company:osce

  • Those closest to #Nagorno-Karabakh conflict ‘most supportive of peace’

    Those who have experienced the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict first-hand and are most affected by the hostilities are more supportive of peaceful reconciliation, a report from UK-based peacebuilding group International Alert suggests.

    ‘Envisioning Peace’ is the first large-scale study of attitudes towards the conflict since renewed hostilities during the April 2016 Four-Day War.

    The study examined ‘grassroot’ views on Nagorno-Karabakh by those living there and among communities in Azerbaijan and Armenia. Respondents included internally displaced persons (IDPs) and those living near the frontline.

    The study suggested that those most affected by the armed confrontations — living in border communities or near the ceasefire line, and those who had personally faced consequences of the war — were more supportive of peaceful reconciliation with the ‘other’ side.

    ‘These individuals understand the importance of resolving this conflict and can take practical steps to promote peacebuilding initiatives’, said Carey Cavanaugh, the Chairman of the Board of International Alert, who is a former co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group.

    The OSCE Minsk Group, led by Russia, France, and the United States, has been mediating the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh since 1992.

    ‘The further people live from the frontline, the more strongly they speak about patriotism’, the report said.
    Powerlessness to resolve conflict

    The report noted the effects of long-lasting hostilities on the communities they had to adapt to, making the conflict a constant part of their lives. ‘I haven’t even thought about what my life would be like without the conflict’, one interviewee says in the study.

    This sort of coping and a ‘learned helplessness’ — less faith in having a control over one’s surroundings, life, and future — among respondents could have a negative influence on peacebuilding initiatives aimed at conflict transformation, the report suggests.

    Respondents in all three societies expressed a sense of powerlessness in resolving the conflict. This, the study suggests, together with a low trust in external peacebuilding actors like the Minsk Group, the US, and Russia, pose additional challenges to policymakers and peace negotiators.

    Protracted conflict, according to the study, was being accompanied by enemy image propaganda, especially by the Azerbaijani state and media.

    The study reflected contrasting attitudes of Azerbaijanis and Armenians on transforming the years-old ‘no peace no war’ stalemate. According to the report, respondents in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia identified the status quo with ‘stability’, while for Azerbaijanis, it evoked the concept of ‘justice’, which they associate with the ‘return of territories’.

    International Alert called for more support for initiatives that would help all three societies to overcome a trend of devaluing human life, and to explore more about the lives of individuals in the border areas.

    The peacebuilding group also underlined the continued exclusion of refugees in all three societies from the conflict discourse.

    ‘It is important to put the focus back on the individual who has shouldered the heavy burden of war, their feelings, thoughts, fears and hopes. Personal history must be clearly seen and valued. Only then will it become possible to appreciate a person’s worth and activity’, the report reads.

    The group suggests ‘open media projects’ as one of the tools to highlight personal stories.

    [Read on OC Media: ‘I would never return home again’ — the Azerbaijani IDPs as old as the conflict]

    The group advocated for raising awareness of members of the communities about the personal cost of conflict both in humanitarian and economic terms.

    ‘If people realise that every individual and every family is paying for the conflict and not for peace, this could help to alter the dynamics of the conflict’, the report reads.

    The group recommends highlighting how conflict reinforces social justice grievances, a problem seen as important among respondents from all communities.
    ‘Status quo no longer in Armenia’s favour’

    On Monday, outgoing US Ambassador to Armenia Richard Mills identified the unresolved conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh and resulting economic blockade from Azerbaijan and Turkey as contributing to corruption in Armenia.

    ‘The status quo is no longer in Armenia’s favour […] Corruption didn’t grow because there are evil people here. The ground was pretty fertile for it because you have closed borders and a very small economy, so it’s very easy to control markets’, Mills said in an interview with EVN Report.

    In the same interview, Mills said he had been ‘struck’ by a lack of discussion in Armenia on what could be ‘acceptable solutions and compromise’ for Armenians, and said that settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict would require Armenia to ‘return some occupied territories’ to Azerbaijan.

    [Read on OC Media: ‘Enhanced security’: Armenian settlers in Nagorno-Karabakh]

    On Wednesday, acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan shortly commented the statement, saying that Armenia’s position was known to the public and ‘has not changed’.

    Russia, another Minsk Group co-chairing country, recently angered Azerbaijani authorities when on 7 October, Svetlana Zhurova, deputy chair of the Russian Duma’s International Affairs Committee, visited Nagorno-Karabakh without their prior permission.

    Her trip was part of the ‘Women for Peace’ initiative under Pashinyan’s wife, Anna Hakobyan.

