Graveyards areas in Yerevan’s administrative area free of charge

The Special Assistance to the Population of Yerevan Municipality informs that the graveyard areas in Yerevan’s administrative area are free of charge.

Citizens are kindly requested to accept this information for the general knowledge and to hold funeral processes, including the acquisition of the grave area, within the scope of the applicable law.

State bodies should do exercises – Tevan Poghosyan (video)

President of the International Center for Human Development spoke about the possible developments in the political processes: “The state bodies must do exercises all day long in order to come up what possible scenarios there are, and how we respond to them, where our interests are, and how we bring them into life.”

The political scientist notes that the state should develop tools in the field of information technologies to develop mechanisms in the geopolitical processes to respond to possible challenges.

Speaking about the prominent pro-Azeri behavior of Kazakhstan and Belarus during the April 2016 war, he said that this emphasis was formed earlier.

In response to the question why Armenia-Russia relations are not similar to the Israeli-US relations, and whether Israel’s technically developed state, Jewish diaspora, lobbying have had a great impact on American-Israeli relations, Poghosyan said: “Imagine how many congressmen and senators with Jewish roots there are in America, who are not ashamed to say, ‘I am a Jew and Jewish interests are very important to me.’

When we have such a situation in Duma, we will have the same situation in the world where Armenians will not be ashamed to say, ‘Yes, I am Armenian.'” In this context, the political scientist underlined Charles Aznavour’s activities in France for Armenia and Armenians. According to him, we need to make everyone in the world to understand that as soon as they try to offend the Armenians, they will unite and respond to it in a very strong way.

Mkhitar Hayrapetyan to head Armenian delegation to EuroNest

Member of Parliament from the ruling My Step faction, chairman of the parliamentary committee on Science, Education, Culture, Diaspora, Youth and Sports Affairs Mkhitar Hayrapetyan will lead the Armenian delegation to EuroNest.

Hayrapetyan said on Facebook that the composition of the Armenian delegation to EuroNest has been confirmed during the January 24 sitting of the National Assembly Council.

“Attaching importance to the role of parliamentary diplomacy in various international platforms, I am proud to note that I will lead this delegation that will carry out this responsible mission. I am sure that together with my party friends and my colleagues representing the Prosperous Armenia and Luminous Armenia parties we will succeed in honorably representing the Republic of Armenia at this international arena,” he said.

Prior to being elected to parliament, Mkhitaryan served as Minister of Diaspora.

The Euronest Parliamentary Assembly is a parliamentary forum to promote political association and further economic integration between the European Union and the EU’s Eastern European partners.

We do not earn millions, we work to survive the day – protest in front of government building (video)

In front of the government building, a group of street traders complained about the decision of the city authorities to ban street trades. Anush Hayrapetyan, who has sold toys and balloons in Republic Square for many years, is no longer working since September.

“Government officials have promised us that they will give us a suitable place, after which only they would ban us to sell here.”

Merchants have even opened private businesses to be able to continue their work, but they have not been allowed to work for a long time.

“The Prime Minister’s decree is to ban the street trade,” said another merchant Gayane Arshakyan. According to her, their work was seasonal and it was connected with fountains, they were working only for 2 hours a day.

“We do not earn millions, we work to survive the day,” said one of the participants.

Civic activist Vardges Gaspari also participates in the demonstration. He thinks that the resignation of Artur Grigoryan from the post of the head of the Inspectorate of Nature Protection and Inspection is unacceptable. According to him, the government has to explain why Arthur Grigoryan was dismissed. The activist thinks that he has been dismissed because of different approaches. According to him, this move of the government is similar to the behavior of the Armenian Pan National Movement.

Henrikh Mkhitaryan to miss game with Manchester United

The head coach of the London’s Arsenal club, Suarez Emerson, informed at the pre-match press conference that Arsenal midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan will again miss the team’s next meeting due to the injury. He was injured on December 19 of the last year at Tottenham Hotspur.

Arsenal – Manchester United’s 1/16 finals will be held on January 25.

Asbarez: ARF World Congress Concludes, Elects New Bureau

Armenian Revolutionary Federation

On January 24, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation 33rd World Congress, which convened on January 16 in the Artsakh capital of Stepanakert, concluded its activities.

The World Congress, after an exhaustive discussion of the agenda, which was publicized, elected a Bureau, the highest governing body of the organization.

In its plenary session, the ARF Bureau elected Hagop Der-Khachadourian as its chairman.

