Post-war reconstruction continues in Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 9 2021
Post-war repair, reconstruction and dismantling works continue on the whole territory of Artsakh, the Ministry of Urban Development informs.
 
According to the Ministry, the reconstruction of more than 250 residential building has already been completed.
 
The restoration is being carried out in two stages. In the first stage, the roofs of the houses were repaired, doors and windows were installed, and heating conditions were created. The apartments are being furnished in the second stage.
 
The reconstruction of the houses damaged by the war continues according to the waiting lists, the priority is given to the families of the victims and the missing.
 
Other housing projects in Stepanakert and other regions are also being developed. The funding to be provided by the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund has already been approved.

Writers Union of Armenia calls for Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 9 2021
 
 
The Writers Union of Armenia called for the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his government and the formation of an interim government in a statement released ahead of the New Year.
 
"We must admit with sorrow that we are closing 2020 in a very alarming situation for our people and the homeland,” the union said, referring to the lack of prospects for economic and social development, the government’s mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic, the failed domestic and foreign policy and the country’s huge casualties and territorial losses in the recent Artsakh war.
 
“However, we believe that everything is not lost yet and there are still legal, diplomatic leverages, international formats and platforms which can be used to fight for pro-Armenian solutions and to make decisions with the involvement of serious and experienced professional forces and resources.
 
“But the current government can no longer do it.
 
“That is why we expect the resignation of the incumbent prime minister and the government, as well as the formation of a transitional government of national accord to achieve the goals stemming from the national interests and the vision of our people's future.
 
"God bless us all!” the statement said.
 

Armenia’s NSS director discusses issue on exchange of captives with Azerbaijan’s State Security Service director

Aysor, Armenia
Jan 9 2021
 
Armenia's NSS director discusses issue on exchange of captives with Azerbaijan's State Security Service director
 
 
 
Director of Armenia's National Security Service Armen Abazyan met with the director of Azerbaijani State Security Service Ali Nagiyev.
 
 The working meeting took place in a bordering neutral zone close to Yeraskh community of Armenia's Ararat province.
 
During the meeting the sides discussed issues on exchange of captives and search works of missing.
 
The contacts over these issues continue.
 
 

Film: Watch Armenian director Sergei Parajanov’s masterpiece The Colour of Pomegranates online for free

Calvert Journal
Jan 8 2021
Watch Armenian director Sergei Parajanov’s masterpiece The Colour of Pomegranates online for free
8 January 2021
Text: Paula Erizanu
Celebrate the 97th birthday of Armenian filmmaker Sergei Parajanov by watching his masterpiece, The Colour of Pomegranates.
 
Viewers in the UK can watch the film for free with English subtitles on Eastern European cinema platform Kino Klassika until 12 January.
 
The poetic film tells the life story of 18th-century Armenian poet Sayat Nova, with visuals rich with poetic symbolism and vivid colour contrasts. The film is also a love letter to traditional Armenian culture, celebrating the country’s music, crafts, churches, and rural life.
 
Born in Georgia on 9 January 1924, Parajanov worked in Ukraine and Armenia before moving into film in 1954. All of his films made between 1965 to 1973 were banned in the Soviet Union, and the director was ultimately imprisoned for four years on charges of rape, homosexuality, and bribery. He was only able to make more films and have them screened in the mid-80s, due to the increased freedom under glasnost. The director died of lung cancer in 1990, just as his films were beginning to circulate and gain recognition at international festivals.

Yerevan mayor on leave again, to return on January 23

News.am, Armenia
Jan 8 2021

Mayor of Yerevan Hayk Marutyan is on leave again. Spokesperson of the mayor Hakob Karapetyan confirmed the news during a conversation with Armenian News-NEWS.am.

“This is Hayk Marutyan’s subsequent leave which, by the way, is from the days not used in 2020 and a few days from the leave for the year 2021. The mayor will be on leave until January 22,” Karapetyan stated.

Rubinyan: Those who left Armenia parliament majority faction should explain how they continue to be MPs

News.am, Armenia
Jan 9 2021

After the well-known events, the following people have left the majority My Step faction of the National Assembly (NA) of Armenia: Vardan Atabekyan, Gor Gevorgyan, Taguhi Tovmasyan, Anna Grigoryan, and Sofya Hovsepyan. Ruben Rubinyan, an MP of the aforesaid faction and Chair of the NA Standing Committee on Foreign Relations, writes about this on Facebook.

"Emphasizing the need for an MP to be accountable to the voters, I believe these people who received a parliamentary mandate based on the votes of the citizens who voted for the My Step bloc should at least explain with whose and what mandate they continue to be MPs—not in a documentary, but in a political context.

P.S.: As the overwhelming political majority, the My Step faction will continue to implement the single mandate given to it—as a tool and order for the implementation of the people's power. Power in Armenia belongs to the people, and this is an indisputable and irreversible reality," Rubinyan added in particular.

Armenia ex-envoy: 1.5 years ago Armenian PM shared with Artsakh President his opinion about Karabakh’s fate

News.am, Armenia
Jan 9 2021

One and a half years ago Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan shared with Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan his opinion about the Karabakh's fate, former Armenian Ambassador to the Vatican Mikael Minasyan tod during a Facebook live broadcast.

"Over the past year, Arayik Harutyunyan and Kamo Aghajanyan [Artsakh ex-national security chief] have sold all businesses that belonged to them or to people associated with them in Jabrail, Fizuli, and, most importantly, in Hadrut," Minasyan noted.

"Arayik Harutyunyan will lose everything, he no longer has a future, there will be no business either because people will burn him, as well as the business of those who exchanged money for their homeland," ex-envoy added.

The ARPA Institute presents: Yervant Zoryan and Raffi Kassarjian on Saturday, January 16 at 10:00 AM PST, on ZOOM

Dear Friends and Compatriots,

 
Please join the ARPA Institute‘s upcoming discussion with the esteemed technologists Yervant Zoryan and Raffi Kassarjian. They will discuss the war and the big picture of what technologies should be developed in Armenia?”The event will be moderated by ARPA Board member Dr. Ani Shabazian.
 
Saturday, January 16, 2021 at 10:00AM, PST (EST 1:00pm, Yerevan 22:00):
 
ZOOM Link and login credentials:
 
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/ 5388322794?pwd= MWJVSU5oTHFnWHJHclcrbDcxMXJiQT 09 
Meeting ID:         538 832 2794
Password:           381750 
 
Or you can join via Facebook Live!
 
https://www.facebook.com/ ARPAInstitute 
 
Thank you for your continued support of the ARPA Institute and we hope that you will join the webcast!
Prior ARPA Lectures (Just click on the title):

1. Consequences of the War in Artsakh and its Implications , Eric Hacopian

2 Արցախիպատերազմը եւ հետեւանքները, Արման Գրիգորեան

3. Armenia in 2600 Years of World Cartographic Heritage, by Rouben Galchian
4. Assessment of the Military Offensive by Azerbaijan and Turkey , Anna Ohanyan, Nerses Kopalyan and Arman Grigoryan, Moderator Hon. Armen Baibourtian, Consul General of Armenia.

Warm regards,
The ARPA Institute Board
 

Aegean Airlines resume flights to Yerevan with discount sale

Greek City Times
Jan 7 2021
by PAUL ANTONOPOULOS

Due to the Turkish-sponsored invasion of Artsakh by the Azerbaijani military and Syrian mercenaries, direct flights between Greece and Armenia, run by Aegean Airlines and Wizz Air, ended.

However, with the signing of the bitter ceasefire agreement on November 9, normalcy is slowly beginning to return to Armenia.

Aegean Airlines will resume flights to Yerevan from Athens on March 31 with discounted flights.

The discounted flights to Yerevan will be available until January 11.

If you are looking for an international holiday outside of Greece, why not consider Armenia and support the economy and people that have been devastated following the Turkish-sponsored invasion of Artsakh.




Armenia’s 44-Day War: A Self-Inflicted Trauma (Part Two)

Jamestown Founation
Jan 7 2021

The Armenian government has yet to unveil the number of military casualties sustained during the Second Karabakh War (September 27–November 9, 2020). Almost two months after the ceasefire, the search for bodies is still ongoing across the theater; while in parallel, Azerbaijan is repatriating prisoners of war and the remains of fallen soldiers to Armenia. Nikol Pashinian’s government in Yerevan seems reluctant for political reasons to disclose the real numbers of soldiers killed and handicapped in this war.

Nor has any systematic or credible opinion polling been attempted in the two months since the ceasefire. Impressionistic estimates in circulation suggest that Pashinian’s current popularity rating is down to about half of the erstwhile 70 percent level. Mitigating the fallout on the government, however, is public skepticism about the opposition parties.

A wide array of opposition groups from both the current and the former political establishment are calling for the resignation of Pashinian’s government and for new parliamentary elections. President Armen Sarkisian, both parliamentary opposition parties, an alliance of extra-parliamentary parties, as well as former presidents Levon Ter-Petrosian, Robert Kocharian and Serge Sarkisian, and both Catholicoses (of Etchmiadzin and of Cilicia) have all urged Pashinian to make way for an interim government of experts and pre-term parliamentary elections to be held within some months (NewsAm, Arminfo, Armenpress, November–December 2020, passim).

Parliamentary opposition leaders Gagik Tsarukian (“oligarchic” Prosperous Armenia party, associated with the old establishment) and Edmond Marukian (Enlightened Armenia party, opposing both Pashinian and the old establishment) advocate for those changes to be implemented in an orderly manner through parliamentary processes. Marukian, hitherto a pro-Western liberal, has switched to strident pro-Russia positions, as a political lesson of the lost war.

Seventeen extra-parliamentary parties have formed a Fatherland Salvation Movement, pressing to remove Pashinian’s government and trigger new parliamentary elections. Its main components are the Republican Party (nationalist-conservative, former “party of power” during Kocharian’s and Serge Sarkisian’s presidencies) and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation–Dashnaktsutyun (ARF—ultranationalist, formerly in Republican-led coalition governments). Both parties lost their parliamentary representation in the 2018 Pashinian-led landslide. Kocharian and Serge Sarkisian are believed to support this protest movement. The ARF Supreme Body’s representative in Armenia, Ishkhan Saghatelian, is the salvation movement’s official coordinator. Vazgen Manukian is the movement’s chairman and its common candidate for prime minister.

Manukian, age 75, was a founding leader of the Karabakh Committee (1988) pressing for Upper (“Nagorno”) Karabakh’s transfer from Soviet Azerbaijan to Soviet Armenia. He was Armenia’s first prime minister (1990–1991) and first defense minister (1992–1993), when Armenian forces won the decisive battles in the first Karabakh war. An unsuccessful presidential candidate in 1996, Manukian’s political career went through an eclipse until now.

The salvation movement operates through daily peaceful rallies in Yerevan and acts of civil disobedience. Initially the extra-parliamentary faction called for the rejection of the November 10 armistice but gave up that stance after Russia made clear that it insists on compliance with the armistice it had brokered. The protest movement has therefore turned Pashinian into the main scapegoat, calling for his removal in inflammatory terms. Protest leaders have also issued calls for strikes in the country, for the army and police to “join the people,” and for residents of certain border areas to form armed detachments. At least two television channels, associated with Tsarukian (see above) and Serge Sarkisian, respectively, actively publicize these protests (NewsAm, Armenpress, Arminfo, December 20–31, 2020; HETQ, January 4, 2021).

The protest movement has not generated mass support thus far. The public seems apathetic in general and skeptical of the old regime’s politicians in particular. Pashinian’s camp depicts the protest leaders as the revanche-bent old elite trying to overturn the people’s power that Pashinian’s “revolution” supposedly achieved. This is the type of language that helped Pashinian achieve his 2018 landslide.

The embattled Armenian prime minister is clinging firmly to power. The governing bloc, My Step Alliance (comprised of Pashinian’s Civil Contract party and minor allies), holds a two-thirds parliamentary majority with 88 seats, versus Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia and Marukian’s Enlightened Armenia, with 26 seats and 18 seats, respectively. Civil Contract equally firmly controls Yerevan’s city hall.

In his appeals to the public, Pashinian admits to his share of responsibility for the country’s crisis, from which admission he extrapolates that he must remain responsible for overcoming the crisis as head of government (Arminfo, Armenpress, December 29, 2020). Within days of the armistice, Pashinian presented a 15-point anti-crisis plan (NewsAm, November 18, 2020) to be fulfilled until June 2021, at which point his own government (not an interim government) would organize pre-term parliamentary elections. No progress report on the anti-crisis plan exists as yet.

Kocharian and Serge Sarkisian must be hoping to capitalize on their long-standing Kremlin connections to regain a measure of political influence in Yerevan. In mid-December, Kocharian and Edmond Marukian (see above) visited Moscow simultaneously; whether this was a joint visit remains unclear. Russian President Vladimir Putin cabled Christmas/New Year personal greetings to Kocharian. For the time being, at least, any Armenian opposition politician seeking Moscow’s favor must not contest the terms of the armistice outright; at the most, he may propose tinkering with matters that the armistice does not directly regulate, such as the demarcation of certain border sectors. Moscow has elucidated that it wants compliance with the armistice terms; and it will work with those Armenian politicians who deliver both compliance and stability. Nationalist politicians in the ARF’s or Vazgen Manukian’s mold do not fit that bill and are unusable to Russia.

Pashinian seems to have understood this situation well and is currently delivering that compliance. The protest movement, insofar as it jeopardizes compliant stability, can only increase Pashinian’s utility value to Russia, at least for the time being.