Federica Mogherini met with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan

European Interest
March 5 2019


          

Federica Mogherini, High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice-President of the European Commission, met today with Nikol Pashinyan, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia in Brussels.

They discussed the importance of implementing the EU-Armenia Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement to underpin domestic reform in Armenia, for which Federica Mogherini confirmed the European Union’s full support. They also exchanged on the prospects for opening a visa liberalisation dialogue between the EU and Armenia.

High Representative Mogherini and Prime Minister Pashinyan took stock of a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in light of recent contacts between Armenia and Azerbaijan. High Representative Mogherini advocated Prime Minister Pashinyan’s full engagement in negotiations without preconditions, under the auspices of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs.

Federica Mogherini and Nikol Pashinyan finally had an exchange on broader regional dynamics.

Verelq: ՊՆ-ում քննարկվում են նոր համազգեստների նմուշները (ֆոտո)

  • 01.03.2019
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  • Հայաստան
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ՀՀ ԶՈՒ ԳՇ ղեկավար կազմի քննարկմանն են ներկայացվել սպայական եւ ենթասպայական կազմի նոր տեսակի ամենօրյա եւ գրասենյակային համազգեստի նմուշները։ Այնուհետեւ հարցը կքննարկվի ՊՆ ղեկավար կազմի հետ:


ՊՆ-ից հայտնում են, որ համատեղ եւ վերջնական որոշումից հետո անձնակազմը փուլերով կապահովվի նոր համազգեստով:

‘Superpower in the world of military orchestra’ – Armenia’s brilliant performance at IDEX 2019 gets global critical acclaim

'Superpower in the world of military orchestra' – Armenia's brilliant performance at IDEX 2019 gets global critical acclaim

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16:39,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. Fearless, perfect, a superpower in the world of military orchestra – this is how the Middle East’s leading English-language newspaper The National has described the Armenian Military Orchestra’s performance at the opening ceremony of IDEX 2019 in Abu Dhabi.

The brilliantly performed drill commands and music by the Guards of Honor and the Armenian Military Orchestra impressed Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, and Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, as the two were seen on big screens leading the applause.

“No-one was quite sure why the Armenian Military Orchestra was taking part, until they started, that is. Armenia, it turns out, is a superpower in the world of military orchestras. A general fearlessly marched a gauntlet of swords slashing up and down in perfect symmetry, allowing him the pass through unharmed. An impressed Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, and Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, were pictured on big screens leading the applause”, The National said in an article on IDEX 2019 entitled “A show of military might and modern warfare”.

The performance of the Armenian military was so impressing that even The Guardian mentioned it in an unrelated article about the expo. “Khaleeji bagpipe band, a colourful aircraft display, a performance by the Armenian Military Orchestra and a big show of support from the Emirate royal families”, The Guardian said.  Gulf News also weighed in, noting the performance to be one of the outstanding moments of the inauguration. “The opening ceremony was marked by a mock military operation as well as performances by the UAE military band, Abu Dhabi police band and Armenian military orchestra.”

The ceremonial guards were among the Armenian military delegation led by Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan to the 2019 International Defense Exhibition and Conference, one of the largest arms expos in the Middle East.

The Armenian Defense Ministry participated at the IDEX 2019 arms expo, presenting the following Armenia-made defense technologies.

  • Electro-optic countermeasure system 3K01
  • Pancratic sniper sight 3*9
  • Sniper Rifle K-8
  • Thermal imaging gunner sight for T72A tank
  • Inductive mine detector RIA-1
  • Bulletproof vest GS-47/0717
  • Various types of reconnaissance UAVs, all in final stages of development, with proven technologies
  • Military and tactical boots
  • MJ-25 sectoral search semi-stationary VHF radar (Model 1:10)
  • Microwave transistor amplifier for target detection HFAS-75G

Earlier in January, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the Vice President and Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Ruler of the Emirate of Dubai, invited Armenian Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan to participate at the event.

