‘Any decision must be acceptable for Venezuela’s people’ – Armenian PM on Venezuelan crisis

‘Any decision must be acceptable for Venezuela’s people’ – Armenian PM on Venezuelan crisis

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16:20,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan commented on the ongoing events in Venezuela, reports Armenpress.

During today’s press briefing in Moscow Pashinyan said Armenia continues following all the developments taking place in Venezuela. “First of all it is necessary to understand the link of these events with the Constitution of Venezuela, but in any case I think that the position of the Venezuelan people must play a great role. In other words, any decision first of all must be acceptable for the Venezuelan people”, the PM said.

Asked whether he doesn’t think that the Venezuelan events are somehow associated with the recent velvet revolution in Armenia, Pashinyan said: “There cannot be any factual association because no clashes and victims were reported during our events, but, unfortunately, victims are reported in Venezuela. Secondly, the whole process that took place in Armenia, was in full accordance with the Armenian laws and Constitution, but what is happening in Venezuela, frankly speaking, is not so understandable from the first glance to what extent they are in accordance with the country’s Constitution. Frankly I cannot say that, but the first impression is that not everything there is in accordance with the logic of the Constitution”, Pashinyan said.

Opposition protests began in Venezuela on January 23. Opposition leader Juan Guiado declared himself acting president during an opposition rally in Caracas. Venezuela's incumbent President Nicolas Maduro described these developments as an attempted coup organized by Washington. At least 26 people have been killed in the protests.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




HRW: Advancing Access to Justice for People with Disabilities in Armenia

Human Rights Watch
Jan 26 2019


Court Ruling Gives Hope for Greater Equality Before the Law

Garo Paylan, Catholicos Aram I discusses Armenian-Turkish relations

News.am, Armenia
Jan 26 2019
Garo Paylan, Catholicos Aram I discusses Armenian-Turkish relations Garo Paylan, Catholicos Aram I discusses Armenian-Turkish relations

19:19, 26.01.2019
                  

Armenian-Turkish MP Garo Paylan met Saturday Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, His Holiness Aram I, the Catholicosate reported.

The sides discussed the Armenian-Turkish relations, Armenian Genocide as well as the current state of the Armenians in Turkey.

Garo Paylan expressed his views over on the issues.

After the meeting, Garo Paylan visited the St. Martyrs Memorial outside the Catholicosate headquarters in Antelias, to pay tribute to the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

Pashinyan: All citizens of Armenia have government formed by free, fair elections

News.am, Armenia
Jan 26 2019
Pashinyan: All citizens of Armenia have government formed by free, fair elections Pashinyan: All citizens of Armenia have government formed by free, fair elections

20:33, 26.01.2019
               

YEREVAN.- All citizens of Armenia have a government formed by  free, fair, democratic and legitimate elections and one of the government's responsibilities is to ensure normal life in the country and ensure the rights and freedoms of the people. His remarks came during enlarged session of the Armenian Police.

“People can express their opinions. There can be no talk about restricting the freedom of rallies, marches, and protest actions in Armenia but this does not mean that everyone who has problems should block roads and customs points,” the Prime Minister stressed.

In this context, the head of government touched upon the stereotype formed on democratic governance.

“It seems to many people that democracy is when everyone does what they want and when they want. Democracy is the system with the most rigorous legal system, because the rule of law is one of the key conditions for democracy, ”he said.

Kostanyan: Azerbaijan prepares new lawsuit in ECHR against Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Jan 26 2019
Kostanyan: Azerbaijan prepares new lawsuit in ECHR against Armenia Kostanyan: Azerbaijan prepares new lawsuit in ECHR against Armenia

21:42, 26.01.2019
                  

Azerbaijan is preparing to submit a new lawsuit against Armenia to the European Court, Armenian ex-representative to the ECHR Gevorg Kostanyan told Tert.am.

“Unfortunately, I have information that Azerbaijan is preparing to submit a lawsuit against Armenia in the context of the Karabakh conflict, and the lawsuit contains a political component,” he said adding the lawsuit in the amount of $50 billion is directed against Armenia.

According to him, Azerbaijani ambassadors conclude deals in various European countries with lawyers and create a lawyer group to file a claim.

Azerbaijan calls for ‘urgent measures’ after Karabakh veteran statue unveiled in Georgian village

OC Media
Jan 25, 2019


(Embassy of Armenia in Georgia)

The Georgian ambas­sador to Azer­bai­jan has been summoned to the Azer­bai­jani Foreign Ministry after reports emerged that a statue of an ethnic Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh war veteran was renovated in a Georgian village. Azer­bai­jan called on Georgia to ‘take urgent measures’, while Georgia’s Foreign Ministry told OC Media that ‘making a scandal out of this is unac­cept­able’.

On 20 January, the renovated statue of Nagorno-Karabakh war veteran Mikhail Avagyan was unveiled in his native village of Bughasheni, in southern Georgia’s Akhal­ka­la­ki Munic­i­pal­i­ty, which is mostly populated by ethnic Armenians.

According to local news website Jnews, the statue, which has been standing in the village for around 22 years, was renovated and unveiled at a ceremony by Avagyan’s children and grand­chil­dren.

