Armenian government approves 2020-2022 medium-term state expenditure program

ARKA, Armenia

YEREVAN, July 11. /ARKA/. The Armenian government held Wednesday night an extraordinary closed-door meeting, chaired by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the press office of the government reports. 

The 2020-2022 program of medium-term public spending of the Republic of Armenia was discussed and approved at the meeting.

Prime Minister Pashinyan stressed the need to consistently implement the measures envisaged under the aforementioned spending program, and gave specific instructions to the heads of relevant departments in terms of implementing capital expenditures, attracting investments, increasing exports, etc. -0—

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/17/2019

                                Monday, 

Pashinian Explains Party Ideology

        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other delegates attend a congress 
of the ruling Civil Contract party, Yerevan, .

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said his Civil Contract party does not espouse 
any of the traditional political ideologies as it held on Sunday its first 
congress since coming to power one year ago.

“We are a party that has rejected ‘isms’ because hardened ideologies no longer 
exist in the contemporary world,” Pashinian told delegates of the congress. “In 
the political sense, we are not liberal, we are not centrist, we are not social 
democrat; we are a civil party.”

“What does this mean?” he said. “This means that we place ourselves beyond 
ideological standards and we are forming a new ideological plane which is based 
on four key pillars: statehood, citizenship, national identity and personality.”

Pashinian set up Civil Contract in 2013 after splitting from former President 
Levon Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress. It operated as a 
non-governmental organization mostly uniting young civic activists before 
becoming a full-fledged political party in 2015. Critics, notably the former 
ruling Republican Party, have accused it of lacking ideological clarity.

Civil Contract served as Pashinian’s core support base during the April-May 
2018 “velvet revolution” which brought the 44-year-old former journalist to 
power. It is also the dominant force in a more broad-based My Step bloc which 
Pashinian formed following the revolution. The bloc won 70 percent of the vote 
in parliamentary elections held in December.

Despite being the party’s top leader, Pashinian has never headed it officially. 
Civil Contract stuck to this tradition at its weekend congress in Yerevan which 
elected the party’s new governing board. The board in turn appointed Minister 
for Local Government Suren Papikian as its chairman.


Armenia -- Delegates of the ruling Civil Contract party's congress elect a new 
party board in secret ballot, Yerevan, .

Among the 21 members of the board are parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan, 
Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian, the Armenian ministers of education, 
health and transport as well as Pashinian’s chief of staff, Eduard Aghajanian.

Sasun Mikaelian, the ruling party’s chairman until now, unexpectedly failed to 
get elected to the new board. Papikian declined to comment on speculation that 
this was the result of a Civil Contract candidate’s failure to unseat the 
incumbent mayor of the town of Abovian in an election held earlier this month.

Romanos Petrosian, the governor of Armenia’s central Kotayk province 
encompassing Abovian, has openly complained that Mikaelian, who is influential 
in the area, failed to help the candidate during the mayoral race. 
Incidentally, Petrosian was elected to the board.

Mikaelian, 61, became in April the new chairman of the once powerful Yerkrapah 
Union of Armenian veterans of the Nagorno-Karabakh war.



Russian Envoy Warned After Meeting With Kocharian

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia- Russian Ambassador to Armenia Sergey Kopyrkin speaks at a news 
conference in Yerevan, Jun 11, 2019.

Russia’s ambassador to Armenia was summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Yerevan 
last week after meeting with the indicted former President Robert Kocharian, a 
senior Armenian lawmaker revealed on Monday.

Ambassador Sergey Kopyrkin and Kocharian met on Thursday nearly one month after 
the latter was controversially released from prison pending the outcome of his 
trial. The ex-president was charged with overthrowing the constitutional order 
in 2008 shortly after last year’s Armenian “velvet revolution.” He denies the 
accusations as politically motivated.

The Russian Embassy in Yerevan said Kopyrkin spoke to Kocharian “within the 
framework of his regular meetings with representatives of social-political and 
business circles” of Armenia.

Parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan dismissed this explanation on Sunday when he 
spoke at a congress of the ruling Civil Contract party. Mirzoyan said he does 
“not welcome” the meeting because Kocharian is facing coup charges and cannot 
be considered a politician in these circumstances.

The pro-government chairman of the Armenian parliament committee on foreign 
relations, Ruben Rubinian, similarly described Kopyrkin’s conversation with 
Kocharian as “bewildering.” Rubinian’s deputy, Hovannes Igitian, went farther, 
denouncing it as “ludicrous.”

“Look, newspapers write that Kocharian is backed by Russia’s [ruling] elite,” 
Igitian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “Kocharian’s entourage is spreading 
such claims. In this context, the ambassador’s meeting was ludicrous to say the 
least.”

A pro-Western opposition parliamentarian, Arman Babajanian, also deplored 
Kopyrkin’s meeting with Kocharian at a session of the parliament committee 
attended by Deputy Foreign Minister Grigor Hovannisian. The latter insisted 
that the Russian envoy did not break the diplomatic protocol.

“The ambassador did not do anything wrong within the bounds of the diplomatic 
protocol and norms,” said Hovannisian. “That [meeting] cannot be deemed 
condemnable or be the subject of a special examination by our ministry.”

Rubinian announced later in the day that he has discussed the matter with 
Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian. “The minister informed me that in fact 
the Russian ambassador was invited on Friday to the Foreign Ministry where a 
conversation took place with the ambassador in the context of not interfering 
in Armenia’s internal affairs,” he wrote on Facebook.

“Deputy Minister Hovannisian did not speak about this at the committee meeting 
because at that point he did not have a permission to publicize the 
information,” added the lawmaker.


Russian President Vladimir Putin (L) and Armenian President Robert Kocharian 
walk at Bocharov Ruchei residence, January 24, 2007.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov denounced the prosecution of Kocharian 
as well as other former Armenian officials shortly after the ex-president was 
first arrested in July 2018.

Kocharian was set free in early August two weeks before Russian President Putin 
telephoned him to congratulate him on his 64th birthday anniversary. A 
spokesman for Putin said at the time that the two men “have been maintaining 
warm relations that are not influenced by any events taking place in Armenia.” 
Kocharian, who ruled Armenia from 1998-2008, described the phone call as a show 
of “serious support” for him.

The ex-president was again arrested in December. Three weeks later, he received 
New Year greetings from Putin.

Kocharian, his former chief of staff Armen Gevorgian and two retired generals 
went on trial last month. The judge presiding over the trial, Davit Grigorian, 
ordered Kocharian released from jail five days later. The decision was strongly 
condemned by Pashinian’s political allies and supporters.



Diaspora Commissioner Buoyed By Status, Powers

        • Harry Tamrazian

ARMENIA -- Zareh Sinanyan pictured in Yerevan on May 9, 2018.

Zareh Sinanyan, Armenia’s newly appointed commissioner general of Diaspora 
affairs, has insisted that his office has a higher status than the Ministry of 
Diaspora abolished by the Armenian government earlier this year.

Sinanyan and his office will be tasked with coordinating Armenia’s relations 
with its worldwide Diaspora, a function which was performed by the ministry. 
Some Diaspora figures have expressed concern at the Armenian government’s 
decision to close the ministry, saying that it could hurt Armenia-Diaspora ties.

Sinanyan sought to allay those concerns in a weekend interview with RFE/RL’s 
Armenian service. “The office [of commissioner] will have a much higher status, 
it is directly subordinate to the prime minister, it is part of the prime 
minister’s office,” he told “The prime minister [Nikol Pashinian] is thus 
showing the Diaspora just how important the Diaspora is for the Republic of 
Armenia and the prime minister.”

“The Ministry of Diaspora carried the old reputation and therefore had to be 
rebranded a little,” said Sinanyan. “I will make every effort to ensure that my 
office works with great efficiency.”

