the EU list, which brutally executed 13 people in Gara, Iraq. Or would that get you into trouble with the PKK lobby?," Ibrahim Kalin said on Twitter regarding Peter Stano's statement.
"The European Union is gravely concerned about the continuing pressure against the HDP and several of its members, which has materialized lately through arrests, replacing elected mayors, what seem to be politically motivated judicial proceedings and the attempt of lifting parliamentary immunities of Members of the Grand National Assembly," Stano's statement said, referring to the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).
In 2014, encouraged by developments in northern Syria, the terrorist group PKK adopted a new strategy in Turkey and sought to weaken the Turkish state by disrupting its unity in an effort to gain territory in line with its separatist agenda.
On Oct. 6-8 of that year, PKK ringleaders and their supporters incited armed violence across the country, instructing militants, terrorists and ideological supporters to take to the streets and rebel against the Turkish state under the pretext of a Daesh/ISIS attack on the Syrian border city of Ayn al-Arab (Kobani).
The HDP -- a party Turkey has said is linked to the terrorist PKK -- also made a statement calling on people to take to the streets in protest.
The call to protest led to violent events in 35 provinces and 96 districts, causing the deaths of 37 citizens -- including civilians distributing humanitarian aid during a Muslim holiday -- and injuries to 761 people, including 326 law enforcement officers.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK -- listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and the EU -- has been responsible for the deaths of at least 40,000 people, including women, children and infants./aa
Azerbaijan's nearly $20 billion investment in Turkey is a "sign of brotherhood and confidence in the Turkish economy," the assistant to the Azerbaijani president said Tuesday in a special edition talks series hosted by the Islamic Cooperation Youth Forum (ICYF).
Speaking about the new geopolitics in the South Caucasus and perspectives of regional cooperation, Hikmet Hajiyev said Turkish-Azerbaijani cooperation along with economic and trade relations are also a "joint investment.”
"First, it is a sign of the brotherhood between Turkey and Azerbaijan, and in the meantime, it's a sign of confidence in the Turkish economy, because Turkey has one of the vibrant economies in the region and the recent developments of Turkey economy-wise and trade-wise also make Azerbaijan happy," he said.
The two countries, with joint efforts, "have changed the energy landscape of the wider European continent," Hajiyev said.
"Turkey-Azerbaijan partnership and cooperation as an element contributes to the development of both countries, and in the meantime, this element of cooperation contributes to the enrichment of the wider region based on the principle that shared prosperity is the best way of doing business," he said.
He recalled that top Azerbaijani officials had recently attended an intergovernmental joint commission meeting in Turkey.
"The intergovernmental joint commission is a very instrumentalized mechanism of development of comprehensive, economic and trade cooperation and the relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan," Hajiyev said.
He added that it is not only limited to those areas, but is a comprehensive program which also covers education, culture and other perspectives.
Energy cooperation
With joint efforts, Azerbaijan and Turkey have changed the geopolitical and energy map of the South Caucasus region and also “brought together” the Caspian Sea, Black Sea, the Mediterranean Sea and the Adriatic Sea, said Hajiyev.
He said the joint efforts which started with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline have now ended up with a recent commissioning of the Trans-Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline (TANAP) and the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) projects.
He stressed that the "last segment" of the Southern Gas Corridor is now fully operational and brings the gas of Azerbaijan from the shores of the Caspian Sea to the European market, adding Turkey is a “major transit country.”
The Southern Gas Corridor includes the Shah Deniz 2 field, the South Caucasus Pipeline, TANAP and TAP. Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey, Bulgaria, Greece, Albania and Italy are the countries that are involved in the 3,500-kilometer-long project.
“Through our joint effort, we are contributing to the energy landscape, energy security of Europe, and not [only] as an alternative route but as an alternative source as well."
Renewal of ancient Silk Road
The Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway system was yet "another fundamental contribution" to the development of the region’s connectivity, which now "brings together" the Central Asian countries.
"We have seen recently the Turkish cargos with the same route have been delivered to China," he said, adding that in a sense, it is also a "renewal of the ancient Silk Road," where Turkey and Azerbaijan played a "fundamental and crucial role."
He emphasized that "innovative development" based on innovation and science is also in the forefront in Turkey.
Meanwhile, education and culture is another important field of cooperation between Baku and Ankara, he stressed, adding that many Azerbaijani students are studying in Turkey and after returning are contributing to the development of their country with their knowledge and skills, while there are also many Turkish students receiving an education in Azerbaijan.
He recalled that 2021 was declared the Year of Nizami Ganjavi in Azerbaijan and Yunus Emre Year in Turkey, adding that Azerbaijan is looking forward to enriching the common cultural cooperation.
Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict
There was also a "transformational change" in 2020 in the geopolitics of the region of the South Caucasus, particularly in the context of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, Hajiyev said, referring to the liberation of Nagorno-Karabakh and other settlements from an Armenian occupation that lasted for nearly three decades.
"As everybody knows, Azerbaijani people have been suffering from the military occupation of Armenia for more than 30 years."
He also hailed the support of Turkey towards Azerbaijan during the 44-day Karabakh war that began on Sept. 27 last year.
Hajiyev said "the brotherly" Turkey always supported justice, international law and the "just cause" of the Azerbaijani people.
He also saluted the “political and moral support” of Turkey towards Azerbaijan during the recent conflict, adding that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan -- “who is a great friend of Azerbaijan and Azerbaijani people” – once again declared that Turkey renders its support to Azerbaijan.
"Such moral and diplomatic support of the brotherly Turkey enhanced the courage and determination of Azerbaijan to liberate Azerbaijan’s occupied territories from Armenia's occupation."
"The 44 days of war resulted in the victory of Azerbaijan, while Armenia signed a declaration of capitulation, and Azerbaijan ensured the withdrawal of Armenian troops from its occupied territories. But now, there are more opportunities for the peaceful development and transformation of the region. Azerbaijan, from its side, is ready for that, as it has been declared by the President [Ilham Aliyev]," he said.
Based on the trilateral statement that has been signed between Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, Baku is engaged in consolidating on the practical elements of this statement, Hajiyev added.
Referring to the Jan.11 statement between Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia about opening the transportation routes, Hajiyev said: "We do believe that opening of communications and also trading relations among the reginal countries will further boost the potential of the peaceful development."
"For that purpose, there was also an initiative of a 3+3 format of cooperation among the countries of the Caucasus and also neighboring countries like brotherly Turkey, Russia and Iran, which could also join this process and have full-fledged regional cooperation."
He added that Baku believes that Yerevan can also "gain a lot of benefits" from such cooperation.
"Under such circumstances, we can have full transformation of the region of the Caucasus, and every country, including Armenia, can get benefit from that," he said.
"Being a self-isolated country and also having a high level of unemployment, demographic challenges and some other difficulties, Armenia can get a benefit from such international cooperation, but for that Armenia finally must end its policy of occupation and also should curb its policy of revanchism," he said, adding that unfortunately, some political groups in Armenia are raising up "revanchist" ideas.
He said in case of "revanchism ideas" by Armenia, Azerbaijan has the "power" to respond, adding that they "will never ever allow again the repetition of such crimes against the Azerbaijani people."
Passport-free travel
Hajiyev reiterated that the possibility of Azerbaijani and Turkish nationals visiting both countries with their ID cards is among the main agenda items between the two states.
"I'm looking forward at the earliest convenience for such an opportunity to visit brotherly and beautiful Turkey with my own identity card," he said.
"We do believe that it's going to boost further the people-to-people contacts, business contacts, human and cultural cooperation between our brotherly countries, and in a wider sense contribute to the development of our countries."
On Dec. 11, 2020, the Turkish Foreign Ministry announced that Turkey and Azerbaijan had signed a protocol allowing mutual passport-free travel for nationals on both sides.
The agreement was signed on Dec. 10 during a visit by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to Azerbaijan, with a Turkish Foreign Ministry statement the following day saying that the protocol allowing travel with ID cards would pave the way for the people of Azerbaijan and Turkey to "intertwine further."
After Azerbaijan revoked visa requirements for Turkish citizens, the residence period for the country's nationals was extended from 30 days to 90 days, noted the communique./aa
A 30-year-old US Navy veteran from Northern California died late last year after a police officer knelt on his neck for five minutes, his family claimed in a recently filed lawsuit.
Angelo Quinto was experiencing a mental health crisis after suffering from bouts of paranoia and anxiety for months when officers from the Antioch Police Department arrived on the scene, his family said in a wrongful death lawsuit filed Feb. 18.
Video of the fatal arrest taken by Quinto's mother and posted on social media appears to show him lying face down, handcuffed, as blood pours from his mouth. He appears nonresponsive.
"What happened?" Cassandra Quinto-Collins, his mother asks, breathless in the video from Dec. 23. “Can you take him, please?” she asks officers.
It is unclear what happened before the recording began.
But the suit claims Quinto had already begun to calm down as he laid on the floor, wrapped tightly by his mother's arms, according to CNN. Rather than attempt to understand the situation, the officers immediately grabbed Quinto and attempted to subdue him by kneeling on his neck, his lawyers said at a news conference.
He was pronounced dead three days later.
"These Antioch police officers had already handcuffed Angelo but did not stop their assault on the young man and inexplicably began using the 'George Floyd' technique of placing a knee on the back and side of his neck, ignoring Mr. Quinto’s pleas of 'please don't kill me,'" John Burris, a family attorney, said at the Feb. 18 news conference, according to CNN./aa
The European Commission is preparing a digital vaccine certificate which is expected to be globally recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO), an EU official said Tuesday.
Speaking at a press conference following a virtual meeting of EU affairs ministers, Maros Sefcovic, vice president of the European Commission in charge of energy union, confirmed that the EU executive body was working on an electronic COVID-19 vaccine certificate.
“It is important for us to have a system which is compatible within EU member states, and we are pushing for a global compatibility on these electronic vaccination records, preferably under the auspices of the WHO,” said Sefcovic, who is also EU Commissioner for Interinstitutional Relations and Foresight.
However, the vaccine certificates should first be used for medical purposes, he said.
Once the vaccination record system is operational and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) delivers its scientific advice, “we can decide about the other uses of electronic vaccination records concerning travel” between EU countries and outside the bloc, Sefcovic said.
EU heads of states and governments are expected to discuss the idea of travel passports during their virtual summit Thursday.
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis in January proposed an EU-wide COVID-19 vaccination certificate for travel in an attempt to save the coming tourist season.
The bloc aims to vaccinate 70% of the adult population by the end of September.
So far, 40.7 million COVID-19 jabs have been administered, and a further 300 million doses will be distributed in the second quarter of the year, Sefcovic said.
The EU has signed advanced purchase agreements with six biotechnological firms --Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, AstraZeneca, CureVac, Johnson & Johnson and Sanofi/GlaxoSmithKline -- to purchase around 2.6 billion vaccine doses./aa