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South Caucasus News

Власти Армении хотят, но боятся выполнять условия Азербайджана



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South Caucasus News

Иран и США не готовы к компромиссам | Москва отказалась от переговоров в Ватикане



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South Caucasus News

Footage of Harutyunyan on tank shown in courtroom war crimes trial


The trial of Arayik Harutyunyan continued today at the Baku Military Court, where video footage featuring the defendant was presented as part of the ongoing proceedings. Harutyunyan, who faces numerous charges related to war crimes and crimes against humanity, responded to questions from state prosecutors during the session.

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South Caucasus News

Coordination Headquarters convenes for meeting in Aghdam


Chaired by Samir Nuriyev, Head of the Presidential Administration and head of the Coordination Headquarters for addressing issues in Azerbaijan’s liberated territories in a centralized manner, a regular meeting of the Coordination Headquarters was held in the city of Aghdam.

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South Caucasus News

Turning loss into legacy: Azerbaijan’s landmark step in quantifying cost of war


By any measure, the consequences of war defy easy calculation. How do we account for years lost, homes destroyed, or futures displaced? And yet, to move forward, a country must take stock of what has been endured. In this spirit, Azerbaijan has undertaken a remarkable and precedent-setting endeavor: the creation of a national methodology to quantify the vast and varied damage caused by decades of military aggression and occupation.

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South Caucasus News

Сербия перед выбором: ЕС или союз с Россией



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South Caucasus News

Lavrov says Zelenskiy’s legitimacy is fundamental in signing new peace deal



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South Caucasus News

Azerbaijan’s government bond market grows 9-fold since 2018


Since 2018, as a result of the successful implementation of the Medium and Long-Term Strategy for the Management of the Public Debt of the Republic of Azerbaijan, the government bond market has grown nearly ninefold, reaching 9 billion manats.

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South Caucasus News

Public Defender’s Office Opposes Move to Dismantle Special Investigation Service


Georgia’s Public Defender’s Office has voiced objections to a legislative proposal backed by the ruling Georgian Dream government to dismantle the country’s Special Investigation Service (SIS). On the contrary, the Office stressed the need to retain and strengthen the independence of the agency.

Speaking before Parliament’s Legal Affairs Committee on May 22, Tatuli Todua, a representative of the Ombudsman’s Office, said the service should be retained to investigate crimes committed by police officers and other officials. As Todua noted, responding to crimes committed by representatives of law enforcement agencies in Georgia has been a serious challenge and problem for a long time, and the investigations conducted in this direction lacked a component of institutional independence.

“For a very long time, the response to crime by law enforcement officials remained a serious problem and challenge in Georgia,” she said. “Instead of abolishing the Special Investigation Service, it should be strengthened,” said Tatuli Todua on behalf of the Public Defender,” she added.

According to the representative of the Public Defender’s Office, the ongoing investigations into crimes committed by employees of law enforcement agencies within the framework of the Prosecutor’s Office have been studied repeatedly, and the Prosecutor’s Office’s investigation into such cases is not up to par.

The draft bill, reviewed in its first parliamentary reading, would fully dissolve the SIS and transfer its ongoing investigations and future responsibilities to the Prosecutor’s office. The agency confirmed to media that it would be absorbed into the prosecutorial system but declined to provide additional information, saying the details would be outlined in the legislative initiative submitted to the one-party parliament.

“We also think that, since 2022, those crimes which were assigned to its mandate and greatly burdened this agency and caused a misdirection of its resources. We have always believed that this agency should have been focused on crimes committed by law enforcement officers and not on those crimes which were later added to it — be it domestic violence or other crimes committed by private individuals,” Todua added.

The SIS, launched in 2022 as an independent investigative body under the 2017-2020 Association Agenda between the European Union and Georgia, was tasked with effectively, timely, and independently probing violent crimes and ill-treatment by officials. It is, however, widely seen as lacking independence, showing negligence, and thus complicit in human rights violations, as no police officers have been charged for targeting protesters over the past year.

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South Caucasus News

Фронт на переломе: Константиновка как фокус военной и политической напряженности