Վարչապետ Փաշինյանը հեռախոսազրույց է ունեցել Նուրսուլթան Նազարբաևի հետ

  • 19.03.2019
  •  

  • Հայաստան
  •  

     

1
 30

Վարչապետ Նիկոլ Փաշինյանը հեռախոսազրույց է ունեցել Ղազախստանի Հանրապետության նախագահ Նուրսուլթան Նազարբաևի հետ, ով ժամեր առաջ հայտարարել էր, որ այլևս չի զբաղեցնելու այդ պաշտոնը՝ մնալով միայն երկրի անվտանգության խորհրդի նախագահի և իշխող՝ Նուր Օթան կուսակցության ղեկավարի պաշտոններին:


Վարչապետ Փաշինյանն ընդգծել է Ղազախստանի առաջընթացի և զարգացման ապահովման գործում նախագահ Նազարբաևի անգերագնահատելի դերակատարումը և եվրասիական տարածաշրջանում ինտեգրացիոն գործընթացների կայացման գործում ունեցած նրա մեծ ավանդը:


Նիկոլ Փաշինյանը բարձր է գնահատել երկու երկրների միջև գոյություն ունեցող բարեկամական գործակցությունը և նախագահ Նազարբաևի հետ ձևավորված անձնական հարաբերությունները: Նա հաջողություններ է մաղթել նախագահ Նազարբաևին իր հետագա գործունեության մեջ: Պայմանավորվածություն է ձեռք բերվել հանդիպել Աստանայում՝ մայիսի 29-ին կայանալիք Եվրասիական տնտեսական միության հոբելյանական գագաթնաժողովի շրջանակում:

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/15/2019

                                        Friday, 

Police Officer ‘Suspended’ Over Hitting Protester


Protesters in a standoff with police near Yerevan's Opera House, 

A police officer has been suspended from performing his duties pending 
investigation after a video showing him hitting a protester, a police spokesman 
said.

In a Facebook post late on Thursday head of the Police’s Information and Public 
Relations Department Ashot Aharonian said: “A video has been disseminated 
showing a police officer hitting and kicking a citizen in [Yerevan’s] Liberty 
Square. Upon the instruction of Police Chief Valery Osipian, the Police’s 
Internal Security Department has launched an internal probe in connection with 
the case, while the police officer has been suspended from performing his 
duties.”

The incident took place on Thursday when municipal authorities continued to 
dismantle cafes in the vicinity of the Opera House in Yerevan.

Several dozen employees of the cafes as well as their owners staged a protest, 
trying to block traffic in a nearby street.

Police detained 16 citizens for “not complying with police officers’ lawful 
demands.” They were released later on.

At least one police officer and one protester were injured in the scuffle and 
were briefly hospitalized to be treated for their injuries.

Yerevan’s municipal authorities said they will continue the demolition work to 
free the green zone around the cultural building from illegal structures.

The cafe owners and employees described the actions of the municipality as 
illegal.

Some activists, on the contrary, had come to the square to show their support 
for the actions of the Yerevan authorities and the police.

Civil activist Vardges Gaspari said the authorities were doing the right thing 
from the point of view of both law and morality. He told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service last night that his poster was seized from him by one of the protesting 
young men and his glasses were broken during the scuffle.



Court Extends Detention Of Ex-President Kocharian

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Former President Robert Kocharian gives an interview to Russia's NTV television 
channel, Yerevan, 28Aug2018

A court in Yerevan on Friday extended by two months the pretrial detention of 
Robert Kocharian, a lawyer for the former Armenian president said after the 
court session.

Aram Orbelian also said he would appeal the decision.

Kocharian was again arrested in December more than four months after being 
charged with overthrowing the constitutional order during the final weeks of 
his decade-long rule that ended in April 2008. He denies the accusations as 
politically motivated.

Earlier this month the Special Investigative Service (SIS) asked the court to 
extend Kocharian’s arrest for the second time since his re-arrest late last 
year. The court granted the request.

