Armen Sarkissian gives consent to become Armenian President’s candidate (video)(photos)

Category
Politics

President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan met today with Armen Sarkissian, who had been offered by the Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) to become the ruling party’s candidate for the President of Armenia. During the previous meeting with Serzh Sargsyan, Armen Sarkissina had asked for some time to be able to hold meetings with different political forces, the leadership of Artsakh, business and science representatives and the public sector.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the Armenian President’s Office, Armen Sarkissian noted that the planned meetings are over based on which he has made a decision. Armen Sarkissina presented the reasons behind his decision in the meeting with President Serzh Sargsyan.

“Honorable Mr. Sarkissian,

A month ago I offered you on behalf of the Republican Party of Armenia to become the candidate of the new President of Armenia. You promised to seriously ponder over that. During this month you have had numerous meetings with both parliamentary and extra-parliamentary political forces, NGOs, intellectuals and you also visited Artsakh. Of course, I attentively followed your meetings through media. They were also very attentive towards you and were extremely inspective towards any of your step, analyzed what you said and your biography”, President Serzh Sargsyan said, noting that there were both sober and ridiculous comments. “You displayed tolerance, patience and readiness for dialogue. These features are of key importance in life in general and just necessity for a head of state. Now I think It’s time for you to give an answer”, Sargsyan said.

Armen Sarkissian first thanked President Serzh Sargsyan and the Republican party of Armenia for the confidence towards him and great expectations from him, noting that he well understands that the position of the President of the Republic is not only very honorable, but also contains great responsibility.

“This is the reason why I asked you to give me time to ponder and hold meetings”, Sarkissina said. Speaking about his visit to Artsakh, Armen Sarkissian said that Artsakh is not only our pride and inseparable part of our people and history, but also the national dignity of Armenians. “If I am elected the President of the Republic, I will try to contribute to the foreign policy of Armenia, economic issues, attracting investments, but what I assess very important is the strengthening of national unity and Armenia-Diaspora relations”, Armen Sarkissian said, adding that he attaches great importance to education and stressed that the future President of Armenia should support and encourage that sphere.

“Mr. President, I want to emphasize that as regards to the issues raised by you I am convinced that I will be able to carry out the high responsibilities with honor”, Armen Sarkissian said, adding that he is ready to spare no efforts and vigor to fulfill that very responsible mission, if elected by the National Assembly.

The President of the Republic hoped that by giving start to the procedures provided for by the Constitution, brilliant results will be recorded.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/16/2018

                                        Friday, 

Armenian Parliament Rejects Tax Cuts Demanded By Opposition


 . Nane Sahakian


Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian speaks in the parliament
during a debate on tax cuts demanded by his Yelk alliance, 16 February
2018.

The National Assembly voted down on Friday an opposition bill that
would reverse recent increases in personal income and fuel taxes
initiated by the Armenian government.

The opposition Yelk alliance, which drafted the bill, has been
particularly critical of higher excise duties on fuel that came into
force on January 1. It blames them for recent weeks' sizable rises in
fuel prices in Armenia. It also says that the higher income tax rates
will hurt the middle class hard.

Presenting the bill to fellow lawmakers, Yelk's Nikol Pashinian said
that a repeal of the new tax rates would mitigate the impact on the
population of the increased cost of fuel and some basic
foodstuffs. "Otherwise the social crisis in our country will deepen
further," Pashinian said during a three-hour parliament debate.

The government spoke out against the Yelk bill even before it reached
the parliament floor. It insisted last week that the impact of the
higher tax rates on consumer price inflation has been minimal.

Speaking in the parliament, Deputy Finance Minister Davit Ananian said
that the higher fuel taxes had to be introduced to make up for what he
called a loss of state revenue resulting from government efforts to
improve tax administration and Armenia's broader business
environment. Ananian also said that the proposed tax cuts, if passed
by the parliament, would result in a revenue shortfall of 32 billion
drams ($66 million).

Khosrov Harutiunian, the pro-government chairman of the parliament
committee on economic issues, also criticized the Yelk bill before the
National Assembly voted to reject it.

