Seyran Ohanyan: Our Armed Forces fulfill the tasks set before them on a high level

Panorama, Armenia

“The Armenian Armed Forces fulfill the tasks set before them on a high level,” former Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Tuesday. In Ohanyan’s words, the ongoing military actions on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border are local clashes.

“Our Armed Forces, the society should be ready. These local clashes always have consequences. Got forbid this will not lead to full scale war and i see there no grounds and prerequisites for large scale war military actions,” the former defense minister noted.

Ohanyan next expressed confidence in the Armed Forces of Armenia and the Artsakh Defense Army are ready for not only defense but also preemptive, punitive and compelling actions.

White House policy on Armenian Genocide ‘unchanged’

Public Radio of Armenia
July 8 2020

Armenia’s Kalashnikov Plant Commences Operations

Israel Defense
July 10 2020

The facility is capable of manufacturing 50,000 assault rifles a year, the country's prime minister says

The Armenian government revealed on July 7 that the country's small arms production plant began operating under license to manufacture Kalashnikov AK-103 assault rifles.

During a tour of the Neutron GAM plant, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced that the new plant could produce up to 50,000 rifles a year. Pashinyan was accompanied by the country's defense minister.

Janes notes that Neutron’s ammunition production lines are also being transferred from the company’s current facility in the capital Yerevan to the neighboring province of Kotayk. Following refurbishment, the facility will be able to produce 7.62×39 mm, 7.62 × 54 mm, 12.7 mm, and 9×18 mm and 9×19 mm ammunition. The modernization of equipment for the 7.62×39 mm, 7.62×54 mm, and 12.7 mm production lines is being performed through a $24 million contract with Russia’s Spetsmashingeneering.

Sports: FC Noah claimes title of Vbet Armenian Cup 2019/20

Xinhua, China
 
 
FC Noah claimes title of Vbet Armenian Cup 2019/20
Source: Xinhua| 2020-07-11 15:42:45|Editor: huaxia
Danu Spataru of FC Noah celebrates after scoring a goal during the final match of the Vbet Armenian Cup 2019/20 between FC Noah and FC Ararat in Yerevan, Armenia, on . FC Noah claimed the title. FC Noah claimed the title of the event after beating FC Ararat. (Photo by Gevorg Ghazaryan/Xinhua)
 
 
 
 
 

Asbarez: Condolences On the Passing of Prelacy Vicar-General’s Father


Prelacy Vicar-General Bishop Torkom Donoyan with his late father, Krikor, and his mother, Adrine

Western Prelate Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, the Prelacy Religious and Executive Councils mourn the passing of Krikor Donoyan, father of Vicar-General Bishop Torkom Donoyan, which occurred on Friday, July 10, in Lebanon following a brief illness.

The Prelate, Clergy, Religious and Executive Councils, Board of Regents of Prelacy Schools, Prelacy Ladies Auxiliary, affiliated bodies and the staff extend their condolences to the Vicar General, his mother Adrine, brothers Harout and Kristapor, and family members.

Requiem service will be conducted on Saturday, July 11, at 2 p.m., at St. Mary’s Church in Glendale, after which the Vicar General will accept condolences at the Church hall until 4 p.m.

May God grant rest to his soul and make him worthy of His eternal kingdom.

May his memory remain ever-blessed.

WESTERN PRELACY EXECUTIVE




Turkey’s Demographics Defy Erdoğan’s Designs

Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies


By Burak Bekdil 



BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 1,636, 

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Only 12% of Turks say they trust Islamic clerics,
and more and more young Turks are unhappy at religious school. As high
a proportion as 60.5% of pro-Erdoğan youths say they would rather live
in Switzerland with half the salary they could have earned in Saudi
Arabia. The fertility rate has fallen to 1.99—below the 2.1 rate
required to sustain existing population figures. Despite Erdoğan’s
unchallenged popularity, power, and authoritarian rule, Turkey is
evolving demographically in a way that defies the dictates of Islamist
social engineering.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has not lost a single election,
including municipal elections and referenda, since his AKP (Justice
and Development) party came to power in November 2002. This is
ostensibly a flawless performance for a politician. But Erdoğan wants
more than just to win one election after another. In 2012 he declared
his political mission to be “raising devout generations.” That is a
far more ambitious mission than just winning at the ballot box.

Credible recent surveys indicate that Erdoğan’s 18-year reign has
failed to achieve his broader political mission.

Optimar, a Turkish pollster, found that in 2017, 99% of Turks
identified as Muslim, but in 2019, that figure had slid to 89.5%.
Konda, another pollster, found in 2019 that Turkish youths were less
likely than the wider population to call themselves “religious
conservative.” They were also less likely to fast, pray regularly, or,
if female, cover their hair.

Another survey, part of OECD’s Programme for International Student
Assessment, revealed that 54% of imam school students do not feel they
belong at their school, compared to 27.5%-29.1% of students at
non-religious schools. Most embarrassing for Islamists, perhaps, were
the findings of a survey by Ipsos, an international pollster. Ipsos
found that only 12% of Turks trust Islamic clerics, the worst score
after politicians (who are trusted by 11%).

A more recent survey found that even conservative, pro-Erdoğan youths
have no faith in either their own country or other Islamic countries.
SODEV, a Turkish foundation, asked young people between the ages of 15
and 25 whether they would live abroad if given the chance. Almost half
(47.3%) of those youths who said they supported Erdoğan’s AKP said
they preferred to live abroad. “That means half of Erdoğan’s youth
have no faith in Turkey’s future,” wrote Akif Beki, a former spokesman
for Erdoğan and a columnist.

SODEV’s “Youth Research” was not encouraging for Erdoğan and
ideologues who advocate authoritarian, top-down social engineering
aimed at producing Islamist youth. SODEV asked pro-Erdoğan (pro-AKP)
young people whether they would rather live in Switzerland on $5,000
per month or in Saudi Arabia on $10,000 per month. As many as 60.5% of
them said they would prefer Switzerland.

Why would fiercely nationalist, religiously conservative, pro-Erdoğan
young Turks prefer to live in a Christian European country? Haven’t
they been listening to Erdoğan’s aggressive anti-Western rhetoric for
the past 18 years? SODEV’s survey provides an answer to that question
too. According to the study, 70.3% of respondents think a talented
young Turk would never be able to promote him- or herself
professionally in Turkey without [political/bureaucratic]
“connections”—that is, without the help of nepotism. And only 30% of
them think they can freely express their opinions on social media.

When asked to name the most significant idea in life, 49.8% cited
“national values” and 45.7% cited “religious values.” But 68.3% cited
“freedom to express one’s opinion.” Apparently, Turkey’s lack of
freedom, equal opportunity, and social mobility tells young Turks that
they would be better off in a Christian country. “That’s because young
Turks, including [those who are] pro-Erdoğan, know they could
fearlessly express their opinions in Switzerland…that they could have
a [successful] professional career without resorting to nepotism and
that they would not face police interrogation just because they
expressed their opinions,” commented columnist Elif Çakır.

Another of Erdoğan’s social engineering failures is the greying of
Turkey. Since 2008, the Islamist-populist leader has repeatedly urged
Turkish families to have at least three children—“four or five if
possible.” Without naming names, Erdogan justified this quest as a
defense against “those [foreign plotters who] want to annihilate our
nation.”

Despite Erdoğan’s baby boom campaign, the number of healthy births in
Turkey dropped by 3.6% to 1.248 million in 2018 versus 1.295 million
in 2017. The overall fertility rate fell to 1.99 from 2.07, meaning
Turkey is now reproducing below the 2.1 rate required to maintain the
population at current levels.

Turkey’s demographic evolution defies the dictates of Erdoğan’s
Islamist social engineering despite his unchallenged popularity,
power, and authoritarian rule. Turkish families ignore his instruction
to have at least three children, and his younger supporters are ready
to pack up and move to a Christian country.

This is not the demographic picture Erdoğan dreamed of, but it is the
natural outcome of his democratic shortcomings. As I have suggested
before, “Perhaps Erdoğan’s best service to his country is to show
young Turks what it actually means to live under an Islamist regime.”


Burak Bekdil is an Ankara-based columnist. He regularly writes for the
Gatestone Institute and Defense News and is a fellow at the Middle
East Forum.


 

Film: Today marks great Armenian actor Frunzik Mkrtchyan’s birthday

Panorama, Armenia
July 4 2020
Culture 10:42 04/07/2020Armenia

July 4 marks the birthday anniversary of talented Soviet Armenian actor Mher Mkrtchyan, better known by his stage name Frunzik. The prominent actor would have  turned 90 today.