“Honestly, at first I will concentrate on Russia a little because it has a very 
large [Armenian] community, it’s very important and it’s also our strategic 
ally,” added the Armenian-born U.S. national.

Sinanyan, 43, is a former mayor of Glendale, a city in Los Angeles County with 
a sizable ethnic Armenian population. A vocal critic of Armenia’s former 
government, he strongly supported last year’s “velvet revolution” which brought 
Pashinian to power.

Some of Pashinian’s political opponents have criticized his choice of the 
commissioner of Diaspora affairs, saying that Sinanyan’s American citizenship 
will make it hard for him work with the Armenian communities in Russia and Iran.

“If they are worried about Russia, I must say that I am very fluent in Russian 
and very familiar with Russian culture because I grew up under the Soviet 
system at a time when Russian culture was more present in Armenia.”

The official said he also sees no serious obstacles to his dealings with 
Diaspora structures in Iran. “We should be very careful not to breach any laws 
and create any problems for Armenia and our community,” he said.

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service a year ago, Sinanyan suggested that many 
Diaspora Armenians will be ready to move to their ancestral homeland after the 
revolution. He claimed on Sunday that such “repatriation” to Armenia has 
already begun from western parts of the United States, which are home to 
hundreds of thousands of Armenian Americans.

“I’m saying this not because I know of people moving here with their families 
but because I know statistical data,” said Sinanyan. “For example, if you talk 
to cargo firms operating both in Yerevan and there, [they will say that] that 
there has been a sharp rise in cargo shipments for families relocating to 
Armenia. People really have high hopes for today’s Armenia and see themselves 
as actors in the building of the new Armenia.”



Armenian Judicial Watchdog Hamstrung By Resignations

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia -- The main meeting room of the Supreme Judicial Council, Yerevan, 
April 10, 2019.

The Supreme Judicial Council (SJC), a state body overseeing Armenia’s courts, 
has been effectively paralyzed by the resignations of five of its nine members.

The resignations began after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian appealed to 
supporters on May 19 to block the entrances to all court buildings in the 
country. The appeal came the day after a Yerevan court ordered former President 
Robert Kocharian released from jail pending the outcome of his trial on coup 
and corruption charges. The court’s decision angered many allies and supporters 
of Pashinian.

The SJC chairman, Gagik Harutiunian, was the first to step down on May 24. He 
cited “ongoing developments relating to the judicial authority” and his 
“concerns expressed in that regard.” Harutiunian’s temporary replacement, 
Gevorg Danielian, quit on June 7.

Three other members of the SJC followed suit last week. Two of those 
resignations were formally accepted on Monday.

“Starting from today, the Supreme Judicial Council cannot make decisions 
because of the lack of a quorum,” Hayk Hovannisian, one of the body’s four 
remaining members told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.

“In order to make decisions, we need the presence of either a simple majority 
[of SJC members] or a two-thirds majority for cases such as taking disciplinary 
action [against judges,]” explained Hovannisian. “We can’t make a quorum in 
both cases.”

“But there are still four of us and we must report for work and coordinate 
sectoral activities of the judicial department,” he said, adding that he has no 
plans yet to step down.


Armenia -- Supporters of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian block the entrance to a 
district court in Yerevan, May 20, 2019.

Under Armenian law, the SJC has wide-ranging powers, including the right to 
nominate judges appointed by the president of the republic. It can also 
sanction and even terminate judges.

The SJC is supposed to have 10 members. Half of them are appointed by the 
Armenian parliament while the other half are chosen by the country’s judges.

The parliament’s pro-government majority has nominated only one member of the 
council so far. The National Assembly is expected to appoint him later this 
week.

Speaking at a May 20 meeting with senior state officials, Pashinian said that 
Armenian courts remain linked to “the former corrupt system” and distrusted by 
the population. He announced plans for a mandatory “vetting” of all judges.

