Armenia ex-PM: Average annual growth is only 2.4% under premier Pashinyan

News.am, Armenia
Jan 3 2022

Last year was unsuccessful. The economic decline in 2020 was 7.8%, this year the growth will be 5-5.5% at best—if there will be, of course—, and the growth is mainly due to the mining and gaming. And what these authorities were complaining about, they now have become the drivers of economic growth in Armenia. Former PM, chairman of the opposition Freedom Party, and economist Hrant Bagratyan told about this to Armenian News-NEWS.am—referring to the 2021 economic indicators of the country.

"As a result of the four years of [incumbent PM Nikol] Pashinyan's rule, the gross economic growth will make 9-9.5%. We have a 7.2% growth, a 5.8 [%], then a 7.8% decline, and a 5% growth. If we divide this by four years, we will get only 2.35-2.4% growth annually. This is the worst indicator during the last seven four years; there is nothing to talk about here.

Not to mention that the mining industry, which has become 20% in industry, whereas 5% in the GDP balance, should be excluded from that growth. The mines [of Armenia] are being looted, mined without oversight, the prices of copper are relatively high, and the miners are constantly extracting and taking the ore, paying only pennies to the state budget, which I simply call looting.

And not counting that the sphere of gaming should be removed from that growth, the growth of which in the GDP made 30%, when the annual GDP grows on average 2.4%, the sphere of gaming—30%. The share of gaming in the GDP [of Armenia] is higher than in the healthcare, education sectors—which is unacceptable. People close to the prime minister control the sphere of gaming, and, sadly, this field is flourishing in Armenia (…).

When 4-5 years ago the sphere of gaming was nothing in the GDP, now it has surpassed a number of important branches, and this structural change is a consequence of poor economic policy. Even during [preceding] Serzh Sargsyan's rule, when it was the worst, too, his average annual growth was 2.7[%], whereas in the last four years—2.4[%].

The construction sector has grown by about 6% this year, and those who say that construction is one of the drivers of economic growth [in Armenia] are lying. Compared to that, the mining industry is growing by 20%, the gaming—by 30%," said the former premier.

Armenia ex-premier: Opening of regional communications will not give much to our economy

News.am, Armenia
Jan 3 2022

I am very sad that [Deputy Prime Minister] Mher Grigoryan negotiated badly. It was strategically important for Armenia to open the line leading to Gazakh—the Yerevan-Sevan-Dilijan-Ijevan- Gazakh—because it would have opened faster, required less cost, and it would have been shorter for both us and them, whereas the opening of communications will not give much to our economy. Former PM of Armenia, chairman of the opposition Freedom Party, and economist Hrant Bagratyan told about this to Armenian News-NEWS.am—and referring to the announcements on the opening of regional communications and, in particular, on the reopening of the Yerevan-Julfa-Ordubad-Meghri-Horadiz railway.

"For a long time I do not believe that it will happen, as I do not think that there will be [the Armenian-Azerbaijani border] delimitation and demarcation; it will never happen, they will not do [it]. Turkey has recognized our borders with the borders of the Soviet [Union], whereas the other one, Azerbaijan, will not recognize [it] because it would mean recognizing that this land is of Armenia. They will generally say 'delimitation, peace treaty' and will not sign.

Their trains will go to Nakhichevan. We do not think we will be able to send a train; let's see, time will tell. But it will not give us anything special. Trade with Turkey is essential, but we have it today, too; that trade has nothing to do with this railway. We do not and cannot even have trade with Azerbaijan. It is not that Armenia can bring a large amount of oil products from Azerbaijan tomorrow (…)

The opening of [regional] communications in trade with Turkey may give a benefit of $10-15 million, in general, a $60-65-million benefit for Armenia’s economy. But that, too, is relative because transportation through Georgia will be reduced, and we will see how Georgia will react [to this]. If they start restoring that part of the railway, it will take three years," Bagratyan said.

Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan had stated that about $200 million will be required to restore the 45-kilometer section of the Yerevan-Julfa-Ordubad-Meghri-Horadiz railway passing through Armenia. According to Bagratyan, the state budget of Armenia will enable to restore that part of the railway through Armenia’s Meghri, but in that case, for example, pensions will not be increased in the country.

"Next year they are going to increase their pensions a little; they have already made a fuss. But in 2021, the pensioners have lived in conditions of a 10-15% increase in food prices. If you increase pensions by 10% next year, those people will live still 5% worse. There is no increase in income, although they admit that poverty has reached from 26.4% to 27%, although it was 23% before [their] coming to power," said the former prime minister.

Turkish press: Georgia will not attend 3+3 Caucasus platform in Turkey: Envoy

Georgia's Ambassador to Turkey George Janjgava speaking to Daily Sabah in Ankara, Turkey, May 24, 2019. (Daily Sabah Photo)

Georgia will not participate in the next 3+3 Caucasus platform meeting to be held in Turkey, the country’s Ambassador to Turkey George Janjgava said Monday.

“Georgia will definitely not attend the 3+3 meeting,” Janjgava told Daily Sabah.

Ankara has made frequent calls for a six-nation platform comprising of Turkey, Russia, Iran, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia for permanent peace, stability and cooperation in the region, describing it as a win-win initiative for all regional actors in the Caucasus.

Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, on the sidelines of the recent Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) meeting in Islamabad, said that Turkey hopes Georgia will also attend the upcoming meeting.

Turkey believes that permanent peace is possible through mutual security-based cooperation between the states and people of the South Caucasus region.

Russia last month hosted the inaugural meeting of the regional platform. However, Tbilisi refuses to attend, citing Russian aggression towards the ex-Soviet nation.

Still, Georgia supports enhanced relations and cooperation in the region with other neighboring countries. It has taken effective steps with Turkey, Azerbaijan and Armenia to ensure lasting peace in the region, the country's prime minister said last month.

"It is extremely important for us to establish lasting peace in the region," Irakli Garibashvili said during the online Conference of Ambassadors.

Janjgava underlined that Georgia sees both Turkey and Azerbaijan as “our strategic partners” and views Armenia as a "historical and good neighbor" in a neighborhood also home to Iran.

“But Russia is a country which is occupying 20% of Georgian territory,” the ambassador strongly emphasized.

Diplomatic ties between Russia and Georgia, which aspires to join the European Union and NATO, collapsed after Moscow occupied two of the latter's territories in a conflict and recognized the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, where Russian troops are now garrisoned. Most of the world, however, continues to consider them as part of Georgia.

Europe's top human rights court earlier last year found Russia responsible for a swath of violations in these regions after the 2008 Russia-Georgia war.

The Strasbourg-based court ruled that Russia exercised effective control over Georgia's separatist regions after the hostilities and that it was responsible for ill-treatment and acts of torture against Georgian prisoners of war, arbitrary detentions of the people and "inhuman and degrading treatment” of 160 detained Georgian civilians, who were held in crowded confinement for more than two weeks in August 2008.

Turkey and Azerbaijan proposed the Caucasus platform following last year's Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a decadeslong dispute over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which lies within Azerbaijan but was under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

Moscow brokered a peace deal last November to end six weeks of fighting over the territory, during which more than 6,600 people were killed.

Armenia’s CSTO chairmanship: What priorities, challenges, and prospects lie ahead for 2022

TASS, Russia
Jan 1 2022
This year, the organization will celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Treaty on Collective Security and the 20th anniversary of its current formation

MOSCOW, January 1. /TASS/. Armenia will take the chairmanship reins of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), a post-Soviet security bloc, in 2022.

Yerevan was formally handed CSTO chairmanship from Tajikistan at the organization’s session in September 2021, and will pass the baton to Belarus in late 2022.

The member states – Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan – chair the organization in turn, according to alphabetical order.

The secretary-general is appointed for three years (regardless of the country’s chairmanship), while the Permanent Council is led by a representative of the state that holds the chairmanship in rotation. Armenia’s Permanent Representative to the CSTO Viktor Biyagov assumed this post, while the country’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan became the Chairman of the CSTO Collective Security Council.

This year, the CSTO will celebrate two anniversaries – the 30th anniversary of the Treaty on Collective Security and the 20th anniversary of the current organization’s formation. CSTO Secretary-General Stanislav Zas earlier said the key challenges were the escalating presence of NATO’s forces approaching the CSTO’s western borders as well as the complicated and unpredictable situation in Afghanistan. According to him, Afghanistan could see a wider armed standoff, stepped-up activity by terrorist organizations, a surge in drug trafficking and mounting uncontrolled migration.

Turkish-Armenian writer facing deportation after Greece arrest, says wife

Jan 2 2022
by GCT

A distinguished Turkish-Armenian writer living under a temporary permit in Greece after fleeing a Turkish prison has been arrested and faces deportation, his wife said yesterday.

Sevan Nisanyan, a 66-year-old linguist and blogger, was detained on the island of Samos on Thursday after Greek authorities refused to renew his residence permit, his wife Ira Tzourou said on Facebook and Twitter.

A Samos court tomorrow is to decide whether he will be deported to Turkey or Armenia, she said.

Nisanyan had been jailed in Turkey in 2014 on charges of illegal construction, a case he claims was punishment for his outspoken views about restrictions on freedom of _expression_ in the country.

He escaped from a low-security prison in 2017 and pursued asylum in Greece.

Nisanyan had also previously been convicted in Turkey of blasphemy over a 2012 blog defending an anti-Islam film that ridiculed the Prophet Mohammed and sparked angry protests across the world.

Greek courts usually refuse to extradite to Turkey persons who say they face persecution for their views in the neighbouring country

Armenia lifts embargo on goods from Turkey, advancing thaw in relations

Middle East Monitor
Jan 2 2022

The Armenian government has announced that it is lifting its embargo on Turkish goods from the beginning of 2022, marking a new step in the thawing of relations between the two countries.

Armenia's economy ministry made the announcement in a Facebook post on Thursday, stating that "as a result of interdepartmental discussions, a decision was made not to extend the embargo on Turkish goods."

The embargo was imposed by Armenia due to Turkey's support of Azerbaijan during the six-week-long conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh towards the end of 2020. Since Baku's victory and subsequent internal political instability within Yerevan, however, the latter is now attempting to reconcile with Ankara and relations are being restored.

According to the ministry's statement, it is not only the revival of ties which necessitate the lifting of the embargo, but also the fact that Armenia has struggled economically with the lack of Turkish goods into the country.

READ: Exports are Turkey's means to tackle the sharp currency decline

Although it has resulted in "newly-established or expanded [domestic Armenian] production…the main negative effect of the embargo is the significant impact on inflation, which has been reflected especially in a number of consumer goods. There are many requests from our businessmen to lift the ban on the import of Turkish goods."

It added that the government expects backlash from the new players in the Armenian industries due to the return of Turkish goods, but assured that the authorities will maintain "the viability and competitiveness of such companies in the new conditions, assisting them with additional tools if necessary."

In mid-December, Turkey and Armenia agreed to appoint special envoys to each other's countries, advancing the normalisation process.

The reset in Turkish-Armenian relations is set to enable more than just the lifting of the embargo, with the reopening of the border between the two countries and the start of chartered flights between Yerevan and Istanbul also being enabled.

Earlier this week, the Turkish foreign minister announced that the bilateral talks will be held in Russia.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20220102-armenia-lifts-embargo-on-goods-from-turkey-advancing-thaw-in-relations/

Armenian physicists develop compact, non-invasive and easy-to-use breathing apparatus

News.am, Armenia
Jan 2 2022

Armenian physicists are developing a compact, non-invasive and easy-to-use breathing apparatus that can be used at home for patients at the initial stage of coronavirus infection, when the lungs are not yet severely affected and the patient can breathe on his own.

The Institute for Applied Problems of Physics (IPPF) of the National Academy of Sciences was among five applicants to win a grant from the Armenian Ministry of High-Tech Industry in April 2020 to support efforts to combat coronavirus.

A group of physicists led by Grant Khachatryan, Ph.D. in Physics and Mathematics, within the framework of a grant worth 2 million drams, created a laboratory sample of the apparatus, developed a special computer program, and is currently assembling the first prototype that can be put into production, if, of course, clinical trials meet the expectations of scientists.

Turkish-Armenian linguist Nişanyan arrested in Greece, facing deportation

Jan 1 2022

Greek police have arrested Turkish-Armenian author and linguist Sevan Nişanyan, who sought asylum in Greece four years ago, his wife announced on Twitter, saying the intellectual was facing deportation.

Nişanyan, whose residence permit was not renewed by Greece and subsequently declared “persona non grata" by Athens last month, was taken into Greek police custody on Thursday and will face a judge on Monday, Ira Tzourou said on Saturday.

Sixty-six-year-old Nisanyan has been living in Greece for the past four years after fleeing a Turkish prison, where he was serving a prison sentence on charges of violating  zoning laws, among other charges.

A Turkish court in 2014 sentenced Nisanyan to 17 years in prison on nine separate counts, including 13 months for insulting the Prophet Mohammed and more than eight years for violating zoning laws. Three years later, the author and linguist announced on Twitter that he had escaped to neighbouring Greece.

A Greek court on Monday will decide where Nişanyan will be deported, his wife said.

Nişanyan is recognised for his etymological Turkish dictionary and travel guides. The linguist become a controversial figure in Turkey after publishing a book entitled "The Wrong Republic,” which questioned taboos about the Turkish Republic and its founder, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. 

Armenian year-long ban on importing Turkish goods lifted

Jan 1 2022

The Armenian government announced that it would end its ban on the importation of Turkish goods that Yerevan implemented in response to Turkey’s support of Azerbaijan in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s RFE/RL Armenian Service reported on Thursday.

“A decision was made not to extend the embargo on the import of Turkish goods into the country,” the Armenian Economy Ministry announced on Facebook.

The ban will be lifted on Saturday, New Year’s Day.

It was first imposed back in Dec. 31, 2020 for six months. However, in June 2021 it was extended for an additional six months.

The Economy Ministry told RFE/RL over two weeks ago that a draft decision for extending the ban was in the works but ultimately never made it onto the government agenda.

The Armenian government’s last cabinet meeting took place on Thursday. Following that meeting, the Economy Ministry released a statement revealing that interdepartmental discussions had ended with a decision not to extend the import embargo.

“We have received many statements and requests to lift the ban on the import of Turkish goods,” read a ministry statement.

Turkey gave extensive political and military support to Azerbaijan during the 2020 conflict, during which Baku reclaimed large parts of the Nagorno-Karabakh region from Armenia. Turkish-built Bayraktar TB2 drones supplied to the Azerbaijani military played a decisive role against Armenian ground forces in that conflict.

Last June, when announcing the extension of the import ban, Armenian Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan said that Turkish imports since the imposition of the first ban dropped by about 70 percent. And while the import of raw materials continued almost no finished products were imported from Turkey during that period.

Armenia and Azerbaijan: UN Court of Justice Faces Hate Speech for the First Time | International

Market Research Telecast
Jan 1 2022

The International Court of Justice of the UN (TIJ), based in The Hague, has raised its voice in the face of the phenomenon of hate speech after Armenia and Azerbaijan, neighboring countries and at odds in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, requested the adoption of emergency measures for alleged violations of the other side of the UN treaty that prohibits racial discrimination. The last military escalation between the two countries, at the end of last year, cost the lives of more than 5,000 people. The cessation of hostilities signed between the parties included the deployment of 2,000 Russian soldiers as peacekeepers in the enclave.

Insults between Armenians and Azerbaijanis have become a major component of lawsuits brought before international justice. Terms such as “barbarians”, “animals” or “fascists” appear in the allegations of both countries. The judges of the highest judicial instance of the United Nations have ordered both parties, in a provisional order of the 7th, unparalleled in the court’s history, to prevent racial hatred while they review the case.

Hate speech, which flourishes both in democratic societies and in authoritarian regimes, threatens human rights by promoting discrimination and racism and undermines the legitimate exercise of freedom of _expression_. Aired in political harangues or on social media, they create an atmosphere of intolerance that can incite violence. Although the court has no power to enforce these injunctions, they are binding on the litigants. Hence its strength, but also its limitations. In this case, the judges did not distinguish between the expletives of Armenians or Azerbaijanis, but demanded – unanimously – the application of provisions to stop the incitement and promotion of racial hatred.

“It is the first time that the court has issued such clear precautionary measures on this matter. It is not just that this speech is illegal. It also creates the necessary climate for other abuses or violations to take place. It will be difficult for the parties to comply with everything ordered to its final consequences, but it is to be expected that the tone of the public discourse will be lowered, ”says, in a telephone conversation, Asier Garrido Muñoz, professor of Public International Law at the University of La Haya for Applied Sciences.

Among the examples invoked in this case are the words of the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, to refer to the Armenians. He has called them “bandits,” “vandals,” “fascists,” “barbarians,” “infidels in black clothes,” “enemies,” and “cowardly in nature,” as well as “animals.” For its part, the Armenian state news agency, ArmenPress, writes that the Azerbaijanis “are as barbarous as the Turks.” “They are not worthy of being on Earth” is another of the expressions that the judges have used. For Garrido Muñoz, “the intersection of accusations based on a similar denigrating intention” is disconcerting. “There are differences in their arguments, but in essence we observe the same dehumanization of the neighbor, whom they consider a threat,” reflects the expert. The dispute has invoked the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, to which Armenia and Azerbaijan are parties.

After the implosion of the USSR in 1991, Armenians and Azerbaijanis clashed in Nagorno Karabakh. The territory – and neighboring areas – remained in Armenian hands. Over the years, the false closure of the conflict led to a series of breaches of the fragile ceasefire. In 2016, what is known as the Four-Day War broke out, causing some 200 deaths, and in last year’s confrontation the militarily superior Baku regained the majority of Nagorno Karabakh, following an agreement brokered by Moscow.