Armenia’s national security service apprehends international terrorist while attempting to cross border (photos)

Category
Society

Armenia’s national security service (NSS) has prevented a terrorist, who was active in the Syrian war, from entering the country.

The terrorist is identified as Suleymangaji Bagandgajiyev, a Russian citizen and resident of Makhachkala. The NSS said it continues being on high alert and focusing on foreign threats or terrorist organizations, taking into account the difficult tactical situation in the country.

The national security service has heightened border control simultaneously with its other function in order to prevent the continuous attempts of terror suspects from taking advantage from the current domestic tension in Armenia and to target the country. The NSS said it had intelligence reports suggesting that terrorist organization-affiliated suspects would attempt to cross the border into Armenia.

The prevention of entry of Suleymangaji Bagandgajiyev back on 13th of February of 2018 has proven the possible threats to national security relating to international terrorist organizations.

The Russian citizen had arrived in Armenia on a transit flight from Kenya and attempted to use a fake passport of a Ukrainian citizen to illegally cross into Armenian territory.

Suleymangaji Bagandgajiyev was charged under Article 325 and 329 of the Criminal Code as part of the criminal case on using forged documents and illegal border crossing.

The Russian citizen was arrested.

The NSS also gathered intelligence reports on Bagandgajiyev’s recruitment and payment by an international terrorism organization for fighting in Syria from May 2015.

The NSS also gathered information on Bagandgajiyev’s suspicious interest towards individual locations in Yerevan and other Armenian cities.

The investigation continues.

[see link]

Genocide: Germany’s role in Armenian Genocide detailed in crucial report

PanArmenian, Armenia
April 5 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – Turkish forces mainly used German rifles and other weapons to carry out the Genocide of the Armenian people, a new report has found, according to Deutsche Welle.

Mauser, Germany's main manufacturer of small arms in both world wars, supplied the Ottoman Empire with millions of rifles and handguns, which were used in the Genocide with the active support of German officers.

"German officers who served in Turkish-Ottoman military staff actively helped carry out individual murders," the report by Global Net – Stop the Arms Trade (GN-STAT) said. "The majority of the aggressors were armed with Mauser rifles or carbines, the officers with Mauser pistols." Many German officers witnessed and wrote about the massacres in letters to their families.

The report represents the first "case" being researched and developed by Global Net, a new multilingual worldwide network of over a 100 organizations, and a database for activists, whistleblowers, journalists, artists, and others interested in arms exports.

The Turkish army was also equipped with hundreds of cannon produced by the Essen-based company Krupp, which were used in Turkey's assault on Armenian resistance fighters holding out on the Musa Dagh mountain in 1915.

In 2015, German President Joachim Gauck acknowledged Germany's "co-responsibility" for the Armenian Genocide, while a book published in the same year by journalist Jürgen Gottschlich detailed the political collusion of Turkey's most important European ally in the first world war, which provided military advice and training for the Ottoman Empire throughout the Wilhelmine period. But the new GN-STAT report is the first to detail the sheer extent of the material support provided by Mauser and Krupp.

"Mauser really had a rifle monopoly for the Ottoman Empire," said the report's author Wolfgang Landgraeber, a filmmaker who has made several films about German weapons exports. Mauser is now defunct as a company, but Krupp's successor, German steel giant ThyssenKrupp, has never publicly acknowledged the part it played in the Genocide.

"The question of who actually supplied the weapons, not only for the Genocide but also for the First World War in Turkey, no one has really addressed that question before," said Landgraeber. "And to what extent German officers took part in murders by actually picking up the rifles and firing them themselves — that wasn't known before."

Many of the first-hand German accounts in the report come from letters by Major Graf Eberhard Wolffskehl, who was stationed in the southeastern Turkish city of Urfa in October 1915. Urfa was home to a substantial Armenian population, which had barricaded themselves inside houses against Turkish infantry. Wolffskehl was serving as chief-of-staff to Fahri Pasha, deputy commander of the fourth Turkish army, which had been called in as reinforcement.

