Russia attentively following joint Azerbaijani-Turkish military exercises – Foreign Ministry

Save

Share

 19:05, 30 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 30, ARMENPRESS. Aleksey Zaytsev, an official at the press service of the Russian foreign ministry, referred to the large-scale Azerbaijani-Turkish joint military excercises near the Armenian border. ARMENPRESS reports TASS news agency asked Zaytsev how Russia assesses the military excercises taking place near the border of Armenia.

''We attentively follow the regional situation, particularly considering the recent confrontation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. We strongly urge the sides to demonstrate restraint, including in their ongoing military activities'', Zaytsev said.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

Expert: Armenia should start sensibly interfering in Turkey’s domestic developments

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 1 2020

Taking into account the unprecedented impudence and provocative actions of the Erdogan regime, Armenia should start sensibly interfering in Turkey's domestic developments, Head of the Yerevan State University Chair of Iranian Studies Vardan Voskanyan said in a Facebook post on Friday.

“In particular, it refers to the Kurdish and Alevi issues, but that interference should be deliberately planned, aimed at forming a circle of Armenia's allies inside Turkey,” the expert wrote.

"We should be able to compensate for the limited territory and human resources of Armenia with intellectual dominance and clear-cut steps based on it in an effort to create a wide range of allies of our country and to bring about at least new serious challenges for the enemies on their own territory,” he said. 

Haypost and Post of Russia the first companies in region to launch a new money transfer system

Save

Share

 16:24,

YEREVAN, JULY 22, ARMENPRESS. Having joined the new program of the Universal Postal Union, Haypost CJSC jointly with the Russian Post launches the new "PosTransfer" money transfer system since, Haypost CJSC told Armenpress.

This is the first official corridor to be opened not only in the CIS region but also among all UPU members-signatories to the Postal payment services agreement. The opening was warmly welcomed by the customers.

The system allows making money transfers from Armenia to Russia and vice versa from any post office of Armenia and Russia for only 1.2% commission. Money transfers will be served in more than 800 post offices in Armenia and in more than 30.000 service points in the Russian Federation, which means that thanks to Haypost now money transfers will be available even in the most remote locations.

The system is also available online, ensuring maximum speed. In just 15 minutes after the money transfer, the addressee can get the amount from any post office in Armenia or Russia.

The decision to create a single money transfer system was adopted during the Universal Postal Congress in Istanbul in 2016. The remaining member states of the UPU are expected to join PosTransfer system at subsequent stages.

The Universal Postal Union is an international intergovernmental organization and a specialized agency of the United Nations, which unites 193 states.

CivilNet: Recent Survey Indicates High Levels of Public Satisfaction with Armenian Government’s Coronavirus Response

CIVILNET.AM

13:38

By Mark Dovich

Survey data collected last month by the International Republican Institute (IRI), a Washington-based think tank, indicate relatively high levels of public satisfaction with the Armenian government’s response to the pandemic, in line with other surveys showing a steady increase in public trust in state institutions over the past few years. The poll, funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development, involved a representative sample of more than 1,500 permanent residents of Armenia.

Overall, 71 percent of respondents reported being “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with the Armenian government’s response to the pandemic. An even higher percentage of respondents (81 percent) reported being “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with the government’s “efforts in communicating to the public health-related risks associated with the pandemic.” Finally, the majority of respondents (85 percent) also reported being “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with the efforts of the Commandant’s Office, which coordinates the government’s coronavirus response. 

Likewise, the majority of respondents reported holding “very” or “somewhat” favorable views of three public officials who have played key roles in combating the coronavirus outbreak in Armenia: Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan (84 percent), Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan (58 percent), and Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan (59 percent), who also heads the Commandant’s Office. 

Moreover, when asked in the IRI survey if their opinions of state institutions improved or worsened in light of the pandemic, the majority of respondents reported “better” opinions of three state bodies: the police (65 percent), the Ministry of Health (64 percent), and the prime minister’s office (58 percent).

Such high levels of public trust are particularly important when considering that 74 of respondents in the IRI survey agreed that “it is the shared responsibility of the government and the people to combat coronavirus” when prompted to give their opinion on state versus individual responsibility in responding to the pandemic.

However, the survey also indicates high levels of public concern about the coronavirus, with 85 percent of respondents saying they are “very” or “somewhat” concerned that they, their family, or someone they know will become infected—despite the fact that 62 percent of respondents reported not knowing anyone who has been diagnosed with the disease.

The percentage of respondents saying they are “very” or “somewhat” concerned about the effect of the pandemic on Armenia’s economy is even higher, at 90 percent. In fact, 68 percent of respondents reported that their household economic situation has worsened “somewhat” or “a lot” since the coronavirus outbreak, while a mere 2 percent of respondents said that their household economic situation has improved since that time.

Respondents were much more split when asked when they expect daily life to “return to the way it used to be” before the outbreak: 9 percent answered “immediately,” 29 percent answered “within six months,” 17 percent answered “within one year,” 19 percent answered “after more than one year,” and 26 percent answered “do not know.”  

The IRI survey also included a number of questions about the role the media plays in informing Armenians about the pandemic. Overall, the majority of respondents (61 percent) again expressed being “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with “the performance of Armenian mass media in general.” Similarly, 68 percent of respondents labeled Armenia’s “national media outlets” “very” or “somewhat” trustworthy. Concerningly, though, 66 percent also reported “encountering information in the media (social media included) regarding coronavirus that [they] believe is misleading or false” on at least a weekly basis.

As of July 20, Armenia had confirmed nearly 35,000 coronavirus cases, according to the World Health Organization.

Armenia must actively be engaged in anti-Turkish fight to make the security threats coming from that country more visible: expert

Aysor, Armenia

Turkey’s threats to Armenia are not something new, but the rhetoric has become more radical and aggressive, expert from Hayatsk think-tank Hasmik Vardanyan told Aysor.am.

“The unconditioned assistance voiced by Turkey to Azerbaijan after the tension on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, including in military operations, contains nothing new for Armenia. Ankara assisted Baku in 2016 too when it unleashed war against Artsakh,” she said, stressing that Turkey periodically states about readiness to assist Azerbaijan in any way of settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Referring to the information that Turkey collects rebels in Syria to send to Azerbaijan, the expert said it is quite possible scenario in case of wide-scale military actions on Armenian-Azerbaijani and Artsakh-Azerbaijani borders.

“It is not a secret for anyone that a part of mercenaries fighting in Syrian are under Turkey’s control and after staying without “work” in Syria during the recent period, Turkey is transporting them to other countries, in particular to Libya, to solve its geo-political issues on site. On the background of the neo-ottoman policy carried out by Turkey and the promises given to Azerbaijan, the possibility of appearance of mercenaries from Syria in Azerbaijan is rather high,” Vardanyan said.

She noted that the threats voiced from Turkey are not just theoretical and may become a reality at any moment. The expert stressed that the Armenian diplomacy must consistently work to make it clear for the international community that the security threats Armenia faces from Turkey are real.

“Armenia must be actively engaged in the campaign of the countries fighting against Turkey’s destabilizing actions. We have demonstrated such activeness in Greek and Cypriot anti-Turkish initiatives, but we need to cooperate with Egypt, United Arab Emirates,” she noted.

“Armenia’s active engagement in anti-Turkish fight of the regional countries will not only make the security challenges coming from Turkey more visible to the world but will promote the boosting of the cooperation of countries engaged in anti-Turkish fight and increasing Armenia’s role in the region,” the expert concluded.

Asbarez: Armenia, Artsakh Foreign Ministers Discuss Karabakh Conflict Settlement

July 6, 2020

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Artsakh, Zohrab Mnatsakanyan and Masis Mayilyan met in Stepanakert on July 4

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Artsakh Zohrab Mnatsakanyan and Masis Mayilyan on Saturday met in Stepanakert and to discuss the latest developments in the ongoing Karabakh conflict settlement process, after Mnatsakanyan met with his Azerbaijani counterpart last week during a video conference mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen.

During the meeting, the sides touched on a wide range of issues related to the current stage of the Azerbaijan-Karabakh conflict resolution process, with Mnatsakanyan briefing Mayilyan on the results of the recent video conferences he held with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov.

In this context, the sides noted the importance of taking practical steps to reduce risks and to maintain stability in the conflict zone, which are aimed at ensuring the irreversibility of the peaceful settlement process. The Foreign Ministers stressed the inadmissibility of the threats and provocative statements recently voiced by the Azerbaijani authorities at various levels, emphasizing that such rhetoric jeopardizes the peace process and hinders the formation of an atmosphere of confidence.

At the same time, the need for the full-fledged participation of official Stepanakert in the negotiations to increase the efficiency of the peace process was reiterated.

Following the one-on-one talks, an expanded meeting was held with the participation of the Artsakh Foreign Ministry senior staff and the delegation accompanying Mnatsakanyan to Artsakh.

There, the sides discussed the implementation of a plan to enhance consultations between the two ministries. The two sides praised the professional and practical nature of cooperation between the ministries. They also exchanged views on expanding Artsakh’s footprint in the international arena the coordinated steps needed to advance this effort.

Armenia’s Foreign Minister of Zohrab Mnatsakanyan meets with Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan in Stepanakert on July 4

While in Stepanakert, Mnatsakanyan also met with Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan to discuss what the presidential press office termed as issues of foreign political challenges.

Specific reference was made to the latest developments in the Karabakh conflict settlement process with both parties emphasizing that the destructive and aggressive rhetoric used by Azerbaijan’s military and political authorities deprives the parties of the opportunity to make progress in the peaceful settlement process.

President Harutyunyan reaffirmed the official Stepanakert’s commitment to the peaceful a settlement of the conflict under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk group and the need for Artsakh’s full-fledged participation in the negotiations.

Artsakh Foreign Minister Mayilyan also attended the meeting.

Asbarez: U.S. Ambassador Discusses Defense Cooperation with Armenia

July 7, 2020

Armenia’s Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan meets with U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy on July 7

Armenia’s Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan on Tuesday met with U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy to discuss defense cooperation between the two countries.

The two leaders took the opportunity to consider previous joint activities, evaluating the likelihood of pursuing the projects in the face of the coronavirus-related restrictions. They also addressed Armenia’s continuous engagement in international peace and stability maintenance missions and the procedures of rotation under today’s circumstances.

Tonoyan briefed the diplomat on the anti-COVID-19 measures in the military, plus the organization of conscription under conditions of the pandemic.

Ambassador Tracy said she is very happy to meet with the minister to discuss mutually beneficial projects and concerns.

According to a Defense Ministry press statement, the sides also exchanged thoughts over regional security issues along with other mutual interests.

Turkey: Rising religious intolerance

Ahram Online, Egypt
July 9 2020
 
 
A US State Department report on religious freedom and a warning early this week left Turkey unhappy. But not wrongly accused, say many
 
Nora Koloyan-Keuhnelian , Thursday 9 Jul 2020
 
Hagia Sophia (photo: Reuters)
 
In our modern world, most of the peoples and nations living on Earth seek to live in harmony and peace. But seemingly not Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
 
Last week, a Turkish court heard a petition seeking to convert the Hagia Sophia museum back into a mosque, over which the US State Department issued a statement urging Turkey not to do so. Considered a symbol of religious tolerance and cultural diversity, being a mix of Christian Byzantine and Ottoman Empire architecture and historical richness, the Haiga Sophia museum was chosen a world heritage site by the UNESCO in 1985.
 
Earlier last month, the US State Department issued its 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom. “It is written in a language far from objectivity,” was the Turkish Foreign Ministry’s curt description of the report’s contents on Turkey. In a statement 1 July, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo urged Turkey “to continue to maintain the Hagia Sophia as a museum, as an exemplar of its commitment to respect the faith traditions and diverse history that contributed to the Republic of Turkey, and to ensure it remains accessible to all.”
 
The US State Department sees any change in the status of the museum as diminishing the legacy of this remarkable building and its ability to serve humanity as a much-needed bridge between those of different faiths and cultures. “It is a testament to religious _expression_ and to artistic and technical genius, reflected in its rich and complex 1,500-year history,” Pompeo’s statement read.
 
“It is not surprising that Turkey ignores or denies the findings in the US religious freedom report, because what the civilised world sees as a violation, abuse or crime, Turkey sees as a normal and even a glorified action. We see the usurpation of churches and their conversion into mosques or other types of facilities as an insult to human rights and religious freedom. But NATO, UN and Council of Europe member Turkey has turned the violation of human rights into a proud tradition,” Greek genocide scholar Vassilios Meichanetsidis told Al-Ahram Weekly.
 
In 1935, the founder of the Republic of Turkey, its first president Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, ordered the building to be transformed into museum. While many consider it to be a “good” decision, Meichanetsidis thinks that it was actually another desecration of a historic non-Muslim place of worship. “Churches are built as churches and not as mosques or museums,” he said. On Tuesday, while speaking to a congregation at a church in Istanbul, the leader of the Greek Orthodox Church, His Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, warned that if Turkey persists with plans to reconvert Hagia Sophia into a mosque, it risks turning Christians against Muslims.
 
 
 
RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT ON TURKEY’S MINORITIES: Let’s not forget that Turkey and its predecessor, the Ottoman Empire, have a century old history of genocide against Greeks, Assyrians and Armenians, who constitute minorities in the country today.
 
According to the US State Department’s report, the Turkish government continues to limit the rights of non-Muslim religious minorities, especially those not recognised under the government’s interpretation of the 1923 Lausanne Treaty, which includes only Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Christians, Jews and Greek Orthodox Christians.
 
The Armenian Apostolic Orthodox community elected a new patriarch in December. “Members of the community and rights organisations criticised [Turkish] government interference in the election process. Minority communities continued to object to the prevention of governing board elections for religious foundations,” states the US report.
 
Another violation towards the Armenian minority mentioned in the report is the incident of forced conversion of a 13-year-old Armenian Orthodox child to Islam on a programme broadcast live by a televangelist on Turkish TV, during the Holy month of Ramadan last year, without his parents’ permission. “Members of the Armenian community and members of parliament (MPs) denounced the action,” states the US report.
 
Professor Anahit Khosroeva, senior researcher at the Institute of History of the National Academy of Sciences in Armenia, thinks that this is not the only case. “It mainly takes place among the citizens who left Armenia and got married to Turks or Kurds, according to statistics. I know several other cases of converted Armenian women over recent years. However, although all these cases have been widely publicised in the Turkish media, conversion is not a normal phenomenon among Armenians,” she said.
 
Khosroeva holds the community’s officials partly responsible. “The role of the Armenian Patriarchate in Constantinople should be significant here. Because it is known that Armenians are not so welcomed by the government of Turkey, especially the refugees, and their children cannot attend public schools. In addition, Armenians are isolated from the traditional community. It’s here that the Patriarchate must show its role by integrating these people into community life,” she told the Weekly.
 
The US report also states that “according to media reports, isolated acts of vandalism of places of worship continued to occur,” noting a February incident when an unidentified person or persons sprayed graffiti on the Surp Hreshdagabed Armenian Church in the Balat district of Istanbul with derogatory messages on the door and walls. “Police had opened an investigation and received security camera footage of the incident. HDP MP Garo Paylan condemned the attack. According to the community, the perpetrators had not been found by year’s end,” states the US report.
 
Khosroeva thinks this, too, is not new. “Vandalism against the Christian sanctuaries and culture, in addition to a continuous disrespectful attitude towards the feelings of [Christian] believers existed before the Ottoman genocide of Christians, between 1914 and 1923, and unfortunately it still exists. It’s very offensive for citizens of the same state or country to see notes on the walls of their churches full of hatred, or emptied garbage cans at the entrance of an Armenian church in Erzurum, where also unknown people left a note saying ‘Erzurum residents, this is our homeland,’” Khosroeva told the Weekly.
 
In March, President Erdogan raised the possibility, during a televised interview, that the status of Hagia Sophia in Istanbul could be changed from a museum to a mosque, adding that the name could change to Ayasofya Mosque. The government took no action following the president’s comments.
 
The US report also mentions that in November last year, the Council of State (the highest administrative court) ruled a former church and mosque now serving as Chora Museum should be returned to its status as a mosque. The museum, famed for its mosaics and frescos depicting Christian imagery, was originally constructed and repeatedly renovated as the Greek Orthodox Church of the Holy Saviour in the fifth century, and then converted into the Kariye Mosque in 1511 before becoming a museum in 1945.
 
“Hagia Sophia and Chora are the property of the Republic of Turkey and all means of authority [over museums] are a matter of Turkey’s internal affairs,” Turkey’s Foreign Ministry spokesman stated in response to the US report on religious freedoms, who called on the US to focus on its own domestic problems, like Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, racism and xenophobia, and not to draw the world’s attention away from US protests.
 
Why do Turkish authorities take pleasure in converting churches into mosques in 2020?
 
“Istanbul has dozens of mosques. Just next to Hagia Sophia there is the Blue Mosque and there are many other mosques across the city. I am afraid that the conversion of Hagia Sophia and Chora again into mosques represent Turkish Islamist triumphalism over Christianity and seemingly brings votes and support to the ruling party from Islamists and nationalists. In their imagination, this is what conversion represents,” Meichanetsidis told the Weekly.
 
Episodes of massacres and cultural attacks were the precursors to the great genocide of the 20th century. “Assyrians in Turkey, also known as Chaldean and Syriac, faced ethnic and religious persecution beginning in the mid-1800s. We have not been able to secure our own state, therefore our persecution is perpetual. The fact that the Turkish government has been denying the 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom should not come as a surprise, for the state has repeatedly denied its crimes against Christians. And let us not forget the direct involvement of the Kurds, a group which also denies their actions against all Christians, especially the Assyrians. Unless the Western countries and their allies in the region do not pressure Turkey to start honouring religious freedom and start protecting its own citizens, regardless of their faith, we will continue to witness the disappearance of the Christian community, an event which is a tragedy for all of humanity,” founder and President of Iraqi Christian Relief Council Juliana Taimoorazy of Assyrian origin, based in the US, told the Weekly.
 
“This is not a mentality of our times, but of some dark ages of the past, where fanaticism, destruction and barbarism prevailed. Islam is a religion of peace, respect and civilisation. Greeks and Arabs have been the initiators and bearers of religious and spiritual traditions with a universal impact,” Meichanetsidis said.
 
The US government estimates the total population of Turkey at 81.6 million (midyear 2019 estimate). According to the Turkish government, 99 per cent of the population is Muslim, approximately 77.5 per cent of which is Hanafi Sunni. Non-Muslim religious groups are mostly concentrated in Istanbul and other large cities, as well as in the southeast. Exact figures are not available, however these groups self-report approximately 90,000 Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Christians (including migrants from Armenia); 25,000 Roman Catholics (including migrants from Africa and the Philippines) and 16,000 Jews. There are also approximately 25,000 Syrian Orthodox Christians (also known as Syriacs); 15,000 Russian Orthodox Christians (mostly immigrants from Russia who hold residence permits) and 10,000 Bahais.
 
According to the US State Department report, estimates of other groups include fewer than 1,000 Yezidis; 5,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses; 7,000-10,000 members of Protestant denominations; fewer than 3,000 Chaldean Christians and up to 2,500 Greek Orthodox Christians.
 
Although the Jewish community in the country is diminishing, the US report states that Jewish citizens have expressed concern about anti-Semitism and threats. According to members of the community, the government continues to coordinate with them and is responsive to requests for assistance. But not all agree. “Anti-Semitism has been widespread in Turkey since the early years of the Turkish Republic. Jews in Turkey were exposed to a pogrom, their freedom of movement was restricted several times, the public use of their Ladino language  — alongside other non-Turkish languages — was banned and the media targeted them extensively in the 1920s and 1930s.
 
Today, making hostile statements against Jews and Israel is a popular trend in Turkey and it is the government that is leading and fuelling this hostility,” Turkish journalist and political analyst Uzay Bulut, who often writes about Jewish-related issues, told the Weekly.
 
According to the US report, the government of Turkey has continued to permit Greek Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox and Jewish religious community foundations to operate schools under the supervision of the Ministry of National Education.
 
“Children of undocumented Armenian migrants and Armenian refugees from Syria could also attend but they were not permitted to receive diplomas, as the government classify legal migrant and refugee children as ‘visitors,’” the report states.
 
The government has continued to provide funding for public, private and religious schools teaching Islam. “It did not do so for minority schools recognised under the Lausanne Treaty, except to pay the salaries for courses taught in Turkish, such as Turkish literature. The minority religious communities funded all their other expenses through donations, including from church foundations and alumni,” states the report.
 
*A version of this article appears in print in the 9 July, 2020 edition of Al-Ahram Weekly
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Armenia’s new telecom player wins approval to buy Veon unit

NASDAQ
July 10 2020
Armenia's new telecom player wins approval to buy Veon unit
     

Armenia's telecoms market is competitive and the merger of Veon Armenia and Team LLC will create a major player to take on market leaders Viva_MTS and Ucom.

Veon had held talks early this year about selling its unit to Ucom when Yesayan was still general director, but it later withdrew from the talks. Yesayan, who had originally founded Ucom with his brother, left Ucom in April.

(Reporting by Nvard Hovhannisyan; Writing by Margarita Antidze; Editing by Susan Fenton)


Greek political party calls for Ataturk’s house in Thessaloniki to become a genocide memorial museum

Public Radio of Armenia

A Greek political party has called for the birth home of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in Thessaloniki to become a museum commemorating the Greek Genocide in the Pontus region on the Black Sea, Greek City Times reports.

The Greek Solution (Ελληνική Λύση) suggested to convert Ataturk’s house into a genocide memorial museum.

“No Turkish court can desecrate the over-chronic character of the Hagia Sophia,” the party said in a statement just one day before Turkey decided to turn it into a mosque.

“On the contrary, Greece can and must turn Kemal’s house into a museum of memory and honor of the victims of the [Greek] Pontian genocide,” Greek Solution said.

Although Turks think of Ataturk fondly as the founder of the modern Turkish Republic, Greeks, Armenians and Assyrians remember him as one of the main perpetrators of genocide against Christian minorities in the Ottoman Empire, that led to the systematic extermination of around 3.5 million people.

With about a million Greeks exterminated on policies made by Ataturk and his predecessors, more than 1.2 million Greeks were forcibly removed from Turkey in 1923-1924 as a result of the the Treaty of Lausanne, decimating thousands of years of Greek life in Asia Minor, Pontus and Eastern Thrace.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan signed a decree on Friday opening Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia as a mosque after a Turkish court annulled a 1934 government decree that had turned it into a museum

On Friday, Erdogan also announced that Hagia Sophia mosque will be open for prayer on July 24.