Society of love and solidarity should not be replaced by society of hatred and antagonism – Armen Ashotyan

Category
Politics

MP representing the Republican Party of Armenia Armen Ashotyan has commented on the recent domestic developments in Armenia, urging not to replace the society of love and solidarity with a society of hatred and antagonism, Ashotyan made a post on his Facebook page.

He noted that neither Nikol, nor Karepetyan should be blackened, nor anyone else. “Diploma vs. Gazprom is very weal argument. Armenia does not need war of compromising material, but rather competition of development programs.

Armen Ashotyan also noted that there is still a “golden window” until May 1 special session. “When you enter a blind alley, making half step back is not a retreat, but a chance to see light at the end of the tunnel “, he said.

Developments serve base to further strengthen potential of Armenia’s economy – acting PM

Category
BUSINESS & ECONOMY

7.5% economic growth, as well as over-fulfillment of approved tax program rates were recorded in Armenia in 2017, acting Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan said during today’s Cabinet meeting, adding that these developments serve base for further strengthening the potential of Armenia’s economy, as well as ensuring long-term, fundamental and tangible reforms for wide public circles.

“Our preliminary assessments state that it’s necessary to touch upon the issue of reducing income tax rates as in the micro-level the reduction of the burden of this type of tax will increase the real incomes for each employed citizen, and on the other hand, will enable the employer to engage more qualified employees within the same salaries”, Karen Karapetyan said, adding that it’s also necessary to improve the tax administration tools to significantly reduce and prevent cases of avoiding tax evasion, to ensure budget stability.

In this regard the acting PM tasked the acting ministers of Economic development and investments and Finance, as well as the chairman of the State Revenue Committee to sum up the preliminary research and assessments within ten days, and based on that to jointly discuss and presents proposals on reduction of income tax rates and effective expansion of tax administration tools.

Powerful Armenia and strong Artsakh first guarantees for NK conflict settlement – Armen Sarkissian

ArmenPress, Armenia
April 9 2018
Powerful Armenia and strong Artsakh first guarantees for NK conflict settlement – Armen Sarkissian



YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS. Powerful Armenia and strong Artsakh are the first guarantees for peaceful and negotiated settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian said in his remarks after the inauguration ceremony at the special session of the Parliament in the Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concert Complex on April 9, Armenpress reports.

“Today the peaceful and negotiated settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict remains a key issue for our country and whole people. Its first guarantee are powerful Armenia and strong Artsakh. In order to achieve fair solution and protect the inseparable rights of the people of Artsakh, we must continue building firm, economically developing, flourishing and strong Armenia. For such Armenia we must provide the best environment for self-_expression_ of our citizen”, the President said.

Armen Sarkissian said it’s necessary to jointly fight against all negative and defective phenomena existing in the state system, public, environment, starting from corruption to social injustice, from indifference to irresponsibility. “It is necessary for each of us to act in this uncompromising and fair fight. We will succeed if we not only criticize, but also propose to unite and work jointly instead of creating watersheds”, Armen Sarkissian said.

Armen Sarkissian took the Oath of Office of President of Armenia midday April 9 at a special session of the Armenian Parliament. Sarkissian was sworn into office by placing his right hand on the original book of the Constitution of Armenia and a 7th century Bible.

“By assuming office of President of Armenia, I swear to be committed to the Constitution of Armenia, to be impartial during fulfillment of my powers, to be guided solely by state and pan-national interests and to contribute my entire strength for the strengthening of national unity. May Gold help me”, Sarkissian said.

The swearing-in was followed by the national anthem of Armenia, and remarks and blessings from Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II.

April 9 marks Armenia’s transitioning to a parliamentary system, and the end of tenure of President Serzh Sargsyan. In accordance to the Constitution, the government is expected to resign. Cabinet members will serve as acting ministers until a new government is formed.

English –translator/editor: Aneta Harutyunyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/03/2018

                                        Tuesday, 

Leaders Deepen Rift In Armenian Opposition Bloc


        • Karine Simonian

Armenia - Edmon Marukian (L) and Nikol Pashinian, leaders of the opposition 
Yelk alliance, address supporters rallying in Yerevan, 19Jan2018.

Disagreements within the opposition Yelk alliance seemed to deepen on Tuesday 
as two of its top leaders publicly traded verbal barbs over how to fight 
against President Serzh Sarkisian.

The bitter exchange came as one of them, Nikol Pashinian, continued to prepare 
for a series of demonstrations in Yerevan aimed at forcing Sarkisian not to 
extend his decade-long rule. Pashinian and a group of activists of his Civil 
Contract party began touring Armenia’s northern and central regions on foot for 
that purpose on Saturday.

