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First Deputy PM requests Prosecutor General to retract motion on arrested opposition lawmakers

April 23, 2018 By administrator

First Deputy PM requests Prosecutor General

YEREVAN, APRIL 23, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s First Deputy Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan made a statement today for the media.

“Today we’ve made a decision and I have addressed the Prosecutor General to retract the motion regarding the Members of Parliament. I am now going to meet with Mr. Pashinyan in order to negotiate and find a solution. Tomorrow’s day is very important, and I believe that we will have enough common sense and soberness to show the whole world that regardless of how many difficult problems we have, regardless of how many unsolved issues we have, we can sit and find a reasonable solution,” Karapetyan said.

On April 22  police dispersed a rally in Yerevan’s Erebuni district, and three initiators of the rally, the opposition leader himself, and two other lawmakers – Ararat Mirzoyan and Sasun Michaelyan were detained.

“All actions of the initiators of the rally are illegal after the decision of the police to cease the demonstrations, and all participants of the rally are obliged to leave the location of the rally”, police said.

After a couple of hours the Prosecutor General’s Office said that the three lawmakers have been placed under arrest under Article 96, Paragraph 2 of the Constitution within the framework of an ongoing criminal case with the purpose of preventing crime and in direct suspicion of deliberately organizing and holding illegal rallies.

“MP Nikol Pashinyan, MP Ararat Mirzoyan and MP Sasun Michaelyan have numerously called on their followers to block city streets, block entrances of governmental buildings, breach into governmental buildings and paralyze the functioning of these buildings.

Their followers implemented the unlawful calls and blocked numerous streets and avenues, blocked the entries of state, self-governing body buildings, as well as private organizations, obstructed the normal functioning of these buildings and agencies, committed violence against police officers and others – leading to disproportionate restriction of the rights of other citizens and public interest.

As required by the Constitution, the Speaker of Parliament has been immediately notified on the arrest of the lawmakers”, the Prosecutor General’s Office said in a statement.

The crowd did not disperse, and pocket demonstrations were reported citywide.

Later in the day, hundreds of protesters gathered in the Republic Square again.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: arrested opposition, First Deputy PM, lawmakers, retract motion

Azerbaijan blacklists three US lawmakers over visit to Nagorno-Karabakh

September 23, 2017 By administrator

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry on September 22 called a recent visit to Nagorno-Karabakh by three US lawmakers a “provocation” and said it had blacklisted them, RFE/RL reports, citng Russian news agency Interfax.

Azerbaijan’s state-run APA news agency earlier in the week said the ministry had threatened to blacklist the three members of the U.S. House of Representatives. Frank Pallone, David Valadao, and Tulsi Gabbard visited Armenia and made a side trip to Artsakh in Nagorno-Karabakh on September 20.

“Pallone, Valadao, and Gabbard paid an illegal visit to the occupied Azerbaijani territories, thus breaching Azerbaijani law,” Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman Hikmet Hajiyev told Interfax. “All three are added to the list of undesirable persons in Azerbaijan.”

The legislators’ visit was “a provocation aimed at undermining efforts of the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, including the United States, in settling the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” he told Interfax.

While in Artsakh, the U.S. legislators, who are members of the U.S. Congressional Armenian Caucus, met with Nagorno-Karabakh legislators and visited the Shushi Arts College and a cathedral.

Pallone said the legislators’ goal was to learn and educate the American public about the region.

“We try to learn about the military situation on the border and what measures are being taken to eliminate the consequences of the April war,” Artsakh Press quoted Pallone as saying. He was referring to a sharp uptick in violence in the region that occurred in April.

“One of the goals of our work is to contribute to the activity of the OSCE Minsk Group,and we believe that the people of Artsakh should have the right to self-determination and have security mechanisms,” Artsakh Press quoted Pallone as saying.

Azerbaijan and Armenia have been locked in a conflict over Azerbaijan’s breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh for years.