Kocharian’s lawyers have dismissed the SIS’s case against their client as 
groundless and politically motivated.

Kocharian is specifically accused of illegally using Armenian army units 
against opposition supporters who protested against alleged fraud in a disputed 
presidential election held in February 2008. Law-enforcement authorities say 
that amounted to an overthrow of the constitutional order.

Eight protesters and two policemen were killed when security forces quelled the 
protests on March 1-2, 2008. Kocharian declared a three-week state of emergency 
on that night.

The 64-year-old ex-president says the accusations are part of incumbent Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s political “vendetta” waged against him.

Pashinian played a key role in the 2008 protests and spent nearly two years in 
prison because of that. He has strongly defended the criminal case against 
Kocharian and denied orchestrating it.



Two Activists Charged With Attempted Kidnapping

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Davit Petrosian, a member of the Restart student group, 11Mar2019

Two activists involved in an attack on a video blogger highly critical of 
Armenia’s government have been charged with attempted kidnapping, a 
spokesperson for the country’s Prosecutor-General’s office said on Friday.

Following the incident that occurred earlier this month prosecutors originally 
opened criminal proceedings on the hallmarks of hooliganism. Later, due to new 
evidence that emerged in the case members of the Restart student group Davit 
Petrosian and Davit Simonian were charged with attempting to kidnap the 
blogger, Narek Malian. The two are confined to country limits pending 
investigation.

Malian was confronted outside his home in downtown Yerevan by members of the 
group shortly after midnight. A YouTube video of the incident showed the 
Restart leader, Petrosian, and several other men forcibly carrying Malian along 
an adjacent street before being stopped by police officers.

Petrosian posted the video on his Facebook page, writing: “There are moments in 
life when you can’t choose between the good and the bad and just have to listen 
to your conscience.”

In a statement, Restart said it wanted to throw Malian into a trash container. 
Petrosian likewise explained that he and his comrades tried “to put the garbage 
in its place” in response to what he called Malian’s offensive and slanderous 
statements about their activities.

Malian, Petrosian, and four other men were detained on the spot but were set 
free a few hours later. Malian was later recognized as a victim in the case.

Originally, the investigation was conducted under an article of the Criminal 
Code dealing with “hooliganism.” Malian, who worked until last year as an 
adviser to former police chief Vladimir Gasparian, described the assault as a 
“kidnapping attempt”. He linked the incident to his vocal efforts to prevent 
the sacking of the long-serving rector of Yerevan State University (YSU), Aram 
Simonian, which is sought by the government. Late last month the former police 
official staged a lone protest at a meeting of YSU’s supervisory board that 
narrowly failed to fire Simonian.

Restart has on the contrary been campaigning for the controversial rector’s 
ouster since last year’s “velvet revolution” in Armenia. The youth group 
comprising current and former YSU students actively participated in the 
revolution.

By contrast, Malian has been very scathing about the dramatic regime change in 
the country. He regularly attacks Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other 
government officials and pours scorn on their supporters on his Facebook page.

Incidentally, Pashinian was quick to condemn the assault, saying that “any 
attempt to solve issues in Armenia through violence must meet with a tough 
legal reaction.”



Armenian PM Offers Condolences Over New Zealand Attacks


An injured person is loaded into an ambulance following a shooting in 
Christchurch, New Zealand

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has sent a telegram of condolences to 
Prime Minister of New Zealand Jacinda Arden over the terror attacks in two 
mosques in the city of Christchurch in which dozens of people were killed.

According to the prime minister’s official website, in his message Pashinian 
said that he was “deeply saddened” by the terrorist attacks that “claimed the 
lives of many innocent people.”

“Strongly condemning terrorism in all its forms, I express my sincere 
condolences and support to you, the families of the victims and the friendly 
people of New Zealand,” Pashinian said.

The Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs also twitted words of condolences over 
the Christchurch attacks, saying that “on this dark day, we stand with the 
people of New Zealand in condemning violence and terrorism.”

Forty-nine people were killed and 20 wounded in an attack on two mosques in 
Christchurch on Friday. Police in New Zealand have arrested the suspected 
shooter, bringing murder charges against him.

Meanwhile, the Armenian National Committee of New Zealand also offered its 
deepest condolences over the terror attacks and unequivocally condemned them.

“Further, we condemn the accused gunman’s attempt to reference the Armenian 
language, along with the languages of other Christian nationalities – including 
Georgian, Serbian, Russian and Austrian - through markings on his weapons used 
in what was an unacceptable hate crime targeting the Islamic community,” the 
organization said in a statement, stressing that “such crusades have no place 
in our world, and definitely no place in peace-loving New Zealand.”



Press Review



“Zhoghovurd” reflects on the statements by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
and Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov who said on March 14 that Baku is 
against changing the format of negotiations on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement. 
“This behavior by Azerbaijan is quite natural, even though in 1994 Baku signed 
a document, recognizing Nagorno-Karabakh as a party to the conflict. Later, it 
did everything to shift the problem into the field of relations between Armenia 
and Azerbaijan only. And because of the former Armenian authorities 20 years 
ago Azerbaijan got what it wanted, as Nagorno-Karabakh was left out of the 
format of negotiations. So, it is natural that Azerbaijan should oppose 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s return to the negotiating table. What is strange is the 
assessments voiced by foreign diplomats that by raising the issue of 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s return to the negotiating table Armenia sets a demand for 
changing the format of negotiations,” the paper writes, stressing that Yerevan 
should have made it clear through its diplomacy that the matter concerns “the 
full application of the 1994 format.”

“Zhamanak” writes that there have been some media reports saying that Armenian 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, who visited Nagorno-Karabakh for the purpose of 
co-chairing a joint meeting of the Armenian and Karabakh Security Councils, 
also had a meeting on the so-called ‘internal political’ subject, in 
particular, with Vitaliy Balasanian, a plausible presidential candidate in 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s 2020 presidential election. “Pashinian stated that Armenia 
is pursuing a policy of raising Nagorno-Karabakh’s status as an entity, which 
means that Armenia should seek not to meddle in the process of the formation of 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s government,” the paper writes, adding: “At the same time, it 
is clear that Armenia cannot but have its interest in it, because as in the 
case with non-interference in the judicial system in Armenia, the possibility 
of influence of the former system may become considerable.”

The editor of “Aravot” comments on the dismantling of cafes located in the 
vicinity of the Opera House in Yerevan’s Liberty Square: “Personally, I would 
have tolerated the existence of these cafes for several more years, especially 
since their owners signed contracts with the municipality until 2022-23. And 
the right of ownership is also very important, including in terms of attracting 
investment. The decision to dismantle the cafes could have been postponed. 
Meanwhile, some ‘constructive’ work could be done before demolishing. It is 
clear that within a few months it is impossible to free us from the poor 
transport system or build a new metro station, but at least some work could be 
started… so that in two or three years the authorities could say: ‘Well, we 
have done some good things, and now we are dismantling the bad things.’”

(Lilit Harutiunian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


Georgian President visits TUMO center in Yerevan

Georgian President visits TUMO center in Yerevan

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20:37,

YEREVAN, MARCH 13, ARMENPRESS. Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili visited TUMO center of creative technologies on March 13 and got acquainted with its educational program.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from TUMO center, the Georgian President accompanied by her delegation and Minister of Education and Science of Armenia Arayiok Harutyunyan, toured in the center.

Pegor Papazian, Head of Development of TUMO Center presented to the Georgian President the ongoing projects – the TUMO studios, TUMO-EU Convergence Center and the process of TUMO international expansion.

Salome Zourabichvili also got acquainted with the process of the classes. “In our new technopark in Georgia we have a startup ecosystem and a project like TUMO can be a great supplement”, she said.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




Armenian side reiterates necessity of involvement of Karabakh in talks: Armenia’s FM

Aysor, Armenia

Security and status of Nagorno Karabakh have always been Armenia’s priorities in the Karabakh conflict settlement process, Armenia’s Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan said at a joint press conference with OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, Slovak foreign minister Miroslav Lajčák.

“During the meeting we have referred to exclusively peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict based on fundamental principles of human rights and implementation of right of people to self-determination,” Mnatsakanyan said.

“I have reiterated that the security and status of Nagorno Karabakh are absolute priorities for Armenia. I have also reiterated the approach relating to ensuring Nagorno Karabakh’s involvement and its resolute voice in the process,” Armenia’s minister said.

He stressed that Karabakh issue relates to the right of people of Artsakh to live safely in their homeland.

“We have many times stressed that for effective process of peaceful regulation of the conflict it is necessary to introduce mechanisms for creation of favorable climate, reduction of risks and prevention of incidents and strengthening trust like it has been fixed at Dushanbe meeting and in Vienna and St. Petersburg. These provisions continue remaining topical,” Mnatsakanyan said.

Russia’s foreign ministry warns Russian citizens of Armenian descent about risks in visiting Azerbaijan

ARKA, Armenia

YEREVAN, March 13. /ARKA/. Russia’s foreign ministry issued a statement Tuesday on its official website warning Russian citizens of Armenian descent about risks in visiting Azerbaijan. 

The thing is that Azerbaijan’s border service continues rejecting such people’s access to the country’s territory regardless of which country’s citizens they are on the excuse of the Karabakh conflict. 

Azerbaijan says it can’t ensure personal safety of people of Armenian origin.  

The Russian foreign ministry says that repeated calls of the Russian side to the Azerbaijani side to prevent discriminative actions against travelers to Azerbaijan on ethnic grounds are being ignored. –0—

Nikol Pashinyan attends former First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia Suren Harutyunyan’s dirge ceremony

Nikol Pashinyan attends former First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia Suren Harutyunyan’s dirge ceremony

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20:21, 6 March, 2019

YEREVAN, MARCH 6, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan attended the dirge ceremony of First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia Suren Harutyunyan at St. Hovhannes Church of Kond.

ARMENPRESS reports Suren Harutyunyan died on March 1 aged 79.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




Asbarez: Prof. Hovannisian to Speak About Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection

Prof. Richard Hovannisian to speak about his Armenian Genocide Oral History Project

The Center for Advanced Genocide Studies and the Institute of Armenian Studies at the University of Southern California are sponsoring a noontime program on Thursday, March 5, featuring Professor Richard Hovannisian and his Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection.

During his more than fifty years of teaching at the University of California, Los Angeles, Hovannisian created a course in the 1970s on Armenian Oral History, in which he trained students to interview survivors of the Armenian Genocide.

Over the years, some 1,000 interviews have been conducted, becoming the largest collection of its kind in existence. In 2018, the Richard Hovannisian Collection was entrusted to the Shoah Foundation at USC for preservation and academic and scholarly research.

In the March 5 program, Hovannisian will discuss the origins and development of his course at UCLA, as well the uses and potential misuses of oral testimony. His former students Lorna Tourian Miller, Tamar Mashigian and Salpi Ghazarian will share their own impressions and experiences in adding to the collection.

“Preserving History: Armenian Voices from the Classroom to the Archive,” featuring Prof. Hovannisian will take place at noon on Tuesday, March 5 at USC’s Doheny Memorial Library , Room 240, 3550 Trousdale Pkwy, Los Angeles.

If You Want Art and Architecture Try Beirut’s 383-Armenia Street

Al-Bawaba, Middle East
March 3 2019
If You Want Art and Architecture Try Beirut's 383-Armenia Street

2.5 5

Published March 3rd, 2019

Vincent Bassil’s exhibition “383-Armenia Street,” now up at ARTLAB, has been a decade in the making.

