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South Caucasus News

Armenia Skips CSTO Meeting


In February 2024, Armenia announced the suspension of its membership in the CSTO, and subsequently refused to pay its membership fee.

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South Caucasus News

Raya Nazaryan elected Chair of Bulgaria’s National Assembly


GERB-UDF MP Raya Nazaryan was elected National Assembly Chair on Thursday. She received 131 votes in favor, 66 MPs voted against, and 39 abstained. Nazaryan was backed by her parliamentary group, the Movement for Rights and Freedoms (MRF) and TISP, the Bulgarian News Agency reports.

Nazaryan’s election became possible after There Is Such a People (TISP) deputy leader Toshko Yordanov said the party would support all nominations.

Four MPs were nominated for head of Parliament. Here is how the legislature voted on the other three:

Silvi Kirilov of TISP: 17 votes in favor, 108 against, and 108 abstentions.
Petar Petrov of Vazrazhdane: 53 votes in favor, 111 against, and 71 abstentions.
Yuliana Mateeva of Velichie (Grandeur): 13 votes in favor, 105 against, and 105 abstentions.

Under the Constitution, electing a chairperson of the National Assembly requires a simple majority of the MPs present. GERB-UDF have 68 seats, the Movement for Rights and Freedoms 47, Continue the Change – Democratic Bulgaria 39, Vazrazhdane 38, BSP for Bulgaria 19, TISP 16, and Velichie 13.

Born in Varna on September 16, 1985, Nazaryan has practiced law for more than 12 years, of which ten specializing in the law of obligations, real law, insurance law, family law and succession law. She has amassed ample experience in commercial, civil and administrative proceedings before Bulgarian courts.

A specialist in mediation and out-of-court settlement of legal disputes. Member of the Sofia Bar Association. Associate and co-founder of a law firm.

On June 9, Nazaryan was elected MP for a third term. She topped the GERB-UDF candidates list in Sofia’s Multimember Constituency No. 24. She entered politics in 2022.

She is single, with one child.


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South Caucasus News

Will the Cabinet Extend the Quarantine Again?


The special quarantine regime in Azerbaijan, initiated four years and three months ago in response to the coronavirus pandemic, is set to end on July 1 at 06:00. However, many analysts predict that the Cabinet of Ministers might once again extend the quarantine measures, as has been done repeatedly over…


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South Caucasus News

Precipitation is expected in the capital on Friday


On June 21, rains are sometimes expected in Baku and Absheron. The wind is north-westerly. The air temperature during the day will be +28+32 degrees. Rains with thunderstorms will be   in  some regions of the country. In mountainous areas, the rains will be intense; fog in the morning and evening….


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South Caucasus News

On June 21, the early termination of the powers of the Milli Majlis will be announced


At a extraordinary session of the Milli Majlis on June 21,  the early termination of the powers of the parliament and the calling of early parliamentary elections will be announced. The parliamentary sources told Turan about this.

This information is indirectly confirmed by today’s closed meeting in the ruling Yeni…


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South Caucasus News

Raya Nazaryan is elected Bulgaria parliament speaker


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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

SJC Criticizes SIS for Not Renewing Investigation in Machalikashvili Case


The Social Justice Center, a local human rights CSO defending the interests of the Machalikashvili family in the case “Machalikashvili and Others v. Georgia”, issued a statement today, June 20, criticizing the Special Investigation Service (SIS) for its decision not to renew the investigation in the case, saying that the SIS decision is “formal, not well studied, groundless” and “contradicts the obligation to respect the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights.”

In March 2024, the Committee of Ministers of the CoE recommended that Georgia consider whether it was appropriate to reopen the investigation, which had been closed in January 2020. Previously, the ECHR had acknowledged that the investigative measures had been carried out, but also pointed out some procedural shortcomings, such as the involvement of an employee of the State Security Service in the investigation and the delayed interrogation of special forces officers. On June 19, the SIS concluded that there was no need to reopen the Machalikashvili case and that the initial investigation had been “comprehensive.”

The SJC notes that although the ECHR found no violation by Georgia of the substantive part of Article 2 (right to life) of the Convention and declared Article 3 inadmissible, the Court did find a procedural violation of Article 2. The SJC emphasizes that the ECHR could not even discuss several issues, including the possible violation of the substantive part of Article 2 only because of the lack of evidence. “For this very reason, it was important for the Special Investigation Service to recognize that the substantial violation in this case could not be found by the European Court due to fundamental shortcomings in the investigation and the lack of relevant evidence,” the SJC notes.

