Number of female lawmakers in Armenia’s new Parliament increases by 14

Number of female lawmakers in Armenia’s new Parliament increases by 14

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15:10, 8 January, 2019

YEREVAN, JANUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. The number of female lawmakers will be 32 in the new Parliament of Armenia: their number was 18 in the previous convocation Parliament, reports Armenpress.

The females will comprise nearly 25% of 132 MPs in the Parliament of 7th convocation.

My Step alliance will have 23 female lawmakers in the Parliament, the Prosperous Armenia party – 5 female MPs and the Bright Armenia party – 4 female MPs.

Snap parliamentary elections were held in Armenia on December 9. Based on the election results, three political forces – My Step alliance, Prosperous Armenia and Bright Armenia parties have been elected to the Parliament.

My Step alliance will have 88 seats, the Prosperous Armenia party – 26 and the Bright Armenia party – 18 seats in the new Parliament.

The first session will be held on January 14.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




No swine flu in Armenia, official says

ARKA, Armenia
Jan 8 2019

YEREVAN, January 8. /ARKA/. An Armenian health ministry official has denied today media reports claiming that about 10 people in the country had “swine flu”.

Fears in Armenia have been prompted by reports from the neighboring Georgia where, according to official information, 10 people have passed away from swine flue this winter. On January 8, five hospitals in Tbilisi have switched to round-the-clock working regime.

Liana Torosyan, the head of a department at the Armenian health ministry overseeing infectious diseases, said patients in Armenia have the usual seasonal H1N1 flu.

According to the ministry, as of January 8, some 642 citizens asked for medical help of whom 597 were diagnosed with acute respiratory illness. -0-

Yerevan’s four districts and Ararat province to have their water supply cut off for 22 hours

ARKA, Armenia
Jan 8 2019

YEREVAN, January 8. /ARKA/. Residents of Yerevan’s Nubarashen, Erebuni, Kentron and Shengavit districts as well as Ararat province will do without water supply on January 9 and 10, Veolia Jur, the company supplying water in Armenia, reported on Tuesday.  

In Kentron district, Ostrovsli, Tsaturyan and Zavaryan streets with their lanes as well as 1, 4/2, 17 Alek Manukyan Street, 1-40 Nar Dos, 1-15 Kristapor, 1-65 Tsakhotagortsneri, 28-231 Khorenatsi and 12-80 Tigran Mets with lanes will have their water supply cut off.  

The Yerevan Police Department, the Armenian National Security Service and the Yerevan State University will be cut off water for 22 hours. 

Residents of Bardzrashen, Ditak, Jrashen and Nor Harberd villages in Ararat province will do without water as well.

The company apologizes to its clients for the inconvenience caused and thanks them beforehand for understanding. -0— 

Yerevan Court to hear the appeal to release Robert Kocharyan on bail tomorrow

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 8 2019

The Yerevan Court of General Jurisdiction is set to hear the appeal to change Armenia’s ex-president Robert Kocharyan’s pre-trial detention measure on January 9. Kocharyan’s defense team filed the motion to the court to release the ex-president on bail in December. On December 28, the court delayed the hearing of the appeal following one of the prosecutor’s argument that the working day was over.

As Panorama.am learn from Hayk Alumyan, one of the lawyers of the ex-president, Kocharyan will not be present at tomorrow’s hearing.

To remind, Robert Kocharyan was arrested in July on charges of overthrowing Armenia’s constitutional order during the March 1-2, 2008 post-election events. On December 7, Armenia’s Court of Appeals upheld the first instance court’s ruling to arrest Robert Kocharyan currently held in custody.

The ex-president and his lawyers strongly deny the charges as ‘politically motivated’ and are set to file lawsuit with ECHR.

Demonstration to be staged outside Russian military base in Gyumri

News.am, Armenia
Jan 8 2019
Demonstration to be staged outside Russian military base in Gyumri Demonstration to be staged outside Russian military base in Gyumri

12:37, 08.01.2019
                  

The European Party of Armenia on Saturday will stage a mourning and a protest rally outside the 102nd Russian Military Base in Gyumri.

The demonstration will be held on the occasion of the four-year anniversary of the Avetisyan family murder and the 40th-day anniversary of the murder of Julieta Ghukasyan, European Party of Armenia Founder Tigran Khzmalyan wrote on Facebook.

The Avetisyan family as well as Julieta Ghukasyan of Gyumri were killed by the soldiers of the aforesaid Russian military base. 

Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers expected to meet later in January

ARKA, Armenia
Jan 8 2019

YEREVAN, January 8. /ARKA/. The official Yerevan has received a proposal of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs suggesting that Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan and Elmar Mammadyarov have another meeting, a press secretary for the Armenian Foreign Ministry Anna Naghdalyan said.

Mnatsakanyan and Mammadyarov had their latest, third meeting in early December 2018 in Italy’s Milan to have a deeper look into the positions and approaches of the parties concerning the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

"The OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs submitted a proposal to hold a meeting of foreign ministers in January," Naghdalyan said. 

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict erupted into armed clashes after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s as the predominantly Armenian-populated enclave of Azerbaijan sought to secede from Azerbaijan and declared its independence backed by a successful referendum. 

On May 12, 1994, the Bishkek cease-fire agreement put an end to the military operations. A truce was brokered by Russia in 1994, although no permanent peace agreement has been signed. Since then, Nagorno-Karabakh and several adjacent regions have been under the control of Armenian forces of Karabakh. Nagorno-Karabakh is the longest-running post-Soviet era conflict and has continued to simmer despite the relative peace of the past two decades, with snipers causing tens of deaths a year. 

On April 2, 2016, Azerbaijan launched military assaults along the entire perimeter of its contact line with Nagorno-Karabakh. Four days later a cease-fire was reached. -0-

Russia ups gas price for Armenia by 10% in blow for new government

CEE Energy NewsWatch Today
January 7, 2019 Monday
Russia ups gas price for Armenia by 10% in blow for new government
 
 
Russia has pushed up the price of gas it sells to Armenia by 10%.
 
Talks over the gas price were seen as key in assessing relations between the new post-revolution government in Yerevan and Moscow, the small nation's big strategic partner.
 
In 2019, Russian state gas giant Gazprom will sell gas to Armenia at $165 per thousand cubic metres, Gazprom said in a statement following a December 31 meeting between its chairman, Alexei Miller, and Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian. The previous price was $150 per thousand cubic metres.
 
Prior to the announcement, the Armenian government had several times said it was aiming to have the gas price reduced. Garegin Baghramyan, Armenia's minister of energy and natural resources, said as late as December 27 that "Of course, we are holding talks on reducing the tariff, but I am unaware of Russia's proposals. The best result for us must be to reduce the tariff."
 
Armenia imports the large majority of its gas from Russia. Its only other supplier is Iran.
 
The price increase comes as Armenia appears set to lose its position heading the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization, and days after Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian met in Moscow.
 
The day after the meeting, Putin pointedly sent public holiday greetings to former Armenian president Robert Kocharyan, a Pashinian nemesis currently in jail in Yerevan on abuse-of-power charges, eurasianet reported.
 
The price increase is "symptomatic of how the Kremlin is exploiting Armenia's acute dependence on Russian hydrocarbons, using gas supply as a political instrument to put pressure on the Pashinian-led government," Eduard Abrahamyan, a London-based analyst of Armenia, told the news website.
 
Pashinian's enemies in the Republican Party of Armenia that ruled the country before the country's velvet revolution of April to May last year made political capital out of the gas reverse. "We are finishing the year not entirely proudly and fruitfully," wrote Eduard Sharmazanov, the party's press secretary, on his Facebook page the day the announcement was made. "Nikol, who for months has been accusing us of artificially increasing prices on gas and creation of a corrupt gas scheme, saying that since his becoming prime minister that Armenia-Russia relations have been wonderful, today reported that the price of gas is increasing."
 
Pashinian claimed that consumers would be paying the same price for energy thanks to "our certain internal adjustments". He did not detail those adjustments.
 
Separately, on December 27 Pashinian said Armenia was determined to continue "integration" within the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EES).
 
"We are committed to further integration within the Eurasian Economic  Union and treat seriously our chairmanship in the EES," Pashinian said during his meeting with Putin in Moscow.
 
"I am confident that after our chairmanship we will have even more effective integration in the union," Pashinian said, referring to Armenia's rotating presidency of the EEU that began on January 1.
 
The trade bloc brings together Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Armenia, and Kyrgyzstan.
 
Putin praised the Russia-Armenia bilateral relationship, including "growing trade that increased by nearly 30 percent" last year.
 
He said that Russia was Armenia's largest economic partner, accounting for some 25% of Armenia's foreign trade.
 
Pashinian's My Step alliance won more than 70% of the vote in the snap parliamentary elections held on December 9.
 
Pashinian vowed to maintain close relations with traditional ally Russia, but at the same time said he would seek closer ties with the United States and the European Union.
 
Russia has a military base in Armenia.

Followers of religions enjoy full freedom in Iran: Archbishop

IRNA – Iran
Jan 7 2019
Followers of religions enjoy full freedom in Iran: Archbishop


       An archbishop in this central Iranian province said on Tuesday that the followers of religions have “full freedom” in Iran, despite the Western media propaganda. Sipan Kechejian, Archbishop of Diocese in Isfahan, made the remarks in an interview with the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA). As Kechejian said, the followers of religions have always held their rituals in full freedom in Iran. He further refuted the on hostile media propaganda against the Islamic Republic claiming that Iran imposes restrictions on the followers of religions and said the reason behind such negative propaganda is that the Iranian officials do not want to be under the supervision of the superpowers. He further hoped that the world people would avoid making pre-judgment on Iran in New Year 2019 which started today. Archbishop of the Armenians in Isfahan also encouraged people from around the world to travel to Iran to get a first hand experience of realities and adivised them to be influenced by the media propaganda. About Armenians’ conditions in Iran, the archbishop said that cordial relations between Christian Armenians and Muslim people in Iran are based on mutual respect. Such relations will continue, he added. About 7,000 out of about half a million Armenians in Iran are living in Isfahan.

Armenia army: Azerbaijan replacement of border army divisions with border troops has not affected situation

News.am, Armenia
Jan 8 2019
Armenia army: Azerbaijan replacement of border army divisions with border troops has not affected situation Armenia army: Azerbaijan replacement of border army divisions with border troops has not affected situation

14:44, 08.01.2019

YEREVAN. – The Azerbaijani side’s replacement of the army divisions on the border with border troops has not affected the situation in any way.

Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Armenia, Artak Davtyan, on Tuesday told the above-said to reporters, at the Central Assembly Station of the Ministry of Defense.

“It hasn’t made a change in the situation; I don’t think it will,” he said. “In the future, we will welcome the approach at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border if we start negotiations and with the issue of determining the border. And the organization of the overall [military] service, as it is commonly said, shall be on the state border.”

Davtyan informed that solely Azerbaijan was replacing its border army divisions with border troops.

“We, in our part, are doing some tasks without announcing,” he added; “there is no need for it.”

Armenian Human Rights Defender appealed to the Constitutional Court in connection with some provisions of the law "On Amnesty"

Arminfo, Armenia
Jan 8 2019
Ani Mshetsyan

ArmInfo. Armenian Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan appealed to the Constitutional Court, challenging certain provisions of the law "On Amnesty." It is  reported by the press service of the Ombudsman.

According to the source, the examination of complaints addressed to  the Ombudsman showed that there are no regulations in the law "On  Amnesty", which would clearly record the grounds for applying the  amnesty act. The matter, in particular, concerns the jurisdiction of  the judicial authority responsible for execution, when the judicial  act is appealed to a higher authority, but the latter has not yet  decided on the issue of taking the case to court.

"It turns out that both the Appeal Court and the Court of Cassation  are not able to apply amnesty and release a person from punishment.  Therefore, it turns out that in the absence of a final judicial act,  a person accused of committing the same crime in one of the cases can  be completely exempted from punishment and in another case, as a  result of the amnesty, the term of punishment may be reduced, "the  statement stresses.

In connection with these facts, Tatoyan appealed to the  Constitutional Court of Armenia, noting that the problems mentioned  are a violation of general equality and violate the prohibition on  discrimination before the law. "The findings mentioned in the  statement are reinforced by an analysis of international standards,"  the statement reads.