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60% of Armenia’s Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum Combine to pass under Russia-registered company control

News.am, Armenia
Dec 28 2021

About 60 percent of the Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum Combine will pass under the control of an industrial company registered in Russia. Chairman of the Competition Protection Commission (CPC) of Armenia, Gegham Gevorgyan, told this to a press conference Tuesday, summing up the results of the passing year.

"This year this was the biggest [business] deal in the sector of extraction of useful minerals," Gevorgyan added.

He noted that another such huge business deal was made in Armenia in telecommunications.

"The Rostelecom shares were acquired by Electric Networks of Armenia company, as well as by individuals," the CPC chairman informed.

Armenian aviation regulator grants permit to Flyone Armenia to operate Yerevan-Istanbul flights

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 17:33,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. Armenian aviation authorities have issued a permit to Flyone Armenia airline to operate charter flights in the Yerevan-Istanbul-Yerevan route.

“Flyone Armenia had recently applied to the aviation authorities of both Armenia and Turkey with the request to operate charter roundtrip flights from Yerevan to Istanbul. We are thankful to the Armenian aviation authorities for the approval,” Flyone Armenia President of the Board Aram Ananyan told ARMENPRESS when asked to comment.

Asked when the flights will be launched, Ananyan said they are awaiting the permit from the Turkish aviation authorities.

Earlier on December 16, the Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said that Ankara is considering bids from both Turkish and Armenian airlines for operating flights between Istanbul and Yerevan. Then, the Turkish authorities said that the Turkish Pegasus airline will operate the flights.

Muratsan University Hospital replenished with new equipment thanks to 100 mln AMD financial support from Karen Vardanyan

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 13:07, 21 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21, ARMENPRESS. “Muratsan” University Hospital has been equipped with the modern medical equipment: mobile X-ray machine, neonatal therapeutic hypothermia and artificial respiratory devices, neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), infant radiant warmer, electroencephalography monitoring system.

To enable the high level care and treatment of newborns in the pediatric intensive care unit of the hospital, benefactor Karen Vardanyan donated new 11 Japanese and European modern life-saving medical equipment.

The total budget of the program is 100 million drams.

[see video]

Newspaper: Another bonus pay distributed in Armenia parliament

News.am, Armenia
Dec 22 2021

YEREVAN. – Hraparak daily of the Republic of Armenia writes: Although back in October the NA opposition "Armenia" Faction petitioned to the Constitutional Court on the issue of bonuses, the NA leadership continues to distribute bonuses.

Yesterday the NA president Alen Simonyan signed another order, according to which he has decided to "encourage the NA MPs, the civil servants and employees of the NA staff with a one-time monetary award, according to the appendices."

By the way, according to the custom, the appendices are not put in the order, and the amount [of the bonuses] is unknown.

Several opposition MPs informed us yesterday that they had not received a bonus.

Let us recall that the [aforesaid] petition of the "Armenia" Faction completely disputes the system of awarding state political officials (RA president, prime minister, deputy prime ministers, ministers, deputy ministers, MPs).


Asbarez: AEF Awards $1 Million in Scholarships to Students in Armenia, Artsakh, and Javakhk

AEF scholarship recipientsThis year, the Armenian Educational Foundation awarded $1 million in scholarships to over 1,000 students. The majority of scholarships were awarded to students attending public universities in Armenia, including 185 Artsakh war veterans.

Scholarships were also awarded to students at the French University and American University of Armenia, as well as students from Javakhk attending universities in Tbilisi. Additionally, AEF provided scholarship recipients with laptops to help with their studies.

AEF’s Yerevan office received over 1,700 qualified scholarship applications. Scholarship recipients are selected based on a mathematical model, which ranks students based on various criteria, such as their socioeconomic status, factors such as single parent households, multi-children families, students from outside Yerevan (villages), parents’ participation in Artsakh war, as well as accomplishments in the areas of academics, leadership, community, and military service.

Upon completing the selection process, AEF wire-transfers each student’s full tuition directly to the university. This year, the top 600 candidates were interviewed over a two-week period.

The success of AEF’s scholarship program is dependent on the generosity of over 150 benefactors, with support ranging anywhere from one student up to 30 students each year.

Hagop Koujakian, a major scholarship sponsor and San Francisco resident, wrote, “Three years ago, my wife Sonia and I made a commitment to sponsor 10 student scholarships through AEF. We did this in memory of our parents Abraham and Verjine Koujakian. Since then we have come to connect with each student via Facebook, video, emails and letters. The connection has been very emotional and uplifting for us. We hope to travel to Armenia in 2022 and meet and greet our students face-to-face. In the meantime, Sonia and I will increase our commitment to sponsoring an additional 20 students starting 2021-22 academic year and on. A total of 30 students per year.”

