Acting healthcare minister visits soldiers wounded in military truck crash

Category
Society

Acting healthcare minister of Armenia Arsen Torosyan visited the four servicemen in the Central military hospital who were injured as a result of the military truck crash in Goris-Kubatli highway on November 7.

The acting minister said on Facebook that one of them has already undergone a leg surgery, and the remaining three didn’t need a surgery, but a conservative treatment.

“No one’s life is in danger. I wish speedy recovery to all and offer my condolences to the relatives of the soldiers killed in this tragic accident, sharing their grief”, the acting minister said.

Pope Francis holds farewell meeting with recalled Armenian Ambassador Mikayel Minasyan (photos)

Category
Politics

Mikayel Minasyan, the outgoing Armenian Ambassador to Vatican who was recalled on November 2, held a farewell meeting with Pope Francis on November 8.

“Yesterday, as [former] ambassador, I bid farewell to [Pope Francis]. Looking into the eyes of Pope Francis, it was difficult to articulate what I am feeling under the justice, memory and power injerited from him.

I conveyed the love and gratitude of us all to the Pope. I am grateful to you, [Your Holiness], as an Armenian, as a citizen of the Republic of Armenia, and simply as a man whom you accepted and loved. You will always be in our prayers,” Minasyan said on Facebook.

Weightlifter Simon Martirosyan conquers world champion title

Category
Sport

Member of the Armenian weightlifting team, silver medalist of Olympic Games Simon Martirosyan becomes world champion.

ARMENPRESS reports during the championship in Turkmenistan in the snatch exercise Martirosyan raised 190 kg at the first approach, 195 kg at the second approach and 197 kg at the third approach which could become a world record but the referees did not count the approach.

Martirosyan raised 230 kg in the pull exercise, which is a world record. In the second approach he raised 240 kg and set the second record. The Armenian weightlifter did not approach the 3rd time.

Simon Martirosyan became world champion at the age of 21 raising 435 kg in total.

250MW thermal power plant providing the cheapest electricity to be built in Yerevan

Category
Society

New thermal power plant with a 250 MW capacity will be constructed in Yerevan within 26 months, acting deputy prime minister of Armenia Tigran Avinyan said.

“This is a joint program with the famous Italian Renco S.p.A., one more famous Italian state company, as well as the German Siemens, as a result of which we will have a thermal power station which will be the most effective among the currently operating stations and will provide us an electricity with the cheapest price”, Avinyan said.

Acting minister of energy infrastructures and natural resources Garegin Baghramyan said after the last upgrading of Yerevan’s thermal power plant, its useful operating rate has somehow increased, comprising nearly 49%. “The useful operating rate of the new power station will comprise about 53%”, he said.

The current investment program has also been discussed under the previous government, and the new government made a decision to launch talks as a result of which they came to an agreement with the investor over new, more satisfactory agreements. Avinyan clarified that based on the talks the price reached from 6.02 US cents to 5.7, which will save 6.4 million USD annually.

The new set tariff comprises nearly 27.4 AMD as of today’s exchange rates.

The construction of the new power station will involve 1000-1200 people. There will be nearly 230 jobs in the plant with high salaries.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/09/2018

                                        Friday, 

Pashinian Speaks Against Creating ‘Fake’ Oppositions

        • Naira Nalbandian

Acting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (C) during a meeting with ethnic 
Armenians in Astana, Kazakhstan, 9Nov, 2018

Fake oppositions have eroded Armenia’s political landscape in the past two 
decades, acting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said at a meeting in 
Astana with representatives of the Armenian community of Kazakhstan.

According to the Armenian leader, his government will not be taking that way. 
“For quite a long time Armenia has not had a government and an opposition with 
a mandate from the people, that’s why in Armenia people did not believe any 
one,” said Pashinian, who on November 8 attended a summit of Collective 
Security Treaty Organization member states in Kazakhstan’s capital.

“We are not going to create an artificial opposition, because it is up to the 
opposition to establish itself as a viable force. In the upcoming parliamentary 
elections the people will decide who will be the government and who will be the 
opposition,” he added.

