The joint efforts of Armenia and Russia are aimed at revealing new promising areas of strategic cooperation – Deputy PM

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 21:10,

YEREVAN, JUNE 13, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Mher Grigoryan took part in the event organized by the Russian Embassy on the occasion of Russia Day. The Deputy Prime Minister delivered a congratulatory speech in which he noted that in the modern history of Russia this holiday is marked by fundamental changes in all spheres of life, based on the citizen, his interests and prosperity, pride in his millennial history, present and future.

"And Russia has passed this difficult path on its own, laying the foundation for a fundamentally new state-public order, clearly pointing out what Russia will be like in the 21st century. The peoples of Armenia and Russia are connected by many deep threads, which create a solid foundation on which the interstate relations of our countries are built, becoming exemplary in terms of bilateral cooperation.

The establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Russia opened a new page in the modern history of the centuries-old friendship of our peoples, on which it is written in capital letters the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance, the 25th anniversary of which we are marking this year.

The Armenian-Russian allied relations are distinguished by military-political cooperation, effective and close cooperation within the EEU, CSTO, CIS and other international organizations, successful bilateral cooperation in trade, economic, energy, transport and other important spheres.

Today our joint efforts are aimed at discovering new promising areas of strategic cooperation. I am confident that through joint efforts we will be able to expand allied relations, enrich it with new initiatives for the benefit of the citizens of Armenia and Russia, for economic and social progress, as well as for security and stability in the world and in the region”, ARMENPRESS reports, Mher Grigoryans aid in his speech.

67% of respondents in Armenia considered collapse of Soviet Union to be negative for country

ARMINFO

Armenia – June 8 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo.In Armenia, 67% of respondents considered the collapse of the Soviet Union to be negative for the country. This is evidenced by the results of a study  conducted and published by the Caucasus Research Resource Center  (CRRC).

At the same time, 22% of respondents consider the collapse of the  Union to be positive for Armenia, another 11% found it difficult to  answer.  At the same time, 56% of respondents noted that they began  to live worse after the collapse of the Union, 22% – better, 21% -  remained at the same level. 

To the request to note the positive aspects for Armenia of the  collapse of the USSR –  80% of respondents mentioned the declaration  of independence, 3% -opportunities for the development of Armenian  culture, 3% – ensuring rights. The following answers received 2%  each: involvement in trade relations, preservation of language,  opportunity to express an opinion or not to be persecuted. 5% found  it difficult to answer.

At the same time, 52% of respondents considered the deterioration of  the economic situation of people as a negative side of the collapse  of the Union, 16%- lack of jobs, 10% – Karabakh conflict, 5% -  widening gap between rich and poor, 12% gave other answers, another  5%-found it difficult to answer.

The study was conducted from December 18, 2021 to February 4, 2022.  The study involved 1648 respondents over 18 years of age. Citizens  were selected from the republican electoral lists of 2018.  Accuracy  +/- 2.4%. Conducted tete-a-tete polls.  31% of respondents are from  Yerevan, 32% – from other cities of the republic, another 37% – from  villages.  55% are women, 47% are men, of which 52% are unemployed  and 48% are employed. 35% of respondents had secondary education,  28%- secondary vocational education, 25% – higher education, 1%-  post-graduate scientific degree, 3% – incomplete higher education, 7%  – incomplete secondary education. 

Bundestag MP sees need for finding political solution to Nagorno Karabakh conflict

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 10:05, 8 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS. Member of the German Bundestag Till Mansmann says it is necessary to find a political solution to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

In an interview to ARMENPRESS, the Bundestag MP said Germany supports the efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship in the negotiations over the NK conflict.

“As a member of the Minsk Group, Germany supports the efforts of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs in the negotiations for the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, taking into account also the military clashes which started between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2020 and lasted until November. Germany believes that it is necessary to find a political solution to the conflict. Following the clashes Germany has provided a total of 2 million Euro humanitarian aid at the level of the International Committee of Red Cross”, the MP said.

Till Mansmann also commented on the ongoing dialogue between Armenia and Turkey aimed at the normalization of the relations, stating that the long-term goal must always be the peaceful coexistence. “No matter how hostile the relations between Armenia and Turkey are, we face a reality when both Armenia and Turkey become more interconnected in conditions of globalization. Armenia should remain open for development of peace and trade”, he said.

