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Ukraine reveals condition for abandoning intentions of joining NATO

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 16:56, 8 March, 2022

YEREVAN, MARCH 8, ARMENPRESS. Ukraine will consider potentially abandoning its intentions of joining NATO only if security guarantees will be provided, Strana News reported citing a statement from Mikhailo Podolyak, the Adviser to the Head of the Office of President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Podolyak added that Ukraine is ready for constructive negotiations over key matters.

“Regarding political matters, Zelenskyy is not afraid to speak with the Russian side about any political matter. But it is natural that we are defending our national statehood, our national rights. And we must receive a clear and concrete legally binding package of security guarantees in conditions when NATO is openly saying that there won’t be a Ukrainian accession. It makes no sense to speak about details now. Now what matters is the physical defense of Ukraine,” Podolyak said.

No decision on third meеting of Armenia, Turkey special representatives – FM Mirzoyan

Public Radio of Armenia
March 2 2022

No dates has been set for third meeting of the special representatives of Armenia and Turkey, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said at a Q&A session at the National Assembly.

He assessed the second meeting between the representatives of the two countries as “positive.”

“As stated in the statement after the meeting, the parties reiterated that the process is taking place without preconditions and that establishment of diplomatic relations and opening of the border are the ultimate goals,” Minister Mirzoyan said.

He noted that the discussions were more concrete than during the first meeting, but added that it was hard to expect very tangible results even from the second meeting in a process that should give solutions to centuries-long or decades-long issues.

As for the invitation to the Antalya Diplomacy Forum, the Foreign Minister said the decision on participation of Armenian representatives is yet to be made.

The discussion of the second meeting of the Armenian and Turkish special representatives was much more specific

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 17:37, 2 March, 2022

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan positively assesses the second meeting of the Armenian and Turkish special representatives held in Geneva.

"I assess the second meeting of the representatives of Armenia and Turkey as positive. You can read everything in the statement made by the representatives. The parties reaffirmed that the process takes place without preconditions, that the end result of the process is the normalization of relations, and, of course, for us, the opening of the Armenia-Turkey border”, ARMENPRESS reports Mirzoyan as saying, answering the question of MP from “Civil Contract” Party Sargis Khandayan.

FM Mirzoyan mentioned that during the second meeting the discussion was much more specific than the during first meeting.

"At the same time, I think we all understand that it is difficult to expect very tangible results even from the second meeting, a process that must provide solutions to the problems of centuries and decades," Mirzoyan concluded.

Azerbaijani press: Armenian ex-leader’s fraudulent embezzlement schemes

By Ayya Lmahamad

Nowadays, it is clear that the situation in which the Armenian government now finds itself, with no ability to participate in the financing of any projects, occurred because all of the country's leaders when they came to power, were only engaged in corruption and embezzlement of state budget funds.

Former Armenian President Armen Sarkissian's fraud schemes were exposed by the Swiss newspaper Süddeutsche, which published an international journalistic investigation by SuisseSecrets based on leaked bank account information. Sarkissian, according to the information, fled with a sum in excess of $10 million.

According to the newspaper, the number of Armenian citizens or people associated with Armenia in the leaked data exceeds 500, and the number of bank accounts exceeds 400, including Armen Sarkissian and his family members.

Thus, the former president and his sister's Credit Suisse bank account contained more than ten million Swiss francs. It should be noted that the account was established in 2006 and was serviced until 2016. The ex-president did not declare the funds in this account.

To recall, in September 2013 Armen Sarkissian was appointed Armenian ambassador to the United Kingdom, and from that moment, according to law, he became “a person obliged to submit a financial declaration”.

However, when analyzing the declarations submitted to Armenia’s Corruption Prevention Commission, it becomes clear that neither in the declaration upon assuming the post of ambassador in 2013, nor in the annual declaration of 2014, 2015 and 2016 the former president indicated the above-mentioned funds.

Furthermore, the Armenian Hraparak newspaper recently reported that Sarkissian owns property in Switzerland, which he denies. According to the same newspaper, one of the most likely reasons for Sarkissian's resignation is his dual citizenship in the Caribbean.

The Baku-based news website Day.az notes that Sarkissian appears to have decided to follow in the footsteps of Levon Ter-Petrosian, Robert Kocharian, and Serzh Sargsyan and that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is doing the same.

In mid-January of this year, Armenian journalists learned that the bookmakers Vivaro Media and Toto Gaming had transferred 5 million drams and 1 million drams, respectively, to one of Pashinian's funds, City of Smile. Furthermore, tycoon Khachatur Sukiasyan donated 3 million drams to this fund, according to Day.az.

"The foundation is ostensibly a 'charitable' foundation, but it is unclear for what purpose the funds were transferred. This has caused consternation among Armenian citizens, who are speculating on social media that it could be a bribe or money laundering," according to the news website.

In addition, a closed report on corruption in Armenia was distributed in Brussels in March 2019. According to the report's authors, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is the country's most corrupt official, with an estimated €1.5 billion in embezzlement.

Turkish press: Turkey to implement Montreux Convention due to Ukraine war

Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu speaks in a joint news conference with Bahraini counterpart in Manama, Bahrain, Jan. 31, 2022. (AA File Photo)

Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said Ankara was implementing an international pact on naval passage to the Black Sea.

"Turkey will implement all provisions of Montreux Convention in a transparent manner," the minister told a live interview with broadcaster CNN Türk.

Under the 1936 Montreux Convention, NATO member Turkey has control over the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits, linking the Mediterranean and Black seas. The pact gives Ankara the power to regulate the transit of naval warships and to close the straits to foreign warships during wartime and when it is threatened.

The Turkish diplomat also held talks on Ukraine with Estonia's Foreign Minister Eva-Maria Liimets along with Dutch counterpart Wopke Hoekstra and Helga Schmid, the secretary-general of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).

In addition, he discussed the humanitarian issue and efforts to ensure a cease-fire in Ukraine during a conversation with U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

Turkey earlier called Russia's invasion of Ukraine a "war" on Sunday in a rhetorical shift that opened the way for the move.

While building close cooperation with Russia on defense and energy, Ankara has also sold sophisticated drones to Ukraine and signed a deal to co-produce more, angering Moscow. Turkish officials noted that the country would continue to support Ukraine's territorial integrity and unity.

Turkey opposes Russian policies in Syria and Libya, its annexation of Crimea in 2014 and its 2008 recognition of two Georgian regions.

He also said Turkey was pleased about Ukraine and Russia's decision to meet on Monday.

Ukraine agreed to launch peace talks with Russia on Sunday, even as battles raged in key cities and President Vladimir Putin raised the prospect of a nuclear escalation with the West.

Delegations from each country are set to meet at the Ukrainian-Belarusian border, the office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said.

There are no conditions to the planned talks at the border, according to the statement.

He noted that Turkey is also striving to ensure the safe evacuation of around 6,600 Turkish citizens in Ukraine.

The Turkish nationals started to arrive on Sunday morning by land after the Turkish Foreign Ministry arranged their evacuation through Romania and Bulgaria due to the closure of the Ukrainian airspace after Russia's attacks on Ukraine.

Evacuated Turkish nationals entered Turkey through northwestern Hamzabeyli Border Gate at the Turkish-Bulgarian border and will be transferred to Istanbul by bus.

Reflection on the “Armenia-Iran: Historical Past and Present” International Conference

Weekly columnist Yeghia Tashjian pictured with Iranian diplomats, conference organizers and participants at the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Yerevan

The Iranian Studies Department of the Oriental Studies of the Armenian National Academy of Sciences, together with the Iranian Cultural Center of the Embassy of Islamic Republic of Iran at Yerevan and Yerevan State University, organized a two-day international conference from February 9-10, 2022 titled “Armenia-Iran Historical Past and Present” dedicated to the establishment of diplomatic relations between both countries. There were more than 20 speakers, diplomats and scholars (Armenians and Iranians), and I was one of them. Iranian-Armenian MPs Robert Beglarian and Ara Shaverdian were also in attendance.

The conference aimed to highlight the history of Armenian-Iranian relations, ranging from political and cultural to economic relations and came up with recommendations to push this relation to different levels. The Iranian Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Armenia H.E., Mr. Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri in his opening speech for the conference highlighted the geostrategic importance of the Iran-Armenia border; the decision of the Iranian government to open a consulate in Kaban, Syunik; the geopolitical significance of the North-South Transport Corridor; and increasing the trade turnover between both countries to $1 billion.

Weekly columnist Yeghia Tashjian with the Iranian Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Armenia H.E. Mr. Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri

The following topics were addressed:

Armenian scholars pointed to the civilizational relations between both states, the importance of preserving the current border, the Pan-Turkic threats and Iran’s passive diplomacy during the 2020 Artsakh war. They also expressed concerns regarding the threat of the “Zangezur Corridor” and Azerbaijan’s territorial claims on Armenia.

Iranian scholars pointed out that the 2020 war on Artsakh was not just a war against Armenia, but also Iran. They hinted that by establishing a “Zangezur Corridor,” Turkey-Azerbaijan-Israel are trying to cut Iran’s alternative routes to Europe and Russia. They stressed the importance of the North-South Corridor for both countries, the increase of trade turnover to more than $1 billion and negotiations regarding the free economic zone in Meghri.

Interestingly, none touched on possible military cooperation between both countries.

My Recommendations for the Strengthening of Armenia-Iran Relations

In my concluding speech during the conference, I came up with the following recommendations:

If in the future, Iran joins the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), it would have better access to Eurasian, Russian and European markets. This accession would also provide EAEU member states with increased access to the Persian Gulf and increase trade and give stronger impetus and incentive for both sides (Iran and other EAEU members) to pursue common interests in third-party states like in the Levant. So Russia and Iran would have stronger cooperation in the Levant and other regions. Hence, they will work to protect their shared economic interests. Therefore, with the unblocking of regional trade routes, in the long run, Armenia would have access to the Levantine markets and reach the Eastern Mediterranean by rail. Iran should facilitate this project so that Armenia would have access to the seas through Iran and not Turkey.

Both Armenia and Iran could launch rapid joint cooperation through joint venture plans and also through Iran’s investments in Armenia’s highways, especially from the Norduz border crossing to Yerevan in order to widen the capacity of the North-South Corridor. From the Iranian perspective, this would widen not only Armenian-Iranian and regional trade, but also promote Iran’s geo-economic interests in Armenia. Such steps may further attract Indian, Chinese and European investments, which would empower Armenia’s security and stability.

Both Armenia and Iran can also have military cooperation for the sake of regional stability and to ensure that geopolitical borders of regional countries will remain stable and unharmed, especially in Armenia, and to ensure that states like Israel and the US will not try to make a scapegoat of Armenia and weaken Armenia for the sake of their plans in the Caucasus. For this reason, an intelligence cooperation center should be created both in Armenia and Iran where both sides can share, analyze and assess regional threats and terror activities that may expose a threat to both countries and regional securities. To facilitate this process, direct communication channels must be established between the security service institutions of both countries. The target of this initiative should be pan-Turkic and Jihadi terrorist groups,

Opening an Iranian consulate in Syunik is the right step; however, a military coordinator/attaché is needed to analyze the military developments on the border and directly report to Tehran. The opening of the consulate will pave the way for other states to take similar steps and preserve Armenia’s sovereignty with international backing on Syunik.

Communication needs to be enhanced between Armenia and the Diaspora communities in Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon in order to compare and assess Iranian intentions and policies in the Middle East and South Caucasus. These communities can act as secondary embassies to facilitate communication and information sharing between different Iranian and pro-Iranian organizations and the Republic of Armenia. For these reasons, having strong communities in Lebanon and Syria is in the interest of both Armenia and Iran. 

After our conference, the Iranian ambassador invited us for a reception at his embassy hall. During a three-hour meeting, in a positive atmosphere, we discussed with the Iranian ambassador and the diplomats about the current challenges and the future of bilateral ties between both countries, geopolitical concerns and threats, and provided suggestions.

Conclusion and Reflection 

From this conference and meeting with Iranian diplomats and scholars, I have come to the following conclusion. 