Political analyst Armen Baghdasarian believes that it is only 
pseudo-governments that need pseudo-oppositions. In Armenia, he thinks, there 
is no such risk at the moment. Moreover, according to the analyst, the real 
struggle will be within the opposition field, as the Pashinian-led My Step 
alliance will be a clear winner.

“The former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) claims that it will be the 
only opposition. I think they are not quite honest and right, because the 
opposition is not those who deliver critical speeches. The opposition is the 
power that can really be a counterbalance and with which the public 
dissatisfied with the government will connect its hopes. Now it is obvious that 
no one in Armenia pins any hopes on the HHK,” Baghdasarian said.

The HHK has not yet made a formal decision regarding its participation in the 
snap parliamentary elections scheduled for December 9.

The party’s spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on 
Thursday that the HHK will hold a meeting on November 11 during which this 
issue will be discussed.

Political parties and alliances have until November 14 to submit their 
documents for registration in the elections.

Snap general elections were appointed in Armenia after the country’s popular 
Prime Minister Pashinian forced the parliament’s dissolution with his tactical 
resignation and two straight tactical votes in parliament that failed to elect 
a new prime minister.

Pashinian’s political team, which came to power on the wave of anti-government 
protests last spring, is tipped to win in the coming polls by a wide margin and 
form the next government.

The pro-Pashinian My Step alliance polled over 80 percent of the vote in 
September municipal elections in capital Yerevan, which is home to more than a 
third of Armenia’s population.




Syunik Governor Vows ‘Unprecedented’ Elections

        • Gayane Saribekian

Newly appointed governor of Syunik Hunan Poghosian addresses a rally in the 
province, 19Oct2018

Hunan Poghosian, a recently appointed governor of one of Armenia’s most 
crime-ridden provinces, has promised to ensure the holding of “unprecedented 
elections” in Syunik next month.

Poghosian served as first deputy chief of police during most of former 
President Serzh Sarkisian’s decade-long rule and resigned immediately after the 
change of government brought about by peaceful demonstrations in April-May.

Nikol Pashinian, the leader of the demonstrations who ousted Sarkisian to 
become Armenia’s next, prime minister, appointed Poghosian as Syunik’s governor 
in October.

The appointment prompted criticism from some human rights activists and even 
some Pashinian supporters, who accused the police general of corruption and 
human rights abuses during the previous administration.

Pashinian, however, repeatedly defended his decision, alleging “attempts to 
restore the old oligarchic logic” in Syunik. “The mountainous region bordering 
Iran should therefore be governed by a tough security officer who can bang his 
fist on the table and maintain law and order, protect civil liberties and 
guarantee free enterprise,” he said at an October 19 rally in Kapan ahead of 
local mayoral elections.

The candidate from Pashinian’s Civil Contract party was narrowly defeated in 
the subsequent vote, with the prime minister blaming “criminal forces” for the 
election loss.

Poghosian, who unlike other provincial governors who are members of Pashinian’s 
political team, is not going to run in individual races in the December 9 snap 
parliamentary elections, said his job was to ensure a proper conduct of the 
polls in the province notorious for electoral violations.

“There must be legitimate, transparent and, in all senses, unprecedented 
elections in which any eligible voter will have the opportunity to go to the 
polls and vote for the party and candidate he or she prefers,” the Syunik 
governor told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Friday.

Poghosian said he was never a party member and was not going to become one. “I 
will be of use here by ensuring that the law is observed,” he stressed.




Armenian PM To Visit Paris For WWI Armistice Centennial Events


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) and French President Emmanuel 
Macron attend the national homage to French-Armenian singer-songwriter Charles 
Aznavour in Paris, October 5, 2018

Armenia’s acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian will pay a working visit to 
France on November 10-11, his press office said on Friday.

In the French capital Pashinian is due to attend a ceremony dedicated to the 
100th anniversary of the armistice in World War I and take part in a session of 
the Paris Peace Forum.

The events will be hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron and will bring 
together a number of world leaders, including United States President Donald 
Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Armistice of November 11, 1918 put an end to fighting on land, sea and air 
in World War I between the Allies [France, the United Kingdom, the United 
States and others] and their opponent, Germany.

It marked a victory for the Allies, with previous armistices eliminating 
Bulgaria, the Ottoman Empire and the Austro-Hungarian Empire from the war.