Hovannisian disputed claims that the SJC, which was formed shortly before last 
year’s “velvet revolution,” also lacks popular trust. “The public is much 
broader than speeches delivered by a few parliament deputies,” he said.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org



UAE-Armenia Political Consultations Committee holds meeting in Abu Dhabi

Emirates News Agency (WAM), UAE
Wednesday
UAE-Armenia Political Consultations Committee holds meeting in Abu Dhabi
 
 
UAE / Armenia
 
ABU DHABI, 12th June, 2019 (WAM) — The second meeting of the Political Consultations Committee between the UAE's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, MOFAIC, and the Ministry of Interior of Armenia took place in Abu Dhabi.
 
Khalifa Shaheen Al Marar, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation for Political Affairs, chaired the meeting, which was attended by Mohammed Issa Al Qattam Al Zaabi, UAE Ambassador to Armenia, and Khalid Al Ameri, Deputy Director of West Asia Administration at the MOFAIC.
 
The Armenian delegation was led by Gregor Hofhanisian, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, and included Mehair Makdoumian, Armenian Ambassador to the UAE, and Armin Melkunian, Director of the Middle East Department at the Embassy.
 
During the meeting, both sides discussed cooperation between the two countries and ways of reinforcing them. They also discussed current regional developments and various topics of mutual concern while agreeing to improve their cooperation, bilateral ties and coordination in regional and international affairs.
 
The two sides will hold the committee's third meeting at a later date.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/11/2019

                                        Tuesday, 

Karabakh Security Chief Sacked After Row With Yerevan

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenia -- Retired General Vitaly Balasanian is pictured after negotiating with 
gunmen occupying a police station in Yerevan, July 23, 2016.

Vitaly Balasanian, one of Nagorno-Karabakh’s top security officials, was 
relieved of his duties on Tuesday one month after criticizing Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian and bitterly arguing with his press secretary.

Bako Sahakian, the Karabakh president, dismissed Balasanian as secretary of his 
national security council in a series of decrees that also named another 
retired army general, Levon Mnatsakanian, as chief of the Karabakh police.

Mnatsakanian is the former commander of Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army. He was 
sacked in December after Pashinian accused Karabakh leaders of “meddling” in 
Armenian parliamentary elections.

Sahakian’s spokesman, Davit Babayan, insisted that Balasanian himself decided 
to resign because he wants to be “involved” in a presidential election which is 
due to be held in Karabakh next year. “He decided to enter the political scene 
and more actively participate in that electoral process,” Babayan told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian service.

Balasanian is expected to be one of the main candidates in that election. He 
had already been Sahakian’s main challenger in a presidential ballot held in 
2012.

Earlier this month, Balasanian publicly scoffed at Pashinian’s 
confidence-building understandings reached with Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev. He also criticized Armenian authorities for not heeding the current and 
former Karabakh leaders’ calls for the release of Armenia’s indicted former 
President Robert Kocharian from prison.

Those remarks sparked a war of words between Balasanian and Pashinian’s press 
secretary, Vladimir Karapetian. An Armenian newspaper report claimed on Monday 
that Pashinian has since been pressing Sahakian to sack his security chief.

The Armenian prime minister last week accused unnamed Karabakh leaders of 
spreading false claims about significant territorial concessions to Azerbaijan 
planned by his government.

Babayan denied, however, any connection between Pashinian’s statements and 
Balasanian’s dismissal. “Please do not link [the two things,] do not look for 
an intrigue,” said the Karabakh official.

Balasanian, 60, is a retired army general who had played a major role during 
the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan. He announced on May 30 that he has set up a 
“pan-Armenian” political movement called For Artsakh.



Constitutional Court Delays Decision On Kocharian’s Trial

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia -- Hrair Tovmasian, the newly elected chairman of the Constitutional 
Court, speaks in the Armenian parliament, Yerevan, March 21, 2018.

Armenia’s Constitutional Court has delayed until July 9 a keenly anticipated 
decision on whether former President Robert Kocharian can stand trial on 
charges stemming from the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan.

