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Armenian delegate to PACE urges Hungary to clarify how murderer Safarov was sold for $7.6 million

October 9, 2017 By administrator

YEREVAN. – Armenian delegate to PACE Naira Zohrabyan called to clarify how Hungaria sold killer Ramil Safarov to Azerbaijan for $7.6 million.

Speaking during the opening day of the Assembly’s autumn session, Zohrabyan said former president Pedro Agramunt’s resignation was simply the first step to clean the Assembly from corruption network.

“It turns out that many well-known European figures who have been receiving huge sums from the Estonian branch of the Danish bank Danske Bank for decades have been involved in a major corruption scandal. I hope our colleagues from the Hungarian delegation will send a question to the political leadership of their country regarding the scandalous disclosure saying Hungary has sold murderer Ramil Safarov, who axed Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan in his sleep, for $ 7.6 million,” Zohrabyan said.

The Hungarian colleagues should be interested in how millions of dollars were transferred from Metastar Invest to an account opened in the Hungarian MKB bank and how these accounts are associated with the Hungarian authorities, the Armenian delegate said.

Zohrabyan recalled that Metastar Invest is a company that made regular transfers to ex-Vice President of PACE, Luca Volonte, “who is now probably telling the Italian Prosecutor General about the warm relations between him and his totalitarian friend.”

The Lithuanian Seimas has recently appealed to the Lithuanian financial crimes investigation body to investigate the possible involvement of Lithuanian figures in the PACE corruption scandal. Zohrabyan expressed hope that other Council of Europe members will follow their lead.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: hungary, murderer, safarov

Frank Engel: Nobody can tell me Safarov’s release by Hungary had nothing to do with money

October 5, 2017 By administrator

From the moment Safarov was sentenced in Budapest, there were repeated demarches by the Azerbaijani government to convince the Hungarian authorities to hand the man over, member of the European Parliament Frank Engel said in an interview with Budapest Beacon.

The Azerbaijani side promised that he would serve out the sentence that was pronounced by the Hungarian court.

“The difference, of course, is that neither Gyurcsány nor Bajnai [former Hungarian PMs – ed.] believed these obviously false promises,” Engel said.

“Then comes Orbán and – miraculously – after an official state visit to Azerbaijan, Safarov is back home a few weeks later. Nobody can tell me this had nothing to do with money. There would be no reason why the champion of Christianity in Europe, Viktor Orbán, would forsake his nation’s friendship with the first Christian nation on Earth, which is Armenia, if he and his government were not paid for doing it, if they were not paid for risking the Armenian element in order for some other elements to arrive [Safarov murdered an Armenian in Budapest].”

“Obviously, now, when we suddenly discover interesting flows of Azeri money to a Hungarian bank account at precisely the relevant time back in 2012 between – in the wider sense – Azerbaijan and Hungary, I must say that even if the amounts are nowhere near the 3 billion that I heard about at the time, but are the 8 or 9 million Euros that we are talking about now, and which are difficult to contest for the Hungarian authorities, it pretty much looks like pocket money received in return for a favor. But who received it is of course something we do not know.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Frank Engel, hungary, safarov

Israelis fume over Netanyahu’s retraction of Hungary’s anti-Soros campaign criticism

July 11, 2017 By administrator

Israel’s PM Benjamin Netanyahu came under fire after retracting criticism of an anti-George Soros campaign. The Jewish-American billionaire said he is ‘distressed’ by the imagery used against him.

Israelis from both sides of the political aisle are fuming over Hungary’s controversial poster campaign targeting the Jewish-American billionaire George Soros, though who is at fault – the Hungarian government, the Israeli government or Soros himself – remains in the eye of the beholder.

The Israeli ambassador to Hungary, Yosef Amrani, condemned a Hungarian poster campaign attacking Soros, saying it encouraged anti-Semitism. “Let’s not let Soros have the last laugh,” the billboards spread across Budapest read (above).

But a day later, Israel retracted the criticism, with the foreign ministry saying that Soros “continuously undermines Israel’s democratically elected governments by funding organizations that defame the Jewish state.”

Following Israel’s shift of stance, many Israeli politicians and activists now claim that the current government, led by Netanyahu’s conservative Likud party, prefers bluntly anti-Semitic views over what is perceived as “left-wing” opinions.

“I could not believe it, but today Netanyahu has reached a new low, when he officially supported an anti-Semitic campaign by Hungary’s prime minister against a Jewish, Holocaust survivor, businessman,” Stav Shaffir, a Knesset Member (MK) from Israel’s left-leaning Zionist Union posted to Facebook.

