Turkey embargo wasn’t working in practice, says Armenian lawmaker after lifting trade ban

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 14:28, 4 January, 2022

YEREVAN, JANUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. There is no certain final opinion in Armenia on the “economic appropriateness” regarding a potential extension of the ban on imports of Turkish products, but nevertheless the Armenian government lifted the embargo by taking into account all opinions both in favor and against.

Lawmaker Babken Tunyan, the Deputy Chairman of the Economic Affairs Committee of the Armenian Parliament, told ARMENPRESS that the ban wasn’t delivering its desired effect, and despite the embargo many importers were utilizing circumvent ways to bring Turkish products into the Armenian market. 

“If we look at this issue from a patriotic perspective, what matters is – why is there demand for Turkish products in Armenia? If we were to compare with the situation we had during the 44-day war when everyone was boycotting Turkish products, now we must understand why people are again willing to buy Turkish products. If there is demand for some product, that product will find its market and will reach its consumer, be it in circumvent ways or at higher costs. That’s why it’s not right to artificially do something. If we put aside the emotional part, we must evaluate its appropriateness from an economic perspective,” Tunyan said.

Tunyan, an economist, further noted that the ban was anyway temporary and partial, with only finished goods being prohibited. Moreover, the list of banned products was revised several times because it turned out there was no alternative in the market.

“Economically, unfortunately this ban led to a situation where Turkish products were entering Armenia through different ways, because carrying out customs administration and control is practically impossible, and this simply led to prices of clothes, household items and other products in Armenia to grow, because these products are going through more complicated ways. Meaning, the objective we’d initially set politically doesn’t serve its purpose.”

In turn, the Ministry of Economy admitted that during the one year of its effect the ban had both positive and negative economic consequences.

Several newly launched or expanded industries in light industry, furniture and construction material production and agriculture are among the positive ones, according to the ministry. While the main negative consequence is the “significant impact on inflation” on various products. In addition, according to the ministry of economy many Armenian businessmen asked them to lift the ban.

The Armenian government initiated the 6-months embargo against Turkey because of the latter’s military support to Azerbaijan during the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh war.

The embargo was extended for another 6 months in the summer of 2021.

But on December 30, 2021, the Armenian authorities announced that they will no longer extend the embargo.

Interview by Aram Sargsyan




Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 04-01-22

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 17:32, 4 January, 2022

YEREVAN, 4 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 4 January, USD exchange rate up by 0.60 drams to 482.19 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 1.88 drams to 544.92 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.04 drams to 6.44 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.13 drams to 651.34 drams.

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

Gold price up by 34.83 drams to 27995.67 drams. Silver price up by 0.44 drams to 357.88 drams. Platinum price up by 18.50 drams to 14867.15 drams.

Armenpress: Two MPs of the faction “Civil Contract” submit letters of resignation

Two MPs of the faction “Civil Contract” submit letters of resignation

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 19:01, 4 January, 2022

YEREVAN, 4 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. Members of the National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia, members of ''Civil Contract'' faction Sedrak Tevonyan and Sergey Movsisyan on January 4 submitted letters of resignation, ARMENPRESS was informed from the official website of the National Assembly.

According to the Armenian law, if after a week following the publication of the resignation the MPs take back their application, the President of the National Assembly makes a statement about that, if they don’t take back their application, then a protocol is made about the termination of their powers, which is signed and published by the President of the National Assembly. After the publication of the protocol, the resignation is considered approved.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/04/2022

                                        Tuesday, January 4, 2022


Armenian Authorities Block Inauguration Of Opposition Mayor

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia - Aharon Khachatrian is sworn in as mayor of Vartenis outside the 
municipal administration building cordoned off by police, January 4, 2022.


Police cordoned off the municipal administration building in Vartenis on Tuesday 
to prevent a local opposition figure from taking over as mayor of the eastern 
Armenian town and nearby villages.

The mostly rural community has been in turmoil since the December 5 election of 
a local council empowered to appoint its mayor. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
Civil Contract party garnered most votes but fell short of an overall majority 
in the 27-member council, winning only 13 seats there.

The remaining 14 seats were won by two local opposition blocs. They reached a 
power-sharing deal and nominated one of their leaders, Aharon Khachatrian, for 
the post of community head.

The 14 opposition members of the new Vartenis council elected Khachatrian as 
mayor during its inaugural session held on December 30. Civil Contract members 
led by Aram Melkonian, Vartenis’s incumbent mayor seeking reelection, tried to 
disrupt the session before walking out in protest.

Melkonian went on to ask Armenia’s Administrative Court to annul the appointment 
of the new mayor, saying that it was “illegal.” The opposition forces dismissed 
the allegation and scheduled Khachatrian’s inauguration for Monday.


Armenia - Vartenis Mayor Aram Melkonian tries to block the first session of the 
new local council controlled by opposition groups, December 30, 2021.

Scores of police officers deployed at the entrance to the local government 
building did not allow the council majority to enter it to hold the swearing-in 
ceremony. Local police chiefs told the oppositionists that Khachatrian cannot 
start performing his duties because of the lawsuit filed by the ruling party.

The ban angered Khachatrian’s supporters who gathered outside the building. “One 
gets the impression that the Civil Contract party has started a civil war 
against residents of Vartenis,” said one of them.

A lawyer representing Khachatrian insisted that council members are legally 
allowed to enter the building regardless of the court case. “The police are 
overstepping their powers,” he said.

Khachatrian had to take an oath of office in the building’s courtyard. His 
loyalists admitted that he will not be able to take office before a court 
verdict.

Meanwhile, Melkonian said that the police acted on his orders. “I personally 
made sure that this buffoonery doesn’t take place,” the incumbent mayor told 
reporters.

Melkonian said that the two opposition forces must not be allowed to run the 
community comprising Vartenis and two dozen villages because they “deceived” 
voters. He did not elaborate.

On Monday, the ruling party’s candidate called on all newly elected council 
members to resign and pave the way for a repeat election.

“The council held a session and elected a community head. What should we annul 
after that?” countered Davit Shahnazarian of the United Vartenis bloc allied to 
Khachatrian’s alliance.

United Vartenis’s leader was arrested on corruption charges shortly after the 
power-sharing deal cut by the two groups. Opposition politicians and human 
rights campaigners in Yerevan condemned his arrest, saying that it is part of a 
government crackdown on political figures who defeated Pashinian’s party in some 
of the three dozen communities across Armenia that elected their local councils 
on December 5.


Armenia - Opposition supporters hold pictures of former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon 
Aslanian and other arrested opposition members during a demonstration in 
Yerevan, December 17, 2021.

Arman Tatoyan, the country’s human rights ombudsman, charged on December 17 that 
opposition groups that did well there are being illegally pressured not to 
install their leaders or allies as community heads.

“These practices are fundamentally at odds with democratic norms,” said Tatoyan.

Pashinian’s political allies maintain that neither these nor any other 
post-election criminal cases are politically motivated.

Pashinian’s party suffered its biggest election setback in Vanadzor, Armenia’s 
third largest city. It won only 25 percent of the vote there, compared with 39 
percent polled by a local bloc led by former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon Aslanian.

Aslanian was thus well-placed to regain his post lost in October. But he was 
arrested on December 15 on corruption charges rejected by him as politically 
motivated.

The Administrative Court blocked the first session of the new Vanadzor council 
slated for December 24. It cited an appeal against the local election results 
lodged by another party that fared poorly in the ballot.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Armenia starts using Russian Sputnik Light as booster jab

TASS, Russia
Jan 4 2022
Business & EconomyJanuary 04, 16:19

YEREVAN, January 4. / TASS /. Armenian citizens who were fully vaccinated can receive the Russian Sputnik Light as a booster jab, the press service of the Health Ministry said on Tuesday.

"The Sputnik Light vaccine was included in the list of drugs authorized in the country and can be used as a booster jab," the press service noted. People aged over 18 can be inoculated with the Russian COVID-19 jab.

Armenia’s epidemiological situation is steadily normalizing. In November, the country registered from 1,500 to 2,500 cases of the infection every day, while in the second half of December, the COVID-19 daily caseload ranged from 100 to 200.

In the spring, Armenia launched mass vaccination with Russia’s Sputnik V, the AstraZeneca, Sinopharm and Moderna drugs. According to the latest data, as many as 903,000 people received the first dose of the jab, while more than 640,000 Armenian citizens were fully vaccinated. In late December, the Armenian government decided to purchase a batch of the US Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine for $ 2.5 mln.

Mercer Island native composes second symphony with Armenian roots

Mercer Island Reporter, WA
Jan 3 2022
  • Monday, January 3, 2022 2:49pm

By Hannah Saunders, For the Reporter

Stephen Lamson grew up on Mercer Island, where if he found himself having a bad day, he would sneak off to grab his dog and go fishing. Throughout his childhood, music played a major role.

“My mom used to play the piano, my sisters used to play the piano, and I used to fall asleep under the piano,” Lamson said.

When he was about six years old, Lamson picked up the drums, which he played until the ninth grade.

“When I was about ten years old, I was sitting at the piano and my mom had just finished playing and I sat at the piano — and I couldn’t play anything — but I looked at the keyboard and I just had this weird feeling that this was what I was supposed to do with my life,” Lamson said.

Lamson recalled his youthful days where he would sneak into churches at night to play piano. When he reached his early twenties, Lamson became more serious about composing while working in the sales and marketing field.

“It’s taken me almost a year of composition on just this composition,” Lamson said.

This past year Lamson finished composing his second symphony, “Ararat’s Shadow,” which is a four movement, 96-minute piece. Lamson has Armenian roots, and the tales of how his grandfather escaped the Armenian Genocide, and Nazi-occupied Germany, is what inspired this symphony.

“I couldn’t believe people could do some of the things you hear,” Lamson said. “I’ve got to do something to honor a part of my heritage and these poor people that suffered so much.”

Through melodies and chording, Lamson tries to educate people. In “Ararat’s Shadow,” he brought up how the third movement is titled ‘The Promise of Forgiveness,” which he describes as a point in which all humans must get to no matter what.

“The last movement is ‘The Awakening,’ and that’s really the celebration of unity and bringing people together and the resurrection of humanity,” Lamson said. “The bringing back of sense and kindness and love and piece.”

Lamson brought up how there were a lot of emotions in the piece. For recording, the piece was so long that it had to be placed on two CDs.

“I composed the piece, the melodies, the whole thing, and then I would get it recorded and then I’d talk with Al and some of these other musicians, so we just carved it out,” Lamson said. “It’s sort of like a spiritual creation by a team of dedicated musicians.”

Lamson calls the group of musicians Eternal Flame, which is a large monument in Armenia with a continuous flame that burns and is dedicated to lives lost during the Armenian Genocide.

Al Cisneros plays electric guitar and bass while also doing editing for the symphony. Jim Malin plays the harmonica. Myles Ricker, 24, plays the violin, viola, and cello. Kurt Madsen plays the classical guitar. Jack Reed, a member of the Seattle Philharmonic Orchestra, plays percussion instruments to include the timpani and glockenspiel. Jeff Miller plays the trumpet. Denny Hancock plays the trumpet and harmonica. Jennifer Rae Getz is a singer and songwriter who does vocals on the track.

“I’ve written music over the years, but this is my most serious work,” Lamson said. “Part of what we want to do with the money is to go to the Armenian relief fund.”

Stephen said if anyone is interested in picking up a copy of “Ararat’s Shadow,” they can call him at 425-503- 1499 or email him at .

https://www.mi-reporter.com/news/mercer-island-native-composes-second-symphony-with-armenian-roots/

Can Armen Sarkissian save Armenia?

Great Britain – Jan 4 2022

More than a year after war broke out, the country is in need of steady leadership

January 4, 2022 | 12:55 pm

Written by:

YEREVAN, ARMENIA — Armen Sarkissian, the president of Armenia, is incandescent with rage. “Five thousand brave and selfless Armenian soldiers were killed in this war,” he tells me at his office, referring to last year’s conflict with Azerbaijan and Turkey. “There must be accountability for their deaths.”

Sarkissian strikes me as the only Armenian politician whose anger comes with a constructive program of national revival. The man once described by Zbigniew Brzezinski as the “Vaclav Havel of the Caucasus” radiates no grievances against foreign powers. Where other politicians complain endlessly about being abandoned by allies or stabbed by foreign powers, Sarkissian appears to be animated by the cold Naipaulian belief that that “the world is what it is”: nations that are nothing, that allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it.

The most remarkable fact about Armenia is that it exists at all. Few countries have survived more suffering through the ages than this tiny Caucasus republic located at the strategic intersection of Europe and Asia. Armenia converted to Christianity in 301 AD, before any other state in the world, and its history ever since has been a chronicle of interminable strife. Competing empires reduced it, in Gibbon’s unforgettable phrase, to a “theatre of perpetual war” for a millennium. The Russians deluged it from above. The Arabs and Persians savaged it from below. And the Turks, having swallowed up all of historic Armenia’s western flank, inaugurated the twentieth century with the slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians.

2020’s war with Azerbaijan and Turkey over Nagorno-Karabakh, the ethnically Armenian territory gifted a century ago to Azerbaijan by the Kremlin, has shattered the relative stability that followed Armenia’s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. The economy, bruised by the pandemic, is crumbling. Blood continues to run on its disputed borders. The national morale is shaken. Tens of thousands of ordinary Armenians are pouring out of the country for opportunities abroad, reviving the tragic tradition of expatriation among a people who have seldom known protracted periods of peace and prosperity in their own land. Armenia’s population is just under three million. Its sprawling global diaspora — a legacy of the genocide perpetrated by Turkey — is thought to exceed twelve million.

In June, Armenia conducted snap parliamentary elections. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the activist turned politician who supervised the war effort, was unexpectedly returned to power. But the impression of closure conveyed by the result concealed the deadly divisions coursing through the country. In Yerevan, young men complained bitterly that they had been betrayed by their own leadership. “I kept going with my friends to sign up to fight every day when the war started,” a medical student told me. “Every time, we were told, ‘go home, we are winning.’ It was just a lie meant to fool us and make us think that the government was in control of the situation. We were completely unprepared.”

How do you rebuild a nation devastated by foreign aggression and demoralized by infighting?

“You begin by looking inwards,” Sarkissian tells me. “You ask yourself difficult questions and make necessary changes.” And one change that is indispensable to healing the national psyche and securing Armenia’s future, according to Sarkissian, is constitutional reform. This can seem like an odd fixation, and I was skeptical of Sarkissian’s argument until I traveled through Armenia this past summer. The war has exposed not only Armenia’s military deficiencies but also the fatal defects in the national charter that governs Armenia’s unlikely democracy. The current constitution, written in 2015, was designed to safeguard the interests of individuals, not the prospects of the nation. And unless Armenia can entrench the idea of accountability, create co-equal branches of government and subordinate individuals to institutions, it will remain vulnerable to populism, intrigue and chaos.

The war in Nagorno-Karabakh came unexpectedly, in the early hours of September 27, 2020, when Armenian positions reported heavy shelling from the Azeri side. By the first week of November, Azeri troops were punching into Shushi — the mountainous linchpin of Armenian defense. When Pashinyan agreed last November to cede substantial tracts of territory held by Armenia as part of an armistice mediated by Russia, a mob stormed the prime minister’s office fully intending to lynch him. He survived. But the election that followed did not so much heal the national rift as harden it.

Sarkissian has emerged as a unifying father-of-the-nation figure in a land unraveling under the burden of loss and recrimination. For years Armenia’s most respected statesman on the international stage, he was elected three years ago to the largely ceremonial presidency. When war broke out, he activated his extensive international connections to drum up support for Armenia. Three separate sources told me that India had come close to airlifting a cache of arms to Armenia. But the war effort was so poorly managed that the administration in Yerevan, operating without a command structure, was unable to figure out how to receive the materiel.

Sarkissian maintains that this period of “national depression” can be converted into an opportunity for a “national revival.” To recover and rebuild, however, Armenia would have to eschew its historical habit of searching for “saviors” and assume responsibility for its own future — for no amount of foreign support can revitalize a nation that refuses to utilize its own strengths. “Azerbaijan surpassed us in large measure because it has oil revenues,” he tells me one afternoon. “What will be the value of oil in a generation’s time? In two generations?”

Sarkissian’s belief in the sanctity of self-reliance and striving, his faith in the perfectibility of the self and his contempt for self-pity, are not ideological reflexes. They are beliefs absorbed from his own life. Sarkissian grew up in extreme hardship. He was ten when his father died of cancer. His mother, Zhenya, widowed in youth, worked three jobs to give Sarkissian and his sister, Karine, a semblance of a normal life. The Soviet Union offered no avenue for unconnected individuals to rise above their station. But Sarkissian realized he could be the master of his own destiny the moment he was enrolled at school: “The classroom was the only capitalist space in the Soviet Union,” he tells me. “It was pure competition.”

And he was so competitive that Soviet grandees showered him with awards and accolades, decorated him with the prestigious Lenin Prize, and even acceded to his request to travel to England in 1984 as part of an exchange program. Sarkissian was taken first to Sussex, where he was expected to spend four months learning English; he mastered the language in two and moved to Cambridge. As a young theoretical physicist, he did research work alongside Stephen Hawking. What he most fondly remembers about his first exposure to the West, however, is the absence of hierarchies in science. The Soviet Union panegyrized the notion of equality; the scientists in England practiced it. The faculty at Cambridge, which included several Nobel laureates, treated Sarkissian as a peer and consulted him as an equal.

After returning home, Sarkissian helped develop an advanced version of the video game Tetris; the fortune it made in the West was pocketed by Soviet officials. When the USSR finally disintegrated, Sarkissian, by then based in the UK, was asked to open the newly independent Armenia’s first international mission in London. It was a provisional arrangement. But Sarkissian’s flair for diplomacy — he went on to open half a dozen embassies across Europe — earned him enough respect at home that he was invited in 1996 to become Armenia’s prime minister. Sarkissian laid the foundations of the country’s intelligence services and advanced a radical proposition intended to dissolve old animosities in the solvent of commerce: an oil pipeline from Azerbaijan to Turkey running through Armenia. His tenure, however, ended before he could sell the idea to his counterparts in Baku and Ankara.

A year into the job, en route to Yerevan from a meeting in Washington, Sarkissian made a quick stop in London to conclude negotiations on an outstanding deal with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The chairman of the bank, Jacques de Larosière, an old friend, was alarmed by the amount of weight Sarkissian had shed since their last meeting. “Armen,” de Larosière said, “I will sign this deal only if you get yourself checked up.”

The next morning, Sarkissian was diagnosed with advanced cancer. Armenia was newly independent and required stability. So Sarkissian kept the news of his illness to himself and scheduled chemotherapy around his work. One evening, however, he spied his son keeping a watchful eye on him while he received treatment — a scene that instantly exhumed memories of his own harrowing childhood, when he had seen cancer devour his father. Sarkissian immediately made arrangements for a handover. He resigned, moved to London and began intensive therapy.

Upon his recovery, he deployed his skills as a scientist and mathematician to build a lucrative career as a private businessman during the telecoms revolution. He also did stints in between as Armenia’s ambassador to the UK — making him one of the longest-serving representatives of any country to London. He returned so frequently to the post that Queen Elizabeth branded him “the champion of all ambassadors.”

What makes Sarkissian seem indispensable to many Armenians today is his deft handling of the Velvet Revolution — an upheaval that ranks second only to the war in the Armenian pantheon of recent political turmoil. In the spring of 2018, hundreds of thousands of protesters poured into the capital. Led by Nikol Pashinyan, then an anti-corruption activist and parliamentarian, they demanded the resignation of Armenia’s longtime president, Serzh Sargsyan. Barred by law from a third term, Sargsyan had rewritten the constitution in 2015, transferred executive power to the prime ministership, and engineered his election to the newly empowered office when his presidential term ended in 2018.

The brazenness of the power grab provoked a mass uprising. Everybody expected tanks to roll into the capital, as they had a decade before. It was Sarkissian, according to supporters of the revolution, who averted a massacre. “Without him, we would have had a repeat of 2008, when tanks were brought to the center of Yerevan and ten people were killed,” says Arman Babajanyan, an independent lawmaker who participated in the Velvet Revolution.

Sarkissian, sounded out for the presidency in the hope that he would endow an ornamental office with gravitas and dignity, had repeatedly spurned the offer. But the requests intensified — and with them the promise to let him steer Armenia’s foreign policy. He relented in 2018. Sworn into office just days before the protests erupted, the new president announced to his staff one morning that he was going for a stroll to Republic Square, the beating heart of the revolution. His advisers and security balked at the idea; they could not protect him from the crowd outside.

“Maintaining peace and preventing violence were my highest obligations to my nation,” Sarkissian tells me. “It would have been a cowardly abdication of my duties had I stayed in the palace.” Accompanied by a pair of guards, he emerged into streets awash in almost a quarter of a million people. Armenians at home watched in disbelief. Souren Zohrabyan, one of the country’s most respected bankers and a fervent early supporter of the revolution, remembers his elderly mother breaking down in tears upon seeing Sarkissian on the television. “This sort of thing just never happened in our history,” he says. As Sarkissian inched his way up to Pashinyan, the muted jeers that had greeted Sarkissian intensified into loud cheers.

The Velvet Revolution had sought to uproot an entrenched oligarchic order in a small nation. Its success depended on more than fury on the streets. It required also the assent of power brokers at home and the acquiescence of great powers abroad. If the old guard believed that Sarkissian would protect their interests, they were disappointed. Sarkissian returned to his office and worked the phones. He reached out to the head of the Armenian church, held talks with the Europeans and the Americans, and conducted delicate diplomacy with the Kremlin, which had profound misgivings about uprisings in its backyard.

Sarkissian’s aides tell me that the president, frustrated by the ancien regime’s refusal to accept reality, threatened to resign if order was not restored before Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, observed each year on April 24. That ultimatum paid off. Sargsyan quit days later, and Pashinyan was elected to the prime minister’s office within a week — all without any loss of life. The Velvet Revolution was not preordained to be peaceful. It was Sarkissian’s intervention that kept the peace.

Armenians tell the cautionary tale of the warrior who slays the dragon and then becomes the dragon. Pashinyan, having mobilized the masses against the accumulation of executive powers in the prime minister’s office, quietly inherited those powers. The promise of constitutional reform implicit in the revolution he spearheaded has fallen by the wayside. It is too early to call the prime minister an authoritarian — he governs with a legitimate democratic mandate — but even his loyal aides concede that he is inimical to deliberation, allergic to opinions that contradict his own and that he has incrementally concentrated decision making in his own office.

It may well be that Pashinyan is motivated more by the desire to be an effective administrator than by the impulse to drape himself in power. But the practical consequences of Pashinyan’s failure to prioritize constitutional reform, and his unwillingness to devolve power to other branches of the government, proved disastrous for Armenia during the war. When I interviewed him last year, Pashinyan described the war to me as an “existential threat” to Armenia. Yet his insistence on being the sole decider of the response to that threat on every front, military to diplomatic, did not serve his country well. His skill at dislodging the old regime did not translate into wartime leadership. A tenacious domestic street fighter, he simply lacked the dexterity to marshal international support for Armenia or negotiate with foreign powers.

Might the outcome have been different, Armenian officials and sympathetic observers abroad wonder, had Pashinyan put forward his nation’s most valuable diplomatic asset to press Yerevan’s cause at the negotiating table in Russia? Preserving the sovereignty of Armenia, an ancient civilization marooned by covetous powers, has always required a command of statecraft that, not to put too fine a point on it, the prime minister does not possess. As a foreign diplomat in a neighboring country who watches Armenia closely and interacts with its leadership explained to me:

Pashinyan is an exceptional figure in world politics for what he has achieved in this part of the world. He is sincere and idealistic, but he can be incredibly persistent and stubborn. Sarkissian is in a different league. He’s a scientist. He’s a capitalist, but he didn’t have his fingers in the pie here. He made his fortune by working hard in the West, a Soviet Thatcherite who wants to turn Armenia into the Israel of the Caucasus. He cultivated really strong relationships as a diplomat. With the exception of Erdogan and Aliyev and maybe Imran Khan, he can get a meeting with almost any world leader. For a tiny country, that is a huge asset. He was just not utilized during the war. He tried to do his best — he reached out to everybody — but he was sidelined and constrained within Armenia. The prime minister ran the show. And it was, I am sorry to say, a disaster from start to finish. Sarkissian’s office had no real authority. If he had had a say in how the war was run and how the peace was negotiated, I can confidently say that country would not be suffering so much today.

Voters in towns and villages in Armenia lamented to me that their president was not on the ballot at the last election. This perhaps explains the reluctance of Pashinyan, a once assertive leader now submerged in insecurity, to grant greater powers to the presidency via constitutional amendment. Sarkissian, for his part, is maximizing the minuscule authority vested in his office. Between consoling families of the fallen — and of those taken captive by the Azeris — his hours are devoted to forging new relationships abroad and luring innovators and investors to Armenia.

Last autumn, Sarkissian convened the third Summit of Minds, a two-day conference modeled on Davos that drew foreign politicians and business titans to the spa town of Dilijan, as part of his program to turn Armenia into a major destination. A day after the summit, he flew to Saudi Arabia, where he was received with full ceremony by Prince Mohammad bin Salman, the de facto ruler of the kingdom. The visit was made historic by virtue of the not unimportant fact that Saudi Arabia and Armenia do not have diplomatic relations. It was another example of Sarkissian using his extensive personal friendships cultivated as a private businessman to the benefit of his beleaguered country.

Perhaps the only head of state who is also a scientist, Sarkissian has embarked on an ambitious initiative to foster a technological revolution at home. The physical foundations of his plan are being laid just outside Yerevan at Advanced Tomorrow (ATOM), a cyber and scientific innovation hub comparable to Israel’s start-up village Yokneam Illit and Bangalore’s Electronic City. He spent the winter touring the Middle East, Europe and Asia to sell the idea to heads of state and investors.

Cajoling major IT and tech companies to help develop global centers of mathematical modeling, AI and machine learning inside Armenia has been relatively easy: the Armenian diaspora, one of the most prosperous and influential in the world, has been eager to help. The true difficulty lay in convincing Yerevan to tear down the obstructions that exist purely to create an unfair advantage for Armenia’s tiny ruling elite, who preside over a maze of regulations designed to protect them from competition from diaspora Armenians.

Sarkissian’s conception of “nation” extends beyond the frontiers of Armenia to encompass the global Armenian community. What is today Armenia was, after all, once marginal to Armenian life, which flourished in lands now held by Turkey. The Armenian identity — its literature, culture, cuisine, lore — was developed outside Armenia. Historically, Armenians built and administered other people’s countries for them. Constantinople’s most revered architect, for instance, was an Armenian — as was the founder of the Turkish political theater. Today, however, such expertise cannot be put to Armenia’s aid. For one of the requirements for service in government is uninterrupted residence in Armenia for several years.

Sarkissian is aghast that all his outreach to draw talent to Armenia is in the end frustrated by “absurd and meaningless regulations.” A luminary of the diaspora such as Noubar Afeyan, the founder of Moderna, must spend a minimum of five years living exclusively in Armenia before he can quality for service in the Armenian government. Yerevan would like his vaccines and philanthropy, but not his skill or service. “Armenia is a small country, but a global nation,” Sarkissian tells me. “And this pettiness is depriving future generations of Armenians. It’s madness.” Opening up the government to the diaspora is among the constitutional reforms Sarkissian is championing.

By convention, changes to the constitution take effect only when a new president is sworn in. Sarkissian has just over three years left in his seven-year term of office. Armenia, by his own admission, cannot afford to wait that long. So is Sarkissian willing to resign in order to expedite the implementation of the reforms? “Being the president of Armenia has been the greatest honor of my life,” he says. “But I did not accept this job to feel honored. I accepted it to serve Armenia. And I will not stay in it a second longer if it means impeding Armenia’s progress.”

Kapil Komireddi is the author of Malevolent Republic: A Short History of the New India.

Armenian family cooking meets fashion in Nensi Avetisian’s mouthwatering SS22 campaign

The Calvert Journal
Jan 4 2022



Armenian family cooking meets fashion in Nensi Avetisian's mouth watering SS22 campaign
4 January 2022
Text: Masha Borodacheva

Who: Moscow-based fashion designer Nensi Avetisian and her sister, experimental confectioner Bella Avetisian. Working together, they’ve reproduced some of Nensi’s avant-garde works in edible form, creating what they call The Tasty Series.


What: Launched as part of Nensi Avetisian’s SS22 campaign, The Tasty Series is the sisters’ first collaborative effort. Drawing inspiration from their Armenian heritage, the pair sampled patterns and textures from beloved family dishes, and transformed them into fashion-forward artworks.

 
 

The results see rosehip tea transformed into a jelly that imitates Nensi Avetisian’s SS22 mesh dress, a honey puff pastry handbag, and toffee caramel decorated with crystals of salt to resemble the geometry of Nensi’s signature structured tote.

What they say: “Some pieces from the SS22 collection were actually inspired by Armenian local food and our family recipes,” Nensi Avetisian told The Calvert Journal. She sees The Tasty Series first and foremost as a “celebration of sisterhood and love”. “I’m not really into cooking, and Bella and I try to divide our professional duties and not to interfere with each other’s work. But during holidays, we cook together with the family for fun. Bella researched our family recipes and modernised them into modern desserts that would imitate SS22 pieces. Her job was to merge the distinctive features of the brand, to modernise it, while saving the actual recipe with the original taste.”

 

What makes it different: Bella and Nensi’s work merges conscious handmade craftsmanship and technology in a bid to make people think about the clothes they wear — and break the spell of reckless consumerism. While some items from the SS22 campaign are produced with the help of 3D models, others, including the mesh dress, are 100 per cent handmade, and can take up to seven days to create.

 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has criticized Biden over the Armenian Genocide Declaration

Tittle Press
Jan 4 2021

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on April 26 condemned US President Joe Biden’s recognition of the Armenian genocide, saying the move would have a “devastating effect” on relations between the two countries.

Speaking on television after the cabinet meeting, Erdogan pointed to the deaths of millions of Native Americans and told Biden to “look in the mirror” before accusing the Turkish nation of genocide.

“You cannot stand up and label the Turkish nation as genocide,” Erdogan said in his first keynote address.

On April 24, Biden became the first US president to use the word genocide in his official statement to describe the massacre and deportation of Armenians in the last days of the Ottoman Empire during World War I. This date marks the anniversary of the gathering in Istanbul on April 24, 1915, of thousands of Armenian intellectuals suspected of hostility to the Ottoman government.

Previous US administrations have refrained from using the term genocide for decades to avoid provoking Turkey, a NATO ally and important regional power.

However, Biden felt an opportunity to “historically acknowledge what happened in 1915” on the basis of “deep respect for the importance of universal human rights,” US Ambassador to Armenia Lynn Tracy told RFE / RL’s Armenian Service. April 26.

Describing Biden’s position as “baseless and contradictory,” Erdogan reiterated Turkey’s position that the issue should be left to historians, not politicians. For years, Turkey has said it will open its archives to a joint history commission to address the problem.

“We believe that these comments were included in the declaration after pressure from radical Armenian groups and anti-Turkish circles. However, this situation does not reduce the destructive impact of these comments,” Erdogan said.

He added that he would meet with Biden during the NATO summit in June to discuss “opening a new door” in relations.

“Now we need to look at what steps we can take towards the future. Otherwise, we will have no choice but to implement the policy required by the new low level, which has sunk our relations. “

Tense US-Turkish relations

Biden’s statement comes at a time when relations between Turkey and the United States are already strained over Ankara’s purchase of the S-400 missile system from Russia, US relations with Kurdish forces in Syria, which Turkey considers to be linked to Kurdish militants, and more. .

Erdogan also criticized the United States for failing to resolve the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh, mediated by the United States, Russia and France, and said Washington was on the side of the massacres.

“Unfortunately, more than 1 million Azerbaijani brothers have been expelled from Karabakh. All of Karabakh has been burned and destroyed, ”he said, referring to the displacement that took place about 30 years ago.

Turkey last year backed Azerbaijan in the conflict in which it reclaimed part of its territory in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, which Azerbaijan lost to ethnic Armenian forces in the early 1990s.

Combining Turkey’s view of history, Erdogan later described numerous “Armenian lies” and criticized the West for “double standards.”

During and immediately after World War I, Armenians and many historians say that about 1.5 million Armenians were killed in what Armenians called the “Great Crime.” Armenians have documented massacres, robberies, rapes of women, looting of property and other atrocities.

As the successor to the Ottoman Empire, Turkey, as a state, protested against the use of the word genocide, saying that hundreds of thousands of Muslims in Anatolia at that time died of war, famine, cold and disease.

Turkey’s official position is that the Armenian revolutionaries formed the fifth column allied with Russia during the First World War, and that the mass deportations and accompanying deaths of Armenians were not premeditated or deliberate. Turkey estimates that several hundred thousand Armenians died.

“Mass graves of Turks killed in our country can be found, but Armenian mass graves can not be found anywhere,” Erdogan said.

“One million Turks and Kurds are said to have been killed by Armenian gangs. April 24 is the day of the arrest of the leaders of the Armenian gangs [in Istanbul]. In fact, nothing has happened today in terms of human tragedy, “Erdogan said.

Erdogan also said that in the last decades and years of the Ottoman Empire, about 10 million ethnic Turks and Muslims were killed or expelled from the Balkans and the Caucasus due to Western-backed ethnic nationalism and Russian expansion.

“Half of our nation comes from exile,” he said. “As Turkey, we never try to use our pain.”

AP, TRT Haber, Anadolu Agency and Yeni Şafak report

Fix is In: Israeli Arms Maker Attacks Armenia to Sell Drones, Mossad and Judges Help Hide the Mess

Tikun Olam תיקון עולם

Breaking news on the Israeli national security state

Jan 3 2022

Back in 2017, I published a story under Israeli gag order about the Israeli drone manufacturer, Aeronautics, whose executives were panting to sell tens of millions of dollars of their military drones Azerbaijan.  Yossi Melman broke the initial story.  But to this day, he cannot say which Israeli company was involved, nor which country was interested in buying the drones.

Aeronautics Aerostar drone sold to Azerbaijan which attacked Armenia

So Aeronautics sent its drone pilots and top executives to that country to seal the deal.  But there was one major hitch: the Azeri military high command demanded a demonstration of the drone’s capability.  But they didn’t want just any demonstration, they wanted it to actually attack an Armenian army position in contested Nagorno-Karabakh to see how effective it would be in a real battle situation.

The Israeli drone operators were horrified.  They were prepared to teach Azeri army officers how to operate the drones, but actually attacking the Armenian army was not what they signed up for.  So they balked, then refused outright.  Then a strange thing happened.  As I mentioned, Aeronautics were chomping at the bit. They would do anything to get the deal done.  So one of its top executives on the scene himself flew the drone and attacked the Armenians.  He even donned an Azeri military uniform to do so.  Luckily, none of their troops were hurt.

Amos Matan, Aeronautics CEO who fell on his sword, forced out after Azerbaijan debacle

When they returned to Israel, the drone techs reported the incident to police and defense ministry officials, who began an immediate investigation.  The defense ministry revoked Aeronautics export license.  The company CEO was forced out (he’d also been accused of insider trading).  It seemed that someone directly responsible for this cockamamie idea would be held accountable.

However, anyone who believed the company itself would suffer any punishment was under the false impression that Israel observes the rule of law.  Actually, it observes the rule of the military-political elite.  Behind the scenes, the outcome was fixed by a hidden hand.  As Melman notes, among the company’s executives were Omri Sharon and Eitay Ashkenazi (sons respectively of Ariel Sharon and former IDF chief of staff, Gabi Ashkenazi), former IAF commander, Eitan Ben Eliyahu, and former Israeli Navy chief, Yedidya Yaari.  That’s more than enough firepower to sink a battleship…or derail a criminal investigation.

Their first stop was the district court, where they sought and received a gag order from a pliant judiciary always amenable to the needs of the military-intelligence apparatus.  The hearing was, of course, in a closed court. the better to suppress this embarrassing episode.  Melman and his attorney appeared in court to object to the gag order.  But they were excluded from the hearing, lest they offer convincing evidence that all the actors, in what the reporter called this “theater of the absurd,” were engaged in a sham.  All this prevented either Melman or any other Israeli reporter from exposing the scandal except in broad, vague terms.  Which is the reason I published my own story here.

It also didn’t hurt that both the Mossad and IDF special forces unit offered a legal brief claiming that exposing the incident in the media would harm Israel’s national security. How revealing that an Israeli weapons dealer engaged in an act of war against a foreign nation with whom Israel was not at war, was given protected status.  In addition, the Azeri defense minister visited Israel, where the concerns of his leadership over the scandal were a top issue:

Perhaps the most important factor behind [Defense Minister] Hasanov’s trip, however, was was Israeli Aeronautics Defense Systems’ (ADS) decision to temporarily block the Orbitier-K1 drone deal with Azerbaijan. ADS specifically froze the deal following reported allegations that the company’s operators, under Baku’s request, had tested new drones over Armenian targets in the Karabakh conflict zone.

Hasanov avowed that the military-intelligence collaboration of both states would be harmed by such media reporting. Melman adds that state media, under the thumb of corrupt dictator, Ilhan Aliyev, also insulted and reviled him personally, calling him an Armenian agent.  Aliyev also threatened to disrupt mutual relations unless the indictments were quashed.

Only two weeks after Aeronautics export license was reinstated, it signed a $13-million deal to maintain drones it had already sold to Azerbaijan.  These weapons and other drones sold to the country by Elbit systems played a key role in the 2020 was against Armenia, giving it a decisive edge in the fighting.  This is yet another example of Israel’s massive arms export industry fueling conflict around the global.  The Jerusalem Post article reporting Aeronautics sale was ordered removed under the aforementioned gag order.  But a copy is cached by Google and linked above.

There are other geo-strategic reasons for the military-intelligence apparatus to treat this case gingerly.  Azerbaijan borders Iran and Israel uses its territory to maintain listening posts and other intelligence assets to spy on the Iranians.  The Azeris have even set aside an entire military airfield for Israeli use.  I’ve written as well that an Israeli company announced it would build a “smart city” in the Azeri countryside bordering Iran.  My strong suspicion is this is a cover for developing further surveillance facilities in Israel’s ongoing efforts to maintain a close eye on Iran’s military and nuclear infrastructure.

Returning to the Aeronautics case, the fix was in.  All the stars were aligned to suppress this sordid episode and prevent the average Israeli from hearing about the atrocious behavior of its weapons industry.  But a funny thing happened on the way to Baku, Israel’s state prosecutor defied the odds and the powers-that-be and filed indictments against Aeronautics and three of its senior executives.  In this case, the decision validated democratic values and the rule of law. Of course, it remains to be seen whether justice will be done and these officials get the punishment they deserve.  It’s quite possible they will never be fully prosecuted.

But the four years in which Melman valiantly fought against the security services’ censor on behalf of transparency took their toll on his belief in the system.  He notes that in his numerous appearances before Israeli judges in hearings in which he was seeking the removal of a gag order, he faced judges famed for their liberal humane values; and right-wing judges.  All to a person shared the same approach: when the security apparatus said “jump,” they responded: “how high?”  They stood ramrod straight and saluted before the representatives of state power.

They did this not only in this particular instance, but in almost every other one related to Israeli military affairs. When human rights attorney Eitay Mack asked the Supreme Court to stop Israel from arming genocidal regimes like Myanmar, South Sudan or the Philipines, and corrupt dictatorships like Azerbaijan, Rwanda, Uganda, and Saudi Arabia, the response was always the same: who are we judges to second guess the generals and intelligence chiefs?  Not only did they reject Mack’s appeals, they slapped a gag order on their own decision so the Israeli public would not know that the judiciary had ratified Israel’s collaboration with genocide.

Melman goes even farther: he accuses Israel of being held hostage by its own version of the Deep State:

…In Israel, this dubious title is worthy of the defense establishment, which operates as a state within a state and does almost as much as it pleases, without effective parliamentary oversight, and with close cooperation and the helping hand of the judiciary. This combined pincer movement exhausts the few who are still willing to fight for justice, human rights and morality and against injustice. I, too, feel exhausted and struggling as Don Quixote tilting at the windmills. I have lost the desire to petition in the courts again. But perhaps I’ll try one more time.

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Silverstein has published Tikun Olam since 2003, It exposes the secrets of the Israeli national security state. He lives in Seattle, but his heart is in the east. He publishes regularly at Middle East Eye and Jacobin Magazine. His work has also appeared in Al Jazeera English, The Nation, Truthout and other outlets.

https://www.richardsilverstein.com/2022/01/03/the-fix-is-in-when-israeli-security-apparatus-messes-up-judges-help-clean-up-the-mess/