Kocharian, his former chief of staff Armen Gevorgian and two retired army 
generals went on trial on May 13. A district court judge presiding over the 
trial suspended it a few days later, saying that the coup charges leveled 
against them may contradict the Armenian constitution.

The judge, Davit Grigorian, asked the Constitutional Court to pass judgment on 
a “suspicion of discrepancy” between three articles of the constitution and 
prosecutors’ claims that Kocharian illegally seized power in the wake of the 
February 2008 presidential election. Grigorian also suggested that the 
constitution gives Kocharian immunity from prosecution.

The Constitutional Court said shortly afterwards that it has already started a 
“preliminary” examination of the appeal. It was due to decide by June 20 
whether or not to open hearings on it.

It emerged on Tuesday that the high court decided late last week to extend that 
deadline to July 9. It cited the need for an “additional examination” of the 
issue.

Prosecutors have appealed against Grigorian’s controversial decisions to 
suspend the high-profile trial and release Kocharian from custody. Armenia’s 
Court of Appeals is scheduled to start hearings on the matter on Wednesday.

Kocharian’s release angered many political allies and supporters of Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian, who hold the ex-president responsible for the 2008 
bloodshed. At Pashinian’s urging, they blocked the entrances to court buildings 
across the country on May 20.

Kocharian and the other defendants deny the accusations.



Envoy Sees ‘Continuity’ In Russian-Armenian Ties

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia- Russian Ambassador to Armenia Sergey Kopyrkin at a news conference in 
Yerevan, .

The Russian ambassador in Yerevan praised the current state of Russia’s 
relationship with Armenia on Tuesday, saying that the two countries have 
remained strategic allies after last year’s Armenian “velvet revolution.”

“Our relations have maintained continuity in the year that has passed since the 
known domestic political events and changes in Armenia,” Sergey Kopyrkin told a 
news conference in Yerevan. “This is probably the most important thing. They 
steadily develop, remain on a high level and have a character of strategic 
alliance.”

Kopyrkin also pointed to an 11 percent rise in Russian-Armenian trade recorded 
in 2018. Echoing statements by Russian President Vladimir Putin, he stressed 
that his country remains Armenia’s leading trading partner and foreign investor.

Putin likewise praised bilateral ties when he met with Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian in Saint Petersburg on June 6. Pashinian described them as 
“strategic” in his opening remarks at the talks held on the sidelines of an 
international business forum.

“According to my information, the [Putin-Pashinian] meeting was constructive 
and productive,” said Kopyrkin. “Topical issues of our relations were 
discussed. The Armenian prime minister gave an assessment of the negotiations 
at a news conference in Saint Petersburg.”

“I understand that this contact laid yet another brick in the construction of a 
constructive and productive high-level dialogue between our countries,” added 
the diplomat.

Kopyrkin also praised the ongoing Armenian presidency of the Russian-led 
Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). He confirmed that Putin is planning to attend an 
EEU summit that will be held in Yerevan in October.

Pashinian had strongly criticized Armenia’s accession to the EEU before the 
2018 revolution that brought him to power. But he has repeatedly made clear 
over the past year that his country will remain part of the trade bloc as well 
as the Collective Security Treaty Organization. Pashinian told Putin in Saint 
Petersburg that Armenia’s “economic indicators are connected in large measure 
to our relations in the EEU and Armenian businesses’ access to the Russian 
market.”



Press Review


“Zhoghovurd” quotes Justice Minister Artak Zeynalian as saying that he decided 
to resign after “evaluating” media reports relating to him. The paper is 
dissatisfied with this ambiguous explanation. “If he meant criticism and 
discontent voiced by parliament deputies from the ruling My Step alliance, that 
should not have caused his resignation, assuming that he is really sure that he 
took right actions,” it says. “Instead of tendering his resignation, the 
minister should have convinced his partners and the public about his 
righteousness. But if there are other reasons [for the resignation] Zeynalian 
should talk about them openly.”

