Month: June 2017
RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/02/2017
Friday, June 2, 2017 First Lady Coy About Armenian President's Political Future . Artak Hambardzumian Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian, his wife Rita and other dignitaries at an award ceremony in Yerevan, 28May2017. The wife of Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian on Friday declined to clarify what he plans to do after completing his second and final term in office next year. "I didn't want him to become president in the first place. I didn't want him to be on the political arena," Rita Sarkisian told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am), commenting on lingering speculation that he may become prime minister in April 2018. When asked whether she wants him to retire from the political scene, she said: "I want to have a rest." Asked whether that depends on Sarkisian's political plans, she replied: "Yes and no. We'll see." The first lady also insisted that she never given her husband political advice. "I don't like women who advise their husbands," she said. "How can I advise him? I don't like that. I would never do that. And I would not respect a man who would take my advice on the job." Sarkisian himself has shed little light on his political future so far. He said in March that he would like to "play a role, in some capacity, in ensuring the security of our people" after the end of his decade-long presidency. Armenia will switch to a parliamentary system of government from April 2018, meaning that its next president will be elected by parliament and have largely ceremonial powers. Armenia -- Frst Lady Rita Sarkisian speaks to RFE/RL in Yerevan, 2June, 2017. Rita Sarkisian spoke to RFE/RL's Armenian service while visiting a Yerevan hospital specializing in treatment of children suffering from various types of blood cancer. A charity headed by her has for years provided financial assistance to it. The first lady complained of declining donations to the charity called Donate Life. "Three or four years ago we raised half a million dollars for this hospital," said the former music teacher. "The following year that figure dropped to $300,000. This year we have only $100,000." "But that's OK," she went on. "We'll learn that culture [of benevolence] little by little." Still No Charges In Armenian Election Scandal . Astghik Bedevian Armenia - Armenians vote in parliamentary elections at a polling station in Yerevan, 2Apr2017. Law-enforcement authorities have not charged anyone yet more than one month after launching an investigation into a secretly recorded audio suggesting that employees of a pro-government businessman were warned to help him get reelected to Armenia's parliament or lose their jobs. The recording posted on Hayastan24.com features the voice of a man threatening to fire those employees of Artak Sargsian's SAS supermarket chain in Yerevan who have failed to guarantee in writing that their friends and relatives will vote for their boss. The man also promises lavish bonuses to their colleagues who will "bring votes" to the candidate of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK). The news website said that the SAS staff meeting took place in the run-up to the April 2 parliamentary elections won by the HHK. Sargsian, who was reelected to the National Assembly, has since refused to comment on the audio and the resulting political scandal. Opposition politicians and other critics of the Armenian government seized upon the revelation as further proof that public and private sector employees across the country were illegally pressurized to vote for the HHK. In an April 3 statement, European election monitors likewise reported "pressure on civil servants and employees of private companies" Responding to the uproar, Armenia's Special Investigative Service (SIS) said on April 19 that it has opened a criminal case in connection with the scandalous audio. An SIS spokesperson told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) on Friday that the law-enforcement agency is still questioning relevant individuals and has not levelled criminal charges against anyone so far. The official refused to give any details of the investigation. Civic activists dismissed this explanation. Heriknaz Tigranian, a legal expert with the Armenian affiliate of Transparency International, insisted that the SIS has had enough time to identify the secretly recorded individuals. "They know how to conduct forensic tests to identify people's voices," she said. Tigranian said she suspects that the authorities are dragging out the probe with the aim of eventually closing the case for a supposed lack of evidence. "Had the authorities had the political will to solve such organized crimes, Artak Sargsian would not have run for parliament in the first place," charged Artur Sakunts, a human rights activist. According to the Hetq.am investigative publication, the man who purportedly threatened to fire SAS employees is Sargsian's elder brother Aram. Karabakh Says Another War Unlikely . Hovannes Movsisian Nagorno-Karabakh - Karabakh Armenian troops fire rounds from a howitzer in the Martakert district, 3Apr2016. Continuing ceasefire violations along the Armenian-Azerbaijani "line of contact" around Nagorno-Karabakh are unlikely to escalate into a full-scale war, a senior official in Stepanakert insisted on Friday. "Although the war can break out at any moment, its likelihood is low," said Davit Babayan, the deputy chief of staff of Bako Sahakian, the Karabakh president. "Why? Because Azerbaijan spent 22 years getting ready to start the four-day war of April 2016. And it got ready for a blitzkrieg," he told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). "Only one year has passed [since the April 2016 war.] Given so many [Azerbaijani] casualties and the clear position of the international community, I don't think that another war is possible now," added Babayan. The four-day hostilities mentioned by the Karabakh Armenian official marked the worst fighting in the conflict since a Russian-mediated truce stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war for the disputed territory in 1994. They left at least 190 soldiers from both warring sides dead. In a report published on Thursday, the International