Music: Catholicos Aram I awards “Knight of Cilicia” medal to Tigran Mansurian

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 18 2019

His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, bestowed the “Knight of Cilicia” medal to world famous Armenian composer Tigran Mansurian on Sunday, after a Divine Liturgy, the Catholicosate's official website reported.

Before the conferring of the medal, Catholicos Aram I highlighted national values as the guarantee of people's survival, with each person contributing to the spread of those values in various ways.

Addressing Mansurian, His Holiness stressed the composer has dedicated his whole life to music, with his compositions having hit the stage both in Armenia and abroad.

“Your compositions conveyed the Armenian spirit, strong faith, deep sorrow and miraculous revival to our nation’s sons and foreigners,” His Holiness said.

Mansurian expressed his gratitude to Catholicos Aram I, adding the medal will encourage him to push ahead with his creative activity.

Music: Who is Armenia’s Eurovision 2019 entry Srbuk?

Radio Times
Feb 18 2019


Meet the pop singer who has been on the rise since her Armenian X-Factor debut

By Gareth Thomas

Armenia arrived on the Eurovision scene in 2006 and although they have never won the Song Contest, they have finished in the top ten seven times and come in fourth place twice.

They were also one of the first countries to announce their participant for the 2019 competition. Here is everything you need to know about their participant, Srbuk…

Armenian pop fans amongst you might have already heard of Srbuk. But for those less familiar, here’s what you need to know.

Srbuk – whose real name is Srbuhi Sargsyan – came to the public’s attention during Armenia’s version of the X Factor. Since finishing as a runner-up in 2011 she has been dubbed a rising star in her home country and competed on the 2018 version of The Voice of Ukraine, placing fourth.

Her 2016 single ‘Yete Karogh Es’ (‘If You Can’) topped the Armenian charts for two weeks, and last November she released a new track titled ‘Half a Goddess’.

Armenia have not yet announced their participating song for the 2019 Eurovision Song Contest.

But if you’re already itching for a taste of what Srbuk has to offer, you can check out her music on YouTube.

Not great… Their act – Sevak Khanagyan – failed to make it past the first semi-final, finishing in 15th place (the top ten advance to the Grand Final).

Sports: Armenian wrestlers conquer 8 medals in Kharkov

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 18 2019
Sport 17:41 18/02/2019

Memorial tournament dedicated to Hovhannes Sahakyan took place in Ukraine’s Kharkov attended by Armenian, Georgian, Ukrainian and Moldovan freestyle wrestlers.

As the Wrestling federation reports, at the international tournament Armenian athletes conquered 8 gold medals. Among winners of the tournament are Karen Zurabyan (57kg), Gor Grigoryan (61kg), Vardges Karapetyan (65kg), Andranik Gabrielyan (74kg) and Hovhannes Maghakyan (125kg).

Asbarez: Portantino Introduces Bill to Re-Establish the California-Armenia Trade Office

From left, Senator Anthony Portantino, Glendale Mayor Zareh Sinanyan and Armenia’s Consul General to L.A. Armen Baibourtian submit SB 302

SACRAMENTO—Senator Senator Anthony J. Portantino (D – La Canada Flintridge) introduced SB 302 to reestablish the California-Armenia Trade Office on Thursday.

In 2005, the original trade office was established through legislation authored by former State Senator Jack Scott, the Schwarzenegger Administration later terminated it in 2008. Senator Portantino and co-authors Senator Scott Wilk, Senator Henry Stern, Senator Scott Wiener, Senator Melissa Hurtado and Assemblymember Autumn Burke and Assemblymember Evan Low hope to build a vibrant business relationship between California and Armenia. Several of these co-authors attended the September Tech Trade trip to Armenia.

Through this legislation, Senator Portantino hopes to capitalize on the trade trip’s positive momentum with establishing the trade office. California is home to one of the largest Armenian populations outside of the capitol Yerevan, Armenia. The 25th Senate District represented by Portantino has the largest Armenian population of any state legislative district in the country.

“There is so much excitement and optimism in Armenia under the leadership of Prime Minister Pashinyan and in California under Governor Newsom that we should capitalize on the moment and formalize a positive economic relationship with Yerevan. I was a young politician sitting in the audience when the Jack Scott Bill was signed and I am very pleased to be in a position to help bring it back,” commented Portantino.