  • Armenia cannot expect more from Iran. Iran has done its share and now expects Yerevan to positively respond. Iran will never militarily intervene in any possible future border crisis between Armenia and Azerbaijan. What Iran can do is to use some hard power to send messages (military exercises, redeployment of forces in the north). Iran cannot alienate and antagonize its large Iranian-Azeri community which is fully integrated into the Iranian society.
  • Iran is satisfied with the current status quo (even though it acknowledges that it has so many gaps), as long Russia doesn’t lose its sphere of influence in the Caucasus. For the time being, Iran cannot alone compete with the rising Turkish influence. 
  • Iran supports peace and economic growth in the region. The Iranian economy needs markets to export its products and modernize its industry. The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan was, to some extent, an obstacle to push for trade activities in the region. Now that both sides are engaging in “dialogue” through Russia, Iran is pushing its geo-economic ambitions forward. 
  • The North-South Transport Corridor is crucial for Iran. Iran proposed many ideas for Armenia, but is still waiting for a response from Armenian authorities. 
  • Armenia, with its Christian cultural heritage, is seen as a successful model for the Iranians to provide a civilizational dialogue and Christian-Islamic harmony and a role model that Iran can engage in similar models with other Christian countries in the world, namely the West.
  • Armenia and Iran have done so little to strengthen their cultural, trade, and political ties. 
  • For now, military-technological (arms industry) cooperation is out of the question. 
Yeghia Tashjian is a regional analyst and researcher. He has graduated from the American University of Beirut in Public Policy and International Affairs. He pursued his BA at Haigazian University in political science in 2013. In 2010, he founded the New Eastern Politics forum/blog. He was a research assistant at the Armenian Diaspora Research Center at Haigazian University. Currently, he is the regional officer of Women in War, a gender-based think tank. He has participated in international conferences in Frankfurt, Vienna, Uppsala, New Delhi and Yerevan. He has presented various topics from minority rights to regional security issues. His thesis topic was on China’s geopolitical and energy security interests in Iran and the Persian Gulf. He is a contributor to various local and regional newspapers and a presenter of the “Turkey Today” program for Radio Voice of Van. Recently he has been appointed as associate fellow at the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut and Middle East-South Caucasus expert in the European Geopolitical Forum.


AW: Armenian and Azerbaijani politicians named in Credit Suisse leak

A leak revealing secret Swiss banking records implicates several figures from the South Caucasus, including former president of Armenia Armen Sarkissian and the sons of the head of Nakhichevan Vasif Talibov. 

The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) published its findings from a leak identifying 18,000 foreign customers at Credit Suisse whose holdings amount to a total of over $8 billion. The accounts belong to “corrupt politicians, criminals, spies, dictators and other dubious characters,” according to the OCCRP report. 

“Credit Suisse’s clients included the family of an Egyptian intelligence chief who oversaw torture of terrorism suspects for the CIA; an Italian accused of laundering criminal funds for the infamous ‘Ndrangheta criminal group; a German executive who bribed Nigerian officials for telecoms contracts; and Jordan’s King Abdullah II, who held a single account worth 230 million Swiss francs ($223 million) at its peak, even as his country raked in billions in foreign aid,” the February 20 report reads

Data from the leak was provided to 48 media outlets worldwide, including Armenian investigative news outlet Hetq. Hetq uncovered that approximately 400 Armenian citizens hold bank accounts at Credit Suisse, including Sarkissian and his sister Karine Sargsyan.

Former President Armen Sarkissian

Sarkissian and Sargsyan held more than 10 million Swiss francs in a Credit Suisse bank account between 2006 and 2016 that he did not disclose in his financial declarations. Sarkissian was legally obligated to submit a financial statement upon his appointment as Armenian ambassador to the United Kingdom in 2013, a post he held until his election to the presidency in 2018.

In 2013, Sarkissian declared that he held eight million euros. In 2016, Hetq reported that Sarkissian had not submitted his financial holdings for several years. Sarkissian submitted his annual disclosures from the previous five years in 2017, following notices from Armenia’s Ethics Committee. Those statements did not include the 10 million francs in his Credit Suisse account, according to Armenia’s Corruption Prevention Commission. 

Reached for a comment from Hetq, Sarkissian said that “accessing details of someone’s private bank account, as you have, is wrong and unlawful, all over the world. It is an infringement of privacy and breach of confidentiality.”

According to Sarkissian, positions served on a pro bono basis, like diplomatic posts, only require the declaration of cash holdings. 

“It was not certain that the rules obliging officials to declare their interests applied in such circumstances and, in fact, others serving on a pro bono basis did not make any declarations,” he said. 

His financial declarations did not specify whether his assets were cash or electronic. 

“They were not electronic at the time and did not oblige me to declare specific bank accounts, only my cash holdings, which I declared every year,” he told Hetq. 

Sarkissian had three other Credit Suisse accounts that closed before he took office. 