    Zhurova ended up being blacklisted by the Azerbaijani government for ‘illegally’ entering Nagorno-Karabakh.
    Renewal of talks

    The OSCE Minsk Group, created in 1992, remains the only format for peace negotiations. It has yielded no major breakthroughs in recent years.

    Azerbaijan’s leadership continues to insist on respecting the country’s territorial integrity and on Armenia withdrawing their armed forces from Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding regions.

    Since a change of power in Armenia in May, new Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has insisted on including the Nagorno-Karabakh authorities in the negotiation process as a party directly involved in the conflict.

    Azerbaijan has rejected the proposal.

    Nevertheless, at a Minsk Group–mediated meeting on 27 September on the margins of the 73rd Session of the UN General Assembly, top Armenian and Azerbaijani diplomats agreed to continue negotiations.

    Talks between the two are expected to resume during the co-chairs’ ‘upcoming’ visit to the region.

    Hopes for progress were reignited after informal talks between Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Dushanbe on 28 September. The meeting was the first public interaction between the two countries’ leaders following the change in power in Armenia.

    After the meeting, both leaders confirmed that they had agreed to open a direct line of communication between each other through their defence ministries, in order to prevent incidents along the Nagorno-Karabakh line of contact.


    http://oc-media.org/those-closest-to-nagorno-karabakh-conflict-most-supportive-of-peace
    #paix #Arménie #conflit
    ping @reka
    En italien:
    https://www.balcanicaucaso.org/aree/Nagorno-Karabakh/Nagorno-Karabakh-piu-vicini-al-fronte-piu-a-favore-della-pace-190742

  • Twisted Metal, Broken Bodies

    https://gichd-training.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=b1d060351d9343ba8df2c9bbe430a38e

    On 23 April 2017, an armored vehicle of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe’s Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine (OSCE SMM) set off an explosion, likely a mine, killing one monitor and injuring two others.
    Circumstances suggest that the explosive device was an anti-vehicle mine (AVM)...
    23 April 2017 OSCE Press Conference, Headquarters of the Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine (OSCE SMM)
    This incident was just one reminder of the daily risks posed by AVMs. Nevertheless, they are often a neglected issue, even as they cause casualties indiscriminately and hamper socio-economic development in many parts of the world. Identifying this as a critical issue, in 2012, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon urged states

    #armement #mines #avm

  • Statement by Head of OSCE Mission to Skopje on President Ivanov’s decisions to pardon 56 individuals | OSCE
    http://www.osce.org/skopje/233646

    Head of the OSCE Mission to Skopje Nina Suomalainen has taken note of President Gjorge Ivanov’s 41 decisions published yesterday in the Official Gazette to pardon 56 individuals.

    While the stated intention of the President was to contribute to the resolution of the ongoing crisis, the citizens nevertheless are entitled to see political and legal accountability being carried out. The judiciary and the Special Prosecutor’s Office must be allowed to continue to do their very important work in line with the principles of independence and impartiality. 

    The investigation of the cases surrounding and arising from the content of the unauthorized interception of communications, and subsequent court cases should help rebuild the trust of citizens in the rule of law and in a well-functioning and impartial justice system.

    • … et, immédiatement, le big boss,

      Statement by OSCE Chairperson-in-Office and German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier on the domestic political crisis in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia | OSCE
      http://www.osce.org/cio/233701

      I am very concerned about the latest developments in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. The decision of the Macedonian President to exempt from criminal prosecution politicians and office holders, who face charges of grave misconduct, damages the rule of law and legal peace. This decision contravenes the Przino agreement concluded between the country’s parties and the decision undermines the work of the Special Prosecutor’s Office and its mandate to investigate all accusations of abuse of power.

      Efforts must now be prioritized and reinforced to create the minimum requirements, as jointly agreed, for holding credible elections as soon as possible.

  • Can Karabakh Pull Back from the Brink? | EurasiaNet.org

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/78096

    After a long simmer, the Nagorno-Karabakh war has once again boiled over. And turning off the heat at this point may not be so easy.

    Three days of fighting have left dozens dead and dozens more wounded. It marks the bloodiest combat between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces since the signing of a ceasefire agreement in 1994. International mediators for the OSCE Minsk Group – which is led by the United States, France and Russia, and is responsible for trying to broker a lasting Karabakh peace settlement – were scheduled to convene April 5 in Vienna to discuss responses to the renewed fighting.

    #haut_karabagh #arménie #azerbaïdjan #causase

  • OSCE chairperson calls for organization of local elections acceptable to both Donbas, Kyiv
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/osce-chairperson-calls-for-organization-of-local-elections-acceptable-to-b

    OSCE Chairperson-in-Office Ivica Dacic calls for a political settlement of the conflict in eastern Ukraine.

