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South Caucasus News

PACE welcomes electoral reforms implemented in Armenia, regrets excessive polarization of political climate


PACE today welcomed the electoral reforms implemented by Armenia in accordance with the recommendations of the Venice Commission, considering that the objective to hold genuinely democratic elections had to a large extent been achieved.

In adopting unanimously a resolution based on the report by Kimmo Kiljunen (Finland, SOC) and Boriana Åberg (Sweden, EPP/CD), PACE also pointed out the Armenian authorities‘ continued effort to improve the system of judicial governance in line with European standards, in close co-operation with the Council of Europe, and commended “the real determination showed by the authorities to fight the problem of systemic corruption”.

Regretting excessive polarisation of the political climate, the Parliamentary Assembly encouraged all political stakeholders “to enter into dialogue about how to improve the […] relationship between the parliamentary majority and the opposition”, in particular with a view to depoliticising the appointment procedures to independent collegial bodies and agencies.

Among the progress made since the adoption of PACE Resolution 2427 (2022) on the functioning of democratic institutions in Armenia, PACE highlighted the decision to present a new draft law on freedom of information and public information, the abolition of the criminalization of defamation, the ratification of Protocol No. 13 to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, concerning the abolition of the death penalty in all circumstances, and the continuation of negotiations of a peace treaty with Azerbaijan.

In view of these advances, particularly in the field of electoral law, PACE decided to pursue its monitoring procedure, attaching particular importance to the implementation of reforms regarding the justice system, the field of media and freedom of expression.


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South Caucasus News

PACE welcomes electoral reforms implemented in Armenia, regrets excessive polarization of political climate – Public … – Public Radio of Armenia – Official Web site


PACE welcomes electoral reforms implemented in Armenia, regrets excessive polarization of political climate – Public …  Public Radio of Armenia – Official Web site

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South Caucasus News

Union of Advanced Technology Enterprises and Applied Policy Research Institute of Armenia Sign MoU – Asbarez.com – Asbarez Armenian News


Union of Advanced Technology Enterprises and Applied Policy Research Institute of Armenia Sign MoU – Asbarez.com  Asbarez Armenian News

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South Caucasus News

Armenia News – NEWS.am


Armenia News  NEWS.am

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(@mikenov) / Twitter

@mikenov: Austin Speaks to New Russian Counterpart for First Time msn.com/en-us/news/wor…



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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

Hilton tells Congress youth care programs need more oversight


WASHINGTON — Reality TV star Paris Hilton called for greater federal oversight of youth care programs at a U.S. House of Representatives committee hearing on Wednesday as she described her traumatic experience in youth care facilities.

Hilton, 43, the great-granddaughter of Hilton Hotels founder Conrad Hilton, has spoken publicly about the emotional and physical abuse she endured when she was placed in residential youth treatment facilities as a teen.

In remarks to the committee on Wednesday, she described being taken from her bed in the middle of the night at age 16 and transported across state lines to a residential facility where she experienced physical and sexual abuse.

“This $23 billion industry sees this population [of vulnerable children] as dollar signs and operates without meaningful oversight,” she said.

“There’s no education in these places; there’s mold and blood on the walls,” she said in response to lawmaker questions. “It’s horrifying what these places are like. They’re worse than some dog kennels.”

Hilton said private equity firms that have taken a greater stake in the industry in recent years focus on maximizing profits, prompting them to hire unqualified workers.

“They’re caring more about profit than the safety of children,” she said.

Hilton first described her experience at a Utah facility in 2021 and has been a vocal advocate for greater oversight of the system.

“These programs promised ‘healing, growth, and support,’ but instead did not allow me to speak, move freely, or even look out of a window for two years,” Hilton told the committee. “My parents were completely deceived, lied to and manipulated by this for-profit industry, so you can only imagine the experience for youth who don’t have anyone checking in on them.”

Several lawmakers agreed that more federal oversight was necessary.

“We must always be concerned about fraud and guard against Wall Street vultures snatching public funds to line their pockets,” Democratic Representative Bill Pascrell said. “We cannot allow the private equity octopus to reach its tentacles into child services.”


