Authorities open criminal investigation into deadly minibus-truck crash, reckless driving suspected

 10:38,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 14, ARMENPRESS. Authorities have instituted criminal proceedings on aggravated reckless driving (vehicular manslaughter) amid the ongoing investigation into the fatal minibus crash in Shirak Province.

11 people died in the early hours of Monday morning in a car crash involving a minibus and a truck on the Yerevan-Gyumri highway.

Gor Abrahamyan, the spokesperson of the Investigative Committee, said in a statement that the driver of the minibus and 10 passengers were killed instantly in the crash. 5 other passengers, including the driver of the ZIL truck, were hospitalized.  The criminal case was opened under paragraph 3, Article 342 of the Criminal Code – violation of traffic rules or vehicular operation safety rules which negligently caused two or more deaths.

Abrahamyan said that law enforcement agencies are working to identify all passengers, reveal the cause of the crash and “give a legal assessment to the actions of the drivers.”

The Ministry of Healthcare reported that 5 of the 6 hospitalized victims are in intensive care. 1 of the victims is in critical condition. 

Three other passengers were treated for minor injuries at the Astghik Medical Center and were discharged.

Armenia Officially Requests UN Security Council Meeting

Aug 14 2023

By PanARMENIAN

On August 11, the Republic of Armenia appealed to the United Nations Security Council with a request to convene an emergency meeting regarding the deterioration of the humanitarian situation as a result of the total blockade inflicted upon the civilian population of Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan, the Foreign Ministry said.

Permanent Representative of Armenia to the UN, Mher Margaryan, in a letter addressed to the President of the UN Security Council, particularly stated:

“Further to the letter from the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia addressed to the President of the Security Council dated 12 July 2023, I am writing in relation to the deterioration of the humanitarian situation as a result of the total blockade inflicted upon the civilian population of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“The severe shortage of essential goods, including food, medicine and fuel, has been exacerbated since June 15, 2023, when Azerbaijan fully blocked the Lachin corridor – the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia and the outer world – by banning any access to Nagorno-Karabakh, even humanitarian. The continued deliberate obstruction of natural gas and electricity supply to Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan has been detrimental for the daily life of the people.

“The suspension of all humanitarian supplies coupled with the gradual utilization of limited domestic stocks, targeted shootings of agricultural areas by Azerbaijani Armed Forces, has resulted in an acute food shortage and closures of shops. Due to the lack of essential food and vitamins, approximately 2,000 pregnant women, around 30,000 children, 20,000 older persons, and 9,000 persons with disabilities are struggling to survive under conditions of malnutrition.

“People with chronic diseases, including 4,687 individuals with diabetes and 8,450 individuals with circulatory diseases, are left almost without any medicine needed. As a result of this situation there has been a recorded increase of mortality from several diseases, including cardiovascular diseases and malignant neoplasms. From January to July, compared to the same period of the previous year, the level of anemia among pregnant women under medical observation has reached around 90%. This is due to inadequate nutrition and the absence or insufficiency of appropriate medications. Moreover, the hot weather conditions and absence of sanitizers and medicine create risks of epidemics in the region.

“As a result, today the people of Nagorno-Karabakh are on the verge of a full-fledged humanitarian catastrophe.

“These actions of Azerbaijan constitute a flagrant violation not only of the Trilateral Statement of November 9, 2020 but also of international humanitarian law and are in direct breach of the Orders issued by the International Court of Justice on 22 February and 6 July 2023, according to which Azerbaijan should “take all measures to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.”

“The deliberate creation of unbearable life conditions for the population is nothing but an act of mass atrocity targeting the indigenous people of Nagorno-Karabakh and forcing them to leave their homes and homeland. Such an infliction of collective punishment upon the people of Nagorno-Karabakh constitutes an existential threat to them should they be left alone vis-a-vis the Azerbaijani aggressive policy.

“Under current circumstances, the Government of Armenia requests the intervention of the UN Security Council as a principal body of safeguarding global security and preventing mass atrocities including war crimes, ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity and genocide.

“With reference to my letter dated 13 September 2022 addressed to the President of the Security Council (S/2022/688), and in follow up to the meeting of the Security Council held on 20 December 2022, I would like to request that an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council be convened based on Article 35 (1) of the UN Charter.

“I also ask that the delegation of Armenia be allowed to participate in the Council’s meeting in accordance with the relevant provisions of the United Nations Charter and pursuant to rule 37 of the provisional rules of procedure of the Security Council.

