Armenia not to save state budget means for proper expertise of Amulsar mine: Acting PM

Aysor, Armenia
Nov 29 2018
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We have clearly stated that the exploitation of Amulsar will be acceptable for us only after having clear professional guarantees that the mine exploitation does not harm Lake Sevan, My Step bloc leader, acting PM Nikol Pashinyan said at the campaign today in Gavar, referring to the situation over Amulsar.

“A criminal case has been filed. A leading international organization will be involved as an expert. The expertise will be conducted on the highest professional level. Armenia will not save money from state budget for carrying out this expertise. After we get convinced that Amulsar is no threat to Lake Sevan and Jermuk water reservoir the exploitation of the mine will be acceptable for us,” Pashinyan said, adding that they cannot carry out this project with closed eyes until they are convinced that it does not strategically harm Armenia.

EU-Armenia Committee Meets for First Time Under Partnership Agreement

Georgia Today, Georgia
Nov 29 2018


PRESS RELEASE

On 27 November, the EU and Armenia held the first meeting of the Partnership Committee under the EU-Armenia Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA).

At the meeting, the EU reiterated its support for the Armenian Government's reform process. The EU representatives also highlighted that the implementation of the CEPA would be a key tool for the reform and modernisation of the country, help attract EU investment, stimulate exchanges with the EU and provide concrete benefits for both EU and Armenian citizens.

The Partnership Committee discussed the draft CEPA implementation roadmap prepared by the Armenian Government.

The CEPA foresees that Armenia approximates its laws with the EU legislation referred to in the agreement in the coming years, including in the fields of transport, energy, environment, climate action, taxation and consumer protection.

The EU and Armenia agreed to continue promoting the mobility of citizens through the visa-facilitation and readmission agreements and consider in due course the opening of a visa-liberalisation dialogue, provided that conditions for well-managed and secure mobility are in place.

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Armenian government approves conscription and demobilization dates

ARKA, Armenia
Nov 29 2018

YEREVAN, November 29. /ARKA/. The government of Armenia approved a draft decision today for announcing the winter conscription and demobilization of servicemen.

The acting Minister of Defense David Tonoyan said the decision determines the procedure for conscription and demobilization of privates, the organization of compulsory alternative military service, the bodies which are responsible for the conscription and the framework of their activities.

He said under the decision, the conscription is to run from December 2018 to January 2019. The conscription applies to Armenian citizens who turn 18 years old until December 31, 2018 inclusive, as well as to those whose draft deferment ends by the end of December. The manning process of the armed forces will start on January 7, he said.

Tonoyan also called on his subordinates to take a responsible approach to the conscription saying it should not be affected by the upcoming snap parliamentary elections.-0-

Armenian government seeks to liquidate the company set for construction of new unit for NPP

ARKA, Armenia
Nov 29 2018

YEREVAN, November 29. /ARKA/. The government of Armenia decided today to vote for the liquidation of Metsamorenergoatom company that was established for handling the construction of a new nuclear power unit for Armenian nuclear power plant (NPP), when its shareholders meet for a general meeting.

This company was established in 2009. It is a joint Russian-Armenian venture in which each sides holds 50% of shares. The founders of the company are Atomstroyexport, a subsidiary of Russian Rosatom that builds nuclear power plants abroad and the Ministry of Economy and Natural Resources Of Armenia.

However, since its inception the company did not carry out any activity. By this decision, the government ordered the Minister of Energy Infrastructures and Natural Resources to participate in the general meeting of the company’s shareholders on behalf of Armenia and vote for its liquidation.

The Armenian Nuclear Power Plant is located some 30 kilometers west of Yerevan. It was built in the 1970s but was closed following a devastating earthquake in 1988. One of its two VVER 440-V230 light-water reactors was reactivated in 1995. Armenian authorities said they would build a new nuclear power plant to replace the aging facility. The new plant was said to operate at twice the capacity of the Soviet-constructed facility.  The plant currently generates some 35 percent of Armenia's electricity. 

In March 2014, Armenian government decided to extend the plant’s service life up to 2026 because of delay in building a new unit. The service life extension has become possible thanks to Russia’s financial resources. The country was to provide $270 million to Armenia as a loan and $30 million as a grant. -0- 

Citizen’s Decision party: Armenia elections again taking place without ideological fight

News.am, Armenia
Nov 29 2018
Citizen’s Decision party: Armenia elections again taking place without ideological fight Citizen’s Decision party: Armenia elections again taking place without ideological fight

16:08, 29.11.2018
                  

YEREVAN. – Elections in Armenia are again taking place without an ideological “fight.”

Artur Avagyan, an MP candidate nominated by the “Citizen’s Decision” Social Democratic Party, on Thursday told the above-said to Armenian News-NEWS.am, during his snap parliamentary election campaign march in capital city Yerevan.