Scholarship recipients write thank you letters to their sponsors every year. Furthermore, AEF encourages and facilitates scholarship sponsors to meet their sponsored student when visiting Armenia.

“It was such a pleasure for us to finally meet our AEF students in Yerevan,” said Dr. Katherine Panossian, a sponsor of five student scholarships. “Their warm smiles and expressions of sincere gratitude truly made our trip to Armenia even more special. We were proud to learn about each of their academic accomplishments and how their individual areas of study have impacted their lives. Meeting the students makes us proud to be Armenian and gives us tremendous hope for a bright future for our homeland.”

AEF scholarship recipients are required to volunteer and engage in community service, and in doing so have helped those most in need, by serving at orphanages, tutoring students, and assisting the elderly and disadvantaged families. Just last year, AEF students successfully delivered food and supplies to 1,800 vulnerable families in various cities and villages in Armenia.

The AEF is grateful to all scholarship sponsors who donate $1,000 per year to pay the full tuition for each student. The achievements of AEF’s scholarship recipients are a testament to the hard work and efforts of the Armenian Scholarship Committee members, who volunteer their time to ensure a fair and objective selection process.

The Armenian Educational Foundation is a non-profit organization, established in 1950, with the aim to render financial assistance to Armenian educational institutions, and to provide financial assistance to students of Armenian parentage.

For information on AEF or to become a scholarship sponsor, please visit the website.

Armenpress: Armenia’s Security Council Secretary meets Atlantic Council’s expert community representatives in US

Armenia’s Security Council Secretary meets Atlantic Council’s expert community representatives in US

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 10:05, 17 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan met with the representatives of the expert community of the Atlantic Council during his visit in the United States, his Office reports.

During the meeting Armen Grigoryan presented Armenia’s approaches to the unblocking of the region.

In a Q&A format, a wide range of issues, including the development processes of democratic institutions, Armenia’s foreign policy priorities and the fight against climate change were discussed.

Launching an Interactive Multimedia Virtual Exhibition:“From Kumayri to Gyumri”

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 16:08, 17 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. AGBU Armenian Virtual College (AVC) and the Smithsonian Institution “My Armenia” Program, in collaboration with the City Research Center (Gyumri), introduced the first interactive multimedia virtual exhibition “From Kumayri to Gyumri”. The public launch took place online on December 15. This unique project was made possible thanks to the support of USAID and Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU).

 

The virtual exhibition presented as an e-book (e-Guide) features the most renown historical and cultural landmarks of Gyumri. It also introduces highly interactive 3-D and Virtual Reality maps, with dynamic analysis and nearby resource searching capabilities, rich visual content, and multilingual audio-listening options, for individuals virtually exploring Gyumri or supplementing their in-person visit. The e-Guide can be accessed at https://avc-agbu.org/kumayri.

“This exciting project creates new opportunities in terms of expanding awareness and access to the historical and cultural heritage of Gyumri, one of Armenia’s cultural hotspots,” saidAstghikMarabyan, Head of the Department of Cultural Heritage and Folk Arts at the RA Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport.

Jeff Paretchan, Acting Office Director of USAID Armenia, referred to the project as “another example of a positive power of partnership,” adding “I remember many collaborations with AGBU, one of which was the e-book focusing on cultural and historical attractions of VayotsDzor.”

In her welcoming remarks, AGBU Central Board Member and head of public relations, Arda Haratunian, indicated that “AGBU has four core pillars, which are culture, education, humanitarian, and socio-economic development, and showcasing the cultural heritage of Gyumri here fits beautifully into two of those pillars, culture and economic development, through tourism,” she also added “AVC has been a pioneer in technological innovation in Armenian virtual education. This new e-book is another proof of that.”

Sisak Mkhitaryan, Chief of Party at My Armenia Program, indicated “This virtual exhibition will be a driving force to develop the local and international tourism in Gyumri. We are deeply appreciative of the teamwork that helped bring this to life.”

“It has been wonderful to see this project come to life,” mentioned Lauren Appelbaum from the Office of International Relations at Smithsonian Institution during her closing remarks. She also added, “we have helped to create lasting material that can celebrate and share Armenia’s rich cultural heritage.”