Residents of a Karabakh village in limbo brace for handover

Lilit Shahverdyan Jun 10, 2022



After the first war, Aghavno was rebuilt with money from Armenian diaspora organizations. (Photos by Lilit Shahverdyan)

After the war, signs of life have come back to Aghavno. Plants are sprouting in gardens, and children’s voices ring from the schoolyard.

But also visible from the village is a new road, now under construction by Azerbaijani workers. Once that road is finished – likely within a matter of months – Azerbaijan says it will take control of the village. And when that happens the current residents, all Armenians, will have to decide whether to stay or go.

Aghavno occupies a uniquely strategic place in the complex geopolitics of post-war Karabakh. Before the first war between the two sides in the 1990s, it was populated by Azerbaijanis and known as Zabukh. During that war it was destroyed, and ended up under Armenian control, along with the entire surrounding Lachin district. 

It was rebuilt with heavy financial backing by Armenian diaspora organizations, renamed Aghavno, and settled by Armenians, some from Armenia itself and others from Armenian communities in Syria and Lebanon.

It lies along the road known as the Lachin Corridor, the narrow tether connecting Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh. According to the ceasefire agreement that ended the more recent war, the entire district of Lachin was supposed to be handed over to Azerbaijan on December 1, 2020, except for a five-kilometer buffer along the corridor road. That ribbon of land was to be patrolled by Russian peacekeepers so that Armenians could continue to travel safely between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

Ahead of the December 2020 handover the de facto Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh told residents of the villages along the road to leave, but a handful in Aghavno defied the orders and stayed

Now that handful has grown: Of the village’s pre-war population of 270, 185 have come back. The village has become a symbol to many Armenians for its defiance and its people’s determination to hold their ground.

Living here now requires navigating “constant obstacles,” the mayor, Andranik Chavushyan, told Eurasianet. 

"We never had gas, so we use gas cylinders. We had power outages, so we brought generators. Water shortages? Fortunately, we have a river in the village,” Chavushyan said. "We believed in ourselves, not in the government, and refused to leave the village. We are living here today because we relied on ourselves.” 

The village’s story has inspired various patriotic Armenian organizations to help support the residents who have stayed. "Mshakutamet," an initiative in which young teachers from Armenia volunteer to hold weekly classes like sewing, piano, traditional dances in rural areas, has set up a program in Aghavno. Teach for Armenia, an organization placing teachers in villages in Armenia and Karabakh, sent an English teacher to Aghavno’s school for the most recent academic year, a relatively rare opportunity for Karabakh village schoolchildren. 

The school, which had 48 students before the war, now has even more, headmaster Poghos Aghabekyan told Eurasianet. About half of the current 55 students now come from the district capital of Lachin (which Armenians call Berdzor) and other neighboring communities, where the schools remained closed following the war.

But Aghavno’s fate over the next few months is not clear. Azerbaijan has said that when it finishes the new road it is constructing, which will bypass Aghavno, it will take control of the territory along the current road. The Russian peacekeeping forces protecting the road – including a detachment just outside Aghavno – will relocate to the new road. 

“We [Azerbaijan] will be able to rebuild the villages in the Lachin region and in this corridor,” military analyst Adalat Verdiyev told the pro-government Azerbaijani news site Yeni Sabah. “The Azerbaijani flag will be raised in the center of the Lachin region.”

In April, Azerbaijani media published the first images of the construction of the new route. It will start from the Armenian border near the village of Kornidzor, then pass through the settlements of Gaygi in the Lachin region, Kirov (Hin Shen in Armenian) and Metskaladeresi (Mets Shen in Armenian) in the Shusha region before reaching Stepanakert.

The construction of the new Lachin Corridor was stipulated in the ceasefire agreement that ended the 2020 war. According to that agreement, a new route connecting Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh will be outlined “within the next three years” and that when it is completed, “the Russian peacemaking forces shall be subsequently relocated to protect the route.”

But Azerbaijan appears to be working well ahead of schedule. The head of the Azerbaijan state road agency, Saleh Mamedov, told reporters in April that the new road would be ready to use by July.

Armenian, Russian, and Nagorno-Karabakh officials have had little to say on the construction of the new road. But the ombudsman in the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, Gegham Stepanyan, in May urged the residents of the villages along the border to stay.

“According to my information, it [the new road] will bypass Berdzor and Aghavno,” he said. “There is no final decision on the Armenian population of these settlements yet. We insist that the Armenian population lives there.” 

In Aghavno, as rumors swirl about the potential impending handover, there are mixed feelings.

Anna Arakelyan, the history teacher at the school, said that the mood among her students darkened during the war, but that things have been gradually returning to their pre-war rhythm. Still, they know that the situation is precarious. “Sometimes I hear things like, ‘If we happen to come to school in September…’ or, ‘If we are still here this summer…’,” she told Eurasianet. “But I am sure we will not leave until the very last minute." 

Arakelyan’s parents were among the first Armenians to settle here in 1992, after fleeing their home in Maragha, a village in far eastern Nagorno-Karabakh that remained under Azerbaijani control. She was the first child to be born in Aghavno after the war, in 1994.

When the 2020 war broke out, she was pregnant, and fled to Armenia. She gave birth there, but moved back to Aghavno as soon as the war ended. “We decided that we would stay regardless of what the authorities decided," she told Eurasianet.

But there are plenty of signs of people who are less determined. Some houses in the village remain empty, their previous inhabitants apparently deciding to make new lives elsewhere.

And the mayor, Chavushyan, criticizes what he calls the “suitcase mood” of some current residents thinking of leaving. But he insists that a strong core will remain. “The quantity does not matter. What matters is being strong,” he said. “I have only dozens of people around, but I trust and rely on them. If some are surrendering, then they are free to go, we will still do our job.”

Chavushyan, who is himself from Qamishli in Syria, moved to Lachin in 2014 and then to Aghavno in 2016. During the 2020 war, he organized a volunteer detachment of soldiers and got weapons from the government, he said. The village itself, far from the front lines, saw little fighting and only two houses and the school were partially damaged by Azerbaijani shells. But Chavushyan’s unit did have to defend the village from looters who came from Armenia to take advantage of the emptied-out villages. 

Now, residents are ready to defend the village again, Chavushyan said. “We are responsible for our future generation. We defended ourselves in the ‘90s, we did it in 2020, and we are ready to fight again. We only need will and faith in ourselves,” he said.

Lilit Shahverdyan is a journalist based in Stepanakert. 

https://eurasianet.org/residents-of-a-karabakh-village-in-limbo-brace-for-handover








Music: ‘Duel’ with Armenia’s National Chamber Orchestra

Panorama
Armenia –

CULTURE 13:26 10/06/2022 ARMENIA

Yerevan’s Komitas Chamber Music Hall will host a unique concert on 16 June to mark the 75th anniversary of composer Georgs Pelecis.

The National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia, led by its artistic director and principal conductor Vahan Mardirossian, will “duel” with soloists Karen Shahgaldyan (violin) and Maxim Novikov (viola) at the concert scheduled for 7pm, the orchestra said.

The program features Georgs Pelecis’ “Ashugh’s Story” for viola, duduk and strings, “Voice of Cosmos”, “Lilac Gardens” and “Blossoming Jasmine” for violin, vibraphone and strings as well as two concertos by Roberto Di Marino.

Armenpress: Nicolas Tavitian calls on Armenian communities in European countries to work together on Artsakh

Nicolas Tavitian calls on Armenian communities in European countries to work together on Artsakh

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 09:41, 30 May 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 30, ARMENPRESS. There is big untapped potential in the Armenia-Belgium relations, according to Committee of Armenians of Belgium President Nicolas Tavitian.

“There is big untapped potential in the Armenia-Belgium relations. Belgians are fine businessmen, here we can contribute to developing cooperation, there is lots to be done in the cultural and educational areas, but of course in coordination with relevant structures of Armenia,” Tavitian said, emphasizing that if Armenia were to have a resident embassy in Belgium it would have facilitated the process.

Meanwhile, the Committee of Armenians of Belgium is preparing for the June 5 community elections to form a representative committee. The previous election was held 4 years ago and the turnout was 1500 people.

“Around thirty thousand Armenians live in Belgium now. There was a large inflow to Belgium after the nineties. Corresponding work was done for our compatriots to be actively involved in community structures, programs. Now, around five thousand Armenians are represented in municipal structures. We expect many of them to be active and participate in the community elections, which forms a representative committee, which in turn forms an executive body – the Committee of Armenians of Belgium,” Tavitian explained, noting that the body will define priorities and develop a strategy.

The action plan related to foreign policy, the development of Armenia-Belgium relations, as well as internal community matters.

In terms of foreign policy, the priority is the issue of Artsakh. Tavitian said they must actively work with the legislative and executive bodies of Belgium to present and raise awareness on Artsakh. Tavitian says it is highly important for all Armenian community structures in Europe to join forces and work together over Artsakh. By doing so, there will be stronger efficiency, Tavitian said.

Concerning cultural ties, Tavitian says there is a need for stronger partnership with Armenian cultural groups: organize visits of dance, theater and concert groups and exchange experience.

Regarding education, Nicolas Tavitian said they must first of all solve the funding issue and implement training programs for teachers.

Interview by Anna Gziryan

Armenian SRC asks Central Bank to develop and enforce cryptocurrency legislation

Armenia – June 1 2022
Armenian SRC asks Central Bank to develop and enforce cryptocurrency legislation
01.06.2022 16:10

YEREVAN, June 1. /ARKA/. Armenia’s State Revenue Committee (SRC) has formally asked the Central Bank to regulate the digital asset industry by enforcing a cryptocurrency legislation, SRC head Rustam Badasyan said today.

He said the lack of legislation hinders combating criminal activities and enables shady transactions.

'We already have had some cases when cryptocurrencies were used to avoid taxes and launder money," he said during parliamentary hearings on the execution of the state budget last year.

Badasyan also said that an investigation was launched into provision of a large sum of cash in exchange for the purchase of cryptocurrency, but it has not yielded any results because of the lack of relevant legislation.

Earlier, Seyran Sargsyan, the Executive Director of the Union of Banks of Armenia, stated that financial institutions in Armenia do not regard cryptocurrencies as legal tender and do not service such assets.

According to him, issues like identification of clients dealing with e-currency, as well as transparency and other related problems connected with money laundering, need to be regulated.

According to the World Economic Forum, there are 18,142 cryptocurrencies, 460 crypto-exchanges and the marked cap of cryptocurrecmies amounts to about $2 trillion. Every 24 hours, $91 billion worth of cryptos are traded, most of them Bitcoin or Ethereum.

Analysts have warned that the industry is so large it could have macroeconomic consequences if mismanaged. They says piecemeal approaches to cryptocurrency regulation must be replaced by a globally coordinated framework.-0-


RFE?RL Armenian Report – 06/01/2022

                                        Wednesday, June 1, 2022


EU Head Reacts To Armenian-Azeri ‘Tensions’
June 01, 2022

Greece - European Council President Charles Michel speaks during an event in 
Alexandroupolis, May 3, 2022.


European Council President Charles Michel seemed to confirm late on Tuesday 
Armenia’s assertions that it has not agreed to open a permanent land corridor 
that will connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave.

Michel was also understood to deny advocating Nagorno-Karabakh’s return under 
Azerbaijani rule during his trilateral meeting with Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev held in Brussels on May 
22.

Aliyev said after the summit that he and Pashinian agreed to open a “Zangezur 
corridor” that will consist of a road and railway connecting Nakhichevan to the 
rest of Azerbaijan. He had demanded earlier that people and cargo using them be 
exempt from Armenian border controls.

Pashinian and other Armenian officials denied Aliyev’s claim, saying that 
Yerevan will not open any extraterritorial corridors. They insisted that the two 
sides reached understandings only on conventional transport links.

“Both parties confirmed [at Brussels] there were no extraterritorial claims with 
regard to future transport infrastructure. Speculation to the contrary is 
regrettable,” Michel’s spokesman, Barend Leyts, said in a statement.

Commenting on “the past days' tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Leyts 
also sought to clarify Michel’s remarks made right after the Brussels talks.

“President Michel's statement on outcomes of the leaders meeting on 22 May 
should not be interpreted as favoring a predetermined outcome of discussions 
either way,” he said.

The European Union’s top official said early on May 23 that “the rights and 
security of the ethnic Armenian population in Karabakh” should also be addressed 
during upcoming negotiations on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty.

Armenian opposition leaders and Karabakh’s leadership denounced the remark. They 
accused Michel of undermining the Karabakh Armenians’ right to 
self-determination by portraying them as an ethnic minority not eligible for 
independent statehood.

“In President Michel's opinion, all core issues that had led to the first 
Nagorno-Karabakh war as well as to the renewed hostilities in 2020 will need to 
be addressed by all stakeholders to create conditions for lasting and equitable 
peace,” stressed Leyts.

Late last week, Aliyev warned the Armenian side against insisting on an 
agreement on Karabakh’s status. He said Baku could respond by laying claim to 
Armenian territory. The Armenian Foreign Ministry denounced the threat.



Saudi Arabia, Armenia Again Signal Warming Ties
June 01, 2022

Saudi Arabia - Saudi and Armenian national flags fly at Riyad airport during the 
arrival of Armenian President Armen Sarkissian, October 27, 2021.


Armenia voiced support on Wednesday for Saudi Arabia’s bid to host the Expo 2030 
world fair in another sign of rapprochement between the two states that have no 
diplomatic relations.

Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan announced the endorsement in a phone call with 
Saudi Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Adel al-Jubeir.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry said the two men discussed “prospects for the 
development of relations” between their nations and stressed the importance of 
promoting bilateral trade and “investment projects.”

“Minister Mirzoyan informed his interlocutor that Armenia supports Saudi 
Arabia's application to hold World Expo 2030 in Riyadh,” the ministry added in a 
statement.

Mirzoyan made that clear one week after Russia, Armenia’s closest ally, withdrew 
its formal request to host the global event. Moscow said the selection process 
cannot be fair because of the West’s efforts to isolate it on the world stage 
over the war in Ukraine.

Saudi Arabia has for decades refused to establish diplomatic relations with 
Armenia due to its conflict with Muslim Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. The 
oil-rich kingdom signaled a change in that policy after its relations with 
Armenia’s arch-foe and Azerbaijan’s ally Turkey deteriorated significantly 
several years ago.

Saudi Arabia - Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman talks to Armenian 
President Armen Sarkissian during the Future Investment Initiative forum in 
Riyadh, October 26, 2021.

The policy change was highlighted last October by then Armenian President Armen 
Sarkissian’s visit to Riyadh. Sarkissian sat next to Saudi Arabia’s de facto 
ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, at the opening ceremony of an 
international conference held there.

Riyadh signaled more overtures to Yerevan in February this year when Saudi 
Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud and Mirzoyan held talks on the 
sidelines of the Munich Security Conference in Germany.

It was the first-ever face-to-face meeting of the top diplomats of the two 
countries. The Saudi Foreign Ministry said they “reviewed bilateral relations in 
various fields” and explored “opportunities to enhance bilateral coordination.”

It remains unclear whether the kingdom is now ready for a full normalization of 
Saudi-Armenian relations.



Aliyev, Pashinian Brief Putin On Brussels Talks
June 01, 2022

Russia - Russian President Vladimir Putin, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev meet in Sochi, November 26, 
2021.


In separate phone calls, the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan have briefed 
Russian President Vladimir Putin on the results of their latest meeting held in 
Brussels on May 22.

According the Kremlin, Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev spoke on 
Tuesday “at the initiative of the Azerbaijani side.” The Russian leader phoned 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Wednesday.

The Kremlin’s readouts of the calls said they presented to Putin details of 
their trilateral meeting in Brussels with European Council President Charles 
Michel. It was the second Armenian-Azerbaijani summit hosted by Michel in less 
than two months.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke with his Armenian and Azerbaijani 
counterparts the day after the May 22 summit. The Russian Foreign Ministry 
afterwards again criticized the European Union’s mediation efforts.

The ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, accused the EU of trying to “wedge” 
into the implementation of Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements brokered by Moscow 
earlier.

The agreements call for the demarcation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and 
the opening of transport links between the two South Caucasus states. Putin 
discussed their implementation with Aliyev and Pashinian.

An Armenian government statement said Putin welcomed the first session of an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani commission on the demarcation held on the border on May 24. 
It reaffirmed that the next session of the commission will be held in Moscow but 
gave no dates.

The statement said Putin and Pashinian agreed on the need to step up activities 
of a separate Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani task force dealing with practical 
modalities of the transport links. It said they also discussed the possibility 
of kick-starting the work of the OSCE Minsk Group on Nagorno-Karabakh co-headed 
by the United States, Russia and France.

Moscow says that Washington and Paris stopped cooperating with it in the Minsk 
Group format after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. U.S. and French officials 
have not denied that.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Russian and Iranian FMs discuss the talks on Iran nuclear deal

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 19:20, 3 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 3, ARMENPRESS. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian discussed the Iran nuclear deal during a telephone conversation, as well as referred to Ukraine, ARMENPRESS reports citing RIA Novosti, the Russian Foreign Ministry informed.

The phone conversation took place at the initiative of the Iranian side.

"The main focus was on the resumption of talks on Iran's nuclear program, as well as the meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Board of Governors to be held on June 6, 2022," the statement said.