Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 04-08-20

Save

Share

 17:28, 4 August, 2020

YEREVAN, 4 AUGUST, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 4 August, USD exchange rate down by 0.17 drams to 485.66 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 2.23 drams to 572.79 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.02 drams to 6.59 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.60 drams to 634.22 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 109.89 drams to 30581.45 drams. Silver price вup by 2.37 drams to 378.34 drams. Platinum price вup by 57.51 drams to 14193.43 drams.

We have deaths every day due to gross failings by the authorities – Vanetsyan

Panorama, Armenia
July 31 2020

The new office of Homeland party and Development Foundation was inaugurated in Artashat town on Friday. The Head of the Party Artur Vanetsyan cut the red ribbon, after which a meeting with supporters and party members was held.

Vanetsyan delivered remarks during the meeting, noting that over the short period of time the Foundation has delivered efficient results through financing different projects and initiatives that brought tangible results.

Reflecting on the ongoing situation in Armenia, Vanetsyan pointed out to the grave situation in the county, insisting the authorities have failed in all directions due to the lack of effective governance.

“I can state that due to gross failings people die every day. The news about new deaths has become a daily routine for the public which is a consequence of the mistakes by the authorities and their lack of understanding of the seriousness of the situation,” Vanetsyan stressed, adding more negative consequences will come up in the economic sphere.

“We may face an economic collapse soon and a serious downfall that would have implications on the social condition of each of us. Our party has always emphasized that a citizen in Armenia should live well, yet we see a serous decline because of the incompetent and incapable leadership,” Vanetsyan aid.

Speaking of the recent escalation on the Armenian-Azerbaijan border, Vanetsyan pointed to the professionalism and courage of the Armenian Armed Forces. “Glory to the RA Armed Forces that were able to prevent the unbridled provocations of the adversary on the Armenian-Azerbaijani state border,” said the Leader of Homeland party.

Former Director of National Security Service Artur Vanetsyan being questioned at NSS

Save

Share

 10:16, 31 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 31, ARMENPRESS. Former Director of the National Security Service of Armenia, president of the Fatherland party Artur Vanetsyan has been invited to the NSS for questioning.

On July 30 member of the Fatherland party Arsen Babayan has posted the photo of the NSS notification sheet which said that the NSS Investigation Department is preparing materials over the case of an appointment in the NSS with the violation of the requirements of the Law on National Security Bodies.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Art: French-Armenian sculptor Toros Rastkelenian dies

News.am, Armenia
French-Armenian sculptor Toros Rastkelenian dies French-Armenian sculptor Toros Rastkelenian dies

18:04, 29.07.2020
                  

French-Armenian sculptor Toros Rastkelenian, a recipient of the Movses Khorenatsi Medal of Armenia and of the Order of the French Legion of Honor—and known to the general public as Toros Rast-Klan—has passed away. French-Armenian journalist Krikor Amirzayan wrote about this on his official Facebook page.

Rastkelenian was born in 1934 in Aleppo, Syria.

His sculptures related to the Armenian Genocide are installed in various French cities.

Toros Rastkelenian was devoted to justice and freedom, which was expressed in his sculptures.

The sculptor had arrived in Armenia in 2015. On the occasion of the 24th anniversary of Armenia's independence, he had donated a sculpture of Komitas to the Komitas Museum-Institute.

https://news.am/eng/news/594127.html?__cf_chl_jschl_tk__=23e14d9d87ebf9458701191c4da009ff70350b56-1596051198-0-Aadw8bAQdAJPZD65VzRO8Uj356bDJE1JkV9LU_LLkx-WnYkCSP1AYx_yruAZFoLH4QRKr6LCJn_BUY3mrOAlPa7l5-yG9k6O5aRajxgxAz0efiSzqfT199t0qXMp7WcJQ72jDLicqTU3NhT6ykA6XH5tr52e5ZGdqfJ9mjGy5A9cHIHKIGZGZexzTkG9a8-jO-WmQVG3d0U1yk2vuHMrSfo-OAxNSZD90z2ZtnonlqgIaRoY5pl5nz8WCN3HlbOIgQffGb8SM8OSF8Nfg_X_K-f4LgQZF_KImUbvskMJl4SyvOA-XKX9Vl9mD0j7CNDX9p8ff_jaGOEbnPwBOQyp9qUzAIUD7xjYrx5L5XwdJibM

Armenia Central Bank keeps refinancing rate unchanged

Save

Share

 12:07,

YEREVAN, JULY 28, ARMENPRESS. The Board of the Central Bank of Armenia made a decision during today’s session to keep the refinancing rate unchanged, setting it at 4.5%, the CBA told Armenpress.

“The lombard repo rate provided by the Central Bank has been set at 6.0%, the interest rate of funds attracted from banks by the CBA has been set at 3.0%”, the statement says.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia PM wife’s spokesperson: We will not publish any data due to safety of those Azerbaijani women

News.am, Armenia

17:04, 28.07.2020
                  

https://news.am/eng/news/593901.html?__cf_chl_jschl_tk__=e766884b8cb247456aa84dcceb95e736ffb087ac-1595968510-0-AW870ZP2k-nnQqvJIT-FjRQIR_wlM6eG1VzddMYSd8zs2ERTpHlNrWeNacdPzE_lGFkXyMJiHDPTE5r31NN5kHJSJYjJmEG7cNKndCCC_HHq2DV_1KxfnR5q1FygZuxW9DW84zDySYFZ3uA0CxZCcnjZNTFXAqPjNgUBI3ECXUUHt1SS7PsG3z11iKhe71IUKwIC55zb9JcQMXtkWUa4pOeb6OwuALnEQfrpDW9iozX-Lld0mZLyvou125DC_CiYi3dQYK32Q9mmGfbOhwZUuAUe3UP9G6yiHDrN7buNlieI-34THUvgiFHwUZEt1j0teTizwbJqWUprnKa-fa3RGpUrJke24EpxVaNjBRKRWU2V

“There will be no big war between Armenia and Azerbaijan — no one needs it”

Realnoe Vremya, Russia

Aleksey Malashenko about the next escalation in Transcaucasia, Erdogan's ambitiousness and the fundamental unsolvability of the Karabakh issue


Source : 

In July, the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan have again deteriorated — this time not in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, but on the border, where four Armenian and 12 Azerbaijani soldiers (including the general of the army) were killed in clashes involving drones and artillery fire. The reasons for the conflict in July 2020 are still unclear: Azerbaijani soldiers are reported to have “accidentally entered” the territory of Armenia, and although the border between the Tavush region of Armenia and the Tovuz region of Azerbaijan is now a little quieter, there are still skirmishes in this area. Orientalist Aleksey Malashenko told Realnoe Vremya about how events are going to develop.

Mr Malashenko, can the current clashes on the border of Armenia and Azerbaijan be called “normal” or has the picture become more complicated this time?

No, in general, this is an absolutely standard situation that we have seen in this region since 1991. The conflict continues, although various solutions have been proposed over the years. And it will continue for the next generations because it is unsolvable, eternal.

What surprised me about today's events on the border of Armenia and Azerbaijan is the activity of the Turks, who sent six attacking drones to Azerbaijan. In this way, the Turks remind us that they support Azerbaijan, and in addition, they show that they can become an important factor in this conflict. The activity of the Turks has also been mentioned before, but it did not come to the point, and now, given how Turkey is acting in Syria and Libya, this may create problems in the region. Of course, this can't lead to any big war, but there is a lot of talk about Turkish activity in the Azerbaijani direction.

The thing is that Europe is de facto for the Armenians, and the Turks are for the Azerbaijanis. Of course, no one will recognise this, and everyone will say that the conflict needs to be resolved diplomatically, but everyone understands perfectly well that no diplomatic route can solve this problem. The problem of the conflict between the two countries, as I said, is eternal, and historical circumstances play an important role here. They have been talking about Karabakh for a very long time: I once spoke with academician Ziya Buniyatov, who brought me books and proved that Karabakh is the land of Azerbaijan, and then my Armenian colleagues showed me numerous materials that this territory has been Armenian since the middle ages. And I conclude that such problems cannot be solved.

