Armenia: EU-funded project calls for CSOs in Syunik working in social protection

May 3 2023

The EU-funded ‘Partnerships for Syunik – Enhanced Community-Based Social Services’ project in Armenia is looking for up to 20 social service-providing Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) or actors, based or operational in Syunik and interested in developing quality social services.

The participants will have an opportunity to gain and enhance critical skills to effectively assess local social service needs and resources, engage in policy dialogue and conduct evidence-based advocacy actions. The action will also focus on technical social service delivery, with the ‘Armenian Caritas’ NGO sharing its extensive experience and supporting interested CSOs to receive government accreditation.

The deadline for applications is 29 May.

‘Partnerships for Syunik – Enhanced Community-Based Social Services’ contributes to the development of a more resilient system of social protection in all seven communities of the Syunik region. The project is funded by the European Union, and implemented by the Czech NGO ‘People in Need’, in partnership with the ‘WINNET Goris’ development foundation and ‘Armenian Caritas’ NGO.

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U.S. notes ‘with disappointment’ suspension of Turkish overflight permissions for Armenian airlines

May 3 2023
Reuters

Passengers wait to check-in at the FlyOne Armenia counter for a flight from Istanbul to Yerevan at the Istanbul International Airport in Istanbul, Turkey February 2, 2022. REUTERS/Murad Sezer

WASHINGTON, May 3 (Reuters) – The United States notes "with disappointment" Turkey's announcement that it would suspend Armenian airline overflight permission, the U.S. Department of State said on Wednesday.

"The agreement that had previously been reached between these two countries to resume air connections had been a very important confidence building measure not just between these two countries, but again, for regional stability broadly," U.S. Department of State spokesman Vedent Patel said during a briefing.

"It's our sincere hope that Turkey and Armenia can continue to rebuild economic ties and open transportation links as well."

Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk; writing by Jasper Ward

Freedom Armenian style: Putin’s allies ‘democratising’ their countries

Bulgaria – May 3 2023

The democracies in Russia’s ally states helping the Kremlin in a war against Ukraine have started to look more like Putin-kleptocracy.

It seems as though the regional rulers had been waiting for a military invasion. While their Kremlin allies were getting ready for a full-scale invasion, a campaign for persecution of political opponents, which is after their own local civil activists and independent media, kicked off in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and Armenia.

Media are being attacked in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan 

The curtailment of civil liberties started in Central Asia. Later it continued in the Caucasus.

Here’s the most recent example. Thursday, April 27. The court in Kyrgyzstan rendered a judgment  to close the editorial office of Azattyk Media, the local office of Radio Liberty.

“These violations reflect the process of establishing a new hierarchy in the country in the realm of truth – when the government discourse turns out to be higher than the law, ” said Jeanne Caveiler, head of the European and Central Asian department of Reporters Without Borders, in response to the persecution of journalists. 

Earlier an unprecedented pressure on the local media began in Kazakhstan. They were persecuted by law enforcement authorities, and there were also attempts to discredit local journalists.

Russian laws are copied in Georgia

Rulers of the Kremlin-allied countries, as though emulating Putin’s regime in Russia, occasionally copy Russian laws. In 2022 the fashion to emulate the Kremlin’s method of revenge against opponents, has covered Caucasus too.

For instance, it was only after mass rallies in the center of Tbilisi, Georgia, in early 2023, that the authorities were compelled to cancel their decision to adopt the law of the “foreign agent” similar to the Russian one.

False democracy in the Armenian way

The Armenian ruling political elite can easily be called by far the most sophisticated authority, disguising the hunt for political opponents as pro-western slogans.

Armenian leaders as well as many other Kremlin’s allies still get handshakes in the EU. They keep traveling freely around Europe in motorcades with sirens. In the meantime, as Ukrainian media pointed out earlier, Armenia still continues to provide an economic background for Russia’s aggression against Ukraine. Armenia is eagerly helping the Russian Federation to evade Western sanctions imposed as a result of aggression against Ukraine. It is not only about delivering supplies to civilians, but also hardware for Russian military industry.

In the meantime, articles claiming that the Armenian Republic is the only democracy in the Caucasus are being spread among English-language versions of news websites. In its “unique” capacity it is contrasted with “Azerbaijani dictatorship”.

Among such reports, one article stands out. It was posted on April 29 on the Armenian website past.am , which has the reputation of a media outlet with the most reliable sources of information. The article points out: “Not only does Armenia expect statements from western and international organisations, but it also waits for practical measures to be taken intended to help the only democracy in the Caucasus against the dictatorial Azerbaijan”.

As Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated “Democracy is the main international brand in Armenia, the key factor of preservation of national sovereignty”.

Such articles are aimed at the western reader oblivious of the local realities. These are propagandist materials designed to fix the image of the republic after many Western and Eastern European media reported the pre-eminent role of Armenia in Russia-Iran alliance in the recent weeks, and the illegal import of equipment including that used for military purposes, into the Russian Federation.

One example is the website of the Ukrainian channel Ми – Україна which said on April 4: “Not only does Armenia serve as a big hub for shipment of sanctioned products into Russia and a base of military and technical supply of aggression against Ukraine, but also as a military and logistic support of the Russian-Iranian alliance.

The image was stained, so much so that on April 14, UKnewspaper The Telegraph called on the West to “toughen the relationships with Yerevan”.

The allegations about the uniqueness of the Armenian democracy are an equivalent to attempts made by Pashinyan since the start of the war to demonstrate the US and the EU its reorientation to the West. However, according to the European and American media, Yerevan keeps a close military strategic partnership with Moscow and Tehran.

The same goes for “the democracy”. The statements by many Armenian politicians and NGOs, as well as numerous facts, indicate that Armenia continues to be an Eastern autocracy, which is strenuously hiding behind modernist civility. But Armenians are not to blame for that.

In a matter of only 30 years, it is impossible to change the foundation of the traditional society and the mentality, which have been formed for centuries, since throughout almost its entire history Armenia was part of despotic Asian empires. Besides, there is a great impact of Putin’s totalitarianism and the Ayatollah dictatorship – Yerevan’s main strategic partners.

Here are some examples of degradation of democracy in Armenia. In a joint statement in May 2022, eighteen non-governmental organizations of Armenia accused the authorities of “nullifying all the positive tendencies in strengthening the re-emerging democratic foundations and development of electoral institutions”.

Yerevan persecuting political opponents

In July 2022, the chairman of the coordination council of Armenia organizations of France, Murad Papazyan stated that the government of Armenia violates “the fundamental principles of the rule of law, the presumption of innocence and the freedom of speech”.

Another politician, an MP for the Hayastan faction in the Armenian Parliament, Vahe Hakobyan said in November 2022 that “unfortunately, today Nikol Pashinyan managed to have the entire law enforcement system on a string… We are living in a dictatorship”. He was echoed by the lawyer of the chairman of the Republican party of Armenia, Ruben Melikyan, who spoke of “sheer lawlessness and overt political persecution in the country, which had pronounced itself the bastion of democracy”.

In April 2023, the chairman of the Armenian parliamentary standing committee on protection of human rights and public affairs, Taguhi Tovmasyan stated “Every day the government deceives the international community claiming that Armenia is a democratic country”.

Facts about the ‘unique democracy’ in Armenia

August 2021. NGO “For the fourth estate” issued a statement about the oppression of the media by intelligence agencies.

November 2021. Artur Vanetsyan, chairman of the parliamentary opposition alliance “I Have Honour” announced that Pegasus spyware had been embedded in his phone.

April 2022. Secretary of the same faction Aik Mamidjanyan said that it had been a year since the authorities “were trying to install virus spyware on my phone”. Media expert Artur Papanyan described such episodes as “the use of cyber weapons to impede legitimate democratic processes”.

May 2022. The National Security Service detained opposition producer Armen Grigoryan. A week later, former MP Gevorg Petrosyan called him “the classic political prisoner”. In another two months Grigoryan passed away in a court room.

July 2022. The National Security Service banned entry into the country to Murad Papazyan, the co-chairman of the Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations of France (CCAF), as an “unwanted person”. This is what he said on the subject: “My presence at the protest rally against Pashynyan in Paris on June 1 2021 and its organization is the reason for the ban”.

August 2022. The National Security Service banned entry into the country of an Armenian activist from the Netherlands, Masis Abramyan. He called it “a display of retaliation by Nikol Pashynyan for rallies and demonstrations we have organized”.

January 2023. The chairman of the Central Office of the French Youth Union “ARF New Generation”  Ndzhe Garagavoryan was banned from entering Armenia  as an “unwanted person”. 

In the course of 2022, a total of 184 violations of media and journalists’ rights were registered.

There is a plethora of such facts. Listing every one of them would take up too much space. That is why we picked out the most characteristic ones. They speak volumes.

The authorities are using classic authoritarian methods of pressure and persecution of the opposition, independent journalists and human rights activists, in particular of those who represent the interests of minorities. The listed facts and quotes by Armenian politicians clearly and explicitly reveal the false nature of the statements about “the single democracy in the Caucasus”.

We emphasise once again: In order to demonstrate the falsehood of the Armenian side, the media outlet Past was chosen as a source at the beginning of the article. Past has the reputation of one of “the most trustworthy sources” in the country. The fact that the text was published in English indicates that the target audience of the propagandist material is none other than the West.

Freedom Armenian style: Putin’s allies ‘democratising’ their countries

Turkey has shut its airspace to Armenian flights, minister says (+Links)


May 3 2023


Turkey has shut its airspace to Armenian flights, minister says
Reuters

ISTANBUL (Reuters) – Turkey has closed its airspace to Armenian flights heading to a third destination in response to the unveiling of a controversial monument in Yerevan last week, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Wednesday.

The monument commemorates those involved in an assassination plot against Ottoman Turkish officials whom Armenia holds responsible for mass killings of ethnic Armenians during World War One. Yerevan says the killings constitute a genocide, a charge Ankara denies.

Speaking to broadcaster NTV, Cavusoglu said Turkey would take further steps if the monument is not removed.

(Reporting by Ali Kucukgocmen; Editing by Gareth Jones)

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/turkey-has-shut-its-airspace-armenian-flights-minister-2023-05-03/

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Amb. Margaryan raises the destruction of Armenian cultural heritage by Azerbaijan at UN Security Council

May 3 2023

Armed conflicts and military actions can have devastating impact on objects of cultural heritage, which are of irreplaceable value to the entire mankind as unique expressions of history, identity and cultural memory, Armenia’s Permanent Representative to the UN Mher Margaryan said the UN Security Council Arria-Formula Meeting “Protection of Cultural Heritage in Armed Conflict.”

As such, their integrity and preservation must be upheld at all times., he stressed.

“In our region, we have first-hand experience going through the devastating loss of cultural property. The Armenian heritage was under heavy attack during the war in Nagorno-Karabakh launched by Azerbaijan in 2020. The Holy Savior Ghazanchetsots Cathedral of Shushi, for example, was deliberately shelled, twice within a few hours, resulting in the partial destruction of the Church,” the Ambassador noted.  

“Today, the millennia-old Christian Armenian sites in Nagorno-Karabakh are on the verge of total extermination, targeted to promote the distorted narrative that the Armenian people are alien in the region. Armenia’s deep concern in relation to the fate of the cultural property in Nagorno-Karabakh is also based on the previous history of total and intentional eradication of the Armenian heritage by Azerbaijan. In Nakhijevan, for example, thousands of monuments, including 89 medieval churches and more than 5,000 cross-stones were annihilated, in an effort to remove traces of the Armenian civilizational presence,” he added.

He emphasized that Azerbaijan is yet to commit, in good faith, to the implementation of the Order on Provisional Measures issued by the International Court of Justice at the request of Armenia in December 2021, according to which Azerbaijan shall “take all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration affecting Armenian cultural heritage, including but not limited to churches and other places of worship, monuments, landmarks, cemeteries and artefacts”.

“Armenia has consistently requested that a UNESCO fact-finding mission be deployed to Nagorno-Karabakh and the adjacent areas in order to help preserve the vast and unique cultural heritage of the region, yet, Azerbaijan continues to obstruct efforts of the international organizations for independent and impartial assessment of the facts on the ground, having opted, instead, for the policy of systematic erasure of the Armenian traces, putting into practice a pseudoscientific theory that denies the historical sites of their Armenian origin. Only today, the chairman of what is called the State Committee for Work with religious Organizations of Azerbaijan went on record saying that the Medieval Armenian Dadivank monastery “belongs to Caucasian Albania” and “sooner or later it will be controlled by the Albanian-Udi religious community”,” Mher Margayn said.

“Destruction of the Armenian cultural heritage continues to be extensively monitored and reported, including through the use of modern technologies. I would like to recall, in this regard, that on 28 April, last Friday, Armenia hosted a panel discussion at the UN, which looked into the role of new technologies in preventing genocidal acts, such as cultural heritage destruction. The event featured a research project at the Cornell University entitled “Caucasus Heritage Watch”, which relies on digital satellite technologies to monitor and document cultural heritage in the region, revealing large-scale damage and destruction in the territories under Azerbaijan’s control,” he added.

The Permanent Representative encouraged UNESCO to also utilize digital technologies to identify, monitor and act upon the facts of destruction of cultural heritage in any part of the world, and in our region in particular.

Musical group Ladaniva bringing a new twist to Armenian, international music

May 3 2023

Music can help bring people together, no matter what language.  

The musical group Ladaniva was founded in 2019 by Armenian singer Jacqueline Baghdasaryan and French multi-instrumentalist Louis Thomas. The group’s music is inspired by traditional songs from Armenia, Russia and the Balkans—with influence from travels in Latin America, Africa and Reunion Islands. 

Last month they were here in Los Angeles for a sold-out performance.

I had a chance to meet the group as they were getting ready for rehearsal before one of their shows at Arbat Hall.

Jacqueline Baghdasaryan and Louis Thomas met at a bar one night during a jazz jam session.

"Louie was playing trumpet, and I was singing. And after we started to do the jazz together, and also we did our study in our conservatory together. And after one day, Louis heard that I am singing in Armenia. And he said, ‘let's do something with this,’ because he loved Armenian language and music," Baghdasaryan said.  

No matter where they’re performing or what language they’re singing in— their energy is contagious.

"There's something melancholic, you know. Melancholy is something beautiful in sadness," Thomas said.  

Baghdasaryan said Thomas encouraged her to write a song in Armenian.  

She wrote their first song "Vay Aman" and immediately following the release of their music video the song was a hit in Armenia and went viral with millions of views.

As far as the name Ladaniva…it’s a Russian car.  

"Jacqueline's father and my father, when we were kids, both had this car."

Most of their songs are in Armenian, but they also have songs in Russian and French.

Jacqueline says her inspiration for songs comes from everyday life—like their most recent song "Shakar" which means "sugar" in Armenian.

Jacqueline’s connection to Armenia has remained strong over the years.  

"I was born in Armenia and I grew up in Belorussia. And after I came to France already eight years. I was always in the Armenian community. I did Armenian dance, singing Armenian songs and for me it was my nostalgia to my roots, and I always wanted to sing in Armenian, to dance it, to participate in our culture," she added.  

Louis was born and raised in France. For him, music is in his DNA; he began playing the trumpet at the age of 7.  

"I was born in a musician family. My mother played the classical piano. And since I was a child, I used to play a lot of different instruments," he stated.  

His love for music and adventure have had a big influence in his work and life.

"I used to travel a lot to learn the traditional music from everywhere."

Their music comes from everywhere… connecting people and different cultures.  

"A lot of different vibes — we have joyful vibes, but also we have a nostalgic and melancholic vibe. Our music is like a mix of different cultures… a music of travel and also the humanity," she explained.  

Why Türkiye closes airspace to Armenia

May 3 2023

What is the Nemesis Monument or statue that caused the crisis between the two countries? It was a matter of curiosity why Turkey closed its airspace to Armenia.

Why did Türkiye close its airspace to Armenia? The questions of what was the last issue that reopened the relations between Turkey and Armenia are asked with curiosity.

Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu announced that Turkey closed its airspace to Armenia.

After the announcement, many people began to wonder why.

The event that caused Turkey to close its airspace to Armenia took place in Yerevan.

The Armenian government has erected a monument to commemorate the terrorists who carried out bloody assassinations and murders against the Ottoman and Turkish Republics since the early 1900s.

There was an immediate reaction from Turkey to the provocative structure that was given the Nemesis Monument.

Türkiye strongly condemned the opening of the Nemesis Monument in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia.

In the statement made by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the following was noted: "We strongly condemn the opening of the 'Nemesis Monument' in Yerevan, which is dedicated to the perpetrators of the assassinations against Ottoman political and military leaders, as well as Azerbaijani officials of the period and even some Ottoman citizens of Armenian origin. The opening of this shameful monument glorifies a bloody act of terror that led to heinous terrorist attacks in which 31 of our diplomats and their family members were murdered. Such provocative steps, which are incompatible with the spirit of the normalization process between Turkey and Armenia, will in no way contribute to the efforts to establish lasting and sustainable peace and stability in the region, on the contrary, they will negatively affect the normalization process.

After Türkiye's condemnation statement, it decided to impose sanctions on Armenia.

Reacting to the monument provocation in Armenia, Çavuşoğlu said, "It is not possible for me to accept this." "We have added Armenia's flights to 3rd countries," he said. said.

Turkey closed its airspace to Armenian flights heading to third destinations because of Nemesis monument, says Cavusoglu

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 12:48, 3 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 3, ARMENPRESS. Turkey has closed its airspace to Armenian flights heading to a third destination in response to the unveiling of the Nemesis monument in Yerevan last week, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Wednesday.

Cavusoglu said Turkey would take further steps if the monument is not removed.

The direct flights from Armenia to Turkey are unaffected by the move.

However, Cavusoglu said that "VIP flights" will not be allowed. He said they made an exception for Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan, who is visiting Turkey for the PABSEC meeting, Anadolu reported. 

Nemesis was unveiled in Yerevan on April 25 to honor the participants of Operation Nemesis, a 1920s program of assassinations of Ottoman perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide.




Armenia’s press freest in region – Reporters Without Borders

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 13:04, 3 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 3, ARMENPRESS. Armenia has improved its position in the World Press Freedom Index published by Reporters Without Borders.

Armenia is ranked 49th in the 2023 index. Last year the country was 51st.

Just like last year, in 2023 Armenia still has the freest press in the region.

Armenia’s neighbors Georgia is 77th, Turkey is 165th, Azerbaijan is 151st, while Iran is 177th.

The report mentions that Armenia is ‘facing an unprecedented level of disinformation and hate speech’.

 

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 03-05-23

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 17:26, 3 May 2023

YEREVAN, 3 MAY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 3 May, USD exchange rate up by 0.13 drams to 386.98 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 3.05 drams to 426.96 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.02 drams to 4.87 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 1.48 drams to 483.96 drams.

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

Gold price up by 168.16 drams to 24826.16 drams. Silver price up by 0.16 drams to 308.18 drams.