Sarkissian resigned at the end of January, citing the constitutional limits on the power of the presidency to influence policy in times of national crisis. Yet an investigation published by Hetq said that Sarkissian resigned after he was contacted by journalists regarding his secret second citizenship of St. Kitts and Nevis.

According to Hetq, Sarkissian held a passport for the Caribbean nation as late as 2017. Under the Armenian Constitution, the president must have held citizenship of only the Republic of Armenia for the preceding six years. 

The office of the president denied the media report, calling it an “attempt to divert public attention by a false agenda.” 

Vasif Talibov, Heydar Aliyev and Ilham Aliyev (Twitter)

The Credit Suisse leak also names Seymur and Rza, sons of the leader of the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic Vasif Talibov. 

Three separate banking leaks reveal that Rza and Seymur received wire transfers worth a total of $20.5 million between 2007 and 2012 in bank accounts held with Credit Suisse, Emirates NBD, Barclays and other major financial institutions. 

The money came from two shell companies, Murova Systems and Continus Corporation, which are associated with the Azerbaijani and Troika Laundromats. The Azerbaijani Laundromat is a multi-billion dollar secret slush fund used among other things to purchase silence from European politicians regarding Azerbaijani human rights abuses. 

In 2012, Rza purchased two buildings in the Georgian resort town of Batumi that he converted into a five-star hotel. Rza, Seymur and their sister Baharkhanim also bought a dozen properties in Dubai, including a luxurious villa and a 12-floor apartment hotel. In total, their properties are worth an estimated $63 million.

Talibov’s official salary is about $26,000 per year. The report says that the Talibov family “enriched itself from questionable sources even as Nakhchivan’s people suffered.” 

Rza and Seymur Talibov (Facebook)

“Talibov has led Nakhchivan with an iron fist for more than 26 years. Under his rule, detainees have been subject to beatings and vicious torture. Dissidents have been forced into psychiatric hospitals. He has also used his power to silence independent media: Journalists and activists who criticized his rule have faced pressure, arrest, and exile,” the OCCRP report reads. 

Credit Suisse has faced a string of scandals over the past two decades regarding its facilitation of money laundering and tax evasion. The bank currently faces charges of allowing a group of Bulgarian cocaine smugglers to launder 146 million euros through its accounts.

The OCCRP interviewed over a dozen anonymous Credit Suisse employees. Most spoke of a “highly toxic corporate culture that incentivized taking on risk to maximize profits—and bonuses.” 

“The bank incentivizes a banker to look the other way with an account they know to be toxic,” said a former senior manager. “If you close a toxic account, especially a large account in excess of $20 million, the banker finds himself in a deep hole. A deep hole that is almost impossible to get out of.”

Credit Suisse released a statement in response to the report stating that it “strongly rejects the allegations and inferences about the bank’s purported business practices.” According to Credit Suisse, the media reports are based on “partial, selective information taken out of context, resulting in tendentious interpretations of the bank’s business conduct.” 

Critics also blame the Swiss government for creating a “lax regulatory environment and laws that punish those who speak out against corruption.”

“The irony is that Switzerland has become the place for dirty money to go because it is pure, well-managed, reliable,” says James Henry, a senior adviser to the U.K. charity Tax Justice Network who has studied tax evasion at Credit Suisse. “The business model of taking money out of poor countries is the problem.”

Lillian Avedian is a staff writer for the Armenian Weekly. Her writing has also been published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Hetq and the Daily Californian. She is pursuing master’s degrees in Journalism and Near Eastern Studies at New York University. A human rights journalist and feminist poet, Lillian's first poetry collection Journey to Tatev was released with Girls on Key Press in spring of 2021.


Armenian Justice Minister discusses legal, political and economic issues with Iran’s Vice President

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 14:39,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 22, ARMENPRESS. Justice Minister of Armenia Karen Andreasyan and his delegation met with Vice President of Iran for Legal Affairs Mohammad Dehghan in Tehran, the ministry said in a press release.

The sides discussed the Armenian-Iranian cooperation in legal and economic areas.

The full protection of rights of Iranian nationals convicted in Armenia was emphasized during the minister’s visit.

Completing the construction of the Iran-Armenia 400 kW power transmission line, organizing the 6th meeting of experts for approving the positions of the two countries over the Persian Gulf-Black Sea multilateral deal, and many other issues were discussed.

Both sides agreed to make more efforts to develop the Armenian-Iranian relations.