11 Armenian servicemen hospitalized after car crash in Vayots Dzor province

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 13:36, 7 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 7, ARMENPRESS. 11 Armenian servicemen (1 officer, 10 conscripts) were hospitalized after a car crash in Vayots Dzor province on June 7, the defense ministry of Armenia said in a statement.

“One of the servicemen suffered a broken rib, the others suffered minor injuries and are in satisfactory condition”, the ministry said, adding that their lives are not in danger.

Today, at around 10:40, a vehicle of the defense ministry of Armenia overturned on the Yerevan-Meghri highway. The circumstances of the incident are still unknown.

Pashinyan’s team doesn’t represent interests of Armenian people, opposition MP tells Lavrov

Panorama
Armenia – June 9 2022

Nikol Pashinyan's government does not represent the interests of the Armenian people, MP Aram Vardevanyan of the opposition Hayastan bloc said at a protest outside the Foreign Ministry in central Yerevan on Thursday, addressing Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

The top Russian official arrived in Armenia on a two-day working visit on Wednesday. He today met with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan.

Vardevanyan stated that all those, who Lavrov is expected to meet in Yerevan during his visit, do not represent the interests of Armenia and Artsakh.

Meanwhile, the parliamentarian highlighted that Russia has been and remains Armenia's strategic ally. According to him, the authorities have done everything possible to put relations between Yerevan and Moscow at risk.

"Once this team is ousted, Armenia will become a strong and real guarantor of Artsakh's security and all threats to Armenian-Russian relations will be eliminated,” Vardevanian said, adding even if the authorities “make promises or express readiness to sign various documents, none of this will be legally binding.”

Venice Commission President visits Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan

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 15:09, 9 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 9, ARMENPRESS. President of the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission Claire Bazy Malaurie and her delegation visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan to pay tribute to the memory of the Genocide victims.

The delegation was accompanied by President of the Constitutional Court of Armenia Arman Dilanyan, the Court’s press service said.

The President of the Venice Commission arrived in Armenia on June 8.

Mirzoyan to CSTO FMs: Question of Azerbaijan incursion of Armenia sovereign territory remains open

News.am
Armenia –

Armenia has been and remains committed to active and proactive cooperation within the CSTO, aimed at strengthening cooperation between member states—including the coordination and intensification of foreign policy in the international arena. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan stated this following Friday’s meetings—in Yerevan—of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

Mirzoyan said that during these meetings, the trends of development the situation in the world and the region, as well as security issues were discussed, and the improvement of the CSTO crisis response mechanisms—which is a priority of Armenia’s CSTO chairmanship—were reflected on.

"In January, the organization responded to the events in Kazakhstan in time. But the question in connection with the incursion of Azerbaijani troops into the sovereign territory of Armenia in May 2021 still remains open," the Armenian FM said.

According to him, they also considered the implementation of the agreements reached at the level of CSTO heads of state.

As a result of the aforementioned meetings, the statement of the Council of CSTO Foreign Ministers on international security issues, the plan of consultations, as well as the venue and date of the next meeting—which will take place also in Yerevan in the fourth quarter of the year—were approved.


TUMO Boxes open in Artsakh’s Martuni, Askeran towns

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 11:32, 6 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 6, ARMENPRESS. TUMO Boxes opened in Artsakh’s Martuni and Askeran towns on June 5.

These two boxes will comprise the base of the TUMO’s entire educational network in Artsakh, together with the Martakert box and the TUMO Center in Stepanakert.

The TUMO boxes will provide the Artsakh youth with innovative education.

During the opening ceremony of the boxes, the President of Artsakh and the Head of TUMO agreed on expanding the educational network in Artsakh, which will start with the establishment of the TUMO box in Karmir Shuka.

The TUMO Center in Artsakh’s capital of Stepanakert is operating since 2015 with the support of the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU).

Armenian parliament to hold special session

Panorama
Armenia – June 4 2022

The Armenian National Assembly will hold a special session on June 9.

Over a dozen items, including amendments to the laws on Armenia’s administrative territorial division, the rights of disabled people, the government structure and activities and the Land Code, are on the agenda.

The emergency session has been requested by the government.

The Asian Development Bank is ready to expand the scope of programs implemented with Armenia

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 18:44, 2 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 2, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan received Vice President of the Asian Development Bank Shixin Chen on May 2.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the President, welcoming the guest, President Khachaturyan noted that the Asian Development Bank is one of Armenia's key partners and has made a significant contribution to the implementation of reforms in the country's socio-economic development, infrastructure programs, education, healthcare and high technologies since 2005. The President noted that the support of the Asian Development Bank is highly appreciated not only by the Armenian government, but also by the citizens.

Vice President of the Asian Development Bank Shixin Chen noted that Armenia is a reliable partner and the bank is ready to expand the scope of programs implemented with Armenia.

Karen Vardanyan donated passenger cars and necessary inventory to 5 orphanages in Armenia on the occasion of June 1st

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 11:14, 1 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. There are 5 state orphanages in Armenia, where 591 children deprived from parental care live. On June 1st, on the occasion of the International Day for Protection of Children, to turn children’s day into a celebration, and to address the needs of special institutions, benefactor Karen Vardanyan donated to orphanages passenger cars, necessary furniture, consumer electronics, special wheelchairs and chairs adapted for children with disabilities. The total budget of the program amounted 107 million AMD.

