Armenia to honor 2008 post-election unrest victims in “powerful civil procession”, PM expected to address the nation

Armenia to honor 2008 post-election unrest victims in “powerful civil procession”, PM expected to address the nation

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10:08,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan has called for a “powerful civil procession” on March 1, the 11th anniversary of the deadly 2008 post-election events in Yerevan that claimed 10 lives.

“This year marks the 11th anniversary of the [March 1] events. The decision on holding a procession was made as a result of discussions. This procession will be dedicated to the victory of the Armenian citizen, will be directed against vote rigging, violence, corruption and crime. The procession will mark the milestone that in Armenia the victory and power of the citizen are irreversible. No longer will there be vote rigging in Armenia, we are firmly standing against any violence, as well as political violence, corruption and illegal [activities]”, Pashinyan said in a live Facebook broadcast.

He said that on that day they will also pay homage to the victims of the 2008 March 1 events and overall to all victims of political violence.

“So, I am inviting everyone to the Freedom Square [Yerevan] at 18:30, March 1, 2019 to hold a civil procession heading to the Myasnikyan statue on the occasion of the 2008 March 1 events. I also intend to address the nation on that day. On March 1, we must demonstrate our decisiveness and dedication to democracy and people’s power in Armenia,” he said.

In March of 2008, 10 people, including two security officers, were killed in violent post-election unrest clashes in Yerevan. The outgoing president at that time was Robert Kocharyan, currently jailed amid an ongoing criminal investigation into the very same events. Other officials are also under investigation. The unrest was sparked when Serzh Sargsyan was named winner of the 2008 presidential election, which the then-opposition claimed was rigged.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Arayik Harutyunyan relieved from position of advisor to Artsakh’s President

Arayik Harutyunyan relieved from position of advisor to Artsakh’s President

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10:30,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Bako Sahakyan signed a decree according to which Arayik Harutyunyan has been relieved from the position of advisor to the Artsakh Republic President – Artsakh Republic President’s representative at large upon his own request, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Asbarez: Illustrated Newsletter Brings Forests and Wildlife of Armenia to a Young Audience

Building Bridges is an environmental education newsletter

BY JASON SOHIGIAN

WOBURN, Mass.–Armenia Tree Project has released the eighth edition of its Building Bridges environmental education newsletter, focusing on the important theme of “Forest and Wildlife Preservation.”

ATP’s Building Bridges program connects diasporan students with their counterparts in Armenia and highlights Armenia’s rich natural heritage through education. Over the past nine years, it has been supported by a grant from the Thomas Kooyumjian Family Foundation.

Armenia has declared 2019 to be the “Year of the Caucasian Leopard,” and this magnificent animal is featured in the newsletter with a camera trap photo captured by experts at WWF Armenia. The Caucasian Leopard is a subspecies listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Recently, a leopard nicknamed “Leo/Neo” has found his way back home to Armenia’s famed Khosrov Forest.

“You can learn more about Leo/Neo, cool environmental facts presented in a format similar to National Geographic Kids, and much more in our newsletter,” explains Sarah Hayes, one of the authors of the publication. The illustrations and characters have been developed by artist Alik Arzoumanian. The newsletter features stories with characters like Aram, Maral, and Tchalo, a gampr dog who has been teaching about fire prevention over the past year.

The ATP newsletter also includes a feature called the coin box challenge. “The publication has a foldable donation box inside, which encourages young people to get involved and take action. We give them an option to collect small sums of money from their community which is used to support ATP’s programs in Armenia,” says Hayes. “This fosters a sense of paying it forward, which is important and gratifying at the same time.”

“So, what is the coin box challenge? When students send their donation boxes in to ATP’s headquarters in Woburn, our executive director Jeanmarie Papelian will send them a Building Bridges certificate. We also offer to feature the student on our website in recognition of his or her volunteer efforts,” adds Hayes.

ATP will highlight the student who raises the most money with a feature story in the next edition of the Building Bridges newsletter. The winner of the coin bank challenge will be announced in September.

The illustrated Building Bridges newsletter is distributed free of charge to Armenian students across North America, in Armenia, and other countries where ATP has partner schools. It is available in PDF format on the ATP website, and hard copies are available for free by contacting ATP’s Woburn office at [email protected] or (617) 926-TREE.

168: Armenian PM presents books to citizens

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Society

On the occasion of the Book Giving Day Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan accompanied by his wife Anna Hakobyan visited “Bookinist” bookshop. Nikol Pashinyan and Anna Hakobyan bought a number of books, put their signatures on them and went out of the shop to present them to random citizens.

“In fact, our books finished very rapidly. I congratulate on the day of book giving and hope you have already received and presented a book”, PM Pashinyan said, addressing the citizens on a Facebook live broadcast.

168: Nikol Pashinyan, OSCE MG Co-chairs highlight implementation of ceasefire agreements

Category
Politics

Prime Minister of Armenia received the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs Igor Popov of the Russian Federation, Stéphane Visconti of France and Andrew Schofer of the United States of America, as well as Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk on February 20.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan welcomed the visit of the Co-chairs to Armenia and highlighted their role as an internationally authorized body to carry out talks on Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement.

The OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs congratulated Nikol Pashinyan on the victory of “My Step” bloc in the parliamentary elections.

PM Pashinyan presented to the Co-chairs the details of his non-formal meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Davos in January.

The interlocutors exchanged ideas on the creation of an appropriate atmosphere for Nagorno Karabakh peace process. The sides highlighted the importance of the implementation of the ceasefire agreements.

Pashinyan and Aliyev have held 3 non-formal meetings so far. The 1st was in Dushanbe in September 2018 in the sidelines of the CIS summit. The 2nd took place in St. Petersburg in December 2018. This time the leaders met during the dinner organized in the framework of the informal meeting between leaders of CIS states following the EAEU regular sitting. Pashinyan-Aliyev 3rd meeting took place in January 2019 in Davos in the sideline sof the World Economic Forum.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/20/2019

                                        Wednesday, 
Armenian Growth Rate In 2018 Reported By Government
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - A supermarket in Yerevan.
The Armenian economy grew by 5.2 percent last year on the back of major gains 
in manufacturing, trade and other services, according to official statistics 
released on Wednesday.
The figure is virtually identical with a growth estimate made by the World Bank 
last month. The bank also forecast that economic growth in Armenia slow down 
this year before accelerating in 2020 and 2021.
Armenian growth reached 7.5 percent in 2017. It hit 9.7 percent in the first 
quarter of 2018, just before the start of weeks of mass protests that led to 
the resignation of the country’s longtime leader, Serzh Sarkisian.
The Armenian Statistical Committee recorded a nearly 9 percent rise in the 2018 
volume of retail and wholesale trade. It said that financial and other services 
were up by as much as 19 percent.
The government agency also registered a 4.3 percent increase in industrial 
output mainly driven by manufacturing sectors. By contrast, the Armenian mining 
industry, a key export-oriented sector, contracted by 14 percent. This seems to 
have primarily resulted from the closure in early 2018 of a large copper and 
molybdenum mine in the northern Lori province.
GDP growth was also dragged down by an 8.5 percent fall in agricultural 
production. Government officials blame it on unfavorable weather conditions.
In its comprehensive policy program approved by the parliament last week, Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government pledged to ensure that the domestic 
economy expands by at least 5 percent annually for the next five years. It said 
rising exports will be the “main engine” of that growth.
The program reaffirms Pashinian’s repeated pledges to carry out an “economic 
revolution” that will significantly reduce poverty and unemployment in Armenia. 
It says the government will improve tax administration, ease business 
regulations, guarantee fair competition, and stimulate exports and innovation.
Mining Giant Becomes Armenia’s Top Taxpayer
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia - A copper ore-processing plant in Kajaran, February 6, 2016.
An Armenian mining enterprise replaced the national gas distribution network 
last year as the country’s largest corporate taxpayer, a senior government 
official revealed on Wednesday.
Rafik Mashadian, the deputy head of the State Revenue Committee (SRC), said 
that the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine (ZCMC) more than doubled its tax 
payments, to 51 billion drams ($105 million), in 2018.
“This company had the largest increase [in tax payments,]” Mashadian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
The sharp rise contrasted with a 10 percent drop in the combined 2018 output of 
Armenia’s mining and metallurgical companies. They still accounted for more 
than 40 percent of Armenian exports.
Located in Kajaran, a small down in the southeastern Syunik province, ZCMC 
reportedly employs more than 4,000 people. A German company, Cronimet, 
nominally owns 75 percent of it.
The rest of ZCMC is controlled by at least two obscure Armenian firms. 
Ownership of those firms has long been a subject of speculation, with some 
local commentators and opposition politicians linking them to former President 
Serzh Sarkisian or his predecessor Robert Kocharian.
According to the SRC, Armenia’s largest cigarette manufacturer, Grand Tobacco, 
also significantly increased its tax contributions and became the second 
largest taxpayer in 2018. It is followed by Gazprom Armenia, the national gas 
network owned by Russia’s Gazprom giant. Gazprom Armenia had paid more taxes 
than any other local firm in 2017.
The Armenian government’s overall tax revenue was up by more than 14 percent, 
at 1.3 trillion drams ($2.7 billion), last year. Large companies generated 
about three-quarters of it.
Mashadian attributed the increase to economic growth and a tough crackdown on 
tax evasion declared by the government.
Vahagn Khachatrian, an independent economist, said while the figure is 
encouraging he is puzzled by a surge in taxes collected by the SRC in December. 
He wondered if the SRC is continuing to force businesses to pay taxes in 
advance of their anticipated earnings.
“I’m worried that that vicious practice of advance payments [collected from 
companies] may have continued,” Khachatrian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
Mashadian ruled out that. “Media claims that the SRC is meeting its targets by 
pressuring businesses are not true,” insisted the SRC official.
Mediators Start Fresh Trip To Karabakh Conflict Zone
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (R) meets with the co-chairs of the 
OSCE Minsk Group in Yerevan, .
U.S., Russian and French mediators met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in 
Yerevan on Wednesday at the start of a fresh tour of the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict zone which follows a series of high-level Armenian-Azerbaijani 
negotiations.
A statement by Pashinian’s press office said they “outlined further steps” in 
the negotiation process and discussed ways of creating an “appropriate 
atmosphere” for that. “They stressed the importance of implementing 
understandings on maintaining the ceasefire regime,” it said.
According to the statement, Pashinian also briefed the three diplomats 
co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group on his meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev held in Davos, Switzerland January 22. It was their third face-to-face 
encounter since September.
The Davos meeting came a week after the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign 
ministers met in Paris in the presence of the Minsk Group co-chairs. According 
to the mediators, the ministers acknowledged the need for “taking concrete 
measures to prepare the populations for peace.”
Those developments fuelled Armenian media and opposition speculation about 
far-reaching agreements reached by Pashinian and Aliyev. Some critics claimed 
that Pashinian may have agreed to make significant territorial concessions to 
Azerbaijan.
The prime minister brushed aside these “conspiracy theories” on January 23. He 
stated a week later that Armenia and Karabakh will not agree to such 
concessions to Azerbaijan in return for mere peace in the region. Baku 
criticized that statement, saying that it could undermine the peace process.
On Tuesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov cautioned against excessive 
expectations of decisive progress towards a Karabakh settlement. “Given that 
the new government of Armenia was formed only recently, additional time is 
needed to understand just how intensively and far it is possible to advance the 
settlement process at this stage,” he told a news conference in Moscow.
“The co-chairs and the OSCE can only help to create conditions for dialogue,” 
said Lavrov. “Decisions will have to be made in direct negotiations between the 
parties.”
Lavrov met with his Armenian counterpart Zohrab Mnatsakanian on February 16 on 
the sidelines of an international security forum in Munich, Germany.
Tsarukian’s Bodyguard To Stand Trial For Assault
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenian - Eduard Babayan (L) attends a parliament session in Yerevan, January 
15, 2019.
A parliament deputy who was until recently Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) 
leader Gagik Tsarukian’s chief bodyguard will go on trial soon on charges of 
violent assault.
Eduard Babayan was arrested in July hours after a 50-year-old man in Yerevan 
was hospitalized with serious injuries. The latter claimed to have been beaten 
up at a compound of Armenia’s National Olympic Committee headed by Tsarukian. 
He said he was hit by Tsarukian before being repeatedly kicked and punched by 
Babayan and another person.
Both Tsarukian and Babayan strongly denied the allegation. The burly bodyguard 
was charged even though his alleged victim later retracted his incriminating 
testimony.
Babayan was freed on bail in August. He was elected to the Armenian parliament 
on the BHK ticket in December.
The Office of the Prosecutor-General told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on 
Wednesday that the criminal investigation into the incident has been completed 
and its findings have been sent to a court in Yerevan.
This means that Babayan will stand trial after all. The accusation brought 
against him carries a prison term of between three and seven years.
Armenia - Businessman Gagik Tsarukian and his chief bodyguard Eduard Babayan 
(R) at an election campaign rally in Hrazdan, 11 April 2012.
The BHK, which is in opposition to the Armenian government and boasts the 
second largest group in the parliament, did not immediately react to the 
development. Tsarukian’s party had defended its decision to nominate Babayan as 
a candidate in the December parliamentary elections.
Armenian media have repeatedly implicated Tsarukian’s bodyguards -- and Babayan 
in particular -- in violence, including against opponents of former 
governments, in the past. The BHK leader, who is also one of the country’s 
richest men, always denied those claims.
In a police video released in July, Babayan’s alleged victim said that he was 
attacked after imploring Tsarukian to help ensure that Armenian law-enforcement 
authorities withdraw an international arrest warrant issued for his son accused 
of draft evasion.
The young man is a boxer and Russian national who was told to serve in 
Armenia’s armed forces after receiving Armenian citizenship in order to compete 
for the South Caucasus country in international tournaments.
Press Review
“Zhoghovurd” says that parliamentary opposition criticism of the Armenian 
government’s policy program approved by the parliament was not backed up by a 
“comprehensive analysis” of the document’s content. The paper says the program 
has instead been thoroughly examined by two parties not represented in the 
National Assembly: the Armenian National Congress (HAK) and Dashnaktsutyun. “It 
does not matter whether or not points made by these two parties are 
acceptable,” it says. “The important thing here is the very fact [of their 
detailed analysis.]” This is further proof that there are few genuine parties 
in Armenia, concludes the paper.
“Zhamanak” reports that parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan has voiced his 
opposition to the idea of restoring the presidential system of government in 
Armenia which has been put forward by former President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s 
Armenian National Congress (HAK). The paper welcomes the statement and says any 
major constitutional reform must be based on consensus.
Lragir.am writes on reports that former President Serzh Sarkisian’s embattled 
brother Aleksandr has donated $18.5 million to the state in the face of 
criminal proceedings launched against him. It quotes a human rights activist, 
Artur Sakunts, as saying that the donation was “voluntary.” “We don’t know what 
criminal case has been opened and what accusations have been brought against 
Sashik Sarkisian,” he says. “Nor do we know the estimated value of his 
properties and financial assets. All we know is the publicized information 
about his $30 million bank account.” Sakunts wonders why Sarkisian has not 
transferred the entire sum to the state treasury.
(Lilit Harutiunian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Calendar of Events – 02/21/2019

                        Armenian News's Calendar of events
                        (All times local to events)
                =========================================
What:           The Zeytun Gospels "Missing Pages: The Modern Life of a
                Medieval Manuscript from Genocide to Justice"
                a lecture is given by Prof. Heghnar Zeitlian
When:           Feb 24 2019 1pm
                Following Church Divine Liturgy which starts at 10:30am
Where:          Armenian Apostolic Church of Crescenta Valley
                Western Prelacy's Hall, 6252 Honolulu Ave., La Crescenta, CA
Misc:           In 2010, the world's wealthiest art institution, the J. Paul
                Getty Museum, found itself confronted by a century-old
                genocide. The Armenian Church was suing for the return of
                eight pages from the Zeytun Gospels, a manuscript illuminated
                by the greatest medieval Armenian artist, Toros Roslin.
                The Missing Pages is the biography of a manuscript that is at
                once art, sacred object, and cultural heritage. Its tale
                mirrors the story of its scattered community as Armenians have
                struggled to redefine themselves after genocide and in the
                absence of a homeland. Heghnar Zeitlian Watenpaugh follows in
                the manuscript's footsteps through seven centuries, from
                medieval Armenia to the killing fields of 1915 Anatolia, the
                refugee camps of Aleppo, Ellis Island, and Soviet Armenia, and
                ultimately to a Los Angeles courtroom.
                Heghnar Zeitlian Watenpaugh is Professor of Art History at the
                University of California, Davis. She is the award-winning
                author of The Image of an Ottoman City: Architecture in Aleppo
                (2004). Her writing has also appeared in the Huffington Post
                and the Los Angeles Times. As a board member of the US
                nonprofit Project 2015, she helped organize the historic
                Armenian Genocide Centennial Commemorations in Istanbul where
                she also delivered a speech in Armenian and Turkish
                The event is free to the public.
Online Contact: [email protected]
Tel:            818-244-9639
                =========================================
What:           International conference 'We Will Live After Babylon'
                Armenian and Jewish existential experience between expulsion,
                exile and annihilation".
When:           Feb 24 2019 9am
                Ends on Feb 27
Where:          Kulturzentrum Pavillon Hannover, Lister Meile 4, 30161
                Hannover, Germany
Misc:           Not only were Jews and Armenians compelled for centuries to
                become stateless and live outside their homelands, but they
                shared another destiny: in the twentieth century, collective
                destruction threatened them in the shadow of two world
                wars. The European Center for Jewish Music (EZJM) and the
                German-Armenian Society (DAG) are using this convergence as the
                starting point for a collaborative conference that will focus
                on Jewish and Armenian historical experiences through
                scientific lectures and a cultural program.
                The speakers (amongst others Richard Hovannisian, Michael
                C. Stone, Harutyun Marutyan, Dan Diner, Emil Sanamyan,mit Kurt)
                represent a variety of disciplines such as theology,
                literature, musicology, history, sociology, political science
                and cultural studies. The themes of the conference - Diaspora,
                Minority Issues, Genocide, Memory and Reception, and Relations
                between Jews and Armenians Today - reflect the common dimension
                of Armenian and Jewish conditions.
                An extensive accompanying program consisting of readings, a
                theater performance, concerts, workshops and a panel discussion
                aims to familiarize a broader public with the subject. The
                concluding podium discussion will discuss the very different
                politics of remembrance in dealing with the Holocaust and the
                genocide against the Armenians in Germany.
                Jointly organized by The` European Center for Jewish Music an
                the German-Armenian Society
Online Contact: [email protected]; 
[email protected]
Web:            
***************************************************************************
Armenian News's calendar of events is collected and updated mostly from
announcements posted on this list, and submissions to Armenian [email protected].
To submit, send to Armenian [email protected], and please note the following
important points:
a) Armenian News's administrators have final say on what may be included in
        Armenian News's calendar of events.
b) Posting time will is on Thursdays, 06:00 US Pacific time, to squeeze in
        a final reminder before weekend activities kick in.
c) Calendar items are short, functional, and edited to fit a template.
d) There is no guarantee or promise that an item will be published on time.
e) Calendar information is believed to be from reliable sources. However,
        no responsibility by the List's Administation or by USC is assumed
        for inaccuracies and there is no guarantee that the information is
        up-to-date.
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        (Dinners, dances, forget it. This is not an ad-space.)
g) Armenian News is a non-commercial, non-partisan, pan-Armenian outlet.
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Armenia may purchase up to 16 Su-30SM fighters from Russia – Defense Ministry

Interfax – Russia & CIS Military Newswire
February 19, 2019 Tuesday 6:40 PM MSK


Armenia may purchase up to 16 Su-30SM fighters from Russia – Defense Ministry

YEREVAN. Feb 19

The Armenian Defense Ministry has not ruled out the possibility of purchasing 16 Sukhoi Su-30SM multi-role fighter aircraft from Russia.

“I cannot name the exact figures. The defense minister also did not provide the exact figures, did not say that Armenia is intending to buy just 12 aircraft. That is a minimal amount we considering. It is a squadron. It could consist of ten, 12 or 16 aircraft. It’s difficult to name the exact figures, but we can’t rule anything out,” Armenian Defense Ministry spokesperson Artsrun Hovhannisyan told Radio Liberty’s Armenian-language service on Tuesday.

When asked whether the jet fighters are being purchased through the 100-million-dollar defense loan provided by Russia, Hovhannisyan replied that Armenia is purchasing military equipment using not only the loan.

“It would be wrong if I let it be known what equipment is being purchased with what funds. But, in general, military equipment is being purchased not only through the loan, but also at our expense,” the Armenian Defense Ministry spokesperson said.

Armenian Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan said earlier that Armenia does not plan on limiting itself to purchasing four Su-30SM multi-role jet fighters from Russia.

“We will not limit ourselves to four jet fighters,” Tonoyan told reporters on February 13.

“The four planes have yet to be delivered to Armenia, and they will be in due course,” he said.