Crisis Group (ICG), a Brussels-based think-tank, warned of a serious risk of renewed heavy fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces. "A year after Nagorno-Karabakh's April 2016 violent flare-up, Armenia and Azerbaijan are closer to war than at any point since the 1994 ceasefire," it said, calling for more vigorous international efforts to broker a peaceful solution to the conflict. Babayan dismissed this conclusion, arguing that the ICG did not predict the April 2016 hostilities. "It does not reflect the reality," he said of the report. Truce violations along "the line of contact" have periodically intensified over past year. In the most recent escalation, Azerbaijani forces fired guided missiles at an air-defense system of Karabakh's Armenian-backed Defense Army on May 16. The latter retaliated with mortar fire targeting Azerbaijani military facilities across the frontline. The U.S., Russian and French mediators co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group condemned the "significant violations of the ceasefire." In a May 18 statement, they urged the parties to "take all necessary measures to prevent any further escalation in the conflict zone." Another Russian Firm Seeks To Leave Armenian Energy Sector . Emil Danielyan Armenia - One of the hydroelectric plants making up the Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade. A state-owned Russian company, RusHydro, has reaffirmed its intention to sell off Armenia's second most important hydroelectric complex belonging to it. The sale of the Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade would further reduce the presence of Kremlin-controlled companies in the Armenian energy sector heavily dependent on Russian gas and nuclear fuel. The Soviet-era facility consists of seven hydroelectric plants built along the Hrazdan river flowing through central Armenia. It accounts for roughly 10 percent of Armenian electricity output. The Armenian government handed over ownership of the Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade to Russia in 2003 in payment for the Metsamor nuclear plant's massive debts Russian nuclear fuel suppliers. RusHydro acquired it from another state-run Russian firm in 2011. Russian media reported in 2015 that the energy giant, which operates most of Russia's hydroelectric plants, is now prepared to sell its Armenian subsidiary. The TASS news agency quoted RusHydro's chief executive, Nikolay Shulginov, as saying on Thursday that his company has been negotiating with potential buyers. "One of them emerged but then vanished," he said. "Another one has now popped up. We are now holding [negotiations.]" Shulginov declined to name those companies or disclose RusHydro's possible asking price for Sevan-Hrazdan. Another Russian energy conglomerate, Inter RAO, essentially pulled out of Armenia in late 2015, selling the country's debt-ridden electricity distribution network and largest thermal power plant to the Tashir Group of Samvel Karapetian, a Russian-Armenian billionaire. RusHydro's withdrawal would leave only one Kremlin-controlled company, Gazprom, owning a power-generating facility in Armenia: a thermal power plant in the central town of Hrazdan. Gazprom is also the country's principal supplier of natural gas. Gas is used for generating around one-third of Armenia's electricity. The Metsamor power plant and hydroelectric facilities meet the rest of its energy needs. The Armenian authorities now seem keen to diversify foreign ownership in the domestic energy sector. More than a year ago they sold Armenia's largest and most modern hydroelectric complex, the Vorotan Hydropower Cascade, to the U.S. company ContourGlobal in a $250 million deal strongly backed by the U.S. government. And in March this year, an Italian company started building a new thermal power plant in Yerevan. Press Review In a commentary on International Children's Day marked on June 1, "Haykakan Zhamanak" says that children in Armenia should first and foremost be protected against "social blows." "Tens of thousands of children are poor, and this means that not only their present but also future is in danger," writes the paper. "For malnutrition, poor living conditions and a lack of education and leisure opportunities deprive the children of their ability to develop their potential in full." "Zhoghovurd" reports that the newly appointed Justice Minister Davit Harutiunian on Thursday called for a stronger government oversight of government grants allocated to non-governmental organizations. In particular, Harutiunian said that from now on such NGOs will have to detail their concrete programs financed by the government and present detailed reports on their implementation. The paper says that Armenian governments have never done this before. "It is obvious that the authorities decided to introduce oversight mechanisms not willingly but under pressure from the European Union following the well-known scandal over misappropriation of [EU] grants," it claims. "Zhamanak" says that when President Serzh Sarkisian promised following last July's Erebuni hostage crisis to form a government of "national accord" many felt that then Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian's and his government's days are numbered. "This is what eventually happened," the paper says. "But the government formed by [the current Prime Minister] Karen Karapetian hasnothing to do with national accord in terms of both political content and agenda. One is left to presume that Sarkisian circulated the idea for another occasion and most probably for his personal use. The course of events shows that this is the case." It notes that Armen Rustamian, a leader of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), stated recently that his party will not object if Sarkisian becomes prime minister next year. (Lilit Harutiunian) Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2017 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
Tourism: 17 Israeli tour operators pay study visit to Armenia
17 tour operators from Israel have paid a three-day study visit to Armenia. As the Ministry of Economic Development and Investments told Panorama.am, today they met with the Armenian tour operators, with Ashot Shakhmuradyan, Honorary Consul of Israel to Armenia, attending the meeting.