‘When the war began in Nagorno-Karabakh, Mikhail Avagyan par­tic­i­pat­ed in the hos­til­i­ties in Horadiz, Khojali, Hadrut, and Fizuli and became known as the “Cobra” because he knew Azer­bai­jani, which helped him in recon­nais­sance’, Jnews wrote, adding that he was wounded by a sniper during battle and died on the way to the hospital.

The bust’s opening ceremony was attended by Armenian ambas­sador to Georgia Ruben Sadoyan, who cut the red ribbon. It was also attended by the the mayor of Akhal­ka­la­ki and the chairman of city council, as well as Georgian MPs Enzel Mkoyan and Samvel Manukyan, both ethnic Armenians.

On 24 January, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement on the bust of Avagyan, accusing him of par­tic­i­pat­ing in ‘the occu­pa­tion of Azer­bai­jani lands’.

The statement said Azerbaijan’s ambas­sador to Georgia had visited the Georgian Foreign Ministry to draw attention to the issue.

‘At the same time, the Georgian ambas­sador to our country was invited to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where there was a demand to take urgent measures to eliminate this devel­op­ment, which does not cor­re­spond to the spirit of bilateral strategic part­ner­ships between our countries’, the Azer­bai­jani Foreign Ministry said.

The day the statue was unveiled, 20 January, is a day of mourning in Azer­bai­jan, known as ‘Black January’. On 20 January 1990, over a hundred mostly ethnic Azer­bai­jani civilians were killed in a Soviet crackdown on the civilian pop­u­la­tion of Baku.

Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev said the crackdown was necessary in order to stop violence against ethnic Armenians in the city, while many in Azer­bai­jan assert that this was only a pretext to suppress the Azer­bai­jani inde­pen­dence movement.

Georgian MP from the ruling Georgian Dream party, Gia Volski, said there was ‘an attempt to make a scandal’ out of the devel­op­ments.

‘We should care about our citizens and make sure they don’t have conflict. There is now an awkward situation inter­na­tion­al­ly, but diplomacy exists to ease such sit­u­a­tions’, Volski told jour­nal­ists.

Giorgi Baramidze, a member of the oppo­si­tion United National Movement Party, said Georgia should make sure its relations with both Azer­bai­jan and Armenia remain secure.

‘We have a gov­ern­ment and we have a state security service which must make sure no hearth of con­fronta­tion is ignited’, Baramidze told oppo­si­tion-leaning TV channel Rustavi 2.

Zaur Khalilov, the director of the Civil Inte­gra­tion Foun­da­tion, an organ­i­sa­tion that helps ethnic minori­ties in Georgia integrate, told OC Media the Georgian gov­ern­ment must maintain neu­tral­i­ty in the conflict and take on a role in building peace.

‘Evidently, there are attempts to ignite con­fronta­tion between ethnic Azer­bai­ja­nis and Armenians living in Georgia’, he said.

‘Who came up with the idea of ren­o­vat­ing and opening the statue on 20 January? I don’t know what to blame it on — ignorance or a delib­er­ate provo­ca­tion? […] Azer­bai­jan took it as an insult because the opening was held on 20 January’, he told OC Media.

He said that Georgian officials tend to look at ethnic minori­ties only from a security viewpoint, and fears that this par­tic­u­lar case may lead to anti-Armenian sen­ti­ments.

‘It’s a fact that [these devel­op­ments] are harmful for Georgia. What will [Georgian officials] do if Azer­bai­jan asks for the sculpture to be demol­ished? And if they do demolish it, this will auto­mat­i­cal­ly trigger a reaction from Armenia’, Khalilov said.

Arnold Stepanyan, who chairs Multi-Ethnic Georgia, an organ­i­sa­tion working to bridge gaps between ethnic, religious, and lin­guis­tic groups in Georgia, echoed Khalilov’s sen­ti­ments.

Stepanyan told OC Media that ‘there’s an attempt to instigate hostility between ethnic Armenians and Azer­bai­ja­nis residing in Georgia’.

‘This is a very sad fact. There are certain people who are always trying to ignite con­fronta­tions — to spread the con­fronta­tion between Azer­bai­jan and Armenian to Georgia’, said Stepanyan.

Enzel Mkoyan, the ethnic Armenian MP from the Georgian Dream party who attended the unveiling of the memorial, told OC Media he attended the ceremony because he was invited by his elec­torate, to whom he could not say no.

‘I didn’t expect there would be such tensions. My elec­torate invited me as their majori­tar­i­an [MP]. I couldn’t refuse their invi­ta­tion. I went there and attended it’, said Mkoyan.

Asked what the solution regarding Azerbaijan’s demands could be, Mkoyan told OC Media he did not know.

‘I can’t answer this. I want a peaceful solution’, he said.

Armenia traders again block customs checkpoint at Georgia border

News.am, Armenia
Jan 26 2019
Armenia traders again block customs checkpoint at Georgia border Armenia traders again block customs checkpoint at Georgia border

17:02, 26.01.2019

A protest rally on Saturday is staged again at Armenia’s Bagratashen customs checkpoint, at the border with Georgia, and this has caused a huge traffic jam at the border.