Populated mainly by ethnic Armenians, Nagorno-Karabakh declared independence from Azerbaijan amid a 1988-94 war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives and displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

Internationally mediated negotiations involving the OSCE’s so-called Minsk Group helped forge a cease-fire in the region, which is not always honored, but have failed to produce a lasting settlement of the conflict.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, blacklists, lawmakers, three, US

Spain: Catalonia’s lawmakers give nod to independence referendum

September 7, 2017 By administrator

Catalan lawmakers have passed a law that paves the way for a referendum on independence from the rest of Spain. The vote, which Madrid says would be illegal, could lead to a deep constitutional crisis.

Catalonia’s regional parliament on Wednesday gave the green light for legislation that would allow a referendum to take place in the northeastern Spanish region.

The vote passed comfortably, with 72 pro-independence members of the Catalan parliament backing the “referendum bill” after more than 11 hours of impassioned debate.

Eleven lawmakers abstained from voting, while 52 opposition members of parliament walked out in protest before the vote was even taken.

The law was passed despite a ruling in February by Spain’s constitutional court, declaring it would be unconstitutional. Under the current constitution, only the central government has the right to call such a referendum.

Read more: Terror attacks leave Barcelona and Madrid at odds, as ever

Catalan President Carles Puigdemont’s cabinet was expected to immediately sign a decree for the vote to take place on October 1.

After the bill was passed, separatist lawmakers clapped sang the Catalan anthem Els Segadors, which remembers a 1640 revolt against Spain’s Habsburg monarchy.

Court challenge likely

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy was understood to have immediately requested a report on the Catalan legislation from the State Council, and was expected to call an urgent cabinet meeting and challenge the regional bill through an appeal to the Constitutional Court.

Spanish Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said Catalonia’s parliament was holding a “fake debate.” She said that the vote had breached parliamentary procedures and that it was an “act of force” characteristic of “dictatorial regimes.”

Meanwhile, public prosecutors announced they were seeking criminal charges against Generalitat speaker Carme Forcadell for allowing the vote to take place.

Forcadell responded with derision to news that she might be charged. “This is the notion democracy of the institutions of state. At parliament we will continue to guarantee that you can always talk about everything.”

No-confidence vote?

The leader of the opposition Ciudadanos (Citizens) party, Ines Arrimadas, immediately announced that she would seek support for a no-confidence vote against Puigdemont, with the aim of forcing new regional elections.

Read more: Catalan independence movement hurts Spanish economy, companies claim

The bill went ahead without the customary vetting of a legal committee. However, Puigdemont has claimed that his government has a democratic mandate to seek a binding referendum based on the principle that a people have a right to self-determination under international law.

Catalonia’s regional government staged a symbolic independence referendum in 2014. More than 80 percent of participants voted to split from Spain, although only 2.3 million of Catalonia’s 5.4 million eligible voters took part.

On Tuesday, Spain’s Court of Auditors ruled that former Catalan president Artur Mas should repay 5.1 million euros ($6.1 million) in public funds that it cost to hold that vote.

The vote was held three weeks after Islamist attacks in Barcelona, Catalonia’s capital, and a nearby seaside resort, which killed 16 people and wounded more than 120.

rc/bw (AP, AFP, Reuters)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: catalonia, independence, lawmakers, referendum

Turkey capitulate agrees to let German lawmakers visit troops

August 8, 2017 By administrator

turkey,BERLIN – Reuters,

Turkey has agreed to let German lawmakers visit soldiers serving at an air base in Turkey next month as part of a NATO trip, according to a letter from the German foreign minister showed on Aug. 8, after Ankara refused a visit there in July.

A letter from German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel to the head of Germany’s parliamentary defense committee said Turkey had agreed to a NATO proposal for a visit to the air base near Konya on Sept. 8.

Under the plan, NATO’s Deputy General-Secretary Rose Gottemoeller would lead the delegation and take up to seven members of the parliamentary committee with her.

“The Turkish foreign minister has agreed to this proposal,” Gabriel wrote.

Details are reportedly still being worked out about which lawmakers would be included in the visit. Turkey had objected particularly strenuously to participation by members of Germany’s far-left Left party, which Ankara accuses of “supporting terrorists.”