“Aravot” comments on Sunday’s mayoral election in Abovian which was won by the 
town’s incumbent Mayor Vahagn Gevorgian, opposed by My Step, and marked by a 
low voter turnout. The paper says that local residents who reelected Gevorgian 
preferred to keep the old “feudal” and “oligarchic” system of local government 
unchanged. It suggests that while the vast majority of Armenians ousted Serzh 
Sarkisian one year ago they did not necessarily reject “the system and the 
mentality formed over the decades.” They probably still think that only a 
benevolent “king” can solve their and their country’s problems, it says.

“Haykakan Zhamanak” dismisses claims by opposition commentators and media 
outlets that the outcome of the Abovian election was a serious setback for 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his allies and a huge success for Gagik 
Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK). “Several years ago, Serzh Sarkisian 
would not even think that a candidate of his HHK could get 48 percent of the 
vote in Abovian,” writes the pro-government paper. It argues that Abovian and 
surrounding villages have long been a de facto fiefdom of Tsarukian.

(Lilit Harutiunian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org



Fitch affirms City of Yerevan at ‘B+’; Outlook Positive

Fitch affirms City of Yerevan at 'B+'; Outlook Positive

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17:59,

YEREVAN, MAY 28, ARMENPRESS.  Fitch Ratings has affirmed the Armenian City of Yerevan's Long-Term Foreign- and Local-Currency Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) at 'B+' with Positive Outlooks and Short-Term Foreign-Currency IDR at 'B'.

Yerevan's IDRs are constrained by Armenia's sovereign IDRs (B+/Positive) as the city's standalone credit profile (SCP) is assessed at 'bb+'. The city's SCP reflects a combination of a 'Vulnerable' risk profile assessment and strong debt metrics leading to a 'aaa' debt sustainability assessment.

Yerevan is Armenia's capital and its largest metropolitan area. It is the country's largest market with a developed services sector and most populous community, with 1.1 million people. Yerevan's wealth metrics remain relatively modest in the international context affecting the city's overall financial profile. Yerevan remains debt free, although it can borrow on the domestic debt capital market, subject to certain restrictions. The city's accounts are cash-based, while budget framework covers single year”, Fitch said in a news release.

A1+: Aleksandr Azaryan will not be deprived of his academic degree – Smbat Gogyan


Smbat Gogyan, chairman of the Higher Qualification Committee in the National Assembly, said that judge Aleksandr Azaryan will not be deprived of his academic degree and added that there is no mechanism to deprive him of that title. 

17 pages of the dissertation of the Appellate Judge were copied from other works, in particular from  the dissertation of the Chairman of the Court of Appeal Vazgen Rshtuni and Tigran Nahapetyan.


Sports: Sokratis calls on Arsenal to win Europa League for absent Mkhitaryan

Goal.com, UK
Sokratis calls on Arsenal to win Europa League for absent Mkhitaryan
Fears over the Armenian's safety in Azerbaijan prompted him to withdraw from the game, a fact that will give the Gunners extra motivation

The absence of Henrikh Mkhitaryan should drive Arsenal on to win the Europa League, according to Sokratis Papastathopoulos. 

The Gunners secured their passage to the decider against Chelsea with a commanding 7-3 aggregate victory in the semis over Valencia

They will take on their London rivals in Baku on May 29, in a match that has been sadly overshadowed by non-footballing matters. 

As a woman and mother my message is to solve NK conflict through negotiations – Armenian PM’s spouse to Azerbaijani reporter’s question

Category
Society

Armenian Prime Minister’s spouse Anna Hakobyan responded to the question of an Azerbaijani reporter relating to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict during the discussion on the sidelines of the Eurasian Media Forum in Almaty, Kazakhstan, stating that as a woman and mother her message is to start to think about solving this conflict through negotiations, not war.