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South Caucasus News

Hilton tells Congress youth care programs need more oversight


WASHINGTON — Reality TV star Paris Hilton called for greater federal oversight of youth care programs at a U.S. House of Representatives committee hearing on Wednesday as she described her traumatic experience in youth care facilities.

Hilton, 43, the great-granddaughter of Hilton Hotels founder Conrad Hilton, has spoken publicly about the emotional and physical abuse she endured when she was placed in residential youth treatment facilities as a teen.

In remarks to the committee on Wednesday, she described being taken from her bed in the middle of the night at age 16 and transported across state lines to a residential facility where she experienced physical and sexual abuse.

“This $23 billion industry sees this population [of vulnerable children] as dollar signs and operates without meaningful oversight,” she said.

“There’s no education in these places; there’s mold and blood on the walls,” she said in response to lawmaker questions. “It’s horrifying what these places are like. They’re worse than some dog kennels.”

Hilton said private equity firms that have taken a greater stake in the industry in recent years focus on maximizing profits, prompting them to hire unqualified workers.

“They’re caring more about profit than the safety of children,” she said.

Hilton first described her experience at a Utah facility in 2021 and has been a vocal advocate for greater oversight of the system.

“These programs promised ‘healing, growth, and support,’ but instead did not allow me to speak, move freely, or even look out of a window for two years,” Hilton told the committee. “My parents were completely deceived, lied to and manipulated by this for-profit industry, so you can only imagine the experience for youth who don’t have anyone checking in on them.”

Several lawmakers agreed that more federal oversight was necessary.

“We must always be concerned about fraud and guard against Wall Street vultures snatching public funds to line their pockets,” Democratic Representative Bill Pascrell said. “We cannot allow the private equity octopus to reach its tentacles into child services.”


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Selected Articles

Putin dealt a double blow in Europe


Two international bodies have on the same day accused Russia of carrying out war crimes and human rights violations in Ukraine.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) pretrial Chamber said on Tuesday it had issued arrest warrants for former Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of the Russian Army General Valery Gerasimov for “the war crime of directing attacks at civilian objects” in Ukraine.

On the same day, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) Grand Chamber said Moscow had committed human rights violations in Crimea in the decade since the beginning of its illegal occupation of the peninsula in February 2014.

Meanwhile, a lawyer for an international human rights group whose report this month outlined how Putin’s forces had employed starvation tactics during the siege of the southern city of Mariupol in 2022, told Newsweek that “food and objects indispensable to survival are being weaponized across the conflict” by Russia.

Russian president Vladimir Putin

Russian president Vladimir Putin on June 20, 2024, in Moscow. On June 25, 2024, two international bodies accused Russia of human rights violations and war crimes in Ukraine.
Russian president Vladimir Putin on June 20, 2024, in Moscow. On June 25, 2024, two international bodies accused Russia of human rights violations and war crimes in Ukraine.
Getty Images

In its statement released Tuesday, ICC judges said there were grounds that the suspects were responsible for missile strikes carried out against the Ukrainian electric infrastructure “from at least 10 October 2022 until at least 9 March 2023.”

Newsweek has contacted the Kremlin and the Russian defense ministry for comment on the decisions by both bodies. Russia’s Security Council, which Shoigu now heads, called the ICC arrest warrants “hot air” since the court’s jurisdiction did not cover Russia and “part of the West’s hybrid war” against Russia.

The ICC report was damning in its criticism of Shoigu and Gerasimov, accusing them of causing incidental harm to civilians and damage to civilian objects and inhumane acts.

These are violations of the Rome Statute that established the court in the Hague that relies on its 124 members to arrest anyone under a warrant.

It is the latest war crimes accusation linked to Putin and his inner circle. In March, 2023, the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Putin over the alleged abduction of children from Ukraine, a claim which Moscow has dismissed.

Mariupol, Ukraine

A Russian sapper checks a ruined building in Mariupol, in Russian-controlled Ukraine. A report in June says Russian forces employed starvation tactics in their 2022 siege of the southern port city.
A Russian sapper checks a ruined building in Mariupol, in Russian-controlled Ukraine. A report in June says Russian forces employed starvation tactics in their 2022 siege of the southern port city.
Getty Images

Siege of Mariupol

This month, the group Global Rights Compliance (GRC) released a report which it said proved that Russian forces had starved Ukrainians in the southern city of Mariupol in the siege that lasted until May 20, 2022.

Drawing on satellite imagery, pictures, videos, public statements and digital data, the group concluded that Russian forces had targeted water, food and medical supplies in a deliberate tactic of starvation before they seized the port city.

It found that 450,000 civilians were targeted with all water, electricity and gas supply cut off. Ukrainians were forced to drink from puddles, radiator batteries, and melted snow, while food distribution points, medical facilities and humanitarian corridors were bombed.

“What is the most shocking is the findings showed the strategy Russian forces pursued in starving the civilian population as a means to accelerate the capitulation of Mariupol,” said Naomi Prodeau, report’s co-author and lawyer on the GRC’s starvation mobile justice team.

“Attacks on civilian populations, attacks on civilian objects, attacks on hospitals—some of those constitute attacks on objects indispensable to the survival of civilians,” she told Newsweek.

She said that such tactics were employed in other sieges by pro-Russian forces prior to Mariupol, such as in Aleppo, where Moscow intervened in the Syrian civil war, “so there were prior instances of these tactics before Mariupol.”

“There are strong indicators that Russian and pro-Russian forces employed similar siege tactics and starvation tactics in northeastern regions at approximately the same time as the siege of Mariupol,” she said. “It demonstrates that this is a tactic that is regularly employed and deployed against Ukrainian civilians.”

“Food and objects indispensable to survival are being weaponized across the conflict beyond siege tactics,” she added.

The ECHR Grand Chamber said on Tuesday that since 2014 when Putin seized Crimea, Russia had committed human rights violations on the peninsula, including the ill-treatment of Ukrainian soldiers, persons of Ukrainian ethnic origin, journalists and members of the Turkic Crimean Tatar minority.

After its full scale invasion in 2022, Russia was expelled from the Council of Europe, of which the ECHR is part and its ruling was welcomed by the Ukrainian foreign ministry which called it a “crucial milestone.”

Meanwhile, the GRC is taking its evidence to the ICC Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court to build a larger war crimes case against Putin.

Prodeau said that similar to genocide, the crime of starvation requires a specific intent to attack objects indispensable to civilian survival, and specific intent to starve that population, “which is a higher bar.”

“Under that standard, if Russian or pro-Russian forces knew that in the ordinary course of events, civilians would starve, that qualifies as intent,” she said. “There has never been a prosecution for the war crime of starvation before international courts,” she said, “it’s an underappreciated crime and is hard to prove.”

Correction: 6/26/24, 9 a.m. ET: This article was updated to correct the date of the end of the siege of Mariupol to May 20, 2022.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.


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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

@nexta_tv: RT by @mikenov: Scholz rejected calls for peace talks with Putin – DW “Putin continues to focus entirely on war and rearmament, no one can ignore this,” the German chancellor said in a speech to the Bundestag. Scholz said anyone who believes that territorial and political concessions to Putin…


Scholz rejected calls for peace talks with Putin – DW

“Putin continues to focus entirely on war and rearmament, no one can ignore this,” the German chancellor said in a speech to the Bundestag.

Scholz said anyone who believes that territorial and political concessions to Putin… pic.twitter.com/d9gc5wvdq6

— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) June 26, 2024


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South Caucasus News

@nexta_tv: RT by @mikenov: Scholz rejected calls for peace talks with Putin – DW “Putin continues to focus entirely on war and rearmament, no one can ignore this,” the German chancellor said in a speech to the Bundestag. Scholz said anyone who believes that territorial and political concessions to Putin…


Scholz rejected calls for peace talks with Putin – DW

“Putin continues to focus entirely on war and rearmament, no one can ignore this,” the German chancellor said in a speech to the Bundestag.

Scholz said anyone who believes that territorial and political concessions to Putin… pic.twitter.com/d9gc5wvdq6

— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) June 26, 2024