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    Categories: 2021

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/28/2021

                                        Thrusday, 


Top Russian General Again Visits Armenia


Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian greets Colonel-General Sergei Istrakov, 
the deputy chief of the Russian military’s General Staff, at the start of their 
talks in Yerevan, .


A top Russian army general met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Thursday 
as he visited Armenia for the third time in nine months.

An Armenian government statement said Pashinian and Colonel-General Sergei 
Istrakov, the deputy chief of the Russian military’s General Staff, discussed 
Russian-Armenian “military-technical cooperation,” an official term that often 
relates to arms supplies.

They also “exchanged thoughts on the current military-political situation in the 
region,” it added without elaborating.

Photographs released by the government’s press office showed that Defense 
Minister Arshak Karapetian was also present at the meeting. The Armenian Defense 
Ministry did not report on Thursday separate talks between Istrakov and 
Karapetian or other Armenian military officials.

Istrakov already visited Yerevan in January and July this year at the head of 
Russian military delegations that held “staff negotiations” with the Armenian 
army’s top brass.

Armenia moved to further deepen its close military ties with Russia shortly 
after the six-week war in Nagorno-Karabakh stopped by a Russian-brokered 
ceasefire last November. Moscow has since deployed troops in Armenia’s Syunik 
province bordering districts southwest of Karabakh retaken by Azerbaijan during 
and after the hostilities.

Meeting with Karapetian in Moscow in August, Russian Defense Minister Sergei 
Shoigu said Moscow will continue to help Yerevan reform, rearm and modernize the 
Armenian armed forces.

“We can consider that the process of arms supplies to Armenia has started,” the 
Russian defense minister said as he gifted his Armenian counterpart a dagger.

According to the Armenian Defense Ministry, the two ministers reached “a number 
of important agreements regarding forthcoming cooperation programs.”



Turkish-Armenian Relations ‘Discussed With Russia’

        • Artak Khulian
        • Tatevik Sargsian

Armenia -- Armen Grigorian, the secretary of Armenia's Security Council, speaks 
at a news conference, .


Armenia is discussing with Russia ways of normalizing its relations with Turkey, 
a senior Armenian official said on Thursday.

“We have repeatedly stated that we are ready to start discussing … the 
normalization of relations with Turkey,” Armen Grigorian, the secretary of 
Armenia’s Security Council, told a news conference. “We are also discussing this 
with our Russian partners, [talking] about how we can move forward in this 
process.”

“I think it’s best to start that work because both we and the Turkish side have 
pointed out that there are positive signals and we can start the normalization 
of relations,” he said.

Russia voiced support for a Turkish-Armenian rapprochement in early September, 
with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov saying that Moscow is “ready to assist in 
that in the most active way.” Lavrov cited in that regard Russian-mediated 
efforts to establish transport links between Armenia and Azerbaijan after last 
year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Turkey has since continued to make the establishment of diplomatic relations and 
opening of the border between the two countries conditional on a resolution of 
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan.

“If Armenia demonstrates a sincere will to normalize its relations with 
Azerbaijan then there will be no obstacles to normalizing relations between 
Armenia and Turkey,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said earlier this 
week.

He spoke during the inauguration of a newly built airport in Fizuli, a town 
southeast of Karabakh recaptured by the Azerbaijani army during the six-week 
war. Erdogan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev also announced the official 
start of work on a new highway leading to Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province.

Aliyev claimed that the road will be part of a “corridor” that will connect 
Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave via Syunik and also “unite the Turkic 
world.” “Both Azerbaijan and Turkey are taking practical steps in that 
direction,” he said.

Yerevan maintains that a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement that stopped the 
Karabakh war last November calls for transport links between the two South 
Caucasus states, rather than permanent “corridors.”

“No issue with corridor logic is being discussed,” insisted Grigorian. He also 
noted that Erdogan did not explicitly echo Aliyev’s demands for the “Zangezur 
corridor” during his latest trip to Azerbaijan.

Erdogan did mention the corridor last month when he claimed that Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian has offered to meet with him and discuss bilateral 
ties. Earlier in September, the Turkish leader also cited Azerbaijan’s demands 
for a formal Armenian recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty over 
Nagorno-Karabakh.



Armenian Government Rules Out Coronavirus Lockdown
Հոկ October տեմբեր 28, 2021
        • Marine Khachatrian

Armenia -- People wear faces masks on a street in Yerevan, August 11, 2020.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian made clear on Thursday that his government has no 
plans to impose lockdown restrictions despite record numbers of coronavirus 
cases and deaths registered in Armenia.

Pashinian said the government will instead step up its vaccination campaign and 
push for greater mask wearing in the country.

“Our strategy is as follows: we believe we should not opt for lockdowns and must 
work in the two [other] directions,” Pashinian told a weekly session of his 
cabinet.

He spoke after the Armenian Ministry said that 2,307 infections and 49 
coronavirus-related deaths were registered in the past day.

Speaking at the cabinet meeting, Health Minister Anahit Avanesian said that all 
of just over 3,000 beds set up for COVID-19 patients at 27 hospitals across the 
country are now occupied. About 1,400 of the patients treated there now are in a 
severe or critical condition, she said.

On Monday, the government ordered Armenian universities to revert to online 
classes and extended school holidays until November 7 in a bid to contain the 
latest wave of infections. Avanesian said it is now considering delaying school 
classes by another week.

“The epidemiological situation in Armenia is extremely tense,” commented 
Pashinian. He said Armenians may soon be required to wear masks not only indoors 
but also in the streets.

Most of them currently do not wear mandatory masks even inside overcrowded 
public buses. The authorities essentially stopped fining them a year ago.

Pashinian said the government will also strive to “expand the volume of 
vaccinations.” They have already accelerated over the past month after the 
authorities began requiring all public and private sector employees to get 
inoculated or take coronavirus tests twice a month at their own expense.

Nevertheless, Armenia continues to have the lowest vaccination rate in the 
region. Ministry of Health data shows that 466,785 people in the country of 
about 3 million received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine and only 
about 210,250 of them were fully vaccinated as of October 24.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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