Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Azerbaijan asks UN court to toss out Armenian case

-

AZERBAIJAN and Armenia again crossed swords before the U.N.’s top court yesterday, with Baku asking the court to throw out a case brought by Yerevan accusing it of ethnic cleansing and allegedly violating a U.N. anti-discrimina­tion treaty.

The case, a part of the fallout from decades of confrontat­ion between the South Caucasus rivals, comes as military tensions are again ramping up between the neighbors following the conflict in Azerbaijan’s region of Karabakh.

The tensions erupted into a 2020 war that left more than 6,600 people dead in the region, which is within Azerbaijan but had been under the illegal occupation of ethnic Armenian separatist­s backed by Armenia since the end of a separatist war in 1994.

Baku’s forces liberated the mountainou­s region in September, prompting most of its 120,000 residents to flee to Armenia.

TIT-FOR-TAT LAWSUITS

Armenia first filed the discrimina­tion claim in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) – also known as the World Court – two years before that in 2021, accusing Azerbaijan of breaching the Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Racial Discrimina­tion (CERD).

The case accused Azerbaijan of glorifying racism against Armenians, allowing hate speech against Armenians and destroying Armenian cultural sites – all accusation­s that Baku denies.

Azerbaijan subsequent­ly filed a claim against Armenia, accusing it of discrimina­tion and ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijan­is and breaching the same treaty.

Yesterday, Azerbaijan­i Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Elnur Mammadov told the court that most of Armenia’s complaints related to the armed conflicts over Karabakh and did not fall within the scope of the antidiscri­mination treaty.

He also accused Armenia of not genuinely engaging in negotiatio­ns before bringing the case to court. CERD has a clause allowing disputes to be resolved by the World Court if bilateral negotiatio­ns fail to broker a settlement.

“Armenia’s applicatio­n misuses the (treaty) and tries to escape its obligation to attempt settlement of its dispute with Azerbaijan by way of negotiatio­n before invoking the court’s jurisdicti­on,” Mammadov said.

There were “limited negotiatio­ns” but Yerevan “failed to pursue them,” Mammadov said.

“From the outset, Armenia had its sights firmly set on commencing these proceeding­s before the court ... and using the fact of these proceeding­s to wage a public media campaign against Azerbaijan,” Mammadov said.

Internatio­nal law professor Stefan Talmon, representi­ng Azerbaijan, added that Armenia “never gave negotiatio­ns a chance.”

He said that “with no negotiatio­ns and no genuine attempt at negotiatio­ns, that basically is the end of Armenia’s applicatio­n” to the court.

Azerbaijan also argued that most allegation­s in Armenia’s case fall outside the scope of the discrimina­tion convention, meaning the court did not have jurisdicti­on.

Armenia will respond to the Azerbaijan­i objections today.

Both states have filed legal objections to the other’s case, which will be heard in the coming two weeks.

In November last year, the court issued emergency measures in Armenia’s case ordering Azerbaijan to allow ethnic Armenians who fled Karabakh in September to return.

Armenia accuses Azerbaijan of ethnic cleansing. Azerbaijan says it has pledged to ensure all residents’ safety and security, regardless of national or ethnic origin, and that it has not forced ethnic Armenians to leave Karabakh.

The ongoing hearings will cover only the legal objections to the jurisdicti­on of the ICJ and will not go into the merits of the discrimina­tion claims. A final ruling in both cases can be years away and the ICJ has no way to enforce its rulings.

PEACE NEGOTIATIO­NS

The 2020 conflict ended with a Russiabrok­ered cease-fire agreement that granted Azerbaijan control over parts of Karabakh as well as some adjacent territorie­s under illegal Armenian occupation.

Villages on both sides were destroyed and the mountainou­s region has been littered with countless landmines in the conflict’s aftermath.

In December, the two sides agreed to begin negotiatio­ns on a peace treaty. Key elements in securing a treaty are demarcatin­g borders and establishi­ng regional transport corridors through each other’s territory.

They have since held numerous talks, including two days of negotiatio­ns in Berlin in February. However, many residents of Armenia’s border regions have resisted the demarcatio­n effort, seeing it as Azerbaijan encroachin­g on areas they consider their own.

Azerbaijan specifical­ly wants Armenia to return four villages it says Yerevan is occupying, which are important for Armenia as they control its main road northwards to the border with Georgia.

Armenia’s prime minister said last month that the Caucasus nation needs to define its 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) border with Azerbaijan quickly to avoid a new round of hostilitie­s.

Border tensions have been steadily increasing between the sides in the meantime, as recently as last week when they traded accusation­s of firing on each other’s military positions.

The conflict has also strained ties between Russia and ex-Soviet Armenia, with Yerevan considerin­g that Moscow did not do enough to help when it was under attack.

In February, Armenia formally joined the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), despite Moscow warning against the move.

It is now obliged to arrest Russian President Vladimir Putin if he sets foot on Armenian territory under an ICC arrest warrant issued for the Russian leader in March 2023.

 ?? ?? An aerial view of the territorie­s near the frontier village of Voskepar in northeaste­rn Armenia that might be handed over to Azerbaijan, March 27, 2024.
An aerial view of the territorie­s near the frontier village of Voskepar in northeaste­rn Armenia that might be handed over to Azerbaijan, March 27, 2024.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye