CivilNet: Environment Ministry pledges to address Lake Sevan algal bloom

CIVILNET.AM

20 Jul, 2022 10:07

The Ministry of Environment pledged to address Lake Sevan’s ecosystem after releasing a statement explaining the causes behind a recent algal bloom in the lake.

A road construction company controlled by a senior Armenian government official won a government contract worth about $2.5 million, an Armenian investigative site reported.

The leaders of Iran, Russia, and Turkey discussed efforts to settle the Karabakh conflict at a major summit in Tehran aimed at resolving the conflict in Syria.

A team of U.S.-based lawyers submitted a report to the United Nations documenting alleged violations of an international racial discrimination treaty by Azerbaijan.

Source: Ruptly

Asbarez: U.S., EU Hail Armenian-Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers’ Meeting

Foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Ararat Mirzoyan (left) and Jeyhun Bayramov greet one another in Tbilisi on July 16


The United States and European Union hailed on Wednesday a meeting between the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun Bayramov, who met in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi.

While both Yerevan and Baku reported no significant progress in the talks, the European and American diplomatic establishments are viewing the meeting as “an important” step toward resolving the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict.

State Department spokesperson Ned Price claimed that the U.S. has been “taking an active role” in the process.

“We’ve consistently said that we are ready and stand ready to engage bilaterally and with likeminded partners, including through our role as an OSCE Minsk Group co-chair, to help the countries find a long-term, comprehensive peace,” Price said, adding that Secretary of State Antony Blinken had engaged his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts in recent weeks,

“Assistant Secretary Donfried, others in this building, have also had an opportunity to engage at high levels with their Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts as well,” said Price referring to U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Karen Donfried who reportedly called Mirzoyan and Bayramov and stressed the need for the continuation of the dialogue.

“We did welcome the meeting between the representatives. We continue to believe that dialogue is the best means by which to achieve a peaceful, democratic, and prosperous future for the South Caucasus region, and we’ll continue to support that in any way we can,” Price added.

Blinken hailed the Saturday talks saying, in a Tweeter post over the weekend that “direct dialogue is the surest path to resolving Azerbaijani and Armenian differences.”

A similar message was voiced by the European Union, whose representative for foreign affairs Josep Borrel welcomed the Mirzoyan-Bayramov talks on Saturday

“[we] Welcome the meeting between Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun Bayramov in Tbilisi. Important step towards the comprehensive solution. EU is fully engaged in support of peaceful, secure and prosperous South Caucasus. Normalization/Reconciliation can be achieved only in direct dialogue,” Borrell said in a Twitter post on Tuesday.tweeted.

According to Armenia’s foreign ministry, Mirzoyan reiterated Yerevan’s position that a political settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is essential within the process of achieving sustainable and lasting peace in the region and stressed the importance of using the institution and experience of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship in accordance to its international mandate.

He also reportedly highlighted the importance of addressing humanitarian issues, including the release and repatriation of the Armenian political prisoners and a clarification on the fates of missing persons.

It seems, however, there was a concrete agreement between Yerevan and Baku, because on Tuesday Armenia’s National Security chief Armen Grigoryan told Armenpress that Armenia will complete the withdrawal of all Armenian military personnel from Artsakh by September—an issue that, according to Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry, Bayramov emphasized during his meeting with Mirzoyan.

Secretary of Security Council of Armenia, EU Special Representative discuss implementation of the Brussels process

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 19:33,

YEREVAN, JULY 13, ARMENPRESS. On July 13, Secretary of Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan met with Toivo Klaar, the EU's Special Representative for the South Caucasus and Crisis in Georgia. Head of the EU Delegation to Armenia, Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin attended the meeting.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Security Council, during the meeting, the interlocutors discussed the Brussels process of the normalization of the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, as well as the implementation process of the agreements reached during the meetings.

Flyone Armenia’s Yerevan-Istanbul flight cancelled by decision of aircraft commander

 

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 12:49, 9 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 9, ARMENPRESS. Flyone Armenia airline’s Yerevan-Istanbul-Yerevan flight was cancelled on July 8 by the decision of the aircraft’s commander, Flyone Armenia Chairman of the Board Aram Ananyan said in a video statement on social media.

“Our aircraft commander, seeing certain differences in the data sensors of the aircraft, decided to suspend the flight. We think it is a right and substantiated decision. The aviation authorities of Armenia have been notified about what had happened, and the flight will take place after a few hours”, he said.

Aram Ananyan assured that the aviation safety of passengers is the airline’s non-negotiable priority, adding that they will do everything for it to remain so. He also apologized on behalf of the airline for this inconvenience. 

The Armenian airline Flyone Armenia is operating Yerevan-Istanbul-Yerevan flights since February 2, 2022.

Meta’s Multilingual Translation Machine Struggles with Armenian, Greek, Oromo, and Others: Here’s Why

TECH TIMES
July 7 2022

The owner of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, Meta Properties released a 190-page opus describing its latest efforts when it comes to machine translation. Although it was capable of translating 202 languages, there were a few of them that the translation machine really struggled on.

According to the story by ZDnet, the opes described how the state-of-the-art translation machine was able to learn different languages that were considered "low resource" languages. The opus described the company's latest effort in machine learning for languages with low resources.

The languages that were considered "low resource" were the following::02

  • West Central Oromo – spoken in the Oromia state of Ethiopia
  • Tamasheq – spoken by several parts of Northern Africa and even in Algeria

  • Waray – spoken by the Waray people of the Philippines

The report coming from Meta researchers was uploaded to Facebook's AI research website. The study also came with a blog to provide more thorough information to better understand what Meta is doing.

As written in their mission statement the "broadly accessible machine translation system" is capable of supporting around 130 languages while they aim to increase that number all the way up to 200.

As reported by ZDNet, Meta is still open-sourcing its data sets as well as neural network model code on GitHub. They are also offering a massive $200,000 award to those that decide to use their technology outside.

The company has also partnered with the owners of Wikipedia, the Wikimedia Foundation, in order to provide a much better translation of Wikipedia articles. ZDNet notes that Meta uses automated methods in order to compile a data set of different bilingual sentence pairs for all their target languages.

The sets included some interesting statistics including the fact that there are 1220 language pairs in total or about 2440 directions for training. The 2440 directions equal to over 18 billion total sentence pairs and the majority of the pairs actually have much fewer than a million sentences and are considered low-resource directions.

The authors reportedly use the data to be able to train the NLLB neural net as well as employ a particular hand-crafted data set of transactions that are expected to be built by human translators.

Read Also: Netflix Continues to Lose Subscribers with Shrinking Market Share! Amazon Prime Video 1% Behind?

The whole human element called the NLLB-SEED data set turns out to be quite important. As written "despite the considerably large size of publicly available training data, training on NLLB-Seed leads to markedly higher performance on average."

Meta is not the only one trying to chew on these gigantic data sets as Google scientists could also be unveiling something similar when it comes to multilingual effort. The research had low results when trying to study Greek, Armenian, Oromo, and other languages.

Displaced Artsakh Armenians say Armenian government ‘ignores’ their concerns

Panorama
Armenia – July 8 2022

Armenians displaced from their homes in Artsakh’s Hadrut and Shushi during the 2020 war accused the Armenian government of “ignoring” their concerns for two years at a protest in Yerevan on Friday.

“We have been in an uncertain situation for two years now,” a man displaced from Hadrut told reporters at the protest outside the UN Office in city center.

“We don't know what status we have. In fact, after all we have gone through we are refugees, we escaped from the genocide," he said.

The man says if the displaced Artsakh Armenians are granted refugee status, they will be able to return to their homes in case of the de-occupation of Shushi and Hadrut.

“Clause 6 of the November 9 statement stipulates the return of refugees and displaced persons to their places of residence,” he stressed.

The man claims the Armenian government has made no efforts to resolve their problems.

“No one in Armenia cares about our problems now. They say it’s for the Artsakh government to deal with them. The government of Armenia only provides financial support to the Artsakh government now, constantly talking about it. No other support is provided to us. But when it comes to the handover of settlements, the [Armenian] prime minster hold talks over it, not the Artsakh authorities,” the protester said.

Overshadowed by war in Ukraine, Armenia and Azerbaijan edge closer to a peace deal

June 30 2022



Armenia and Azerbaijan, two long-standing adversaries in the South Caucasus, are edging closer to a peace deal that could potentially alter regional geopolitics. The prospective reconciliation also coincides with a nascent rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey. Yet there are significant constraints too, in terms of both wider geopolitics and domestic Armenian politics, that could hinder the process.

 

Following the end of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, Armenia and Azerbaijan were locked in a cycle of occasional fighting along the border and intensive diplomatic negotiations to finally settle the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. Armenia’s position has been fluid and more reflective of the changed balance of power on the ground: Yerevan no longer held the initiative and was mostly dependent on Russia, while Azerbaijan was ascendant. This translated into a changed Armenian vision on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

The first tangible indication of this came in March 2022 when Baku unveiled a framework document that called for the mutual acknowledgement of the geographical integrity of Armenia and Azerbaijan; confirmation of the absence of territorial claims; border delimitation and demarcation; establishment of diplomatic relations; and the opening of transport communications. Armenia did not disagree with the proposal. The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, according to Ararat Mirzoyan, Armenia's minister of foreign affairs, is a matter of rights rather than a geographical dispute. This constituted a major change as since the end of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in the early 1990s, Armenia was against recognizing Azerbaijan's sovereignty. Yerevan is still likely to demand certain rights, such as the status of the Armenian language and perhaps the autonomy of Nagorno-Karabakh.

This change in perspective followed a change in language by the Armenian leadership that has been evident in recent months. In an interview in April, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan made a deliberate point to underline that Nagorno-Karabakh was part of Azerbaijan.

Concrete progress toward a peace treaty was made on May 22 when the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan met in Brussels to discuss the peace process. Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, served as the meeting's facilitator. After extensive negotiations, Armenia and Azerbaijan came to an agreement on transit routes, including the Zangezur corridor, whereby Azerbaijan would have direct road access to the exclave of Nakhchivan through southern Armenia, while Yerevan will have a railway link to Russia through Azerbaijan. This was confirmed by the latest leak by the Russian side that Baku and Yerevan are nearing an agreement on the corridor through Armenia. Another significant outcome of the Brussels summit was the process of delimitation and delineation of boundaries.

The Brussels summit also served as a historic high point for EU engagement in the South Caucasus. Since early 2022, the representatives of the two South Caucasian republics have met almost exclusively through EU mediation.

Despite the progress that has been made, a series of obstacles remain on the road to a peace treaty. First, the Armenian leadership’s change in tone has not been warmly received by Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, who vehemently backed the previous strategy of complete secession from Azerbaijan. Some Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians even went so far as to suggest joining Russia in mid-April, criticizing Yerevan's rhetoric and declaring that it would be impossible to live under Baku's rule.

Beyond the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenian leadership has also come under intense pressure from opposition forces. Former President Robert Kocharyan and his supporters have enough domestic resources to make it difficult for the Armenian leadership to move ahead with the new policy on Nagorno-Karabakh.

There is also the influential Armenian diaspora, which has organized protests calling for a boycott of the proposed agreement. This might result in reduced foreign financial and political support for Armenia from the U.S. and France, which would complicate the position of the Armenian government. Yet for the majority of the Armenian population it is becoming increasingly clear that the Armenian diaspora is disconnected from the realities on the ground. First off, compared to the diaspora, Armenians in Armenia do not harbor as much animosity toward Turkey.

Geopolitics presents yet another obstacle, namely the Russia factor. It is still far from clear what Russia is gaining from Armenia’s potential improvement of relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey. For decades Yerevan’s isolation served Moscow’s interests well. Armenia’s dependence on the Russian economy and military has allowed Moscow to retain its position in the South Caucasus unchallenged. The rapprochement, however, could slowly unravel the basis of Russian power. This has led many to express skepticism over Moscow’s intentions and desire to help Turkey, Armenia, and Azerbaijan end their historical enmity.

Nevertheless, despite wider geopolitical uncertainties and months-long street protests and occasional fighting in Yerevan, the threat to Pashinyan’s government is not existential. He seems confident that he can weather the storm since Armenia's previous leaders are frequently linked to the corrupt system that weakened its regional position and undermined it internally over the past two decades. There is an emerging agreement in Armenia that Pashinyan cannot be held completely responsible for the defeat in 2020; rather, the Republican Party's decades-long depravations are to blame.

There is also another, no less important reason. Near 40% of the Armenian population continues to support the PM, mostly because there is no realistic political alternative. Few in Armenia believe in better relations with Turkey and Azerbaijan (and the majority oppose abandoning Nagorno-Karabakh), but the economic and geopolitical rationales are undeniable. Along with the increased commerce with Turkey and a new route to European markets, reconciliation with their eastern neighbor would restore railway ties, effectively transforming Armenia from a traditionally isolated actor into an active player in the South Caucasus. Both Ankara and Yerevan already stated that they were ready to start diplomatic relations and reopen the long-closed land border.

Thus the thaw in ties between Armenia and Azerbaijan is closely related to the nascent rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey. It is still far from clear how long it will take to see a meaningful improvement in ties between Armenia and its neighbors, but the progress so far is significant enough to argue that continuity is likely.

 

Emil Avdaliani is a professor at European University in Tbilisi, Georgia and the Director of Middle East Studies at the Georgian think-tank, Geocase.

Photo by Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

MEI is an independent, non-partisan, non-for-profit, educational organization. It does not engage in advocacy and its scholars’ opinions are their own. MEI welcomes financial donations, but retains sole editorial control over its work and its publications reflect only the authors’ views. For a listing of MEI donors, please click here.

 

Artak Zeynalyan refuses to comment on audio scandal involving SJC head

Panorama
Armenia –

Armenia’s former Justice Minister Artak Zeynalyan, who has been nominated for a judge of the Administrative Chamber of the Court of Cassation, on Monday refused to comment on the scandalous audio recording involving the judicial watchdog head.

Ruben Vartazaryan, the dismissed SJC chairman, released last week a secretly recorded audio of his conversation with acting SJC head Gagik Jhangiryan, who can be heard warning Vartazaryan to resign or face criminal charges. The Investigative Committee is probing the audio scandal.

Opposition groups and activists have demanded Jhangiryan’s resignation and prosecution for illegal interference in the work of law-enforcement agencies.

“A legal process is underway and I, as a candidate for judgeship, cannot publically comment on it at this point,” Zeynalyan told reporters on Monday.

In response to the remark that he had not yet been elected to the post and could express his position, Zeynalyan stated that the rules of judicial ethics also apply to candidates.

He promised to act in full compliance with the law if elected.

Diplomat: It is pointless to talk about the security guarantees of the Artsakh people in the absence of the status of Artsakh

ARMINFO
Armenia – June 23 2022
David Stepanyan

ArmInfo. Against the backdrop of Baku's desire to force to renounce any status of Artsakh, dilute it with the rest of Azerbaijan, holding Artsakh people as hostages,  Armenian interests in this matter have not even been formulated yet.  Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, former Foreign Minister  of Artsakh Arman Melikyan expressed a similar opinion to ArmInfo.

"And the fact that before the 44-day war these interests were  expressed in the maintenance of the status quo, the preservation of  which was guaranteed by external, and not by our own forces, is the  biggest problem of the Armenian statehood. Having a formal toolkit  for conducting foreign policy, our state has all these years did not  even try to form an alternative agenda, although such ideas were  proposed. As a result, today the restoration of sovereignty requires  a lot of consistent work," he said.

In the opinion of the diplomat, in today's realities, this work, the  search for ways to outline the most important problems and ways to  solve them, should be carried out outside the state and political  institutions by a professional team. While, unfortunately, the expert  and analytical circles in Armenia are busy serving either the  interests of the authorities or the interests of external forces, but  certainly not the interests of Armenia. Moreover, in both cases this  is done by analytical justification of already committed, rather than  predicted actions.

Meanwhile, according to Melikyan, it is pointless to talk about the  security guarantees of the people of Artsakh if Artsakh does not have  a status. While in the current situation, Baku not only does not  intend to do this at all, but also claims that even the NKAO does not  exist, referring to the decision to disband it, taken back in the  early 1990s. While according to Melikyan, Artsakh should have a  status in any case. Just like ithad it, starting with the formation  of the USSR. In this light, it is impossible to consider Artsakh as a  part of sovereign Azerbaijan under any circumstances.  "Another  important problem is Baku's attempts to draw parallels between the  rights of Artsakh people and, for example, Azerbaijanis who  previously lived in Syunik. One should never confuse the issue of  human rights with the right of a particular territory to have state  status. Meanwhile, unlike the Azerbaijanis living in Armenia earlier,  the Artsakh Armenians had this right yesterday and still have it  today. And Armenia abandoned its natural mission of protecting the  rights of more than half a million Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan,  and thus provided Baku with the opportunity today to express its  readiness to protect the rights of all Armenians in Azerbaijan  without granting the status to Artsakh," the diplomat summed up.

Sports: FIFA’s Infantino reaffirms determination to contribute to the prosperity of football in Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia –

FIFA President Gianni Infantio has reaffirmed determination to promoting the prosperity of football in Armenia.

In a letter to the President of the Football Federation of Armenia Armen Melikbekyan, Infantino expressed gratitude for the cordial welcome and warm hospitality during a recent visit to Armenia. He thanked for making their stay “so special on the occasion of our visit to Armenia last Wednesday, for the FFA 30th Anniversary’s celebrations.”

“First of all, please allow me to reiterate my heartfelt congratulations on this historic milestone and pay tribute to all those who keep our sport alive and ensure its prosperity in Armenia, and to all those who have contributed and continue to contribute to this invaluable legacy,,” the FIFA President said.

“During our visit, we have shared important moments. The audience with H.E. Nikol Pashinyan, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia, the exciting match at Tsovagyugh Village, and the memorable FFA 30th Anniversary Gala dinner were certainly some of the highlights. All these moments shared together offered us the opportunity to exchange our ideas and vision of football and to express FIFA’s support for the development of football in your country. No doubt that the mini-fields project will greatly contribute to it,” he added.

He assured that “this visit has reinforced our determination to work together for the prosperity of football and the community in Armenia, and you can always count on FIFA’s support for this.”