According to the SJC, the SIS did not take seriously the “fundamental violations” found by the Court and downplayed them as “minor procedural violations” as if they could not affect the outcome of the investigation. “For us, it is unjustified and raises doubts as to how the Special Investigation Service can consider as minor procedural violations the issues of institutional independence of the investigation, the failure of the investigation to find the factual circumstances crucial to the case, and the substantial errors in the testimonies of Special Forces officers,” the SJC says.

“The way the Special Investigation Service works and the arguments it puts forward once again highlight the problem of institutional independence and impartiality of this agency, which has been criticized on several occasions by the Venice Commission, the EU and local actors,” the statement adds.

The SJC insists that reopening the investigation could have a significant impact on the case.

The watchdog intends to “immediately” approach the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe with a request to publish the interim resolution on the Machalikashvili case at the Committee’s next meeting in September.

18-year-old Temirlan Machalikashvili was shot in the head during the special forces operation to detain potential terrorism suspects in December 2017 and died of his wounds in January 2018 in a Tbilisi hospital. The State Security Service of Georgia (SSG) operatives said the shot was fired as Machalikashvili tried to detonate a hand grenade. Machalikashvili’s family denied this claim and said Temirlan was asleep in his room when the officers opened fire.

Also Read:


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South Caucasus News

SJC Criticizes SIS for Not Renewing Investigation in Machalikashvili Case


The Social Justice Center, a local human rights CSO defending the interests of the Machalikashvili family in the case “Machalikashvili and Others v. Georgia”, issued a statement today, June 20, criticizing the Special Investigation Service (SIS) for its decision not to renew the investigation in the case, saying that the SIS decision is “formal, not well studied, groundless” and “contradicts the obligation to respect the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights.”

In March 2024, the Committee of Ministers of the CoE recommended that Georgia consider whether it was appropriate to reopen the investigation, which had been closed in January 2020. Previously, the ECHR had acknowledged that the investigative measures had been carried out, but also pointed out some procedural shortcomings, such as the involvement of an employee of the State Security Service in the investigation and the delayed interrogation of special forces officers. On June 19, the SIS concluded that there was no need to reopen the Machalikashvili case and that the initial investigation had been “comprehensive.”

The SJC notes that although the ECHR found no violation by Georgia of the substantive part of Article 2 (right to life) of the Convention and declared Article 3 inadmissible, the Court did find a procedural violation of Article 2. The SJC emphasizes that the ECHR could not even discuss several issues, including the possible violation of the substantive part of Article 2 only because of the lack of evidence. “For this very reason, it was important for the Special Investigation Service to recognize that the substantial violation in this case could not be found by the European Court due to fundamental shortcomings in the investigation and the lack of relevant evidence,” the SJC notes.

According to the SJC, the SIS did not take seriously the “fundamental violations” found by the Court and downplayed them as “minor procedural violations” as if they could not affect the outcome of the investigation. “For us, it is unjustified and raises doubts as to how the Special Investigation Service can consider as minor procedural violations the issues of institutional independence of the investigation, the failure of the investigation to find the factual circumstances crucial to the case, and the substantial errors in the testimonies of Special Forces officers,” the SJC says.

“The way the Special Investigation Service works and the arguments it puts forward once again highlight the problem of institutional independence and impartiality of this agency, which has been criticized on several occasions by the Venice Commission, the EU and local actors,” the statement adds.

The SJC insists that reopening the investigation could have a significant impact on the case.

The watchdog intends to “immediately” approach the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe with a request to publish the interim resolution on the Machalikashvili case at the Committee’s next meeting in September.

18-year-old Temirlan Machalikashvili was shot in the head during the special forces operation to detain potential terrorism suspects in December 2017 and died of his wounds in January 2018 in a Tbilisi hospital. The State Security Service of Georgia (SSG) operatives said the shot was fired as Machalikashvili tried to detonate a hand grenade. Machalikashvili’s family denied this claim and said Temirlan was asleep in his room when the officers opened fire.

Also Read:


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South Caucasus News

Azerbaijani literature promoted at world’s second largest book fair [PHOTOS] – AzerNews.Az


Azerbaijani literature promoted at world’s second largest book fair [PHOTOS]  AzerNews.Az

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South Caucasus News

Armenia drop one spot in FIFA rankings