    (intégralité de la brève, comme souvent le titre en dit plus : acceptable to both…)

    Il faut dire l’actuel président de l’OSCE est le ministre des Affaires étrangères serbe…

  • Ukrainian army has no intention of fully withdrawing weapons from Donbas - Lysenko
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/ukrainian-army-has-no-intention-of-fully-withdrawing-weapons-from-donbas-l

    Ukrainian army units in Donbas will not fully withdraw heavy weapons as there is no indication that the militants have done the same, Andriy Lysenko, a representative of the headquarters for the military operation in eastern Ukraine, said.

    Petit à petit la trêve s’affaiblit.

    On rappellera que, par ailleurs, les deux parties n’autorisent pas l’accès des observateurs de l’OSCE à certains endroits sensibles. Les séparatistes certes, largement repris dans la presse, mais aussi les gouvernementaux.

    Intégralité du passage concerné dans le rapport de la Mission Spéciale en Ukraine de l’OSCE pour le 9 mars au soir

    Latest from the Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine (SMM), based on information received as of 18:00hrs (Kyiv time), 9 March 2015 | OSCE
    http://www.osce.org/ukraine-smm/144336

    Restrictions on SMM access and freedom of movement:

    The SMM is restrained in fulfilling its monitoring functions by restrictions imposed by third parties and security considerations, including the lack of information on whereabouts of landmines.

    The security situation in Donbas is fluid and unpredictable and the cease-fire does not hold everywhere. For this reason, the SMM requires security guarantees from “DPR” and “LPR” which are not always provided. Where such guarantees are limited to escorted movements, and escorts are not provided for all planned patrols or are delayed, this also represents a restriction of SMM freedom of movement.

    In particular during the reporting period:

    –The SMM was stopped at a “DPR” checkpoint located 1.2km north of the village of Komsomolske. The “DPR” personnel informed the SMM that the SMM was not allowed to visit the area and that access to the village was denied. The SMM asked further about its freedom of movement to monitor “DPR”-controlled areas of the Donetsk region, but “DPR” personnel informed that authorization from the “DPR” “MoD” was needed to allow the patrol to proceed. The “DPR” member said because of the presence of “DPR” military, access to the area was restricted.

    – En route to government-controlled Volnovakha (47km south-west of Donetsk) the SMM was stopped at the Ukrainian Armed Forces checkpoint in the eastern outskirts of Volnovakha. The soldiers requested to know the nationalities of the SMM patrol denying its passage. The SMM contacted the JCCC in Volnovakha, which sent a Ukrainian Armed Forces colonel to the checkpoint to assist the SMM. After 55 minutes, the SMM was able to cross the checkpoint.

    –At a checkpoint near Zhovten about 5km north of the border with the Russian Federation, “LPR” “border guards” said that the SMM is not permitted in the “border zone” without special permission.

    –In the Zaporizhzhia region, Ukrainian Armed Forces personnel did not allow the SMM to visit a weapons storage site.

    • Malgré cela le porte-parole de l’OSCE, dans sa déclaration du 10 mars, est optimiste.
      (mais il est vrai qu’il est Serbe…)

      Ceasefire and co-operation are conducive to reaching concrete results in Ukraine, OSCE Chair says | OSCE
      http://www.osce.org/cio/144331

      OSCE Chairperson-in-Office and Serbia’s Foreign Minister Ivica Dačić today welcomed the beginning of efforts to remove and destroy unexploded ordinance in southeast Ukraine as a good example of co-operation by all sides yielding tangible results and producing visible improvements in the lives of the local population.

  • Conclusions préliminaires de la mission d’observation des élections présidentielles en #Azerbaïdjan de l’#OSCE
    http://www.osce.org/odihr/elections/106901 (pdf) (10/10/2013)
    sur la page http://www.osce.org/odihr/elections/103589

    The 9 October election was undermined by limitations on the freedoms of expression, assembly, and association that did not guarantee a level playing field for candidates. Continued allegations of candidate and voter intimidation and a restrictive media environment marred the campaign. Significant problems were observed throughout all stages of election day processes and underscored the serious nature of the shortcomings that need to be addressed in order for Azerbaijan to fully meet its OSCE commitments for genuine and democratic elections.