Rounding out the ARF Bureau are:
Armen Rustamyan: President
Vigen Baboumian
Aram Kaloustian
Viken Yacoubian
Hagop Khatcherian
Arsen Hambartsoumyan
Giro Manoyan
Benjamin Bdjakdjian
Spartak Seyranyan
Raffi Donabedian
Hovsep Der-Kevorkian
Mourad Papazian

ARF Bureau Public Information Office
Stepanakert, Artsakh

Asbarez: ARF World Congress Issues Statement on Artsakh

The “We are Our Mountains” monument near Stepanakert symbolizes Artsakh

The 33rd Armenian Revolutionary Federation World Congress announces:

The Declaration of Independence of the Artsakh Republic and the independent state that has been guaranteed by its Constitution, as well as it territorial integrity cannot be compromised.

The signing of a military-political agreement between the republics of Armenia and Artsakh, in a short period of time, is an urgent imperative.

With its worldwide structure, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation expresses its unwavering support to the authorities of the Artsakh Republic, pledging its readiness to continue its steadfast commitment to the Artsakh leadership’s efforts to develop and enhance the country’s socio-economic situation, its security and territorial integrity.

Taking into consideration the increased momentum in the Karabakh negotiations in recent months, and the concerns that have emanated from the announcements and steps taken by the sides to the conflict and the mediators,

The 33rd ARF World Congress states that:

The negotiations must proceed with the complete participation by the Artsakh Republic authorities;

The leadership of Armenia, on the world stage, must continue to lead the charge as the guarantor of Artsakh’s independence and security.

33rd ARF World Congress
Stepanakert, Artsakh Republic




Asbarez: Kalashnikov to Supply AK-12 Rifles to Armenia

Kalashnikov-12 rifle

Kalashnikov Concern, the Russian defense manufacturer known for its iconic AK rifles, will supply 50 new AK-12 assault rifles to Armenia, according to a report by Kommersant newspaper on Thursday.

“The contract is signed, we are now preparing a small batch that will include around 50 assault rifles. They will be tested and viewed,” the chief executive officer of Kalashnikov Concern Vladimir Dmitryev told Kommersant.

According to Dmitryev, Armenia will be the first foreign country to buy the AK-12 assault rifles.

In August, Armenia’s Defense Ministry spokesperson Artstrun Hovannisyan announced  that an Armenian company Royalsys Engineering signed a manufacturing license contract with Karashnikov to produce AK-12 and AK-15 rifles in Armenia.

Photographs posted on Hovannisyan’s Facebook page showed that Armenia’s Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan attended the signing ceremony in Moscow.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether Thursday’s announcement was part of the August deal with Kalashnikov.

Kalashnikov Concern opened an official representation in Yerevan in 2014. At the time it was announced that an agreement between Russia and Armenia allowed Armenian and Russian defense companies to supply each other with equipment, assembly parts and other materials needed for the production, modernization and repair of various weapons.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/24/2019

                                        Thursday, 

Armenian Tax Agency Denies Huge Bonuses To Senior Staff

        • Nane Sahakian

Armenia - Davit Ananian, head of the State Revenue Committee, speaks to 
reporters in Yerevan, 25 October 2018.

Armenia’s State Revenue Committee (SRC) on Thursday strongly denied a media 
report that said its most-high ranking officials received huge yearend bonuses 
vastly exceeding their monthly wages.

The Yerevan.Today publication claimed that the SRC head Davit Ananian and his 
first deputy Rafik Mashadian were paid 8.6 million drams ($17,700) and 9.6 
million drams ($20,000) respectively in bonuses late last month. Two other 
senior SRC officials got roughly 6.5 million drams each, according to 
Yerevan.Today.

In a statement, the SRC said that the sums are grossly exaggerated. “There are 
no such amounts of bonuses in the SRC,” it said.

Ananian rejected the report as a “lie” when he spoke to reporters. “Such large 
amounts are just not possible,” he said.

Ananian refused to reveal how much extra pay he and other SRC officials 
received ahead of New Year’s holiday, saying that such information would 
constitute a privacy violation. He said only that the largest bonus was worth 
1.5 million drams.

According to government data, the average monthly salary in Armenia stood at 
169,000 drams ($350) as of November 2018.

The Yerevan.Today report came amid continuing media uproar over much smaller 
but still significant bonuses which three Armenian provincial governors paid 
themselves and their senior staffers.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other senior government officials have 
essentially defended the payments, arguing that they have been made for many 
years and have also benefited ordinary public sector employees. Pashinian also 
complained on Wednesday that the government has trouble attracting skilled 
professionals working for private firms because public sector salaries are too 
low.



Armenian Authorities Reopen Panama Papers Probe

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Parliament deputy Mihran Poghosian at a session of the National 
Assembly in Yerevan, 19 May 2017.

An Armenian law-enforcement agency has launched a new criminal investigation 
into a former senior official who resigned in 2016 after being accused of 
having secret offshore accounts exposed by the Panama Papers.

Citing the leaked documents, the Hetq.am investigative publication reported in 
April 2016 that Mihran Poghosian, the then head of an Armenian state body 
enforcing court rulings, controls three shadowy companies registered in Panama. 
It said Poghosian has the exclusive right to manage Swiss bank accounts of two 
of those firms.

After initial a denial of the report, Poghosian announced his resignation later 
in April 2016. But he stopped short of admitting any wrongdoing.

The Special Investigation Service (SIS) launched a criminal investigation in 
connection with the Hetq.am report shortly after the resignation. It closed the 
criminal case in January 2017, saying that it found no evidence of Poghosian’s 
involvement in “illegal entrepreneurial activity.”

Poghosian had close ties to then President Serzh Sarkisian and his Republican 
Party of Armenia (HHK). He was elected to the former Armenian parliament on the 
HHK ticket in April 2017.

A spokeswoman for the SIS, Marina Ohanjanian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on 
Thursday that the SIS has reopened the probe. She said investigators will again 
try to determine whether the once powerful official used his position to earn 
and hide business revenues.

Armenian media outlets had for years accused Poghosian of having extensive 
business interests. In particular, the 43-year-old was widely regarded as the 
main owner of Katrin Group, a company that enjoyed a de facto monopoly on 
banana imports to Armenia until last year’s “velvet revolution” that toppled 
Sarkisian. He always denied owning any lucrative businesses.

Shortly after the revolution the State Revenue Committee (SRC) launched a tax 
evasion inquiry into Katrin Group and three other firms linked to it. They 
promptly admitted failing to pay a total of 600 million drams ($1.2 million) in 
taxes, leading the SRC to stop the criminal proceedings.

The SRC reopened the probe a few weeks later, however, saying that it has 
discovered evidence of greater tax evasion on the part of the four business 
entities.



Bolton Voices U.S. Support For Pashinian


Armenia - U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton speaks at a news 
conference in Yerevan, 25 October 2018.

The United States regards the recent parliamentary elections in Armenia as 
democratic and supports Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s reform agenda, U.S. 
National Security Adviser John Bolton said on Thursday.

“I called Prime Minister Pashinian of Armenia yesterday to congratulate him on 
his re-appointment and applaud the Armenian people on free and fair elections 
in December,” tweeted Bolton. “The U.S. supports his efforts to secure a 
prosperous future for Armenia.”

Pashinian was quick to report the phone conversation with Bolton on his 
Facebook page. Writing from Davos, he said they “stressed the importance of 
U.S.-Armenian relations for our governments.”

Visiting Armenia in October, Bolton praised the new Armenian government’s 
stated efforts to democratize the country, combat corruption and strengthen 
broader rule of law. He also said Washington expects Pashinian to take 
“decisive steps” towards the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict’s resolution “right 
after” his widely anticipated victory in the December 9 parliamentary elections.

Bolton spoke with Pashinian by phone one day after the latter met with 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum 
held in the Swiss resort town. The Armenian leader said Wednesday that he did 
not discuss the Karabakh issue with U.S. President Donald Trump’s key adviser.

Trump sent a congratulatory letter to Pashinian late last week. “The United 
States supports a prosperous, democratic Armenia at peace with its neighbors,” 
he wrote. “Together, we can make progress on deepening trade between our 
countries, strengthening global security, and combating corruption. A peaceful 
solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will help these efforts.”

During his visit to Yerevan, Bolton also stated that normalizing relations with 
Azerbaijan and Turkey would enable Armenia to break “historical patterns” that 
have shaped its traditional foreign policy. He further indicated that 
Washington is ready to sell Yerevan U.S. weapons and thus reduce Russia’s 
“excessive influence” on Armenia.

Russia condemned those remarks, accusing the U.S. of meddling in its South 
Caucasus ally’s internal affairs. “We expect that the current leadership of 
Armenia … will have the courage to resist the unhidden external blackmail and 
pressure,” Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin said last month.

Armenian leaders earlier played down the significance of Bolton’s statements.



European Court Reports Further Drop In Appeals From Armenia


FRANCE -- The building of the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, 
November 15, 2018

The number of appeals filed by Armenians in the European Court of Human Rights 
(ECHR) continued to fall rapidly last year, the Strasbourg-based tribunal said 
on Thursday.

“For Armenia, the number of new applications allocated to a judicial formation 
was 167, more than a two-fold decrease as compared to 356 in 2017,” the ECHR 
said in an annual report presented by its president, Guido Raimondi, at a news 
conference.

The ECHR recorded 753 lawsuits from Armenia in 2016.

Armenia fell under the European court’s jurisdiction when it joined the Council 
of Europe in 2001. Its government lost the first case in Strasbourg in 2007.

The ECHR has ruled against various Armenian government, judicial and 
law-enforcement bodies on 94 occasions since then, costing them more than $1.2 
million in damages. “The highest number of violations related to the right to a 
fair trial, and right to liberty and security,” says its report.

The ECHR handed down 15 rulings against the Armenian state in 2018, up from 11 
such judgments in 2017.

“By January 1, 2019, there were 1,901 cases pending for Armenia, a small 
increase as compared to 1,819 in 2017. Armenia has remained in the top-ten 
states by the number of pending applications,” says the report.

The large number of lawsuits reflects a lack of judicial independence and 
corruption among law-enforcement officers and judges in Armenia.

The current Armenian authorities have repeatedly pledged to address the problem 
since they came to power in a democratic revolution in May. Their critics 
claim, however, that just like their predecessors, they pressure courts to side 
with prosecutors in high-profile criminal cases. Government officials -- and 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in particular -- strongly deny this.



Press Review



“Hraparak” says that in “normal countries” bonuses paid to government officials 
and other public sector employees would not be as controversial as they are in 
Armenia. “But in a country where there is a lot poverty, unemployment and daily 
fight for survival such an outcry is natural,” writes the paper. “And if we 
recall that the ruling political force paved its way to power with the help of 
these poor and unemployed people it will be even more understandable why people 
[in Armenia] are outraged by those bonuses.” It says that Armenia’s current 
rulers must be prepared for public scrutiny of their questionable decisions 
because they had spent many years accusing their predecessors of plundering the 
country.

“For any reasonable person it is obvious that there is no alternative to 
negotiations in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” “Zhoghovurd” writes in a 
commentary on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s latest meeting with Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev. “More precisely, the alternative is war. Any meeting or 
contact with Aliyev can only be beneficial for the negotiation process no 
matter how informal those meetings are.” The paper argues that ceasefire 
violations in the conflict zone have decreased significantly since Pashinian’s 
first meeting with Aliyev held in September.

“The latest Pashinian-Aliyev meeting held in Davos lasted for one and a half 
hours,” writes “Aravot.” “Of course it is only right that the leaders of 
Armenia and Azerbaijan do not shun each other while attending the same 
international events. But the time is now ripe for people to have a general 
idea of what the two leaders and their foreign ministers talk about. At any 
rate, it is better to meet and talk, even fruitlessly, than to shoot. One can 
assume that the leaders and foreign ministers of the two countries talk about … 
some [settlement] variants.” In this regard, the paper wonders whether 
confidence-building agreements reached by Baku and Yerevan in 2016 are still in 
force and whether the parties are now discussing a phased or a “package” peace 
deal.

(Lilit Harutiunian)




Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


Theatre: London features riveting play on Armenian Genocide

Big News Network
Jan 24 2019


Next week will see the premiere of a new London production of "Beast on the Moon". This highly acclaimed play on the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide has been commissioned by Finborough Theatre and will be performed between 29 Jan and 23 Feb., 2019, MassisPost reports.

The setting is Milwaukee in the 1920s. A survivor of the Armenian Genocide, Aram, believes he will begin a new life when his teenage 'mail-order' bride, Seta, arrives to join him. They are a couple united by history – both survivors of the Armenian Genocide. But their painful, shared experience does nothing to promote domestic harmony as Aram is obsessed with creating a family to replace the one he lost in such savage circumstances, and Seta, just fifteen and trapped by the traditions of the old ways, struggles to embrace her new life in a new country.

Beast on the Moon was last performed in the United Kingdom at Battersea Arts Centre in 1996 to much acclaim. "Richard Kalinoski's small, quiet play has a big, unashamedly sentimental heart as it charts Aram and Seta's difficult marriage and explores how it is possible to live when all the rest of your family have died " said The Guardian (London). "The past finds a sort of closure, but the author's skill has kept us on tenterhooks throughout, uncertain whether any happy outcome can be possible" said The London Times Online and "Humane, funny and touching, 'Beast on the Moon' presents the claims of both past and future with fairness and empathy" commented The Independent (London)

The organisers of the play, sensitive to their subject matter, have included a number of post-performance discussions on the Armenian Genocide and its enduring legacy. They will be hosted by Ara Sarafian (Gomidas Institute), Misak Ohanian (Centre for Armenian Information and Advice) and Sally Gimson (Index on Censorship). For more information see finboroughtheatre.co.uk