Around 40 million soldiers and civilians were killed in the four-year war waged 
by the world’s leading powers of the time.

Armenians, then a people divided between two opposing empires – Ottoman Turkey 
and Russia – suffered severe consequences of the war.

Some 1.5 million Armenians were exterminated by the Ottoman authorities during 
the years of World War I in what many historians and more than two dozen 
governments of the world today recognize as the first genocide of the 20th 
century.

Pashinian’s visit to Paris will be his third since assuming the post of 
Armenia’s prime minister in May.

In September, Pashinian went to France for talks with Macron ahead of the 
summit of Francophonie nations that was held in Yerevan the following month and 
was attended by the French leader.

On October 5, the Armenian leader visited Paris for a national homage to 
Charles Aznavour, a world-renowned French-Armenian crooner who had died at the 
age of 94.

Pashinian attended that ceremony jointly with Macron.




Press Review



“Zhamanak” writes that the November 8 summit of the Collective Security Treaty 
Organization (CSTO) in Astana, Kazakhstan, in fact, confirmed the media 
publications that at least some of the members of the Russian-led security 
grouping do not want Armenia to retain its rotational post of the 
organization’s secretary-general until 2020 and want to transfer it to Belarus, 
which is next in line in alphabetical order. “This position, in particular, was 
expressed by Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who reasoned that ‘in 
any case Armenia’s quota has only one year to go and the new secretary-general 
will not even have enough time to visit all the member states in order to fully 
get down to work.’ This reasoning may seem logical, but considering the real 
nature of the CSTO, the expression ‘fully get down to work’ sounds rather 
ridiculous. The organization itself is more a formality than a 
military-political bloc, and, therefore, the post of its secretary-general is 
also a formal post,” the paper says.

On the same subject “Zhoghovurd” writes: “After Armenia recalled Yuri 
Khachaturov from the post of the CSTO secretary-general, Belarus wants to take 
over the senior leadership post at the organization. In this matter it enjoys 
the support of Kazakhstan. And Russia, whose opinion in the bloc is decisive, 
has not expressed its clear position yet. In any case, in this structure 
decisions are made in accordance with a collegial principle. And if one member 
vetoes a certain option, then the decision will not be made.” The paper says 
that while formally Armenia has the right to retain the post, “there some 
political nuances.”

Lragir.am writes: “In a new Facebook post former Defense Minister Vigen 
Sargsian suggested that [acting Prime Minister] Nikol Pashinian needs a strong 
opposition in parliament so as to be able to withstand growing pressure in the 
Nagorno-Karabakh issue. According to Sargsian, it is only possible ‘through a 
debate with a serious and experienced team to achieve supra-party consensus.’ 
Vigen Sargsian is right that it is very important when the state’s system is 
composed not only of a strong government with strong legitimacy, but also of a 
strong opposition with strong legitimacy. He is also right when he speaks about 
the need for a debate with an experienced team, implying the former ruling 
Republican Party of Armenia (HHK). In this sense, the HHK has no competition, 
however hard it may be for some to admit. While retaining power through 
usurpation for nearly two decades, simply due to being a governing party the 
HHK naturally had more knowledge of foreign-policy and security issues than 
others.”

(Lilit Harutiunian)



Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


Fresno was special to Grandpa — and he made it special to us

The Fresno Bee
Nov 10 2018

05:26 AM

Iran Sanctions Herald Energy Trouble for Caucasus Nations

Lobe Log
Nov 10 2018
    
Oil fields near Baku (Juraj Kamenicky via Shutterstock)

by David O’Byrne

The resumption of wide-ranging American sanctions on Iran promises economic uncertainty for the Islamic Republic’s neighbors in the Caucasus: Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia.

Washington’s goal of reducing Iran’s oil exports to zero will not directly impact any of three Caucasus states, as none of them imports Iranian crude. All three, however, have to various extents relied on Iran for natural gas, and stand to be affected – if only by uncertainty until the exact scope of the sanctions becomes clearer.

U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton recently visited all three countries to try to shore up support for Washington’s efforts to isolate Tehran, though his results were inconclusive. When Washington imposed the new round of sanctions on November 5 it exempted eight countries, including neighboring Turkey, but none of the Caucasus states were spared.

