Armenian, Moldovan PMs see need to develop trade-economic ties

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 16:36,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan met with Prime Minister of Moldova Ion Chicu in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

At the beginning of the meeting the Armenian PM congratulated Ion Chicu on assuming office.

“Of course, there are very good political relations between our countries. Our countries have a very rich history of humanitarian, cultural ties, but, unfortunately, we cannot be proud of our commercial ties. But, of course, there are objective and subjective explanations for that”, Pashinyan said.

Pashinyan emphasized that Armenia and Moldova should raise the level of economic relations, trade turnover, expressing his readiness to work on that path. “Why I especially emphasize the issue of commercial relations, because we do not have any problem in other matters and will not have”, he added.

The Moldovan PM said Armenia and Moldova have a great potential to develop the economic relations because both Armenia has some advantages in certain directions and Moldova has such advantages. “I think it’s necessary to restart the works of the inter-agency commission. It’s a good platform for discussing various issues and an opportunity to develop the cooperation”, the Moldovan PM said.

Ion Chicu invited PM Pashinyan to visit Moldova.

The session of the Eurasian Inter-Governmental Council was held today in Almaty, Kazakhstan. The session was also attended by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

The next session of the EAEU Inter-Governmental Council will take place in Minsk on April 9-10.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




President Sarkissian hopes that one day Israel will recognize the Armenian Genocide

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 16:47,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Israel will not win the battle against antisemitism until it recognizes the Armenian Genocide, President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian said in an interview to The Jerusalem Post.

Sarkissian, who was in Israel over the past week for the Fifth World Holocaust Forum, which marked the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, said that most of the Armenian population does not understand the logic behind Israel’s refusal to officially recognize the mass killing of more than 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children by the Ottoman government between 1915 and 1917.

The Armenian Genocide is recognized by more than 30 countries, including the United States as it adopted a respective resolution in October 2019, but Israel has resisted formally naming the genocide for what it is.

“A lot of Armenians ask, ‘Why on earth would Israel, a country whose people have seen their own huge tragedy, not recognize the Armenian Genocide?’” Sarkissian said. “There is no logical answer. I cannot say that Israel has relations with Turkey and that is why – I cannot say that.” But he acknowledged that Israel-Turkey relations, which were formalized in March 1949, are likely the catalyst for Israeli silence.

“Israel has relations with Turkey,” Sarkissian said. “Today, those relations are good, tomorrow they are bad, and then the other way around. But the truth will remain the truth.”

He said that recognizing human tragedy is a matter of morality more than anything else, and he can only hope that one day Israel will recognize the genocide and that “human values, moral values and the importance of history will prevail. “Recognition will not be connected with this or that interest of the State of Israel or something else that is important only in the moment”, the Armenian President said.

But he also believes that Israel’s failure to commiserate with Armenia over their comparable tragedies – the Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide – is harming Israel and the Jewish people’s efforts to combat an ever-expanding epidemic of antisemitism.

“All of the reasons why this happened have not disappeared,” Sarkissian told the Post, referring to both the Holocaust and the Genocide. “Antisemitism is alive. Extreme nationalism is alive everywhere in the world…. It can all come back.”
He said that human tendency is to forget the lessons of history for the convenience of the present.

Sarkissian believes that Turkey has not recognized the Genocide because it would be “inconvenient: millions of people lost their lives; a culture was destroyed; and Turkey is probably afraid of claims – material and moral claims.

“Maybe they are afraid because for years they didn’t tell the truth to their children and grandchildren in their schools,” he continued. “It does not matter to me personally whether this country or that country will or will not recognize [the genocide]. It will not change my life or the lives of the millions of Armenians who lost their homes and are scattered all over the world in the Armenian diaspora. But it is going to backfire.”

He said that a country’s recognition of the Genocide or not will decide if that country is able to build for itself a tolerant society. A country that does not recognize the Genocide, he said, is a country that will ultimately lack tolerance for other people’s religion, nationality, faith and culture.

“The biggest disease of humanity today is not a virus in Hong Kong,” Sarkissian said. “It is not AIDS or cancer. With new technologies we are learning more and more how to fight cancer and defeat viruses. But technology will not teach us how to cure the disease of inhumanity.

