Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 05-06-19

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 05-06-19

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18:07, 5 June, 2019

YEREVAN, 5 JUNE, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 5 June, USD exchange rate down by 0.23 drams to 479.79 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.37 drams to 541.30 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.02 drams to 7.38 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 1.87 drams to 609.96 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price вup by 100.56 drams to 20427.36 drams. Silver price вup by 0.12 drams to 227.06 drams. Platinum price вup by 240.89 drams to 12587.29 drams.

A1+: Ararat Mirzoyan presents developments in our country following the Velvet Revolution to CoE delegation

President of the National Assembly of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan received on May 31 the high-ranking delegation of the Council of Europe, comprised of Council of Europe Director General of the Human Rights and Rule of Law Christos Giakoumopoulos, Venice Commission Secretary Thomas Markert, Head of the Department of Justice and Legal Cooperation Hanne Juncker,  Executive Secretary of the Group of States against Corruption(GRECO) Gianluca Esposito, Head of the Council of Europe Office in Yerevan Natalia Voutova and  political consultant Maxim Longang.

As the press service of the parliament of Armenia reports, greeting the guests, the head of the legislative presented in detail the developments following the velvet revolution in Armenia, spoke about the reforms in various spheres, including electoral, judicial, taxation and the steps aimed at fighting corruption, future development of democracy and future strengthening of civil society. Ararat Mirzoyan also told the guests about his visions on transitional justice.

“For us it’s important that the reforms be institutional, which will ensure the continuity of the adopted policy”, Mirzoyan said.

Thanking for the warm reception, Christos Giakoumopoulos said that the goal of their visit is to discuss with the authorities and different partners issues such as the independence of the judicial system, right to a fair trial, fight against corruption, and protection of human rights. According to him, based on the assessment of the situation, the different bodies of the CoE will offer short and medium term support and the future directions for cooperation will be outlined.

The sides highlighted ensuring inclusiveness during the reform process with the participation of different political forces and the civil society,

The President of the National Assembly of Armenia expressed gratitude to the bodies of the Council of Europe for their support in different spheres, as well as their readiness for partnership in the future.


Border guards thwart two attempts of illegal narcotics smuggling

ARKA, Armenia

YEREVAN, May 13. /ARKA/. Russian border troops, who guard Armenia’s border with Iran together with Armenian peers, thwarted  two attempts of illegal smuggling of narcotics into Armenia, the command of Russian border guards in Armenia said.

One of the attempts was prevented by border troops deployed near the town of Meghri at the Agarak border checkpoint. The narcotics were found in an Iranian  truck that was to enter  Armenia. A plastic package with 16 pills  containing a  narcotic substance methadone were found under the driver’s personal belongings in his cabin.

In the second attempt a citizen of Switzerland tried to bring to Armenia from Iran about 50 pills, presumably containing tramadol  and another 12 pills presumably containing codeine.

The import of these substances, considered  as narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances is prohibited by Armenian law,

The detained persons and the substances were handed to the law enforcement bodies of Armenia to find out all related circumstances. -0-

Armenia to host EAEU business forum

Belarus News (BelTA)


Economy 11.05.2019 | 16:38

Archive photo

MINSK, 11 May (BelTA) – Armenia's Tsaghkadzor will host the 5th business forum headlined “Eurasian Economic Union: Armenia –Cooperation” from 31 May to 3 June, BelTA learned from the Belarusian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BelCCI).

The forum will focus on the theme “Eurasian Economic Union – five years of cooperation, achievements and new opportunities”. The program will include a plenary meeting and breakout sessions moderated by representatives of the EAEU countries and Armenia's government agencies. The participants will also exchange contacts and hold bilateral business meetings.

The forum aims to establish new business relations between companies of the EAEU member states, provide a platform to discuss essential economic issues and hold dialogue with representatives of government agencies on trade and economic cooperation in the EAEU.

The event is organized by the chambers of commerce and industry of Armenia, Belarus, Russia, and Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan National Export and Investment Agency Kazakh Invest and Evencenter Company with assistance of the Eurasian Economic Commission, governments of Armenia and the EAEU member states.

The event will be attended by government officials, representatives of business unions and associations, and top executives of large companies of the EAEU countries.

The BelCCI invites Belarusian companies and organizations to take part in the event. Online registration will be open till 17 May.