Photo: Armenian Defense Ministry Press Service / PanPhoto / AP

Yes, there has been a conflict again and three tanks of the Azerbaijani army were shot down, soldiers and the Azerbaijani General were killed, and the sides seem to be talking about peace, but again they blame each other, but this will continue

The Karabakh problem is often compared to the Yugoslav problem, the split of the Sudan, or something else, but in those cases everything was obvious in terms of solving the problem, but here it is not. The independence of Karabakh is impossible for Azerbaijanis, the entry of Karabakh into Azerbaijan on any special conditions is also impossible, and the entry of Karabakh into Armenia is also not politically necessary for anyone — neither for Karabakh itself, nor for the Armenians. Besides, we should not forget that a million refugees affect the atmosphere in Armenia, and only recently people from Karabakh were in power in this country. So the situation is very complex, and no one is interested in solving it.

Nevertheless, to put it cynically, the interested party is Russia. It is very difficult for our country in this region, since Russian weapons are being supplied to both Armenia and Azerbaijan, but it is present as a mediator and an important factor in the negotiations. But I do not see people in the Russian elite who would offer any compromise on this issue. So everything will remain as it is. Yes, there has been a conflict again and three tanks of the Azerbaijani army were shot down, soldiers and the Azerbaijani General were killed, and the sides seem to be talking about peace, but again they blame each other, but this will continue. And there will never be a big war. They won't let it in because no one wants it.

Has there been any serious aspect of the active conflict over 30 years? Maybe chauvinism, rabid nationalism has gone?

Of course, the nationalism that was in the late 1980s and 1990s is no longer there. First, the nationalist line is fading, albeit slowly. Second, both Baku and Yerevan are already getting used to this conflict. And third, there is fatigue from it, and here it causes irritation in both states, and it is enough for some minimal pretext to resume everything in this conflict. This problem will last for generations. Yes, it's been 30 years, but I think it will take another 50-60 years for people in Armenia and Azerbaijan to get the following into their heads: yes, all this is wrong, bad, but it can't be changed, so the situation with Karabakh should only be a background.

But here's something else to pay attention to. After 1945, we got used to the idea that borders, like the bipolar world, are eternal, but it turned out that there is no such eternity. There is no Soviet Union, there is no Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Sudan, there are Transnistria, Abkhazia, Crimea as part of Russia. The borders change, so the Azerbaijanis still have “what if Karabakh returns?" in their subconscious, while the Armenians have the opposite. And this is part not only of political psychology but also of personal psychology. There is the concept such as “historical memory”. Is it a myth or not? Academician Valery Tishkov believes that this is a myth, it is not serious, but it is also a memory. Look at how it is always present in politics. One time we celebrate the anniversary of the Battle of Kulikovo, then many people are obsessed with the Great Patriotic War. And all this affects the psychology, which means that such things quite contribute to the perpetuation of the conflict around Karabakh. We shouldn't also forget that relations between the Armenian and Azerbaijani ethnic groups have always been tense. Therefore, a large set of factors prevents the conflict from being resolved.

Photo: facebook.com/poghosyan.vahram

The borders change, so the Azerbaijanis still have “what if Karabakh returns?" in their subconscious, while the Armenians have the opposite. And this is part not only of political psychology but also of personal psychology

I personally do not blame anyone for this conflict. Why? Let's take another example — Georgia and Abkhazia. Abkhazia under the Soviet regime always wanted to be part of the RSFSR, and I saw with my own eyes how anti-Georgian demonstrations took place in Sukhumi, and this under the Communists! Therefore, the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan will continue. Yes, they are killing people, but nothing will change in the coming decades: there were negotiations and agreements in Bishkek in 1994, then there were Minsk and Madrid, since 1999 the presidents of the two countries have been meeting with each other, the American side took part in the negotiations, not to mention Moscow — and what? There is no movement, and it is impossible. Well, in 1994 in Bishkek, the parties agreed that, they say, we were not at war, but you saw what happened at the border.

If people in both countries will live better, wealthier, it will probably contribute to a peaceful attitude to the problem?

Azerbaijan is a rich country because it has oil, gas, and a lot of money, and people live very well there, if we compare their lives with those of other countries from the former Soviet space. Against this background, Armenia is poor, of course, but has the growing rich Azerbaijan become calmer towards Karabakh? No. Moreover, in Azerbaijan back in the 1990s, it was believed that Armenians were good soldiers, but Azerbaijanis are worse, but now Azerbaijan has a great army with good weapons. Yes, Armenia is a member of the CSTO — so what? By the way, about the CSTO. Armenia believes that if it is attacked, the CSTO should unite against Azerbaijan. Is it possible? Of course not.