The two other parties making up Yelk, Bright Armenia and Republic, have refused 
to join this campaign, saying that anti-Sarkisian protests will not attract 
large crowds. The Bright Armenia leader, Edmon Marukian, criticized Pashinian’s 
tactics in an op-ed article posted on Aravot.am.

In particular, Marukian said his opposition ally is seeking “short-term glory” 
and following a “path trodden by defunct political forces” which failed to 
achieve regime change in the country. “It is reckless to do the same thing 
every time and to expect to achieve a different result every time,” he wrote.


Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian and his supporters pose for a 
photograph in Lori province, 2 April 2018.

Pashinian hit back at Marukian as he and his associates walked through the 
northern Lori province in heavy rain. “The path drawn in Mr. Marukian’s article 
has been repeatedly trodden, including by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation 
and the Orinats Yerkir party,” he said, referring to parties that have closely 
collaborated with Sarkisian during his rule.

“I am convinced that my actions reflect the will of the overwhelming majority 
of Yelk’s voters,” insisted Pashinian. He argued that the Yelk leadership has 
unanimously spoken out against Sarkisian’s “third term in office” before.

The Civil Contract leader is due to finish his 200-kilometer-long walking tour 
in time for his first anti-government rally in Yerevan slated for April 13. His 
party is planning to rally supporters in the city’s Liberty Square for at least 
four consecutive days.

The Armenian parliament dominated by Sarkisian’s supporters is scheduled to 
elect a new prime minister on April 17. The outgoing president, whose second 
term expires on April 9, is widely expected to take up what will now be the 
country’s top executive post.

Yelk finished third in last year’s parliamentary elections, winning 9 seats in 
the 105-member National Assembly.




Tax Breaks Fuel IT Startup Growth In Armenia


        • Emil Danielyan

Armenia - Young people at the annual DigiTec Expo tech exhibition in Yerevan, 
30 September 2017.

The Armenian government reported on Tuesday a sharp rise in the number of new 
information technology (IT) firms that have qualified for tax breaks introduced 
three years ago to boost Armenia’s rapidly growing IT sector.

Under a government bill passed by the Armenian parliament in late 2014, such 
firms employing up to 30 people can be fully exempt from profit tax. They are 
also eligible for a preferential income tax rate for their employees, 
equivalent to 10 percent of their gross wages.

Nearly 430 IT startups have been granted the tax breaks, valid for five years, 
by a special government commission since then. According to the Armenian 
Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology, 281 of them 
received such exemptions last year, up from around 100 in 2016.

The ministry touted the privileged tax regime on Tuesday in a statement and a 
video report attached to it. The footage featured interviews with the founders 
of three Armenian tech firms set up in the last few years.

One of them, Himnark, specializes in accounting software development. “We 
provided services to one foreign company and our resulting profit wasn’t 
taxed,” said its young owner, Ruben Osipian. “We invested it in developing new 
software. Had it not been for the tax exemption, we would have obviously 
invested less.”

“Our income tax is lower and that allows us to pay higher [real] wages,” said 
Vahram Bleyan, one of the two founders of another startup, Mamble. The company 
claims to mainly sell software to a large corporate client in the United States.


Armenia - Prime Minister Karen Karapetian visits an IT company in Yerevan, 30 
March 2018.

IT is the fastest-growing sector of the Armenian economy, having expanded by 
over 20 percent annually in the past decade. The sector employing more than 
15,000 people grew by almost 30 percent last year, according to government data.

Deputy Transport Minister Amalya Yeghoyan predicted last week that this rapid 
growth will continue unabated this year. “I am sure that the number of jobs 
will increase,” she said, according to the Armenpress news agency.

The government-funded Enterprise Incubator Foundation (EIF) estimates that the 
combined turnover of at least 650 IT firms currently operating in Armenia 
reached $765 million in 2017. The figure, which includes Internet service 
provision, was equivalent to over 6.5 percent of the country’s Gross Domestic 
Product.

The sector’s largest companies include the Armenian branches of U.S. tech 
giants like as Synopsys, National Instruments, Mentor Graphics and VMware. Its 
steady expansion is also increasingly driven by homegrown Armenian companies.

“Local firms are now in better shape than they were five years ago,” the EIF 
said in a recent report. “They have more employees, attract venture investment, 
and demonstrate an improvement in technical expertise and knowledge of the 
market. In addition, they are implementing more complex and value-added 
projects.”

A lack of skilled personnel is widely seen as the main challenge facing the 
sector. Local IT executives have long complained about the inadequate 
professional level of many graduates of IT departments of Armenia universities. 
The latter often need to undergo on-the-job training after graduation.

“This is a problem,” said Yeghoyan. In her words, there are now at least 2,000 
job vacancies in the sector.




German Embassy Suspends Visa Service Outsourcing


        • Anush Muradian

Armenia - German Ambassador to Armenia Matthias Kiesler gives a press 
conference in Yerevan, 22 November 2016.

The German Embassy in Armenia has effectively suspended its decision to 
outsource consular services to a Turkish-based company which is being 
investigated by the Armenian authorities, it emerged on Tuesday.

The embassy has long processed visa applications from Armenian nationals 
planning to travel to Germany and five other European Union member states. It 
announced last week that starting from April 3 this will be done by Vizametric, 
a Turkish-Russian private firm registered in Turkey.

The announcement raised fears in Armenia that the Turkish government will gain 
access to sensitive personal data of many Armenians. The latter are required to 
disclose their incomes, bank details and other personal information in their 
applications for so-called Schengen visas valid in virtually all EU member 
states.

The Armenian government’s Agency for Personal Data Protectionsaid on Friday 
that it has ordered the Vizametric office in Yerevan avoid accepting visa 
applications pending its investigation aimed at “preventing possible 
violations” of Armenian law.

The German ambassador to Armenia, Matthias Kiesler, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service (Azatutyun.am) that his mission will therefore continue to provide 
consular services for the time being. “We have to wait and see how the process 
goes,” he said.

“I want to reassure that the agreement between the German Foreign Ministry and 
Vizametric stipulates that the protection of personal data must be at the 
highest level and that it cannot be passed on to a third party,” stressed 
Kiesler.

Meanwhile, the head of the Armenian government agency, Gevorg Hayrapetian, said 
it is scrutinizing the visa service provider to see whether the latter would 
comply with Armenia’s law on personal data protection. Vizametric must prove 
that there would be no “illegal” access to information collected by it, he said.

Hayrapetian denied that the Turkish origin of the company was not the reason 
for the launch of the inquiry. He noted, though, that Turkey is known for 
adequate protection of personal data.

Turkey refuses to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia and fully 
supports Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.




Ruling Party Figures Defend ‘Real Opposition’


        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Eduard Sharmazanov, spokesman for the ruling Republican Party, at a 
news conference in Yerevan, 14May2017.

Senior representatives of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) praised 
on Tuesday an opposition leader who has criticized other opponents of President 
Serzh Sarkisian for planning rallies against his continued rule.

Edmon Marukian and his Bright Armenia party have refused to join the campaign 
launched by the Civil Contract party of Nikol Pashinian, a fellow member of the 
opposition Yelk alliance. In a newspaper article, Marukian said voters 
essentially allowed Sarkisian to become prime minister during last year’s 
parliamentary elections. Nothing can therefore stop the outgoing president from 
remaining in power, he wrote.

Pashinian insisted on the opposite. He said Armenians should take to the 
streets and thwart Sarkisian’s “third term.”

Gagik Melikian, a senior HHK parliamentarian, said Marukian “told the truth.” 
“I highly appreciate Edmon Marukian’s political and legal knowledge,” he told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). “What Edmon Marukian is saying is 
written in our constitution, electoral code and the National Assembly statutes.”

Another senior HHK figure, Eduard Sharmazanov, was careful not to openly take 
sides in the deepening dispute within the Yelk leadership. Still, he said: “To 
my knowledge, Bright Armenia has never spoken of fighting against concrete 
persons or disputing the April 2 [2017] election results in the streets. That 
is why I’m not surprised [by Marukian’s stance.] Pashinian’s behavior is more 
unexpected.”

“In democratic countries around the world, the real opposition is not those who 
cry loudly but those who consistently follow their ideological path,” added 
Sharmazanov.

Sarkisian stated in 2014 that he will “not aspire” to the post of prime 
minister if Armenia becomes a parliamentary republic immediately after his 
second and final presidential term ends on April 2, 2018. He is now widely 
expected to be named premier by the HHK later this month.

HHK representatives deny that the outgoing president is about to break his 
pledge. They claim that he never explicitly promised to leave office in April 
2018.