Zarmine Zeytuntsyan, Chairperson of the State Tourism Committee of the Armenian Ministry of Economic Development and Investments, attached importance to the cooperation between Armenia and Israel in tourism sphere.
“We believe that boosting tourism visits between the two countries plays an important role not only in economic terms, but also in terms of strengthening and developing inter-cultural dialogue and the friendship of the peoples,” she noted.
A number of issues regarding the further strengthening of the cooperation between Israel and Armenia in tourism sphere were touched upon at the meeting. The sides exchanged necessary information aimed at further promoting the cooperation in the future.
The visit of the Israeli tour operators to Armenia has been organized by the Armenia Air company.
Chess: Armenian GM Artashes Minasian among leaders at European Individual Championship
The games of Round 3 at European Individual Chess Championship 2017 have been played in Minsk, Belarus. Armenian GM Artashes Minasian claimed the third victory in the round, outplaying Daniele Vocaturo from Italy.
As the Chess Federation of Armenia told Panorama.am, another Armenian player Hovhannes Gabuzyan drew his game against Andrei Volokitin.
Hrant Melkumyan, Tigran Harutyunyan, Gevorg Harutyunyan, Vahe Baghdasaryan, Arman Mikaelyan and Artur Davtyan also secured victories in Round 3.
After three rounds, nine chess players have scored 3 points apiece and are leading the table with Armenia’s Artashes Minasian being among the leaders.
Hrant Melkumyan and Hovhannes Gabuzyan have scored 2.5 points each.
To note, European Individual Chess Championship 2017 is a qualification event for the next World Cup. According to FIDE regulations and the decision of the ECU Board, 22 participants will be qualified for the world chess tournament.
Tourism/Medicine: Armenia joining in the growth of cosmetic surgery tourism
Comically enough, much of the drive behind development of cosmetic surgery in Armenia especially that pertaining to Rhinoplasty or nose surgery stems from the iconic Armenian nose. It is a long, pointed and aquiline fleshy structure which is a reason for national pride.
The famous Armenian nose is often referred to symbolize the country’s high mountains which stands erect kissing the skyline.
However, paradoxically enough, many Armenians particularly the women folk are not happy with their long noses. They consider it a disqualification for marriage prospects. A long nose can have a substantial damaging impact on hopes of tying a potential wedding knot. They would rather prefer a western nose which is relatively small and cute.
Hence they go for a frantic quest for getting their noses operated and modeled as per trendy western looks. Thus, the seeds of Rhinoplasty industry were planted that soon turned into a popular national pursuit to get smaller and customized noses boosting the country’s medical tourism sector.
To make Rhinoplasty popular in Armenia, a competition was organized in the early 2000s by the plastic surgery department of the Kanaker – Zeytun medical centre located north of Yerevan. This was held between 2004 and 2011 eight times and those emerged as champions earned a free rhinoplasty done to get their desired shape plus the silver and bronze medalists received heavy discounts. The competition of this kind brings about a massive boom in the industry where people from both within the country and abroad as well flock around Armenian nose job clinics.
A good and booming clinic in Armenia will perform no less than 500 nose jobs a year and the number keeps climbing to astonishing heights. Even 5 years back Armenian clinics used to book and execute around 150 to 200 Rhinoplasty surgeries a year.
The craze for reconstructive plastic surgery in Armenia went up rapidly following the intense earthquake in 1988, and the surgeons saw it as a lucrative opportunity to go in for other plastic surgery ventures as to reconstruct lost and impaired body parts of those suffered from the wrath of the quake.
The clients for Rhinoplasty in Armenia are not just confined to the local population. Tourists from outside find this country a hotspot for nose surgery chiefly because the cost is surprisingly low, besides the unquestionable expertise the surgeons have in this specialized field.
The infrastructure of this country is reasonably good to draw large tourist population from abroad seeking cosmetic surgeries. As per a noted plastic surgeon, 80% of his customers are from Russia and the US accompanied by Ukraine, other EU countries and even from far off countries like South Africa and Argentina. The number of operations in reputed Armenian clinics is growing 10-15% annually.
With the Armenian nose design getting less popular among the local folks, the industry is thriving well on a social psyche of opting for a new trend of getting replicated nasal structure of celebrity nose models of the Western world.
Cosmetic surgery tourism in Armenia proffers a range of opportunities for plastic surgery and dental care. The Armenian surgeons are capable of smooth execution of relatively complex plastic surgeries. The prices are wallet friendly and about 70 % of the price a clinic is going to charge for the same kind of treatment in the UK and in US.
Armenia is a fast emerging country specializing in the skills of rhinoplasty making it a much sought after cosmetic surgery tourism destination. Most of the reputed clinics are located in Yerevan. They have a potential for handling up to 500 customers in a month. Around 33 % of the nose job clientele comprises of women.
The Armenian nose has a considerable cult status and is associated with fashion, tourism, business, journalism and it is in fact a significant part of everyday life. Besides rhinoplasty, this country has also specialized clinics for other surgeries too like Laser surgery and Laser hair removal. The surgeries are done with meticulous precision and the surgeons are adequately qualified for this.
http://drprem.com/medical-tourism/armenia-joining-in-the-growth-of-cosmetic-surgery-tourism
Sports: Manchester United films exclusive documentary about Henrikh Mkhitaryan in Armenia.
YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. The official Manchester United TV channel is shooting a film about Henrikh Mkhitaryan, the Reds said on Facebook.
The movie is a documentary as is being filmed in Armenia.
It will soon be aired on MUTV.
BAKU: Risks of war in Nagorno-Karabakh higher than in previous decades
By Rashid Shirinov
Armenia and Azerbaijan – the two parties to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict are closer to war than at any point since a ceasefire brokered more than 20 years ago, the International Crisis Group said.
For over two decades the two South Caucasus countries have been locked in conflict, which emerged over Armenian territorial claims. Since the 1990s war, Armenian armed forces have occupied over 20 percent of Azerbaijan's internationally recognized territory, including Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent regions.
The clashes over control of Nagorno-Karabakh have intensified in the past three years and turned into a violent flare-up of the conflict last April.
The reports said any descent into all-out war could draw in regional powers, which include Russia and Turkey – closely allied to Armenia and Azerbaijan respectively.
“Since mid-January 2017, deadly incidents involving the use of heavy artillery and anti-tank weapons have occurred with varying degrees of intensity; May saw a significant increase, including reports of self-guided rockets and missiles used near densely populated areas along the line of contact,” the report notes.
Not a day goes by without Armenia’s ceasefire breaking and provocations with the use of large-caliber machine guns, mortars and other weapons. The Armenian side constantly shells Azerbaijani settlements located in the frontline regions, thus threatening the lives of peaceful Azerbaijani citizens living there.
Although the OSCE Minsk Group, chaired by Paris, Moscow and Washington, is working to find a peaceful solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict for over two decades, its activities have brought no breakthrough results so far, and ICG analysts also note this.
“Efforts to ensure a lasting settlement of the conflict in the South Caucasus, which is crossed by oil and gas pipelines, failed, despite the mediation of the OSCE Minsk Group,” the ICG stated.
The ICG, which prepared its report based on the insights of analysts who spoke to residents and observers on the ground, noted in its report that the settlement process has stalled, and both sides appear ready for confrontation.