Stepan Kocharyan

Thirty Years On, Armenian Earthquake Survivors Still Waiting to Be Rehoused

IndraStra Global
Feb 21 2019

Thirty Years On, Armenian Earthquake Survivors Still Waiting to Be Rehoused


Cover Image Attribute: Eighty-seven-year-old Karmen and eighty-one-year-old Gayane / © Klaus Richter
Thirty Years On, the Victims of the Most Devastating Earthquake Ever to Strike in the Former-Soviet Union are Still Waiting to Be Rehoused
Story and images by Stephen M. Bland and Klaus Richter

On December 7th, 1988, an earthquake with a magnitude of 6.8 struck near the Armenian town of Spitak, destroying every building in the municipality. With the effects of the quake felt across the north of the country, much of Gyumri, the ancient second city of Armenia some thirty miles away was leveled. As this occurred during Soviet times, the death toll was never confirmed, estimates ranging between 25,000 and 55,000, whilst over half a million were made homeless. With temperatures plummeting to -12°C, many sought refuge in shipping containers. As of 2018, according to Vahan Toumasyan, President of the Shirak Centre NGO, there were still 1,800 inhabited containers in Gyumri alone, with no access to power or running water.
Following the Velvet Revolution of May 2018 which swept to power a popular ‘people’s government,’ today in Gyumri reconstruction work is finally gathering pace. Though it remains the capital of the poorest region in the country, the city is awash with new monuments, tree-lined boulevards, and trendy cafés. One doesn’t have to go far from the center, however, to arrive in a wasteland of overgrown nettles, car chassis and rubble amidst which the forgotten people of Gyumri reside.
Having watched the disaster unfold from aboard a plane, former soldier Rafik suffers from PTSD.
Image Attribute: Rafik's shack / ©Klaus Richter
"It’s the best container in town," he said of his home, expanded piecemeal over the years from rusted sheets of corrugated iron and asbestos. "I’ve worked hard to get here. I was just twenty-two when the earthquake struck. My best friend caught the flight before me, so he was on the ground and died. You still see traces of it everywhere in the city, so you’re constantly reminded. At first, the containers were everywhere, but then they moved us out of sight to the edge of town. If the city had been rebuilt, we could have moved on better. I had a good life here until the disaster, and now, thirty years later there are still containers and no jobs; there’s sixty percent unemployment in Gyumri."
A few hundred meters across the shanty town, Susannah’s family has occupied the same fetid two-room metal box since shortly after the earthquake.
Image Attribute: Susannah / © Klaus Richter
"Six of us live here," she explained. "In the summer it’s too hot to sleep as the windows don’t open and in the winter we never know if we’ll be warm enough. There’s no connection to gas or running water. When it rains, it drips down from the ceiling. It used to be worse, but we saved hard to renovate. We have a bit more than others around here," she added, clutching at a gold crucifix. "Even if we got a government apartment, it would only be two rooms, so I’d let my children have it. I’d stay here."

Image Attribute: Askya / © Klaus Richter
Inside eighty-two-year-old Askya’s container, the ceiling was black and the walls thick with damp as she shuffled around in a snow leopard print dress. A bed, a gas burner, a table and chair, a doll and a broken black-and-white TV were the sum total of her possessions.
"I have so many memories of that day," she said. "We were in an apartment block when it struck. We saw the building opposite crumble and collapse, so we ran out of our flat. That night, although it was December, we slept on the streets. The next day tents were handed out to people, so we slept in a tent. Then I came here. There’s no hope to receive anything more now. My husband died in 2008, and I’ve been alone out here ever since."
Image Attribute: Askya's Container / © Klaus Richter
Less than a mile from the center of the city, a half-collapsed four-storey block stands next to a luxury hotel replete with a red carpet. Its top two floors burnt-out, at the rear of the building, refrigerators, furniture, and clothing spill from the gutted center, the eerie silence of the unlit stairwell broken only by the howling of dogs.

Image Attribute: Karmen and Gayane's apartment next to a luxury hotel / © Stephen M. Bland
In a one-room apartment on the second floor live eighty-seven-year-old Karmen and eighty-one-year-old Gayane. With filler holding up the crumbling ceiling and the walls decorated with pictures cut from cardboard boxes, a single flickering light bulb leaves the room dark at the height of the day.
"We both grew up in orphanages," the diminutive, white-haired Karmen explained. "I started working in a textile factory at the age of twelve, as did Gayane. For forty-seven years we worked together in the same factory."
"We sacrificed our lives to the textile factory," said Gayane. "Now we’re old ladies, I get 42,000 drams ($86) a month pension, and Karmen a little more, but it’s nothing for so many years of work."