As a major exporter of both crude oil and natural gas, and a sometime importer of Iranian gas, Azerbaijan’s position is most complex.

Azerbaijan shares long land and maritime borders with Iran, as well as ownership of a number of undeveloped Caspian oil and gas fields subject to a joint development agreement signed in March this year.

Development of those fields is now unlikely to proceed, but other joint ventures have advanced beyond the point where even Washington can impose a halt.

Azerbaijan’s main gas field, Shah Deniz, is being developed by a consortium led by UK oil giant BP, but in which Iran’s national oil company, NIOC, holds a 10 percent stake.

Shah Deniz is currently the only source of gas for the long-planned, EU-backed Southern Gas Corridor (SGC), aimed at lessening Europe’s dependence on Russian energy.

Already in August, Washington made the position of Shah Deniz and the SGC project clear when the Treasury Department granted a permanent waiver from Iran-related sanctions for “the development of natural gas and the construction and operation of a pipeline to transport natural gas from Azerbaijan to Turkey and Europe.”

That concession means that neither BP, the Azerbaijani state oil company SOCAR, nor the other three shareholders will face sanctions related to that project.

Azerbaijan also stands potentially to benefit from any increase in global oil prices caused by the halting of Iranian exports. That uncertainty also would lead to an increase in natural gas prices, which are for the most part indexed to oil prices.

“Azerbaijan may well reap some secondary benefits from U.S. sanctions on Iran, since it stands to gain if oil prices increase as a result of heightened tensions in the Persian Gulf,” Caspian energy analyst and Atlantic Council fellow John Roberts told Eurasianet, though he cautioned that any potential benefits are unpredictable as they rely on factors beyond Baku’s control.

Roberts added that Azerbaijan’s position is further complicated by its position as an importer of natural gas from Iran.

Azerbaijan imports small volumes of Iranian gas into its exclave of Nakhchivan for local consumption. Also, in recent years, gas from Turkmenistan has transited via Iran into mainland Azerbaijan to supplement its own production and to meet export commitments to Georgia, which is expected to import around 2.7 billion cubic meters of gas from Azerbaijan this year.

SOCAR spokesman Ibrahim Ahmadov told Eurasianet that the company’s gas imports via Iran have now stopped thanks to increased domestic production.

“A big part of the imported gas was used to fill our gas storage during summer which is then re-exported in winter when there is higher demand,” Ahmadov said. With more than 3 billion cubic meters currently in storage, and further imports due from Russia before the end of the year, SOCAR doesn’t anticipate shortages. “There should be no problems with the gas supply in Georgia,” Ahmadov said.

Sandwiched between Iran and Armenia, and with a tiny outlet to Turkey, Nakhchivan’s geography limits its alternatives.

An agreement with Ankara for a pipeline link to bring gas into Nakhchivan from Turkey was signed in 2010, but to date no pipeline has been laid, leaving the exclave still dependent directly on swap arrangements with Iran.

Such barter deals would not necessarily put Baku in breach of the U.S. sanctions. Ahmadov confirmed that SOCAR is “not planning any payment-based transactions with Iran in the near future.”

If Azerbaijan’s gas exports to Georgia will indeed be unaffected, then Georgia – which with its Black Sea coast has no need to import Iranian petroleum products – should be little troubled by the U.S. sanctions.

Few Options for Armenia

The same, though, cannot be said for Armenia, whose landlocked geography and regional political isolation leave it few options.

With few natural resources of its own, and still getting over 40 percent of its power supply from the aging Metsamor nuclear power plant, Armenia has become increasingly dependent on imported gas to meet its energy needs.

The bulk of Armenia’s gas is imported from Russia (via Georgia), but Yerevan also imported about 400 million cubic meters of gas from Iran in 2017, and sends Iran power in exchange. In late 2017 an agreement was announced for Armenia to boost Iran gas imports by up to 25 percent, and to increase power exports by a similar amount.

The status of that agreement and of existing Iranian gas exports to Armenia is currently unclear.