    Ce n’est que le début…
    • manque d’impartialité de la Commission électorale
    • limitation de la liberté de rassemblement
    • déséquilibre dans l’accès aux médias
    • pas d’explication sur la taille de la liste électorale : 1,8 millions de personnes de moins que la population en âge de voter (soit environ 1/3 du total)
    • problèmes à l’ouverture des urnes dans 20% des observations réalisées
    • les observateurs ont relevé du bourrage d’urnes dans 37 des points
    • le dépouillement s’est passé mal ou très mal dans 58% des bureaux observés. Dans 15 d’entre eux, il a été observé des manipulations sur la liste des électeurs, sur les résultats y compris la réattribution de votes à un candidat différent

    • Évidemment, ça ne plait pas…

      OSCE/ODIHR statement is serious damage to organization’s authority : Ali Hasanov - AzerNews
      http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/60589.html (11/10/2013 16:24)

      The opinion, announced by the observation mission of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), on law violations at the presidential election in Azerbaijan is based not on any serious fact, but on false information spread by the opposition, head of the Public and Political Issues Department of Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan, Ali Hasanov said on October 11 commenting on the statement of the OSCE/ODIHR mission.

      D’ailleurs tous les (très nombreux) autres observateurs ont trouvé que ça c’était passé normalement

      According to [Hasanov], the representatives of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, the European Parliament, the CIS, BSEC Parliamentary Assembly and the NGO Forum, TURKPA and other organizations noted at the press conferences held on Wednesday and Thursday that the election in Azerbaijan was free, transparent, democratic and just, and underlined that the election fully meet international standards. These observation missions included MPs, public and political leaders, representatives of NGOs, experienced professional experts of election observation.

      “Therefore, we can confidently say that ODIHR’s position absolutely doesn’t reflect the position of countries which enter the OSCE area. Thus, a subjective opinion, made by the current monitoring mission, is not only a disrespect for the will of Azerbaijani voters, but also counteracts the OSCE commitments on impartiality, objectivity, and collegiality to member countries,” Hasanov said.

      D’ailleurs, aucun Azerbaïdjanais n’a plus confiance dans la mission de l’OSCE depuis que celle ci a conclu que les élections présidentielles s’étaient déroulées normalement en Arménie.

      “The OSCE has caused Azerbaijani citizens’ serious distrust to objectivity a while ago with its subjective assessment of the presidential election held in Armenia. So, it was ODIHR which deliberately turned a blind eye to the fact that the pre-election situation during the presidential election in Armenia was fully criminalized, opposition’s election campaign in all regions was fully limited, one of the presidential candidates was shot, false information was spread about 3 million voters in a country with a population of 2 million people, as well as ballots were thrown in the boxes in batches. The organization, by expressing particularly ’fundamental’ and ’warm’ attitude towards the presidential election, positively assessed the poll held in condition of complete oppression of the media outlets and gross violation of human rights,” Hasanov said.

    • Néanmoins, le secrétaire général de l’OSCE félicite l’heureux réélu et le félicite des progrès de la démocratie dans son pays (11/10/2013 17h51 locales)

      OSCE committed to continue beneficial cooperation with Azerbaijan:Lamberto Zannier - AzerNews
      http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/60596.html

      OSCE Secretary General Lamberto Zannier congratulated Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, who won the October 9 presidential elections with over 84 percent of votes.
      “I would like to convey to you my heartfelt congratulations on your re-election as President of the Republic of Azerbaijan. Please allow me to wish you every success in continuing to build a strong and vibrant democracy in your country,” Zannier’s message reads.
      “Please be assured that the OSCE remains ready to continue the long-standing and fruitful cooperation established with the Government of Azerbaijan,” Zannier said.

    • Même son de cloche (un peu plus nuancé) du côté du président de l’OSCE : je prends note du rapport de la mission et je relève qu’il y a eu des progrès sur beaucoup d’aspects

      OSCE top official congratulates Azerbaijani people on democratic election - AzerNews
      http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/60584.html

      OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Leonid Kozhara congratulated the people and the leadership of Azerbaijan on holding democratic presidential elections that represents an important step forward in the country’s democratic development.
      In his statement , Kozhara welcomed the fact that the presidential election in Azerbaijan was monitored by a large number of observers from authoritative international organizations, including the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Council of Europe, the European Union (EU), Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and others, as well as by many national delegations from the OSCE member countries.
      I take note of the statement of preliminary findings and conclusions made by the OSCE International Observation Mission as well as the comments of the Special Coordinator. I also take note of the Joint Statement made by the election observation delegations of the Council of Europe and the European Parliament, as well as the statements by other international observers,” he said. “In these statements the international observers conclude that a number of aspects of the conduct of the Presidential Election in Azerbaijan showed progress towards meeting the OSCE and Council of Europe commitments and other international standards for democratic elections.