In his words, the Citizen’s Decision party has tasked itself with introducing the element of an ideological and a program-based “fight” to the election campaign.

“All the political forces [in Armenia] practically seek to carry out their campaign by way of discrediting and ‘blackening’ the opponents,” Avagyan noted. “[But] our party differs by [the fact] that it refuses [to use] such a method of [political] ‘fight,’ and it calls on the other [political] forces to a more constructive debate.”

Presenting the platform of the Citizen’s Decision party, Artur Avagyan explained that the main items on this program were the social issues and the role of the state in resolving them.

He added that the state shall have a more active part in resolving the social issues.

Campaign season for the upcoming snap National Assembly (NA) election has gotten underway Monday in Armenia.

The campaign season will conclude on December 7, whereas December 8 is election silence day, and December 9—election day

Eleven political forces—two alliances and nine parties—are running for parliament.

As a result of this election, the NA seats will be distributed proportionally among the political forces that have passed the respective minimum thresholds: 5% for parties, and 7% for alliances.

Armenian President meets with Angela Merkel

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 29 2018
Politics 13:15 29/11/2018 Armenia

The Armenian President Armen Sarkissian met with the German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the Chancellor's office in Berlin, the president’s press office informed.

Welcoming the Armenian President’s official visit to the Federal Republic of Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel said she has very good memories of her recent visit to Armenia.

She noted that she was particularly impressed by the TUMO Center for Creative Technologies, and at the moment the German side is discussing opportunities for cooperation.

"Armenia considers Germany as a political and economic partner and a friendly country," President Sarkissian said. He noted he was glad to meet with the Chancellor again and continue the discussions on the expansion of the Armenian-German relations. According to him, the two countries can successfully cooperate in the spheres of high and information technologies where Armenia has great potential.
"Our country can be a platform for different start-ups," Armen Sarkissian underscored.

The Armenian President and the German Chancellor attached importance to the expansion of mutually beneficial cooperation in cultural and scientific-educational spheres to strengthen the ties between the two friendly peoples. They also talked about cooperation in tourism, as well as exchanged views on visa facilitation and liberalization process.

Armenia’s Pashinyan: Soldier trapped under snow was found dead

News.am, Armenia
Nov 29 2018
Armenia’s Pashinyan: Soldier trapped under snow was found dead Armenia’s Pashinyan: Soldier trapped under snow was found dead

15:27, 29.11.2018
                  

The contract military serviceman, who had been trapped under snow nearby Kakhakn village in Gegharkunik Province, was found dead.

The Acting Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, on Thursday said the aforementioned during his talk with the residents of Vardenis town.

Subsequently, those in attendance observed a minute’s silence in memory of this soldier.

“I extend my condolences to all of his relatives, friends and close circles,” Pashinyan added.

The 911 emergency hotline on Tuesday received a report that a person—who was born in 1994—had been trapped under snow nearby Kakhakn village, and rescuers were needed.

A fire and recue squad was dispatched to the area.

The search and rescue operations, however, were halted due to the dark and adverse weather.

And on Wednesday morning, two special rescue squads had resumed these operations.

5 Weeks and Counting: Dutch Church Holds Worship Marathon to Protect Migrant Family

New York Times
Nov 29 2018
 
 
5 Weeks and Counting: Dutch Church Holds Worship Marathon to Protect Migrant Family
Bethel Church in The Hague has taken dramatic steps to protect an Armenian family that was denied asylum in the Netherlands.CreditCreditAxel Wicke
 
By Richard Pérez-Peña
Nov. 29, 2018
 
Five weeks after a pastor in the Netherlands started what seemed like a fairly ordinary church service, that service is still underway, a sort of pious filibuster relay that involves hundreds of people and shows no sign of stopping.
 
Bethel Church in The Hague is trying to prevent the deportation of an Armenian family that was denied asylum after almost nine years in the Netherlands, despite claims that they would be in danger if they returned to their homeland.
 
The church and its parent denomination, the Protestant Church in the Netherlands, are taking advantage of a Dutch law that, under most circumstances, prevents the authorities from conducting operations in a place where a religious service is being held. Their strategy is deceptively simple: Shelter the immigrant family in the church, and make sure a service is always being held.
 
At the outset, doing so was a serious logistical challenge, with a handful of people organizing things and asking clergy members to take shifts and plug holes in the schedule. But as the effort has captured the nation’s attention, it has also become steadily easier to manage.
 
 
“There are already more than 450 different priests, pastors, deacons, elders from around the country, every denomination, wanting to be put on the rotation to participate in this service,” Axel Wicke, Bethel’s pastor, said in an interview on Thursday.
 