At the beginning of the conversation, you mentioned the inclusion of Turkey in this conflict. What does its activity indicate?

First of all, of course, it is the ambitions of Recep Tayyip Erdogan. But don't forget how much the Turks “love” the Armenians, and how much the Armenians “love” the Turks. Besides, there is also pan-Turkist solidarity, and this is to Erdogan's advantage — he can't abandon the fraternal Turkic country, especially if Azerbaijan complains that it was attacked by Armenians. This is advantageous for Erdogan, it is an additional opportunity to show that Turkey acts correctly in the Middle East because pan-Turkist solidarity exists, and the fact that he sent drones to Azerbaijan is normal for him. Note that the tanks of the Azerbaijani army were destroyed by drones! Besides, the Turks sent two multiple rocket launchers to Azerbaijan, and multiple rocket launchers are very serious, as we know from some experience.

So it turns out that Erdogan's position in Syria and Libya as an international player is strong?

Surely, it's strong. Erdogan is terribly ambitious, and ambitious in a number of ways: he is certainly one of the Muslim leaders, in addition, he is the head of the state that, in his opinion, looks no lower than Europe — Erdogan behaves on an equal footing with us, with the Americans. If he has interests in Libya, Syria and Africa, will he abandon the Turks in other parts of the world? But the main thing is precisely Erdogan's ambitiousness. Look at his biography, look at how he has developed up as a politician, and he developed thanks to Islam.

Photo: tccb.gov.tr

Erdogan shows flexibility most often, and he is not a stupid person in this regard. Yes, he is cruel and ambitious, but he knows to what point it is possible to come

Is it impossible to weaken Erdogan?

So far, it turns out that he is playing on equal terms — with the United States, Russia, and France. Theoretically, he could have been ousted in 2016, but it is likely that he could have staged this coup himself. But Erdogan has a strong position in the army, he feels confident in Syria, and most of the Turks treat their president with respect — after all, this is the Turkish leader who is respected around the world.

Do they respect not only Erdogan's musle flexing but also with his flexibility?

Erdogan shows flexibility most often, and he is not a stupid person in this regard. Yes, he is cruel and ambitious, but he knows to what point it is possible to come. Look, the relations between Russia and Turkey periodically escalate, but then the parties somehow agree, find a common language. Remember the story of the downing of a Russian military plane in 2015. Erdogan apologized because he admitted his mistake, and everything was beautiful, and now Russia and Turkey have peace and so on.

If we talk about limits, what is the limit for Erdogan in the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan?

The limit is technical supplies to Azerbaijan. What's next? Well, you can't send Turkish troops to Armenia, can you? It will be like a madhouse! Turkish troops are NATO troops!

It is unlikely that he will send troops to Azerbaijan for, let's say, pan-Turkist assistance. Do you agree?

I have already heard some speculations on this topic, but this is hard to prove: someone suggested that Turkey may be transporting fighters from Syria to Azerbaijan. But do we need militants in Azerbaijan who will fight against Armenians today, and tomorrow we don't know who they will fight against in Azerbaijan itself? Of course, this is gossip, exaggeration, but if we are talking about manpower, such people may well end up in Azerbaijan. But no one needs this, especially in Azerbaijan itself.

Photo: president.az

Is there any alternative to Aliyev? It was 6-7 years ago — it was Musavat followers, someone else, but whether there is an alternative now, I doubt

What is the meaning of that some of the protesters broke into the Azerbaijani parliament building at a rally in Baku that was gathered because of the border clashes? Were they emotions?

Yes, it is emotions. But you understand the thing: Azerbaijan is an authoritarian state, although under the leadership of a MGIMO graduate. Well, people broke into parliament — so what? Yes, Azerbaijanis are emotional people, but this does not mean anything to the authorities. This is not a campaign against Ilham Aliyev.

Yevgeny Satanovsky has recently suggested that Aliyev might be deposed if a war does not start.

Is there any alternative to Aliyev? It was 6-7 years ago — it was Musavat followers, someone else, but whether there is an alternative now, I doubt. Yes, there have been reasons for discontent with Aliyev in recent years, but nothing serious has emerged in the end.

Note that the guys who moved to Azerbaijan from Karabakh did not become a political factor. Both Sunnis and Shiites live in equal numbers in Azerbaijan, and only Allah knows which of them is greater, and this factor also does not play any role for Aliyev. Therefore, I do not see any prerequisites for a change of power. The Aliyev clan is powerful and strong, they have settled everything in the republic. There are dissatisfied with the president in the country, but they are very few.

If nationalism, as you have noticed, is declining, although slowly, then we can say that the nationalist factor does not play a role for Aliyev?

All this ended in Azerbaijan. Today's Azerbaijan is a cosmopolitan Muslim state. There is no Islamic opposition, they have been crushed. There are not even Democrats there — there were some people in this camp at one time, but they were jailed. As for the regions, no region will go against Baku.

Of course, now we see that residents of certain countries are irritated by the coronavirus — yes, this factor probably exists, people are tired of all sorts of quarantines. But in this case, this is not the main thing, the virus could push to such things, but still did not push. I think that the parties will soon agree.

There don't seem to be any nationalists in Armenia either.

But Armenia still has a political multipolarity. And compare how many presidents and prime ministers there have been in Armenia and in Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan is actually a monarchy. But you see, there is a clear position in the Armenian society: Karabakh is not Azerbaijan, that's all. And how there is and what, these are details, and no one will get away from this position. As soon as someone in Armenia hints that it would be nice to make Karabakh part of Azerbaijan as a confederation, they will simply remove him and he will be crushed as a politician.

Photo: primeminister.am

There is no doubt that Pashinyan, when he came to power, relied on people who advocated improving relations with the United States. And this is understandable — Armenia is the part of the former Soviet Union that is trying to pursue a multi-vector policy. But everything will be decided by Trump

What are the positions of the Armenian leader Nikol Pashinyan?

As my colleagues from Yerevan say, they are rather strong than weak. But this is not an authoritarian fortress, Pashinyan is not Aliyev or Putin. Thus, the political situation in Armenia can be quite fluid. Kocharian, Ter-Petrosyan, and Sargsyan can be elected there.

How true is it that Pashinyan is looking for a lot of US support, given Turkey's joining the game?

There is no doubt that Pashinyan, when he came to power, relied on people who advocated improving relations with the United States. And this is understandable — Armenia is the part of the former Soviet Union that is trying to pursue a multi-vector policy. But everything will be decided by Trump. But Armenia will also rely on Russian support. Please note that there is no anti-Russian sentiment in Armenia.

How will events develop in the near future?

There is such a moment — since the Turks have already participated in the situation, as the European Union has somehow started to move, as the UN said the worsening conflict fraught with disaster and that it is almost a war, I think that there some kind of international gathering with the participation of all stakeholders. Of course, Russia is also working in this regard, and it has always worked here, but in order to satisfy everyone and show that the world is worried, the agreement must be very broad. The Turks are both the Turkish lobby and the Muslim lobby, but there is also a global Armenian lobby with California and France. By the end of 2020, there should definitely be some broad international event on this issue.

Will there be a war?

That's impossible.

By Sergey Kochnev
Source : 


MP Sergey Bagratyan leaves Prosperous Armenia faction

Save

Share

 14:53,

YEREVAN, JULY 23, ARMENPRESS. Member of Parliament Sergey Bagratyan has submitted a notice to the Speaker of Parliament on leaving the Prosperous Armenia faction, the Parliament said.

The MP informed the Speaker that he is leaving the faction.

Sergey Bagratyan is serving as Member of Parliament since 2017. He has been member of the Tsarukyan faction in 2017-2019.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/23/2020

                                        Thursday, 

Russia Urges Turkish Restraint On Karabakh Conflict


RUSSIA -- Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and Russian Foreign Minister 
Sergei Lavrov arrive for a meeting in Moscow, January 13, 2020

Russia urged Turkey on Thursday to exercise restraint in its reaction to the 
deadly hostilities on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border which has been strongly 
condemned by Armenia.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his Turkish counterpart Mevlut 
Cavusoglu discussed the clashes between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces during a 
telephone conversation.

“In connection with the recent escalation of violence between Armenia and 
Azerbaijan, the Russian side emphasized the need for a balanced approach and 
containment of the parties involved in the conflict to prevent the further 
aggravation of the situation, ensure security on the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border, and intensify efforts for the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process,” the 
Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“They agreed to develop cooperation between Moscow and Ankara to stabilize the 
region,” added the statement. It gave no further details.

Turkey has blamed Armenia for the fighting which broke out on April 12 and 
continued for several days, leaving at least 17 soldiers from both sides dead. 
It has pledged to continue to strongly support Azerbaijan in the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, including with military assistance.

The Armenian government has decried the Turkish reaction, accusing Ankara of 
trying to destabilize the region, undercutting international efforts to resolve 
the conflict and posing a serious security threat to Armenia. Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian said earlier on Thursday that Ankara’s increasingly “aggressive” 
pro-Azerbaijani stance is necessitating a rethink of Armenia’s foreign and 
security policy. He did not elaborate.

Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said last week that the Armenians “will 
certainly pay for what they have done” to Azerbaijan, his country’s main 
regional ally. Such statements have fuelled speculation about Turkey’s 
intervention in the Karabakh conflict on Azerbaijan’s side.

Analysts believe Moscow would strongly oppose Turkish military presence in the 
former Soviet region regarded by it as a zone of Russian geopolitical influence.

Russia is allied to Armenia and has thousands of troops stationed in the South 
Caucasus state.




European Court Seeks Information About Armenian Captive In Azerbaijan

        • Susan Badalian

FRANCE -- The building of the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, 
September 11, 2019.

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has ordered Azerbaijan to provide 
information about the whereabouts and condition of an Armenian man who was 
detained in its Nakhichevan exclave earlier this month.

Authorities in Nakhichevan reported the arrest of the 30-year-old man, Narek 
Sardarian, on July 15 one week after he went missing while grazing cattle in a 
border village in Armenia’s southeastern Syunik region.

Sardarian was shown on local television saying that he fled Armenia and wants to 
live in Azerbaijan or a third country. His family believes that he crossed the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border by accident and was forced by the Azerbaijani 
security services to give a different reason for entering Nakhichevan.

A lawyer representing the family, Artak Zeynalian, asked the ECHR last week to 
help ensure that Sardarian is safe and sound and can communicate with his wife, 
sister and parents.


Armenia - Narek Sardarian.

The Strasbourg-based court agreed to issue such an injunction on Thursday. 
According to Zeynalian, it specifically ordered the Azerbaijani authorities to 
reveal the place and conditions of Sardarian’s detention and report whether he 
is facing any criminal charges, has access to a lawyer and can receive or send 
letters.

Baku must provide this and other information before the end of this month, 
Zeynalian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.

Armenia’s human rights ombudsman, Arman Tatoyan, discussed Sardarian’s 
disappearance at a July 14 meeting with Claire Meytraud, the head of the Yerevan 
office of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). It is not clear 
whether officials from the ICRC office in Baku have since been allowed to visit 
Sardarian.

Zeynalian, who served as Armenia’s justice minister from 2018-2019, suggested 
that the ECHR took into account the tragic fate of other Armenian civilians who 
had strayed into Azerbaijani territory in similar circumstances.

In September 2010, a 20-year-old resident of a border village in Armenia’s 
Gegharkunik province, Manvel Saribekian, crossed into Azerbaijan and was 
immediately accused by Baku of planning to carry out terrorist attacks.

Saribekian was found hanged in an Azerbaijani detention center one month later. 
Azerbaijani officials claimed that he committed suicide. But in a January 2020 
ruling, the ECHR backed Armenian forensic experts’ conclusion that young man was 
tortured to death.


Azerbaijan -- Armenian captive Manvel Saribekian is paraded on Azerbaijani TV, 
17Sep2010

Another Armenian villager, Karen Petrosian, was pronounced dead in August 2014 
one day after being detained in an Azerbaijani village across the border. The 
Azerbaijani military claimed that he died of “acute heart failure.” The Armenian 
authorities believe, however, that Petrosian was murdered or beaten to death.

Sardarian is not the only Armenian national currently held in an Azerbaijani 
prison. Karen Ghazarian, a resident of the Tavush province, was captured in July 
2018.

In February 2019, an Azerbaijani court sentenced Ghazarian to 20 years in prison 
on charges of plotting terrorist attacks and “sabotage” in Azerbaijan. Yerevan 
condemned the ruling and demanded Ghazarian’s immediate release.

No Azerbaijani villagers are known to have died in Armenian captivity. One of 
them entered Armenia from Azerbaijan’s Gedabey district as recently as on June 
12 and remains in detention.


Government Names High Court Nominee

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia -- Vahram Avetisian, Yerevan, 

The government nominated on Thursday a candidate to replace one of the three 
members of Armenia’s Constitutional Court who were controversially dismissed 
last month.

The nominee, Vahram Avetisian, heads a civil law chair at Yerevan State 
University. He has previously worked in the Office of the Prosecutor-General and 
the private sector.

“I believe that I have necessary professional skills, experience and integrity 
to properly perform the duties of a Constitutional Court judge,” Avetisian told 
reporters after the announcement of his candidacy.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government enjoys a comfortable majority in the 
National Assembly, making Avetisian’s appointment to the Constitutional Court 
all but a forgone conclusion. The nominee said that if elected by the parliament 
he will strive for judicial independence and “harmonious” activities of the 
judicial, legislative and executive branches of government.

President Armen Sarkissian and an assembly of the country’s judges are due to 
name two other nominees for the high court.

The parliament approved last month constitutional amendments calling the gradual 
resignation of seven of the court’s nine installed before April 2018.Three of 
them are to resign with immediate effect. Also, Hrayr Tovmasian must quit as 
court chairman but remain a judge.

Tovmasian and the ousted judges have refused to step down, saying that their 
removal is illegal. They have appealed to the European Court of Human Rights 
(ECHR) to have them reinstated.




Pashinian Wants Armenian Policy Response To ‘Turkish Threat’


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks at a cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan, .

Armenia needs to review its foreign and security policies in response to 
Turkey’s increasingly “aggressive” support for Azerbaijan in the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Thursday.

Echoing statements by other Armenian officials, Pashinian charged that Ankara 
has sought to heighten tensions in the conflict zone by blaming Yerevan for this 
month’s deadly hostilities on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and promising 
military aid to Baku.

“The only country that attempted to provoke greater violence, rather than calm 
the situation down, [during the flare-up] was Turkey,” he said at the start of a 
weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan.

“Given that country’s destabilizing and aggressive policy towards a number of 
neighboring regions and traditional anti-Armenian policy, evidenced by its 
justification of the [1915] Armenian genocide, Turkey’s stance did not come as a 
surprise,” he said. “But its increased aggressiveness is creating the need for a 
certain revision of our policy, including in terms of the scale of our 
participation in international formats for curbing Turkey’s aggressiveness.”

Pashinian did not specify whether he thinks Armenia should forge even closer 
military ties with Russia, its main ally, or step up security cooperation with 
the West.But he did single out Russia’s role in international efforts to stop 
the Armenian-Azerbaijani border clashes that broke out on July 17.


Azerbaijan -- Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, left, and Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev walk before a meeting in Baku, October 14, 2019

The deadly clashes provoked last week a bitter war of words between Ankara and 
Yerevan, with the two sides accusing each other of trying to destabilize the 
South Caucasus. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and other Turkish leaders blamed 
Armenia for the violence that left at least 17 soldiers dead. For its part, the 
Armenian Foreign Ministry branded Turkey a “security threat to Armenia and the 
region.”

Turkey’s National Security Council condemned the Armenian “aggression” on 
Wednesday in a statement issued after a meeting chaired by Erdogan. It said 
Ankara “will support any decision by Azerbaijan.”

Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar vowed on July 16 that Armenia will be 
“brought to account” for its “attack” on Azerbaijan. He did not elaborate.

Akar spoke at a meeting with a visiting Azerbaijani military delegation headed 
by Deputy Defense Minister Ramiz Tahirov. The delegation also met with Ismail 
Demir, the head of a state body overseeing the Turkish defense industry. Demir 
tweeted afterwards that Ankara is ready to provide Baku with military drones and 
missiles.

Successive Turkish governments have lent Azerbaijan full support throughout the 
Karabakh conflict, reflecting close ethnic and cultural ties between the two 
Turkic nations. They have made the establishment of diplomatic relations with 
Armenia conditional on a Karabakh settlement acceptable to Baku.

Armenia, which is allied to Russia politically and militarily, has always 
rejected this precondition.




EU Mediates Talks Between Armenia, Azerbaijan


Belgium -- EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep 
Borrell at a press conference in Brussels, July 12, 2020.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, has urged Armenia and 
Azerbaijan to avoid further ceasefire violations and resume peace talks during a 
trilateral phone call with the foreign ministers of the two South Caucasus 
states.

Borrell phoned Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian and his newly appointed 
Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov late on Wednesday to again discuss the 
July 12 outbreak of deadly clashes on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, which 
left at least 17 soldiers dead. It was Mnatsakanian’s first conversation with 
Bayramov, who replaced Azerbaijan’s longtime Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov 
last week.

“I urged both sides to reaffirm their commitment to a ceasefire and undertake 
immediate measures to prevent further escalation,” Borrell tweeted after the 
phone call.

In a separate statement, the EU cited Borrell as saying that the parties to the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict should “refrain from action and rhetoric that provoke 
tension, in particular from any further threats to critical infrastructure in 
the region.”

“He also stressed the need for meaningful re-engagement in substantive 
negotiations on the key aspects of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement 
under the auspices of the [OSCE Minsk Group] Co-Chairs; both ministers concurred 
on this,” read the statement.

Baku and Yerevan blame each other for the border clashes which appear to have 
subsided over the past week. Mnatsakanian and Bayramov were reported to stand by 
their governments’ diametrically opposite versions of the events.

According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Mnatsakanian “emphasized the 
importance of implementation of the previous agreements on reducing tensions, 
restoring and strengthening the ceasefire.” The confidence-building agreements 
reached in 2016-2017 called for the deployment of more OSCE monitors in the 
conflict zone and international investigations of truce violations happening 
there.

For his part, Bayramov said that while Azerbaijan remains committed to a 
peaceful Karabakh settlement it wants further negotiations with Armenia to 
produce “concrete results.”

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev has threatened in recent weeks to withdraw 
from the negotiating process, saying that it has been “meaningless” so far. He 
has said the U.S., Russian and French mediators co-heading the Minsk Group 
should do more to make the talks “substantive” in addition to trying to prevent 
violence.

Meanwhile, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian insisted on Thursday that 
Azerbaijan itself hampers progress towards the conflict’s resolutions with its 
“maximalist” position that preludes any compromise peace accord. He said Baku 
must not “talk to us from the position of force.”

“Azerbaijan should publicly renounce the use of force and take credible steps to 
end its anti-Armenian rhetoric,” Pashinian added during a weekly cabinet meeting 
in Yerevan.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Hayastan All-Armenian Fund launched "Empowering Remote Border Communities" fundraising campaign

Arminfo, Armenia

ArmInfo. The Hayastan All-Armenian  Fund has launched a fundraising campaign for "Empowering Remote  Border Communities ", the official Website of Fund reports Accourding  to the source, the unwavering resolve of the fearless people of  Tavush standing strong against an unpredictable and dangerous enemy  to protect their home, their land and Our Borders. These communities  are unequivocally and strategically vital for the security of Armenia  and Artsakh. Protecting them strategically, economically and socially  is a national priority.

For years the Fund has supported these dedicated guardians of our  sovereign borders through essential infrastructural projects, the  construction of community centres, schools, kindergartens, social  housing, hospitals; with dedicated and trained medical professionals,  state of the art equipment, innovative agricultural projects, solar  energy panels and clean drinking water.

Now more than ever, this support is critically important. The  development of Tavush communities will ensure the stability and  security of our borders and in turn our country. Strong and  unassailable communities will further inspire the committed and  unwavering people of Tavush to continue to protect our ancestral  lands.

In times of peril, Armenians around the world have always stood  united and supported those most in need.  Today, the brave men and  women of our border communities need us to stand together as one  global Armenian family.

All proceeds will go to addressing the most pressing needs of these  communities; rebuilding shelled homes, providing renewable energy,  drinking water, social assistance to those effected by the most  recent escalations of the conflict, providing access to healthcare  and distance learning tools for school students.

Please join this critical global effort. You can donate through the  special online fundraiser created in the Fund's website or make a  direct transfer to the bank accounts specifying the purpose of the  donation as "Empowering Remote Border Communities"  https://www.himnadram.org/en. You can also donate through the local  affiliates of the Hayastan Global Armenian Fund in your country.

The names of all donors and the donated amounts will be automatically  generated on this page. A final report on the fundraising campaign  will be presented at the end of the program.