Yelk put forward the bill after holding two demonstrations in Yerevan
to protest against the price hikes. The rallies attracted only several
hundred people.

The recent amendments to Armenia's Tax Code criticized by Yelk raised
from 26 percent to 28 percent the tax rate for monthly incomes ranging
from 150,000 to 2 million drams ($310-$4,150). The rate for those
earning more was set at 36 percent. The amended code at the same time
cut the tax rate from 24.4 percent to 23 percent for workers making
less than 150,000 drams a month.

Government officials insist that the more progressive tax will put a
heavier financial burden only on high-income individuals. They argue
that 90 percent of employed Armenians, who make between 150,000 and
280,000 drams, will not have any additional sums deducted from their
wages because of a complex method of income calculation. And those who
earn from 280,000 to 330,000 drams will pay an extra amount of only up
to 820 drams ($1.7) a month, they say.



Moscow Chides Aliyev Over `Historic Azeri Lands'


RUSSIA -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, accompanied by
Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, attends his
annual press conference in Moscow, January 15, 2018

Russia has criticized Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev for again
publicly declaring that Yerevan and other parts of Armenia are
"historic Azerbaijani lands."

Aliyev pledged to "return Azerbaijanis" to Yerevan, Armenia's
southeastern Syunik province and the area around Lake Sevan when he
addressed a pre-election congress of his Yeni Azerbaycan party on
Thursday. That, he said, is a "strategic goal" of his regime.

Armenia condemned the statement, with President Serzh Sarkisian saying
it shows that Baku is not committed to a compromise solution to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

"Reports about Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's speech at a
congress of the ruling party have certainly been seen in Moscow," the
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, said on
Thursday. "We are well aware that Azerbaijan's relations with
neighboring Armenia are extremely tense. The comment in question will
clearly not help to reduce the tensions."

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry rejected the Russian criticism on
Friday. A ministry spokesman, Hikmet Hajiyev, said it runs count to
Russia's "strategic partnership" with Azerbaijan.

Hajiyev was quoted by Azerbaijani media saying that Aliyev did not lay
any territorial claims to Armenia and only spoke of an eventual
"return of Azerbaijanis to their historical lands."

Aliyev has repeatedly made similar statements in the past. In 2014,
for instance, he stated that Baku will eventually gain control of not
only Karabakh but also parts of the "fascist" Armenian state which he
said had been created on "historic Azerbaijani lands."

The Russian, U.S. and French mediators may have referred to the
Azerbaijani leader's latest claim when they urged the parties to the
Karabakh conflict to avoid "inflammatory statements" after wrapping up
their latest regional tour on February 11.

Aliyev will be seeking a fourth term in office in a snap presidential
election slated for April 11. The ballot will be held two days after
Sarkisian completes his second and final presidential term. Sarkisian
is tipped to become prime minister immediately after Armenia is
transformed into a parliamentary republic later in April.

Aliyev and Sarkisian pledged to intensify the Karabakh peace process
when they last met in Geneva in October. Their foreign ministers held
follow-up talks in December and January.



Armen Sarkissian Agrees To Be Armenia's Next President


 . Emil Danielyan


Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (R) meets with former Prime
Minister Armen Sarkissian in Yerevan, 16 February 2017.

A former Armenian prime minister who has lived in Britain for nearly
three decades officially accepted on Friday the outgoing President
Serzh Sarkisian's offer to serve as Armenia's next president under a
new, parliamentary system of government.

Armen Sarkissian (no relation) communicated his widely anticipated
decision to Sarkisian after a series of meetings held with Armenian
political parties, non-governmental organizations, prominent
intellectuals and business circles.

The next president of the republic will be elected by the Armenian
parliament, controlled by the ruling Republican Party (HHK), one month
before the current head of state completes his final term on April
9. Armenia will then be transformed into a parliamentary republic,
meaning that the most of the presently sweeping presidential powers
will be given to the prime minister.

The outgoing president offered to nominate Armen Sarkissian as the
HHK's presidential candidate on January 19. Sarkissian, who has served
as Armenia's ambassador to Britain since 2013, said he needs time to
decide whether to accept the proposal.