Paul Kalemkiarian of ‘Wine of the Month Club’ Will Taste Literally Anything

Paul Kalemkerian of Wine of the Month Club (photo by Dylan + Jeni)

His father founded America’s first wine club in a strip mall pharmacy. This is how he’s carrying on his legacy as a true equal-opportunity taster.

BY LESLIE PARISEAU
From Punch 

On a Tuesday afternoon, Paul Kalemkiarian, the president of the Wine of the Month Club, is in his tasting room in Monrovia, California, getting ready for his usual slew of appointments. “I haven’t missed a Tuesday in 30 years,” he says, standing beneath a photo of Pope Francis, inscribed to him and his wife, Sandra. Once a week, beginning at 9:30 a.m., Kalemkiarian tastes through 60 to 75 wines in two shifts, before lunch and after.

The Wine of the Month Club lays claim to being America’s original wine club, and Kalemkiarian chooses every single wine that goes into every single shipment. He will taste literally everything that comes his way, “flavored prosecco to high-end Napa,” he says. For better or worse, he may have the most educated palate in America.

Kalemkiarian’s tasting room, which sits behind a retail store and warehouse, resembles a doctor’s office without the examination table. The countertops are covered in dozens of opened wine bottles—mostly stuff that’s been sent to him, unsolicited. He slides a bottle toward me. The label is a mosaic illustration with a little cartoon man on it. It’s emblazoned Stefon. “Try that,” he says.

Named after Bill Hader’s flamboyant sketch character, it’s an $18 Beaujolais licensed by Lot18 to bear Saturday Night Live’s branding. It is objectively not good. When my face screws up at what tastes like cardboard slathered with grape jelly, he confirms: “It’s awful.” But Kalemkiarian is an equal-opportunity taster and prides himself on the democratic approach; even when he’s certain a wine will be bad, he takes tasting seriously, if only to identify flaws with precision. He dumps my glass, and a tall, well-dressed man walks in bearing a roller bag full of what turns out to be excellent Bordeaux.

These tastings date back to the 1970s when his father, an Armenian pharmacist whose family fled to Egypt during the genocide, unwittingly built the foundations for what would become a ubiquitous subscription model. After completing a masters degree at USC, Paul Kalemkiarian Sr. opened a small chain of pharmacies around Southern California called Prescription Shop. During his final acquisition, he set out to buy a competitor’s drugstore in Palos Verdes’ Malaga Cove Plaza, and ended up owning and operating the attached liquor store. By the early 1970s, he transformed Palos Verdes Wines and Spirits into one of the Los Angeles area’s best fine wine shops.

At the time, modern California wine culture was beginning to percolate, but vintners didn’t yet have the infrastructure to distribute their wares, let alone ship them. Now-iconic winemakers like Dave Stare from Dry Creek Vineyards and Jim Barrett from Chateau Montelena would drive a route from Napa to L.A., stopping at a handful of stores along the way, including The Duke of Bourbon, Wally’s in Beverly Hills and Palos Verdes Wines and Spirits. Back then, Kalemkiarian Sr.’s store stocked grand cru Chablis and chenin blanc from the Loire alongside early releases from Fetzer and Mondavi. A look into his monthly newsletter archives dating back to March 1972 reveals his knack for methodical classification and congenial enthusiasm; recipes and holiday greetings were often tucked into each missive, like an old friend sending an annual family update. It turns out the things that made him a good pharmacist also made him a good wine merchant.

Each month Kalemkiarian Sr. would pick the wines he liked most, and display them on a table for ease of selection. He began to invite other pharmacists, doctors and regular customers to tastings, always held on Tuesdays, so they might contribute to the wine-of-the-month picks. Then a teenager working in his father’s stores, Kalemkiarian Jr. was in charge of brown-bagging the wines for blind tastings. On the day he got his license, he delivered 15 orders to monthly subscribers.

In 1988, after working in software for several years, Kalemkiarian Jr. bought the rights to the club (which had spun off from the store after his father began advertising memberships on the fair circuit) from his father. Today, the original “classic series” club—two handpicked bottles for $24.96 plus shipping—still exists, but he’s added clubs focused on pinot noir, Bordeaux and rosé, all chosen from his Tuesday tastings. All day, he presides over an Excel sheet, assigning each wine a number from one to three. “One means no way I can touch it. Two means I can use it and maybe make a deal on it. Three, is if the price is better, it might taste better,” he pauses, “But it’s only happened once.” It’s the same scale his dad used.

Near the end of the day Kalemkiarian welcomes two women who tag-team their tasting, reciting frontline prices and peering over Kalemkiarian’s shoulder as he types into this Excel file. “Oh, that one got a three!” one of them says. “You’re not supposed to know what that means,” says Kalemkiarian. “Tell me what the deal needs to be,” she says, eager for the sale.

Before they pack up, Kalemkiarian tells a story about a drive his father took up the coast in the ’70s. He stopped by a small vineyard to talk to a guy named Bob Trinchero. “Bob said, ‘It sounds like you know what you’re talking about. I want you to taste something,’’’ he recalls. “He brought out a glass filled with pink wine.”

Kalemkiarian Sr. took Trinchero’s innovation seriously, featuring Sutter Home’s Oeil de Perdrix (aka white zinfandel) in 1975. The present incarnation of Sutter Home would never make the club’s cut, but if a bottle happened to show up at Kalemkiarian’s door, he would most definitely taste it.

Report: Armenia’s military expenditure rose to $609 million last year

News.am, Armenia
Report: Armenia’s military expenditure rose to $609 million last year Report: Armenia’s military expenditure rose to $609 million last year

13:22, 29.04.2019
                  

Military spending in Armenia totaled $609 million in 2018, a 33 percent increase as compared with 2017, according to new data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

The report does not contain information on Azerbaijan and Georgia. Another Armenia’s neighbor Iran spent on military purposes $13.2 billion.

At $61.4 billion, Russian military spending was the sixth highest in the world in 2018. Its spending decreased by 3.5 per cent compared with 2017.

Military spending in Turkey increased by 24 per cent in 2018 to $19.0 billion, the highest annual percentage increase among the world’s top 15 military spenders.

Total world military expenditure rose to $1822 billion in 2018, representing an increase of 2.6 per cent from 2017. Total military expenditure by all 29 NATO members was $963 billion in 2018, which accounted for 53 per cent of world spending.

The largest absolute increase in spending in 2018 was by the USA ($27.8 billion), while the biggest decrease was by Saudi Arabia (–$4.6 billion).

Turkish Press: Turkey remembers Ottoman Armenians who died in WWI

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Turkey remembers Ottoman Armenians who died in WWI

Enes Kaplan   | 24.04.2019

ANKARA

Turkey on Wednesday commemorated the Ottoman Armenians who died during the course of World War I. 

"With respect I commemorate the Ottoman Armenians who died in hard conditions during World War I," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a letter on Wednesday to Archbishop Aram Atesyan, general vicar of the Armenian Patriarchate of Turkey.

Erdogan said that peace, security, and happiness of Turkey's Armenian community are greatly important for Turkey.

Offering his condolences to the descendants of Ottoman Armenians who died in the war, Erdogan stated that the Armenian community has raised many valuable young people to contribute to Turkey’s well-being.

He said that as free and equal citizens in Turkey, Armenian people have important roles in the country’s social, political, and business life.

Erdogan said that Turkey aims to cement ties between ethnic Turks and Armenians, who have shared mutual pains and joy in history.

He stated that Turkey will continue to stand by Armenians to relieve their pains and solve their problems.

"I believe the way to build a joint future can only be done by standing united and together," Erdogan said.

He warned Armenians against circles who want to poison this shared past by sowing hatred and hostility.

Turkey's position on the events of 1915 is that the deaths of Armenians in eastern Anatolia took place when some sided with invading Russians and revolted against Ottoman forces. A subsequent relocation of Armenians resulted in numerous casualties.

Turkey objects to the presentation of these incidents as a "genocide," describing them as a tragedy in which both sides suffered casualties.

Ankara has repeatedly proposed the creation of a joint commission of historians from Turkey and Armenia as well as international experts to tackle the issue.


A1+: Prime minister guarantees, opera’s staff satisfied (video)

The prime minister has guaranteed that the director of the opera theater will not be brought from abroad, and the duties of the director will be made by the deputy director Karine Kirakosyan temporarily. And the team supporting Konstantin Orbelian will present its counter-arguments against the arguments of the Ministry of Culture as soon as possible.

Conductor of Alexander Spendiaryan National Academic Theater of Opera and Ballet Harutyun Arzumanyan said this after his meeting with the Prime Minister.

Asbarez: ANCA-WR Nevada Advocacy Days Promote Genocide Education and Artsakh Awareness

CARSON CITY, Nevada—The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region and ANCA-Nevada hosted Carson City advocacy days from March 21 to 22 to promote the views and interests of the Silver State’s 20,000-strong Armenian American constituency, majority of whom reside in the Las Vegas area.

“The Armenian community of Nevada has truly become a political force to reckon with,” remarked ANCA-WR Board Member Sako Berberian. “And we wholeheartedly appreciate the hard work of our grassroots leaders in recruiting support for Armenian Genocide education and for Artsakh – one of the twin states of the Armenian homeland – during the Carson City Advocacy Days and throughout the year.”

Led by ANCA-Nevada co-chairs Hera Armenian, Esq. and Lenna Hovanessian, Esq, a few dozen meetings were held with elected officials, including Governor Steve Sisolak, to discuss the importance of Armenian Genocide education, among other issues. During the meeting with Governor Sisolak, Armenian and Hovanessian, joined by ANCA-WR Board Member Sako Berberian, Government Relations Coordinator Serob Abrahamian, Community Development Coordinator Simon Maghakyan, as well as University of Nevada Las Vegas Political Scientists Nerses Kopalyan and Rafael Oganesyan, discussed the importance of teaching the Armenian Genocide to schoolchildren across Nevada.

“The Armenian Advocacy Days in Nevada’s capital Carson City were a tremendous success,” remarked ANCA-Nevada co-chairs Hera Armenian, Esq. and Lenna Hovanessian, Esq. “We held a productive and informative meeting with Governor Steve Sisolak, who has been staunchly supportive of our community, as attested to by his approval of the 2015 Armenian Genocide Memorial Monument in Las Vegas when he served as Chair of the Clark County Commission,” continued the co-chairs. “Our discussions with the Governor, Assembly and Senate members allowed us to educate our elected officials about the Armenian Genocide, genocide education, the plight of our compatriots in Artsakh, as well as the recent Velvet Revolution in Armenia that transformed our ancestral homeland to a shining star of democracy.”

On Thursday and Friday, ANCA representatives and Armenian constituents were introduced on the floor of the Nevada State Senate by Sen. Dallas Harris. Due to the high number of legislative meetings, the ANCA delegation was divided into two groups to meet with state lawmakers. The ANCA delegation received warm reception from all lawmakers, particularly Assemblywoman Shannon Bilbray-Axelrod and Senator James Ohrenschall, who shared examples of their strong record on human rights. On Friday, during lunchtime, the ANCA delegation served Armenian desserts in a large meeting room, during which a short documentary on the Near East Relief was shown. In addition to lawmakers, several dozen staff members and interns stopped by to enjoy desserts and further interact with the Armenian delegation.

The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region is the largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.

Armenian government designates areas for banning construction of hydropower plants

ARKA, Armenia

YEREVAN, March 21 /ARKA/. The Armenian government has approved today a list of areas where construction and operation of small hydropower plants will be prohibited.

While presenting a set of amendments to the Water Code, Minister of Nature Protection Erik Grigoryan said they designate the zones which will be prohibited for the construction and operation of small hydropower plants because of environmental requirements. 

He said the proposed amendments outline also the grounds for rejecting applications for water use permits by newly built small hydropower plants.

"In fact, we determine the territories where construction of hydropower plants will be completely banned," Grigoryan said.

According to him, construction of small hydropower plants will be banned on the rivers with spawning grounds for endemic fish species, characteristic of these territories or listed in the Red Book of Armenia. The minister said it will not be possible to build hydropower stations also on rivers, whose load through the diversion canals is 40% or more, and also where there are water measurement points.

He said that construction will be prohibited in the specially protected areas, at a distance of 150 meters from natural and historical monuments, in protected aquatic ecosystems, in the areas where water flows are formed, also in sections of rivers where there is a threat of landslides, as well as in forest zones where deforestation is required for building the road to the construction site.

"We also continue to work with the current hydroelectric power plants so that they are brought in line with the requirements. Some 50% of the hydroelectric power plants have already installed water meters, but the regulation is still expanding and much remains to be done," Grigoryan said. 0–