“A year after Nagorno-Karabakh’s April 2016 violent flare-up, Armenia and Azerbaijan are closer to war than at any point since the 1994 ceasefire,” the report notes. “While violence remains at a relatively low boil, any escalation quickly could spin out of control.”
Since the meetings of Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents in Vienna and St. Petersburg, which took place after the April 2016 clashes, the negotiation process came to the dead end due to the denial of Yerevan to continue serious talks.
Baku has repeatedly voiced readiness to settle the conflict through direct negotiations with Armenia with the mediation of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs. However, the Armenian side is constantly trying to make up reasons to avoid a constructive dialogue and preserve the status quo in Nagorno-Karabakh.
The ICG report also suggested that Russia remains the most influential foreign player, but noted that the country’s role is complex: “Russia is a co-chair in the Minsk Group, but also chief arms supplier to Azerbaijan and Armenia, both of whom suspect Russia is more interested in expanding its influence in the region than in resolving the conflict.”
The report also stated that Azerbaijan – frustrated with the longstanding status quo and concerned that additional security measures could further cement it – insists that substantive discussions cannot be delayed.
Earlier, Daniel Coats, the Director of U.S. National Intelligence stated that potential for large-scale hostilities in Karabakh will remain in 2017.
BAKU: French envoy: Macron to make every effort to resolve Karabakh conflict peacefully
By Rashid Shirinov
The newly-elected French president will make every effort to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict peacefully, French Ambassador to Baku Aurelia Bouchez said at a press conference on June 2.
She noted that President Emmanuel Macron realizes the value of rich bilateral ties existing between France and Azerbaijan.
Bouchez added that Macron is informed about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
“He will make every effort to settle the conflict peacefully. I think his position will be aimed at the peaceful settlement of this conflict and the role of the OSCE Minsk Group in this matter,” the envoy said, stressing that the main priority is to find a peaceful solution to this problem.
France along with Russia and the U.S. is a co-chair country of the OSCE Minsk Group established to broker a peace to the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
For more than two decades, Armenia and Azerbaijan are in a state of war following Yerevan’s aggression, ethnic cleansing policy and illegal territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenia keeps under control over 20 percent of Azerbaijan's internationally recognized territory, including Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent regions.
Armenia still controls fifth part of Azerbaijan's territory and rejects implementing four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding districts.
Nalbandian and Dacho discussed issues of Armenia-EU cooperation
ARMINFO News Agency, Armenia Wednesday Nalbandian and Dacho discussed issues of Armenia-EU cooperation Yerevan May 31 Marianna Mkrtchyan. Armenia-EU cooperation and interaction within the framework of Eastern Partnership Project were discussed in details by Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and the head of Slovak Republic Foreign Affairs Ministry Special Delegation Dushan Dacho. According to the information shared with ArmInfo by the press office of Armenian Minsitry of Foreign Affairs, the delegation comprised also members from Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, Estonia and Switzerland MFA-s. parties referred to the issues of preparatory works to the Brussels summit planned for the November of this year. The parties stated the dynamic development of Armenia-EU relations, including joining the Horizon-202, COSME, Creative Europe and others, as well a the beginning of negotiations on Joint Aviation Zone. Parties referred also to Armenia-EU Comprehensive Partnership Agreement and to the priorities of Armenia-EU partnership for the year of 2017-2020. The importance of visa status liberalization was accentuated as well.
Armenia plans to increase its peacekeeping force in Lebanon
ARMINFO News Agency, Armenia Wednesday Armenia plans to increase its peacekeeping force in Lebanon Yerevan May 31 Tatevik Shahunyan. Armenia plans to increase its peacekeeping force in Lebanon, Koryun Nahapetyan, the head of the parliamentary commission on defense, national security and foreign affairs informed during the press conference today. According to him, in the near future the issue will be reviewed in plenipotentiary structures and in National Assembly. "International community highly estimates the participation of Armenia in peacekeeping missions. With that we proof the world that we are the country which provides international safety", Nahapetyan stressed. He also informed that in the near future, NATO Trustees Fund will provide Armenia with funds for the disposal of out-of-service weapons. "A country has already been found that will send the necessary funds to the fund, which will be allocated to Armenia. But while the deal has not been drawn, I cannot declassify its details, "Nahapetyan said. To note, Armenian peacekeeping crew implements its mission in Lebanon as a part of the Italian command.