Mixing art and architecture, the show’s 30 untitled pieces attempt to visualize the changes he’s witnessed in the capital, especially on his home street in Mar Mikhael, since moving to Beirut in 2008.

“From then until 2018, I was studying architecture and I started this project, inspired by Beirut and the life I’ve lived here,” Bassil told The Daily Star. “My studio was in Mar Mikhael and around me were all these buildings being fixed up.

“Since 2008 a lot has changed in Mar Mikhael and in 2008, after the economic crisis in Dubai, everyone in Dubai came to buy in Mar Mikhael and it changed into something else,” he added. “Between this and my studies, I was inspired to think of how to abstract the city and see it in a new way.”

The acrylic paintings show bold blocks of color, designed in what could be an aerial view of a city, or an abstract map, with illegible writing in the background or woven between streets.

“These [words] are me trying to put the city I created in my own words, with my personal stories, how I’ve interacted with the city and it has become inside my world,” Bassil said. “In future works I might make it readable but these things are really personal, like a diary.”

Installations are also on show, some showing 3D models of the city in the same style as the paintings, others presenting put-together bits and bobs upcycled wooden planks painted brightly or bits of brick and metal found in the area.

“I tried to take the 2D and make it 3D. Even in the paintings I wanted it to feel like it was jumping out at you, just like the city,” Bassil explained. “It could be read as the facade of the buildings and the urban planning as one thing, one layer. I wanted to see what light and shadows I could create.”

Bassil spends much of his time taking photos of buildings and people to mull over later, a hobby that has aided his study of the area’s decade of change.

“It became more cultural. Buildings have been built, renovated or knocked down,” he said.

“Before, it used to be quiet by 6. Now people start coming at 6. It’s the opposite and yet has become more isolated and less connected.

“People visit Mar Mikhael and leave. It’s like this across the city, in Hamra, Badaro etc.”

This isolation has become more and more evident in his paintings over time. The oldest painting in the exhibition, from 2010, has been brought in specially despite already being sold. “I insisted on having it here because this one started everything. It was the first one where I felt like there’s something interesting happening,” Bassil said of the blue-red-black-and-gold piece.

“You’ll notice there is less isolation in it and its more linked to the surroundings – Mar Mikhael and myself were less isolated – whereas the newer pieces are very isolated [in their design] are have no links with their surroundings or the past.

“It was Armenia Street and it was full of Armenians and old people or longtime renters living there,” Bassil added. “Now there is no one. I have no neighbors. All the people I knew left or moved house or it became an office, a garage, restaurants and art galleries.

“It’s not wrong. I like both ways,” he mused, “but it was a drastic change in the city between 2008 and 2018 and it’s now a totally different street.”

“383-Armenia Street” is up at ARTLAB, Gemmayzeh, through March 9.

This article has been adapted from its original source. 

Mixing art and architecture, the show’s 30 untitled pieces attempt to visualize the changes he’s witnessed in the capital, especially on his home street in Mar Mikhael, since moving to Beirut in 2008.

“From then until 2018, I was studying architecture and I started this project, inspired by Beirut and the life I’ve lived here,” Bassil told The Daily Star. “My studio was in Mar Mikhael and around me were all these buildings being fixed up.

“Since 2008 a lot has changed in Mar Mikhael and in 2008, after the economic crisis in Dubai, everyone in Dubai came to buy in Mar Mikhael and it changed into something else,” he added. “Between this and my studies, I was inspired to think of how to abstract the city and see it in a new way.”

The acrylic paintings show bold blocks of color, designed in what could be an aerial view of a city, or an abstract map, with illegible writing in the background or woven between streets.

“These [words] are me trying to put the city I created in my own words, with my personal stories, how I’ve interacted with the city and it has become inside my world,” Bassil said. “In future works I might make it readable but these things are really personal, like a diary.”