“No medicine can be taken with water to help you become more human, more tolerant – this is much more problematic,” he explained. And he said that only in the moment that Israel recognizes the Genocide will it truly be able to move into its rightful role as the worldwide leader in the fight against antisemitism and extremism.

“It will make Israel’s case much stronger when it partners with Armenia, Rwanda, Cambodia,” Sarkissian stressed. “Then, we can come together and say, ‘This is enough.’ If we don’t do that and everyone plays the game on their own, we are going to lose the battle.”

President Sarkissian said that he attended the World Holocaust Forum because he does not think “it would have been right for any Armenian to connect the remembrance of the Holocaust tragedy” with whether the Israeli parliament recognizes the Armenian Genocide or not. “There is no way that, as president of Armenia, I would ever consider not being here,” he said.

Asked that Armenia has held Israel to a double standard in its conflict with the Palestinians, voting against many resolutions in the UN relating to this conflict, President Sarkissin stated: “The Armenian state has to think of protecting Armenian life, and the Jewish state has to think about protecting Jewish life. Both Armenians and Jews are human, and yet politics decides many things. Armenia is a landlocked country; it has only four neighbors: Turkey – and you know our relations with them; Azerbaijan – and you know our relations,” he continued. “Armenia has only two ways of communicating with the world: One is Georgia, and the other is Iran. I’ll stop there. Don’t take me into the jungle of politics.”

Until the countries come to terms on these differences, Sarkissian said, he hopes that they will identify other areas in which they share common ground.

After the Holocaust Forum the Armenian President met with top Israeli universities and with the Israel Innovation Authority, for example, and noted there are plans to collaborate on new projects in the artificial intelligence arena.

He also said he hopes to increase tourism between the two countries. “Once we have Israeli citizens traveling to Armenia and learning about its history and culture, our beautiful land and fantastic food, and once more Armenians come to Israel and spend the holidays here, the better the world will be,” he concluded.

Armenia’s Pashinyan meets with Russia’s new PM in Almaty, Kazakhstan

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 15:48,

ALMATY, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. The meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Prime Minister of Russia Mikhail Mishustin kicked off today in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

This is their first meeting after the Russian PM assumed office.

After welcoming one another the two PMs took a joint selfie.

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The Armenian PM congratulated Mishustin on his appointment. “There have always been and will be good and warm relations between our governments and countries, but I think that there is always an opportunity to raise these relations to a new level. We will manage to do that in cooperation with you. The relations between our states are developing as planned, quite well. The 2019 trade turnover approaches to 2 billion which is quite a good figure. This dynamics will be maintained in 2020”, the Armenian PM said, expressing hope that they will soon meet in Yerevan as this year one of the sessions of the Eurasian Inter-Governmental Council is going to take place in Armenia.

In his turn the Russian PM said he warmly remembers his last visit to Armenia to attend the World Congress on Information Technology (WCIT) which was well organized. “Armenia and Russia are connected with very close and allied relations. Russia is Armenia’s main trade partner, and the Russian government is inclined to a constructive partnership”, he said.

The Armenian and Russian PMs are taking part in the Eurasian Inter-Governmental Council session in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




URGENT: Armenia temporarily suspends visa-free regime with China over coronavirus

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 16:57,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is suspending the visa-free entry regime for Chinese nationals effective February 1 until March 31 over the coronovirus outbreak, Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan said on Facebook.

The World Health Organization has declared on January 30 that the coronavirus outbreak that has killed 213 people in China now constitutes a global public health emergency.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




First two persons infected with Chinese coronavirus identified in Russia

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 17:02,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Two persons infected with coronavirus have been identified in Russia, both are Chinese citizens, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova said, reports TASS.

"The Rospobrebnadzor [Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Well-being] services have identified two persons infected with coronavirus in Russia – in the Trans-Baikal Region and the Tyumen Region. They are under strict surveillance. They have been isolated, and necessary assistance has been provided to them. Both are Chinese citizens," she said.

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.




Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 31-01-20

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 17:58,

YEREVAN, 31 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 31 January, USD exchange rate is down by 0.09 drams to 478.60 drams. EUR exchange rate is up by 0.33 drams to 527.80 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate is down by 0.05 drams to 7.56 drams. GBP exchange rate is up by 4.72 drams to 627.78 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price is up by 69.31 drams to 24285.08 drams. Silver price is up by 3.87 drams to 272.74 drams. Platinum price is down by 156.73 drams to 14987.27 drams.

We have to level up our economic relations – PM Pashinyan meets with Moldova’s PM

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 18:14,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. There are very good political relations between Armenia and Moldova, the countries have rich history of cultural, humanitarian ties. But the two countries have to level up economic relations and trade turnover, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan said during the Eurasian Inter-Governmental Council session in Almaty in a meeting with Prime Minister of Moldova Ion Chicu.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister of Armenia, PM Pashinyan said, “Honorable Mr. Prime Minister, I am very glad to meet you, and I want to once again congratulate you on being appointed Prime Minister of Moldova. Of course, there are very good political relations between Armenia and Moldova, the countries have rich history of cultural, humanitarian ties. But we cannot boast about the level of our trade and economic relations, for which there are both objective and subjective reasons. But I think we have to level up our economic relations and trade turnover, which is a solvable task in the 21st century and I am ready to make efforts in that direction. I emphasize particularly trade and economic relations, because I am confident that we have and will have no problems in other directions”.

The Prime Minister of Moldova said,

“I am thankful, Mr. Prime Minister, for your congratulations and warm wishes. We are really happy, since there are very good relations between our countries and peoples in cultural, humanitarian and other spheres. Of course, you are right and we have great potential for developing economic relations, since we both have advantages in a number of spheres where we can develop cooperation. I talked about that also in my speech. Moldova has free trade regime with the EU and given the activeness of Armenia’s representatives, I think we will be able to make a good use of that opportunity. In some areas we are represented in the same market, but, of course, we are not rivals. We can only say words of appraisal in the address of the Armenian cognac and other productions.

We also have very good relations in terms of reforms in various spheres, for example, in the sphere of state finances I had many interactions with the Ministry of Finance of your country when I was working at the World Bank, where progressive reforms were being implemented. I mean we can promote and give new impetus to our cooperation in various directions.

And of course, we are looking forward to your visit to the Republic of Moldova. Before my visit I spoke with Igor Nikolaevich Dodon and he conveyed warm greetings to you, saying that we are looking forward to your visit to Moldova.

I also think that we should resume the works of the intergovernmental commission, which is a good platform for discussing issues and the opportunities for the development of cooperation”.

The Prime Ministers of Armenia and Moldova also discussed a broad scope of issues referring to the development of economic relations.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

Extraordinary session of Armenian parliament cancelled

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 19:30,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. The extraordinary session of the National Assembly of Armenia scheduled on February 6 has been cancelled. ARMENPRESS reports by the decision of President of the National Assembly of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan, his previous decision has been declared null and void.

The National Assembly of Armenia convened an extraordinary sitting on January 30, scheduled for February 6. The sitting’s agenda was to address mainly constitutional issues.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

Government, parliament respected legal procedures to resolve Constitutional Court situation– PACE

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 21:54,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. PACE co-rapporteurs for the monitoring of Armenia, Andrej Šircelj (Slovenia, EPP/CD) and Kimmo Kiljunen (Finland, SOC) issued a statement on January 31over the situation over the Constitutional Court of Armenia.  ARMENPRESS reports that so far the Government and the parliament have respected legal procedures to resolve the situation.

“We are very concerned by the high level of tension between two State institutions in Armenia, the Prime Minister’s Office and the Presidency of the Constitutional Court,” said the co-rapporteurs of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe for the monitoring of Armenia, Andrej Šircelj (Slovenia, EPP/CD) and Kimmo Kiljunen (Finland, SOC).

“Checks and balances are essential in any democratic system. This implies that all institutional powers must act according to the rule of law, and respect it in their deeds and words, including with regard to the principle of the presumption of innocence. If they fail to interact according to these principles, they undermine and damage each other. We are therefore worried about the long-term damage these tensions, that have reached an unprecedented level, could inflict on the judiciary as a whole, in which trust is already very low,” they said.