"They (the Armenians) had occupied the houses south of the church in numbers," the German officer wrote to his wife. "When our artillery fire struck the houses and killed many people inside, the others tried to retreat into the church itself. But … they had to go around the church across the open church courtyard. Our infantry had already reached the houses to the left of the courtyard and shot down the people fleeing across the church courtyard in piles. All in all the infantry, which I used in the main attack … acquitted itself very well and advanced very dashingly."

While German companies provided the guns, and German soldiers the expert advice on how to use them, German officers also laid what Landgraeber calls the "ideological foundations" for the Genocide.

That the German Reich shared the Ottomans' mistrust of the Armenians was no secret — both feared they were colluding with mutual enemy Russia, while Gottschlich's book quotes navy attache Hans Humann, a member of the German-Turkish officer corps and close friend of the Ottoman Empire's minister of war, Enver Pasha, as saying, "The Armenians — because of their conspiracy with the Russians — will be more or less exterminated. That is hard, but useful."

Landgraeber is keen to underline that the new research does not absolve the Ottoman Empire of its guilt — but simply fills in the gaps in the historical record. "It happened as we have researched it, and nothing should be sugarcoated — but the entire picture should be more complete."

Some three dozen countries, hundreds of local government bodies and international organizations have so far recognized the killings of 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as Genocide.

On June 2, 2016, a resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide passed almost unanimously in the German Bundestag. In response, Turkey recalled its ambassador in Berlin and Germany's Turkish community held protests in several German cities.

Turkey denies to this day.

Sports: Ararat F.C. youth team players to hold joint training camp with FC Stade Nyonnais in Switzerland

ArmenPress, Armenia
Ararat F.C. youth team players to hold joint training camp with FC Stade Nyonnais in Switzerland


YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. Three football players of the Yerevan-based Ararat FC youth team will depart to Switzerland for a training camp.

Ararat said three of their players – Koryun Kirakosyan, Hayk Avagyan and Erik Babayan will depart to Switzerland which coach Maxim Arakelyan for a joint training camp with FC Stade Nyonnais.

The players will train with their Swiss counterparts while coach Arakelyan will undergo training and exchange of experience with the Swiss coaches.

English –translator/editor: Stepan Kocharyan

Nalbandian Slams Aliyev’s Territorial Claims from Armenia

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and Minister of Foreign and European Affairs of Luxemburg Jean Asselborn at a joint press conference Tuesday

YEREVAN—Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian on Tuesday warned Baku to refrain from using language that can derail the peace talks, specifically slamming recent comments by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev who has claimed Armenia as part of “historic Azerbaijan.”

Speaking during a press conference with his counterpart from Luxembourg, Jean Asselborn, who is in Yerevan on an official visit, Nalbandian urged Baku to meet its commitments to the peace talks and respect the agreements that were reached during myriad summits mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing countries.

“Baku once said negotiations should be constructive and logical, as if they have been neither substantial, nor logical until now,” said Nalbandian. “Now they have gone from the phase of substantial and logical negotiations into a new phase that will require them to make ‘creative’ proposals to the Co-Chairs.”

“Such ‘creativity’ was demonstrated when our 2,800-year-old capital Yerevan and other regions of Armenia were declared ‘Azerbaijan’s historic territories.’ Azerbaijan’s ‘creativity’ also finds its iteration in the constant threats of force. Perhaps, they have found a new trick to explain why they are rejecting the principles and elements proposed and reflected in the five statements adopted by the co-chairing countries on the highest level. Maybe, Baku considers these proposals primitive and simple, and lacking creativity,” added Nalbandian.

He was making reference to Aliyev’s territorial claims that Yerevan and other regions of Armenia are part of “historic Armenia,” claims that were made as recently as last week during his Novruz holiday.

Minister Nalbandian advised Baku to refrain from further “linguistic exercises” and return to a more constructive approach to the peace process.

“During the recent Krakow meeting we agreed to expand the capacities of the team of the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, and both Armenia and the Co-Chairs announced this. However, up until now Azerbaijan refuses to implement those agreements and even refer to them,” Armenia’s top diplomat said.

He said the same has happened on different occasions and added: “If Azerbaijan is unable to return to the constructive field, it should be forced to do so.”

European extreme cold weather doesn’t threaten Armenia, says chief meteorologist

Category
Society

The extreme cold weather conditions of Europe do not threaten Armenia so far, Gagik Surenyan, director of the meteorological center of the Hydromet Service told ARMENPRESS.

“No drastic weather changes are expected in the coming days. In terms of the extreme colds in Europe, currently there are no fears that they [freezing colds] can impact Armenia”, he said.

Temperature will rise 5-6 degrees Celsius March 18-20 in most parts of the country.

Europe’s freezing temperatures continue, with strong winds inflicting heavy damages in several countries, knocking down trees. Casualties have been reported.

In the US and Canada, a blizzard has left over 1 million people without power supply, while in Russia heavy snowfalls have disrupted traffic in Moscow.

The son of Armenian immigrants and Donald Trump’s idol: Fortune

PanArmenian, Armenia
Feb 24 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – One of Donald Trump’s idols in the business world may come as a surprise. He was little known, and liked it that way. He was a daring pilot during World War II. And on the playing fields of deal-making, he was the future president’s polar opposite—the very embodiment of self-discipline, humility and grace under pressure.

Fortune unveils an article about Kirk Kerkorian, a self-made billionaire and fellow hotel developer, who started out as a penniless eighth-grade dropout from California before becoming a Hollywood movie mogul, a Las Vegas casino magnate, and one of America’s richest men. His largely unheralded charitable giving also made him one of the country’s most generous tycoons.

In many ways, he was the un-Donald, yet Trump regarded Kerkorian as business royalty. When a New York Times columnist was calling Kerkorian—then in his late 80s—“the god of all deal makers,” Trump was likewise calling him “the King” and publicly declared: “I love that guy.”

The stories of the two fellow billionaires have obvious parallels, but perhaps more interesting than that, is how vastly they diverged in their approaches to achieving remarkably similar versions of the modern American dream.

By the time Kerkorian died at age 98 in 2015, he owned most of the major hotels and casinos on The Strip. But his name was on none of them. And though he transformed the American gambling mecca, Kerkorian’s name never appeared on a street sign, a park site or so much as a private parking spot.

The Las Vegas skyline does, however, have the giant gold letters T-R-U-M-P atop the 64-story Trump International Hotel.

The reticent Kerkorian avoided media engagement. He declined most interviews and lived by his own rule against divulging anything about his personal or business interests. The first Kirk commandment was: don’t talk too much. His second was: never talk about yourself.

Trump was notorious for self-promotion well before entering politics. Even before becoming the nation’s Tweeter-in-Chief, he sometimes posed as his own public relations guy to pass along all kinds of personal and business information to the press. In 1989 he even talked his way onto a Forbes list of billionaires, only to be summarily dumped for inflating his net worth—found to be “in hailing distance of zero” upon review by magazine editors.

Though fiercely competitive, Kerkorian carried no grudges. Even after intense negotiations, Kerkorian’s business competitors often ended up as social friends. His closest associates said he never had a bad thing to say about anyone. Trump’s response to his Forbes list demotion was also typically Trumpian—accusing deceased magazine publisher Malcolm Forbes of “finally getting back at me from the grave.”

Kerkorian studiously avoided both the trappings of celebrity and any involvement in political activism. But he also admired, perhaps even envied, Trump for his easy command of audiences. The naturally shy son of illiterate Armenian immigrants was almost paralytic about public speaking. “I wish I could talk like Trump,” he told friends.

And, had Kerkorian lived to see it, he almost certainly would have been impressed with the audacity of Trump’s 2016 presidential bid. For Kerkorian, a heroic wartime aviator and seemingly fearless gambler—who once risked a million dollars on a single roll of the dice, who wagered his fortune more than once on major Las Vegas developments, and who favored big bets, win or lose—seeking the White House would definitely have qualified as a praise-worthy whale of a big bet.

Chess: Aeroflot Open: Armenia’s Tigran Petrosian celebrates third victory

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 23 2018
Sport 16:14 23/02/2018 Armenia

Armenian GM Tigran L. Petrosian claimed the third victory in a row at the 16th Aeroflot Open chess festival underway in Moscow, Russian.

In Round 3 of the top A Tournament, Petrosian beat S. P. Sethuraman of India to share the 1-2 spots with Viktor Bologan of Moldova on 100% score, the National Olympic Committee told Panorama.am.

Other representatives of Armenia – Manuel Petrosyan, Haik Martirosyan, Arman Mikayelyan, Arab Hakobyan and Gabriel Sargissian scored 1,5 point apiece to take the 28th, 46th, 55th, 56th, and 61st spots respectively. Shant Sargsyan lost his game in this round. 

The two leaders of the tournament will face each other in the fourth round. 

Sports: Henrikh Mkhitaryan describes Wenger as ‘friendlier’ than Mourinho

PanArmenian, Armenia
Feb 10 2018

PanARMENIAN.NetHenrikh Mkhitaryan has hinted he is already benefiting from Arsene Wenger's more compassionate style of man management, Mirror says.

The Armenia international completed his move to Arsenal from Manchester United last month in a swap deal which saw Alexis Sanchez move in the opposite direction.

Mkhitaryan produced only flashes of his best form during a turbulent 18-month spell at Old Trafford but already appears to have acclimatised to his new surroundings and the requirements of his new manager.

The 29-year-old provided three assists on his full debut during last week’s crushing 5-1 win over Everton at the Emirates and summed up the difference between his two most recent bosses by contrasting their approach to man management.

"Mourinho required a lot from the players," Mkhitaryan told SFR Sport on Friday.

"A lot, he was very hard.

"Arsene Wenger is friendlier, he understands, can think about players’ situations, is calmer. That’s the difference."

"I think I left an impression in Manchester, although I had difficulties," he added.

"We won three trophies in a year and a half, it’s not every club that does that.

"We won the Europa League final, I scored a goal. If people say that I have not had enough success it is their opinion, but I can say that I had a lot of success at the club.’

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/08/2018

                                        Thursday, February 8, 2017

Snap Election In Azerbaijan Unrelated To Karabakh Talks, Says Yerevan


 . Sargis Harutyunyan


Armenia - Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharian holds a news
conference in Yerevan, 23Nov2016.

A senior Armenian diplomat denied on Thursday any connection between
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's decision to call a snap presidential
election and ongoing Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks on
Nagorno-Karabakh.

In a decree announced on Monday, Aliyev brought the date of Azerbaijan's
next presidential election forward by more than six months, to April
11. He did not explain the reasons for the unexpected decision which
swiftly drew sharp criticism from his beleaguered opponents. Some
observers have suggested that the move may be connected with the Karabakh
peace process which has intensified of late.

"I don't think that Azerbaijan is a country where elections matter,"
Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharian told
reporters. "Election results there are always predetermined. So I would
link the earlier-than-expect holding of elections in Azerbaijan with
their intra-clan relationships."

"Of course, external factors may also be at play," said Kocharian. "If
there is an internal struggle for power there, then any information to
the effect that a rival side in that struggle may be backed by other
states could also have an impact."

Aliyev met on Wednesday with the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of
the OSCE Minsk Group, who travelled to Baku at the start of their latest
tour of the Karabakh conflict zone. According to the Azerbaijani Foreign
Ministry, Aliyev and the mediators "reached an agreement on the
continuation of intensive negotiations after the presidential elections
in Armenia and Azerbaijan."

The mediators were due to arrive in Yerevan on Thursday for similar talks
with President Serzh Sarkisian. The latter will complete his second and
final presidential term on April 9, two days before the Azerbaijani
presidential ballot.

Armenia's next president will be elected by the parliament in early March
and have largely ceremonial powers because of the country's transition to
the parliamentary system of government. Sarkisian is tipped to become
prime minister later in April.

Aliyev and Sarkisian pledged to step up the protracted search for a
Karabakh settlement at their most recent meeting held in Geneva in
October. Their foreign ministers held follow-up talks in December and
January. Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov described those
talks as "positive."



Minister Rejects Tax Cuts Demanded By Armenian Opposition


 . Hovannes Movsisian


Armenia - Finance Minister Vartan Aramian speaks at a news conference in
Yerevan, 25Sep2017.

Finance Minister Vartan Aramian on Thursday dismissed opposition calls
for the Armenian government to reverse recent increases in personal
income and fuel taxes.

The Tsarukian Bloc and the Yelk alliance are particularly critical of
higher excise duties on fuel that came into force on January 1. The two
opposition groups represented in the Armenian parliament blame them for
recent weeks' sizable rises in fuel prices. The National Assembly is due
to debate next week a Yelk bill that would repeal the new tax rates.

Echoing statements by Prime Minister Karen Karapetian, Aramian insisted
that their impact on consumer price inflation will be minimal. "When
discussing [the recent amendments to] the Tax Code, we definitely took
into account the impact of higher excise tax rates on [overall] prices,"
he told reporters. "It's estimated at just 0.5 percentage points."

Aramian also made the point that tax cuts are a wrong way to reduce the
cost of living in any country. "Tax legislation or taxes are not the
right tool for helping socially vulnerable categories of the population,"
he said. "This is not done through tax rates around the world."

The minister further argued that the government needs more tax revenue to
finance greater budgetary spending planned by it. The government would be
wrong to resort to internal or external borrowing for that purpose, he
said.

Yelk leaders say the authorities should boost their tax revenue by
cracking down on tax evasion and corruption instead. They also claim that
the higher income tax rates will hurt the middle class hard.

Government officials counter that only those Armenians who earn well
above the average wage in the country will be taxed more. They say 90
percent of workers will not have any additional sums deducted from their
wages.



Armenian Presidential Frontrunner To Meet Opposition


 . Ruzanna Stepanian


Armenia - Former Prime Minister Armen Sarkissian visits the TUMO Center
for Creative Technologies in Yerevan, 31 January 2018.

The opposition Yelk alliance reiterated on Thursday that its parliament
deputies will not vote for President Serzh Sarkisian's pick for the next
head of state despite agreeing to meet him.

Edmon Marukian, one of the bloc's leaders, told RFE/RL's Armenian service
(Azatutyun.am) that the meeting with former Prime Minister Armen
Sarkissian will take place on Friday. Marukian said Sarkissian was aware
of Yelk's stance when he proposed the meeting.

"We expect to hear from Mr. Sarkissian about his vision, about how he
imagines his activities as president and how he sees Armenia's course
given the existing challenges," said Marukian.

The Armenian parliament is due to elect a new and less powerful president
of the republic one month before Serzh Sarkisian serves out his final
presidential term on April 9. The outgoing president offered Armen
Sarkissian (no relation) to become the ruling Republican Party's
presidential candidate late last month.

Sarkissian, who currently serves as Armenia's ambassador to Britain, said
he needs "some time" to decide whether to accept the offer. He said he
will hold consultations with major political and civic groups before
making the decision.

The Republican Party (HHK) spokesman, Eduard Sharmazanov, suggested on
Thursday that the nominee will make the decision after his meetings with
the parliamentary opposition, which also includes businessman Gagik
Tsarukian's alliance.

"It will be difficult for him to make a final decision without meeting
with the opposition," claimed Sharmazanov. "So I think our presidential
candidate is right to meet with representatives of Yelk and the Tsarukian
Bloc.

Under the Armenian constitution, a presidential candidate has to be
backed by a three-fourths and two-thirds majority of lawmakers in order
to win in the first and second rounds of voting respectively. A simple
majority of votes is enough to win the presidency in the third round. The
HHK has such a majority.

Nevertheless, President Sarkisian has expressed hope that the former
prime minister will win outright in the first round. In that case, the
latter would need the backing of at least 79 members of the 105-seat
parliament.

The HHK and its junior coalition partner, the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), control 65 parliament seats. They will
therefore need the support of the Tsarukian Bloc which holds 31 seats.



New Armenian Government Post Sparks Controversy


 . Tatevik Lazarian


Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and Prime Minister Karen
Karapetian shake hands before an official ceremony at the Yerablur
military cemetery in Yerevan, 28 January 2018.

Opposition lawmakers denounced as unconstitutional on Thursday government
plans to create the post of first deputy prime minister who will be
appointed after Armenia becomes a parliamentary republic in April.

Under a government bill debated by the National Assembly, the first
deputy premier will be one of the members of a new security body to be
headed by the next Armenian prime minister, the country's most powerful
official.

Edmon Marukian, a leader of the opposition Yelk bloc, argued that
Armenia's constitution says only that the prime minister can have up to
three deputies responsible for various policy areas.

"The constitution does not single out any of them," said Marukian. "It
doesn't say that one of them shall be first deputy prime minister while
the two others just deputy prime ministers, which in essence means a
hierarchy."

"Unless we correct this now, we will have an unconstitutional law," he
added during the heated debate.

Artur Hovannisian, a deputy justice minister who presented the bill to
lawmakers, denied that. "I absolutely do not agree with your position,"
he said. "The constitution does not contain any restrictions on this
issue."

Hovannisian did acknowledge, though, that the first deputy prime minister
will have more powers than the two other vice-premiers. In particular, he
or she will run the government "in the prime minister's absence," added
the official.

The planned creation of the new government post is seen by some
opposition figures and pundits as another sign that President Serzh
Sarkisian intends to stay in power as prime minister after completing his
final presidential term in April. The outgoing president has shed little
light on his plans so far.

Nikol Pashinian, another Yelk leader, charged that Sarkisian has broken a
pledge to let Prime Minister Karen Karapetian retain his post after
Armenia's transition to the parliamentary system of government. "In order
to mitigate this cheating process a little, he is giving [Karapetian] a
consolation prize: the post of first deputy prime minister," he said.

Pashinian also likened the constitution, controversially amended in 2015,
and new laws stemming from it to a "suit tailor-made for Serzh
Sarkisian."



Press Review



"Haykakan Zhamanak" is dissatisfied with the Armenian authorities'
response to death threats made against Marianna Grigorian, the editor of
the Medialab.am publication. The paper says that law-enforcement bodies
only reluctantly opened a criminal case in connection with those
threats. It says that they had just as reluctantly identified and
prosecuted a man who beat up an opposition parliamentarian in Yerevan a
few years ago. That man never went to prison. "This is a mentality
befitting the Middle Age," says the paper.

"Zhamanak" comments on a government bill that would seriously restrict
the next Armenia president's power to grant pardons. "It is not
accidental that there is bitter infighting in the higher echelons of
power regarding who will control one of the main segments of the [ruling]
system: the criminal underworld," claims the paper. Pardons granted in
Armenia have never been about justice and humanism, it says.

"Zhoghovurd" accuses the government of presenting misleading data to
prove that Prime Minister Karen Karapetian has delivered on his pledge to
attract at least $830 million in investments Armenia's public
infrastructure and businesses last year. Karapetian said in the
parliament on Wednesday that the actual investments exceeded that
figure. The paper points to official statistics showing that foreign
direct investment (FDI) in Armenia fell short of government projections
and was mainly channeled into the Armenian mining sector. The government,
it says, has used a flawed methodology to report a much higher investment
total, which includes money spent by the government.

"Hraparak" complains that Armenians are now unwilling to take to the
streets and protest against their government in large number. The paper
sees a sharp contrast with 1988 when huge crowds gathered in Yerevan to
demand Karabakh's unification with Armenia despite stern warnings issued
by the Soviet authorities. "People were not scared of the Moscow
Politburo and the tanks brought by it," it says.

(Tigran Avetisian)


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

Nine employees of Gyumri libraries to be discharged

Nine employees of Gyumri libraries will be discharged.

The reason is that the library optimization process has started. Gyumri municipality’s “Ani” library community non-profit organization will pass to the balance sheet of school N 11 in Gyumri. As a result, employees will be deprived of their jobs and an alternative will be offered for them.