
ArmInfo. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has called on the Azerbaijani authorities to release individuals detained for political reasons, including 23 Armenians. This was announced on social media by Ruben Rubinyan, head of the Armenian delegation to PACE and Vice-Speaker of Parliament, citing a resolution adopted following the latest monitoring of the fulfillment of obligations by Council of Europe member states. The document was adopted at the 2026 PACE Winter Session in Strasbourg.
"A PACE resolution entitled 'Progress in the Assembly's Monitoring Procedure' was adopted in Strasbourg. In the section on Armenia, among other things, PACE expresses deep concern 'regarding information about plans to seize power by several clerics,' and in the section on Azerbaijan, among other things, it calls for the release of all Armenians held there," Rubinyan wrote.
The resolution covers the situation in a number of countries monitored by the Assembly, including Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Serbia, Turkey, and Ukraine. The document was adopted by 75 votes in favor, one vote against, and three abstentions. From Armenia, Ruben Rubinyan and Sona Ghazaryan (representatives of the ruling faction) voted in favor, while opposition MP Armen Gevorgyan from the Hayastan faction abstained. One parliamentarian from Switzerland voted against, while another Swiss representative and a member of parliament from Liechtenstein abstained.
"The Assembly regrets the excessive polarisation and stigmatisation of political opponents by all sides in Armenia. It is deeply concerned by the tensions between the Prime Minister and the head of the Armenian Church, and by the reports of plots to usurp power by several clergymen belonging to the Armenian Apostolic Church. While reiterating that three consecutive elections have been free of irregularities since 2018, the Assembly reiterates the need to implement regulations on the misuse of public resources and the financing of political parties. Ahead of the June 2026 general elections, the Assembly calls for an improvement in relations between the political majority and the opposition, in order to ensure that the election campaign is issue- and policy-driven, and free from personal attacks between election contestants. In this context, the Assembly refers to the recommendation of the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) that "elected bodies and political parties should adopt appropriate codes of conduct that prohibit the use of hate speech, call on their members and followers to abstain from engaging in, endorsing or disseminating it, and provide for sanctions". The Assembly takes note of the current Prime Minister's intention to organise a constitutional referendum after the 2026 general elections;" the document reads.
Regarding Azerbaijan, the document reads that "with reference to its Resolution 2527 (2024) "Challenge, on substantive grounds, of the still unratified credentials of the parliamentary delegation of Azerbaijan", the Assembly remains seriously concerned about the further deterioration of the human rights situation in the country and the increase in the number of persons detained allegedly on politically motivated grounds, including civil society activists, journalists and media workers, academics, opposition politicians and other government critics. It exhorts the authorities to end retaliatory prosecutions and to release immediately all those detained on politically motivated charges, including 23 Armenian detainees, the human rights defender, Mr Anar Mammadli, as well as the journalists and media workers involved in the Abzas Media case. The Assembly again calls upon the authorities to amend the Law on Political Parties, the Law on Media, and relevant non-governmental organisation legislation in line with the recommendations of the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission), and to implement the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. The Assembly reiterates its condemnation of the decision by the Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs to declare numerous members of the Assembly personae non gratae as a result of, inter alia, their vote in favour of Resolution 2527 (2024) and urges the authorities to immediately revoke this decision. The Assembly takes note of the resumption of cooperation between the Azerbaijani authorities and the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) and calls on the authorities to engage in constructive dialogue with all Council of Europe bodies, including the Assembly itself."
For details following link:
https://pace.coe.int/pdf/1cd888d53ea56853b9a6683f3f7bc4900dc0ab85db91335e332307150313 a90c/res.%202633.pdf