27.8 billion AMD returned to state in 2018

27.8 billion AMD returned to state in 2018

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18:28,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. The Prosecutor General’s Office of Armenia has examined and summed up the situation with the financial damage inflicted on the state through criminal measures and the process of its restoration for the year 2018. A total of 27.8 billion AMD (57 million USD) has been returned to the state, ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the Prosecutor General’s Office.

The examination shows that the total damage to the state as for 2018 amounts to over 84.8 billion AMD (nearly 174 million USD), but the preliminary investigation of a number of criminal cases is not over yet. Measures are taken to return to the state the entire financial damage.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




In line with government all citizens have their share of action, Pashinyan on implementation of Action Plan

In line with government all citizens have their share of action, Pashinyan on implementation of Action Plan

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15:51,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 14, ARMENPRESS. In line with the government’s responsibility over the implementation of the government’s Action Plan, every citizen has his/her share of action and responsibility in it, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said in his remarks in the Parliament, reports Armenpress.

“I consider the debates of the past three days quite successful. A very serious ideological debate has taken place. There was a clash of two opinions here, a clash between two groups of people. One side was presenting the information they got from the books they red, and the other side was stating that they are going to write a new book”, the PM said.

According to him, this Action Plan is based on the pre-election program of My Step alliance which received the trust vote of the absolute majority of voters.

“The government is determined to carry out an economic revolution in Armenia. The pre-election program contains what was written back in 2013: we are convinced that the transformation of an individual is a key tool for public transformation. Everyone can start the public transformation process. The state should create necessary environment and atmosphere to contribute to such transformations. This is the main ideology. Starting from 2006 I have told the citizen that the future of Armenia depends on one person, and that person is you. The government has its share of responsibility and actions, but each citizen as well has his/her share of responsibility and action. We say that poverty is impossible to overcome without work. Nothing can change without work”, Pashinyan said.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




In the Singapore government program, there was only one number. Member of “My Step” faction (video)

Member of the “My Step” faction, Hovhannes Igityan, is skeptical of the formulations that there are few numbers in the government’s program.

“All of you are talking in different ways about creating an anti-corruption body. The first part of the Singapore program sounded like this: Absolute freedom of action of the National Anti-Corruption Committee, unlimited powers. Secondly, excluding any unauthorized persons in the struggle against corruption. At that time, even cases were brought to Lee Kuan Yew’s wife and son, I do not even say against friends and classmates. Third, a new  system of public servants remuneration, in the amount of 2/3 of the remuneration of an adequate specialist in the private sector.

A person working in our state system must be a competitor of his salary with those specialists who work in the private sector. It is not only a guarantee of a dignified life, but also a guarantee that we will have highly paid professionals in the public sector. Fourth, a severe penalty for breach of law, for any violation, from public order to criminal offense. And the fifth is the creation of entrepreneurship and the simplicity of the tax system. There was only one number, if you noticed that it was 2/3, “Mr. Igityan underscores.

Cyprus Defense Minister commemorates the victims of the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey

Arminfo, Armenia
Feb 13 2019
Tatevik Shahunyan

ArmInfo. Cyprus Defense Minister Savvas Angelidis visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial and the Genocide Museum as part of his official visit to Armenia.

The Cyprus Defense Minister paid tribute to the memory of the victims  of the Armenian Genocide; in the Museum he left an entry in the book  of sorrow. Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum Foundation  Harutyun Marutyan presented the guest with a 2-volume book of  articles on the Armenian Genocide.

A is for Armenia

The Advertiser (Australia)
Sunday
A IS FOR ARMENIA
 
by KENDALL HILL
 
 
In a new weekly column, open the atlas to see where the alphabet leads
 
The Jacaranda Atlas was my go-to reference book growing up. I was raised in tiny country towns where nothing ever happened and the Jacaranda Atlas was a constant reassurance there was a whole world out there beyond my dreary horizons. The maps were marvellous works of art but my favourite bit was the index at the back, the gazetteer.
 
The concept of it always struck me as bizarre. Who in their right mind would ever think they could catalogue an entire planet?
 
Whoever it was, thank you. Gazetteers have been my lifelong inspiration. I love scouting intriguing place names – from the Great Rann of Kutch to Tooting Broadway – tracing their coordinates to the atlas page and then letting my imagination run wild.
 
That's the idea behind the A-Z of Travel. To pluck a letter from the alphabet each week and see where it leads using that letter to kickstart some thoughts on a place, a person, a trend, a hotel or anything related to the realm of travel.
 
It could be an insider city guide, tales of mishaps on the road (I've had many), profiles with awesome people, amazing experiences … anything to fuel the wanderlust.
 
A, then, is for Armenia. I haven't actually been there but I did glimpse it recently from the border of far-eastern Anatolia in Turkey.
 
We were wandering among the ruins of Ani, a 10th century city crumbling elegantly on golden plains, when I pointed to a snow-streaked mountain on the horizon and asked guide Suleyman what it was.
 
"Oh, that's Armenia," he said casually, as if it wasn't any great concern to me. Until that moment it hadn't been. I'd never contemplated going there before but suddenly I was bursting to dash across the plains, scale the modest border fence and lose myself in the South Caucasus.
 
A is also for Afghanistan. I haven't been there either. But at the Pakistani border town of Torkham, at the end of the Khyber Pass, I stood on a ridgetop and gazed wistfully through barbed wire at Afghanistan's barren, chiselled mountains.
 
If not for my armed guard of six Afridi tribesmen, I would have happily stowed away on a cargo truck and trundled into the unknown. Both situations reminded me, not for the first time, that travel is never finite.
 
We treat it like it is – we go from A to B to do C – but the reality, for me anyway, is the more I see of the world the more I want to keep exploring. It's perpetual temptation.
 
Another time, flying home from Tunisia, I hadn't studied my itinerary closely so was shocked and a little put out when we touched down in the Libyan capital Tripoli – a surprisingly lush and ordered land of vineyards and olive groves. If I'd only known I might have arranged a stopover.
 
It was even more distressing when, a few hours later, we touched down in Cairo. Cairo! I'd dreamt of visiting that crazy, kaleidoscope city ever since I first laid hands on a Jacaranda.
 
And now here I was, trapped in its lifeless airport on a two-hour transit stop and so desperate to get among it I was almost climbing the walls.
 
I shared my frustration with the airport cafe owner, who was sympathetic but kept giving me a strange look. The kind of look that says, what kind of fool doesn't know where he's flying to?
 
Me. I'm that kind of fool. I rarely read itineraries properly. I prefer to put my trust in fate, which is perhaps fine in theory but does create the occasional drama.
 
In Mexico, after visiting the jungle temples of Yaxchilan in southern Chiapas state – where deafening howler monkeys hooted in the forest and I met a tarantula bigger than my head – I hopped in our boat to head home down the Usumacinta River. I asked the guide what was on the far bank. "Guatemala," he said. My eyes popped and I begged him to make a pit stop so I could touch the soil.
 
He did, reluctantly. He couldn't understand my obsession with setting foot in Guatemala but then he hadn't spent his childhood cooped up in a remote Australian town dreaming of such opportunities. Besides, I wanted to explain travel is not like an itch I can scratch and make go away; the more I scratch, the itchier I get.
 
I still think about Cairo a lot. I remember finally boarding the flight in a funk and then falling asleep as soon as the cabin pressurised, like I always do. I woke minutes after take-off and glanced out the window and below me, on a desert plain, stood two perfect pyramids, gold-plated in the afternoon light. I have no idea which ones they were but it doesn't matter. It was pure magic. Proof that, at least sometimes, the most memorable moments are the unplanned ones.

Lawyer: The court refuses to release Kocharyan on the basis of the same rationales, on the basis of which Pashinyan was released at the time

Arminfo, Armenia
Feb 8 2019
Tatevik Shahunyan

ArmInfo. The trial on the case of choosing a measure of restraint against second president of Armenia Robert Kocharyan in the Court of Appeal took place within the  framework of the law, in contrast to the process that took place in a  court of general jurisdiction.

This was announced today at a press conference by Kocharyan's lawyer Hayk Alumyan. According to him, the judge was also elected within the law. "Initially, he perceived our  arguments, but, unfortunately, the verdict was later adopted with a  gross violation of the legislation of the country," said Alumyan. As  a justification of his words, he cited the argument that the current  Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan who was passing in the same case and  another 6 people were once accused under the same article that now  Robert Kocharyan (the overthrow of the constitutional order). However  after the revision of the relevant article of the Constitution in  2009 (300.1), which tightened the punishment for this crime, these  seven were released. "Since criminal law prohibits toughening of  punishment for a person, if there was no such article at the time he  committed a crime. We emphasize that, according to the same logic,  the prosecution against Kocharyan should also be discontinued, since  in 2008, Article 300.1 of the Constitution did not work. However, the  prosecutor tells us that when the Pashinyan case was decided at the  time, the accusatory side had its position, we now have our own, and  we disagree with the above arguments. That is to say, there is a  biased interpretation of the laws and Constitution ",  Alumyan  outraged. He also considered it absurd the court's motivation to  arrest Kocharyan considering that the latter would obstruct the  investigation if released. "Kocharyan is constantly monitored by the  National Security Service officers, how he may interfere with the  investigation," said Alumyan.

Alumyan considered the version that Kocharyan could hide from the  investigation if released as absurd.  "He previously had many  opportunities for this, however Kocharyan voluntarily returned to his  homeland," he stressed.

According to Hayk Alumyan, in the case against Robert Kocharyan, the  accusation is based on the fact that the second president, before the  March 1 events during a speech to Yerevan State University students,  said:  There are only two options for the authorities: to wait for  the rallies to stop by themselves and the second to use force option  to stop the rallies. "This is the basis of the accusation, but the  question arises, what is his fault here, is there  a third option  that Robert Kocharyan didn't mention," said Alumyan, stressing that  even the investigative body does not admit that Kocharyan issued a  decree on the use of violence on March 1, 2008. "There is no such  provision in his accusation," the lawyer said, adding that Kocharyan  has not yet given testimonies and does not intend to do so, because  the charge is not clear to him.  The lawyer also said that Kocharyan  was allowed meetings, he continues to play sports in prison.

Turkish Press: Past massacres by Armenians go unrecognized: Historian

Yeni Şafak, Turkey
Feb 5 2019


Past massacres by Armenians go unrecognized: Historian

   17:04 February 05, 2019 Anadolu Agency

Large states frequently “avoid seeing the truth,” an eminent Turkish historian told Anadolu Agency on Tuesday.

Telling how Armenians carried out massacres in eastern Anatolia and Azerbaijan during the early 20th century, Refik Turan of Gazi University in Ankara, Turkey’s capital, said: "For some reason, the great states do not recognize this."

Citing the 1992 Khojaly massacre, one of the bloodiest incidents of the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over control of the now-occupied Upper Karabakh region after the breakup of the Soviet Union, Turan, head of the Turkish Historical Society (TTK), said such massacres continued in later years as well.

But “great states show such weakness,” Turan told Anadolu Agency. “They often avoid reality.”

Turan, speaking in Azerbaijan at the invitation of the Turkey-Azerbaijan Businessmen and Industrialists Association, also noted historical events that have served to bring Azerbaijan and Turkey closer together as peoples and states.

For example, he praised the Azerbaijani people's support for Turkish forces during the 1914 Battle of Sarikamis against Russia’s Caucasus Army, which claimed the lives of nearly 90,000 Ottoman Turkish soldiers due to devastating weather conditions.

Turan also cited the Caucasian Islamic Army, which protected Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity on Sept. 15, 1918 and paved the way for the country’s independence in 1991, decades later.

-'Brotherly countries'

On the geopolitics of the Caucasus region and Azerbaijan in particular, Turan described Turkey and Azerbaijan as “brotherly countries” with deep historical and cultural ties.

He said his history foundation works in conjunction with the Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences, which is planning a number of joint projects with the Turkish Language Association.

Karabakh, a territory disputed between Azerbaijan and Armenia, broke away from Azerbaijan in 1991 with military support from neighboring Armenia.

Three UN Security Council resolutions and two UN General Assembly resolutions refer to Karabakh as being part of Azerbaijan.

The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe refers to the region as being occupied by Armenian forces.

The Armenian occupation of Upper Karabakh has led to the closure of the region’s frontier with Turkey, which sides with Baku in the drawn-out dispute.

Azerbaijani press: Turkey: France’s statement about "Armenian genocide" is irresponsibility

6 February 2019 16:29 (UTC+04:00)

Baku, Azerbaijan, Feb. 6

By Rufiz Hafizoglu – Trend:

France's statement on the so-called Armenian genocide is irresponsibility and this will not remain unanswered, a source in the Turkish government told Trend on Feb. 6, commenting on French President Emmanuel Macron's statement on the 1915 events.

“Despite the statements made by France – which is still under the influence of the Armenian diaspora – do not have political significance for Turkey, Ankara will firmly respond to such a provocative statement,” the source said.

The source stressed that by making such statements, the French side wants to prove its "commitment to democracy."

"By recognizing unfounded claims as a fact that cannot be denied, Paris demonstrates adherence to double standards that are contrary to democratic values," the source added.

The source also stressed that it would be much more reasonable for France to convince Armenia to create a joint commission with Turkey, consisting of historians, to investigate the 1915 events.