Repeated refusals by Ankara to let lawmakers visit German soldiers at the Incirlik air base in southern Turkey prompted Berlin to relocate those troops to Jordan. Turkey also refused a visit from German MPs to the Konya base planned for mid-July.

Germany’s armed forces are under parliamentary control and Berlin insists lawmakers must have access to them.

On Aug. 7, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan accused Germany of “assisting terrorists” by not responding to files sent from Ankara to Berlin or handing over suspects wanted by the Turkish authorities.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: capitulate, german, lawmakers, troops, Turkey, visit

Turkish lawmakers banned to say “Armenian Genocide”

July 28, 2017 By administrator

YEREVAN. – Turkish parliament has approved a package of internal regulations, one of them banning lawmakers from saying Armenian Genocide in the parliament, editor of the Armenian department of Agos newspaper Pakrat Estukyan said.

The real goal of this law is to limit the speech of lawmakers that are not pleasant for the authorities,

“The ruling party and leadership are worried about speeches of certain lawmakers, for example Garo Paylan,” he said, adding this is the reason that ruling party together with nationalist party pushed the draft bill.

Estukyan believes new regulations are especially targeted against the lawmakers from Democratic People’s Party.

The amendments were supported by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), while the opposition voted against. The amendments suggest imposing fines on lawmakers who will insult “the history of the Turkish nation”. The phrases “Armenian Genocide”, “Kurdistan” will be banned.

The editor also recalled that the oath of Turkish MP, famous Kurdish human rights defender Leyla Zana has been denied and she can be deprived of a parliamentary seat. The reason is that while taking the oath Zana said she would be faithful to the Turkish nations (using plural), not Turkish nation

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: banned, Genocide, lawmakers, Turkish

Iraqi Parliament Dismisses Finance Minister Hoshyar Zebari charges of corruption

September 21, 2016 By administrator

hoshyar-zebariIraqi lawmakers have voted to dismiss Finance Minister Hoshyar Zebari.

Parliament voted by majority on September 21 to dismiss Zebari after questioning him last month on charges of corruption and mismanagement — which he denies.

The vote came after parliament dismissed the country’s defense minister over the allegations last month.

Zebari, a Kurd who previously served for years as Iraq’s foreign minister, became finance minister in 2014.

He has recently led negotiations with the International Monetary Fund for a loan deal and with international lenders for a Eurobond.

Iraq’s economy has been hit by a drop in global oil prices and the costs associated with the campaign against the Islamic State group.

Based on reporting by Reuters and AFP

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: dismiss, finance-minister, Hoshyar Zebari., Iraqi, lawmakers

Nearly 30 female Israeli lawmakers sexually abused: Report

May 31, 2016 By administrator

israeli female lawmaker abusedNearly 30 female members of Israel’s Knesset have fallen victim to sexual harassment or sexual assault at some point in their lives, a report says.

Of the total 32 current female lawmakers at the Israeli legislature, 28 revealed they had suffered from some sorts of sexual abuses in the past, Israeli daily Ha’aretz reported on Tuesday, citing a survey conducted by Israel’s Channel 2.

The report added that two of the lawmakers, Michal Biran from the center-left alliance Zionist Union, and Merav Ben Ari from the centrist party Kulanu, experienced the harassment even after they had entered the Knesset.

“Even today, the fact that I’m a single woman in the Knesset puts me in unpleasant situations. Sometimes people make comments … I don’t want to elaborate, but there was a situation recently in the Knesset,” said Ben Ari, speaking of a recent incident in the Knesset building.

“There was an incident that repeated itself in the planning and building committee, of which I was a member. Another city councilor would make remarks of a sexual nature regarding things that I said, and the whole room would burst out laughing,” said Rachel Azaria from Kulanu party.

“I consulted with the legal adviser and other officials, and they all said there was nothing to be done,” she said, recounting a bitter experience she had when she was a Jerusalem City Council member.

The lawmakers also exposed different kinds of other sexual abuses, which happened on military buses or on the streets.

In December, the Israeli interior minister and vice-premier, Silvan Shalom, was forced to resign after his ex-staffer revealed that she was sexually harassed by her boss and was “touched” against her will, giving details on how he had abused her more than a decade ago.

Subsequently, “several other women also alleged that the minister sexually assaulted them,” according to a December 20, 2015 Ha’aretz report.

The Israeli interior minister is by no means the first top Israeli politician to leave office over sexual misconduct.

Former Israeli President Moshe Katsav stepped down in 2007 on charges of raping two women as a cabinet minister in the late 1990s, as well as sexual assault against two of his female staffers as president.

The issue of sexual misconduct is also frequently reported in the Israeli military, which has given rise to heated debates over the past years.

The Israeli military itself says it has launched about 250 investigations into sexual abuse allegations over the past two years. Twelve of the investigations concern alleged rape, up from eight in 2014 and five in 2013.

Source: presstv

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: abused, Female, Israeli, lawmakers, sexually

Jordanian lawmaker’s son was Daesh bomber in Iraq

October 2, 2015 By administrator

d3178317-befa-4824-9bd2-54f9e005482fThe son of a Jordanian parliamentarian has died while carrying out a bomb attack for the Daesh Takfiri militant group in Iraq.

Jordanian media said on Friday that Mazen al-Dhalaein has revealed to the Khaberni news website that his son, Mohammed, known by the nom de guerre Abu Baraa, had died in a bombing in Iraq, adding that he had learnt about his son’s death after seeing his photo on a Daesh-related website.

The Jordanian lawmaker explained that his 23-year-old son had been a medical student in Ukraine before joining Daesh this summer and urging him and his wife to join the extremist group, as well.

Our son “was trying to convince us to join IS (Daesh),” the lawmaker said, adding that the son called his parents “apostates.”

Dhalaein added that he had last heard from his son in August, when he sent them a message revealing his plan to take part in an imminent bomb attack.

On Wednesday, a statement posted on Twitter claimed that Daesh had carried out triple car bombings the previous day in the northern outskirts of Ramadi, a city west of Iraq’s capital, Baghdad.

Musa Abdullat, a leading Jordanian lawyer, also said that Dhalaein’s son was killed in an attack on the Iraqi army on Tuesday.

An estimated 4,000 militants from Jordan are said to be fighting for terrorist groups in Iraq and neighboring Syria, Abdullat said.

“Eighty percent of them have joined IS,” he said, adding that 420 Jordanian militants have been killed since 2011.

Report: presstv

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: bomber, Daesh, jordanian, lawmakers, son

US Lawmakers Violated Laws, Taking Trips to Azerbaijan and Turkey

May 21, 2015 By administrator

BY HARUT SASSOUNIAN

harut-sassounian-small-1In a lengthy article titled, “10 members of Congress took trip secretly funded by foreign government,” The Washington Post disclosed last week the scandalous details of an all-expenses paid trip to a conference in Azerbaijan by 10 lawmakers and 32 staff members in 2013. Former top aides to Pres. Obama — Robert Gibbs, Jim Messina and David Plough – also attended the conference as guest speakers.

The organizer of the international oil gathering in Baku, SOCAR, the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic, funneled $750,000 through two U.S. nonprofit organizations “to conceal the source of the funding” for the trip, according to a confidential Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE) report obtained by The Washington Post. Another $750,000 was contributed by British Petroleum, ConocoPhillips and KBR for airfare, hotel and gifts.

The newspaper also reported that “shortly before the May 28-29, 2013 conference, SOCAR and several large energy companies [including the National Iranian Oil Company] sought exemptions for a $28 billion natural gas pipeline in the Caspian Sea from U.S. economic sanctions being imposed on Iran.” In fact, a month before the conference, SOCAR established the nonprofit Assembly of the Friends of Azerbaijan (AFAZ) in Houston by transferring $750,000. The second nonprofit involved in the scheme, also based in Houston, was the Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians (TCAE). Both nonprofits, headed by Kemal Oksuz, shared the same Houston address. Congress approved several bills sanctioning Iran, while exempting the SOCAR project. Pres. Obama then signed these bills into law.

The ten members of Congress who went on the Baku junket were: Jim Bridenstine (R-OK), Yvette Clarke (D-NY), Danny Davis (D-IL), Michelle Grisham (D- NM), Ruben Hinojosa (D-TX), Leonard Lance (R-NJ), Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX), Gregory Meeks (D-NY), Ted Poe (R-TX), and Steve Stockman (R-TX).

Ethics investigators disclosed that these lawmakers, accompanied by spouses and fiancés, received several gifts, including “crystal tea sets, briefcases, silk scarves, turquoise earrings, gold-painted plates and Azerbaijani rugs…. All lawmakers received at least one rug and some got two, one prayer-size and one area rug. Many staff members also received rugs.”

To justify their illegal or improper actions, some of these lawmakers made ridiculous statements to congressional investigators:

— Cong. Davis stated that during the Baku conference he “received one rug which was delivered to his hotel room.” He said he was thinking about donating the rug to a museum or charity!

— Cong. Hinojosa claimed: “I received souvenirs of what I believed to be of minimal value and in compliance with the House Gift rule.”

— Ladan Ahmadi, spokeswoman for Rep. Meeks, stated that the Congressman “understood the rug to be a permissible courtesy gift.”

— A senior staff member of Rep. Lance told The Washington Post that the Congressman “returned the one rug he received after he got back to Washington. The staff member also said Lance received a pair of earrings and reimbursed the nonprofit group that helped organize the conference $100 immediately upon returning to New Jersey.”

— Cong. Grisham told ethics investigators that she did not disclose the rugs because she did not think they were particularly valuable. She also thought they were unattractive: “It’s not a carpet I would have purchased.”

— Cong. Bridenstine was the only lawmaker who disclosed the rugs on his financial report. “He had them appraised: the smaller rug at $2,500 and the larger at $3,500.”

Quoting from the ethics report, The Washington Post revealed that Reps. Clarke, Grisham, Hinojosa, Lance, and their staff members also “took side trips to Turkey, traveling to Istanbul, Ankara or both…. The Bosphorus Atlantic Cultural Association of Friendship and Cooperation, a Turkish nonprofit organization, covered the expenses, the report said. The lawmakers did not disclose the role of that nonprofit.”

The Office of Congressional Ethics concluded that “SOCAR and AFAZ provided gifts in the form of impermissible travel expenses to congressional travelers in violation of House rules, regulations and federal law,” while “members of Congress who traveled to Turkey accepted payment of travel expenses from impermissible sources, resulting in an impermissible gift, in violation of House rules and regulations.” Furthermore, the investigators reported that five nonprofits affiliated with the Azerbaijani government asserted that they sponsored the conference, filing sworn statements with the Ethics Committee in April and May 2013. “The five sponsoring organizations contributed no funding for the congressional travel in spite of false affirmations on the forms they submitted to the Committee on Ethics.” The Washington Post reported that these findings have been referred to the House Ethics Committee for investigation of possible violation of congressional rules and federal laws that bar foreign governments from trying to influence U.S. policy.

It is deeply troubling that members of Congress are willing to sell their souls to corrupt Azerbaijani and Turkish entities for a free rug!

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Law, lawmakers, Turkey, US, violated

Valley morning star Report: Trips by lawmakers to Turkey, Azerbaijan abound paid by Turkish TCAE or AFAZ,

May 17, 2015 By administrator

By EMMA PEREZ-TREVIÑO

50f470906be3f.imageOn Jan. 25, 2011, state Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr. accompanied by other senators, passed a resolution recognizing Turkish preacher Fethullah Gülen for his ongoing and inspirational contributions to the promotion of global peace and understanding.

Gülen, who has lived in the United States since the late 1990s, is said to have inspired the establishment of Turkish institutes and organizations in this country, including the Gülen Institute, Harmony schools, and the reportedly non-profit organizations the Assembly of the Friends of Azerbaijan (AFAZ), and the Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians (TCAE). Kemal Oksuz, based in Houston, has been at the forefront of numerous organizations.

