Armenia will be logical, prosperous country, optimistic and confident for future – PM Karapetyan’s New Year address

Category
Society

Armenian Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan released a statement ahead of New Year and Christmas holidays, the government’s press service said.

“Dear Compatriots,

I have the honor and the opportunity to address you with New Year and Christmas congratulations. May your families be blessed with much happiness, homely warmth, love and solidarity in the New Year!

As usual, we summarize the outgoing year in the run-up to the New Year. The annual economic performance will be better than we expected in 2016, and positively different from the indicators of other countries in the region. To cope with all the problems facing the country, we must work hard and ensure sustainable growth every year.

No one will develop and build the country for us.

Armenia is to be a logical and prosperous country, optimistic and confident about the future. We need an atmosphere of tolerance in the country; mutual respect and consolidation around the goal of developing the country.

Every one of us can take a share in that nationwide drive for consolidation. Anyone, who protects the country and works hard, studies, wakes up early and is thoughtful of his surroundings and the country, as a whole, should feel wanted by his fellow countrymen.

We can develop our country together and, as a result, have a powerful, equitable, well-developed and prosperous Armenia strong with ever-growing and happy population.

Dear Compatriots,

On this festive days, I suggest that you fill up your homes with affection and care, embrace your parents, grandparents, children and grandchildren, exchange kind remarks, rejoice, forgive … Join your family members, relatives and friends in a bid to get rid of your everyday concerns and stock up on a positive supply of energy for the coming year.

Be assured that we are going to have an awesome and wonderful country.

Happy New Year and Merry Christmas”, the PM said in the statement.

College Town: Clark Prof Taner Akcam receives honors from World Without Genocide

The Telegram, MA
Dec 30 2017
 
 
College Town: Clark prof receives honors from World Without Genocide
 
 
Clark University history professor Taner Akcam will be honored with the 2018 Outstanding Upstander Award from the World Without Genocide organization. [Submitted Photo]
By Bonnie Russell / Telegram & Gazette Staff
 
 
Clark University history professor Taner Akcam will be honored for the decades he has spent gathering historical evidence to document the 1915 Armenian genocide, the mass killings of 1.5 million Armenians that took place at the hands of the government during the Ottoman Empire.
 
Mr. Akcam will be honored with the 2018 Outstanding Upstander Award from the World Without Genocide organization.
 
According to its website, World Without Genocide, housed at the Mitchell Hamline School of Law in St. Paul, Minnesota, works “to protect innocent people around the world; prevent genocide by combating racism and prejudice; advocate for the prosecution of perpetrators; and remember those whose lives and cultures have been destroyed by violence.”
 
Mr. Akçam, one of the first Turkish intellectuals to acknowledge and openly discuss the Armenian genocide, holds an endowed chair at Clark’s Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies. An outspoken advocate of democracy and free _expression_ since his student days at Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey, he is an internationally recognized human rights activist.
 
“We have long admired your bold and dedicated work to document the atrocities perpetrated by the Ottoman government against the Armenian people. You have persisted in speaking out about the genocide, despite being marked for death by Turkish ultranationalists,” Ellen J. Kennedy, executive director of World Without Genocide, wrote to Mr. Akçam.
 
One example is Mr. Akcam’s challenging of Article 301, a provision of Turkey’s criminal code that permits the arrest of individuals who use the term “genocide” to describe the killing of about 1.5 Armenians during the Ottoman Empire. The European Court of Human Rights ruled in Mr. Akcam’s favor stating that Turkey violated his right to free _expression_, which was reported in an Oct. 29, 2011, Telegram & Gazette article by Bronislaus B. Kush.
 
Mr. Akçam presented the case in 2007, following the murder of journalist Hrant Dink, who had been convicted under Article 301.
 
Mr. Akçam’s most recent discovery, an Ottoman document that he states is “the smoking gun,” which demonstrates the government’s knowledge of and involvement in the systematic elimination of the Armenian population, was discussed in an article by Tim Arango published on April 22 in The New York Times.
 
In an email, Mr. Akcam explained that he had first discovered “a memoir of an Ottoman bureaucrat Naim Efendi, which is considered lost.” The memoir includes about 52 telegrams belonging to the Ottoman Government regarding the deportation and extermination of Armenians.
 
“The second discovery is a different telegram sent by a central committee member of the Union and Progress Party (which organized the genocide). The telegram is a smoking gun and includes the killing orders,” he said.
 
Mr. Akcam’s forthcoming book, “Killing Orders,” combines these two different areas of research to provide evidence that refutes arguments by Turkish denialists regarding the inauthenticity of the telegrams.
 
Previous recipients of the World Without Genocide award include Eli Rosenbaum, director of human rights enforcement strategy and policy at the U.S. Department of Justice; Claudia Paz y Paz, former Attorney General of Guatemala; and Magistrate Judge Peggy Kuo, former prosecutor at the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia.
 
Mr. Akçam will formally receive the award at the organization’s annual gala in May 2018 in Minneapolis.
 

Art: Martin Holik’s photographs of Armenia’s abandoned and forgotten Luna Park

Creative Boom
Dec 19 2017


Martin Holik's photographs of Armenia's abandoned and forgotten Luna Park

Luna Park is an old amusement park that towers above Yerevan in Armenia. People don't tend to visit the place very often, as there's a more modern alternative in town. During a recent trip there, photographer Martin Holik wandered around the almost empty park to capture what's been left behind.

"From time to time, someone comes to visit. Just to remember the old days," explains Martin. "The days when they were young and the world was easier to live in. They bring their children and enjoy the peaceful, nostalgic mood."

Although this looks like a sad documentation of what once was, showing just a hint at happier times, Luna Park still has an optimistic feel – you can see it in the smiles on people's faces, and how their memories of the place live on, even though the crowds have gone.

Based in Czech Republic, Martin studied at the Institute of Creative Photography of the Silesian University and today works as a wedding and documentary photographer. Discover more at martinholik.com.

Film: New Armenian Genocide documentary debuts in Argentina

Pan Armenian, Armenia
Dec 1 2017
December 1, 2017 – 16:15 AMT
New Armenian Genocide documentary debuts in Argentina

The documentary "The April Symphony" directed by Teresa Saporiti and Claudio Remedi premiered in Buenos Aires on Thursday, November 30 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

The film centers around the preparations for the centenary of the Genocide in 2015 through the interaction of the Armenian community of Buenos Aires and the residents of Yerevan, Prensa Armenia reports.

The project records the daily life of both capitals during the month of April 2015 and culminates with commemoration event on the 24th of that month.

Armenians throughout the world held hundreds of large-scale events, campaigns and rallies to commemorate the centennial of the Armenian Genocide.

Some three dozen countries, hundreds of local government bodies and international organizations have so far recognized the killings of 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

EPP supports efforts of OSCE MG Co-Chairs on NK conflict settlement: Party adopts declaration in Brussels

Categories
Artsakh
Politics
Region
World

The European People’s Party (EPP) fully supports the efforts of the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group regarding the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

The EPP adopted a declaration based on its summit results in Brussels on November 23.

“We reaffirm our full support for the efforts of the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group regarding the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, based on the norms and principles of international law, in particular those concerning the non-use of force or threat of force, territorial integrity and the equal rights and self-determination of peoples; we call on all sides of the conflict to adhere to the ceasefire regime with full respect to the 1994-1995 ceasefire agreements, to implement confidence-building measures and to reduce tensions on the Line of Contact, including those measures agreed to during the Summits in Vienna, St. Petersburg and Geneva”, stated in the declaration.

The Armenian delegation participating in the summit approved this declaration with reservations.

On a working visit to the Kingdom of Belgium, President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan participated in the Summit of the European People’s Party (EPP) in Brussels on November 23.

President Serzh Sargsyan delivered a speech at the summit, in which he touched upon the agenda of EU-Armenia cooperation and the dynamics of relationship development, the importance of those issues of interest to Armenia to be discussed at the EPP and Eastern Partnership summits in Brussels, the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement between Armenia and the European Union, as well as on inter-party cooperation-related activities. Noting that this year marks the 5th anniversary of RPA’s membership of the EPP, Serzh Sargsyan stressed that despite the relatively short period of time, the RPA managed to fully integrate into this European family. RPA’s cooperation with the EPP has become one of the most important platforms for Armenia’s involvement in European politics.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/06/2017

                                        Monday, November 6, 2017

Ruling Party Again Dominates Local Elections In Armenia


 . Karine Simonian
 . Nare Stepanian
 . Anush Muradian


Armenia - Residents of Achajur village vote in local elections,
5Nov2017.

Amid a continuing lack of interest shown by opposition parties, the
ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) dominated local elections
held in 69 communities across the country at the weekend.

More than 30 of those communities were only recently incorporated into
single administrative entities, each of them having previously
consisted of several villages. It was the first election of their new
mayors and local councils.

According to preliminary official results released on Monday, mayoral
candidates nominated or endorsed by the HHK prevailed in at least 37
communities, including more than a dozen towns. They ran unopposed in
several of those towns.

In another town, Goris, the Republican incumbent mayor was only
nominally challenged by a non-partisan candidate, Samvel
Harutiunian. The barely campaigned and did not even cast a ballot on
election day. Speaking to RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am),
Harutiunian called the Goris vote a "charade" and accused the HHK of
again abusing its administrative resources.

The HHK dominance was so strong that in some communities members of
the party headed by President Serzh Sarkisian challenged each other.

The HHK's junior coalition partner, the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), fielded three candidates in the local
polls. Two of them were reportedly elected heads of rural communities.

Armenia's second largest parliamentary force, which is led by
businessman Gagik Tsarukian and claims to be in opposition to
President Sarkisian, had only seven mayoral candidates. Three of them
won in their respective communities.

None of the other Armenian opposition groups chose to join the
electoral race, reflecting their lack of financial resources and
strong regional chapters. Opposition leaders have long claimed that
the outcomes of local elections are essentially decided by vote
buying, use of administrative resources and other irregularities.

The established opposition showed much stronger interest in municipal
elections that were held in Yerevan in April 2017 and Gyumri and
Vanadzor, the country's second and third largest cities, a year ago.

The opposition Yelk bloc monitored Sunday's polls through its
representatives sitting on election commissions. A senior Yelk member,
Davit Khazhakian, claimed on Monday that many voters were pressurized
or bribed into backing various wealthy candidates.


Armenia - A man in Odzun village appears to give guidance to an
elderly voter, 5Nov2017.
An RFE/RL correspondent reported from Odzun, a large village in the
northern Lori province, that many elderly voters were guided by other
individuals as they entered polling booths. Election officials there
said those voters claim to have eye problems and require "assistance."
"I just can't refuse to allow others to help them," said Suren
Papikian, the Yelk-affiliated chairman of one of Odzun's two precinct
commissions.

Barsegh Ayvazian, a non-partisan candidate narrowly defeated by the
incumbent community mayor, on Monday demanded a vote recount.

Tension ran high in the southeastern Vayots Dzor province where
another newly consolidated community comprising several villages
elected its new chief executive. Dozens of local residents blocked a
nearby highway on Monday in protest against the official vote results
that gave victory to an HHK candidate. They charged that the latter
won as a result of vote buying. The protesters were supporters of a
defeated candidate, who has run one of those villages until now.

One of Sunday's most competitive contests was in Achajur, a rural
community in the northern Tavush village. A 39-year-old owner of a
village grocery store representing the HHK defeated Achajur's
incumbent mayor and two other candidates. His rivals appeared to
concede defeat.

"This is a rare election after which there is no talk of vote bribes,
brute force or other coercion," the head of a regional election
commission in Tavush, Gagik Abovian, told RFE/RL's Armenian service.



Government Defends Caps On Social Spending


 . Astghik Bedevian


Armenia - Labor and Social Affairs Minister Artem Asatrian speaks in
the Armenian parliament in Yerevan, 6Nov2017.

Labor and Social Affairs Minister Artem Asatrian defended on Monday
the Armenian government's decision not to raise public sector salaries
and pensions next year despite a planned rise in its overall
expenditures.

The draft state budget approved by the government in late September
calls for over 1.46 trillion drams ($3.1 billion) in total
expenditure, up by 7.6 percent from the government's 2017 spending
target. Most of the extra spending would be channeled into various
infrastructure projects. By contrast, the 2018 budget would
practically not increase public spending on social programs.

Prime Minister Karen Karapetian and other officials have said that
increased spending on capital projects is a better way to ease
socioeconomic hardship as it would stimulate economic activity in the
country.

Asatrian echoed these arguments at a meeting with standing committees
of the Armenian parliament that focused on the draft 2018
budget. Their opposition members strongly criticized the government's
reluctance to spend more on salaries, pensions and poverty benefits,
which were most recently raised in 2015.

Asatrian insisted that the government cannot opt for more such rises
for now without additional borrowing that would only add to Armenia's
mounting public debt. "Raising pensions by just 1,000 drams would
require an extra 5 billion drams in spending," he said.

The opposition lawmakers were unconvinced, however. Nikol Pashinian, a
leader of the Yelk alliance, said stagnant pensions and salaries mean
lower living standards and greater poverty.

"The biggest impact on poverty reduction comes from economic growth,"
said Asatrian.

"This budget will not reduce poverty," countered Pashinian.

"The people's social plight is worsening," Gevorg Petrosian of the
Tsarukian Bloc said for his part.

Deputy Finance Minister Atom Janjughazian denied Petrosian's claim. He
said that unemployment in Armenia fell from 19 percent to 17.8 percent
in the first half of this year.

According to government projections, economic growth, which all but
ground to a half in 2016, will reach 4.3 percent this year and 4.5
percent in 2018.



Education Minister Hails Scrapping Of Draft Deferments


 . Ruzanna Stepanian


Armenia - Education Minister Levon Mkrtchian at a news conference in
Yerevan, 22Sep2017.

The upcoming abolition of most remaining military draft deferments
enjoyed by university students is fair and will not harm higher
education in Armenia, Education Minister Levon Mkrtchian said on
Monday.

Mkrtchian said the measure will also reduce corruption among officials
in and outside state-run universities who are in a position to make
male students eligible for government scholarships.

Such students have until now been allowed to perform two-year military
service, compulsory in Armenia, after completing their undergraduate,
graduate or post-graduate studies.

A government bill passed by the Armenian parliament in the first
reading late last month will largely scrap these temporary
exemptions. It will grant draft deferments only to those students who
will agree to undergo parallel military training and serve in the army
as officers for three years after graduation.

The measure was strongly criticized by the opposition Yelk
alliance. Lawmakers representing the bloc claimed that it will prevent
many students from becoming scientists or scholars. They said it will
also not stop the sons of many senior government officials,
pro-government politicians and wealthy businesspeople from dodging
military service.

The main official rationale for the bill drafted by the Armenian
Defense Ministry is that it will close a key loophole for evading
military service and reduce "corruption risks" among military and
university officials.

"This law will greatly eliminate the risk of corruption," agreed
Mkrtchian.

Mkrtchian also insisted that it will not hamper the development of
science and scholarship in the country. In an apparent reference to
Israel, he argued that science and technology has "peaked" in other
countries that have not had draft deferments.

Besides, he told reporters, "if we look at who has pursued and
obtained doctoral degrees [in Armenia] and how many of them have
stayed in science, we won't see a nice picture."

The minister also asserted that drafting some students and letting
others continue their studies uninterrupted is inherently unfair. He
argued that more than 80 percent of 18-year-old Armenian men enrolled
in state universities are already drafted to the armed forces just
because they have to pay tuition fees.

Critics say that students who have wealthy or influential parents will
find other ways of evading draft.

The bill will likely be debated in the second and final reading next
week. If passed, it will come into effect in January 2021, meaning
that it will not apply to students who have already been granted
deferments.



Press Review


(Saturday, November 4)

"Zhoghovurd" is unimpressed by President Serzh Sarkisian's calls for
Indian companies to invest in Armenia and take advantage of the
country's membership in the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU),
which he made during a working visit to New Delhi. The paper argues
that EEU member states like Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan are
geographically closer to India than Armenia. "Besides, there are no
transport routes to Armenia," it says.

"Haykakan Zhamanak" looks at implications of the November 1 meeting of
the Iranian, Russian and Azerbaijani presidents held in Tehran. The
three leaders reaffirmed their commitment to a North-South corridor
that will boost rail communication between them. The paper alleges
that this corridor is "rendering meaningless" Armenia's ambition to
serve as a transit link for cargo shipments from the Persian Gulf to
the Black Sea. It says the Armenian highways stretching from the
Iranian to the Georgian borders, which are now undergoing major
repairs, will be underused. "Most of the traffic will pass through
Azerbaijan's territory,"

"Zhamanak" quotes Vartan Yeghiazarian, a deputy chief of the national
police service, as saying that that the law-enforcement agency will be
directly subordinate to Armenia's prime minister after the country
completes its transition to the parliamentary system of government in
April. The paper wonders whether that statement made on Friday was
coordinated with President Serzh Sarkisian. It says that a prime
minister directly controlling the Armenian police would have greater
political clout. "For which prime minister is that [change of
subordination] being done?" it asks.

"Aravot" carries an editorial on upcoming local elections to be held
in mostly rural communities across Armenia. "Hardly anyone doubts who
will win those elections," writes the paper. "Opposition parties
decided not to enter the fray. `Good guys' from [Gagik Tsarukian's]
BHK will win in several communities, while Republican `good guys' will
make up the vast majority of town and village mayors. The names of
parties are absolutely unimportant # Even so, the opposition's
non-participation is weird. That fact testifies to not only a lack of
money or regional chapters but the laziness and indifference [of
opposition groups.] Yes, it is almost impossible to achieve success
[in Armenian local elections] but not trying to do that, not
communicating with citizens is a wrong tactic."

(Elen Chilingarian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2017 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Hovhannes Ghazaryan: They just wanted to say we will bring you to your level, go and have a rest, then we will put you under pressure and you will not take part in it (video)

Hovhannes Ghazaryan, a jailed member of the Founding Parliament, who was detained at case of Sari Tagh District in July last year, and then released, is unaware of the stage of his case. “The case is stopped, they neither close it, or do anything. At the moment they have my passport and also some of my things: keys, money, that they have not returned,” said Hovhannes Ghazaryan to A1+.

Hovhannes Ghazaryan, a journalist arrested on the case of Sari Tagh district, is charged with participating in mass disorders, in particular, in throwing stones at the police station, on July 29. “This was an unsuccessful act that did not last long, the accusation was completely groundless, as no such action was taken by me,” added the supporter of the Founding Parliament.

Hovhannes Ghazaryan knew why he had been arrested. “They just wanted to say we will bring you to your level, go and have a rest, then we will put you under pressure and you will not take part in it. But they did not succeed.”

To remind, the supporter of the Founding Parliament spent 6 months and 13 days in the detention center and was released under the decision of the Court of Appeal on signing a decree not to leave the city.

People know what the text of the CEPA says; no room left for rumors. Diogo Pinto

Category
Politics

“168 Hours” interviewed Diogo Pinto, Director of European Friends of Armenia (EuFoA).

– Dear Mr. Pinto, the text of the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement is published, and the agreement is already available for the Armenian public. First of all, why has EU decided to publish the text? What was the main goal of that decision?

– I guess that the EU decided to publish the text for the sake of transparency, and to put an end to certain rumors that were circulated about the content of the agreement.

Now people know what the text of the agreement says; no room left for rumors. On the other hand, one could ask why only now… but I guess this has to do with technical issues and the agreement behind the agreement: that to be done among the EU institutions and its 28 member states.

– We have the text but it is interesting to know your opinion: what kind of economic, political and trade opportunities will this agreement create for Armenia? Why is this document important for Armenia taking into consideration Armenia’s foreign policy and special relations between Armenia and Russia?

– As you said, we have the text; so, I will refrain from giving opinions on what kind of opportunities this agreement creates, because everyone can read it and many already wrote extensively about it. What I would like to stress, instead, is that this Agreement  shows that both the EU and Armenia have demonstrated the necessary will to negotiate a new compromise that takes into account Armenia’s commitments to its EAEU membership and, therefore, its special relations with Russia. It is important to fully acknowledge this, as this is probably the best example of “differentiation” and “greater flexibility” that many have been asking from the EU in what concerns its Neighborhood Policy; in my opinion, the fact that this happens in such a complicated context of EU- Russia relations, makes it even more meaningful. So, what I am trying to say is that the EU made an effort to accommodate Armenia’s need for pursuing a “balanced” foreign policy, and that must be fully appreciated.

– What is the difference between The Armenia-EU Association Agreement and this agreement?

– I think we need to stop making comparisons between what could have been and what is about to become a reality. Reality is all we have. This Agreement takes into account  the limitations that Armenia has as a member of the Eurasian Economic Union; therefore, and although it retains a considerable amount of content from the Association Agreement, the core trade policy elements are affected, and a DCFTA is no longer possible. Now, what is more important is what the agreement includes: the areas of political dialogue, justice and freedom, and even security are all of them substantial, and the room for cooperation huge. So, instead of discussing what is no longer possible, I would urge Armenian authorities and civil society to get serious about implementation of what is possible.

– After the signature, where will be Armenia in EaP program? We know that associated countries don’t want to be in one basket with Azerbaijan, Belarus and Armenia. Will it be fair to classify Armenia with Belarus and Azerbaijan? Can there be another option to your mind?

– As I already mentioned before, many have been asking for some time for the EU to show more “differentiation” and “greater flexibility” in its European Neighborhood Policy, as well as to adhere to its own maxim of more for more”. When it comes to the specific case of the Eastern Partnership, I think it is obvious for everyone that each country is a specific case, and attempts to put them in “baskets” will probably be doomed to fail. Now, I think that Armenia, with the new Agreement, is probably the best example of this “differentiation” and “greater flexibility”, and instead of worrying about being classified in a way or another, should focus on getting the best out of this.

The best way to do it, in my opinion, would be to implement the opportunities opened by the new Agreement as well and as fast as possible; proving itself to be a reliable and serious partner will be the best way for Armenia to show the EU that it deserves and is ready for even more.

-And what about signature? When will the EU be ready to conclude all the preparations for the signature? I am asking because we have information from very reliable sources that EU member states are doing their utmost to finish the preparations as soon as possible, but is seems to us that they won’t manage to do all the work until the summit in Brussels. When can we expect the signature?

– I can’t possibly comment on it or speak on behalf of the EU and its member -states. I am an optimist though; if the EU and its member -states are doing their utmost, I believe that the Agreement will be signed at or around the Summit. And if this is not the case, I am sure it will be signed soon after that.

-What will be the next step in Armenia-EU relations after this agreement?

– If, as I hope, both the EU and Armenia will take implementation seriously and make a success of this Agreement from its inception, I think we should start talking about visa liberalization soon. Armenia and the Armenian people deserve it, and it would certainly make EU-Armenia relations easier and opportunities more tangible. At the end of the day, this is what this kind of agreements should be about: improving the lives of citizens. Abolishing the visa regime for the citizens of Armenia to travel to the EU would be my next favorite step, and I promise that EuFoA will work hard for it.

By Araks Martirosyan

https://en.168.am/2017/10/27/21847.html

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/05/2017

                                        Thursday, October 5, 2017

Armenian Parliament Ratifies New Defense Accord With Russia


 . Ruzanna Stepanian


Armenia - Russian Air Force officers and a combat helicopter at the
Erebuni airbase in Yerevan, 12Mar2016.

The National Assembly overwhelmingly ratified on Thursday a
Russia-Armenian agreement on a joint military force that was first
formed in Armenia more than a decade ago.

Under the agreement signed late last year, "the united group of
troops" is tasked with "ensuring military security in the region" and
thwarting or repelling possible foreign aggressions against Armenia or
Russia.

The joint contingent comprises troops from the Russian military base
in Armenia and an Armenian army corps. It has been led by Armenian
army generals since its creation in 2001.

The Armenian parliament backed the treaty, ratified by Russia's
parliament this summer, by 87 votes to 7. All of those seven deputies
represent the opposition Yelk alliance.

Yelk's representatives said during Wednesday's parliamentary debate on
the issue that the accord will limit Armenia's sovereignty and put its
armed forces under Russian control. Leaders of the pro-government
majority in the parliament dismissed those claims.

Eduard Sharmazanov, a deputy parliament speaker and the spokesman for
the ruling Republican Party (HHK), insisted on Thursday that the
Russian-Armenian military force will boost Armenia's security. He said
it will defend the country in case of a military attack by Turkey or
Azerbaijan.


Armenia -- Eduard Sharmazanov, the spokesman for the ruling Repubican
Party of Armenia.
"If a tense situation erupts on Armenia's borders and if Armenia
appeals to its allies -- Russia and the [Collective Security Treaty
Organization] -- they will be obliged, under the CSTO statutes, to
intervene and defend Armenia," Sharmazanov told RFE/RL's Armenian
service (Azatutyun.am). "The same will be true for that military
force, if necessary."

Deputy Defense Minister Artak Zakarian confirmed during the parliament
debate that the mandate of the Russian-Armenian unit covers only
Armenia's internationally recognized territory, meaning that it will
not be required to intervene in possible hostilities in
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Sharmazanov dismissed statements by pro-Western opposition figures
that Russia cannot be trusted because it has sold billions of dollars
worth of offensive weapons to Azerbaijan in the past decade. He
insisted that there is still no alternative to Armenia's close
military ties with Russia. "If we don't create this united military
force, what can we create in its place?" he said.



Armenian Lawmakers `Brawl' After Bitter Debate


 . Astghik Bedevian


Armenia -- Parliament deputies Nikol Pashinian (L) and Artashes
Geghamian.

Nikol Pashinian, an outspoken opposition lawmaker, claimed to have
been physically assaulted by a pro-government colleague in the
Armenian parliament on Thursday after publicly deriding his
pro-Russian views.

Pashinian said that Artashes Geghamian attacked and punched him in a
corridor of the parliament building in Yerevan. "I successfully
defended myself," he wrote on Facebook. "And I shined my shoes with
him a couple of times."

Geghamian, who represents the ruling Republican Party of Armenia
(HHK), denied attacking Pashinian. "If I punch someone, rest assured
that they will be taken to hospital because I had practiced boxing for
three and a half years," he told reporters.

Asked about red spots on Pashinian's face, Geghamian said: "He
probably blushed with shame seeing as he makes ludicrous statements."

Earlier in the day, the two men bitterly argued during a parliament
debate on Armenia's military cooperation with Russia. Pashinian, 42,
mockingly reminded Geghamian of his Communist past as he deplored the
67-year-old's strong support for close ties with Moscow. "You had
better speak of Marxism and Leninism," he said.

"Watch your mouth," shot back Geghamian.

Pashinian challenged the ruling HHK to react to "this hooligan act"
when he addressed the National Assembly later in the day. He linked
the alleged incident with a recent statement by the HHK's
parliamentary leader, Vahram Baghdasarian, seemingly threatening
opposition figures with violence.

"This is a very serious issue, and we intend to pursue it till the end
so that we can draw conclusions regarding the mode of our further work
here," added one of the leaders of the opposition Yelk alliance.

Geghamian is a former opposition leader who was one of the main
candidates in Armenia's 2003 presidential election. He subsequently
pledged allegiance to President Serzh Sarkisian, whom he had for years
harshly criticized. Geghamian was reelected to the parliament on the
HHK ticket in April.



Government Formalizes Delay In Highway Upgrades


 . Sargis Harutyunyan


Armenia - The Yerevan-Ararat highway is upgraded as part of the
North-South transport project, 2Feb2014.

The Armenian government formally acknowledged on Thursday a two-year
delay in the reconstruction of two major national highways as part of
an ambitious project to upgrade the country's transport
infrastructure.

Work on the two highways stretching almost 100 kilometers from
Ashtarak, a town 22 kilometers west of Yerevan, to Armenia's second
largest city of Gyumri was due to be completed this year in line with
the government's agreements with the Asian Development Bank (ADB). The
Manila-based bank is financing it with two loans worth over $250
million.

Officials in Yerevan admitted earlier this year that these roadworks
have fallen behind schedule. Some of them blamed Spanish and Chinese
construction firms that were contracted to carry out them.

The government formalized this delay by extending its deadlines for
expanding and refurbishing the two roads to September 2019. Transport
and Communications Minister Vahan Martirosian gave no reasons for the
decision when he spoke at a cabinet meeting in Yerevan on Thursday.

The roadworks stem from the government's North-South transport project
aimed at upgrading Armenia's main highways stretching over 550
kilometers to Georgia and Iran. Only two highways connecting Yerevan
to the towns of Ararat and Ashtarak have been completed to date,
costing $60 million in ADB funding. Their total length of is just over
30 kilometers.

Martirosian insisted on September 26 that the government is committed
to rebuilding the remaining road sections mainly passing through the
mountainous Vayots Dzor and Syunik provinces in the country's
southeast. He estimated that this will require as much as $1.5 billion
in funding, a figure equivalent to roughly half of the Armenian state
budget.

Martirosian said the government hopes to attract the investments from
private firms, rather than seek more loans from the ADB or other
international lenders. That would lead to the creation of Armenia's
first-ever toll roads, he said. The minister gave no possible dates
for the project's completion.

Silva Adamian, who coordinates a team of civic groups monitoring the
project's implementation, was highly skeptical on that score. "We will
not have that [reconstructed] road in full," she told RFE/RL's
Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). "We may get parts of it, but that
won't happen anytime soon. If we have something by 2025, it will be
very good."



Press Review



"Zhamanak" reaffirms its strong opposition to a new bilateral
agreement on a joint Russian-Armenian military force in a commentary
on Wednesday's parliamentary debate in Yerevan on its
ratification. The paper claims that Yerevan's continuing heavy
reliance on Moscow for defense and security is based on wrong
geopolitical calculations.

"Aravot" maintains that in 2013 Armenia could have signed an
Association Agreement with the European Union and thus avoided joining
the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). At the same time, the
paper questions the wisdom and timing of the opposition Yelk bloc's
calls for Armenia's exit from the EEU, saying that neither the
authorities nor most ordinary citizens support this idea. "We must
also take into account the fact that relations between the West and
Russia have further deteriorated in the last four years. Do we really
need to get willy-nilly involved in that tussle?" it says. While
calling Armenia's membership in the EEU an "unpleasant reality," the
paper says that it is not the root cause of the country's problems.

"Zhoghovurd" quotes Agriculture Minister Ignati Arakelian as saying
that a sharp increase in the prices of meat in Armenia is only
temporary. "There will be a [price] decrease later on," he
says. "Everything changes. The prices cannot remain unchanged." The
paper dismisses this explanation as "inadequate."

"Hayots Ashkhar" looks at suggestions that with their strong push for
the holding of a meeting of Armenia's and Azerbaijan's presidents
later this year the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE
Minsk Group are indicating that they have "prepared something for the
parties" which has to do with their "fundamental interests." "It is
evident that the Karabakh conflict is the only conflict in the region
where major differences between the countries leading the OSCE Minsk
Group do not impede discussions on the Madrid Principles drawn up by
them before," writes the paper.

(Tigran Avetisian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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