Among the many distinguished speakers were Lilit Tovmasyan, Head of Cultural Department of Gyumri Municipality, Ashot Mirzoyan, Founding Director of Gyumri City Research Center, Liz Tunick, Office of International Relations at the Smithsonian Institution, and Dr. Richard Kurin, Acting Director of the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, who also spoke about the importance of this project for the preservation of cultural and historical heritage, and the promotion of Gyumri as a tourism destination to local and international communities through innovative technologies.

During his immersive demonstration, the AGBU AVC Founding President & AGBU Central Board Member, Dr. Yervant Zorian, classified the new e-book as a successful continuation of the AVC Multimedia e-Book Series. “This time, it is in a beautiful story-map format with interactive multimedia content. AVC leveraged state-of-the-art innovative technological approaches and tools to virtualize the beautiful heritage of Gyumri.”

 

The current version of the e-Guide includes twelve landmarks situated in the historical Kumayri district of the city. More informative content and multilingual representation will be added over time to better present the rich historical and architectural heritage of Armenia’s cultural capital.

 

This virtual exhibition is part of AVC’s Multimedia e-Book Series developed in multiple languages and available for free download on smartphones, tablets, and PCs.

Azerbaijani press: OSCE Minsk Group facing crisis of confidence

By Orkhan Amashov

The Second Karabakh War sent a near-death blow to the beleaguered OSCE Minsk Group. Neither the trilateral ceasefire agreement that ended the hostilities nor subsequent documents signed within the same format, mentioned the organisation in question in any way, whether in a perfunctory or pro forma manner. But what would have been a coup de grace has yet not been delivered. Its ultimate fate remains unsealed. 

The OSCE Minsk Group is, technically, alive. It reminded us of its existence throughout the war by making "peace-seeking" statements, which, as the old saying goes, were not worth the paper on which they were written. 

Its co-chairs, despite not being formally invited by Baku, were received by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev after the end of the hostilities. The OSCE Minsk Group found it important to declare to the larger world, through its 13 April statement, that it retained the OSCE mandate to mediate and called for a "comprehensive and sustainable settlement on the basis of the elements and principles well-known to the sides". The declaration, perhaps inadvertently, demonstrated the organisation's inability to offer anything apart from vaguely worded proposals based on "normative ambiguity".

There have been some meetings arranged under its auspices since the end of last year's war. For instance, in late September, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov met the co-chairs and his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan on the sidelines of the 76th session of the UN General Assembly. Another OSCE-arranged meeting of foreign ministers, scheduled for December 4, did not take place, due to Baku's last-minute change of mind caused by the illegal visit of Armenian MPs to Karabakh. 

With Russia as Yerevan's closest ally and the U.S. as the home of the largest Armenian diaspora in the world, the evenhandedness of the co-chair countries has been doubtful from the very outset. The inclusion of France did not help either. The latter was instrumental in replacing the term "the armed forces of Armenia" with "local Armenian forces" in the four UN Security Council resolutions passed against the occupation in 1993, which meant that the conflict would be considered not under the Chapter VII of the UN Charter as an act of aggression, but under the Chapter VI as a dispute that should be settled peacefully. 

The perfidy lying at the heart of the French view of the conflict from its inception manifested itself throughout the years of fruitless negotiations and perhaps culminated in the fatal words of President Macron to the effect that, in the dramatic context that emerged after last year's war, France sided with Armenia.

The impact of the consequences of the Second Karabakh War on the OSCE Minsk Group is massive. The November 10 ceasefire statement was the result of a military solution, whereas the process under the OSCE's mandate was predicated on peace negotiations. Azerbaijan, by using its right to defend its sovereign territory under Article 51 of the UN Charter, compelled Armenia, through the application of military force, to withdraw from the occupied territories. This was also perfectly in line with the logic of the four UN Security Council resolutions, in which the Armenian military presence was referred to as "occupation". Therefore, by behaving strictly in conformity with international law, Azerbaijan achieved a military solution to the protracted conflict, which was completely beyond the comprehension of the OSCE Minsk Group's logic. 

It is true that Azerbaijan's victory in the 44-day war led to the crisis of relevance that the OSCE Minsk Group is currently facing. But Baku's recourse to military means was the result of the meaninglessness of the peace process, which became particularly obvious when the new Armenian government, led by Nikol Pashinyan, explicitly repudiated the Madrid Principles, insisting on the inclusion of the unrecognised illegal Armenian regime as a party to the negotiations, without the participation of Azerbaijani citizens. This, coupled with Pashinyan's cheap populism, which manifested itself in ill-thought public utterances, effectively meant a renunciation of the OSCE mediation by Yerevan. 

Russia, which has been an inescapable actor in the Azerbaijani-Armenian negotiations, is very comfortable with its central mediator role in the trilateral format, and thus not interested in the revival of the OSCE Minsk Group, which the US and France view as an instrument to re-establish themselves within the process. While the Kremlin upgraded its role in relation to the conflict from 2010 onwards, Washington and Paris did the reverse, they retrenched. Even if the two Western powers manage to recoup some of their influence, which may be possible to a certain extent for the U.S, and very unlikely in the case of France, it is not probable that the OSCE Minsk Group will evolve into an effective tool in their hands.

The OSCE Minsk Group was not a shining example of success throughout its almost 30-year existence, yet it behoves a fair-minded observer to acknowledge that, between 1997-2007, the period which perhaps was the heyday of the organisation, the co-chairs managed to put forward a couple of proposals, which were not entirely worthless.

But, if to consider a larger picture, the Minsk Group has outlived its unfulfilled purpose and thus is devoid of any meaningful reason to exist. It is an embodiment of creative inertia and a textbook example of how to spend a lot of resources on achieving nothing. Here is a candid quote from Richard Hoagland, who was an American co-chair of the Minsk Group in the past: “We stayed in five-star hotels where we were usually assigned suites on the executive floor that gave us access to a private dining room and full bar at no additional expense. We always sought out the best restaurants in the cities where we found ourselves. We lived well while we showed the OSCE flag and reminded Baku and Yerevan that the Minsk Group exists. But to be blunt, very, very little ever got accomplished.”

At present, the OSCE Minsk Group is experiencing what one may call, without any degree of exaggeration, an existential crisis, as it has been left with miniscule raison d'etre. It is now bankrupt and dead. Its terms of reference are archaic. To date, there have been very little signs suggesting that the co-chairs have come to terms with the new post-war reality. Their statements have been indicative of the urge to remain relevant.

It remains to be seen if the OSCE Minsk Group will manage to conclusively readjust itself through reform and the renewal of purpose, and consequently play any substantial part in post-conflict resolution. Yet what happens to be more or less certain is that its future role is not going to be anywhere near to what it had been prior to last year's war.

Turkish press: Russia to host 1st meeting of 6-member South Caucasus platform

An elderly man walks past destroyed buildings during the ongoing fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region's main city of Stepanakert (Khankendi), Oct. 6, 2020. (AFP File Photo)

The first meeting of the 3+3 platform to ensure permanent peace and stability in the South Caucasus region suggested by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev will take place in Moscow on Friday, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry said Thursday.

Delegations from Turkey, Azerbaijan, Russia, Iran and Armenia will attend the meeting of the platform, established to enhance regional cooperation in the South Caucasus.

Deputy Foreign Minister Sedat Önal will lead the Turkish delegation at the meeting, the ministry said.

The ministry statement did not elaborate on the details of Georgian delegation at the meeting.

Last year, Erdoğan talked about the idea of the six-country regional cooperation platform including Russia, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iran, Georgia and Armenia during his visit to Azerbaijan where he attended the ceremony of the Victory Parade in the capital Baku upon invitation of Aliyev.

Turkey believes that permanent peace is possible through mutual security-based cooperation among the states and people of the South Caucasus region.

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

When new clashes erupted on Sept. 27 last year, the Armenian Army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces, violating several humanitarian cease-fire agreements during the subsequent clashes.

During the 44-day conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages.

On Nov. 10, 2020, the two countries signed a Russia-brokered agreement to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.

The cease-fire is seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia, whose armed forces withdrew in line with the agreement.

Diversity in results underscored competitive nature of local elections in Armenia – US Embassy

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 12:22, 7 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. The Embassy of the United States in Armenia issued a statement on the 2021 local elections in the country.

The Embassy highly appreciated the Armenian people’s participation in the elections held on October 17, November 14 and December 5, as well as their continued commitment to Armenia’s democratic trajectory.

“A small number of Embassy staff observed the elections in a visitor capacity. We were pleased to see the elections were generally calm, peaceful, and well-administered. The diversity in results underscored the competitive nature of the elections, the vibrancy of Armenia’s democracy, and the significant progress Armenia has achieved over the years. We also note reports of pressure against opposition candidates and encourage authorities to investigate credible allegations of abuse. As we work to perfect our own democracy, we welcome Armenia’s commitment to its democratic reform agenda and look forward to strengthening our bilateral ties based on shared democratic values”, the statement says.