“So far, the Government and the Parliament have respected legal procedures to resolve the situation. Moreover, the authorities have requested the opinion of the Venice Commission on the mechanism for early retirement of judges of the Constitutional Court. According to European standards, the Venice Commission underlined that early retirements should be strictly voluntarily and that this principle needs to be observed. As co-rapporteurs, we will closely monitor that the Armenian authorities continue to act in this way, even if the objective of this mechanism, to uphold the spirit of the constitutional amendments of 2015, seems valid,” they added.

“We have already emphasized the need for political players to refrain from actions and statements that could be perceived as exerting pressure on the judiciary. In addition, we call on all parties to lower tension,” said the co-rapporteurs.

“Finally, these tensions should not overshadow the need for reforms in Armenia, whether it be those in preparation or those that have already been launched in many areas of interest for the Council of Europe,” they concluded.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/31/2020

                                        Friday, 

Former Security Chief Questioned By Investigators

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia -- National Security Service Director Artur Vanetsian watches a football 
match at Republic Stadium, Yerevan, September 5, 2019.

Artur Vanetsian, the former National Security Service (NSS) chief increasingly 
at loggerheads with Armenia’s political leadership, has been summoned for 
questioning in two criminal investigations, it emerged on Friday.

The Investigative Committee said it questioned Vanetsian on Thursday as a 
witness in the ongoing inquiries into his leaked phone conversations and alleged 
corrupt practices in the Football Federation of Armenia (FFA).

Vanetsian’s sensitive phone calls with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Sasun 
Khachatrian, the head of the Special Investigative Service (SIS), were secretly 
recorded in July 2018 and posted on the Internet in the following months. The 
then NSS director discussed with them coup charges brought against former 
President Robert Kocharian and retired General Yuri Khachaturov.

Vanetsian could be heard saying that he pressured a judge to sanction 
Kocharian’s arrest. He at the same time urged the SIS not to arrest Khachaturov, 
who was the secretary general of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty 
Organization (CSTO) at the time, warning of a negative reaction from Russia.

“As part of the wiretapping investigation, Mr. Vanetsian’s [mobile] phone was 
subjected to an examination,” Naira Harutiunian, the Investigative Committee 
spokeswoman, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. She also said that nobody has been 
indicted in that probe yet.

The other case stems from financial abuses allegedly committed Ruben 
Hayrapetian, the controversial former head of the FFA, and individuals linked to 
him. Vanetsian succeeded Hayrapetian as FFA president following the 2018 “Velvet 
Revolution” in Armenia. He resigned from that post last November two months 
after being sacked as NSS director for still unclear reasons.

Vanetsian on Friday declined to comment on his interrogations, referring all 
inquiries to his lawyer Lusine Sahakian. “We decided not to make comments for 
now,” Sahakian said for her part.

Vanetsian has repeatedly traded bitter recriminations with Pashinian since his 
sacking. In a January 11 article, the “Haykakan Zhamanak” daily controlled by 
Pashinian’s family accused him of organizing a smear campaign against the 
family. Hrachya Hakobian, a pro-government parliamentarian and Pashinian’s 
brother-in-law, alleged afterwards that Vanetsian was fired in September because 
he was plotting a coup.

Vanetsian, who has not been charged with any crimes so far, denounced the 
“Haykakan Zhamanak” article as slanderous and threatened to file a libel suit 
against the paper.

The former NSS chief also scoffed at Pashinian’s weekend allegations that 
Armenian security services have thwarted a “hybrid” anti-government conspiracy 
hatched by current and former officials. He said Pashinian’s Civil Contract 
party should consider replacing the prime minister. Senior party figures hit 
back at Vanetsian.



Armenia Suspends Visa-Free Regime With China Amid Coronavirus Fears

        • Artak Khulian

China -- Workers in protective suits work at the production line manufacturing 
detection kits for the new coronavirus at a company, as the country is hit by an 
outbreak of the new coronavirus, in Taizhou, Jiangsu province, January 29, 2020

The Armenian government on Friday suspended for two months visa free-travel 
between Armenia and China, citing the need to guard against a new coronavirus 
that has killed more than 200 people in China.

A bilateral agreement allowing Armenian and Chinese citizens to stay in each 
other’s country visa-free for up to 90 days was signed last year and went into 
force as recently on January 19.

Its suspension announced by Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian means that 
Chinese nationals travelling to Armenia between February 1 and March 31 will 
need to have Armenian visas. Avinian attributed the decision to the 
“epidemiological situation conditioned by the coronavirus.”

The government announced earlier in the day that it has set up an interagency 
commission tasked with preventing the spread of the deadly disease to Armenia. 
The commission is headed by Avinian.

The government warned Armenians against all travel to China last week. It also 
banned imports of Chinese food and raw materials.


Armenia -- Foreign Ministers Zohrab Mnatsakanian (R) of Armenia and Wang Yi of 
China sign a visa waiver agreement in Yerevan, May 26, 2019.

Health authorities say they are monitoring all people arriving from China to 
Armenia via third countries.

Health Minister Arsen Torosian told reporters on Friday that the authorities are 
not yet equipped to definitively detect the coronavirus there is a “99.9 percent 
likelihood” of the absence of any cases in Armenia.He said they will receive 
laboratory equipment and materials for coronavirus tests in the coming days.

“Up until now Armenian citizens returning from China and Chinese citizens 
[visiting Armenia] … have had no symptoms characteristic of the coronavirus,” he 
said.

According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, some 400 Armenians lived in China 
before the outbreak of the virus which the World Health Organization declared a 
global emergency on Thursday. At least six of them remain in the Chinese city of 
Wuhan lying at the epicenter of the outbreak.

A young man in Yerevan, Erik Khachikian, claimed on Thursday that doctors at a 
local policlinic refused to examine his condition after he told them that he 
lived in another Chinese city, Xian, and returned to Armenia just days ago.

“Such things are unacceptable,” Torosian said in this regard. He pledged to 
“take measures” over Khachikian’s claims.

At least 213 people in China have died from the coronavirus, with nearly 10,000 
cases registered. A total of 98 cases have been confirmed in 18 other countries, 
but no deaths outside of China have been recorded, according to the WHO.



Pashinian Meets New Russian PM


Kazakhstan -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian takes a selfie with his 
Russian counterpart Mikhail Mishustin at the start of their meeting in Almaty, 
.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his new Russian counterpart Mikhail Mishustin 
hailed rapidly growing trade between their countries and pledged to further 
deepen Russian-Armenian commercial ties when they met for the first time on 
Friday.

The two men held talks on the sidelines of a meeting in Kazakhstan’s largest 
city, Almaty, of the prime ministers of the five ex-Soviet states making up the 
Eurasian Economic Union (EEU), a Russian-led trade bloc.

“Relations between our countries, governments have always been and will be good 
and warm,” Pashinian said in his opening remarks at the talks. “I think that we 
always have a chance to elevate our relations to a new level.”

Mishustin assured him that Russia’s newly reshuffled government is “intent on 
continuing constructive relations and working contacts with our Armenian 
colleagues.” He said that Russian-Armenian trade soared by nearly 18 percent in 
January-November 2018, solidifying Russia’s status as Armenia’s number one 
trading partner.

“This is good,” he said. “We should cement this positive trend and look for new 
fields of cooperation.”

Pashinian likewise noted that bilateral trade was on track to approach the $2 
billion mark last year. He said this is one of the reasons why economic growth 
in Armenia accelerated to over 7 percent.

“I hope that your government will support the economic dynamic which we have in 
Armenia right now,” added the Armenian leader.

According to an Armenian government statement, the two premiers then discussed a 
“wide range of issues pertaining to Russian-Armenian economic relations.” The 
statement cited Mishustin as proposing that Moscow and Yerevan explore 
possibilities of launching “concrete projects in the information technology 
sector.” Pashinian welcomed the idea, it said.

Mishustin, whom Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin appointed as prime 
minister on January 16, attended a global IT forum held in Yerevan in October. 
The 53-year-old technocrat headed Russia’s Federal Tax Service at the time.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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