On November 6, Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson Anna A. Naghdalyan tweeted that her ministry was closely monitoring developments. “A comprehensive examination of the effects the new sanctions will have on Armenia is ongoing,” she said. She did not respond by press time to queries from Eurasianet.

Armenia’s position is further complicated by the fact that much of its gas pipeline network is owned by Russia’s Gazprom. The two have long bickered over the price Gazprom charges for the gas it supplies.

Forcing Yerevan to abandon Iranian imports will thus leave it more dependent on Russia, and in a far weaker bargaining position.

David O’Byrne is an Istanbul-based journalist who covers energy. Reprinted, with permission, from Eurasianet.

Analyst: Armenia should not allow Russia to develop relations with Azerbaijan at its expense

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 10 2018

Recently, the relations between Russia and Azerbaijan are remarkable because the neighboring country is buying large quantities of gas from our strategic ally. Besides, from time to time, the topic of possible accession of Azerbaijan to CSTO is discussed. Ali-Husseinov, the head of the Russian-Azerbaijani Interparliamentary Cooperation Group, specifically stated earlier that "under these new geographical conditions, Azerbaijan's participation in the CSTO can be considered."

Panorama.am correspondent talked to analyst Tevan Poghosyan about what might have possibly changed in Russian-Azerbaijani relations and whether the above-mentioned circumstances are a manifestation of Russia's business interest or a mere outcome of Armenia's foreign policy.

The latter noticed that the Armenian side, of course, has had failures and should carry out more coordinated work on the international platforms.

"We need to understand whether Armenia has made enough efforts so that no country thinks that relations with Azerbaijan are more important than relations with Armenia. Our guilt lies in the fact that Armenia is not one of the world's most powerful countries today. This is entirely our fault, the result of our inadequate effort, most often, a consequence of our not correctly made efforts. It is necessary to understand what we should do for Armenia and Russia to cooperate more closely, so that the relations improve even more, so that when establishing relations with another country Russia always takes into account whether Armenia will like it or not.

Today Azerbaijan announces that Armenians are their enemies and that it is at war with Armenia. That country will do its best to win on the diplomatic platform as well. That's why it will do all it possibly can in parliamentary assemblies, international organizations, even in the spheres of sports and culture, " Tevan Poghosyan said, adding that Armenia should do its best to protect its own interests, not allowing Russia to develop relations with Azerbaijan at its expense.

On the other hand, according to the analyst, it is unacceptable for a third party to interfere with the relations between the two countries, in the same way as one cannot interfere with the American-Israeli relations, for example.

"Relations between Russia and Azerbaijan are conditioned by the interests of the leaders of the two countries. They implement projects, " said Tevan Poghosyan.

Acting PM urges Armenians to work

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 10 2018

During his meeting with the representatives of the Armeinian community in Astana, the Acting Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan urged them to work.

He noted that soon legislative changes will be made in Armenia to make the opportunities for evolving business activity more accessible.

"Our main goal is to encourage people. As it was the case during the revolution, we told them, my dear people, you are powerful, get up and stand up for your rights. Now we are saying the same thing regarding business. Now our task is to have hundreds of thousands of people do something in terms of economics, so that people can understand that it’s only through work that we can solve the existing problems," he said.
Pashinyan said that if they were driven by sitting at home and waiting for the government, these issues would not be resolved.

"Poverty is a serious problem in Armenia today, and it’s first of all the responsibility of the government to find a solution to the problem. But let me tell you something: will the government be able to find a solution to overcome the poverty of the family if the family members do not do anything to improve that situation? " he said.

The Acting PM noted that during their meetings in the villages, people stated: "We wish we had work and could work".

"Then, after a few inquiries, we find out that in the same village where we were asked for workplaces, there is a vacancy and the owner says that he has nor been able to employ anyone for two years because people do not want to work since they receive poverty benefits which equals 25,000 drams. It has come to the point that people are slaughtering their cows so that they can receive poverty benefits, or they do not buy a TV so that can receive poverty benefits," he said.
According to Pashinyan, 350,000 people are employed in Armenia and they need to provide for 800,000 people.

"800 thousand people demand from those 350 thousand, 350 thousand people are working quite hard, and 800 thousand people want them to get out of their way and work even harder," he stressed.