“Great Armenian artist Martiros Saryan, while painting my portrait, asked me: “Where are you from, Mher?” I replied: “My father is from Mush, mother is from Van and I was born in Leninakan. So, where I am from?” The master thought for some time and said: “So, you are a genuine resident of Yerevan, guy.” (From “Mher Mkrtchyan. Eternal Monologue.”)
Every role he played in cinema or theater is unique and recognizes no time. “An actor should be able to play any role. An actor represents a man, and the human essence has such manifestations as crying, laughter and humor,” he said once. The actor followed this principle both in cinema and theater.

Born in Leninakan (now Gyumri), he first studied in a local art college and theatre studio. Later, Mkrtchyan also graduated from Yerevan Institute of Fine Arts and Theatre. Beginning 1953, he performed in the Sundukyan Drama Theatre of Yerevan. He also directed many successful productions, with Maxim Gorky's “The Lower Depths" among the best.

His cinema career began in 1955. The artist’s famous roles in “Aybolit-66” (1966), “Kidnapping”, “Caucasian Style” (1967) and “Mimino” (1977) earned him the reputation of one of the leading comedy actors in the Soviet Union. But that reputation sometimes overshadowed his real talent and emotional deepness which he put in such classics of Armenian cinema as “Triangle” (1967), “We Are Our Mountains” (1969), “Father” (1973), “Life Triumphs” (1977), “The Song of the Old Days” (1982), “The Tango of Our Childhood” (1985).

Mher Mkrtchyan was honored with the title of People's Artist of the Soviet Armenia in 1971 and People’s Artist of the Soviet Union in 1978. He died in Yerevan in 1993. In 2001, he was posthumously awarded with St. Mesrop Mashtots Order.
“Every man is the sculptor of his own destiny. He passes away when the sculpture is finished,” Mher Mkrtchyan said.


President Sarkissian holds meeting with CBA chief

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 17:20, 1 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 1, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian had a meeting with President of the Central Bank Martin Galstyan, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

President Sarkissian congratulated Martin Galstyan on election to the post and wished further success in his working activity.

The officials exchanged views on the ongoing changes in the international financial market due to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, their possible impacts in Armenia, touched upon the economic consequences of the pandemic and the ways to overcome them.

The CBA President presented information about the ongoing activity and planned works of the Bank.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Anti-Armenian Turkish politician elected President of 75th UN General Assembly

News.am, Armenia

01:07, 20.06.2020
                  

Armenian News-NEWS.am’s correspondent talked to Turkologist Andranik Ispiryan about the election of Turkish diplomat Volkan Bozkir to the position of President of the 75th United Nations General Assembly.

According to the Turkologist, what is troubling for Armenia is not only the fact that a Turkish figure is elected President of the United Nations General Assembly, but also the fact that he is a member of Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party, which has a strictly negative attitude towards Armenia.

“When he was chair of the foreign relations committee of the Turkish parliament and minister for relations with the European Union, he would make anti-Armenian statements. As minister for European Union affairs, in 2015, he declared that the European Parliament’s call on Turkey to recognize the Armenian Genocide was of no value for Turkey, and he coarsely responded to then US President Barack Obama who had dared to utter the word “Yeghern” in Armenian.

Bozkir is also known for his statements to unconditionally support Azerbaijan for settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

As the chair of the foreign relations committee of the Turkish parliament, what was the most shameful statement was his statement according to which he will not allow normalization of relations with Armenia during his term of office. This is the kind of politician elected to the position of President of the 75th United Nations General Assembly in the 21st century,” Ispiryan stated, adding that it’s natural that Bozkir will try to work against Armenia and Armenians and support Turkey and Azerbaijan during his term of office. However, Ispiryan says there is no need to overestimate the role of the president of the UN General Assembly since it is a more of a symbolic position.

Armenia and Azerbaijan’s Season of Symbolic Offensives

Chatham House


18 June 2020
Hopes the two countries would find ways to reinvigorate long-stagnant negotiations have faltered, despite the sustained reduction in violations of the Nagorny Karabakh ceasefire.
Associate Fellow, Russia and Eurasia Programme

Eighteen months on from a reported agreement by Armenia and Azerbaijan’s foreign ministers to prepare their populations for peace, both states have in reality remained largely preoccupied with consolidating domestic power due to enduring socio-economic frustration and populations radicalized by the ‘four-day war’ back in 2016.

A rapidly evolving international context since then has been dominated by regional tensions in Ukraine and the Middle East, and between the United States and Iran. And the COVID-19 pandemic now presents both Yerevan and Baku with new threats and problems.

Armenia’s measures to contain the virus were roundly criticised as ‘too little, too late’, while the de facto authorities in Nagorny Karabakh were rebuked by many in civil society for pressing ahead with elections despite risks to public health. Azerbaijan appears to have contained the pandemic more effectively, but long-term impacts on the oil price threaten to expose its vulnerability to external shocks.

Under such circumstances it is unsurprising to see an instinct to rally populations around the symbolic politics of the conflict prevailing, although President Aliyev and Prime Minister Pashinyan – to their credit – did take the unprecedented step of appearing together on a podium at the Munich Security Conference in February.

But their debate dismayed an international community looking for an articulation of strategies for peace, as each leader reverted to a traditional repertoire of historical-legal claims and conspiracy theories. This was followed in May by both countries trading accusations over alleged collaboration with the Nazis in the Second World War.

Adding to this tension was the decision to hold the inauguration of the de facto Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’s new leader Ara Harutyunyan in the city of Shusha – overwhelmingly populated by Azerbaijanis prior to the 1992-94 war and a key symbol of Azerbaijan’s claim to the territory. This aroused considerable anger in Azerbaijan, which was then added to by Pashinyan’s presence at the inauguration.

Aliyev appeared to reciprocate by reiterating claims that modern Armenia is in fact founded on ancient Azerbaijani territory after a group led by an Azerbaijani academic in Turkey declared the founding of a ‘Republic of Western Azerbaijan (Irevan)’ in exile, laying claim to substantial areas of Armenia – and implying that not only is an Armenian claim to Nagorny Karabakh illegitimate, but also to most of the territory forming Armenia including its capital Yerevan.

Then on 8 June Karabakh Armenian leader Harutyunyan said that the construction of a third road across Armenian-occupied territories, connecting the southern Armenian town of Kapan with Hadrut in Nagorny Karabakh, would proceed soon. Initially announced in July 2019, Yerevan and Stepanakert frame the road as a humanitarian necessity. Baku sees it as confirmation of an annexation policy.

The challenging atmosphere was not helped by the European Court of Human Rights handing down its judgment in the notorious Ramil Safarov case, an army officer extradited and pardoned by Azerbaijan after being convicted of murdering an Armenian counterpart in Budapest in 2004. Although many Azerbaijanis have now distanced themselves from support for Safarov, the judgement still ‘fell short’ for many Armenians.

Some of these incidents are felt much more deeply than others and inflict greater damage on the prospects of a meaningful peace process. But both sides can plausibly point to adversarial moves as evidence that good faith in such a process is lacking. Collectively, each side’s symbolic offensives have fed the other’s cynicism.

Formal negotiations between the two have been anchored for more than a decade by the Basic (‘Madrid’) Principles – but these too are now under pressure. Within the framework of the Minsk Process mediated by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), uncertainty over where the parties stand vis-à-vis the principles is both a driver of further polarization and indicative of a lack of new ideas.

Armenia’s post-Velvet Revolution leadership – depicted as ‘weak on security’ by the previous regime – dismissed the principles as a legacy associated with previous incumbent Serzh Sargsyan, and Pashinyan proposed an alternative set of ‘Munich Principles’ in the aftermath of his encounter with Ilham Aliyev in February. But these amounted more to a set of positions and red lines than to a proposed set of mechanisms for resolving the conflict.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov added to Yerevan’s discomfort with the principles by making comments appearing to confirm a ‘phased’ approach to their implementation. This is widely assumed to accord more with Azerbaijan’s interests, as concessions in the form of territorial withdrawals are presumed to come first without a clear settlement of Nagorny Karabakh’s status.

In the current climate, Lavrov’s comments have only hardened Armenian scepticism towards the principles reinforced by the fact that, as recent research shows (opens in new window), informal ‘Track-II’ dialogue across the Armenian-Azerbaijani divide is at its lowest level since the beginning of confrontation in 1988.

Buffeted by so many external shocks and internal challenges, little progress can be expected on the core political issues dividing Armenia and Azerbaijan. But the prolonged reduction of violence on the Nagorny Karabakh Line of Contact does mean that discussion of ‘low-cost’ confidence building is still possible. Small-scale positive-sum measures that do not imply new structures or mandates could enable Baku and Yerevan to step away from symbolic battlegrounds and stop feeding the cycle of cynicism.

https://www.chathamhouse.org/expert/comment/armenia-and-azerbaijan-s-season-symbolic-offensives#