Installations are also on show, some showing 3D models of the city in the same style as the paintings, others presenting put-together bits and bobs upcycled wooden planks painted brightly or bits of brick and metal found in the area.

“I tried to take the 2D and make it 3D. Even in the paintings I wanted it to feel like it was jumping out at you, just like the city,” Bassil explained. “It could be read as the facade of the buildings and the urban planning as one thing, one layer. I wanted to see what light and shadows I could create.”

Bassil spends much of his time taking photos of buildings and people to mull over later, a hobby that has aided his study of the area’s decade of change.


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Vincent Bassil’s exhibition “383-Armenia Street,” now up at ARTLAB, has been a decade in the making.

Mixing art and architecture, the show’s 30 untitled pieces attempt to visualize the changes he’s witnessed in the capital, especially on his home street in Mar Mikhael, since moving to Beirut in 2008.

“From then until 2018, I was studying architecture and I started this project, inspired by Beirut and the life I’ve lived here,” Bassil told The Daily Star. “My studio was in Mar Mikhael and around me were all these buildings being fixed up.

“Since 2008 a lot has changed in Mar Mikhael and in 2008, after the economic crisis in Dubai, everyone in Dubai came to buy in Mar Mikhael and it changed into something else,” he added. “Between this and my studies, I was inspired to think of how to abstract the city and see it in a new way.”

The acrylic paintings show bold blocks of color, designed in what could be an aerial view of a city, or an abstract map, with illegible writing in the background or woven between streets.

“These [words] are me trying to put the city I created in my own words, with my personal stories, how I’ve interacted with the city and it has become inside my world,” Bassil said. “In future works I might make it readable but these things are really personal, like a diary.”

Installations are also on show, some showing 3D models of the city in the same style as the paintings, others presenting put-together bits and bobs upcycled wooden planks painted brightly or bits of brick and metal found in the area.

“I tried to take the 2D and make it 3D. Even in the paintings I wanted it to feel like it was jumping out at you, just like the city,” Bassil explained. “It could be read as the facade of the buildings and the urban planning as one thing, one layer. I wanted to see what light and shadows I could create.”

Bassil spends much of his time taking photos of buildings and people to mull over later, a hobby that has aided his study of the area’s decade of change.

“It became more cultural. Buildings have been built, renovated or knocked down,” he said.

“Before, it used to be quiet by 6. Now people start coming at 6. It’s the opposite and yet has become more isolated and less connected.

“People visit Mar Mikhael and leave. It’s like this across the city, in Hamra, Badaro etc.”

This isolation has become more and more evident in his paintings over time. The oldest painting in the exhibition, from 2010, has been brought in specially despite already being sold. “I insisted on having it here because this one started everything. It was the first one where I felt like there’s something interesting happening,” Bassil said of the blue-red-black-and-gold piece.

“You’ll notice there is less isolation in it and its more linked to the surroundings – Mar Mikhael and myself were less isolated – whereas the newer pieces are very isolated [in their design] are have no links with their surroundings or the past.

“It was Armenia Street and it was full of Armenians and old people or longtime renters living there,” Bassil added. “Now there is no one. I have no neighbors. All the people I knew left or moved house or it became an office, a garage, restaurants and art galleries.

“It’s not wrong. I like both ways,” he mused, “but it was a drastic change in the city between 2008 and 2018 and it’s now a totally different street.”

“383-Armenia Street” is up at ARTLAB, Gemmayzeh, through March 9.

This article has been adapted from its original source. 