Armenia - Former Prime Minister Armen Sarkissian meets with members of
the National Academy of Sciences in Yerevan, 30 January 2018.

"With my entire essence and vigor, I am ready to get involved in that
very important endeavor if the National Assembly elects me president,"
Sarkissian told the president on Friday.

The 64-year-old former scholar said his month-long meetings reinforced
his belief that "a lot needs to be done in various areas." He said
that as president he will strive to "make my contributions" to
Armenia's foreign policy, international economic relations and, in
particular, government efforts to attract more foreign investment. He
said he will also try to improve the quality of public education and
strengthen the Armenian civil society.

Under Armenia's amended constitution, Serzh Sarkisian's successor will
be primarily tasked with ensuring "observance of the constitution" by
various branches of government. He will be empowered to appoint
members of the government, ambassadors abroad and the Armenian army's
top brass. But all of those officials will be nominated by the prime
minister, who will also be the army's commander-in-chief.

Sarkissian has insisted during his frequent contacts with journalists
in recent weeks that he will be more than a figurehead if he runs for
president and gets elected. He has also called for a "national
dialogue" among Armenia's political and other organizations, saying
that it is necessary for healing serious divisions existing in the
society.

The presidential frontrunner said on Friday that he intends to launch
such a dialogue. Serzh Sarkisian praised his "readiness for dialogue"
in his opening remarks at the meeting.

A physicist and mathematician by education, Armen Sarkissian worked at
the Cambridge University when he was appointed as newly independent
Armenia's first ambassador to the United Kingdom in 1991. He served as
prime minister for four months in 1996-1997 before being again named
ambassador in London.


Armenia - Former Prime Minister Armen Sarkissian visits the TUMO
Center for Creative Technologies in Yerevan, 31 January 2018.

His second ambassadorial stint was cut short in 1999 by then President
Robert Kocharian. Sarkissian stayed in Britain where he made a big
fortune in the following decade, mainly working as an advisor and
consultant for Western corporations doing business in the former
Soviet Union. He was appointed as Armenian ambassador to Britain for a
third time in 2013.

Sarkissian will have to be backed by a three-fourths and two-thirds
majority of lawmakers in order to win in the first and second rounds
of voting respectively. A simple majority of votes is enough to win
the presidency in the third round. The HHK has such a majority.

Nevertheless, the president expressed hope last month that the former
premier will win outright in the first round. In that case, he would
need the backing of at least 79 members of the 105-seat parliament.

The HHK and its junior coalition partner, the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), control 65 seats between them. They will
therefore need the votes of businessman Gagik Tsarukian's alliance
which holds 31 seats. Despite being officially in opposition to the
government, Tsarukian has not ruled out the possibility of endorsing
an HHK candidate.



Key Suspect Questioned In Court Hearing On Babayan


 . Karlen Aslanian


Georgia - A screenshot of official video of the arrest in Tbilisi of
Robert Aghvanian, 27Mar2017.

A man recently extradited from Georgia admitted on Friday possessing a
sophisticated weapon which was confiscated and used by Armenian
law-enforcement authorities in their controversial criminal case
against Samvel Babayan, a retired army general linked to an opposition
group.

The Armenian national, Robert Aghvanian, insisted at the same time
that he never knew Babayan personally or thought that he is selling
the shoulder-fired surface-to-air rocket system to the latter.

Aghvanian was detained in Tbilisi in March last year just days after
Babayan's controversial arrest. Armenia's National Security Service
(NSS) said at the time that the former commander of Nagorno-Karabakh's
army paid two other arrested suspects to smuggle the Igla system from
or through Georgia. The NSS claimed to have found and confiscated the
Russian-made weapon in Karabakh.

Subsequent NSS statements were more ambiguous about the origin of the
weapon. Investigators said only that Aghvanian delivered the weapon in
return for $38,000 that was promised by Sanasar Gabrielian, a longtime
Babayan associate. Gabrielian allegedly acted on the general's orders.

Babayan repeatedly denied the accusations as baseless before being
sentenced to six years in prison by a Yerevan district court in
November. Gabrielian, who received a three-year prison sentence,
insisted at their trial that it was he, not Babayan, who commissioned
the confiscated Igla. He said he planned to donate it to the Karabakh
military.

Both men appealed against what they call a politically motivated
verdict. Aghvanian was brought to the Court of Appeals to give
evidence at their request.


Armenia - Samvel Babayan, a retired army general, goes on trial in
Yerevan, 31Jul2017.
The 40-year-old told the court that the Igla rocket was for years kept
in his house in Echmiadzin. He said it was left over from his father,
the town's former mayor who he said had obtained many weapons for the
Armenian army in 1990s.

Aghvanian went on to admit selling the rocket to Hrachya Mayilian, a
man who the NSS claims "voluntarily" surrendered it to law-enforcement
authorities and avoided imprisonment because of that. "As for what
Mayilian did after that, ask him," he added. "I know neither
Mr. Babayan nor Sanasar Gabrielian."

According to the prosecution, Mayilian is one of the two middlemen
through whom Gabrielian purchased the rocket for the once powerful
general. In his testimony, Mayilian has not implicated Babayan in the
illegal arms deal.

Babayan seized upon Aghvanian's testimony as further proof that he is
innocent. He insisted that the authorities have failed to come up with
any compelling evidence to the contrary.

Babayan was arrested about two weeks before Armenia's last
parliamentary elections. He was unofficially affiliated with the ORO
alliance led by former Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian and two other
opposition politicians. ORO condemned the criminal case as politically
motivated. The opposition bloc failed to win any parliament seats.



Press Review



Citing weekend comments by Armen Ashotian, a deputy chairman of the
ruling HHK, "Chorrord Ishkhanutyun" says there is no doubt that
President Serzh Sarkisian will become prime minister immediately after
completing his final presidential term on April 9. The paper says
Ashotian's remarks prove that recent years' political processes in
Armenia were a "political show" designed to enable Sarkisian to extend
his rule.

"The HHK seems to be becoming divided," writes "Zhamanak." "Some party
members do not hesitate to speak about Serzh Sarkisian being
irreplaceable and about his prime-ministerial future. But there are
also those who do not rush to join that partisan act of allegiance,
saying that there is still no decision and that they will speak up
when the issue is discussed. After all, few in Armenia can imagine
Sarkisian giving up his status as the number one government
figure. Especially now that the constitutional hurdle to that has been
eliminated and he has secured a constitutional opportunity to
indefinitely remain the number one figure." The paper says that his
HHK allies have no say whatsoever in his decision making.

"Zhoghovurd" says that former President Armen Sarkissian will be "part
of an illegitimate government" if he agrees to become Armenia's next
president. The paper is also skeptical about his calls for national
unity. It argues that Serzh Sarkisian made similar calls when he took
over as president in April 2008 in the wake of a deadly post-election
unrest in Yerevan. "So Armen Sarkissian will hardly live up to
expectations especially given that he will have mainly symbolic
powers," it says,

"Our oppositionists have failed for the past 25 years not because
their methods of struggle are not eccentric or extreme enough," writes
"Aravot." "The problem runs deeper. For the past quarter of a century
the opposition has pinned its hopes on a popular revolt # They should
have had enough time to understand that this is a methodological
mistake. But if you just listen to any opposition speech you will see
that `vision' from the second or third sentence. It's about the time
they realized that this path cannot lead them anywhere."

(Tigran Avetisian)


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

Dutch Foreign Minister respects calls to recognize Armenian Genocide

News.am, Armenia
Feb 16 2018
Dutch Foreign Minister respects calls to recognize Armenian Genocide Dutch Foreign Minister respects calls to recognize Armenian Genocide

19:45, 16.02.2018
                  

Dutch Foreign Minister Sigrid Kaag said she respects parliament’s “enthusiasm” to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

However, Kaag said she will not comment on the government’s stance on the matter until she's debated the matter with parliament next week, NOS   reports.

A motion recognizing the Armenian Genocide has been presented in the Tweede Kamer, the lower house of Dutch parliament, on Thursday.The motion is authored by ChristenUnie parliamentarian Joel Voordewind.

The minister said the government always refers to this matter as “the issue of the Armenian genocide” and that is still the case. She added that she respects the relatives’ grief about the terrible things that happened in 1915.