President Khachaturyan meets Armenian public, cultural figures in Tbilisi, Georgia

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 13:38,

YEREVAN, MAY 31, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan visited the Hovhannes Tumanyan Cultural Center in Tbilisi on the sidelines of the official visit in Georgia, where he met with a group of Armenian public and cultural figures, the Presidential Office said.

The meeting touched upon the current domestic political situation in Armenia and the regional security.

President Khachaturyan answered also to the questions of the meeting participants.

Turkish press: Turkey’s new Syria operation: A message to NATO

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan speaks during a press meeting in the capital Ankara, Turkey, May 23, 2022. (AA Photo)


President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan signaled the launch of a new counterterrorism operation on northern Syria on May 23, to resume efforts to create a 30-kilometer (18.6-mile) wide safe zone south of its border. “The main target of these operations will be areas that are centers of attacks on our country and safe zones,” Erdoğan said following the Cabinet meeting and added that the details will be outlined in the upcoming National Security Council (MGK) meeting.

The safe zone project is not a new initiative. However, though some parts were established, including ensuring relative stability in the region and enabling civilian returns, it has not been completed. In addition to humanitarian aims and stability at the local level in northern Syria, the safe zone will also be an added level of security for Turkey against the terrorist threats posed by the PKK terrorist organization’s Syria affiliate, the U.S.-backed YPG.

Erdoğan’s announcement comes at a time when Turkey has been at the center of several regional and international debates: From Ankara’s efforts to normalize ties with several regional countries, including the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Israel, Armenia, Saudi Arabia and Egypt, to mediation efforts between Ukraine and Russia. Now, a new debate has also emerged: Finland and Sweden’s application for NATO membership and Turkey’s position on the issue.

As the second-largest army of NATO, Turkey has, rightly so, voiced its concerns over the two states’ membership, saying that both countries support terrorist groups that target its very own sovereignty, namely the PKK and its affiliates and also the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ).

Firstly, Ankara is not against NATO’s eastward enlargement, it does want to make the same mistake it did by saying an unconditional OK to Greece’s acceptance to NATO in 1980 during late Gen. Kenan Evren’s term.

Secondly, it argues that both Sweden and Finland must convince Turkey that they will halt support for the groups targeting Turkey. On the surface, time will show how the membership debate will turn out. While it is difficult to say that a genuine distance will be put between these two states and the groups Turkey highlights as security concerns, nevertheless their membership may be approved following a series of negotiations.

At a deeper level, however, Turkey’s position on the membership bid signals a new debate: A new language of Turkish diplomacy is emerging and being conveyed to Turkey’s Western allies. If we were to go back and take a look at a series of recent events, the new approach and diplomatic tone to relations with the West can become clearer.

Firstly, the new approach is beyond some of the cliche explanations, including axis-shift, neo-Ottomanism, etc. Instead, a pragmatic approach that compartmentalizes issues on the agenda has enabled Turkey to develop a new language in its relations. For example, its ability to establish and have a relatively working relationship with Russia in Syria has led to not stepping on each other’s toes in Libya and also when Turkey provided support to Azerbaijan against Armenia in Karabakh. Moreover, it enabled Turkey, perhaps the only country working to establish peace between Ukraine and Russia, to establish mediation grounds between top diplomats from both sides with summits first in Antalya and later in Istanbul.

In addition, its use of hard power in several successful counterterrorism operations in northern Syria against the PKK/YPG and Daesh, the use of its domestically produced weapons, including Bayraktar drones, in places like Libya, Karabakh and northern Iraq, has also shown its military maneuvering capability in a region where two superpowers – and other regional actors – compete for influence.

Having two failed states along its borders, as well as the war-torn Afghanistan in its region, Turkey has also been carrying the large burden of civilians fleeing the conflict zones. In other words, it is actually a de facto buffer zone between conflict zones and the West, or Europe.

Evaluating Turkey’s position on Finland and Sweden’s membership bid and Erdoğan signaling a new operation on northern Syria against the abovementioned background suggests that Turkey now sees itself at a table where it has confidence in its diplomatic and military capacity, particularly highlighting its defense industry capabilities.

While it wants to establish a humanitarian safe zone for Syrian civilians, Ankara asks that economic costs not be shouldered by Turkey alone. Furthermore, the possible operation points out that Turkey is noting the recent harassment attacks coming from the zones controlled by the YPG, which is supported by the West, including Sweden. The aggression will not be ignored and will face Turkey’s military muscle.

This means that decision-makers in Ankara’s foreign policy strategy and the country’s political leadership no longer accept the position Turkey was once in during the post-Cold war status quo and want its Western allies to come to realization of this new position. It simply expects to be treated as an equal among the members of the alliance.

Not surprisingly, critical voices have been emerging both domestically and internationally, including those who question whether Turkey should remain a member of NATO. These approaches are passe and fail to acknowledge Turkey’s new position, making it difficult for actors to adjust to the country’s new stance and preventing them from even trying to understand it. The intellectual block in their assessment of Turkey’s new position also leads them to blur NATO’s real purpose: Is it to provide security for the alliance through legitimate and sovereign states? Or is it to support illegitimate terrorist groups that target the members in the alliance?

Under Erdoğan’s leadership, Turkish diplomacy has transformed from being a mere puppet of the Western agenda to one that prioritizes the security and interests of its citizens, be it in Africa, the East Mediterranean region or elsewhere. Also, with Erdoğan's famous "the world is bigger than five" motto, Turkey proposes a comprehensive reform in global governance for a more just international system. It is time Turkey’s Western allies also learn this new language and approach of Turkish foreign policy.