Image Attribute: Eighty-seven-year-old Karmen and eighty-one-year-old Gayane / © Klaus Richter

"I’ve been living here since 1972," Karmen continued. "The building crumbled during the earthquake, but it didn't fall to pieces like it is today. The people who moved in after took the beams from the roof to sell as firewood until it finally collapsed in 2000. Then the center of the building gave way in the middle of the night in 2016."
"In 2004, a Russian hotelier bought the building. Now he wants to expand the hotel and says we have to get out, but where would we go?" Gayane blurted disdainfully. "Over the past thirty years, a lot of foreigners have come to see the conditions here, but no one has ever come from the government. There are so many abandoned buildings in the city; you could do something with them but they’re just left sealed."
"Now, with the new government, though, we finally have a good guy in charge,"  Karmen chipped in, her weathered face lighting up. "He’s from the common people, like us." 
"We’ve been fighting a legal battle for almost ten years," Gayane concluded. "A decision will be reached soon. A new building is being constructed by the government and we want a flat there, but the people who still live in the containers will get a place first. Whatever happens though, we go together or we don’t go at all."


Image Attribute: The Iron Fountain used to be the heart of the University of Gyumri campus / © Stephen M. Bland
About the Authors:
Stephen M. Bland is a freelance journalist and award-winning author specializing in Central Asia, the Caucasus and South-East Asia. His articles have appeared in numerous publications including The Diplomat, Vice, EurasiaNet, and Motherboard. You can view a selection at www.stephenmbland.com Twitter: @stephenmbland

Klaus Richter is a freelance photographer currently living in and working from Lithuania. For more photographs visit www.klausrichter.at 
Cite this Article:
Bland, S.M., Richter, K., "Thirty Years On, Armenian Earthquake Survivors Still Waiting to Be Rehoused" IndraStra Global Vol. 05, Issue No: 02 (2019) 0050,  | ISSN 2381-3652

Armenian delegation members march during opening ceremony of IDEX 2019

News.am, Armenia
Feb 17 2019
Armenian delegation members march during opening ceremony of IDEX 2019 Armenian delegation members march during opening ceremony of IDEX 2019

15:05, 17.02.2019
                 

Armenian delegation comprising guard of honor, military band and representatives of the defense companies marched during the opening ceremony of IDEX 2019 defense exhibition in Abu Dhabi, spokesperson for the Armenian defense ministry told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Armenian Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan is on a working visit to Abu Dhabi where he will participate in IDEX 2019 Exhibition and Conference. He is also expected to hold working meetings.

Watch the video at

Անթիլիաս – Նոր Հրատարակութիւն

Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
PO Box : 70 317 Antelias – LEBANON
Tel: (+961-4) 410 001 / 3
Fax: (+961-4) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]

Նոր Հրատարակութիւն

«ՆՈՐ ՀՈՐԻԶՈՆՆԵՐՈՒ ԴԻՄԱՑ». ՀԵՂԻՆԱԿ՝ Ն.Ս.Օ.Տ.Տ. ԱՐԱՄ Ա. ԿԱԹՈՂԻԿՈՍ


Վերջին օրերուն լոյս տեսաւ Ն.Ս.Օ.Տ.Տ. Արամ Ա. Վեհափառ Հայրապետին «Նոր Հորիզոններու Դիմաց» հատորը։ Ան կը պարունակէ ութ տարիներու ընթացքին Վեհափառ Հայրապետին պատգամներէն ու գրութիւններէն հատուածներ, որոնք կը շօշափեն մեր եկեղեցւոյ, ազգին, հայրենիքին, Սփիւռքին ու ազգային պահանջատիրութեան հետ աղերս ունեցող խնդիրներ։


Communication & Information Department

Insurance companies unhappy with Armenia’s Single Window for Automotive platform

ArmBanks, Armenia
Feb 11 2019
Insurance companies unhappy with Armenia’s Single Window for Automotive platform
11.02.2019 18:53

YEREVAN, February 11. /ARKA/. Armenian insurance companies are getting increasingly unhappy with the Armenia’s Single Window for Automotive (ASWA) platform, designed for handling vehicle insurance-related cases because of suffering additional losses, said Hayk Arakelyan, the head of the Union of Insurance Agents.

ASWA was launched on November 1, 2017 by BIVAC Armenia. ASWA is a web-based platform, which is designed for the digital exchange of information and regulation of issues related to mandatory insurance of vehicles. This platform can be used by any motorist, insurance agent or an employee of an insurance company for online conclusion of vehicle insurance contracts.

According to Arakelyan, the problem is that the service cost of the software used by ASWA (developed by a French company) is about 1-1.5 billion drams per year. He said local insurance companies cannot afford paying it because of the growing number of compensation claims.

He said to compensate for this payment, insurance companies will have to cut premiums to insurance agents, which in turn may result in layoffs. To avoid this problem Arakelyan suggested that a locally-designed analogue of the French software be used, which is as effective as the French one, but is much cheaper.

He said the French software had been chosen by the Armenian Car Insurers' Bureau without consulting with local insurance companies.

Artak Khachatryan , the founder of Tugank NGO that defends motorists rights, noted that insurance companies do not raise this issue because of fear of losing their licenses. According to him, many companies face problems since the French software does not have an offline mode.

According to BIVAC Armenia, from November 1, 2017 to December 31, 2018, more than 1 million mandatory vehicle insurance contracts had been signed by using the ASWA platform. The platform is connected to the insurance companies, the traffic police, the current databases of contracts, as well as other systems, thus enabling collection and analysis of all related data in one place.

Car owners can conclude online contracts by visiting the website of the Armenian Car Insurers Bureau at www.appa.am, as well as by using payment terminals, the websites of insurance companies, mobile applications and online banking systems, as well as the ASWA website. -0-

Armenpress: Kocharyan will remain jailed, court rejects bail

Kocharyan will remain jailed, court rejects bail

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12:14, 7 February, 2019

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 7, ARMENPRESS. Former President Robert Kocharyan will remain in jail as the Court of Appeals has rejected his motion requesting bail.

“The verdict has been published. Robert Kocharyan’s lawyers’ motions have been completely rejected,” Vahagn Muradyan from the General Prosecution said.

2nd President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan, who ruled the country from 1998 to 2008, spent two weeks in jail in summer of 2018, but was eventually freed. But on December 7, a higher court overruled the release and ordered him to be remanded into custody pending trial again.

At the time the court announced the verdict, Kocharyan turned himself in to authorities.

Kocharyan is charged for ‘overthrowing constitutional order’ during the 2008 post-election unrest, when clashes between security forces and protesters left 10 people dead, including two police officers, during his final days as president.

He vehemently denies wrongdoing.

 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenian Parliament Speaker holds meeting with Lebanese Ambassador

Armenian Parliament Speaker holds meeting with Lebanese Ambassador

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17:00, 7 February, 2019

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 7, ARMENPRESS. Speaker of Parliament Ararat Mirzoyan on February 7 received Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Lebanon to Armenia Maya Dagher, the Parliament told Armenpress.

Speaker Mirzoyan highly valued the current level of friendly relations between the two countries, highlighting the key role of the Lebanese-Armenian community in the country’s political, public life, as well as on deepening the bilateral relations.

The Speaker highlighted raising the role of parliamentary diplomacy and stated that most of the newly-elected MPs are interested in strengthening the ties with Lebanon.

Ararat Mirzoyan highly appreciated the inter-parliamentary cooperation in terms of deepening the bilateral ties and noted with satisfaction that the two countries are actively working in the international platforms which must further develop.

In her turn the Lebanese Ambassador congratulated the Speaker on assuming office and the victory of his political force in the snap parliamentary elections.

The Ambassador expressed readiness to boost the activities of the parliamentary friendship groups and the actions aimed at expanding the bilateral partnership.

The sides also touched upon other issues relating to the development of democracy, protection of human rights and freedoms, improvement of the legislative field and etc.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Armenian foreign ministry warns Israel of arms race danger in region

ARKA, Armenia
Feb 5 2019

YEREVAN, February 5. /ARKA/. Arms race has always been intensive in the region, Anna Naghdalyan, press secretary of Armenia’s foreign ministry, said Tuesday at a news conference. 

“We merely want to stress and remind our international partners that the arms race in our region is extremely dangerous,” she said. 

Naghdalyan also said that Armenia has always raised and will be raising this issue at bilateral and multilateral meetings. 

On Monday, the Israeli defense ministry gave its permission to Aeronautics Defense Systems Ltd. to resume selling drones to Baku. 

Earlier, this company was suspected of testing one of its battle drones on behalf of Azerbaijan against Armenian troops in a clear breach of the Israeli law. –0—