“It can be important what a thing is called, but we will decide that in the debate with the Kamer”, she said to NOS.

NOS also said that the minister did not comment whether a member of the government will attend the commemoration in April, but “sources in The Hague told NOS that someone will be there.”

Sports/Olympics: Armenia’s Mikayel Mikayelyan finishes the 83rd in Olympic skiathlon

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 16 2018
18:54 16/02/2018

Armenian skier Mikayel Mikayelyan finished the 83rd in the 15k freestyle race at the Olympics. The Armenian showed a result of 39:01.4, around six seconds behind the winner.

Swiss Dario Cologna became the quadruple Olympic champion in the race. Norwegian Simen Kruger, who has previously won gold in the skiathlon, became the second. Russian Denis Spicav won bronze in the Olympics.

To note, this was the last race of Mikayelyan in Pyeongchang. Armenia's last representative Ashot Karapetyan competing in the Alpine skiing will start on February 22.

WCIT 2019 baton to be passed to Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 16 2018
Society 18:37 16/02/2018 Armenia

The delegation of Armenian IT companies led by Communication, IT and Transport ministry officials is heading for India to attend the World Congress on Information Technology (WCIT) to be held in Hyderabad on February 19-21. As the Union of Information Technology Enterprises of Armenia (UITE) reports, our country participates in the event for the ninth time.

WCIT is the largest and the most reputable international event among worldwide IT leaders. It brings together high-level officials from different countries, heads of multinational organizations, universities and scientific research centers, non-governmental organizations' representatives and many more.
The event includes discussions of legal, political and economic trends affecting IT business processes, presentations of innovative solutions, B2B meetings and so on. The WCIT has been held since 1978.

In the frames of the event, the baton of the next Congress – WCIT 2019 – will be passed to Armenia, as our country will host the major IT conference in 2019. Armenia has been approved as the hosting country for WCIT 2019 during the meeting of the WITSA's board of directors at WCIT 2014 Mexico.

It is expected 2000-2500 delegates from more than 80 countries of the world. WCIT 2019 will be the first Congress being held in Europe since 2010.

The inspirational video about WCIT 2019 is available here.

According to the source, the Armenian delegation represents Mr. Aleksandr Yesayan, UITE President; Mr. Karen Vardanyan, UITE Executive Director;  Mr. Levon Babayan, UITE Deputy Director; the UITE members on behalf of Mrs. Anna Gevorgyan, CEO of "Instigate Consulting"; Mr. Arman Poghosyan, CEO of "Instigate Design"; Mrs. Anna Shahinyan,  VP of Engineering of "Instigate Mobile"; Mr. Mikayel Gevorgyan, Head of Administration of "Instigate Mobile"; Mr. Karlen Ohanyan, QA Lead of "Instigate Mobile"; Mr. Igor Gabrielyan, Head of Planning and Project Implementation Department of "Veon Armenia"; Mr. Armen Ayvazyan, Business Strategy Development Adviser of "VOLO"; Mr. Ruben Sukiasyan, Commercial Director of "IU Networks"; Mr. Thomas Mazejian, Head of Information Systems Department "VivaCell-MTS". Mr. Arman Khachatryan, the Vice Minister of the Transport, Communication and Information Technologies of RA will represent the Government.

McDonald’s to come to Armenia in April

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 16 2018
17:28, 16 Feb 2018

  

McDonald’s fast food company will come to Armenia in April. Georgian businessmen Temur Chkonia intends to open a chain of restaurants in Armenia.

“The first restaurant must be in a well-visible, respected place. We have received 2-3 offers and by April we’ll make a decision on the location of the first McDonald’s in Armenia,” Chkonia told Public Radio of Armenia.

The businessman has opened a chain of 14 restaurants in Georgia, each serving an average of 25,000 visitors a day.

The food safety authorities are not very delighted with the perspective of the fast food company entering the Armenian market.

Food security expert David Pipoyan says fast food restaurants use a lot of supplements to preserve semi-finished products as long as possible. Besides, you never know what these establishments serve in reality.

Armenian President to take part in Munich Security Conference

MediaMax, Armenia
Feb 16 2018
Armenian President to take part in Munich Security Conference

According to the agenda provided by the official website of the conference, Serzh Sargsyan will take part in the panel discussion ‘In or Out? The Countries In-Between Russia and Europe’.

The speakers at the discussion will be Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, Prime Minister of Moldova Pavel Filip, EU Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement Negotiations Johannes Hahn, and Konstantin Kosachev, Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the Federation Council, Parliament of Russia.

President of Eurasia Group Ian Bremmer will perform as the moderator.


Russian blogger shares impressions about ‘real’ Karabakh

Pan Armenian, Armenia
Feb 16 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – Russian blogger Igor Shiryaev was among the group of journalists who visited Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) to participate in events marking the 30th anniversary of the Karabakh movement on February 10-13.

“Having traveled to a lot of beautiful and exotic spots on the planet, I find Karabakh one of the few places that I call real,” Shiryaev said in a Facebook post.

“There are higher mountains, more exotic nature, and richer countries, but Karabakh is real!”

The country, according to the blogger, is populated by properly educated people who have experienced a lot and, surprisingly, have become not worse, but better people.

“They do not ask for anything from anyone. They just want to be left alone and allowed to live peacefully on the land they consider their own,” Shiryaev said.

“And I absolutely agree with them. Nowhere else do I feel so free and at the same time safe as in Karabakh.”

During the visit, the members of the group met the Primate of the Diocese of Artsakh of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, parliament speaker Ashot Ghulyan, foreign minister Masis Mailyan, human rights defender Ruben Melikyan to name a few.

MP Melikyan: Israel wants to take part in creation of free economic zone in Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Feb 16 2018
MP Melikyan: Israel wants to take part in creation of free economic zone in Armenia MP Melikyan: Israel wants to take part in creation of free economic zone in Armenia

17:49, 16.02.2018
                  

YEREVAN. – Israel is quite interested in participating in the establishment of a free economic zone in Armenia. 

Ruling Republican Party of Armenia MP Gagik Melikyan, a member of the Armenia-Israel Parliamentary Friendship Group delegation that recently visited Israel, noted about the abovementioned at Friday’s press conference of the members of this friendship group.

In his words, considering Armenia’s membership in the Eurasian Economic Union—which comprises Armenia, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan—, the Israeli side has made quite an intriguing and interesting statement.

“They want to participate in the process of creating a free economic zone in Armenia, and to start active economic activities at that zone,” Melikyan noted.

Dutch parliament recognises Armenian genocide

AHVAL News
Feb 16 2018
 
 
Dutch parliament recognises Armenian genocide
2018-02-16
 
The lower house of the Dutch parliament approved a motion on Friday to recognise the mass killings of Armenians during World War One as genocide, local English-language news website the NL Times said .
 
It also said a Dutch minister or state secretary should attend the annual commemoration of the genocide in Armenia in April, the site said.
 
The move is likely to anger Turkey, which denies the mass killing of Armenians in 1915 constitutes genocide.
 
"We can not deny history out of fear of sanctions. Our country houses the capital of international law after all, so we must not be afraid to do the right thing here too," the site quoted Joel Voordewind, a member of one of the governing coalition parties, as saying.
 
The Netherlands officially withdrew its ambassador from Turkey last week following the failure of negotiations for his return after the Dutch government refused to allow a Turkish minister to make a speech in favour of a presidential system to locally-based Turkish citizens last year.
 
Text
 
https://nltimes.nl/2018/02/16/dutch-parliament-recognizes-armenian-geno…
 
Dutch Parliament recognizes Armenian genocide; Minister to attend commemoration
 
A majority in the Tweede Kamer, the lower house of Dutch parliament, approved two motions regarding the Armenian genocide of 1915 on Thursday. One states that the Tweede Kamer "recognizes the Armenian genocide", the other that a Dutch Minister or State Secretary should attend the commemoration of this genocide in Armenia in April. This decision is expected to further sour the relationship between Turkey and the Netherlands, ANP reports. Both motions were submitted by ChristenUnie parliamentarian Joel Voordewind. All four coalition parties supported the motions.