“We were pleased to host Senator Portantino, Senator Stern, Assemblymember Low and Assemblymember Burke on a legislative trade study trip to Armenia a few months ago and to show them first-hand how Armenia has progressed in such a positive way. We are grateful to them for recognizing the potential that a new California-Armenia Trade Office can bring both for American entrepreneurship and for the Armenian economy, and we look forward to continuing to work with them and the State to advance this important initiative,” said Nora Hovsepian, the chairperson of the Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region.

“For years, the ANCA-WR has been advocating for the re-opening of the Trade Office first with Governor Brown and more recently with Governor Newsom and has received assurances that it will be re-established soon. Senator Portantino’s welcome introduction of SB302 will help to ensure that this happens. As the fifth largest economy in the world and home to the largest Armenian Diaspora Community, California is uniquely positioned to play a pivotal role in Armenia’s progress and economic development, and the ANCA-WR remains committed to use the resources at its disposal to help accomplish this goal,” added Hovsepian.

Consul General Dr. Armen Baibourtian and Glendale Mayor Zareh Sinanyan joined Senator Portantino in Sacramento to introduce SB 302. Dr. Armen Baibourtian made his first trip to the State Capitol while serving his second term as Consul General representing Armenia in Glendale. On Friday, he will be formally recognized on the State Senate and the State Assembly floor.

“This is truly an important development for both California and Armenia. We have long-wanted to reestablish the trade office and are very grateful to Senator Portantino and his colleagues for authoring this promising proposal. I know it will be well-received by the Armenian Community in California and business and political leaders in Yerevan,” added Consul General Baibourtian.

In September, Portantino, Stern, Sinanyan and the ANCA completed a tech trade trip to Yerevan and Guymri. The trip was Portantino’s second trip to Armenia. Attending Senators and Assemblymembers were introduced to the many facets of the Armenia tech and education communities in Armenia’s two largest cities. The goal of the trip was to strengthen economic ties between California and Armenia. During his first term in the Senate, Portantino established the Senate Select Committee on California, Armenia and Artsakh Mutual Trade, Art and Cultural Exchange. Establishing the trade office is a natural extension of these efforts.

“Our community in California is igniting a renewed optimism toward the Armenian economy, something Senator Portantino witnesses first-hand. We are lucky to have him championing and fostering this formalization effort. Now, the responsibility falls upon all of us to ensure its success. I am confident that the trade offices will lead to mutual economic and social benefit,” commented Mayor Sinanyan.

SB 302 seeks to establish the trade office under the umbrella of Go Biz, the official economic development arm of the Governor’s Office. The legislation calls for the trade office to be funded by private funding. Before funds can be raised, the office needs formal designation and creation. On Thursday, that effort took its first giant step.

“We are excited to be part of this effort. The wonderful entrepreneurial spirit of Armenian Americans has a new avenue to pursue success. It is truly exciting times in California and in Armenia,” concluded Senator Scott Wilk.

Asbarez: The New Government Must Embrace Criticism

Students at a school in Armenia

BY VICKEN SOSIKIAN

The parliament elected in late 2018 is now fully functioning and the government that subsequently was established is now up and running.

Starting from the very early days of the popular movement in April 2018, its leaders have announced their intention to be the government of the people. Nikol Pashinyan, Ararat Mirzoyan, Alen Simonyan, Arayik Harutunyan, Mkhitar Hayrapetyan and several more of their colleagues have repeatedly announced that they welcome and encourage criticisms of their plans, decisions, policies and work.

They have been successful in giving the public a sense of full representation in governance. Their words and charisma have turned thousands into staunch supporters and even blind followers.

However, actions speak louder than words, especially when they contradict one another.

Just a few days ago, after the government presented its operating plan, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation presented its view points and criticisms regarding the many areas it saw as concerning.

The Minister of Education and Science, Arayik Harutyunyan was quick to respond stating that the ministry, which was headed by ARF members for years is in shambles.

There are two major problems with Mr. Harutyunyan’s response.

The ministry he represents and all other ministries can certainly be in better shape. However, his assessment and inherent blame to the ARF is simply unfounded and false.

Here’s a partial list of accomplishments secured by the Ministry of Education while it was led by ARF members:

  • Teacher salaries went from about 15,000 to 90,000 drams.
  • The World Bank’s educational program was launched, directing all its resources to general education reforms and the launch of textbook preparation programs.
  • For the first time in Armenia, a Law on Education was established. In force until today, the law regulates the country’s education system.
  • Advanced learning campuses were created.
  • Chess was introduced as a part of the standard curriculum.
  • Cooperation with Diaspora educational institutions and institutions were initiated.
  • The ministry began preparing textbooks for the Diaspora.
  • A training program for Diaspora Armenian teachers was developed.
  • Small-scale school management and financing procedures were developed.
  • Armenian studies, national patriotic education, the history of the Armenian Church and studies of the Armenian Cause were enhanced in school programs.

Could more have been done? Yes. Does this sound like a system in shambles? No.

That said, the more serious problem with Mr. Harutyunyan’s response is the lack of willingness to hear feedback. This reaction is not exclusive to him, however. Virtually all of Prime Minister Pashinyan’s confidants behave the same way and have similar responses to criticism.

What happened to welcoming criticism and feedback? It seems that the attempt to divide the public is still a tactic utilized by members of the government and National Assembly leadership.

Through numerous announcements, the ARF has made clear that it is an extra-parliamentary oppositional force (in Armenia all those not in the government are automatically considered opposition), which will be critical of the government (very normal with all opposition forces – think Democrats and Republicans).

However, the ARF has also made clear that the party is willing to cooperate with the government on issues that it shares ideological agreement on. Furthermore, the ARF has also explained that all its criticisms will be in constructive formats and not intended to discredit or hinder the work of the government. It has already shown this in action by establishing eleven committees manned by more than 150 ARF members who study the government’s plans and decisions, proposing alternatives where it disagrees with decisions, plans or policies.

In light of this, such politically immature responses to criticism, especially when repeated time and time again by various country leaders, become a reflection of the new government’s way of thinking and operating.

The country’s parliament is run by one party (Pashinyan’s My Step) that holds majority voting power. When any group holds such a large share of the power, the people are inherently robbed of representation that unites differing viewpoints.

Furthermore, when the holders of such power openly begin dismissing opinions that are contrary to their own, the situation ripens for all sorts of damaging repercussions – a possible reality that the ARF has raised a red flag about.

I am hopeful that the government’s representatives will break away from their rigid and divisive perspectives and embrace constructive criticism provided by de-facto oppositionists, especially when presented with tangible and adoptable alternatives from a party that has stood by its people since its founding.

On with nation building.

Asbarez: Are There Any Turks in Turkey?

Garen Yegparian

BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

I’ve wanted to write this piece for a long time, but there’s a set of information that would make it more complete which I have not been able to find (more on this later). So, after putting it off for more than a year, I decided to give it a go anyway.

To start, I played a game with myself by listing how many different nationalities living in Turkey today I could name. I came up with this list: Albanians (Arnawoot), Alevis, Arabs, Armenians, Assyrians, Azerbaijanis, Bosnians (Boshnaks/Bosniaks), Bulgarians, Circassians (Adyghe and Kabardian as I sybsequently learned), Greeks (including Pontic Greeks), Jews, Kurds, Laz, Macedonians, Turkmens, Zaza (Kurds), and miscellaneous Eastern European stock converted to Islam by the Ottomans who settled in post-Ottoman Turkey, often in the homes left vacant by Armenians who were murdered or exiled. I’m not even including the more ancient peoples who dwelt as Armenians’ neighbors to the west and have since disappeared, nor the various nations represented by their business-based diasporas.

Of course, I missed some: Abazins, Abkhazians, Chechens, Crimean Tatars, Gagauzes, Georgians, Ossetians, Pomaks, Romani/Roma/Gypsy, Karakalpaks, Tahtaci, and one source described “minorities of West European … the Levantines (or Levanter, mostly of French, Genoese and Venetian descent) … present in the country (particularly in Istanbul and İzmir) since the medieval period”. These two lists, together, are what I could find, in what I can only describe as a “stingy” environment. There are probably many more. Obviously, Ankara wants the world to believe that everyone living in Turkey is a Turk. This is a very clever bit of wordplay, since the Republic of Turkey’s constitution defines the country’s residents in that way. Ankara certainly doesn’t want awareness, neither worldwide nor among its own citizens, of the large number of nationalities that pan-Turkist and Ataturkist policies aim to subsume and render “Turkish” over time. In fact, the last census they gathered information about aomething as simple as languages spoken, not national identity, was in 1965.