“Please, accept, Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration.”

https://www.eurasiareview.com/14082023-armenia-officially-requests-un-security-council-meeting/

Notes From Armenia and Romania: Book Markets Under Pressure

Aug 10 2023

In News by Eugene Gerden

Publishers in two of the smallest of Europe’s book markets talk about signs of progress and stubborn barriers to success.

By Eugene Gerden

In comments from publishing players this summer in Armenia and Romania, we hear two outlooks, one upbeat and the other less so.

Edit Print Publishing House

In Armenia, Mkrtich Karapetyan—the founding president in Yerevan’s Edit Print Publishing House—says that an elevated interest in reading has contributed to some growth in book sales.

“Taking into account the fact that the interest in reading has been growing over the last two or three years in Armenia,” Karapetyan says, “we expect that it will keep growing, and sales with it. In the case of our publishing house, we systematically undertake different projects, including reading competitions and excursions in the publishing and printing houses for schoolchildren,” to help boost the attraction of reading.

Mkrtich Karapetyan

This year Edit Print is publishing new fiction, he says, although much of what he’s calling new seems to be the two previous centuries’ translated Western work. He talks of releasing “titles by Agatha Christie, Erich Maria Remarque, Jules Verne, and others,” as well as what he says is “international bestselling international nonfiction.

The Armenian writer Hovhannes Tumanyan’s (1869-1923) children’s poems and ballads, now have been published by his group in English and Russian, Karapetyan says. Tumanyan’s birthdate, February 19, is recognized in Armenia as a “book giving day,” he says, something gaining in popularity with consumers. In addition, the company has released 24 new textbooks and manuals for schools’ use, and in the trade is focusing on series dedicated to classical Armenian writings, contemporary work, an “identity series,” and more.

Serious structural problems are in place, though, for Armenian publishers, Karapetyan says, the fundamental issue being that it’s a small-language market with slim chance for growth. A lack of government support, he says, compounds the issue, as a lagging rate of library purchases of books and a VAT (value-added tax) rate of 20 percent on books.

Arevik Ashkharoyan

The ARI Foundation’s Arevik Ashkharoyan echoes much of what Karapetyan says, adding that the economic and political conditions in Armenia have remained unstable in the past year because of the Russian-Ukrainian crisis. “The current educational reforms sound promising,” Ashkharoyan says. “New subject standards were developed, and a pilot implementation has been placed in a number of schools throughout the country. The government has also developed reading promotion programs and reading standards for schoolchildren, while some schools on their own initiative are doing a lot to promote reading.”

The intent of these programs, she says, are to instill a “habit of reading” in youngsters with reforms scheduled to begin in September. The hope, she says, is that the children’s book market may show signs of progress as a result.

Mihai Mitrică, who leads the Romanian Publishers’ Federation says he has high hopes for a “reading pact” that’s new to his market this year, an initiative that calls on authorities to observe publishing-supportive laws in place since the early years of this century.

Some of the laws he references require the government to:

  • Buy books for public libraries
  • Support postal deliveries of books
  • Create a nationwide campaign for promoting reading
  • Reinstate a grant to teachers of €100 annually to buy books

“We had a very successful edition of our ‘BookFest’ book fair in Bucharest in May,” Mitrică says, when several events focused on those expectations of government support were organized for discussion.

Mihai Mitrică

According to Mitrică, despite some modest growth, Romania’s book publishing market remains the smallest in the European Union, estimated at just €100 million overall (US109.8 million).

Counter to Mkrtich Karapetyan’s talk of a growing interest in reading in Armenia, Mitrică says Romania remains faced with a significant decline of interest in reading. He cites a survey from May, the results of which indicated that 51 percent of surveyed young people aged 18 to 24 in the biggest cities of Romania simply aren’t readers. This is gauged by their having reported reading no books at all in the past year.

The publishers’ federation counts some 300 bookstores in the country, with distribution almost exclusively in urban areas–which means that small cities have a shortage of bookstores, and sales.

At least 50 percent of the Romanian book market’s revenue comes from Bucharest, according to the federation’s observations. Mitrică says the current estimate is that some 6,000 presses may  be operating to some degree in Romania, about 200 of them relatively sizeable.


More from Publishing Perspectives on markets in Europe is , more relative to the Armenian market is , and more on the Romanian market is .

https://publishingperspectives.com/2023/08/notes-from-armenia-and-romania-book-markets-under-pressure/

Citing 1991 Almaty Declaration, Pashinyan denies Aliyev’s claim on undefined borders

 11:57, 3 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 3, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan has denied Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s claim that the border between the countries is undefined.

“The borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan were defined under the 1991 Almaty Declaration, and this was reiterated during the 6 October 2022 quadrilateral meeting in Prague, where the Almaty Declaration was adopted as the foundation for delimitation and demarcation of borders between the two countries. There’s an impression that Azerbaijan has the following plan: to sign a peace treaty with terms that would allow for disputing the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan stipulated under the Almaty Declaration and subsequently make territorial claims against Armenia during the delimitation and demarcation process. If the borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan are undefined, then what territories is Azerbaijan talking about regarding various parts of the border? If such a question is raised, then the borders are defined, and Armenia’s proposal on reciprocal withdrawal of troops from that border line is still in force. While the delimitation and demarcation of borders attests not to the absence of borders, but on the contrary, to the defined, meaning, the reiteration of the administrative borders between Soviet Armenia and Soviet Azerbaijan at the time of the Soviet Union’s collapse, and its reflection on the ground as a state border,” Pashinyan said at the Cabinet meeting on Thursday. 

PM Pashinyan reiterated the agreement on establishing peace based on the reciprocal recognition of respective territorial integrity of Armenia (29,800 km2) and Azerbaijan (86,600 km2) and said that he is waiting for Azerbaijan to publicly reiterate this agreement.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 07/20/2023

                                        Thursday, 


Armenia Building Checkpoint On Turkish Border

        • Nane Sahakian

Turkey/Armenia - An Armenian truck loaded with humanitarian aid for earthquake 
victims crosses a Turkish-Armenian border bridge near Margara, February 11, 2023.


Armenia is building a checkpoint at its closed border with Turkey despite what 
Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan has described as a “pause” in efforts to 
normalize Turkish-Armenian relations.

The Armenian government contracted recently a private company to construct the 
checkpoint in Margara, a border village 40 kilometers southwest of Yerevan, in 
preparation for a planned opening of the Turkish-Armenian border for diplomatic 
passport holders and citizens of third countries.

Ankara and Yerevan reached an agreement to that effect in July last year 
following a series of negotiations held by their special envoys. The Armenian 
negotiator, parliament vice-speaker Ruben Rubinian, said earlier this year that 
it is due be implemented “at the beginning of this summer.”

However, the Turkish government gave no such indications even after Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s June 28 phone call with Turkish President Recep 
Tayyip Erdogan. The issue was reportedly on the agenda of the call.

“We have had a certain pause in this process, which I think was due to the 
[presidential] election campaign and the elections in Turkey,” Mirzoyan said 
during a visit to Austria on Tuesday. “Now it’s time to continue the 
normalization talks.”

Armenia- A view of the ruins of a medieval Armenian bridge over Akhurian river 
marking the Turkish-Armenian border, May 10, 2023.

Erdogan and other Turkish leaders have repeatedly made clear that further 
progress in the normalization process is contingent on the signing of an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace accord sought by Baku.

The head of Armenia’s State Revenue Committee, Rustam Badasian, said on Thursday 
that work on the Margara checkpoint is in full swing and will be complete 
“soon.” “I can't give a specific date,” he told reporters.

Badasian, whose agency comprises the national customs service, did not comment 
on prospects for the functioning of the Margara facility.

Another interim agreement reached by Rubinian and his Turkish opposite number, 
Serdar Kilic, called for air freight traffic between the two neighboring 
nations. There have been no signs of its implementation either, even though the 
Turkish government officially allowed cargo shipments by air to and from Armenia 
in January.

In the words of Gagik Musheghian, an Armenian businessman who splits his time 
between Yerevan and Istanbul, such shipments are possible only “on paper.” He 
said that as recently as on Monday he inquired about Turkish customs clearance 
for airlifting a consignment of goods to Armenia.

“They said … it’s not possible to do as a normal [commercial] shipment because 
they don’t recognize Armenia,” Musheghian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.




Russia Responds To Turkey Over Karabakh Peacekeeping Mission

        • Aza Babayan

LITHUANIA - Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan gives a press conference 
during the NATO Summit in Vilnius on July 12, 2023.


Turkey has no business deciding how long Russian peacekeepers should remain 
stationed in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Russian Foreign Ministry said on Thursday.

The ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, responded to Turkish President Recep 
Tayyip Erdogan, who said last week that the peacekeeping contingent must leave 
Karabakh in 2025 in line with a Russian-brokered agreement that stopped the 2020 
Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

Under that agreement, the 2,000 or so Russian soldiers, deployed along the 
current Karabakh “line of contact” and in the Lachin corridor right after the 
six-week war, will stay there for at least five years. The peacekeeping 
operation can be repeatedly extended by five more years if Armenia and 
Azerbaijan do not object to that.

Speaking at the end of a NATO summit in Vilnius on July 12, Erdogan expressed 
confidence that Moscow will honor the truce accord and the five-year timeline 
set by it.

“Ankara is not a party to the statement of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan dated 
November 9, 2020,” Zakharova told a news briefing in Moscow.

“It was on the basis of this document that the Russian peacekeeping contingent 
was deployed in the zone of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” she said. “And it is 
in this document that both the terms of stay of the contingent and the 
parameters of its possible extension for the next five-year period are laid out.”

Nagorno-Karabakh - Russian peacekeepers check their weapons at a checkpoint on 
the road to Shushi, November 17, 2020.

Azerbaijan regularly emphasizes that the peacekeeping forces are deployed in the 
conflict zone on a “temporary” basis. It has increasingly criticized them during 
its seven-month blockade of the Lachin corridor condemned by Armenia and 
Karabakh as a gross violation of the ceasefire.

Baku accused the peacekeepers of supporting “Armenian army units” in Karabakh 
when it rejected on July 16 Moscow’s latest calls for an immediate end to the 
blockade. A senior Russian diplomat strongly denied the claim.

The Russians have also been criticized by Armenia for their failure to ensure 
unfettered traffic through Karabakh’s sole land link with the outside world 
envisaged by the 2020 accord.

Zakharova again defended the peacekeepers, saying that they are playing a 
“stabilizing role” in Karabakh. “Maintaining peace in the South Caucasus is in 
the interests of both Azerbaijan and Armenia, and, I think, all countries of the 
region, including Turkey,” she said.

Karabakh’s leadership regards the Russian military presence as the Armenian 
populated region’s main security guarantee. Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh 
president, expressed hope last September that it will be “indefinite.”




Pashinian Admits Lack Of Progress In Fresh Talks With Aliyev

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses prosecutors in Yerevan, July 
1, 2023.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Thursday that he and Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev did not achieve “concrete results” at their latest 
meeting hosted by European Union chief Charles Michel on July 15.

Pashinian said they discussed mutual recognition of Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s 
territorial integrity, delimitation of the border and transport links between 
the two states as well as the deepening humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh 
caused by Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin corridor. He made no explicit 
mention of an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty, the main focus of peace talks 
held by Baku and Yerevan in recent months.

“As you can see, I cannot present very concrete results from the Brussels 
meeting,” Pashinian told his ministers during a weekly cabinet meeting. 
“Nevertheless, the negotiation process should continue as intensively as 
possible and active efforts should be made to find mutually acceptable 
solutions.”

Speaking after the trilateral meeting, Michel gave no indications that Aliyev 
and Pashinian narrowed their differences on the peace treaty. He said he urged 
them to “take further courageous steps to ensure decisive and irreversible 
progress on the normalization track.”

Pashinian said the meeting “did not yield any concrete results in terms of 
opening the Lachin corridor and overcoming the humanitarian crisis in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.” He again charged that “ethnic cleansing” is the ultimate aim 
of the Azerbaijani blockade.

“At the moment, our task is to draw greater international attention to the 
humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh through diplomatic methods and by 
presenting the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh in the international press and 
social media as widely and objectively as possible,” he said.

Artur Khachatrian, an Armenian opposition lawmaker, dismissed the remarks. He 
said Yerevan should portray the blockade as further proof that the Karabakh 
Armenians cannot live safely under Azerbaijani rule.

“They [the Armenian government] don’t talk about that because they are scared,” 
he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Echoing statements by other opposition leaders, Khachatrian claimed that the 
blockade is the result of Pashinian’s decision to stop championing Karabakh’s 
right to self-determination and to recognize Azerbaijani sovereignty over the 
Armenian populated region.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

​Ivan Safranchuk: Armenian authorities violated the strict “geopolitical diet”

Armenia –
Ivan Safranchuk: Armenian authorities violated the strict “geopolitical diet”

Mediamax’s interview with Ivan Safranchuk, Director of the Center for Euro-Asian Studies of MGIMO, member of the Council on Foreign and Defense Policy

 

– Recently, we hear a lot of judgments about Russia and the West “fighting for Armenia”.  Opinions about Armenia’s “geopolitical reversal” are also being voiced. Do you think it is possible?

 

– There is objective reality, and there are various speculative judgments. This applies to many issues in the post-Soviet space. We are faced with the fact that for 30 years Western politicians and experts, the entire Western community as a whole, have been promoting the thesis that we should not dwell on objective circumstances and that everything can be changed. What matters is energy, will, desires, and the “right values” and “right institutions”. And allegedly all this changes the reality. This is, like, Marxism in reverse: it is not the basis that determines the superstructure, but the “right superstructure” can change not only the basis, but the whole reality.

 

These theses have been presented for long. And since in many countries, including Armenia, there is dissatisfaction with objective circumstances, the economic situation, and the parameters of corruption, people start looking for ways to change this. And, unfortunately, we have to admit that in some places, against the background of these objective difficulties, the Westerners managed to brainwash some part of the elite and the population.

 

Ukraine is the most catastrophic case, at one point it was Georgia, but they sobered up there a little. Apparently, it has reached a critical point in Armenia as well. Some part of the elite is infected with this idea, it creates a buzz that it is possible to turn around, to turn over, to change everything.

 

I would like to emphasize that Armenia is not an exception. This is a rather general situation for the post-Soviet space and even, perhaps, wider – for a whole category of states, where there is, so to speak, this gap between dreams and reality. And Westerners use it in a certain way.

 

– Before the 2020 war, Armenia was generally able to maintain a balance in relations between Russia and the West. Today, when tensions between Russia and the West have reached their highest point, will Armenia be able to maintain a balance in these conditions, or, roughly speaking, will it have to make a choice?

 

– Many who are infected with the desire to gamble on something and accomplish something incredible are betting big on the opportunity to play on the contradictions of the great powers. But we have seen in various examples in the post-Soviet space that trying to play on great contradictions does not end well. Bakiyev tried to play on big contradictions, and it ended badly. Saakashvili tried, and that also ended badly. And Yanukovych, in general, also tried to play, and again, it ended badly. These experiments sobered up the elites: from the desire to play they switched to the search for some geopolitical neutrality.

 

I think a lot depends on what balance you pursue – aggressive or more moderate. If the elite of even a small country does not want to be a geopolitical suicide bomber, does not want to play too dangerous games, no one will force it.

 

I think what is happening in Armenia in recent years is a very dangerous geopolitical game. It is a path along the edge. Not even on the edge of personal destiny, as it was in case of Bakiyev, Saakashvili or Yanukovych, but on the edge of statehood. I have always believed that Armenia is unique in the sense that the statehood is young but the baggage of historical problems is very heavy. Therefore, these objective realities and historical circumstances prescribed Armenia a very strict “geopolitical diet”. But unfortunately, Pashinyan has seriously violated the rather strict ration of this diet. The attempt to explore these new possibilities – US, France – has not justified itself. At the analytical level, many spoke of the impossibility of this. At the level of political intuition, the previous generation of Armenian politicians also believed that the diet should not be violated. But here came a man who took a risk putting a lot at stake.

 

– Armenia and Azerbaijan continue to negotiate on a peace treaty within the framework of two formats: Russian mediation – arising from the logic of the trilateral agreement, and US and EU mediation. How long can these two processes coexist?

 

– The question is not only how to formalize the agreement with Azerbaijan and under what international guarantees. The question is how the Armenian people will feel this statehood and how they will live with it. After all, what is being discussed now was not even on the table of negotiations five years ago. The generations that grew up in independent Armenia understood their statehood in a certain way, while now they must understand it in some other way and Pashinyan says that this is the best thing he can offer to the Armenian people.

 

The issue of international formats is very important, but much more important is the issue of harmony inside Armenia. The Armenian people must realize that they are determining their fate, probably for a long historical perspective. My point is that the threats to the agreements may come not from the outside but from within Armenia.

 

– Pashinyan’s associates say the Russian plan, which did not write off the issue of Karabakh’s status, was not adopted due to lack of Russia’s proper support to Armenia, which, in its turn, raises concerns about the viability of the plan.

 

– This looks like an attempt to cover up their own failures, to blame them on Russia, to cover themselves up with Russia. This is probably a rational step in domestic political conditions, but rather cynical and unfair to Russia.

Ivan Safranchuk

Photo: Valdai Club

The reasons for the current developments should be sought not in what happened after the trilateral agreements, but in what led to the war and the trilateral agreements to stop it. The root cause is there. Five years ago we discussed the Russian plan, which proposed handing over 5 regions and leaving the issue of the status of Karabakh to the future generations. These were the parameters of compromise then. Today Armenia is in a completely different situation and not because Russia did not do something. On the contrary, at that time the Russian settlement plan was treated without due respect and attention. As to Pashiniyan, he gave it up completely and decided…

 

– To go his own way, as he said.

 

– And the result was a completely different reality. So we should not look at the situation through the prism of the last three years following the war. We should look at the horizon of six or seven years. The situation in which Armenia has found itself is the choice of the Armenian leadership. The result is a long and very complicated crisis. I think Russia would have preferred a more compromised solution, not at the expense of the interests of one side only. But over these six or seven years this option has been lost, it no longer exists.

 

Ara Tadevosyan spoke with Ivan Safranchuk

 

This interview has been prepared as part of a joint project with the Tufenkian Foundation.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 07-07-23

 17:07, 7 July 2023

YEREVAN, 7 JULY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 7 July, USD exchange rate down by 0.09 drams to 386.19 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 0.10 drams to 420.64 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.01 drams to 4.22 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 0.50 drams to 492.82 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 202.37 drams to 23700.22 drams. Silver price up by 4.41 drams to 287.69 drams.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 04-07-23

 17:17, 4 July 2023

YEREVAN, 4 JULY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 4 July, USD exchange rate down by 0.73 drams to 386.25 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 0.52 drams to 420.90 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.02 drams to 4.30 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.62 drams to 490.92 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 160.02 drams to 23951.65 drams. Silver price up by 3.27 drams to 282.83 drams.

FC Krasnodar’s Spertsyan voted Player of the Season

 10:08, 26 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 26, ARMENPRESS. Armenia midfielder Eduard Spertsyan, who plays for Krasnodar FC, has been recognized as Player of the Season of the Russian football club.

The title is awarded as a result of voting by fans.

This is the second consecutive time that Spertsyan is getting the title.

The Armenian midfielder has made 28 appearances, scored 10 goals and recorded 12 assists in the Russian championship.

Armenian Diaspora Survey: New Research Study Results Published

Digital Journal
PRESS RELEASE
Published

Armenian Communities Across the Globe

The Armenian Diaspora Survey published the results of the research conducted in 2019, 2021 and 2022. Over 12,000 Armenians in more 50 diaspora communities in ten countries provided their views and opinions on questions of identity, language, culture, community and political engagement, and relations with the republic of Armenia.

To find out more, please visit https://www.armeniandiasporasurvey.com

This unprecedented state-of-the-art research study is a project funded by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, under the auspices of the Armenian Institute in London, and is led by a group of international scholars and researchers.

"The Armenian diaspora is multifaceted, complex and geographically spread around the world. Yet, the main subject around which virtually all themes in diasporic life orbit is 'Armenian identity'", said ADS director Dr. Hratch Tchilingirian of University of Oxford.

Unlike a few decades ago, in contemporary times, "one generalization we could make based on our research is that Armenian identity is largely self-defined, fluid and personalized," explained Dr. Tchilingirian. "Armenians living in the same country or in the same state or city could have different perceptions, public opinions and understanding of 'Armenianness', depending on multiple variables, such as family upbringing, community, personal preferences, so on."

The results of both the 2021 survey conducted in Belgium, Paris, United Kingdom and Rostov on Don and the 2022 survey in the United States and Ontario, Canada are publicly available and could be downloaded for free at the ADS website https://www.armeniandiasporasurvey.com

The previous round was completed in 2019 in Argentina, Lebanon, Montreal and Romania.

ADS fills a critical gap in the knowledge of the Diaspora and provides evidence-based understanding of the multi-layered and diverse aspects of diasporic life. The results are used to inform the public, scholars, policymakers and community leaders about the issues, attitudes and trends shaping the Armenian world in the 21st century.

"The department is pleased that this systematic survey that covers a vast geography of the Armenian Diaspora has been successfully completed and the results are published," said Dr. Razmik Panossian, Director of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation's Armenian Communities Department. "Understanding the Diaspora is a crucial part of our mandate to support Armenian Studies globally. We look forward to building on this research and enhancing its impact on policy development. I thank the ADS team and all the people involved with the project and its success," Panossian added.

More substantive final reports will follow, which will include short chapters on the results of each of the communities in the survey. Visit https://www.armeniandiasporasurvey.com

Armenian Diaspora Survey

1 Onslow Street

United Kingdom