In his question the Azerbaijani reporter said the Armenian PM’s son is serving in the army in Nagorno Karabakh which is not an internationally recognized territory of Armenia. He also added that in May 2018 after his election as PM Nikol Pashinyan visited Stepanakert and spoke to the cameras. The journalist asked whether in such conditions it is possible to create confidence between the sides. He tried to ask also the second question, but his microphone turned off, but before that the Forum’s coordinator interrupted him urging to ask a question, rather than to make a statement.

In response Armenian PM’s spouse Anna Hakobyan said she doesn’t want to enter into details and in politics. “I am here as a woman and my call, my message is as a woman and mother. But I want to tell you that the war is not over yet, that’s why our son is serving in the army in Nagorno Karabakh.

So, my message is to start to trust each other and to start to think about solving this conflict through negotiations, not war. You know that in 2016 a large-scale war has been initiated by the Azerbaijani side, and we lost hundreds of young people from both sides. And my message is not to repeat the same, never repeat the same and to start to think about solving this conflict through negotiations”, she said.

The PM’s spouse noted that the Armenian side never started war. “And if you are talking about the messages coming from our family or the Armenian side, you have to remember the speeches and messages coming from the Azerbaijani government and Ilham Aliyev. You know better than me what kind of hostility exists in his speeches. So I want to repeat that my message is to start not to hate each other. I know it’s very difficult, but is not impossible.

I think that if women and mothers for the beginning give the same message to the political decision-makers, the negotiators, the OSCE Minsk Group coordinators never again to let a new war and try to solve the conflict through negotiations, we will come to a point”, she said.

Sports: Arsenal and Chelsea fail to sell half their tickets for Europa League final

Panorama, Armenia
Sport 10:44 23/05/2019 World

UEFA are facing the prospect of major Europa League embarrassment with Arsenal and Chelsea fans shunning the final in Baku, The Sun reports.

European finals involving English sides have traditionally seen as many as 40,000 from each club descend on host cities.

But the extortionate costs and ludicrous travel problems associated with getting to Azerbaijan mean more than half the 12,000 tickets allocated to the two London clubs are likely to be returned.

Both Arsenal and Chelsea were given individual allocations of 6,000 for the match, which kicks off at midnight local time next Wednesday.

SunSport understands the Gunners have only shifted around 3,500 with little sign any more will be sold in the build-up to the match.

And fewer than 2,000 Chelsea fans have purchased seats from their allocation as the folly of having to trek to the Eastern-most edge of Europe hits home.

As soon as both teams qualified for the final, the price of flights to Baku escalated to over £1,300 – and local hotels have vastly increased the price of rooms in a blatant attempt to cash in on football fans.

Both clubs have excellent numbers of supporters who usually travel abroad to follow the team in action – but this time they are being priced out.

It means Uefa now faces the prospect of the showpiece match being beamed around the world showing thousands of empty seats.

That comes on the back of Arsenal deciding they could not take Henrikh Mkhitaryan to Azerbaijan for the match amid fears for his safety.

Garo Paylan plans to file complaint over religious conversion of 13 year-old child, assessing it child exploitation

Garo Paylan plans to file complaint over religious conversion of 13 year-old child, assessing it child exploitation

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21:00,

YEREVAN, MAY 14, ARMENPRESS. Member of Turkish parliament of Armenian origin Garo Paylan plans to file a complaint against Turkish broadcaster Nihat Hatipoğlu, ARMENPRESS reports Paylan wrote on his Facebook page, referring to the religious conversion of 13 year-old Armenian boy Artur on a live broadcast.

“I have met with the mother of Artur, exploited by Nihat Hatipoğlu. She informed that her son appeared in that program without her permission”, Paylan wrote, adding that tomorrow he will file an official complaint to Supreme Council for Radio and Television and Prosecution against this program that exploits children.

During the program Nihat Hatipoğlu had announced that he has the permission of Artur’s mother, but the mother, Alina Yengibaryan, informed that her son converted to Islam without her knowledge.

The family moved to Turkey 13 years ago. According to the mother, her son and her family are Christian.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan