Russia intends to withdraw from Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe

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 15:24, 10 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 10, ARMENPRESS. Russia has indicated its intention to formally withdraw from the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE), a military transparency agreement that is currently suspended, RT reported citing announcements published by the Kremlin.

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov has been selected by President Vladimir Putin to supervise the procedure in the Russian parliament.

The appointment was revealed on Wednesday as part of regular Kremlin announcements. Ryabkov will represent the government in both chambers of parliament regarding the proposed withdrawal, the document said.

Leonid Slutsky, the leader of the nationalist LDPR party, told RIA Novosti that a draft law on Russia’s withdrawal from the treaty could be introduced as early as this week.

The CFE treaty was one of the cornerstones of the attempted de-escalation of tensions between the Warsaw Pact bloc and NATO during the final days of the USSR. Signed in 1990, the agreement set limits for deployment of conventional forces on the European continent and established various transparency mechanisms, such as on-site verification inspections.

ICRC ‘hopes’ to restore patient transfers from Nagorno Karabakh – spox

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 16:22, 10 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 10, ARMENPRESS. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has not facilitated transfer of patients from Nagorno Karabakh to Armenia since April 29 and is now discussing details pertaining to the format of its work with decision-makers from the parties involved, the ICRC told ARMENPRESS on May 10.

“In regards to developments, the International Committee of the Red Cross is discussing with all decision-makers from the parties the details pertaining to the format of our work,” ICRC Armenia Communications and Prevention Manager Zara Amatuni said when asked to comment on Nagorno Karabakh ombudsman Gegham Stepanyan’s tweet that Azerbaijan has been obstructing the ICRC’s work ever since it illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor.

Amatuni explained that the process is confidential since it is proceeding in a format of a dialogue. She did not elaborate further on the discussions.

“It’s about the continuity of our humanitarian work. We hope it will be restored. However, there’s some need for clarification, and now this process is taking place. During this period we are factually not implementing transfers because we must have clarity regarding several details with all parties involved,” Amatuni said.

Armenia, Azerbaijan to hold foreign ministerial talks in Moscow next week

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 15:28, 10 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 10, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan will have a meeting with his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov on May 19 in Moscow, Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan told ARMENPRESS.

“A foreign ministerial level meeting between Armenia and Azerbaijan is planned for May 19 in Moscow, hosted by the Russian side,” she said.

Pashinyan, Charles Michel attach importance to forthcoming joint meeting with French, German and Azeri leaders

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 01:43,

YEREVAN, MAY 14, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President of the European Council Charles Michel discussed the “military-political and humanitarian situation in the region” during an informal meeting in Brussels Saturday evening.

PM Pashinyan spoke about the situation resulting from the latest “provocative and aggressive” actions of the Azerbaijani military against Armenia’s sovereign territory, which “are aimed at disrupting the efforts for resuming the peace talks,” the Prime Minister’s Office said in a readout.

Pashinyan and Michel also discussed issues related to the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno Karabakh resulting from the illegal blockade of Lachin Corridor by Azerbaijan, as well as the normalization process between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The Armenian Prime Minister and the European Council President also discussed the upcoming May 14 trilateral meeting with participation of the Azerbaijani President and attached importance to holding a five-sided meeting together with French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Chisinau on June 1, within the framework of the European Political Community Summit.

Eurovision 2023: Sweden’s Loreen wins for second time

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 03:08,

YEREVAN, MAY 14, ARMENPRESS. Sweden's Loreen won Eurovision 2023 with the song "Tattoo" in Liverpool on Saturday, becoming the first woman to win twice in the contest.

Loreen is the only person after Ireland's Johnny Logan to win the Eurovision song contest twice. 

Finland's Käärijä came second with "Cha Cha Cha", but he was still behind Loreen’s points after the results from juries from participating countries were announced.

Noa Kirel of Israel came third.

"I am seriously overwhelmed," Loreen told reporters.

Armenia’s Brunette finished 14th with "Future Lover". She received 5 points from Italy, 1 point from Latvia, 1 point from Austria, 1 point from Poland, 2 points from Moldova, 6 points from Ireland, 7 points from France, 3 from Estonia, 3 from Spain, 3 from the UK, 4 from Cyprus, 5 from Switzerland, 10 from Georgia, 10 from Albania and 8 from Czech Republic. With another 69 points from the jury, Brunette ranked 14th with 122 points.

Armenia gave to Israel.

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1110891.html?fbclid=IwAR1Vw5a81JldSuufeWc6IsRbWUV36AaHlByt_2CjiiUZwmKJflE1zhpBUNY

Azerbaijan: The veneer of democracy is peeling off Baku’s authoritarian political structure

May 11 2023
May 11, 2023

Seven of the 125 seats in Azerbaijan’s parliament are now vacant and no one seems in a hurry to do anything about it. The prolonged vacancies are an indicator that President Ilham Aliyev’s administration is not worrying about maintaining a democratic veneer on the country’s authoritarian system.

Azerbaijan has a strong presidential system that includes what is widely viewed as a rubber-stamp legislature. Parliament is packed with pro-presidential MPs, most of them members of Aliyev’s New Azerbaijan Party, along with a smattering of independents. The democracy watchdog group Freedom House in its 2023 Freedom of the World report ranked Azerbaijan’s political system as “not free,” adding that Baku ranked among the “worst of the worst” states in the areas of political rights and civil liberties.

Parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan have routinely been marred by irregularities, according to monitoring groups. The last legislative elections in 2020 produced an expected, overwhelming pro-presidential majority, but it also yielded a minor surprise: the Central Election Committee invalidated the results in four electoral districts, citing complaints of fraud. The invalidations came after Aliyev spoke publicly about a need to clean up Azerbaijan’s reputation for dirty elections. “We don't want any violations,” Aliyev said. “Those who committed violations should receive their punishment so that such situations do not happen in the future.” 

One way to address electoral fraud is to not hold a vote at all. And this is what has happened with the four invalidated results. No re-run elections have been scheduled in the un-represented districts. Three additional parliamentary vacancies have also opened up over the years: one MP died, another was arrested and expelled, and the third was promoted to a post in the executive branch. No moves have been made to fill those vacancies either.

Azerbaijani legislation seems to require expeditious action to fill parliamentary vacancies. The law on Elections for Parliament calls for re-run elections to be held within three months in cases where original results are nullified.

Back in 2021, CEC chief Mazahir Panahov told journalists that special elections for the vacant seats would be held “in the near future.” But since then there hasn’t been a peep about the matter from administration officials, who seem more focused on external issues, including as Azerbaijan’s prickly relations with Iran and the still smoldering conflict with Armenia over Nagorno Karabakh. Earlier this year, MP Zahid Oruj said that no special elections are currently planned. The next general legislative elections should be held no later than 2025.

Najmin Kamilsoy, a political analyst in Baku, said widespread apathy with electoral politics is enabling the government’s ability to put off special elections. Campaign season is a time when “political activity comes to life,” he noted. And given that elections have often engendered “international criticisms targeting election fraud, the government doesn’t feel an urge to call for new or repeated elections,” continued Kamilsoy, co-founder and analyst at Baku-based Agora Analytical Collective. “There isn’t much domestic demand.”

A lone vocal voice in calling for special elections is Ilgar Mammadov, chair of semi-opposition Republican Alternative Party (ReAl). He invoked a time-tested rationale for filling the vacant seats: taxation without representation is tyranny. “As parliamentarism is directly related to the tax policy of the state, it is the right of citizens to participate in the disposal of collected taxes by the Milli Majlis [Azerbaijani parliament] through their representatives,” he wrote in a public statement in 2022. 

Mammadov’s rallying cry hasn’t resonated much with voters, however. There’s been no groundswell of grass-roots support for special elections. Even some sitting members of parliament seem to question the point of filling the seats, acknowledging the existence of electoral fraud and the legislature’s subservient role in relation to the executive branch.

MP Erkin Gadirli from ReAl, often described as the only opposition voice in parliament, was vilified by pro-government MPs in January after he questioned the validity of the entire electoral process. The parliamentary rebuke followed Gadirli’s interview with blogger Mehman Huseynov, during which he said he could not be sure if his own mandate was legitimate. “There are no democratic elections” in Azerbaijan, he said. Another MP, independent Vahid Ahmadov, received an official reprimand from parliament’s Disciplinary Committee for taking a similar swipe at the legitimacy of the legislature. Ahmadov also called attention to the impropriety of some MPs operating business ventures while being involved in creating legislative frameworks concerning commerce.

 

Is ban on export of dairy products from Armenia to Russian Federation a political decision?

  • Gayane Sargsyan
  • Yerevan

Export of dairy products to Russia

For more than a month there has been a ban on the export of dairy products from Armenia to Russia. In Russia, this decision was justified by “the use of Iranian raw materials in Armenian products, the import of which into the Russian Federation is prohibited.”

Although Rosselkhoznadzor checks revealed this problem only in the products of two Armenian producers, the import of dairy products of all exporters is prohibited, and for an indefinite period.


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The Igit company does not use Iranian raw materials in its production, but as a result of the ban, it lost the opportunity to export to the Russian Federation. According to the manager of the company Aram Kroyan, mainly cheese was exported to Russia, 30-40 tons per month.

Due to the ban, which has lasted more than a month, the company has had to look for additional premises to store finished products. In addition, the company has reduced the volume of purchases of dairy products from farmers.

The company’s only hope is that the ban will be lifted in the near future and it will be possible to export products to Russia again.

“If the export ban is not lifted as soon as possible, the farmers will suffer first of all. The fact is that with the beginning of the spring season the volume of milk produced has increased and companies are forced to reduce the volume of purchases. If the ban drags on, manufacturing companies will have to look for new sales markets, as well as think about layoffs, and possibly closing production facilities,” Kroyan says.

The problem is being discussed at the state level and negotiations are underway between the Food Safety Inspectorate of Armenia and Rosselkhoznadzor. After a bilateral meeting on April 17, the Armenian side said: “Both sides have demonstrated a constructive approach and agreed to resolve the issue in stages.”

A Russian statement said: “Flaws in the supervision system have allowed Armenian companies to export products made from raw materials from Iranian enterprises that are not allowed to trade with Russia. As a result, in 2022 Armenia increased oil supplies by ten times. Such schemes disrupt the competitive environment not only in the Russian market, but also introduce an imbalance in the economic activity of the EAEU.”

The Eurasian Economic Union operates under the leadership of Russia and includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. The organization provides its members with freedom of movement of labor, goods, services and capital. Armenia joined the EAEU in 2015.

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The difference in the content of these two messages reinforced the opinion of experts that it was not about economic or food security, but about politics.

“As a rule, the parties agree in advance with each other that the transmitted messages have the same content. Various statements testify to a serious conflict in relations between the Republic of Armenia and the Russian Federation,” economist Nairi Sargsyan says.

In her opinion, the ban is due to tense relations between Armenia and Russia due to the change in Armenia’s foreign policy vector towards the West:

“States use different tools to restore, correct or maintain relations. We can consider the ban as one of such tools.

Russia, having sufficient stocks of dairy products, allows imports solely for the purpose of strengthening political and other influence on Armenia. In order to maintain superiority in the countries of its sphere of influence, including Armenia, the Russian Federation distributes some kind of carrot. In this case, the carrot is a permit for the export of dairy products from Armenia to Russia.”

Armenia to use the Black Sea as an alternative to the Upper Lars checkpoint, as the only land road connecting Armenia with Russia is often closed due to poor weather conditions or landslides

Food law specialist David Pipoyan does not find the decision of Rosselkhoznadzor to ban the export of Armenian dairy products surprising. He considers the problem from a professional point of view and taking into account the many problems in the manufacturing sector:

“If we look at the trends in the development of the sphere, we will notice a regression in almost all aspects of food safety. Prior to the Rosselkhoznadzor, the Investigative Journalists Club of Armenia carried out sectoral expertise of Armenian dairy products. The Food Safety Inspectorate has followed the trail of violations identified by journalists and found various violations in many manufacturers. But no conclusions were made after these alarming signals, let alone action.”

Pipoyan emphasizes that the supervision of food production needs radical changes, but “there is no political will to solve the problems of the sphere.”

Compared to recent years, the volume of exports, in particular of butter, has increased significantly. According to the Ministry of Economy, if in 2021 only 170 tons were exported to Russia, and in 2022 more than 3,000.

“I think in Russia they noticed that there was a sharp change in volumes, which is an important indicator for assessing risks. They realized that the volume of production in Armenia could not increase so dramatically. For this reason, they had doubts about the use of raw materials imported from third countries. Therefore, we decided to check whether proper control is carried out. The message of the Rosselkhoznadzor contains a clear message about the lack of confidence of the Russian Federation in the work of the inspection body of Armenia.”

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Pipoyan does not exclude a political background to Russia’s decision.

“There may be a political context, but if your production does not meet the quality criteria, no one is obliged to turn a blind eye to this,.”

Economist Narek Sargsyan believes that Russia is not announcing a specific date for lifting the ban, as it awaits an answer to the question of whether Armenia remains in its sphere of influence. The decision of the Russian Federation, in his opinion, is directly related to which foreign policy vector Armenia will choose:

“If Russia hears what it wants, the ban will be lifted very soon. And if not, then I think other areas may also be subject to sanctions, in particular the manufacturing industry.”

Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan maintains any such activity was an isolated incident

According to experts, if the ban drags on for three to six months, Armenian producers will face serious problems.

“For the domestic market, the number of active dairy producers is actually too large. They didn’t open to satisfy the local market. And since Armenia has not diversified export markets, including for dairy products, we face a very serious danger. It is possible that in the long term it will be possible to organize itself, review production volumes, and diversify markets. But in the short term, I think the country will have serious problems,” economist Narek Sargsyan says.

Food law specialist David Pipoyan hopes that the problem will be resolved in the near future.

Regardless of the development of events, experts consider it abnormal that 45 percent of exports from Armenia go to Russia. They argue that it is necessary to think about the diversification of markets, otherwise Armenia will continue to depend on the Russian Federation.

“You can never be completely dependent on any country, either in terms of exports or imports. But we are well aware that there are many obstacles to entering other markets, starting with the prices of local products. It is very important for Armenia to enter the market with high purchasing power,” Pipoyan says.

In any case, Pipoyan considers compliance with food safety standards to be paramount:

“First of all, it is necessary to respect the rights of citizens and consumers of our country, as well as the countries where we export our products, and not to ignore safety issues.”

In response to a request from JAMnews, the Food Safety Inspectorate of Armenia reported that inspections are currently underway at nine enterprises producing dairy products. In the near future, the results will be sent to Rosselkhoznadzor to review the export permit.

Tatoyan: Azerbaijan will not limit itself to Artsakh and has no intention of peace regardless of the Artsakh issue

NEWS.am
Armenia –

Azerbaijan will not limit itself to Artsakh and has no intention of peace regardless of the Artsakh issue.  The former Ombudsman of Armenia, President of the Tatoyan Foundation Arman Tatoyan wrote about this on his Facebook page.

“Azerbaijan will not limit itself to Artsakh and has no intention of peace regardless of the Artsakh issue.

The goal of the Azerbaijani government is to numb our vigilance and advance aggression under the veil of false peace, and the destruction of Armenian identity.

Now, one of the fundamental goals of their state policy is to deepen the division and tension in our society, to make us all hostile to the Armenian Diaspora.

We would like to thank international lawyers Garo Ghazarian and Karnig Kerkonian for their invaluable support in the preparation and analysis of evidence.

All of this is proven with uncontroverted evidence”, – he wrote. 

CSUN’s Armenian organizations educate students about culture and history

DAILY SUNDIAL
CSUN, California

Gallery|6 Photos
Brandon Balayan, Reporter

Throughout the last week of April, CSUN celebrated Armenian Heritage Week – an initiative by various Armenian organizations on campus to commemorate the Armenian genocide.

Campus organizations included the fraternity Alpha Epsilon Omega, the sorority Alpha Gamma Alpha, the Hidden Road Initiative and the Armenian Students Association.

The week began with the “Stain of Denial,” a protest against the denial of the Armenian genocide, and a vigil in remembrance of those whose lives were lost.

On April 26, an Armenian barbecue, or khorovats, was held at Matador Square with a dance performance by Patille Dance Studio.

The last event of the week included a tribute to Artsakh Awareness Day with a screening of the Armenian film “Neutral Zone” at the University Student Union.

Gallery|5 Photos

Brandon Balayan
Members of the CSUN Armenian Students Association hold flags and signs during their "Stain of Denial" protest on April 25, 2023. The protest, that commemorated the Armenian genocide of 1915, was held in front of the CSUN University Library in Northridge, Calif.

https://sundial.csun.edu/174492/news/csuns-armenian-organizations-educate-students-about-culture-and-history/

Charles Michel says meeting with Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders brings clear progress in normalising relations

 

On 14 May, European Council President Charles Michel hosted Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for a fifth meeting in Brussels.

The leaders focused on progress on the path towards Armenia-Azerbaijan normalisation, and shared a common willingness for a South Caucasus at peace.

On border issues, the sides reviewed progress and the next steps regarding the delimitation of the border. They agreed on the resumption of the bilateral meetings on border issues, confirming their unequivocal commitment to the 1991 Almaty Declaration and the respective territorial integrity of Armenia (29,800 km2) and Azerbaijan (86,600 km2). The ultimate delimitation of the border will be agreed through negotiations.

According to Charles Michel, the sides made “clear progress” in their discussions aimed at unblocking transport and economic links in the region. “Positions on this topic have now come very close to each other in particular on the reopening of the railway connections to and via Nakhchivan,” explained Michel in his press remarks after the meeting. The respective teams were tasked with finalising an agreement in principle on the conditions for opening the railway connection and the necessary construction work, together with a concrete timetable.

On humanitarian issues, the sides agreed at the meeting that further detainees would be released in the coming weeks. Charles Michel also stressed the need to safeguard the mutual understanding that soldiers who have simply got lost and crossed to the other side would continue to be released through a speedy procedure. 

Michel also called on Azerbaijan to guarantee the rights and security of Armenians living in the former Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, in close cooperation with the international community.

Leaders will meet again in the beginning of June on the margins of the 2nd European Political Community Summit (EPC) in Chișinău and in July in Brussels. Michel also invited the leaders for another such meeting on the margins of the third EPC summit in Granada in October.

Find out more

Press release

https://euneighbourseast.eu/news/latest-news/charles-michel-says-meeting-with-armenian-and-azerbaijani-leaders-brings-clear-progress-in-normalising-relations/