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March 5 2021

Armenpress: Ara Ayvazian, Josep Borrell discuss issues of regional stability and security

Ara Ayvazian, Josep Borrell discuss issues of regional stability and security

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 21:38, 2 March, 2021

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ara Ayvazian held a telephone conversation with Vice-President of the European Commission, High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell on March 2.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, the Armenian FM and the EU High Representative, the sides congratulated each other on the occasion of the completion of the ratification of the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement, noting that the full entry into force of the agreement opens new prospects for the multidimensional cooperation between Armenia and the EU.

During the conversation the sides also referred to the issue of regional security and stability. Ara Ayvazian and Josep Borrell exchanged views on the humanitarian crisis in Artsakh and the involvement of international partners for addressing the challenges facing the Armenian population of Artsakh. The sides higjlighted the role of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs in addressing the issues related to the peaceful settlement of Nagono Karabakh conflict.

Armenian president meets with chief of General Staff, who demands Cabinet’s resignation

TASS, Russia
Feb 26 2021
Armen Sargsyan earlier held meetings with the country’s political forces and different branches of power to discuss ways of resolving the internal political crisis in the country

YEREVAN, February 26. /TASS/. Armenia’s President Armen Sargsyan on Friday met with the chief of the armed forces’ General Staff, Onik Gasparyan, who on Thursday said the Nikol Pashinyan-led Cabinet of Ministers must resign, the press service of the presidential administration said.

Earlier, Sargsyan held meetings with the country’s political forces and different branches of power to discuss ways of resolving the internal political crisis in the country.

The General Staff of Armenia’s Armed Forces on February 25 came out with a statement demanding the resignation of the prime minister and his Cabinet on behalf of the military. The statement was signed by the chief of the General Staff, Onik Gasparyan, his deputies and heads of departments and corps. Pashinyan qualified the demand as a coup attempt and declared a decision to dismiss the chief of the General Staff. The president, who according to the Constitution appoints and dismisses the chief of the General Staff at the prime minister’s initiative, has not signed the dismissal order yet. Against this background demonstrations by Pashinyan’s opponents and supporters began in the capital Yerevan.

Russians Accuse Pashinyan of Lying About Iskander Missiles

February 24,  2021



Aside from Russia, Armenia is the only country in the region to posses the Iskander missile system

YEREVAN (Azatutyun.am)—Russian pro-government lawmakers and pundits strongly condemned Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Wednesday for implying that Armenia’s most advanced Russian-made missiles proved useless during the recent war with Azerbaijan.

In an interview with the 1in.am news service aired late on Tuesday, Pashinyan responded to former President Serzh Sarkisian’s claim that the Armenian military did not adequately use its Iskander missiles against advancing Azerbaijani troops because of wrong government orders.
Sarkisian made the claim earlier this month as he harshly criticized Pashinyan’s handling of the the six-week war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10.

“Let him ask why the fired Iskander did not explode or why it exploded by, say, 10 percent,” Pashinyan hit back without elaborating.

Pashinyan went on to suggest that the sophisticated missile system might be outdated. Asked whether it could have indeed malfunctioned, he said: “I don’t know. Maybe it’s a weapon of the 1980s.”

The remarks provoked a storm of criticism in Russia which supplied several Iskander systems to Armenia in 2015. Senior members of the State Duma, Russia’s lower house of parliament, attacked Pashinyan in unusually strong terms.

“The Iskander is a highly precise weapon, which has repeatedly been proved during military exercises,” said Viktor Zavarzin, the deputy chairman of a State Duma committee on defense and security.

What Pashinyan said about the missile is a “complete lie,” Zavarzin told the Govorit Moskva radio station.

Another Russian lawmaker, Dmitry Sablin, mocked the Armenian premier and questioned his competence.

“A bad dancer is hampered by other things. This popular saying best describes the Armenian prime minister’s claims about the use of the Iskander in the last war and its being obsolete,” the RIA Novosti news agency quoted Sablin as saying.

Vladimir Solovyov, Russia’s leading political talk show host, and other pro-Kremlin commentators likewise denounced Pashinyan’s remarks widely circulated by the Russian media.

Pashinyan also came under fire from his political opponents at home.

“How can 10 percent of a missile explode and the remaining 90 percent not explode after hitting a target?” said Seyran Ohanyan, a retired general who served as Armenia’s defense minister during the acquisition of Iskander missiles.

“I think that [Pashinyan] is very far from being qualified to make judgments about them,” Ohanyan told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

With a firing range of up to 500 kilometers, the Iskander is known for its precision and ability to overcome modern missile defense shields. Russia prompted serious concerns from the United States and other Western powers when it deployed such missiles to its Kaliningrad exclave on the Baltic Sea in 2018.

What peace could mean for the South Caucasus

Arab News, Saudi Arabia
Feb 21 2021
An Azeri soldier stands in the city of Jabrayil in October after Azeri forces regained control during fighting with Armenia over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh. (AFP/File)

The South Caucasus is a region historically known for its instability, largely because it has stood at the intersection of the zones of influence of first Byzantium and Iran, then the Ottoman Empire and Iran, and finally between Russia, Iran and Turkey.

The last attempt to change borders in the region was made by Armenia in 1988. It attacked neighboring Azerbaijan and occupied the autonomous region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which was predominantly inhabited by Armenians. Azerbaijan was not prepared for war, so it was defeated.

Armenia’s appetite for conquering new territories continued to grow and it also occupied several other provinces adjacent to Nagorno-Karabakh. The areas it occupied outside of Nagorno-Karabakh amounted to a fifth of Azerbaijan’s entire territory. More than half a million Azeris had to flee these areas.

The international community refused to recognize Armenia’s occupation and the UN Security Council adopted four resolutions urging it to withdraw from the occupied Azeri territories. In 1992, the Organization of Cooperation and Security in Europe (OSCE) set up the Minsk Group to force Armenia to withdraw from the occupied territories. However, for almost three decades, this group, co-chaired by the US, France and Russia, has done more to perpetuate the Armenian occupation than put an end to it.

Azerbaijan understood that the only way to liberate its territories was to rely on its own army. So it drew up a long-term plan to establish a strong army equipped with state-of-the-art weapons. Soldiers were trained and students sent to cadet colleges and staff academies in several countries, including Turkey, where there is a strong tradition of military training.

Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the first president of Armenia after the dismemberment of the Soviet Union, was planning to use his country’s position of strength to negotiate a fair peace with Azerbaijan. Current Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was even more ambitious and continued to further harass Azerbaijan. In July last year, Armenia attacked a border town, Tovuz, which is strategically located on the route of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, the newly constructed Kars-Tbilisi-Baku railway and the Turkey-Georgia-Azerbaijan motorway. Unlike other settlements located on the boundaries between Azerbaijan and the Armenian-occupied Azeri territories, Tovuz was on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Therefore, Yerevan could not use this attack to extend the boundaries of the territories under its occupation. The Tovuz attack could only aim at changing the border between Azerbaijan and Armenia, or simply provoke Baku to attack.

Azeri troops last year liberated most of the territories that Armenia had occupied for some three decades

Yasar Yakis

Azerbaijan refrained from falling into this trap because of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), also known as the Russian NATO. This treaty ensures that, if Armenia is attacked by a third country, Moscow has a contractual obligation to help it. Therefore, Baku limited its reaction to the attack on Tovuz to silencing the Armenian guns.

On Sept. 27, Armenia attacked several Azeri towns. Azerbaijan this time retaliated with massive firepower. Armenia, as expected, asked Russia to fulfill its commitment under the CSTO and send troops to join its fight against Azerbaijan. Russia responded that the CSTO provisions were valid only when internationally recognized Armenian territory was attacked. Therefore, it had no obligation to militarily support Armenia.

So fierce military clashes took place for 44 days between Azerbaijan and Armenia. The Armenian forces ultimately suffered a major defeat. Azeri troops liberated most of the territories that Armenia had occupied for some three decades. They also seized the strategically important city of Shusha, opening the way to Khankendi (Stepanakert), the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh.

At this stage, Russian President Vladimir Putin stepped in and invited the parties to agree to a cease-fire. As Pashinyan admitted defeat, there was nothing to do but agree to it. Putin was not pleased by Pashinyan’s pro-Western policy, so he wanted to teach him a lesson. However, he did not want to do it to such an extent that it would cause the total collapse of the Armenian army. Otherwise, the balance of power in the South Caucasus would tilt too much in favor of Azerbaijan.

The best solution now would be for Azerbaijan to let the Armenians go back to their pre-1988 estates and for the Armenians not to create problems for the return of Azeris to the homes they fled as a result of the initial Armenian invasion.

If the cease-fire holds and peace returns to the region, the South Caucasus may become a stable area. The talented and sophisticated Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh will be the major beneficiaries of Azerbaijan’s opulent economy, as they are fully fledged citizens of this oil-rich country.

*Yasar Yakis is a former foreign minister of Turkey and founding member of the ruling AK Party. Twitter: @yakis_yasar

Arman Saghatelyan: Karen Bekaryan’s and Ara Saghatelyan’s detention sparked great excitement in Azerbaijan

News.am, Armenia
Feb 21 2021

I can’t say whether courts will maintain their high reputation, but I hope so because, unlike the law-enforcement system which has almost completely turned into a repressive system, we see judges make adequate and reasonable decisions and behave adequately and reasonably every now and then. This is what co-founder of Quartet Media Arman Saghatelyan told reporters today, touching upon the detention of former chief of staff of the National Assembly of Armenia Ara Saghatelyan.

According to Arman Saghatelyan, the judiciary is the institution that is currently trying to go against the political orders and cheap shows.

When told that the detainees are high-level experts and asked if the fact that they are targeted by the authorities is by chance, Saghatelyan said the following:

“I can say that Karen Bekaryan and Ara Saghatelyan are major analysts with many years of experience in their respective fields. Azerbaijani propagandists have been afraid of them for a long time, and the detention of these two has already sparked great excitement in Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijanis welcome the fact that they are detained.”

Arman Saghatelyan added that this is a process of political repressions and that the authorities are trying to silence and isolate the analysts.

The court is currently examining the appeal of Ara Saghatelyan’s attorney against the decision on his detention.

The National Security Service of Armenia has detained former chief of staff of the National Assembly Ara Saghatelyan, co-founder of Quartet Media Karen Bekaryan and manager of the office of International Center for Development of Parliamentarism NGO Mher Avagyan. They are detained under particular articles of the Criminal Code of Armenia (inciting national, racial or religious hatred; an organized group making public calls for use of violence, publicly justifying or advocating violence; violating the rules for publication or dissemination of information during the legal regime of martial law).

Krisp nearly triples fundraise with $9M expansion after blockbuster 2020

Tech Crunch
Feb 16 2021

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

Krisp, a startup that uses machine learning to remove background noise from audio in real time, has raised $9M as an extension of its $5M A round announced last summer. The extra money followed big traction in 2020 for the Armenian company, which grew its customers and revenue by more than an order of magnitude.

TechCrunch first covered Krisp when it was just emerging from UC Berkeley’s Skydeck accelerator, and co-founder Davit Baghdasaryan was relatively freshly out of his previous role at Twilio. The company’s pitch when I chatted with them in the shared office back then was simple and remains the core of what they offer: isolation of the human voice from any background noise (including other voices) so that audio contains only the former.

It probably comes as no surprise, then, that the company appears to have benefited immensely from the shift to virtual meetings and other trends accelerated by the pandemic. To be specific, Baghdasaryan told me that 2020 brought the company a 20x increase in active users, a 23x increase in enterprise accounts and 13x improvement of annual recurring revenue.

The rise in virtual meetings — often in noisy places like, you know, homes — has led to significant uptake across multiple industries. Krisp now has more than 1,200 enterprise customers, Baghdasaryan said: banks, HR platforms, law firms, call centers — anyone who benefits from having a clear voice on the line (“I guess any company qualifies,” he added). Enterprise-oriented controls like provisioning and central administration have been added to make it easier to integrate.

Image Credits: Krisp

B2B revenue recently eclipsed B2C; the latter was likely popularized by Krisp’s inclusion as an option in popular gaming (and increasingly beyond) chat app Discord, though of course users of a free app being given a bonus product for free aren’t always big converters to “pro” tiers of a product.

But the company hasn’t been standing still, either. While it began with a simple feature set (turning background noise on and off, basically) Krisp has made many upgrades to both its product and infrastructure.

Noise cancellation for high-fidelity voice channels makes the software useful for podcasters and streamers, and acoustic correction (removing room echos) simplifies those setups quite a bit as well. Considering the amount of people doing this and the fact that they’re often willing to pay, this could be a significant source of income.

The company plans to add cross-service call recording and analysis; since it sits between the system’s sound drivers and the application, Krisp can easily save the audio and other useful metadata (How often did person A talk versus person B? What office locations are noisiest?). And the addition of voice cancellation — other people’s voices, that is — could be a huge benefit for people who work, or anticipate returning to work, in crowded offices and call centers.

Part of Krisp’s allure is the ability to run locally and securely on many platforms with very low overhead. But companies with machine learning-based products can stagnate quickly if they don’t improve their infrastructure or build more efficient training flows — Lengoo, for instance, is taking on giants in the translation industry with better training as more or less its main advantage.

With AI translation service that rivals professionals, Lengoo attracts new $20M round

Krisp has been optimizing and reoptimizing its algorithms to run efficiently on both Intel and ARM architectures, and decided to roll out its own servers for training its models instead of renting from the usual suspects.

“AWS, Azure and Google Cloud turned out to be too expensive,” Baghdasaryan said. “We have invested in building a data center with Nvidia’s latest A100s in them. This will make our experimentation faster, which is crucial for ML companies.”

Baghdasaryan was also emphatic in his satisfaction with the team in Armenia, where he and his co-founder Arto Minasyan are from, and where the company has focused its hiring, including the 25-strong research team. “By the end of 2021 it will be a 45-member team, all in Armenia,” he said. “We are super happy with the math, physics and engineering talent pool there.”

The funding amounts to $14 million if you combine the two disparate parts of the A round, the latter of which was agreed to just three months after the first. That’s a lot of money, of course, but may seem relatively modest for a company with a thousand enterprise customers and revenue growing by more than 2,000% year over year.

Baghdasaryan said they just weren’t ready to take on a whole B round, with all that involves. They do plan a new fundraise later this year when they’ve reached $15 million ARR, a goal that seems perfectly reasonable given their current charts.

Of course startups with this kind of growth tend to get snapped up by larger concerns, but despite a few offers Baghdasaryan says he’s in it for the long haul — and a multibillion dollar market.

The rush to embrace the new virtual work economy may have spurred Krisp’s growth spurt, but it’s clear that neither the company nor the environment that let it thrive are going anywhere.

British Minister visits Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 17 2021

On a working visit to Armenia, Wendy Morton, UK Minister for European Neighborhood and the Americas of Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial today.

Harutyun Marutyan, director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, briefed the guest on the history of the memorial.

Wendy Morton laid a wreath at the memorial to the victims of the Armenian Genocide and flowers at the eternal flame, and observed a minute of silence in memory of the victims.

WHO announces about global decline of COVID-19

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 21:35,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 15, ARMENPRESS. It’s already 5 weeks that COVID-19 is declining in the world. ARMENPRESS reports, citing Ria Novosti, Director General of the World Health Organization Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced during a briefing.

՛՛This is already the 5th week that COVID-19 reports decline globally’’, he said, adding that during the 5 weeks, the number of new cases has almost halved.