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Iraqi Kurdistan KRG closes offices of Yezidi rights organization Yazda

January 2, 2017 By administrator

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Kurdish authorities confirmed that they have closed the office of the rights organization Yazda, which advocates on behalf of the Yezidi community, because it did not abide by the terms and conditions of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) in the Region.

Monday evening, Yazda said in a statement that their offices were “formally closed by the Security Forces ‘Assayesh’ for unknown reasons, this includes all Yazda’s humanitarian projects serving the Yazidi community.”

Dr. Dindar Zebari, head of the Kurdistan Regional Government’s High Committee to Evaluate and Respond to International Reports, told Rudaw English that the closure came after the rights organization ignored an initial warning to abide by the rules of the Kurdistan Region regarding the work of NGOs.

Zebari said the department for NGOs had earlier warned them to fully abide by the rules, but that they failed to do so in “some aspects” and they “stepped outside their organizational mission.”

He refused to give specific details of the closure, saying that the decision came from the NGO department.

Rudaw English could not immediately reach the NGO department for comment.

Local and international organizations have to register with the NGO department in order to work in the Kurdistan Region.

Zebari said Yazda is a registered organization.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: close, KRG, Yazda

Germany shuts Ankara embassy amid fear of attack by Erdogan supporters

September 14, 2016 By administrator

germany-close-embassyGermany has temporarily closed its embassy in Ankara, reportedly because of fears of an attack. Turks are said to be outraged by a German magazine’s depiction of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as a dictator.

Germany closed its embassy in Turkey on Wednesday, along with all other consular offices in Turkey, with reports that officials feared the buildings might come under attack.

The Foreign Ministry confirmed that its embassy and consular offices – including the main consulate in Istanbul – would be closed from September 12 to September 16. However, the ministry did not comment on the cause.

Germany’s “Bild” newspaper reported that the decision had been taken as a precaution after the German Foreign Ministry learned that mob attacks were likely during the Eid al-Adha religious holiday. Public outrage in Turkey was said to be brewing over the depiction of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the latest edition of German news magazine “Der Spiegel.”

Minarets to rockets

The Turkish government accused the weekly of giving a distorted view of the country in its “Focus on Turkey” special edition. Ankara accused Spiegel of prejudice and said the front page was “particularly provocative.”

In a statement, Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgic said the cover, published during Eid, sought to create “a negative image not only about Turkey but also Islam.”

German magazine "DER SPIEGEL"s cover with Erdogan as dictator ! pic.twitter.com/OtdGzZhajV

— Christos G Failadis (@xfailadis) September 14, 2016

 

The front page features a stone-faced Erdogan wearing sunglasses as the minarets from Istanbul’s Blue Mosque appear to have been transformed into military rockets lifting off into the air. Under the main title “Hotspot Turkey,” is the strapline, “A land loses its freedom.”

At the bottom of the page, a teaser for one of the magazine’s stories is titled simply “The Dictator.”

The Turkish Foreign Ministry described the magazine’s publishing policy as “far from being responsible,” saying that it was “the clear and latest example of an anti-Turkey approach.”

“We regretfully condemn the attempts… to smear Mr. President,” it added, urging an end to efforts to tarnish Turkey’s image.

Turkish and German relations have been tested lately, with Turkey having barred German parliamentarians from visiting the Incirlik airbase over a Bundestag resolution that declared the massacre of Armenians during World War I to have been “genocide.” The ban was later lifted after the German government pointed out that the resolution was not legally binding.

The German government also complained last week about the confiscation of DW’s interview footage with Turkish Minister of Youth and Sports Akif Cagatay Kilic. The minister had been asked about the July coup attempt in Turkey, which was followed by a harsh crackdown on opponents of Erdogan.

rc/sms (dpa, AFP, Reuters)

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/germany-shuts-ankara-embassy-amid-fear-of-attack-by-erdogan-supporters/a-19553393

Filed Under: News Tagged With: close, close syria turkey, embassy, Germany, Turkey

Armenia close to recognizing Nagorno-Karabakh – analyst

April 28, 2016 By administrator

f572209f0da7a5_572209f0da7dc.thumbThe landmark moment for Armenia to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence is drawing near, says Stepan Grigoryan, a Yerevan-based political analyst.

According to him the process requires an appropriate consideration and timing. “Recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence implies automatically abandoning [the OSCE Minsk Group] format. Azerbaijan has embarked on diplomatic processes to unilaterally withdraw from earlier arrangements. Hence I don’t think we should be the side responsible for dismantling that format. But the moment of recognition is definitely drawing near,” he said.

Asked to comment on the necessary political efforts for Armenia, Grigoryan said he sees quite a lot of steps ahead.

“I have given recommendations many times before, but I see very little feedback. On April 2, for example, I said that Armenia should apply to the UN Security Council, calling for an ad hoc session and coordinating the plan with the Minsk Group. ”

As to why the Minsk Group is silent while it sees Azerbaijan attacking civilians, Mr Grigoryan said that it is now difficult to identify the conflicting party responsible for the escalation, whereas it was much easier to do on April 2, but was not done.

“When Azerbaijan launched hostilities, regrettably no one condemned Azerbaijan. And now that Azerbaijan resorts to provocations, our forces retaliate – and they are right – and it is difficult to say for certain. When the very first ceasefire violations take place, it is quite easy to identify the part responsible for that. Regrettably, the international community had not the strength to tell the truth,” Mr Grigoryan said.

It is the lack of necessary statements that are the cause of the current confrontation.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: analyst, Armenia, close, Nagorno-Karabakh, recognizing

Turkey: another consulate in Istanbul closed over ‘terror threats’ Dutch

March 23, 2016 By administrator

n_96815_1ISTANBUL – Doğan News Agency

The Netherlands Consulate General in Istanbul was closed on March 23 due to “terror threats,” the Dutch Foreign Ministry has announced.

The announcement said the Consulate General would be closed due to “terror threats” until future notice.

Meanwhile, Germany’s Consulate General in Istanbul remained closed, however its high school in the city, Deutsche Schule Istanbul, reopened on March 23.

The German Foreign Office had closed down the German embassy and the German consulate in Istanbul on March 17 and March 18, along with the school in Ankara and the Deutsche Schule Istanbul, over terror concerns.

Five people were killed and more than 30 were injured in a suicide bomb attack on March 19 in central Istanbul, on the busy İstiklal Avenue in Taksim.

The Turkish interior minister has said the bomber had links with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: close, Turkey, ‘terror threats’ Dutch consulate

Azerbaijan Orders OSCE To Close Baku Office

June 5, 2015 By administrator

By Carl Schreck

June 05, 2015

Azerbaijan's move to close the OSCE office comes just days after the contract of the organization's project coordinator in Baku, Alexis Chahtahtinsky (pictured), expired.

Azerbaijan’s move to close the OSCE office comes just days after the contract of the organization’s project coordinator in Baku, Alexis Chahtahtinsky (pictured), expired.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) says Azerbaijan has given it one month to halt its operations in the country and that Baku provided “no explanation” for the decision.

OSCE spokesman Shiv Sharma told RFE/RL on June 5 that Azerbaijani authorities this week “informed us of their intentions of closing the office” of its project coordinator in Baku and that the 57-member security organization is “now assessing our options.”

The move comes amid heightened criticism of Azerbaijan’s record on civil society and media freedoms by Western officials and international human rights watchdogs.

Rights groups say Baku has escalated its efforts to muzzle government opponents since Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev was reelected for a third term in 2013.

The Vienna-based OSCE has been a prominent voice among those critics.

In November, its media freedoms representative, Dunja Mijatovic, said that “practically all independent media representatives and media NGOs” in Azerbaijan “have been purposefully persecuted under various, often unfounded and disturbing charges.”

Azerbaijan has bristled at Western criticism of its human rights record, saying such censure lacks objectivity.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, which notified the OSCE that Baku was terminating an agreement allowing the organization to operate in the country, had not commented publicly on the situation as of June 5.

Azerbaijan’s human rights record has also faced increasing international scrutiny in the run-up to the European Games, an Olympics-style event limited to athletes from Europe that is set to open on June 12.

Status Downgrade

EU lawmakers last month called on Azerbaijan to release individuals widely seen as political prisoners ahead of the games and urged European leaders to skip the event’s opening ceremony in Baku.

The OSCE office in Baku was downgraded to the office of a “project coordinator,” reportedly at Azerbaijan’s request, in January 2014.

The downgrade of the mission came at the request of the Azerbaijani government, which cited the country’s “significant progress” since the OSCE office in Baku was opened in 1999.

Khadija Ismayilova, a journalist and contributor to RFE/RL currently jailed in Azerbaijan on a series of charges that have been internationally condemned as politically motivated, testified before U.S. lawmakers in November that the downgrade had led to a halt of “most” of the OSCE office’s projects “related to media and combating corruption.”

Among other duties, the OSCE coordinator had been tasked with “implementing OSCE principles and commitments” and “maintaining contacts” with nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), local authorities, universities, and research institutions.

NGOs have been among the numerous targets of a crackdown by Azerbaijani authorities, including groups promoting free-media efforts in Azerbaijan.

In April, the Council of Europe’s human rights commissioner, Nils Muiznieks, said “human rights defenders are harassed through restrictive NGO legislation and selectively targeted with criminal prosecutions on charges that defy credibility.”

RFE/RL last month closed its Baku bureau after Azeri authorities sealed the office shut last December in connection with the government-led campaign against foreign organizations. RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service, however, continues to operate on digital and satellite platforms.

RFE/RL Editor in Chief Nenad Pejic said on May 22 that the Azerbaijani authorities had acted “illegally and arbitrarily.”

Azerbaijani ‘Masters’

Azerbaijan’s move to close the OSCE office comes just days after the contract of the organization’s project coordinator in Baku, France’s Alexis Chahtahtinsky, expired.

Novruz Mammadov, the deputy head of Aliyev’s administration and director of its Foreign Relations Department, suggested on Twitter on June 1 that Chahtahtinsky was relieved of his duties because of U.S. objections to the French diplomat’s public appearance with Aliyev.

Mammadov appeared to be referring to a July 2014 statement by Daniel Baer, the U.S. Ambassador to the OSCE, in which he criticized Chahtahtinsky for being photographed with Aliyev and Azerbaijan’s foreign minister but not “with civil society.”

“While consultation with the host government is certainly an important part of your work, you work for all of us, and you work for the principles that underlie this organization. Your masters are not the government of Azerbaijan,” Baer said, addressing Chahtahtinsky in the statement.

Baer did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.

But France’s ambassador to the OSCE, Maxime Lefebvre, told RFE/RL that the decision not to renew Chahtahtinsky’s contract was not linked to politics or OSCE-Azerbaijani ties, but rather to “internal management problems.”

Lefebvre said the OSCE “would like Azerbaijan to remain committed” to the organization and “would like the mission to continue its work.”

He added that it would be regrettable if the decision to close the Baku office was confirmed, “because we think it’s important that we keep a field presence of the OSCE in Azerbaijan and that we maintain good relations between Azerbaijan as a participating state with the OSCE.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Baku, close, office, OSCE

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