Armenian traders who import goods from Turkey have blocked the entry and exit of this checkpoint, yet again.

They have been protesting for several days against the new procedure for customs clearance of the goods they import from Turkey.

As of January 1, the value of imports that are exempt from customs duties and taxes in Armenia has been reduced three times, while their weight—twice as much. 

These changes are pursuant to a respective decision by the Board of the Eurasian Economic Commission—the executive body of the Eurasian Economic Union which comprises Armenia, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan.

Traders note that, in addition, customs officers do not permit them to even import up to 25kg of goods, saying that they show their Turkish visas. Also, the customs officers demand that the traders pay 4 euros per one kilogram of imported goods.

The Armenian traders had closed off the Bagratashen customs checkpoint on Tuesday evening, too. But, subsequently, it was reopened at the request of the director of the National Security Service of Armenia, Artur Vanetsyan.

President: Armenia does not have great financial resources but has talented scientists

News.am, Armenia
Jan 26 2019
President: Armenia does not have great financial resources but has talented scientists President: Armenia does not have great financial resources but has talented scientists

17:56, 26.01.2019
                  

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian on Saturday received Professor Massimo Inguscio, President of the National Research Council of Italy.

President Sargsyan said, in particular, that we are entering a new world which will be primarily led by new ideas and approaches where the quantum approach will be one of the leaders.

Professor Inguscio, for his part, noted that Armenia is considered in Italy as a strategic country with the highest level.

The interlocutors reflected on the prospects for the deepening of scientific cooperation and expansion of scientific and educational ties between Armenia and Italy.

The President said even though Armenia does not have great financial resources, it has talented scientists.

In Armen Sarkissian’s words, the two countries can successfully collaborate especially in mathematical modeling of artificial intelligence, efficient management of water resources, and in some other domains.

Armenia’s standing in the Index of Economic Freedom 2019 worsens

ARKA, Armenia
Jan 26 2019

YEREVAN, January 26, /ARKA/.  Armenia ranked 47th in the Index of Economic Freedom (2019), compiled by the Heritage Foundation having moved to the group of "relatively free" countries. 

Opposed to the previous ranking, when it was 44th among 180 nations, Armenia’s current standing has worsened. In the 2017 ranking, Armenia rose by 21 positions and ranked 33rd moving from the category of ‘moderately free’ countries to the category of ‘mostly free’. In the 2016 ranking, Armenia was 54th among 178 states, and a year earlier it occupied 52nd place.

In the 2019 ranking, Armenia is located between Poland (46th place) and Belgium (48th place). In the latest ranking Armenia’s economic freedom score is 67.7, making its economy the 47th freest in the 2019 Index. Its overall score has decreased by 1.0 point, dragged down by a steep drop in fiscal health and lower scores on government integrity and judicial effectiveness. Armenia is ranked 24th among 44 countries in the Europe region, and its overall score is slightly below the regional norm but well above the world average.

Countries that score less than 50 points are ranked as “absolutely non-free”, 50–60 points as “mostly not-free”, 60–70 points as  “relatively free”, 70–80 points as  “mostly free”, and over 80  points –as  "free".

According to the Heritage Foundation, despite the previous government’s efforts to improve the business environment through tax reform, reduce corruption in the customs and tax administrations, and increase the transparency of procurement processes, Armenia’s geographic isolation, narrow export base, and pervasive monopolies in important business sectors make it particularly vulnerable to deteriorations in global commodity markets. Nevertheless, modest diversification has produced greater economic dynamism, and a decade of strong economic growth has reduced poverty and unemployment. Cronyism and influence peddling remain concerns, and progress in tackling corruption has been limited.

Armenia’s neighbor Georgia is in the group of "mostly free" countries (16th).  Of other former Soviet republics, Kazakhstan is 59th, Azerbaijan is 60th, Moldova is 97th, Russia is 98th, Belarus is 104th, Tajikistan is 122nd, Uzbekistan is 140th and Ukraine is 147th. Turkmenistan is 164th in the group of "absolutely unfree" states. The leaders of the Index are Hong Kong, Singapore, New Zealand, while Cuba, Venezuela, and North Korea are outsiders. -0-

15:01 26.01.2019

Armenian PM comments on latest meeting with Azerbaijani president

Armenian PM comments on latest meeting with Azerbaijani president

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16:31,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has commented on his recent meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev that took place in Davos within the framework of the World Economic Forum.

Asked at a press conference in Moscow on how he assesses the results of the meeting, Pashinyan said that there are no results because the meeting was simply an interaction.

“We’ve had a similar interaction in Dushanbe also. True, in Dushanbe we had clear results. We have also talked in St. Petersburg, which too was simply a conversation. Neither Aliyev, nor I, or anyone else has anticipated any results from this meeting. It was simply a conversation, an interaction,” Pashinyan said.

The PM said they talked about the NK conflict during the conversation.

“I would like to say that factually these aren’t negotiations. These are unofficial contacts, during which both Aliyev and I speak about our perceptions, on how we perceive this issue, how our peoples perceive this issue”.

 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan