Armenia economic activity index grows 7,8%

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 13:20, 31 January, 2020

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. The economic activity index of Armenia grew 7,8% in 2019 January-December compared to the previous year, the Statistics Committee said in a report.

During the reporting period the volume of industrial output grew 9%, the gross agricultural production dropped 4,2%, construction grew 4,6% and trade turnover grew 8,9%. Volume of services grew 15%.

Consumer price index increased 1,4%, while the industrial product price index 0,5%.

Electricity production dropped 1,9%. Average monthly wages grew 5,8% – totaling 182750 drams (8,4% increase in public sector and 3,8% increase in private sector).

The volume of foreign trade turnover grew 10,4% (exports grew 9,4% and imports grew 10,8%).

 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Authorities to investigate what Nairi Hunanyan told PM Pashinyan in letter

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 13:34, 31 January, 2020

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has sent Nairi Hunanyan’s letter addressed to him to the Prosecutor General of Armenia. In turn, the prosecution said they have forwarded the letter to the National Security Service to investigate whatever Hunanyan has said in it as part of the re-opened proceedings into a separated criminal case of the October 27 case.

Nairi Hunanyan, the 1999 Armenian parliament attack ringleader, sent a letter from prison addressed to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on January 17.

Unconfirmed media reports earlier said Hunanyan has reportedly expressed willingness in the letter to participate in the re-opened investigation into a separated criminal case of the October 27 case.

On October 27, 1999 a group of five armed gunmen led by Hunanyan stormed into the parliament while it was in session and assassinated Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan, Speaker Karen Demirchyan, Deputy Speakers Yuri Bakhshyan and Ruben Miroyan, as well as three lawmakers and a Cabinet member. The gunmen held the remaining MPs in parliament hostage until surrendering to authorities the next day.

The five perpetrators, which include Hunanyan’s younger brother and uncle, were sentenced to life in prison in 2003.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenia considers temporary halt of visa waiver with China, evacuation of nationals from Hubei

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 14:11, 31 January, 2020

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. On January 31, the Armenian governmental Inter-Agency Commission for Coordinating the Preventive Actions of Coronavirus in Armenia held its first meeting chaired by Deputy PM Tigran Avinyan.

During the meeting Avinyan noted that the number of confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus in China is reaching 10,000, and confirmed cases have already been recorded in other countries.

Healthcare Minister Arsen Torosyan briefed the officials on the measures being taken to prevent the import of the virus to Armenia. He said they are working together with the foreign ministry to acquire the test protocols and kits for coronavirus.

Deputy FM Avet Adonts noted that the Armenian Embassy in China is maintaining contact with nearly 600 Armenian nationals currently living in China. He said that Armenia is discussing with its partners the possibilities of voluntary evacuation of the Armenian citizens who are living in the province of Hubei, the epicenter of the outbreak.

The officials also discussed the appropriateness of temporarily suspending the visa-free regime with China.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenia to make decision on limiting entry of Chinese citizens in upcoming 1-2 days

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 12:03, 31 January, 2020

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Armenian governmental inter-agency commission discussed the issue of limiting the visits of Chinese citizens to the country aimed at preventing the spread of new coronavirus detected in China. The final decision will be made in the upcoming 1-2 days, Healthcare Minister of Armenia Arsen Torosyan told reporters at a press conference.

“Just a while ago the session of the inter-agency commission for prevention of novel coronavirus, created by the decision of the PM, was held chaired by deputy PM Tigran Avinyan. During the session we discussed the current situation, the actions taken so far and the upcoming steps. We also discussed the issue of limiting the entry of Chinese citizens [to Armenia], and a respective decision will be made within the next 1-2 days”, he said.

The minister stated that this also supposes changes within the international commitments, and the foreign ministry of Armenia will come up with a respective statement.

The commission also discussed issues relating to the Armenian citizens who are currently in China. “All actions envisaged by the medical rules of the World Health Organization are being taken. These include border control, final diagnosis of patients, etc”, he said.

Minister Torosyan said they will just try to reduce the entry of citizens to Armenia who represent a potential danger.

On December 31, 2019, Chinese authorities informed the World Health Organization (WHO) about an outbreak of an unknown pneumonia in the city of Wuhan v a large trade and industrial center in central China populated by 11 million people. On January 7, Chinese experts identified the infecting agent: coronavirus 2019-nCoV.

According to latest reports, a total of 8,100 people were infected with the new coronavirus in China, and the death toll reached 171.

Cases of the new coronavirus were also confirmed in 18 other countries, including Australia, Vietnam, India, Cambodia, Canada, Malaysia, Nepal, the United Arab Emirates, South Korea, Singapore, the United States, Thailand, the Philippines, Finland, France, Germany, Sri Lanka and Japan.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




German MP Karin Strenz stripped from immunity amid probe into Azerbaijani Laundromat scandal

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 14:13, 31 January, 2020

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. The German parliament has stripped from immunity lawmaker Karin Strenz who is accused in accepting bribes from Azerbaijan and carried out lobbying for Baku. Former MP Eduard Lintner is also under investigation.

The suspicions around Strenz’s alleged wrongdoings surfaces back in 2017 during the high profile corruptions scandal at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Her name was mentioned in the April 2018 report by independent experts about PACE lawmakers being on Azerbaijani payroll.

According to the document, ex-MP Eduard Lintner has hired Strenz to Line M-Trade consulting, a company owned by him and which is financed by Azerbaijan.

Despite the commercial interests, Strenz was among the observer delegation in 2015 during elections in Azerbaijan. In light of the suspicions she was not included in the German delegation to PACE in 2018. However, Strenz denies wrongdoing and claims she was unaware that Linter was funded from Azerbaijan. She does however accept that she failed to notify the Bundestag about her additional salary.

Transparency International issued a statement on January 30, noting that Transparency Germany welcomes the investigation by the public prosecutor's office in Frankfurt am Main into corruption allegations against Karin Strenz and Eduard Lintner.

“In March 2019, Transparency Germany filed criminal complaints against these current and former members of Bundestag for bribery and corruption of public officials in the course of the Azerbaijani Laundromat scandal, in accordance with Section 108e of the Criminal Code. The Rostock public prosecutor decided in May 2019 not to launch an investigation.

Hartmut Bäumer, Chairman of Transparency Germany said: “It is time that the wrongdoing by Karin Strenz and Eduard Lintner is finally also prosecuted, after their right to access the Council of Europe was withdrawn for life. We are pleased that the Frankfurt public prosecutor's office assesses the situation differently than the Rostock public prosecutor's office."

In September 2017, it became public that the authoritarian regime of Azerbaijan created a network in which 2.5 billion Euros flowed through banks and shell companies, with bribes paid to political decision-makers across Europe. Karin Strenz is said to have received money from Azerbaijani sources as a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) – officially in the form of consultancy contracts with Eduard Lintner's company. During her time at PACE, she participated in election observation missions in Azerbaijan, led a delegation tour of German MPs and was involved in PACE votes on politics in the country, in most of which she held a pro-Azerbaijan position.

The Frankfurt prosecutor accuses Karin Strenz of “pro-Azerbaijani” behaviour and collection of at least 22,000 Euros in bribes. Former PACE member Eduard Lintner is accused of having received funds from Azerbaijan in the amount of around 4 million Euros through British shell companies between 2008 and 2016, in order to pass them on to members of PACE. In return, they are said to have expressed positive opinions about the Azerbaijani government and deliberately spoken out against the release of political prisoners.

At the end of August 2019, Eduard Lintner referred to Transparency Germany's criminal complaint as a "PR comedy". The public prosecutor's office in Rostock justified its decision not to initiate an investigation on the grounds that there were neither indications of an agreement according to Section 108e of the Criminal Code, nor an offence that meets the requirement of occuring “when exercising the mandate”. In addition, payments from third parties for past actions are not captured by the Section.

“Obviously, there are different opinions among the public prosecutor's offices about what Section 108e of the Criminal Code says about bribing officials. This procedure will show whether the law is too narrow and is therefore a toothless tiger in its current form,” said Bäumer.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenia delegation to PACE issues declaration on 30th anniversary of Armenian pogroms in Baku

News.am, Armenia
Feb 1 2020

17:15, 01.02.2020
                  

Armenia’s delegation to PACE has issued a declaration on 30th anniversary of large-scale pogroms of the Armenian population in Baku, the capital city of Azerbaijan. The declaration runs as follows:

“We, the undersigned, declare the following:

On 13-19 January 1990, hundreds of thousands of Armenians living in Baku, Azerbaijani SSR, faced a large scale series of pogroms, the manifestations of Azerbaijani policy of systematic attacks against the ethnic Armenian population. Hundreds of Armenians were murdered, mutilated, persecuted, displaced. Under the threat of extermination, around 250 000 Armenians were forced to flee Azerbaijan.

The Baku massacres became the culmination of the State policy of racism and xenophobia against Armenians (armenophobia). Contrary to the facts recorded by the international community, human rights organisations and the European Parliament (Resolutions of 1988, 1990, 1991), the Azerbaijani authorities deny those crimes and evade responsibility. 30 years after those outrages, there is no respect and compassion for the victims of Armenian massacres in Azerbaijan. Azerbaijanis who tried to speak about the pogroms are officially considered betrayers.

Regarding this, we:

– commemorate the memory of the Baku pogroms victims;

– condemn any manifestation of racism and xenophobia;

– reaffirm that crimes against humanity have no statute of limitations and emphasise that condemnation of past crimes is the most important guarantee for preventing new ones;

– deplore that the organisers and perpetrators of the pogroms have not yet been brought to justice.

A number of PACE MPs from different countries and different political groups also joined (signed) the written declaration.”

Number of PACE MPs sign declaration on 30th anniversary of pogroms of Armenian population in Baku

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 1 2020

Number of PACE MPs from different countries and different political groups have signed the written declaration circulated by the Armenian delegation on the 30th anniversary of pogroms of Armenians in Baku, the parliament press service reported.

The declaration reads that on 13-19 January 1990, hundreds of thousands of Armenians living in Baku, Azerbaijani SSR, faced a large scale series of pogroms, the manifestations of Azerbaijani policy of systematic attacks against the ethnic Armenian population. Hundreds of Armenians were murdered, mutilated, persecuted, displaced. Under the threat of extermination, around 250 000 Armenians were forced to flee Azerbaijan.

“The Baku massacres became the culmination of the State policy of racism and xenophobia against Armenians (armenophobia). Contrary to the facts recorded by the international community, human rights organisations and the European Parliament (Resolutions of 1988, 1990, 1991), the Azerbaijani authorities deny those crimes and evade responsibility. 30 years after those outrages, there is no respect and compassion for the victims of Armenian massacres in Azerbaijan. Azerbaijanis who tried to speak about the pogroms are officially considered betrayers,” reads the text in part.

The undersigned call for commemorating the memory of the Baku pogroms victims, condemn any manifestation of racism and xenophobia, reaffirm that crimes against humanity have no statute of limitations and emphasise that condemnation of past crimes is the most important guarantee for preventing new ones;
The MPs also deplore the fact that the organisers and perpetrators of the pogroms have not yet been brought to justice.

Sweden completes ratification of Armenia-EU Agreement

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 1 2020

Pashinyan to reduce cash turnover in Armenia

Vestnik Kavkaza
Feb 1 2020
1 Feb in 21:53

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that the country's authorities will limit the cash turnover in the republic. The announcement was made during a working discussion in the government of the draft bill ‘On non-cash payments in Armenia.’

"This issue is important for us not only in economic or anti-corruption but also in civilization terms," the prime minister said.

According to Pashinyan, such a measure will help to increase the international rating of Armenia.

Pashinyan: Armenia to reduce the number of cash transactions

ArmBanks.am, Armenia
Feb 1 2020

01.02.2020 17:12

YEREVAN, February 1. /ARKA/. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told a discussion of the draft law on non-cash transaction that his government will be consistent in reducing the number of cash transactions since this issue is important not only from the point of view of the economy, the fight against corruption, but also in a civilizational sense.

He emphasized that the process of increasing the number and volume of non-cash transactions and digitizing electronic transactions and functions is one of the significant directions. He said this process will lead to serious changes in the quality of life of the citizens.

During the meeting it was noted that over the past two years, the number of cashless transactions has increased several times, including through foreign bank cards.

The participants also touched upon measures aimed at stimulating cashless operations, providing appropriate infrastructures and the forthcoming steps in this direction.

The head of government instructed the heads of relevant agencies to elaborate the draft law, taking into account the submitted proposals and observations. – 0–