Earlier, Macron called the 1915 events as "genocide of Armenians" and "a crime against humanity".

Armenia and the Armenian lobby claim that Turkey's predecessor, the Ottoman Empire, allegedly carried out "genocide" against the Armenians living in Anatolia in 1915.

Follow the author on Twitter: @rhafizoglu


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/07/2019

                                        Thursday, 

Kocharian’s Appeal Against Arrest Rejected

        • Naira Nalbandian

ARMENIA -- Then Armenian President Robert Kocharian talks to the media at a 
polling station in Yerevan, February 19, 2008

Armenia’s Court of Appeals upheld on Thursday a lower court’s decision to 
extend the pretrial detention of former President Robert Kocharian prosecuted 
on coup charges.

A district court in Yerevan allowed investigators on January 18 to keep 
Kocharian under arrest for two more months, refusing to free him on bail. The 
64-year-old ex-president appealed against that ruling.

One of Kocharian’s lawyers, Hayk Alumian, denounced the higher court’s decision 
to reject the appeal. “This is a 100 percent political decision which was made 
as a result of a political order,” he told reporters. “There is zero 
jurisprudence behind this decision.”

Alumian said his client will challenge the decision in the higher Court of 
Cassation as well as the European Court of Human Rights.

Kocharian was arrested on December 7 on charges of overthrowing the 
constitutional order just weeks before serving out his second and final 
presidential term in April 2008. The Special Investigative Service (SIS) says 
that he illegally used Armenian army units against opposition supporters who 
protested against alleged fraud in the February 2008 presidential election. It 
denies any political motives behind the high-profile case.

The SIS has brought the same charges against three retired army generals, 
including former Defense Minister Mikael Harutiunian. But it has not arrested 
any of them.

Kocharian, who ruled Armenia for ten years, ordered army units into central 
Yerevan on March 1, 2008 amid vicious clashes between protesters and security 
forces trying to disperse them. Eight protesters and two policemen were killed 
in that violence.

Kocharian again defended his actions when he spoke in the Court of Appeals last 
week. He said that he only ordered the generals to “ensure the army’s 
neutrality” during the post-election political crisis in the country.



Another Western Firm Invests In Armenian Mining Sector

        • Emil Danielyan


Armenia - The Kapan Mining and Processing Company, September 5, 2018.

A British-based company has paid $55 million to buy a major gold and copper 
mine in Armenia from a Russian metals group.

The company, Chaarat Gold, is the largest Western investor to move into Armenia 
since last spring’s “velvet revolution” that replaced the country’s former 
government with a more reform-minded and democratically elected administration.

“Clearly our decision to come here straight after the revolution tells you that 
… we believe in the positive change that the revolution has brought to the 
country,” Chaarat’s chief executive, Artem Volynets, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service on Thursday. “We think it’s good to be in an open and transparent 
society.”

“We believe in transparency and doing things properly in the same way that 
people in this country believed in transparency when they initiated the 
revolution,” Volynets said in an interview.

Chaarat completed the acquisition from Russia’s Polymetal group of the Kapan 
Mining and Processing Company on February 1. The company currently employing 
about 1,000 people mines gold, copper, silver and zinc near the southeastern 
Armenian town of Kapan. It reported more than $20 million in earnings last year.

Chaarat is registered in the British Virgin Islands, headquartered in London 
and listed on the London Stock Exchange’s Alternative Investment Market trading 
platform. Its largest shareholder is Martin Andersson, a Swedish investor who 
has a 33.5 percent stake in the company. Switzerland’s UBS Group AG and a 
state-owned Chinese mining firm are among its smaller shareholders.

Volynets said the purchase of the Kapan mine is part of Chaarat’s plans to 
create “one of the leading gold producing companies in the former Soviet 
Union.” “We currently have two very large [gold] deposits in the Kyrgyz 
Republic which will form the base of our first cluster,” he explained. “The 
acquisition of Kapan is a logical step in that strategy.”


Armenia - An ore-processing facility at the Kapan Mining and Processing 
Company, September 6, 2018.

Chaarat, Volynets went on, views Armenia as the “second cluster” of its 
operations and could make further investments in the Armenian mining sector, 
which generated more than 40 percent of the country’s exports worth $2.4 
billion in 2018. “If our experience in Kapan will prove to be a successful one, 
we will look at other opportunities,” he said.

Armenia’s largest mining enterprise, the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine 
(ZCMC), is located in Kajaran, a smaller town about 15 kilometers west of 
Kapan. It has more than 4,000 employees. The German metals group Cronimet 
officially owns 75 percent of ZCMC.

Another major Western player in the sector is the British-American company 
Lydian International which had been granted the exclusive right to develop a 
large gold deposit in the southeastern Vayots Dzor province. Lydian has faced 
an uncertain future in Armenia since the “velvet revolution.”

All roads leading to the Amulsar deposit have been blocked since June 2018 by 
several dozen people protesting against gold mining operations there which they 
say are fraught with serious risks to the environment. Lydian, which claims to 
have invested more than $300 million in Amulsar, has dismissed these concerns, 
saying that it will use modern and safe technology. The company has repeatedly 
demanded an end to what it considers an illegal blockage.

U.S. diplomats have warned that continued disruption of Lydian’s operations 
could scare away other American investors interested in Armenia. Nevertheless, 
the Armenian government and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in particular have 
not ruled out the possibility of revoking Lydian’s mining license.

Chaarat’s Volynets said he is aware of the situation around Amulsar. “We 
believe that if we do things right … we should be fine,” he said when asked 
about its potential implications for his company.

Volynets insisted that Chaarat will stick to “global standards” for 
environmental protection in its mining and ore-processing operations in 
Armenia. He said its most immediate task is to “reinforce” the Kapan mine’s 
toxic waste disposal dump located just outside the industrial town.

“Mining companies operate in many developed countries, whether it’s the United 
States, Canada or Australia,” argued the Chaarat CEO. “The important thing is 
to be responsible for your actions in terms of health safety and environment, 
and that is very much at the forefront of our activities.”



Ter-Petrosian Also Questioned In 2008 Violence Probe

        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia - Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian at an election campaign rally, 
February 13, 2008.

Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian was questioned by an 
Armenian-law-enforcement body on Thursday as a witness in its ongoing 
investigation into the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan.

His press secretary, Arman Musinian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that the 
interrogation lasted for around 90 minutes. Musinian gave no other details.

Ter-Petrosian, who served as Armenia’s first president from 1991-1998, was the 
main opposition candidate in a presidential held in February 2008. He staged 
nonstop street protests in Yerevan after rejecting as fraudulent official vote 
results that gave victory to Serzh Sarkisian, outgoing President Robert 
Kocharian’s preferred successor.

Security forces broke up those protests on March 1, 2008. Eight protesters and 
two policemen died in street clashes that broke out in Yerevan on that day.

Citing the deadly violence, Kocharian declared a state of emergency and ordered 
Armenian army units into the capital. He accused Ter-Petrosian of attempting to 
forcibly seize power. Dozens of Ter-Petrosian allies, including Armenia’s 
current Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, were subsequently jailed on charges of 
organizing “mass disturbances” which they strongly denied.

Ter-Petrosian rejected the official version of events, saying that Kocharian 
resorted to lethal force to enforce the official results of a rigged election.

The Special Investigative Service (SIS) blamed the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition 
for the violence until last spring’s “velvet revolution” which brought 
Pashinian to power. It now says that Kocharian illegally used army units 
against the protesters.

Kocharian, who denies the accusations as politically motivated, was arrested in 
December. Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenian strongly condemned the 
arrest, saying that Pashinian is exacting “personal revenge” against the man 
who ruled the county from 1998-2008.

Sarkisian was reportedly questioned by the SIS late last week.



New Government Program Too Vague For Armenian Opposition Party

        • Tatevik Lazarian

Armenia - Parliament deputy Gevorg Gorgisian speaks to RFE/RL, October 20, 2017.

A senior opposition lawmaker strongly criticized a five-year policy program of 
the Armenian government on Thursday, saying that it is short on specifics and 
sets very few socioeconomic targets.

Gevorg Gorgisian of the Bright Armenia Party (LHK) insisted that the 70-page 
program does not substantiate Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s pledges to carry 
out an “economic revolution” in the country.

The document laying out the government’s priorities and policies was made 
public on Wednesday two months after Pashinian’s My Step alliance won snap 
parliamentary elections by a landslide. The government is expected formally 
adopt and send it to the parliament for approval on Friday.

The program says, among other things, that the Armenian economy will grow by at 
least 5 percent annually thanks to government efforts to improve the business 
environment, spur exports and attract more foreign investment. It promises 
“substantial” decreases in poverty and unemployment but sets no concrete 
targets.