Also in January 2011, the Valley Morning Star reported on Lucio Jr.’s campaign contributions and expenditures, finding that TCAE had paid for a $3,800 trip for Lucio Jr. to Istanbul, Turkey, from Oct. 10-18, 2010.

In his campaign statement, Lucio said that he had meetings with Turkish members of Congress during the “good will and fact finding mission.” “The Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians is an umbrella group that works to promote peace, understanding the community among people of different background,” the senator said at the time. “As chairman of the Senate Committee on International Relations and Trade, I was invited as part of a bipartisan group of senators to come to Turkey to learn about other cultures,” Lucio Jr. added.

According to TCAE’s website, its mission is, “to promote the cultural, educational, academic, business, social and arts relations and to organize events and activities to bring together the American and Turkish, Turkic and Eurasian communities within the U.S.”

Lucio Jr. is but one of the significant numbers of elected officials and staff that TCAE and affiliated organizations have taken on trips to Turkey and Azerbaijan.

A handful of these came to the limelight Thursday when the Associated Press reported that a bipartisan group of 10 U.S. House lawmakers said they had no idea that a May 2013 congressional trip to Azerbaijan was paid for by the country’s government. An investigation by the Office of Congressional Ethics and the House Ethics Committee revealed that the travel had not been paid by TCAE or AFAZ, but that instead the State Oil Company of the Azerbaijan Republic had allegedly funneled $750,000 through the two organizations to pay for the conference. This would go awry of travel rules. Inquiries continue.

The 10 lawmakers are U.S. Rep. Ruben Hinojosa, D-Texas, U.S. Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas, U.S. Rep. Jim Bridenstine, R-Okla., U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas; Yvette Clarke and Gregory Meeks of New York; Danny Davis of Illinois and Michelle Lujan Grisham of New Mexico; as well as Rep. Leonard Lance, R-N.J. and former Rep. Steve Stockman, R-Texas, the AP reported.

Information that the Star reviewed reflects that a staff member of Lujan Grisham’s office went on the trip, and that Lujan Grisham approved it.

But before this group of lawmakers went, the Star found that U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, and his wife traveled from Jan. 5, 2013 through Jan. 13, 2013 on a TCAE organized U.S. congressional delegation trip to Turkey and Azerbaijan. Data compiled by LegiStorm, which maintains documents about the U.S. Congress reflect that the cost of the trip was $26,145. Briefings at the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic were on the trip’s agenda.

One of Cuellar’s staff members went on May 2013 trip with the lawmakers at a cost of $5,290. Another staff member went to Istanbul and Ankara, Turkey Oct. 17 through Oct. 25, 2014. This trip was sponsored by the Turkish American Federation of Midwest that also is affiliated with TCAE. This trip cost $3,307.

LegiStorm data show that TCAE has sponsored 29 trips at a cost of $202,454 for 19 republicans and 10 democrats, but Turkish groups combined have spent more than $1 million to fund trips of elected officials.

Other organizations linked to Oksuz, TCAE, and AFAZ include Niagara Foundation, IID, Target Design & Management, TDM Construction, Cosmos Foundation, and Harmony Public Schools.

Texas Ethics Commission records reflect that TCAE also has funded trips to Turkey and the area besides the trip that Lucio Jr. took. These include Judge Randy Clapp of El Campo and a family member, Justice Molly Francis of Dallas, Rep. Joseph Deshotel of Beaumont, Rep. Hubert Vo of Houston, Sen. Troy Fraser, Rep. Rafael Anchia of the Dallas area, and former Rep. Lon Burnam of the Fort Worth area.

As Lucio Jr. did, some disclose the trips on the statements of campaign contributions and expenditures. Others disclose the trips as gifts in their personal financial statements.

Lucio did not respond to requests for comment.

Source: Valley morning star

Eperez-trevino@valleystar.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, lawmakers, trip, Turkey

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