“Some of these posters were glued to the floor in trains for Hungarians to step on them,” she said. “Soros donates to human right organizations all over the world, has established a renown (sic) university, and Orban is trying to shut it down because it’s too critical of the government. But guess who decided to support him and go against the Jewish community? That’s right, the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.”

Soros himself reacted to the campaign, saying that “I am distressed by the current Hungarian regime’s use of anti-Semitic imagery as part of its deliberate disinformation campaign. Equally,” he added, “I am heartened that together with countless fellow citizens the leadership of the Hungarian Jewish community has spoken out against the campaign.”

In Hungary, Soros has enraged Prime Minister Viktor Orban with his support for more open immigration. But the financier and philanthropist is also highly unpopular among the Israeli right, as he supports human rights organizations such as Human Rights Watch that frequently criticize Israel’s policies toward the Palestinians.

Soros’s spokesperson Michael Vachon told DW in a statement said that “the Fidesz-led government [of Orban] launched a nationwide campaign reminiscent of Europe’s darkest hours” and that “the government has spent $12.9 million (5.7 billion HUF) on the campaign so far.”

Cross-party criticism

Despite the accusations of an anti-Semitic tone pervading the poster campaign, several Israeli right-wing activists have taken to social media to express a discontent that lies not with Hungarian government or with Israel’s retraction of criticism, but rather with Soros himself.

“The Foreign Ministry has condemned the Hungarian government for acting against the anti-Semite billionaire,” Yoav Eliassi, an Israeli rapper and right-wing activist operating under the name “The Shadow,” wrote on his Facebook page.

“But the left-wing clerks in the ministry didn’t even ask Netanyahu (before issuing the condemnation), who then forced them to publish a clarification.”

“Let us all see what kind of a despicable creature this Jewish, billionaire, anti-Semite, Soros really is,” Eliassi continued, also posting an article which claims Soros supports “radical left organizations responsible for thousands of migrants entering Europe.”

However, many Israelis still failed to understand how a campaign which forces commuters to step on Soros’s face while boarding trains and singled him as the enemy of the state can be anything but anti-Semitic.

And indeed, since the launch of the campaign, several Hungarian media outlets have reported on anti-Semitic incidents in the country. “Some of the posters have been defaced with hateful graffiti such as ‘stinking Jew’ scrawled across Soros’ face,” Vachon added in the statement.

Sensitive timing

Netanyahu is due to meet Orban in Budapest on July 18 – the first visit of an Israeli prime minister to Hungary in 30 years. And on July 19, both Netanyahu and Orban are scheduled to meet with the premiers of Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic.

The timing of the campaign is therefore particularly sensitive, and some critics claim that Netanyahu abandoned his own values in favor of those of other world leaders.

“Bibi [Netanyahu] is so in love with the idea of meeting with heads of state, that he’s even willing to legitimize their anti-Semitic campaigns,” said Niv Lilien, an Israeli senior journalist and activist.

Others have commented on Shaffir’s or Eliassi’s posts, such as Riki Kovacs Goldshteyn, who called Netanyahu’s retraction “very disturbing.”

“I’m trying to understand what was going through Netanyahu’s mind when he acted like that. We Jews live here peacefully,” said Goldshteyn, an Israeli who has been living in Hungary for 15 years.

However, Israel insists that it “deplores any expression of anti-Semitism in any country and stands with Jewish communities everywhere in confronting this hatred.” Soros’ spokesperson added that “the Hungarian regime’s xenophobia and demonization of refugees are anti-European. The claim that Soros is promoting a scheme to import illegal immigrants into Europe is Victor Orban’s fantasy.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anti-Soros, Campaign, criticism, hungary

ECHR Azerbaijan and Hungary questionnnées about Ramil Safarov scandal

February 14, 2016 By administrator

arton121551-480x270The governments of Azerbaijan and Hungary were questioned by the European Court of Human Rights to formally respond to an appeal filed by the parents of an officer of the Armenian army Gurgen Markarian, who was murdered by Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov, an ax in Budapest in 2004. Markarian The parents are represented by the European Centre for Human Rights of defense (based at the University of Middlesex), Legal Guide (Armenian NGOs) and Nazeli Vardanyan.

The family of the victim supports the right of Gurgen Markarian to life (Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights) was violated by Azerbaijan – both because of his murder, and also because Ramil Safarov’s pardon has prevented the full implementation of his sentence. They also argue that Markarian has been the victim of a racial crime which was subsequently approved by the pardon and release of Safarov (in violation of Article 14 taken together with Article 2 of the Convention). Moreover, they contend that Hungary has violated Article 2 of the Convention because it allowed to be transferred Safarov to Azerbaijan without obtaining assurances that he should serve the remainder of his prison sentence.

The appeal is also carried by Hayk Makuchyan, an officer of the Armenian army Ramil Safarov that tried to murder during the same incident in Budapest.

Both governments are required to file their responses to the Strasbourg Court in May. The Court also called on the Armenian government to submit its observations, taking into account the nationality of Markarian.

Sunday, February 14, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, hungary, Karabakh

Memorial plaque to Gurgen Margaryan to be installed in Hungary

August 21, 2015 By administrator

Gurgen Margaryan.jpg

Gurgen Margaryan.

Armenian community of Hungary is expecting a reply from Hungarian Defense Ministry on installing a memorial plaque to Gurgen Margaryan, an Armenian army lieutenant who was brutally murdered in Budapest by an Azerbaijani army lieutenant Ramil Safarov, Nikoghos Hakobyan, Deputy chairman of an Armenian organization told Armenian News – NEWS.am.

The Armenian community had earlier announced plans to install a memorial plaque on the building where Margaryan was killed.

Hakobyan said it is impossible to install the memorial plaque directly in the murder site for technical reasons. “We have sent a letter to Hungary’s Ministry of Defense. They promised to provide another place for installing the memorial plaque. Now we’re waiting for a reply from the Ministry,” he said.

Referring to the situation with the memorial plaque project, Hakobyan said the final version will depend on the place provided, its size and surrounding territory.

Lieutenant of the Armenian Armed Forces Gurgen Margaryan, 26, was axed to death, while asleep, by a fellow Azerbaijani army lieutenant Ramil Safarov, in Budapest during a three-month English language course within the framework of a NATO-sponsored Partnership for Peace program. The reason behind the violent crime was the fact that Margaryan was Armenian.

Budapest District Court sentenced Safarov to life imprisonment, precluding the possibility of pardon for 30 years.

On August 31, 2012, after secret talks between the authorities of Azerbaijan and Hungary, Safarov was extradited to Azerbaijan and pardoned by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

That very day Armenia suspended its diplomatic ties with Hungary.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gurgen Margaryan, hungary, Memorial, plaque

Armenian community plans to install memorial plaque honoring Gurgen Margaryan

February 19, 2015 By administrator

Gurgen-Margaryan

Gurgen-Margaryan

YEREVAN. – The Armenian community of Hungary plans to install a memorial plaque on the building where Gurgen Margaryan was killed 11 years ago, deputy chairman of the Armenian organization of Hungary Nikoghos Hakobyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

There is a khachkar in Budapest, and the Armenians and representatives of Hungarian NGOs honor memory of Gurgen Margaryan by bringing flowers to the khachkar, he said.

The organization has already addressed Hungary’s Defense Ministry with a request to install a memorial plaque on the building where Armenian soldier had been killed, and they are expecting the formal reply from the Ministry.

Ramil Safarov, a then-lieutenant in the Azerbaijani military, was extradited on August 31, 2012 from Hungary, where he was serving a life sentence for the premeditated axe murder of Armenian lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan, in his sleep, during a NATO Partnership for Peace program in Budapest back in 2004.

Ramil Safarov’s return to Baku was welcomed, as was his act of murder, by the officials of president Ilham Aliyev’s government and much of Azerbaijani society

And Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan announced on August 31, 2012 that Armenia is suspending its diplomatic ties with Hungary.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, hungary, memorial-plaque

EU ‘shot itself in foot’ with Russia trade sanctions: Hungary PM

August 15, 2014 By administrator

BUDAPEST – Agence France-Presse

n_70477_1The EU “shot itself in the foot” by imposing trade sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine conflict, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said in a radio interview Friday.

The European sanctions over Moscow’s perceived role in separatist violence in eastern Ukraine “hurt us more than the Russians,” Orban said during his weekly interview spot on state-run radio.

“The EU should compensate not only producers suffering now but should rethink the whole policy,” Orban said.

The sanctions, coupled with Russia’s retaliatory ban on most EU food imports, mean some EU countries are suffering a trade blow. EU member Hungary is also reliant on Russian gas.

Russia is former communist Hungary’s largest trading partner outside the EU, and in 2014 it granted a multi-billion-euro loan to Budapest to expand the country’s only nuclear power plant.

“For an export-dependent economy, trade sanctions are always against the national interests,” Orban said.

Orban said he would look for partners to convince the EU to change tack on sanctions, and urged a summit meeting to discuss future trade cooperation between the EU and Russia.

The European Commission said Thursday it would take exceptional measures to support growers in the EU affected by Russia’s ban on food products.

EU Agricultural Commissioner Dacian Ciolos said the measures would be unveiled “early next week” and would aim to support sellers of fruit and vegetables that are “clearly in trouble”.

August/15/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: hungary, Russia, sunction

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