Gorgisian dismissed the action plan as a collection of “nice wishes” not backed 
up by concrete figures and time frames for putting them into practice. “There 
is little substance there, and it is very dangerous that it lacks specific 
provisions on many strategic security spheres,” he told reporters.

“Everyone can propose toasts,” said Gorgisian. “If you go to any wedding or 
birthday party you will hear as many toasts.”

Finance Minister Atom Janjughazian disagreed with the criticism, saying that 
the quality of such programs does not depend on the abundance or lack of 
socioeconomic figures. Parliament deputies representing My Step also defended 
the program.

One of those lawmakers, Nikolay Baghdasarian, said that the program does not 
have to be very specific. It should first and foremost present the government’s 
strategy of coping with various challenges facing Armenia, he said.

Gorgisian said that his party has not yet decided whether to vote against the 
program when it is debated by the National Assembly later this month. “That 
can’t be ruled out,” he said. “How else can you call on the government to sober 
up?”

The LHK controls 18 seats in the 132-member parliament, compared with 88 seats 
held by My Step. The remaining 26 seats are controlled by Gagik Tsarukian’s 
Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), which also claims to be in opposition to 
Pashinian’s government.

A senior BHK deputy, Naira Zohrabian said that the party’s parliamentary group 
has not yet discussed the government program and will therefore not comment on 
it for now.



Press Review



“Zhoghovurd” condemns as “disgusting” the behavior during a court hearing on 
Wednesday of members of the Sasna Tsrer armed group that seized a police 
station in Yerevan in 2016. “Having claimed three human lives during the 
seizure of the police base, the Sasna Tsrer members tried to present themselves 
as heroes and justify their deeds with their ‘right to revolt’ for the purpose 
of ‘saving the homeland’ and restoring the constitutional order,” reports the 
paper. It says that the members of the group set free following the “velvet 
revolution” still “do not realize the gravity of their actions or even try to 
show remorse.” On the contrary, it says, they are proud of their deadly attack 
on the Erebuni police facility.

Lragir.am says that the leadership of Kosovo is ready for a land swap with 
Serbia for the sake of its eventual membership in the European Union. 
“Coincidentally, almost the same statement has been made by the prime minister 
of Moldova,” writes the publication. “Kosovo, Serbia and Moldova are the most 
real candidates to join the EU in the near future. Territorial disputes are the 
biggest obstacles on that path and the statements by the prime ministers of 
Kosovo and Moldova mean that these countries are prepared to give up disputed 
territories for the sake of European integration.” The publication speculates 
that the West may also offer Azerbaijan to drop its claim to Nagorno-Karabakh 
in return for major benefits.

“Zhamanak” says that although Gagik Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) 
was driven out of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government in October some 
BHK members still hold government positions. “In particular, the BHK’s deputy 
chairman, Armen Arzumanian, is a deputy minister of communications, transport 
and information technology,” writes the paper. “Other BHK members work as 
deputy governors or hold other state posts. This raises a logical question: is 
the BHK is a semi-governing or semi-opposition force now?”

(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


Speaker of Armenian Parliament, Polish Ambassador discuss cooperation prospects

Speaker of Armenian Parliament, Polish Ambassador discuss cooperation prospects

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17:49, 7 February, 2019

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 7, ARMENPRESS. Speaker of Parliament Ararat Mirzoyan on February 7 received Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Poland to Armenia Pawel Cieplak, the Parliament told Armenpress.

Welcoming the guest Ararat Mirzoyan thanked the Marshal/Marszałek of the Sejm of the Republic of Poland Marek Kuchciński for the congratulation on his being elected as Speaker of the Armenian Parliament.

The Head of the legislative body has noted that the Armenian-Polish relations are based on the two friendly peoples’ firm ties, expressing conviction that due to joint efforts it will be possible to give new impetus to those relations.

Highlighting the inter-parliamentary cooperation the Speaker underlined the mutual visits and the active work and contacts of the Parliamentary Friendship Groups.

Ararat Mirzoyan has highly assessed the warm attitude shown through many centuries by the authorities of Poland towards the Polish-Armenians, noting with satisfaction that the Armenians with their work and devotion have considerable contribution in the most different spheres of life in Poland.

In his turn Pawel Cieplak emphasized the development of cooperation in all spheres, noting that in its expansion the inter-parliamentary ties and the effective contacts of the Friendship Groups can have an important role.

The Ambassador presented to the Head of the parliament the programs and events which had been pinpointed within the frameworks of the inter-parliamentary cooperation.

The officials exchanged thoughts over the perspectives and possibilities of deepening the cooperation in bilateral and multilateral formats.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan