Armenian President congratulates Greek counterpart on Independence Day

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 10:44,

YEREVAN, MARCH 25, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has sent a congratulatory message to President of Greece Katerina Sakellaropoulou on the national day – the Independence Day and the 200th anniversary of the Greek War of Independence, the Armenian President’s Office told Armenpress.

“The Greek people gained their independence through heroic struggle, long fight and sacrifice. Along that way there have been many manifestations of cooperation and joint fight of Armenian and Greek Christian nations under the Ottoman rule, based on millennia-old historical-cultural connections, common spiritual values and mutual sympathy.

Over the past decades Armenia and Greece have managed to develop firm inter-state relations and a bilateral sustainable agenda which involves active political dialogue and cooperation in various areas.

The viable Armenian community in Greece and the Greek community in Armenia which enjoys the love and respect of the Armenian people play a significant role in further intensifying the relations between our countries”, the Armenian President said in his letter.

He expressed confidence that the warm friendly ties between the two countries, the sincere and productive cooperation will continue to develop and strengthen for the benefit of the Armenian and Greek peoples.

The Greek War of Independence, also known as the Greek Revolution, was a successful war of independence waged by Greek revolutionaries against the Ottoman Empire between 1821 and 1830.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia bans unlicensed use of cameras, including drones at borders

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 13:41,

YEREVAN, MARCH 18, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government approved amendments to the Law on State Border and the Administrative Offense Code making it illegal for anyone to use photo-video devices, including drones, to film “the territory of the bordering country”, or the engineering facilities, buildings, surveillance towers and transportation equipment used by border guards in the “border layer” in Armenian territory unless having a special permit issued by the National Security Service.

The amendments will specify the grounds for imposing administrative liability for people who'd violate the rules of entering or residing in “border layers”.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Police apprehend Yerevan demonstrators for bringing ice cream for Armen Sarkissian

News.am, Armenia
March 10 2021

Demonstrators brought ice cream for President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian as a sign of protest in front of the presidential residence..

Police officers didn’t let the citizens hold their demonstration.

One of the demonstrators told a police officer that he has stopped working and has come to fight for homeland salvation, to which the police officer said there are ways to fight for homeland salvation. Afterwards, police officers apprehended the citizens.

The participant of the demonstration showed resistance to police actions, noted that he hadn’t violated the law and added that he would go to the police station, if he received a letter stating which law he had violated.

Founder of Armenian DASARAN educational platform named 2021 Young Global Leader by World Economic Forum

Public Radio of Armenia
March 12 2021

World Economic Forum has honored global recognition to the CEO and Founder of DASARAN Educational Platform, Mr. Suren Aloyan’s for his unique professional and societal contributions. The Forum has honored Suren Aloyan as a Young Global Leader 2021.

Suren Aloyan is the first ever Armenian national to be honored this title by the WEF. As a World Economic Forum Young Leader Suren Aloyan will represent Armenia in the diverse community of world-renowned young leaders.  

YGL forum is an accelerator for a dynamic community of exceptional people with the vision, courage, and influence to drive positive change in the world. The growing membership of more than 1,400 members and alumni of 120 nationalities includes civic and business innovators, entrepreneurs, technology pioneers, educators, activists, artists, journalists, and more.

Aligned with the World Economic Forum’s mission, YGL seeks to drive public-private co-operation in the global public interest. The Forum is united by the belief that today’s pressing problems present an opportunity to build a better future across sectors and boundaries.

The World Economic Forum is an International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation. The Forum engages the foremost political, business, cultural and other leaders of society to shape global, regional and industry agendas.

With an average budget of 300 million Swiss francs, the World Economic Forum is partnered with such large organizations as Google, Nestle, Barclays, Credit Suisse, Deloitte, Deutsche Bank, ABB.

Jancis Robinson on the rise of eastern European wines

Financial Times, UK

 


‘There has been a dramatic revolution in the vineyards here over the past 20 years and the results are making an impression abroad’  

Jancis Robinson 

When asked to host another online wine tasting as part of the forthcoming FT Weekend Digital Festival, I did not hesitate to choose a theme. 

 Last time, in September, I opted for new wave California wines because I wanted to showcase exciting wines that are off the beaten track. For next week’s spring edition I have chosen a less expensive theme: eastern Europe. There has been the most dramatic revolution in the vineyards and cellars here over the past 20 years and the results are just beginning to make an impression on wine buyers abroad. 

 Mikhail Gorbachev’s campaign to impose sobriety on the Soviet Union in the late 1980s had a seismic effect on wine production. It was felt not just in Soviet wine-producing republics such as Moldova, Ukraine, Georgia and Armenia but in countries that had previously shipped vast quantities of wine to the USSR — Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and Cyprus, in particular. Collective wine farms lost their principal customer. State monopolies, which oversaw production and shipments to Soviet cities, fell apart. Vineyards all over eastern Europe were abandoned, often without any obvious owner.  

Like so much else, the wine scene that emerged from behind the Iron Curtain was chaotic. Yet, as a new century dawned, EU membership beckoned alluringly and there was considerable and often well-considered investment in these newly independent countries that had been producing wine — usually much, much better wine than was shipped to the USSR — for millennia. The exciting results of those investments are now making their way west. 

 Of course, each country is different, with very distinctive terroir and traditions, so this article will try to cover a lot of varied ground. But if I can persuade a wine drinker in Coventry or Chicago not to turn their nose up at a wine from eastern Europe, then it will have done its job.  

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The first wine I chose for my online tasting was from the border of Europe and Asia, a haunting red blend of two local grapes from Armenia, a country that is currently sparring with its neighbour Georgia over which is the birthplace of winemaking. Last October, I included the Armenia Wine Company’s Yerevan Areni Noir/Karmrahyut 2016 in my recommended wines under £10. This led me to its importer, Shropshire family wine merchant Tanners. They have a more adventurous array of affordable eastern European wines than many, so we gave them the job of supplying wines for this FT tasting.


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Following the progress of the latest shipment of this wine, Tanners’ private sales director Robert Boutflower admits he suffered palpitations. In early January he emailed the news that “The Armenians are on the way . . . but have been since November.” Two weeks later: “Yerevan is en route.” Early February: “The Armenian Yerevan is currently ‘changing vessel’ in Turkey. They say it will be two weeks from the Black Sea.” February 17: “It has now cleared Turkey and is due into Liverpool on March 5.” February 25: “After two more delays and a further stop for the Yerevan, the earliest we can get it now is March 15 — too late.” (All orders for my tasting had to be in by March 9 to allow time for delivery by next weekend.)

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I am sad not to be able to share the very special qualities of Armenia’s signature grape Areni Noir with tasters but overleaf I recommend a more expensive yet inspiring clay-pot-aged example. It is made by Alberto Antonini, the Tuscan consultant winemaker to Armenian producer Zorah, who describes Areni as a cross between a Tuscan Sangiovese and a Burgundian Pinot Noir.

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To fill the place of the errant Armenian, I have chosen a Pinot Noir from Hungary’s red wine hotspot Villány — a pure, fragrant 2018 from producers Csányi. Hungary suffered less from Gorbachev’s temperance movement than the other countries cited above because a much higher proportion of its vineyards had remained in private hands and were duly better cared for.

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Bulgarian vineyards suffered terribly. British wine drinkers of a certain age will remember Bulgarian Cabernet Sauvignon as one of the great bargains of the early 1980s. But Gorbachev’s campaign left the country’s vineyards and distinctly industrial cellars in disarray.

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Bulgaria is one of the eastern European countries whose wine industry has been transformed most by outside investment. Its current winemakers are also notably female — about 50 per cent, as compared with just 14 per cent in perhaps the most right-on wine region of all, California, according to research from Santa Clara University last year.

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I have written previously about the vibrant wine scenes in Romania and neighbouring Moldova, and their wealth of indigenous grape varieties. One of the dry white wines in this tasting is a mature Feteasca Regala.

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The other white I chose represented a different sort of revolution in eastern European wine: breeding new vine varieties that are suitable for local conditions. The vine nurseries of the Czech Republic and, especially, Slovakia have been particularly active in this respect. But post-Brexit transport problems struck yet again and, at the very last minute, I have substituted a white 2018 version of the Armenian Yerevan wine, made from two local grape varieties like the original red.

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My other red wine next week is a complete contrast to the delicate Pinot Noir: a potent, spicy wine made from North Macedonia’s signature grape Vranec by the dominant wine producer Stobi. The price is a snip for a wine that will clearly continue to develop for many more years.

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Slovenia and Croatia, missing from this tasting, are sources of brilliant white wines, although tourists and locals lap them up so enthusiastically that we see too few of them abroad. Georgia, which is also missing, has the world’s most powerful wine culture and, after several false starts, I hope to get there one of these days and write about it in the detail it deserves. Apologies that I have tasted so few Georgian wines recently.

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I am deliberately excluding the riches of the eastern Mediterranean (Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, Cyprus and Israel) here. And I am braced for complaints from Poland (which now, thanks to climate change, has a thriving wine industry), Montenegro, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, Ukraine and Russia that I have not mentioned the transformation of their wine industries — but I continue to be fascinated by them.

And only last week I received my first invitation to taste the wines of Azerbaijan.

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Whites 
 • Paparuda Feteasca Regala 2017 Romania
£7.50 Tanners 
ovakia
 • Barta, Egy Kis Furmint 2019 Tokaj, Hungary
£14.95 Corney & Barrow 
 • Martin Pomfy Devín 2020 Sl £15.50 Tanners 
 • Chateau Vartely, Individo 2017 Moldova
£16 Moldovan Wine 
 • Urban Petrič, Natural White 2018 Slovenia 12.5%
£16.50 Wanderlust Wines 
 • Kolonics, Somloi Juhfark 2018 Nagy Somlo, Hungary
£17 Wanderlust Wines 
 • Gasper, Rebula 2016 Western Slovenia
£24.99 Golborne Fine Wine & Deli, £127 for six bottles The Fine Wine Co, Scotland 

 Reds 
 • Stobi, Vranec 2019 Tikves, North Macedonia
£8.95 Tanners
 • Armenia Wine Co, Yerevan Winemaker’s Blend Areni Noir/Karmrahyut 2019 Armenia
£9.95 Tanners 
 • Rumelia, Merul Mavrud 2016 Bulgaria
£9.95 The Old Cellar 
 • Via Verde, Expressions Cabernet Franc/Melnik 2015 Bulgaria
£12.60 The Old Cellar 
 • Fautor, Negre 2017 Moldova
£23 Moldovan Wine 
 • Zorah, Karasi Areni 2018 Armenia
£26.29 to £34.50 various independents including £29.50 Symposium Wine Emporium, £29.60 Hedonism Wines, £29.95 Saxtys Wines, £30.99  
The Wine Reserve  

COVID-19: Armenia reports 508 new cases, 191 recoveries in one day

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 11:09, 6 March, 2021

YEREVAN, MARCH 6, ARMENPRESS. 508 new cases of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) have been confirmed in Armenia in the past one day, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 174.257, the ministry of healthcare said today.

191 more patients have recovered in one day. The total number of recoveries has reached 164.654.

4 more patients have died, raising the death toll to 3219..

3016 tests were conducted in the past one day.

The number of active cases is 5560.

The number of people who had been infected with COVID-19 but died from other disease stands at 824.


German Bundestag hosts discussion on Armenian POWs held in Azerbaijan

Public Radio of Armenia
March 4 2021

Armenian Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan presented a report at a special online discussion on Armenian prisoners of war in Azerbaijan organized in the German Bundestag.

The discussion took place under the chairmanship of Michael Brandt, Chairman of the Bundestag Standing Committee on Human Rights, and Marian Wendt, Chair of the Bundestag Petition Committee. More than 70 German deputies took part in the discussion.

The Defender raised the issue of the urgency of the return of prisoners of war — servicemen and civilians — of the Armenian side detained in Azerbaijan. Arman Tatoyan noted that the Azerbaijani authorities are artificially delaying and politicizing the process so as to cause mental suffering to the Armenian society and especially to the families of the captives, and in order to create tension in the country.

The Human Rights Defender of Armenia presented in detail the international humanitarian and human rights rules which require the immediate release of prisoners and their safe return. The Ombudsman emphasized the gross violations of international humanitarian law and the rights of prisoners who are wrongly portrayed as “terrorists” given the circumstances of ongoing armed conflict.

The Ombudsman also provided information on war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Azerbaijani armed forces during the war (beheadings, torture, humiliation of bodies, etc).

Arman Tatoyan thanked the members of the German Parliament for the discussion.

The Human Rights Defender hailed the assistance of the Armenian Embassy in Germany in organizing this discussion.

The evidence on the Azerbaijani atrocities and torture collected by the Human Rights Defender of Armenia was passed on by the Armenian Ambassador Ashot Smbatyan to Amnesty International in Germany.

Pashinyan fires Chief of General Staff

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 12:51, 25 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has sacked the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces Onik Gasparyan.

Pashinyan said he had signed the papers on the dismissal of Gasparyan and his deputy before the General Staff issued the statement calling for his resignation.

Gasparyan will officially be considered dismissed only after the President’s formalization of the document.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan