Armenian Defense Minister meets President of the Cypriot House of Representatives

 16:35,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Defense Suren Papikyan has met with President of the House of Representatives of the Republic of Cyprus Annita Demetriou during his official visit to Cyprus.

The meeting in the Cypriot Parliament focused on matters pertaining to Armenian-Cypriot relations and regional security, the Ministry of Defense said in a readout.

Yerevan to host Ministerial Meeting of the Landlocked Developing Countries

 15:53,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. The Ministerial Meeting of the Landlocked Developing Countries will take place on December 14-15 in Yerevan, Armenia.

The meeting will be one of the biggest events held in Armenia jointly with the UN.

The ministerial event is an official themed meeting ahead of the Third United Nations Conference on the Landlocked Developing Countries (LLDC3) to be held in 2024 in Kigali, Rwanda.

The Yerevan meeting will be attended by over 30 foreign delegations, including the foreign ministers of Botswana and Nepal, the transport ministers of Zimbabwe, Eswatini and Lesotho, the tourism minister of Malawi, the deputy foreign ministers of Georgia and Paraguay, and deputy transport ministers of Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan.

Representatives of international organizations will also attend the meeting, particularly the UN High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States (UN-OHRLLS) Rabab Fatima, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (ECE) Tatiana Molcean, TRACECA Secretary General Aset Assavbayev and the deputy director general of WTO.

The secretaries-general of the World Customs Organization and the Organization of Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC), as well as UN officials, will deliver speeches via video.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 12-12-23

 17:29,

YEREVAN, 12 DECEMBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 12 December, USD exchange rate up by 0.05 drams to 403.59 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.07 drams to 435.84 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.04 drams to 4.48 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.06 drams to 507.43 drams.

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

Gold price down by 275.10 drams to 25778.21 drams. Silver price down by 11.25 drams to 297.40 drams.

Armenian FM, Chief Foreign Policy Advisor to President of the European Council discuss regional security issues

 17:47,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia, Ararat Mirzoyan on December 12 had a meeting with Simon Mordue, Chief Foreign Policy Advisor to the President of the European Council.

According to the foreign ministry, the interlocutors discussed issues related to regional security.

During the meeting, the parties discussed the latest developments in regulating relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Finland to re-open two checkpoints on its eastern border with Russia

 18:43,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS.  Finland will re-open two checkpoints on its eastern border with Russia from Thursday 14 December, Prime Minister Petteri Orpo (NCP) announced on Tuesday.

According to YLE News, the two checkpoints to re-open are located at Vaalimaa, in the southeast of the country, and at Niirala, in North Karelia.

The remaining six crossing points along the Finnish-Russian frontier will remain closed.

The authorities will close the border again if the situation changes.

The Finnish government closed the entire eastern border nearly two weeks ago in response to a suspected Russian 'hybrid attack' involving increasing numbers of undocumented migrants arriving at Finnish checkpoints.

Russia always ready to host Armenia-Azerbaijan negotiations, Russia’s Galuzin

 21:04,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Russia is always ready to host negotiations on the Azerbaijani-Armenian settlement process and hopes that Baku and Yerevan take into account the relevance of the corresponding proposal, Deputy Foreign Minister of the Russian Federation Mikhail Galuzin has said, Tass reports.

Our proposals for holding negotiations on a peaceful settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan in Moscow are open to our partners for Armenia and Azerbaijan," said the Russian Deputy Foreign Minister, expressing hope that Yerevan and Baku remember and understand it.

When asked whether the meeting of the foreign ministers of the three countries in Moscow is currently being arranged through diplomatic channels, Galuzin affirmed that they are always ready for such work.

Estonian Foreign Minister to visit Armenia

 19:14,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna will arrive in the Republic of Armenia on a working visit on December 13-14, the Foreign Ministry of Armenia said.

The meeting of the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Estonia will take place on  December 13 at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia, which will be followed by the joint press conference of the ministers.

Armenpress: High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan to visit four Ukrainian cities

 21:44,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. By the decision of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on December 12, High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan, will be sent to Ukraine on December 12-20, where he will meet with representatives of the structures of the Armenian community, business circles and cultural figures.

 The PM’s decision is posted on .

Zareh Sinanyan will visit four cities: Odessa – December 12-14; Dnieper – December 14-15; Kharkiv – December 15-16; Kyiv – December 16-20.

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1126116.html?fbclid=IwAR3byA-CWKB6t86RuRMCbivJ11ztoYVEs7A3IDOgKsQ-Oekj_dyBRNZZiwA

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 12/12/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Armenian, Azeri Prisoners Not Yet Exchanged Despite Deal

        • Astghik Bedevian

ARMENIA -- A freed Armenian captive is escorted off a Russian military plane 
upon arrival at a military airport outside Yerevan, December 14, 2020


Armenia and Azerbaijan did not exchange prisoners as of Tuesday afternoon almost 
one week after reaching an agreement to that effect welcomed by the 
international community.

Under the agreement announced on December 7, Azerbaijan is to free 32 Armenian 
soldiers and civilians in exchange for Armenia’s release of two Azerbaijani 
servicemen and support for Baku’s bid to host the COP29 climate summit next 
year. A senior Armenian lawmaker suggested on December 8 that the prisoner swap 
will be carried out within “hours or days.”

Parliament speaker Alen Simonian on Tuesday declined not give possible dates for 
the repatriation of the captives. He said only that the deal struck as a result 
of direct Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations remains in force.

“We are waiting,” Simonian told reporters. “I think that we will have 
information very soon.”

Vagharshak Hakobian, another lawmaker representing Armenia’s ruling Civil 
Contract party, said he hopes that the deal will not be scrapped.

The United Nations officially announced on Monday that Azerbaijan will host next 
year’s global climate summit. In line with the December 7 deal, Armenia did not 
object to that decision.

The Azerbaijani government publicized late last week the list of the 32 Armenian 
captives that will be repatriated by it. Most of them were taken prisoner in 
Nagorno-Karabakh in December 2020 just weeks after a Russian-brokered ceasefire 
stopped the last Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

Also on the list is Gagik Voskanian, an Armenian army reservist who was 
mobilized a few weeks before straying into Azerbaijani territory in August this 
year in unclear circumstances. An Azerbaijani court convicted Voskanian of 
“terrorism” just hours before the announcement of the prisoner swap.

Voskanian’s mother, Ashkhen Avetisian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that she 
also does not know when he will return home.

“I contacted a Defense Ministry official and was told, ‘Keep waiting, we too 
don’t know anything, everything will be alright,’” she said.

The Azerbaijani soldiers to be freed by Yerevan were detained in April after 
crossing into Armenia’s Syunik province from Azerbaijan’s Nakhichevan exclave. 
One of them was charged with murdering a Syunik resident the day before his 
detention. Armenia’s Court of Appeals sentenced him to life imprisonment last 
week.

Azerbaijan’s prosecutor-general expressed confidence on Tuesday that they will 
be set free. But he did not give any dates.




Armenia Revives Amnesty-For-Cash Option For Draft Dodgers

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Soldiers march at an Armenian military base, December 24, 2022.


Armenia’s parliament approved on Tuesday a bill allowing men who illegally 
evaded compulsory military service to buy an amnesty.

Armenian law requires virtually all male citizens aged between 18 and 27 to 
serve in the country’s armed forces for two years. Refusal to do so is a crime 
punishable by five years in prison.

The bill drafted by Hayk Sargsian, a parliament deputy from the ruling Civil 
Contract party, and passed by the National Assembly in the first reading will 
give fugitive draft dodgers aged between 27 and 37 a range of options.

In particular, they will be able to turn themselves in and perform a 
two-and-a-half-year service or legally evade it by paying the state 15 million 
drams ($37,000). They could also serve in the armed forces for shorter periods 
in exchange for smaller fees.

Sargsian said that about 5,000 fugitive Armenian men will be eligible for these 
options. As things stands now, they cannot serve in the army “even if they want 
to,” complained the lawmaker.

“I don’t want us to again declare an amnesty in order to exempt these 
individuals from prosecution, but nor do I want to see 5,000 citizens sentenced 
to five years in prison,” he added during a debate on the parliament floor.

The parliament declared such an amnesty in 2021. More than 1,300 draft dodgers 
took advantage of it.

Sargsian also insisted that the new legal arrangements will not encourage draft 
evasion among draft-age men. He argued that it applies only to citizens aged 25 
and older.

Opposition deputies and even some of Sargsian’s pro-government colleagues were 
not fully convinced by his assurances. Civil Contract’s Hovik Aghazarian was 
concerned that the bill will foster “wrong behavior” in the country.

“I’m quite uneasy about this idea,” said Sona Ghazarian, another Civil Contract 
deputy. “I think that we kind of undermine social justice and social equality 
with this bill.”

“We can’t tell people that if they don’t have money … they must serve the 
homeland or go to jail but if they have money they can pay up and move on,” said 
Tadevos Avetisian of the opposition Hayastan alliance.

Nevertheless, the parliament’s pro-government majority voted for the bill, while 
Hayastan and the other opposition bloc, Pativ Unem, abstained, instead of voting 
against it.

Armenia already had a similar amnesty-for-cash arrangement from 2004-2019. 
Officials say that some 10,000 draft evaders used it to avoid prosecution during 
those years.




EU Details Expansion Of Border Monitoring Mission In Armenia


Armenia - European Union monitors patrol Armenia's border with Azerbaijan.


The European Union has decided to deploy an additional 71 observers and experts 
to Armenia’s volatile border with Azerbaijan.

The EU’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, announced the decision late on Monday 
following a meeting of the foreign ministers of EU member states held in 
Brussels. He said they agreed to “increase our presence on the ground from 138 
staff to 209.”

“The fact that we have decided to increase by such an important number our staff 
on this mission shows our clear commitment to stability on the border between 
Armenia and Azerbaijan and an important contribution to the peace efforts,” 
Borrell told a news briefing.

He said the expansion of the monitoring mission, approved by the ministers in 
principle last month, also reflects the EU’s deepening relations with Armenia.

“Armenia clearly sees the benefits of increasing cooperation with us and we are 
ready to respond positively,” added the EU foreign policy chief.

The mission was launched in February at the request of the Armenian government 
and with the stated aim of preventing or reducing ceasefire violations along the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Russia, Armenia’s increasingly estranged ally, has 
opposed it from the outset, saying that it is part of U.S. and European Union 
efforts to drive Moscow out of the South Caucasus.

Moscow has pressed Yerevan to agree to a similar monitoring mission proposed by 
the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian has repeatedly declined those offers, accusing the military 
alliance of not honoring its security commitments to Armenia.

The recent Azerbaijani takeover of Nagorno-Karabakh has raised more fears in 
Yerevan that Azerbaijan will invade Armenia to open a land corridor to its 
Nakhichevan exclave. Pashinian urged Western powers to prevent Baku from 
“provoking a new war in the region” when he addressed the European Parliament in 
October.

Both the EU and the United States regularly voice support for Armenia’s 
territorial integrity. Unlike Russia, they have condemned Baku’s September 19-20 
military offensive that forced Karabakh’s practically entire population to flee 
to Armenia.




Yerevan Backs Further EU Expansion Into Former Soviet Union


Belgium - Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan arrives for a meeting in 
Brussels, .


Amid its growing rift with Russia, the Armenian government has voiced support 
for Georgia’s, Ukraine’s and Moldova’s membership in the European Union and 
reaffirmed its desire to deepen ties with the EU.

“My government warmly welcomes the European Commission’s [recent] decision to 
recommend the European Council to open accession talks with Moldova and Ukraine 
and to grant candidate status to Georgia,” Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said 
late on Monday. “This decision is welcomed not only by the government of Armenia 
but also people of Armenia, who also have European aspirations.”

Yerevan is committed to “coming closer to the European Union to the extent the 
EU will deem it possible,” Mirzoyan added in a speech delivered during a meeting 
in Brussels of the foreign ministers of EU member states and five ex-Soviet 
republics involved in the 27-nation bloc’s Eastern Partnership program.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian expressed that commitment when he addressed the 
European Parliament in October. He stopped short of announcing plans to seek 
Armenia’s eventual membership in the EU.

In his speech, Pashinian also accused Moscow of using the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
conflict to try to topple him. A Russian official responded by saying that the 
Armenian premier is helping the West “turn Armenia into another Ukraine.”

Mirzoyan and EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell met in North Macedonia late 
last month as a team of EU officials wrapped up a visit to Yerevan during which 
they explored ways of bringing Armenia closer to the bloc.

Borrell also met with Mirzoyan in Brussels earlier on Monday. He said they had a 
“good exchange of views … on concrete ways to enhance EU-Armenia relations” but 
did not elaborate.




Armenia Keeps Up Contacts With Ukraine


Beglium - Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Ukrainian 
counterpart Dmytro Kuleba meet in Brussels, .


Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba met 
in Brussels on Monday, continuing diplomatic contacts between their counties 
that were denounced by Russia this fall.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry said the two ministers discussed “bilateral 
cooperation on issues of mutual interest” and “regional issues” relating to the 
South Caucasus. Kuleba tweeted, for his part, that they talked about the 
“advancement of Ukraine-Armenia dialogue.”

That dialogue appears to have begun in early September amid a further worsening 
of Armenia’s relations with Russia, its longtime ally. Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s wife visited Kyiv at the time to attend the annual Summit of First 
Ladies and Gentlemen held there. Anna Hakobian also delivered Armenia’s first 
humanitarian aid to Ukraine since the start of the Russian invasion.

The Russian Foreign Ministry listed Hakobian’s trip among “a series of 
unfriendly steps” taken by Yerevan against Moscow when it summoned the Armenian 
ambassador a few days later. The strong criticism did not stop Pashinian from 
talking to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy during an EU summit in Spain 
on October 5.

Spain - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Ukrainian President 
Volodymyr Zelenskiy meet in Granada, October 5, 2023.

Three weeks later, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, Armen Grigorian, 
participated in a multilateral peace forum in Malta initiated by Ukraine. 
Grigorian also met with the powerful chief of’Zelenskiy’s staff, Andriy Yermak, 
during what Moscow described as a “blatantly anti-Russian event.”

The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, called Grigorian’s 
trip to Malta a “demonstrative anti-Russian gesture of official Yerevan” and 
linked it with Pashinian’s conversation with Zelenskiy. She accused Pashinian’s 
government of “persistently destroying our allied relations.”

The Armenian leaders’ attendance of those events contrasts with their boycott of 
recent months’ meetings of top officials of ex-Soviet states making up the 
Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization as well as the Commonwealth 
of Independent States.

Pashinian embarked on the apparent rapprochement with Ukraie despite its stong 
support for Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. In particular, Kyiv was 
quick to condemn the September 9 election by Karabakh lawmakers of the region’s 
new president, saying that it is “contrary to the rules and principles of 
international law.” The election came ten days before the Azerbaijani military 
offensive that forced Karabakh’s practically entire population to flee to 
Armenia.

“I reiterated Ukraine’s support for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity within 
its internationally recognized borders,” Kuleba wrote after meeting with 
Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov earlier on Monday.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

EU to Expand Armenia Mission by 50%, Says Foreign Affairs Chief

o

The 100-person EU Civilian Mission in Armenia launched on Feb. 20

The European Union’s foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell on Monday announced that the bloc will expand its mission in Armenia by 50 percent.

This announcement comes after EU foreign ministers last month approved the expansion of the EU mission in Armenia.

“Today the EU Council decided to strengthen our civilian mission in Armenia, increasing our presence on the ground from 138 to 209 people, this is an important increase in the size of the mission and it is a way to increase the stability of Armenia’s international border with Azerbaijan,” Borrell said.

The EU’s 100-person monitoring mission to Armenia began in February. In the fall Canada said it would join the mission, becoming the first non-EU country to be folded into its activities.

Before meeting with Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, Borrell told reporters that the situation in Armenia requires the EU’s strong support.

“Many things are happening in the whole region, it is important to continue to pay attention to them and, in particular, to Armenia, that has been in a very difficult situation and still is,” Borrell told reporters ahead of the EU Foreign Affairs Council in Brussels.