Sports: World Championships: Armenian gymnast takes 13th spot

PanArmenian, Armenia
Oct 6 2017
World Championships: Armenian gymnast takes 13th spot

The all-round final of the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships took place in Montreal, Canada on Thursday, October 5.

The representative of Armenia, Artur Davtyan, scored 83,332 points to take the 13th spot. Compared to his preliminary result, Davtyan managed to improve his performance, Armenia's National Olympic Committee reports.

China's Xiao Ruoteng won gold in the men's all-around final after Russian David Belyavskiy fell on the high bar to miss out on top spot.

Harutyun Merdinyan's final performance is slated for Saturday.


Culture: Zorakan village to host ‘Millennial Traditions’ festival

ARKA, Armenia

Aug 25 2017

YEREVAN, August 25, /ARKA/. On August 26-27 the village of Zorakan in the Armenian province of Tavush, populated mostly by Armenian refugees from the village of Chardakhlu in Azerbaijan, will host the second festival called ‘Millennial Traditions’.

The coordinator of the festival Hovhannes Karapetyan told journalists today that the main purpose of the festival is to encourage the development of border regions and the restoration of old traditions. He said the residents of Zorakan used to have interesting traditions, which the festival is trying to restore. In his words, the festival will feature organic fruits and vegetables grown in the village. 

The tourists, if they wish, will be able to participate in various daily activities of the residents, take a course on honey pumping, cooking traditional dishes, sewing a blanket,  making home vodka and even sewing a donkey saddle.

They will also be offered the opportunity to prepare a traditional Armenian dish called "hophop", which is prepared of goose or chicken meat, onions and pomegranate. The participants of the festival will also take part in rural folk games – tug-of-war games and  the traditional ritual called "nuru-nuru", believed in old times to help villagers ‘cause" rain. 

Instead of hotels the guests will be staying at the homes of local residents. In the evening all the guests  will gather around a bonfire to fry meat or potatoes, corn and sing songs.  The next day, they will go to the nearest forest to gather cornel, blackberries and other berries, after which they will take pictures of a  hundred-year-old tree with a huge hollow .

Until 1988 the village of Chardakhlu was located in Azerbaijan. Residents of the village were forced out of their homes by Azerbaijani authorities. The village is the birthplace of two marshals of the former USSR – Hamazasp Babajanyan and Ivan Baghramyan , as well as 12 army generals and seven heroes of the Soviet Union. –0–

Turkey’s missile deal evidence West must rethink policy

Irish Times
Aug 17 2017

Turkey’s missile deal evidence West must rethink policy

Ties between Ankara and West eroding as Turkey moves closer to dictatorship

Stephen Starr

Russian S-400 Triumph rocket systems: purchase puts Turkey in direct confrontation with its fellow Nato members and the West. Photograph: Alexey Sazonov/AFP/Getty

 

On a visit to the ruined, ancient city of Ani last month, my tour guide offers an alternative perspective on the murder of hundreds of thousands of Armenians that took place in this region a century ago.

“Foreigners don’t realise,” he says, “that the popular stories about Armenians in Turkey are completely made up.” His is a view regularly repeated by Turkey’s government towards events regarded as the first genocide of the 20th century.

Ani sits on the border that divides feuding neighbours Turkey and Armenia, a border that has been closed since 1993. Ties between the two countries have hardly improved since, as evidenced by a senior Armenian official’s calls in 2013 for Turkey to return territory owned by Armenian communities before the horrors of 1915 happened. Today, Turkey’s already-fraught relations with its neighbours and the West may plummet further as it is set to close a €2.2 billion deal to buy advanced missile systems from Russia.

The S-400 missile deal puts Turkey in direct confrontation with its fellow Nato members and the West. Two batteries are to be shipped within the next year, with two more to be built by Russian weapons engineers in Turkey. Crucially, the missile systems are not interoperable with similar weapons used by Turkey’s Nato allies.

And because the systems will be supplied by Russia and not a Nato member, there is nothing to stop Ankara from placing the missile batteries along its borders with Armenia, an EU ally, and Greece, a member. Numerous Armenian news outlets have picked up on how this represents a new threat to their country’s security.

Sphere of influence

The deal is a consequence of the deterioration of ties between Ankara and the West that has seen Turkey drift out of the latter’s sphere of influence in recent years. “It is a clear sign that Turkey is disappointed in the US and Europe, ” Russian analyst Konstantin Makienko told Bloomberg last month.

When Turkey previously attempted to buy similar missile systems from China in 2013, Nato and western states were able to convince it to walk away from the deal. Now, because of the slow souring of relations, whatever leverage that existed then has evaporated.

The fact that advanced Russian-built missile systems are soon to be operated by a Nato member is a clear sign that the alliance’s members have fallen asleep at the wheel, and represents a major quandary. Nato’s eastern European members are deeply fearful of Russia’s ambitions, a worry legitimised by the annexation of Crimea and occupation of swathes of territory in eastern Ukraine in 2014. Russia’s move for Turkey seems to have fallen under Nato’s radar.

But the West can’t have been all that surprised. Ankara’s rapport with Russia and the difficulties that relationship encapsulates for the West are, in part, down to its own intransigence. Washington has refused to meet Ankara’s demands to extradite Fethullah Gulen, blamed by Turkey for orchestrating a botched military coup in July 2015 that led to the deaths of more than 250 people. The US says there is not enough evidence of the cleric’s involvement to merit Gulen’s extradition. Gulen has lived in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania since 1999.

Kurdish militias

Even more troubling, from Turkey’s perspective, is Washington’s support for Kurdish militias in Syria that have, during the course of the war, taken control of much of the northeast. US forces have quietly provided weapons and logistical support to Kurdish-dominated militias fighting to take Raqqa, Islamic State’s so-called capital. Ankara, however, sees them, known as the People’s Protection Units or YPG, as the Syrian arm of the PKK. Turkey and the PKK have fought a bloody guerrilla war for more than three decades that has killed more than 30,000 people.

Ties between Washington and Ankara worsened further in May when Turkey’s foreign minister called for America’s anti-Isis envoy, Brett McGurk, to be fired for his role in supporting the Kurdish groups. All this has been taking place despite US president Donald Trump’s summation of relations with Ankara as “a great relationship [that] we will make even better.”

Turkey’s actions are also deeply troubling for the EU. In July, Germany, Turkey’s largest trading partner, said it would overhaul its Turkey policy because of a campaign to jail journalists and human rights activists that has followed the failed coup.

It is clear the West and particularly the EU tolerates Turkey’s transgressions only because it must. Turkey’s military bases are essential to carrying the fight to Isis, and Ankara has ended the flow of refugees and migrants into Europe via Greece by requiring visas of Syrians, and tightening security on its land and sea borders.

Russian deal

While ceding to Turkey’s demands would certainly be foolish, the missile deal means that Nato and the West must finally try to cobble together a new roadmap for dealing with Ankara. There is no doubt their respective interests have diverged significantly over the past decade and that all parties realise, without ever stating so, that the accession of Turkey to the EU sits dead in the water.

Regardless, Turkey remains crucial to upholding Europe’s security and Nato’s position as the world’s leading military alliance. Drawing Ankara away from autocratic regimes such as Russia’s, Iran’s and China’s should be a priority for the West.

The purchase of the missile systems from Moscow signals Turkey is willing to threaten regional stability as well as Nato’s own internal cohesion. And while appeasing President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his AK Party government has clearly only served to embolden Ankara, shunning him would bear no tangible solutions either.

Repairing that relationship would doubtlessly serve the interests of all parties. But it is up to the West to offer the first olive branch before it loses an important partner that has been wandering, with increasing abandon, further down the path to dictatorship.

Stephen Starr is a journalist who has lived in Syria and Turkey since 2007. He is the author of Revolt in Syria: Eye-witness to the Uprising

Forecast: New US sanctions against Moscow can help liberate Armenia from Russia’s imperial encroachments

ARMINFO News Agency, Armenia
 Friday


Forecast: New US sanctions against Moscow can help liberate Armenia
from Russia's imperial encroachments

 Yerevan August 11

17. Arminfo, David Stepanyan. New sanctions in general Congress shows
the world the next axis of evil in the face of Russia, North Korea and
Iran. Thus, a new blow is being struck across Russia in the form of
determining its place in the international coordinate system in the
American sense. Director of the Armenian Center for Political and
International Relations Aghasi Yenokyan expressed this opinion to
ArmInfo. US Vice President Michael Pence conditioned the possibility
of lifting new sanctions "by the Kremlin's fulfillment of its
obligations," regretfully stressing that "Russia's recent diplomatic
moves are telling the opposite."

"As for Iran, his so strong rejection of President Trump, in my
opinion, is due to his personal inability to form a fundamentally new
foreign policy agenda of Washington .In this light, he is compelled to
simply destroy everything that was created by his predecessor Barack
Obama, including Including significant progress made in the settlement
of US-Iranian relations, in general, and Iran's nuclear problem, in
particular, by the way, this aspiration is felt not only in foreign
but also in domestic policy. United . X US In this case, in a hurry
and congressmen, trying to tie the hands of Trump and prevent the
realization of his personal ambitions and preferences in this matter,"
said the analyst.

Yenokyan is convinced that the new package of US anti-Russian
sanctions will have negative consequences for the Armenian economy.
According to his estimates, this scenario is inevitable, given
Armenia's serious dependence on transfers received from Russia. The
political scientist believes that it is already clear today that the
new sanctions will lead to their further reduction. He is also
convinced that finding Armenia in the area of Russian influence as a
result of tightening the US sanctions policy will automatically lead
to even greater isolation of Armenia.

At the same time, Yenokyan does not rule out that the implementation
of all the latest US sanctions against Moscow is capable of leading
Russia to significant changes that are fully capable of helping to
free Armenia from Russian imperial encroachments. According to his
estimates, the impulses towards Russia can be so lightning that
Armenia will not even have to withdraw from the EEU or CSTO.

"The new sanctions are directly affecting and exerting pressure on the
interests of the significant stratum of the Russian oligarchy, and as
a result, these people are quite capable of refusing to accept the
internal results of external Putin's policies. Light, the likelihood
of cardinal changes within the Russian ruling class is, in my opinion,
sufficiently substantiated, tangible and therefore predictable.
Possible," summed up the political scientist.

Infamous Perincek to run for president in Turkey

Armenpress News Agency, Armenia
July 20, 2017 Thursday


Infamous Perincek to run for president in Turkey



YEREVAN, JULY 20, ARMENPRESS. Doghu Perincek, the infamous chairman of
Turkey’s Vatan party, who is known for his hatred towards Armenians by
his outrageous public Armenophobic statements, will run for
presidential office in Turkey’s 2019 election, Sputnik reported.

A party spokesman told a local TV channel that Perincek will be one of
the presidential candidates.

In 2007, Perincek received criminal conviction by a Swiss court for
publicly denying the Armenian Genocide and hate speech.

Sports: Serzh Sargsyan Received President of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) René Fasel

Aravot, Armenia

President Serzh Sargsyan received yesterday President of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) René Fasel.

Welcoming the guest, President Serzh Sargsyan expressed the hope that Mr Fasel’s first-ever visit to Armenia will help us promote in our country the development of ice hockey – one of the most popular sports in the world. During the meeting, Armenian Ice Hockey Federation’s membership of the IIHF was appreciated on either side.

President Sargsyan noted that while ice hockey is still underdeveloped in Armenia, steps are being taken to promote it in the country. In this connection, the President stressed that the necessary infrastructure is being created in Armenia. Specifically, the second international standards-compliant ice-hockey rink will soon be inaugurated in Yerevan.

Serzh Sargsyan thanked René Fasel for his readiness to contribute to the development of ice-hockey in Armenia. The interlocutors agreed that this sport has good potential and development opportunities in Armenia, which calls for consistent efforts.

Press-release


Yerevan in talks with Moscow on new loan to buy Russian weapons

TASS, Russia

World

July 20, 2:53 UTC+3 YEREVAN

YEREVAN, July 19. /TASS/. Armenia is in talks with Russia on a new loan to buy Russian-made weapons, Armenian Finance Minister Vardan Aramyan said on Wednesday.

"Discussion of the issue of a new defense-related loan started with Russia this year and will go along for quite a time," he said, adding that the two countries had earlier reached a top-level agreement on buying Russian-made defense-related products at Russia’s domestic prices. "As a strategic partner, Russia agreed. Negotiations are now underway," he noted.

According to the Armenian finance minister, his country is having such talks only with Russia from among other countries of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). "We are also discussing how to avoid problems linked with the loan repayment," Aramyan said.

In his words, Armenia has not yet completely used the first export loan of 200 million U.S. dollars meant to buy Russia-made defense-related products. "We have 30 million U.S. dollars left," he said.

The two countries signed an agreement on that loan on June 25, 2015. It came into effect on February 10, 2016.

Unfair for Artsakh to remain outside the European Institutions’ attention – Artsakh Ombudsman

Panorama, Armenia

July 14 2017

Europe’s involvement in Artsakh is critical first of all in term of civilizational considerations, and it is unfair for Artsakh to remain outside the attention of European institutions, Artsakh Human Rights Defender Ruben Melikyan stated at a discussion hosted by the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) to discuss the possibilities of humanitarian assistance to Artsakh by European organizations.

“The April developments of 2016 should be taken as a dividing line, as Diasporas structures started paying increased attention to Artsakh issue which is the case with AGBU. One of the main expectations [of the program] is related to the Europe’s larger presence in Artsakh,” Melikyan said, referring to the engagement of the European Human Rights community that would strengthen the human rights protection in the internal life of Artsakh as well as positively impact in terms of maintaining the peace.

Asked whether human rights are respected in Artsakh in accordance with European criteria, Melikyan said: “We are doing our best. To the extent of our capabilities we attempt to issue legal positions in line with the European human rights norms.”

The head of the Ministry of Transport noted the complete lack of progress in the implementation of the program for the construction of the railway "Iran-Armenia"

ARMINFO News Agency, Armenia
July 13, 2017 Thursday


The head of the Ministry of Transport noted the complete lack of
progress in the implementation of the program for the construction of
the railway "Iran-Armenia"

Yerevan July 13

Naira Badalyan. Minister of Transport, Communications and Information
Technologies of Armenia Vahan Martirosyan assures that the absence of
the government program for 2017- 2022gg. The project of building the
Iran-Armenia railway does not mean that the government refused to
implement it. "It is impossible to include everything in the
government program and, if this is not stated in the document, does
not mean that the project will not be implemented," Vahan Martirosyan
told ArmInfo on July 13 after the meeting of the government.

According to the minister, despite the fact that the government's
program for the next five years specifies in detail the timeframe to
ensure a stable, affordable and competitive transport network, a
street and road network that meets modern requirements for safety and
comfort, and also upon completion of the investment program of the
road corridor "North-South", and not a word about the railroad
"Iran-Armenia", the Cabinet still hopes for the implementation of the
project in the future. Nevertheless, as Vahan Martirosyan stated,
today there is nothing that would be optimistic. "At this stage, there
are problems with the implementation of the project, deciding which,
we will be able to move forward," - noted the heads of the Ministry of
Transport. These problems, as pointed out by Martirosyan, are related
both to investors and the implementation of a number of obligations,
and to the study of the state of roads.

The Minister admits that Armenia is already lagging behind the earlier
deadlines. According to him, there are certain limitations that,
before they are eliminated, do not allow talking about progress. Which
exactly - Vahan Martirosyan abstained to voice.

The fact that the railway project "Iran-Armenia", recognized according
to the assurances of the Ministry of Transport of Armenia,
economically justified, ordered to live for a long time, became clear
already at the beginning of this year, when the government decree of
January 12 eliminated CJSC "Railway Construction Directorate "Under
the Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technologies
of Armenia. Then the minister of transport, communications and IT of
Armenia Vahan Martirosyan tried to calm the media representatives,
noting that this will not in any way affect the implementation of the
program for the construction of the Iran-Armenia railway. "As part of
the Ministry operates" Railway Management, which can perform the
relevant functions, "- he said. However, saying that negotiations in
the direction of attracting potential investors in construction
continue, the minister did not name the names and countries - possible
participants in the project. "We are working in this direction, but we
all realize that the project is not an easy one and requires
individual work with each individual investor," he said. It is
noteworthy that the project, which was announced as early as in 2012,
is not completely formed for today. According to the Ministry of
Transport, according to a very approximate calculation, the
construction cost is estimated at $ 3.2 billion. "But this calculation
is very approximate, since there is no final approved project, and we
are waiting for the evaluation of future investors," Vahan Martirosyan
stated then. "The routes of connection with the operating railway are
discussed via the Sevan coast (Sevan station), the other via the
Ararat valley (station Eraskh.) At the moment, the route through Sevan
is preferable," the minister explained. As he said, all for the same
rough estimates, the payback period of the project is estimated at 22
years.

Back in May 2012, the Armenian and Iranian sides signed a concession
agreement, which discussed the feasibility study and the main tasks of
designing, building and financing this project. Thanks to the
cooperation between Armenia and the investment company "RACIA FZE", a
feasibility study for the feasibility of the "Southern Railway"
project was developed. Based on the facts studied, it is proposed to
build a railway for six years. The cost of the project was estimated
at $ 3.5 billion. The total length of the road in Armenia is 305 km.
It will have 86 bridges, a total length of 19.6 km and 60 tunnels with
a total length of 102 km. Construction in accordance with the
submitted program, will be completed in 2022. It is assumed that the
volume of cargo transportation by rail from Gagarin station
(Gegharkunik region) to Agarak (Syunik region) will be 25 million tons
per year. This road, which is 44 km shorter than the planned site of
Gavar-Agarak, will be connected to the existing railway network. The
launch of the projects "Southern Railway of Armenia" and "Southern
Highway of Armenia" (Iran-Armenia) was announced in January 2013. At
the same time, a trilateral Memorandum of Understanding on regional
cooperation aimed at the development of the South Railway of Armenia
was signed between the South Caucasus Railway, the Ministry of
Transport and Communication of Armenia and the company Racia FZE,
registered in the United Arab Emirates by the company. After that,
nothing more substantive about the "Racia FZE" and the results of
negotiations with it was not announced.

It should be noted that, according to economic analysts of ArmInfo,
the economic inefficiencies in the construction of the Iran-Armenia
railway are based on three main factors. This is, first of all, the
deadlock of the Armenian railway and the impossibility of its direct
access to the "Russian expanses"; secondly, even with the hypothetical
possible unblocking of the Abkhaz section of the railway in the
future, the presence of the currently constructed Iran-Armenia section
of the North- Will make the Iran-Armenia railway, in connection with
its insignificant length, inefficient. To this initially low
efficiency, the third, perhaps most important, factor is added: the
railway project of the Astara-Resht-Qazvin railroad realized by the
Railways. This is a transport corridor that will connect the operating
railways of Russia, Azerbaijan and Iran. The project is carried out
within the framework of the international transport corridor
"North-South", whose goal is the integration of the transport and
information highways of Russia, Azerbaijan, Iran, India and Oman. In
the opinion of analysts, the Iran-Armenia railway project is
exclusively politically motivated and that is why during the last few
years it practically did not manage to move from a dead center. The
statements of the Armenian officials on the possibility of China's
participation in this project in the framework of China's
super-bureaucratic program for the revival of the Great Silk Road,
worth $ 40 billion, do not stand up to the claims of the Armenian
officials. Armenia does not exist in one scenario of the new Silk
Road, but the maps show Iran- Azerbaijan and Turkey-Georgia.

Tehran: Iran, Armenia to Share Experience on Rescue, Relief Operations

Iranian Government News
 Thursday


Iran, Armenia to Share Experience on Rescue, Relief Operations



Tehran: The IRIB has issued following news:


Senior Iranian and Armenian officials in a meeting in Yerevan on
Tuesday agreed to expand mutual cooperation between the two countries
in the fields of emergency services.


The agreement was reached between Head of Iran’s Red Crescent Society
Amir Mohsen Ziayee and Armenian Minister of Territorial Administration
and Development Davit Lokyan in the Armenian capital agreed to start
cooperation in the field of rescue and relief operations.
During the meeting, both sides explored ways to broaden Tehran-Yerevan
cooperation in the field of emergency services.
Ziayee describing the Iran-Armenia relations in the field as
important, and said confronting natural disasters and sharing
experiences are priorities for rescue and relief cooperation.
Lokyan, for his part, described the Iranian side’s suggestions as
valuable and echoed the call for extensive ties on rescue and relief
between the two countries.
The two sides agreed on exploring the grounds to expand mutual
cooperation in the field between Tehran-Yerevan in the joint upcoming
meetings.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s visit to Yerevan and his talks with
his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sargsyan last winter paved the way for
expanding cooperation between the two countries.