The CIA seems hell bent on assisting Ankara. Its “The World Factbook” gives these statistics for Turkey’s demographic diversity: “Turkish 70-75%, Kurdish 19%, other minorities 7-12% (2016 est.)” That is not only terse, but extremely misleading. Even so, it tells us that roughly one-third of the population is NOT Turkish. Let’s proceed from here, assuming that that two-thirds is, indeed Turkish. This is where the demographic time bomb that terrifies Ankara is ticking away in plain view.

Turkey fertility map 2015

There are many articles out there about how Turkey’s population, like much of the rest of the world, is getting older. They also address the brain drain of the country’s most talented youth departing for Europe or America, especially since the abortive 2016 coup that enabled Erdoğan to consolidate his power to the point of “choking” the young generation, further prompting them to leave. But this is NOT the biggest fear of Turkey’s current leaders.

Take a look at the accompanying map of Turkey and its provinces. The red, yellow, and light green colors indicate where net fertility (basically, birth rates) are highest. You’ll notice they are in the predominantly Kurdish-populated parts of the country. The more heavily “Turkish” parts of the country have lower birthrates, often BELOW replacement levels. “Replacement level” is defined as the average number of children that must be born to a woman to maintain a constant population. In developed countries, this figure is 2.1. But it can be as high as 3.4 in some developing countries because of higher mortality rates. So let’s say for Turkey it is somewhere in between, 2.7. You can see the western and northern parts of the country are well below this level. What this means is that in a few generations, “Turks” could well become a minority population in Turkey.

But even the “Turkishness” of today’s Turks is really suspect, ambiguous, and ultimately meaningless. Really, how many Turks arrived from the Altai Mountains and Central Asia into Anatolia and the Armenian Highlands? This is the information I lack referenced above. I have not been able to find or compile a table that indicates years of arrival of successive waves of Turkic invaders, how many they were, and what the population of the territories concerned was in that year. With those numbers, we could really tell what proportion of the overall number of Turks today can really be seen as Turks. The rest would be Armenians, Assyrians, Greeks, and everyone else who lived there before the invaders came.

Ask your “Turkish” contacts. What are they REALLY when it comes to their roots? It might trigger some reflection, soul-searching, and reassessment of their identity. Or, in the case of the large number of racists to be found among Turks, it will give you the mischievous pleasure of driving them to great irritation.

168: Government’s economic revolution formula is perceived by Armenian public, says PM

Category
BUSINESS & ECONOMY

The government’s economic revolution formula is perceived by the Armenian public, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said during today’s Cabinet session, adding that the government must adopt the list of actions deriving from the Action Plan, but that list should be separated from the list of actions promoting to revolution.

Pashinyan tasked to revise all investment proposals, reveal all existing problems for investments and concentrate the information in the ministry of economic development and investments.

He also instructed to form a map to simplify the regulations, solve the issue of availability of gas and water and accelerate the works on creating an Armenian Investment Fund.

Touching upon the period of the seasonal work, the PM said in case of working people should continue receiving family and social benefits.

Pashinyan also gave instructions relating to the agriculture sector with the goal to make the works on installing new agricultural technologies more effective.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/15/2019

                                        Friday, February 15, 2019
Former Defense Chief Calls For Kocharian’s Release
February 15, 2019
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian, April 18, 2011.
Former Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian urged Armenian authorities on Friday to 
release former President Robert Kocharian from custody pending investigation 
into the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan.
In a 30-minute video address posted on Facebook, Ohanian also reiterated his 
strong denial of coup charges that have also been leveled against him.
“I find totally wrong the treatment of the country’s second President Robert 
Kocharian, his being held in detention,” he said. “A person who voluntarily and 
repeatedly showed up for all investigative actions does not deserve such 
treatment. Such people never dodge responsibility.”
Ohanian argued that Armenia’s two other former presidents, Serzh Sarkisian and 
Levon Ter-Petrosian, have not been arrested or prosecuted even though they too 
were involved in the events of February-March 2008 in one way or another.
“I think that the second president is in unequal conditions,” he said. “They 
can free him and continue the investigation.”
The Special Investigative Service (SIS) has charged Kocharian, Ohanian and two 
other retired generals, Mikael Harutiunian and Yuri Khachaturov, with 
overthrowing the constitutional order in the wake of the February 2008 
presidential election.
Harutiunian, who now lives in Russia, served as defense minister while Ohanian 
was the chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff at the time. The latter 
replaced Harutiunian as defense minister in April 2008. None of the generals 
has been arrested so far.
The SIS claims that the four men illegally used the armed forces against 
Ter-Petrosian supporters who demonstrated in Yerevan against alleged electoral 
fraud. It says Kocharian ordered troops into the Armenian capital before 
declaring a state of emergency late on March 1, 2008 amid violent clashes 
between security forces and protesters. Eight protesters and two police 
servicemen died as a result.
The coup charges are based on a secret directive which Harutiunian issued to 
the military on February 23, 2008. SIS investigators say that the directive 
known as the Order No. 0038 led to the army’s illegal involvement in the 
political process.
In his video message, Ohanian again defended the legality of that order, saying 
that it was only meant to ensure that the army “maintains neutrality” in the 
dramatic post-election developments. He also said Kocharian was not aware of 
its details.
Kocharian’s lawyers make similar arguments. They say that Ter-Petrosian, who 
was the main opposition candidate in the 2008 ballot, tried to get the Armenian 
military to back the protests and that two deputy defense ministers sided with 
Ter-Petrosian. They both were sacked in April 2008.
Ohanian’s calls for Kocharian were dismissed by Seda Safarian, who was one of 
the two opposition members of a multi-partisan team formed by Serzh Sarkisian 
later in 2008 to conduct a supposedly independent inquiry into the bloodshed. 
Safarian said that the ex-president could obstruct justice if set free.
Armenian Ministries Told To Spur ‘Economic Revolution’
February 15, 2019
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is about to attend the inaugurationo 
of a new hotel in Yerevan, February 15, 2019.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Friday ordered his government to take a set 
of measures which he said will “stimulate the economic revolution” in Armenia 
promised by him.
Pashinian issued 15 mostly economic directives to various government agencies 
one day after the Armenian parliament approved his cabinet’s five-year policy 
program.
“Of course, the government will adopt a list of measures stemming from the 
program but I want to differentiate them from a list of measures to stimulate 
the economic revolution,” he told ministers before listing those actions.
In particular, Pashinian said, the government should “review all investment 
proposals” submitted by local and foreign businesspeople and look into 
obstacles to their implementation.
The premier made clear at the same time that from now on he and other senior 
government officials must meet with only those potential investors who have a 
proven track record of major entrepreneurial activity. He complained that some 
of his meetings with individuals claiming to be ready to invest in Armenia were 
a “meaningless waste of time.”
“For example, if a person has never had even $5,000 on his bank account but now 
says that he wants to invest $5 million or $50 million then obviously something 
is fishy there,” said Pashinian.
In its 70-page program approved by the National Assembly on Thursday, the 
government pledged to achieve a significant increase in foreign direct 
investment in Armenia. The document stresses the importance of creating 
“attractive conditions” for foreign investors, saying that “internal savings 
will not be enough to achieve high rates of economic growth.”
The government expects the Armenian economy to grow by at least 5 percent 
annually for the next five years.
Other directives issued by Pashinian relate to infrastructure projects 
benefiting the agricultural sector, agricultural export promotion, cheap credit 
to small businesses and hiring of seasonal workers by commercial farmers. 
Pashinian said the government must ensure that the families of those workers 
are not stripped of poverty or unemployment benefits because of the temporary 
employment.
The premier said the government should also do more to retrain unemployed 
individuals and support organizations teaching potential entrepreneurs 
“business skills and financial literacy.”
Pompeo Calls For Change In Iran
February 15, 2019
Mateusz Morawiecki, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and United State 
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, from left, stand on a podium at a conference on 
Peace and Security in the Middle East in Warsaw, Poland, Thursday, Feb. 14, 
2019.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says a meeting on the Middle East in Warsaw 
was "historic" because it brought Israelis and Arabs together to talk about the 
threat posed by Iran. He spoke on February 14 at the meeting in Poland in an 
interview with RFE/RL's Radio Farda.
Niusha Boghrati, RFE/RL's Radio Farda:
Secretary Pompeo, so let's begin with what has happened right here, right now 
-- an effort by the U.S. administration in order to form a broad and 
international coalition against the Islamic Republic [of Iran] as was reflected 
in U.S. Vice President Mike Pence's remarks. Now, my question is how feasible 
do you think that is, given the fact that EU countries seem to be sticking to 
their end of the deal, when it comes to the JCPOA (The Joint Comprehensive Plan 
of Action)? You know that recently they’ve put in place a tool (eds: Special 
Purpose Vehicle (SPV)) in order to facilitate trade with Iran.
Mike Pompeo, U.S. Secetary of State:
The gathering was aimed at creating peace and stability throughout the Middle 
East -- that's what 60+ countries came together to talk about, to work on 
solutions to what have been intractable problems in Yemen, problems in Syria, 
the security risks associated with the conflict between the Palestinians and 
Israel -- each of those topics, that's what we came together for. It's the case 
that when you talks about Hezbollah, you have to talk about Iran; when you talk 
about the Huthis’ mischief in Yemen, you have to talk about Iran. Iran was 
certainly one of the things that was discussed [at the conference]. But I will 
tell you that the coalition is strong. Not a single person, not a single 
country denied that this threat from Iran is real -- whether they were Arab 
countries or countries that were here from Asia or from South America, from the 
Middle East itself -- all understood the threat that the Islamic Republic of 
Iran presents to their citizens. And so we worked on that. There’s clearly 
differences on how to attack the problem. The Europeans are wedded to the 
JCPOA, we've made a very different decision. We think any money that goes to 
the Islamic Republic of Iran will end up in the hands of Qassem Soleimani (eds: 
head of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps -- IRGC) and be used for 
mischief, and most importantly will be used to create real hardship for the 
Iranian people. And so we’re determined to make sure that the Iranian people's 
voices are heard. We gathered people here today (February 14), we made our 
case, and I am confident that we came out of here today more collectively able 
to deal with all of the threats that exist throughout all of the Middle East.
Boghrati:
But, going back to Iran, how those threats that you are mentioning are going to 
be dealt with? This conference is viewed by many as part of an ongoing effort 
on Washington's side in order to pave the wave for a regime change in Iran. 
What do you think about that?
Pompeo:
I have to say, this was historic. You had the Israelis and the Arabs sitting 
together having a conversation about the threat that Iran poses. This wasn't a 
Washington-driven effort. We certainly have made clear our concerns about the 
Islamic Republic of Iran and we have devoted substantial resources towards 
reducing those risks. We'll keep at that because we ultimately want the Iranian 
people to have their voices heard. We want a change in the regime's behavior, 
we want them to act like a normal country. Back in May (2018), I laid out 12 
core things that the Islamic Republic of Iran needed to do to rejoin the 
community of nations. We are driving every day a set of policies that we hope 
will achieve that, and when we do, the entire Middle East, and indeed the 
world, will be a safer place.
Boghrati:
About those conditions, the pre-conditions and the changing of behavior, which 
has been mentioned numerous times by you and other figures in the [U.S.] 
administration. The thing is that the behavior that you have in mind is so 
integral with the identity of the Islamic Republic that changing them will 
basically be a sort of a regime change. I mean, if Iran will just abandon every 
single [pattern of] behavior that it has got throughout the Middle East, 
throughout the world, towards the people of Iran, then nothing is left of the 
Islamic Republic.
Pompeo:
Ultimately, the 'how', how these behaviors will be changed will be dealt with 
by the Iranian people. They'll make their voices heard, they'll assert their 
power. These are smart people, capable people with a deep and rich history -- 
they are entirely capable of managing the affairs of their nation. And so these 
behavioral changes that we are seeking are aimed at creating security 
throughout the Middle East and creating better lives for the Iranian people, 
and we are doing everything we can to support those Iranian voices inside of 
their country, so that they can get a life that is the one that they want, and 
one that doesn't pose a threat and a risk to people throughout the Middle East 
and the rest of the world.
Boghrati:
Mr. Secretary, you are aware that on Wednesday (February 13) a deadly attack 
happened in Iran against a bus which belonged to IRGC, killing 27 people. 
Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iranian foreign minister, wrote in a Tweet and I quote: 
'Is it no coincidence that Iran is hit by terror on the very day that 'Warsaw 
circus' begins?' Your reaction to that?
Pompeo:
Yeah, well, the Americans had nothing to do with this at all. I'll say this: 
You know, many countries, including European countries, meet with this man 
Zarif -- he's actually headed to Munich where many European countries will meet 
with him. I would ask those countries when they meet with Mr. Zarif to ask him 
why he would say such an outrageous thing? Sometimes he is posited to be a 
moderate. It's not moderate to accuse the Israelis and the Americans of murder 
-- that's not moderate. I think it shows the signs that Mr. Zarif and [Iranian 
President] Mr. [Hassan] Rohani are revolutionaries in the same way that the 
other leaders inside of Iran are as well.
Minister Rules Out Gas Price Rise For Armenian Consumers
February 15, 2019
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenian consumers will not pay more this year for natural gas mostly imported 
from Russia despite a recent 10 percent increase in its wholesale price for 
Armenia, Energy Minister Garegin Baghramian said on Friday.
Russia’s Gazprom monopoly announced on New Year’s Eve that it has raised the 
price from $150 to $165 per thousand cubic meters. The announcement followed 
fresh talks held by the Gazprom chairman, Alexei Miller, and Armenia’s Deputy 
Prime Minister Grigorian as well as phone conversations between Russian 
President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
Pashinian, who also met with Putin in Moscow earlier in December, assured 
Armenians that the retail prices set by Armenia’s Gazprom-owned gas 
distribution network will remain the same in 2019.
Baghramian reaffirmed that pledge when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service. 
“There is an understanding that in 2019 that [10 percent price rise] will not 
affect the tariffs for consumers,” he said, commenting on the government’s 
ongoing negotiations with the Gazprom Armenia operator.
The minister said that the gas distributor will offset its additional losses 
with cost cutting and other “optimization” of its activities. It will cut back 
on “unnecessary expenditures and investments,” he added.
Gazprom Armenia has so far made no public statements to that effect. The 
company only said on January 7 that it will not ask Armenian utility regulators 
to raise the retail prices until its talks with the government are over.
Gazprom Armenia’s chief executive, Hrant Tadevosian, complained in November 
that his company is operating at a loss for a second consecutive year. He 
attributed them to its decision in late 2016 to cut the gas prices for 
households and corporate consumers.
Press Review
February 15, 2019
Lragir.am reports that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian met with more than a 
dozen diplomats from European Union member states visiting Armenia. “The envoys 
said that they have arrived in Armenia to familiarize themselves with the 
[Armenian government’s] economic reform agenda and to voice their support for 
Armenia’s transformation,” writes the publication. It says that Pashinian has 
called for the EU’s financial assistance to his reform agenda. The prime 
minister, it says, has underlined the seriousness of his intentions with 
unpopular appeals to Armenians which will be inevitably exploited by his 
political opponents.
“Zhamanak” reports on Thursday’s meeting in Sochi of the presidents of Russia, 
Turkey and Iran. “It is noteworthy that the humanitarian aspect [of the 
situation in Syria] was mentioned quite frequently at the summit held in Sochi 
yesterday,” writes the paper. “It means that Armenia had some involvement, 
albeit an indirect one, in that format.” It notes that Pashinian will visit 
Iran later this month.
“Aravot” says some of the young members of Pashinian’s government no longer 
want journalists to call them by their first names. This was not the case just 
a few months ago, writes the paper. “This may be a nuance but it’s a 
significant one,” it says. “Expectations that the new ‘revolutionary’ officials 
will behave like ordinary people, will go to work on foot or by metro, will not 
be arrogant, and will not look down on us have not materialized.” The paper 
says each of those officials must make sure that they are “not detached from 
reality” and do not overreact to opposition criticism.
(Lilit Harutiunian)
 
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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