Press Review



“Zhamanak” comments on opposition leader Nikol Pashinian’s and his supporters’ 
200-kilometer-long walking tour of Armenia aimed at drumming up popular support 
for their upcoming anti-government rallies in Yerevan. The paper says this is 
not the first opposition attempt to “take Yerevan politics to the regions” and 
it is likely to fail just as the previous ones have.

“The small group of young oppositionists has decided to pass through at least 
half of the country on foot and to inform people who live in towns and village 
and are cynical and indifferent towards everything about the rallies that will 
start on April 13,” “Hraparak” writes on the same subject. “The public has 
split in two parts. The larger part -- namely those who prefer a problem-free 
life and are ready to run risks only in case of having a 100 percent guarantee 
of success -- is extremely pessimistic. They consider Nikol Pashinian to be 
crazy or adventurist. The other, smaller section thinks that one has to fight 
even if the likelihood of victory is very small.”

“Zhoghovurd” laments the fact that none of the high-ranking state officials 
laid flowers on Monday at the graves of Armenian soldiers who were killed in 
the four-day war in Nagorno-Karabakh which broke out exactly two years ago. The 
paper says that only some officials from the Armenian Defense Ministry visited 
the Yerablur military cemetery in Yerevan for that purpose. It wonders whether 
President Serzh Sarkisian and key members of his entourage forgot the war 
anniversary or just did not want to look the soldiers’ relatives in the eyes.

“The commander-in-chief of Armenia’s armed forces, Serzh Sarkisian, did not 
visit Yerablur,” writes “Haykakan Zhamanak.” “Nor does the presidential website 
contain any message on the second anniversary of the April war.” Instead, the 
paper says, Sarkisian on Monday congratulated Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah 
el-Sisi on winning another term in office.

(Tigran Avetisian)

Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


FFA fines Geghashen secondary school

The regular session of the Disciplinary Committee was held at the Football Federation of Armenia.

The decision made by the members of the Committee shows that the Shirak vs. Kapan match of the Armenian Futsal Championship was not held, for which the Kapan team was fined (AMD 10,000). The Charbakh team was also fined (AMD 10,000) due to the absence of a police officer at the pre-consultation.

FC Shatskogo’s team played two football players who had been disqualified for a match with Alaverdi, for which Shirak State University was fined(AMD 80,000), and team coach Gevorg Aghanyan was disqualified for two games.

The FFA also fined Geghashen secondary school (AMD 50,000) to remove Geghashen-04 from the Armenian Championship.

Minister Manukyan considers inappropriate the construction of new energy unit of Armenia’s NPP at the moment

Category
BUSINESS & ECONOMY

Minister of energy infrastructures and natural resources Ashot Manukyan doesn’t consider appropriate the construction of new energy unit of the nuclear power plant at the moment․

“We have repeatedly announced that Armenia’s nuclear power plant is able to continue its work in case of conducting some upgrading works. After some diagnostic works the specialists can decide how long it can operate. At this moment it is inappropriate to build a new energy unit when there is the current one which can operate safely for some time”, the minister said in the Parliament in response to the question of Yelk faction head Nikol Pashinyan.

The minister stated that the nuclear technologies are rapidly developing. According to him, if 5 years ago there was an alternative just between the two technologies, today there are at least five alternatives each of which can be applied in our system, each of them is much cheaper, much safer and more reliable.

“Therefore, the government’s decision was simple – to operate the current nuclear power plant as much as it has the resource for safe operation, and after deciding the operation deadline to discuss when to build the new nuclear power plant and with what technology”, the minister said.

Book: Defying Erasure: Armenian Photographers in the Middle Eastern Photographic Imagination

The Armenian Weekly

Two recent books from the Beirut publishing house Al Ayn’s “Photographes du Moyen Orient” (Collection Traces) help to fill in cultural lacunae in the Middle Eastern world—gaps created by a crushing succession of colonialism, war, competing ideologies, and refugee camps. Entire traditions have been suppressed or destroyed and individual families have suffered the same fate. These conflicts have also impeded a richer understanding of the wealth of artistic talent present in this region of the world.

Now, perhaps for the first time, the public-at-large and critics can both learn something about the work of two talented photographers, Karnik Tellyan and Hovsep Madénian, both Lebanese-Armenians.