“Even from abroad we’ve gotten help — there have been sermons held in English, French and German,” he said. “It’s quite moving to us. I often see a pastor handing over the service to another pastor of another denomination who they would ordinarily not have anything to do with, liturgically.”
 
The Tamrazyan family — two parents and their three children, ages 21, 19 and 14 — have said that they left Armenia after receiving death threats over the father’s political activism. The people working with the family declined to say what political causes he was involved in, or who might want to harm him; the organization Freedom House rates Armenia, a small nation in the Caucasus, as “partly free,” with democratic institutions but limited political freedom or freedom of _expression_.
 
Derk Stegeman, a Protestant Church pastor who has acted as a spokesman for the Tamrazyans, said they were talking with Dutch officials, holding out some hope that the government would reverse course.
 
Lennart Wegewijs, a spokesman for the Ministry of Justice and Security, which handles immigration matters, said he could not explain the government’s position. “Our policy is that we do not make any statements about individual cases,” he said.
 
 
Church officials said the parents had not given interviews and wanted to be identified only by their surname, Tamrazyan, in part to protect family members still in Armenia from recriminations. But their daughter Hayarpi, the oldest child, has spoken publicly.
 
In a video she posted to Twitter in September, she asked people to appeal to the government on behalf of her family. “You have the power,” she said in Dutch. “Please use it for us, and for 400 kids like us. We’re innocent.”
 
A court in the Netherlands granted the family asylum. Mr. Stegeman said the government appealed the decision but lost again, appealed that ruling and lost again, and only on its third try won a ruling that it could deport the Tamrazyans.
 
“They were in court procedures for almost six years,” he said. “Now they’re very thankful and grateful because now they feel safe.”
 
Under Dutch law, the government can make exceptions to the usual restrictions on immigration for families with children who have lived in the Netherlands for five years or more. But the government, which rejects most requests for those exceptions, has declined to give one to the Armenian family.
 
The country’s immigration and asylum policies have been a political flash point for years, and the conflicts have grown since the surge in migration to Europe in 2015 and 2016. After previous governments were accused of being too lenient, the government that formed last year took a tougher approach, drawing a different kind of criticism.
 
In September, it ordered the deportation to Armenia of two children who had lived most of their lives in the Netherlands and did not speak Armenian. After an outcry, they were given legal residency.
 
The family at Bethel Church first took shelter in a church in Katwijk, the coastal town where they lived. But that church did not have the resources to keep up a round-the-clock service, and they feared a raid by immigration agents. So the Tamrazyans accepted an invitation to use an apartment in Bethel Church, a red brick building nestled among low-rise apartment blocks.
 
They arrived at 1:30 p.m. on Oct. 26, Mr. Wicke said, and the marathon service began.
 
 
 
 
 

Aznavour’s son recalls how his father mobilized whole world after 1988 Spitak quake

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 29 2018

Moscow’s Art Academic Theater after Maxim Gorky hosted on Wednesday a commemorative event dedicated to the 1988 devastating Armenian earthquake, also known as the Spitak earthquake.

Anna Hakobyan, the spouse of Armenia’s Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, National Hero of Armenia Nikolai Ryzhkov, Primate of the Russian and New Nakhichevan Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church Archbishop Yezras Nersisyan and others attended the event organized by the Armenian Embassy in Russia in cooperation with the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative and Aznavour Foundation.

Addressing the meeting, Armenian Ambassador to Russia Vardan Toghanyan said the event commemorates the 30th anniversary of the catastrophic Spitak earthquake that claimed some 25,000 lives, the embassy said on Facebook.

“Armenia shall never forget the support of those people and nations that were not indifferent to Armenians in their darkest moments. Starting from the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire to the Spitak earthquake, our history is full of amazing examples of humanity,” the envoy said, expressing gratitude to the whole world.

The Aurora Humanitarian Initiative co-founder, Philanthropist Ruben Vardanyan and Charles Aznavour's son Nicolas, who co-founded the Aznavour Foundation, also delivered remarks at the event.

“This event is entitled to become a global symbol of inspiration and support for social transformation. If we want to change our society, if we are resolute to create the best conditions for the future generations, we should show the world the real value of empathy and generosity that motivate the modern heroes. This is the mission of Aurora,” Vardanyan said.

Nicolas, for his part, shared the story of the legendary singer’s great assistance to Armenia after the Spitak earthquake. He recalled how his father mobilized the world after the tragedy.

“My father was among the first to react to the 1988 tragedy and take action immediately. That very night, he wrote the song Pour toi Armenie (For You Armenia) together with Georges Garvarentz, mobilizing artists from France, United States, Italy and later from the entire international community,” he said. 

“The existence of individuals able to consolidate people around them and empathize with them is a crucial factor to promote human development,” he added.