Վարչապետի գլխավորությամբ անցկացվել է մարտիմեկյան զոհերի հիշատակին նվիրված երթ

  • 01.03.2019
  •  

  • Հայաստան
  •  

     

1
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Վարչապետ Նիկոլ Փաշինյանի գլխավորությամբ 2008 թվականի մարտիմեկյան իրադարձությունների կապակցությամբ այսօր մայրաքաղաք Երևանում անցկացվել է երթ:


Երթը, որին մասնակցել են նաև վարչապետի տիկին Աննա Հակոբյանը և նրա դուստրերը, մեկնարկել է Երևանի Ազատության հրապարակից, անցել Մաշտոցի պողոտայով, Գրիգոր Լուսավորիչ փողոցով և ավարտվել Մյասնիկյանի արձանի մոտ:


Վարչապետ Փաշինյանը ծաղկեսակ է դրել և հարգանքի տուրք մատուցել բոլոր զոհերի հիշատակին:


Ավելի վաղ վարչապետ Նիկոլ Փաշինյանը մարտիմեկյան իր ուղերձում անդրադարձել էր քայլերթի նշանակությանը՝ նշելով. «Մենք այս քայլերթով մեր հարգանքի տուրքը կմատուցենք Մարտի 1-ի, քաղաքական բոլոր սպանությունների զոհերին և մեր վճռական ոչը կասենք բռնություններին, անարդարությանը, ապօրինություններին, կոռուպցիային, ընտրակեղծիքներին, իրավունքների ոտնահարմանը»:

Iran keen on expanding of relations, cooperation with Armenia, says president

Islamic Republic News Agency , Iran
Feb 27 2019
Iran keen on expanding of relations, cooperation with Armenia, says president

Tehran, 27 February: The Iranian President emphasised the need to strive for exploiting the capabilities and capacities available for exponential development, strengthening and consolidation of ties and comprehensive cooperation between Tehran and Yerevan. Addressing a joint meeting of high-ranking Iranian and Armenian delegations on Wednesday [27 February], Hassan Rouhani said, "The Islamic Republic of Iran has always wanted to develop its relations with neighbouring countries, especially Armenia, and pursues this path seriously."

The president assessed the developments in Armenia as peaceful and on a democratic path, adding that the trip will strengthen the political, economic, cultural and development of relations between the two nations.

Rouhani pointed out that today there is political will and sufficient motivation to develop relations and cooperation between the two governments, and said, 'We must strive to promote the level of economic and trade cooperation to reach the desired and mutually acceptable level for the two countries.'

The president considered an agreement with the Eurasian Union and a preferential trade agreement that would create the conditions for the development of economic relations between the two countries and went on to say, "Iran and Armenia can cooperate in the energy sector, including in the field of gas and electricity bilaterally and with other regional countries as well as establishing Iran's refinery in Armenia."

The high-ranking official highlighted, 'There are good opportunities and capacities in Iran and Armenia to develop relations in various sectors of agriculture, including animal husbandry, cultivation of products and the establishment of cultural and industrial companies, which should be working to facilitate the conditions for the development of joint cooperation in this area."

The President of the Islamic Republic of Iran has expressed the importance of developing banking relations in expanding Iran-Armenia trade and economic cooperation and noted that the Islamic Republic of Iran is ready to develop relations with Armenia in various sectors of medicine, health, health tourism, industry and mining, export of products ICT, modern technologies, transportation, transit of goods, scientific and tourism, and environmental cooperation in the Aras area.

Rouhani noted that the two countries should provide the necessary conditions for the full development of relations between the two countries through the appropriate efforts and planning at the Joint Commission on Cooperation between Armenia and Iran.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, for his part, also thanked Iran for welcoming and warm hospitality towards the Armenian delegation during its visit to Tehran.

'Iran is a neighbour and close friend of Armenia,' the Armenian Prime Minister added.

'We are interested in developing and deepening the all-embracing relations and promoting the level of cooperation in various fields, economics and culture, Agriculture, transportation, communications and tourism with the Islamic Republic of Iran,' said the Armenian PM, pointing out that 'we should use many opportunities and capacities we have to increase our friendships and cooperation'.

Pashinyan stressed that the development of the Eurasian Union's cooperation with Iran and the adoption of a preferential trade agreement in the parliaments of the member-states would be a major development for the region.