(Photo: Karnik Tellyan)

Armenians have contributed in remarkable numbers to the world of photography, from Ara Güler in Turkey and Yousuf Karsh in Canada to contemporary artists closer to home in the United States such as Ara Oshagan, Nubar Alexanian, and Scout Tufankjian. In the Middle East, as Christians and enterprising businesspeople in a Muslim society that shunned working with images and such new technologies, it is not surprising that in the early and mid-20th century, Armenians rose to play a crucial role in this field. From Turkey to Lebanon and Iran, Armenians were at the forefront of the development and expansion of still photography—portraiture in particular. Tufankjian, in fact, recently mused in an interview that perhaps because of their experience of persecution and migration, Armenians have been especially drawn to a medium that seeks to emphasize a certain sense of existence and reality—a proof of their and their community’s existential existence and survival.

The cover of Karnik Tellyan (Al Ayn, 2017)

The cover photograph of Karnik Tellyan (Al Ayn, 2017) displays a gorgeous mastery of the black-and-white craft medium. At first sight, we see what appears to be a group of children skating in a large circle holding hands. We cannot make out any of their faces—combined with the snow and the exquisite quality of the paper, the whole almost glows with an ethereal feel. It turns out upon closer inspection that the children and their chaperones are merely out on a winter outing and wearing shoes—not skates. The blurred quality of the photo and the wonderful juxtaposition between the all-black clothes worn by everyone in the photograph and the snowy white surroundings, as well as the geometric nature of the composition (both front center and in the background) arrest the viewer’s gaze. Accustomed as we are to stock images of the Middle East (war, desert oases, harems) it surprises as well: a winter kaleidoscope that might just as well be in the Alps or Vermont.

Tellyan’s life story is so full of last-minute escapes from disaster and almost vaudevillian episodes, that it seems almost like a Hollywood slapstick story involving a persecuted immigrant—one, who travels the world escaping death, surviving only to make money and then lose it all through no fault of his own, then finally rises to the top of his chosen profession and establishes studios in three different parts of Beirut. Born in Kayseri in 1904, he escaped the Great Crime or Medz Yeghern and eventually settled in Lebanon. In the ensuing years, he was hired by the German leader in the field, Agfa. He shot several highly-regarded documentary films in Germany, as well as portraits pictures for the military and wealthy families of Iran and Iraq, and then worked again in Eastern Europe and Germany. While in Germany he barely escaped Hitler’s minions and moved on to settle in Lebanon. There, he founded a family and continued his innovations—which were many—until 1985, when the studio closed amidst the corruption and moribund economy that followed in the wake of the so-called Lebanese Civil War.

(Photo: Karnik Tellyan)

Tellyan discovered entirely new ways of developing film and was so meticulous, that even his German employers marveled at his work ethic and precision. An essay by the ethnographer and artist Houda Kassatly, which follows on a long biographical sketch of Tellyan’s life, informs us that much of his archives were lost after the closure of his studio: pictures and material were simply thrown out or incinerated by family members and employees who did not realize the ethnographic and historical-artistic value of his photos.

So this book is a rare gift indeed: Pictures of farmers harvesting watermelons; of proud Druze tribesmen; or simply beautifully jagged water filled cliffs—Tellyan captured the essence of these places and people with rare skill. Working 12 hours a day, six days a week, he shot a film on Dervishes in Konya and another on an ethnic minority in Serbia, the Vlachs. His output was prolific even during a certain period in his life when he had to grow tomatoes and other agricultural goods in order to support himself.

But fast-forward to the 1960s and 70s, and Tellyan would be famous throughout Lebanon and the Fertile Crescent. And the photographer was endowed with quite a personality: When Greek priests on Mount Athos refused to be filmed, he simply recruited local boys, dressed himself and the boys as clergymen, and recreated supposedly authentic religious ceremonies.

Hovsep Abraham Madénian, also known simply as Saro, was also a refugee of the Armenian Genocide. Born in 1915 in Hadjin, he and his family barely made it from Adana down to Lebanon. After studying at the Armenian Seminary in Antelias and teaching at the Shalieh School in Syria, Saro would return to Lebanon where he became renowned for taking the most dazzling of portraits: Glamorous Lebanese women mainly, posed to look like Hollywood starlets (others mimicking Greek goddesses), wedding portraits, but also family and community pictures that chronicle early Armenian settlements in Greater Beirut and surrounding towns.

(Photo: Saro)

But Saro, who passed away in Lebanon at the age of 97 in 2012, was more than a “mere” portrait photographer, though his great talent was—as in the case of Karsh—precisely to lift portraiture to an art form. Saro was also at the forefront of several colorizing processes and techniques. And he was certainly not hesitant to make a yellow shirt more yellow than a canary or a lipstick red even more vibrant than in real life. Some of his portraits seem to portray preternaturally Technicolor worlds, such as the ones that 1950s American Pop and interior decoration also depict. In a move that would today seem peculiar, he also did not hesitate to add in a missing limb on a Palestinian soldier, simply drawing or painting it in. The past, erased, was being re-established.

(Photo: Saro)

One goal of photography for Saro was to make the subject beautiful—and his bright portraits were prized seemingly by all. It is difficult to understand today, in an age of endless selfies, how important a role portrait photographers played in the cultural and business lives of entire communities once upon a time. As Kassatly notes in Saro (Al Ayn, 2015), Madénian was also different in that his studios were located in towns outside Beirut—in Bikfaya and the Tarik El Jdideh neighborhood near the Palestinian refugee camps. As she relates, he took photographs of some babies simply au naturel, naked as the proverbial day they were born, while others he attired in tiny intricate cowboy outfits, hat, holster and revolver included. It’s a marvel that he pulled off such kitsch.

(Photo: Saro)

The cover of Saro (Al Ayn, 2015)

Ever the multimedia artist, Saro would sometimes outline his future creations beforehand in charcoal drawings. One photograph of a Bedouin provides a gorgeous ethnographic record of clothing as well as facial features and hair/mustache styles; another is obviously a recreation, the man pictured tall with exaggerated smile and large sash around the waist, the whole bathed in a glowing, greenish tint.

In Saro’s hands, the studio became a stage and any tool at his disposal would be used to create a finished work of art—in a sense, absent the play with gender and narrative traditions, he is more in the line of an early Cindy Sherman than say Avedon, to put things in a contemporary American context.

Kassatly’s biographical and erudite text also provides us with names of other Armenians who paved the way for the art form in the Middle East and whose work we also know very little here in the West. The most famous of these include two Jerusalem monks by the names of Krikorian and Garabedian; Halladjian in Haifa; and Guirogossian, Varoujian, and Sarafian in Beirut.

It’s a breathtaking task to think of the difficult but fascinating work still to be done in bringing them and others to the fore. So much talent, so many critical trails yet to follow.

***

Purchase copies of Kanik Tellyan and Saro at www.loiseauindigo.fr.

Hariri: We need to strengthen relations with Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Hariri: We need to strengthen relations with Armenia Hariri: We need to strengthen relations with Armenia

23:44, 12.03.2018
                  

Lebanon and Armenia have many sphere of cooperation, Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri said during the joint press conference e with Armenian Premier Karen Karapetyan.

According to him, the Armenian-Lebanese relations and the relations between the two peoples are deeply rooted in history. Such historical links are also conditioned by the important role of the Armenians in Lebanon.

“For me it’s a great honor that my father, Rafic Hariri, was the first person to established firm fraternal relations with Armenia in 1991. And we are committed to continue this path for the benefirt and welfare of the two countries and peoples”, Hariri said.

The Lebanese PM said during the talks with the Head of the Executive of Armenia they agreed to strengthen and develop relatiuons between Armenia and Lebanon in different spheres, particularly in the banking sector.


Azeri military exercises are domestic propaganda means, says analyst

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
March 9, 2018 Friday
Azeri military exercises are domestic propaganda means, says analyst
 
 
YEREVAN, MARCH 9, ARMENPRESS. Political scientist Hrant Melik-Shahnazaryan believes that the latest Azerbaijani military exercises shouldn’t cause any concern.
 
In an interview to ARMENPRESS Mr. Melik-Shahnazaryan said Azerbaijan holds such exercises every year, and even several times during a single year.
 
“One of their goals is for it [exercises] to be viewed as a threat in Armenia or a reason for concern, but naturally I think there is no reason to be worried – generally these kind of processes shouldn’t deserve the attention of our society,” he said, adding that the intelligence level of the Armenian military is on a very high level.
 
According to the political analyst Azerbaijan is carrying out domestic propaganda by holding these exercises, but at the same time the Azeri military seek to test the combat readiness of their armed forces. “I believe this time they’ll try to learn something new again”, he said.
 
Hrant Melik-Shahnazaryan didn’t also rule out that such military drills can be pre-election measure.
 
The Armenian foreign ministry also commented on Azerbaijan’s decision to hold the large scale military exercises.
 
“25 thousand people, 250 units of armored battle vehicles, 1000 missile-artillery systems, 50 aviation units will take part in the largest election campaign. Analysts are racking their brains over the speech topic of the candidate with the biggest star on his epaulette”, foreign ministry spokesperson Tigran Balayan mockingly said.
 
The Azeri president ordered the large scale military exercises to be held March 12-17.
 
English –translator/editor: Stepan Kocharyan