ARF of Armenia Urges Voters to ‘Ignore’ April 5 Referendum


The ARF Supreme Council of Armenia headquarters in Yerevan

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation Supreme Council of Armenia, in an statement issued on Thursday, is urging voters to ignore the Constitutional Court referendum slated to take place on April 5.

Below is the translated text of the announcement.

It is with great regret that we verify that the current political leadership, by ignoring numerous pleas and warnings, is pulling the country into reckless risk.

By exploiting and distorting one of the important tents of a democracy—the referendum—the authorities, in veiled effort, are advancing their singular goal to establish an autocracy and their inability to neutralize the threats facing the country.

By condemning the political leadership’s approach of creating artificial plans through demagogic methods, we are sounding an alarm for this unconstitutional approach. The ARF Supreme Council of Armenia announces that the leadership’s approach of addressing issues through unlawful means is unacceptable.

As such,

We call on the citizens of the Republic of Armenia to not become participant to the authorities’ routine unlawfulness and ignore the April 5 referendum, thus sending a clear message to the authorities that the people are tired of the populism and contriving plans, the destructive policy of dividing the society into “whites” and “blacks,” and the continued upheavals which, as we have seen, have not benfitted the welfare of the people and true democracy.

We call on political forces, civil society—our compatriots—urging them to put their efforts together to prevent a “Yes” vote and thwart this anti-state process and finally start implementing real reforms. The ARF will use all necessary means to this end.

King Abdullah II of Jordan, Sarkissian Dine at Yerevan’s Derian Restaurant


YEREVAN (Armenpress)—Cuisine is perhaps one of the best ways of reflecting the hospitality and culture of any nation, and Armenia boasts some of the finest traditional cooking in the world.

Derian, a cozy Syrian-Armenian restaurant located in Downtown Yerevan, hosted two very special patrons on February 10. President Armen Sarkissian and King Abdullah II of Jordan dined at the restaurant on the first day of the King’s first-ever visit to Armenia.

In an interview with Armenpress’ Norayr Shoghikyan, Hakob Azelyan, the Syrian-Armenian owner of Derian, reflected on how it felt to host King Abdullah II, and revealed what was on the menu.

“We were informed that the President will be hosting a guest at our restaurant, but we didn’t know who that guest would be. It was kept a secret due to security reasons,” Azelyan said. Hakob and his wife Mirey run the restaurant as a family. On the day of King Abdullah II and President Sarkissian’s visit, the entire Azelyan family took part in the special occasion.

“We were quite anxious in the beginning, but King Abdullah II was warm and welcoming. President Sarkissian introduced us to King Abdullah II, explaining that our family migrated from Syria. After shaking hands with the king, our anxiousness subsided. He created a warm atmosphere,” remarked Mirey.

When asked about the menu, Hakob noted that there was nothing extraordinary served. The dinner comprised of Armenian and Arabic cuisine.

“We served our entire menu. There was nothing unusual. The menu consisted of veal and chicken barbeque, ghaurma, ishli kofte, manti, Armenian cheeses, strained matzoon, olives, tabbouleh, dolma, hummus, and mutabal. We served caramel cake, a fruit assortment, and Arabic kanafeh for dessert,” he said.

Mirey Hamalyan said King Abdullah II thoroughly enjoyed the food and thanked the staff for their hospitality.

The owners of Derian were pleased with their high-profile guests, which also included celebrities Elton John and Michael Caine, as well as government officials.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/13/2020

                                        Thursday, 
Armenian Parliament Approves Gradual Ban On Indoor Smoking
        • Robert Zargarian
A No Smoking sign in Armenian and English.
Armenia’s parliament voted on Tuesday to accept a government proposal to 
gradually ban smoking in cafes, restaurants and all other indoor public places 
in the country.
Under a government bill passed in the second and final reading by 76 votes to 16 
with 7 abstentions, Armenians will also not be allowed to smoke while driving 
cars or buses. In addition, the bill imposes a blanket ban on any form of 
tobacco advertising.
Indoor smoking will be punishable by up fines ranging from 50,000 drams ($105) 
to 200,000 drams.
The bill was drafted by the Ministry of Health and submitted to the Armenian 
government for approval one year ago. It underwent some changes before being 
approved by the National Assembly in the first reading in December. In 
particular, it was decided that the ban on smoking in cafes and restaurants will 
come into force in March 2022.
Deputies representing the opposition Bright Armenia Party (LHK) voted against 
the final version of the bill, saying that it will hurt many businesses. One of 
them, Gevorg Gorgisian, argued that Armenia’s leading cigarette manufacturer, 
the Grand Tobacco company, is now the country’s number one corporate taxpayer.
“Let’s develop other sectors of the economy before starting to hit this one,” 
Gorgisian said during a parliament debate that preceded the vote.
Deputy Health Minister Lena Nanushian, who presented the bill to lawmakers, 
dismissed such arguments.
“Ten percent of annual deaths [in Armenia] result from smoking,” said Nanushian. 
“This 10 percent is a serious figure, my dear deputies: every year 3,000 people 
die as a result of smoking.”
Armenia is a nation of heavy smokers with few restrictions on tobacco sales and 
use enforced to date. According to Ministry of Health estimates, 52 percent of 
Armenian men are regular smokers. Medics blame this for a high incidence of lung 
cancer among them. The smoking rate among women is much lower.
Nanushian also warned of health risks posed by passive smoking when she spoke in 
the parliament in December. Citing surveys conducted in 2016 and 2017, she said 
that more than 70 percent of pregnant women in the country are “exposed to 
secondhand smoke every day.”
Sarkisian’s Ex-Bodyguard Cleared Of Extortion
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Vachagan Ghazarian empties his bag filled with cash after being 
arrested by the National Security Service in Yerevan, 25 June 2018.
An Armenian law-enforcement has decided not to bring additional criminal charges 
against Vachagan Ghazarian, the former chief bodyguard of ex-President Serzh 
Sarkisian.
The Special Investigative Service (SIS) had launched an inquiry after the former 
chief accountant of a Yerevan night club owned by Ghazarian’s wife had accused 
him of extorting 40 million drams ($84,000) from her.
An SIS spokeswoman told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Thursday that the criminal 
case has been closed due to a lack of evidence.
Ghazarian was charged with illegal enrichment and false asset disclosure shortly 
after the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that toppled Sarkisian. They stem from his 
failure to declare to a state anti-corruption body more than $2.5 million in 
cash that was mostly held in his and his wife’s bank accounts.
Ghazarian, who headed Sarkisian’s security detail for over two decades, was 
obliged to do that in his capacity as deputy chief of a security agency 
providing bodyguards to Armenia’s leaders. He was first detained in June 2018 
after police raided his apartment in Yerevan and found $1.1 million and 230,000 
euros ($267,000) in cash there. The National Security Service (NSS) confiscated 
more cash from him in the following days.
A Yerevan court released Ghazarian on bail in December 2018 after he offered to 
transfer as much as $6 million to the state.
The SIS announced in October 2019 that the once powerful officer and his wife 
have completed the payment. It described the cash transfer as a recovery of 
financial “damage” inflicted on the state.
Germany’s Merkel Praises ‘Deepening’ Ties With Armenia
        • Karlen Aslanian
Germany -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and German Chancellor Angela 
Merkel meet at the Chancellery in Berlin, 
German Chancellor Angela Merkel hailed Germany’s increased cooperation with 
Armenia and significant changes in the South Caucasus state when she met with 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in Berlin on Thursday.
It was their third meeting in 18 months. Merkel noted with satisfaction that 
German-Armenian relations have “intensified” since her previous talks with 
Pashinian held in August 2018 in Yerevan and in February 2019 in Berlin.
“We will continue to talk today about deepening bilateral relations,” she said 
in a statement to the press made at the start of their latest meeting.
Merkel stressed that “a lot has changed in Armenia” since Pashinian swept to 
power in the “Velvet Revolution” of April-May 2019.
“There is a parliamentary democracy, elections have been held, and there is also 
a major renewal process … for example in the legal system,” she said. “We 
naturally hope that Armenia will be very successful here because that's not an 
easy process.”
“We are therefore very happy about your courage and your determination to follow 
this path,” she told Pashinian.
“Germany is a close friend and partner of Armenia and we feel the power of that 
friendship in both emotional and practical senses,” Pashinian said for his part. 
“Germany is one of the powerful bridges connecting Armenia to the European 
Union, European civilization and culture.”
The Armenian leader went on to thank Germany as well as the EU for their “moral, 
political technical and financial assistance” to ongoing reforms announced by 
his administration. He said he will discuss his “reform agenda” with Merkel.
An Armenian government statement issued after the talks said Merkel promised 
continued German assistance to “democratic reforms” in Armenia. It said 
Pashinian briefed her on his political team’s controversial decision to hold on 
April 5 a referendum on dismissing seven of the nine members of Armenia’s 
Constitutional Court.
Economic issues were also high on the agenda of the talks, according to the 
statement. Pashinian was reported to urge German companies to invest in various 
sectors of the Armenian economy.
Germany is already Armenia’s number European Union donor and trading partner. It 
has provided the South Caucasus nation with hundreds of millions euros in aid 
and low-interest loans since the 1990s. German-Armenian trade rose by over 4 
percent, to $451 million, last year, according to official Armenian statistics.
In her public remarks, Merkel said she will also discuss with Pashinian the 
unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The Armenian government statement on the 
talks made no mention of the conflict.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Armenian Activists Block Road for 2 Held in Police Killings

New York Times
Feb 12 2020

By

  • Feb. 12, 2020, 11:47 a.m. ET

YEREVAN, Armenia — Several dozen activists blocked a highway in Armenia for several hours Wednesday while demanding that authorities release two men accused of killing three police officers during an armed takeover of a police station in 2016.

The Sasna Tsrer party said its activists obstructed the Yerevan-Gyumri highway to draw public attention to their cause and moved out of the way when police arrived at the protest site.

More than 20 party activists armed with guns seized a police station in the Armenian capital in July 2016 to demand their leader’s release from custody. They took several hostages and barricaded themselves inside the station for two weeks before surrendering. Three police officers were killed in the standoff.

The armed activists were arrested, and most were released on parole in 2018 pending trial. The two men who remained in custody are accused of being the ones who killed the three officers.

The protesters calling for the two to be freed Wednesday argued that the men were “only fulfilling their natural right to rebel.”

Police spokesman Ashot Agaronian confirmed that the protesters unblocked the highway.

Turkey Enraged as Syrian Parliament Recognises Armenian Genocide Amid Bilateral Tensions

Sputnik Russia
Feb 13 2020
© AP Photo / SANA
Middle East

The overwhelmingly symbolic move comes in the wake of a serious deteriorated situation in northwestern Syria, where Turkish and Syrian troops have been trading fire in the rebel-held province of Idlib.

The People’s Council of Syria, the nation’s unicameral parliament, has backed a resolution condemning the mass killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Turks during WWI as genocide.

Lawmakers have passed the motion unanimously, Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) reports.

They expressed sympathy for the Armenian people and recognised what they called the “systematic ethnic cleansing and massacre” of Armenians, Syrians and Assyrians by the Ottoman Empire, calling on the international community to condemn it as well.

Hours after the announcement, Turkey moved to condemn the decision, accusing Damascus of the persecution of its own citizens.

“This is a picture of hypocrisy on the part of a regime which has for years committed any kind of massacre on its own people… which has displaced millions and which is well known for its use of chemical weapons,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

According to the most widely-cited estimate, some 1.5 million Armenians were killed and many more deported from the Ottoman Empire in what many scholars say amounts to a genocide. So far, 32 countries have formally recognised what happened at the time as a genocide. Turkey acknowledges that mass killings of Armenians took place during World War I and in the following years, but disputes the death toll and rejects the term.

The resolution was passed at a time when Syrian and Turkish government forces have found themselves on a collision course in Idlib, the last Syrian militant enclave outside of Bashar al-Assad’s control, currently held by the jihadist terror group Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, the local branch of al-Qaeda.

While troops loyal to President al-Assad and backed by Russia are advancing on the positions of terrorists, Turkey deployed its troops to Idlib, ostensibly to protect civilians and prevent an exodus of refugees.

Syria has accused Turkey of supporting and arming terrorists in Idlib and condemned its military presence in the province as illegal.

Turkey’s defence ministry said on Monday that it had shelled Syrian positions and killed 101 government troops in retaliation for the killing of five Turkish soldiers by Syrian army artillery fire. Last week, Ankara reported killing another 76 Syrian servicemen in response to an artillery strike that left five Turkish troops dead.

Russia, the main power broker in the region, blamed Turkey for the flare-up and accused it of failing to meet its commitments under the 2018 Sochi agreements, which envisaged a buffer zone in Idlib.


Azerbaijani Press: ECHR’s Judgement Upon Armenian Intelligence Serviceman’s Death Prompts Reaction In Baku

Caspian News, Azerbaijan
Feb 13 2020

By Mushvig Mehdiyev

Leyla Abdullayeva, Spokesperson to the Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan / Report.Az

Tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan simmered again this week as foreign ministries of the two countries exchanged remarks on a judgment of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) upon the death of an Armenian intelligence serviceman in Azerbaijan in 2010.

The ECHR held in a Chamber judgment on January 30 that the authorities in Baku are responsible for the death of an Armenian intelligence serviceman in military police detention in Azerbaijan in 2010 as it is insisted in “Saribekyan and Balayan vs Azerbaijan” case launched by the parents of the deceased. Reactions from Baku and Yerevan to the court ruling were quite contradictory. 

Armenia’s foreign ministry interpreted the court ruling as an evidence of the violation of human rights by Azerbaijan. The foreign ministry in Baku, however, said the decision of ECHR is not unanimous and final, and that it is looking into the right of appealing the document to the court’s Grand Chamber.

“Azerbaijan has the right to appeal this decision to the Grand Chamber of the Court within three months,’’ Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry’s Spokesperson, Leyla Abdullayeva said in a written statement issued on Tuesday.

‘‘We are currently conducting appropriate investigations in this regard. I would like to emphasize that the ECHR’s decision was not unanimous.”

“The statement of the Armenian Foreign Ministry contradicts the idea of preparing the two countries for peace, which was accepted in joint statements personally by the foreign minister of this country and exposes the true intentions of the Armenian leadership.”

The “Saribekyan and Balayan vs Azerbaijan” case came up following the application of Mamikon Saribekyan and Siranush Balyan, parents of the Armenian intelligence serviceman Manvel Saribekyan, who was captured and died in Azerbaijan. 

Saribekyan was detained by the Azerbaijani military during an operation against an Armenian sabotage group in the north-west of the Armenian-Azerbaijani line of contact on September 11, 2010. When captured, he carried several intelligence items with him. According to initial observations, he was part of a group that attempted to cross the line of contact and blow up a school in Azerbaijan.

While in detention at a military police station in Baku, Saribekyan committed suicide on October 5, 2010 and the Baku Military Prosecutor’s Office launched a criminal investigation, which revealed that he hanged himself in a cell where he was kept. Despite a forensic report that was made and issued under the surveillance of the representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Baku, the Prosecutor General in Armenia insisted that Saribekyan was killed. But, the final outcomes of the investigation in Azerbaijan proved in January 2011 that Saribekyan had committed suicide and had been held in proper conditions with no assault on him.

Leyla Abdullayeva said torture and killing are what Azerbaijani nationals suffered from the hands of the Armenian military since the very start of anti-Azerbaijan sentiments in Armenia in the late 1980s and after the occupation of Azerbaijani territories in the early 1990s.  

“The policy of ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijanis living in the territory of present-day Armenia was further aggravated in the late 1980s and forced expulsion reached its climax with the deportation of Azerbaijanis from the Gafan region in 1988-89,” she said.

“With the military occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding regions of Azerbaijan, Armenia carried out bloody ethnic cleansing against the local Azerbaijani population of the region, resulting in hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis being displaced,” Abdullayeva said, adding 613 Azerbaijani civilians were massacred by Armenians in just one night in Khojaly on February 26, 1992.

The Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts of Azerbaijan are currently under Armenia’s occupation as a result of the full-scale war in 1991-1994. The bloody war launched by Armenia following the collapse of the Soviet Union has also killed 30,000 ethnic Azerbaijanis and displaced one million.

Meanwhile, Abdullayeva recalled the ECHR decision on “Chiragov and others vs Armenia” case in 2015, saying Armenia’s responsibility has been re-established in that ruling, and the existence of an illegal formation in Azerbaijan’s occupied territories through the military, political, financial and other support of Armenia is confirmed. 

The “Chiragov and others vs Armenia” case was put forward by six Azerbaijani nationals from the occupied Lachin region of Azerbaijan in 2005. They insisted that they were forcibly displaced from their houses in Lachin after the region’s occupation in May 1992 and Armenia did not allow them to return back. ECHR justified their appeal in June 2015.

Syria parliament recognizes 1915-1917 Armenian genocide as tensions with Turkey surge

The Japan Times
Feb 13 2020
This file photo released by the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute purportedly shows soldiers standing over skulls of victims from the Armenian village of Sheyxalan in the Mush valley, on the Caucasus front during the First World War. Syria’s parliament Thursday recognized the 1915-1917 murder of up to 1.5 million Armenians as genocide, as tensions run high with Turkey after deadly clashes in northwest Syria. | AFP-JIJI

AFP-JIJI

  • Feb 14, 2020
  •         

Syria’s parliament on Thursday recognized the 1915-1917 killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians as genocide, as tensions run high with Turkey after deadly clashes in northwest Syria.

“The parliament … condemns and recognizes the genocide committed against the Armenians by the Ottoman state at the start of the twentieth century,” the legislature said in a statement.

The Armenians seek international recognition that the mass killings of their people under the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1917 amounted to genocide. They say 1.5 million died.

Turkey strongly rejects the accusation and says both Armenians and Turks died as a result of World War I. It puts the death toll in the hundreds of thousands.

The Syrian parliament’s latest move comes after weeks of tensions between Ankara and Damascus over deadly clashes between their forces in northwest Syria that Ankara says has killed 14 of its soldiers.

Russia-backed Syrian government forces have since December upped their deadly bombardment of the last major bastion of opposition in northwest Syria, where Ankara supports the rebels and has deployed troops.

The offensive on the jihadist-dominated bastion of Idlib has also forced 700,000 people from their homes toward the closed Turkish border, the United Nations says.

Turkey, which already hosts more than 3 million refugees, fears a massive fresh influx from Syria and has kept its border closed to newly displaced people in Idlib.

It has sent reinforcements to the war-torn-country in recent weeks, a move that Damascus says serves to protect rebels and halt its Idlib advance.

“We are currently living through a Turkish aggression that relies on the same hateful Ottoman thinking” as “the crimes carried out by Erdogan’s forefathers against the Armenian people,” Parliament Speaker Hammouda Sabbagh said.

Beyond Idlib, Turkey and its proxies have conducted three operations in Syria against both the Islamic State group and Kurdish fighters it views as “terrorists.

After the last incursion, Turkey set up a “safe zone” in a 120-km (70-mile) long strip inside Syrian territory along its southern border.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday threatened to strike Syrian government forces “everywhere” if its soldiers come under renewed attack.

Damascus hit back that he was “disconnected from reality.”

Clashes between Armenians and Turks had already started at the end of the 19th century, costing between 100,000 and 300,000 Armenian lives between 1895 and 1896, according to Armenian sources.

That came as growing nationalist sentiments in the Balkans and elsewhere threatened Ottoman authority, particularly since Greek independence in 1830.

Turkey says the Armenians collaborated with the Russian enemy during World War I, and accuses them of killing tens of thousands of Turks.

In 1915, thousands of Armenians suspected of being hostile to Ottoman rule were rounded up and a special law a month later authorized deportations “for reasons of internal security.”

Many Armenians were forced into exile in the Syrian desert and a large number were killed, either on the way to detention camps or after they arrived.

Some were burned to death, others were drowned, poisoned or died from disease, according to foreign diplomats and intelligence services at the time.

The eastern Syrian region of Deir Ezzor lies on the desert route taken by thousands of Armenians during their forced exile by the Ottoman empire.

A genocide memorial in the area contained some of the remains of the victims and served as a pilgrimage site for Syria’s Armenians before it was bombed by jihadis in 2014.

In 2010, then-Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian visited the site, which also served as a church, and said it was to Armenians what Auschwitz is to the Jews.

Turkey’s defeat in the First World War led to the creation of an independent Armenian state in 1918.

Before the start of Syria’s civil war in 2011 with the repression of anti-government protests, the country counted tens of thousands of Armenians.

Second city Aleppo was once home to the largest contingent: 150,000 out of 350,000 Syrian Armenians, according to Syria specialist Fabrice Balanche.

But when the government recaptured Aleppo from rebels in late 2016, just 10,000 were left there. Thousands had fled to Armenia, neighboring Lebanon or even farther afield to the United States, Canada, and Europe.

Parliaments in nearly 30 countries have passed laws, resolutions or motions recognising the Armenian genocide.

The U.S. Congress in December recognized the mass killings as genocide, angering Turkey. President Donald Trump’s administration said it did not agree.


Armenia-UAE friendship group members with ambassador Isa al-Zaabi discuss cooperation prospects

Arminfo, Armenia
Feb 13 2020

ArmInfo.The members of the Armenia-UAE friendship group met with the UAE Ambassador to Armenia Mohammed Isa al-Zaabi. This was reported by the press service of the parliament.

According to the source, the head of the friendship group Narek  Zeynalyan noted that regular business forums, bilateral tourism,  flights, the presence of almost six thousandth Armenian community in  the UAE, etc., testify to the relations formed between the two  countries.

Zeynalyan noted with satisfaction that about 20 enterprises operate  with the participation of Arab capital in Armenia. He assured that in  the post-revolutionary period a favorable investment environment was  formed in Armenia.

Ambassador Mohammed Isa al-Zaabi described the bilateral relations as  excellent and noted that his country recognizes the importance of  cooperation with Armenia, in particular, in the cultural,  educational, humanitarian fields, as well as in the field of latest  technologies. He said that the Emirates are interested in the  activities of the creative center “TUMO” and would like to create  such a center in their country.  Turning to the growing tourism year  after year, the ambassador noted that Armenia is a safe country and  his compatriots visit the whole family with Armenia. N. Zeynalyan  informed the ambassador that more than 11 thousand tourists from the  UAE visited Armenia last year.

The interlocutors also discussed issues of cooperation at  inter-parliamentary venues.  The ambassador said that the UAE is  interested in the parliamentary experience of the RA, therefore,  mutual visits and contacts with parliamentarians can be very  effective.

In this context, the creation of the UAE-Armenia friendship group was  discussed. Mutually expressed the hope that the activities of  friendship groups will contribute to the further development of  productive cooperation.

The interlocutors concluded the meeting expressed confidence that the  vectors of cooperation and the ways to achieve success are numerous. 

Silence of country`s leadership in connection with death of servicemen is unacceptable

Arminfo, Armenia
Feb 13 2020

ArmInfo. In the first months of 2020, 12 soldiers were already killed in our army and all of them died not from the enemy’s attack,  meanwhile t the Ministry of Defense reports only unexplained circumstances, ” head of the Armenian Association of Investigative Journalists Edik Baghdasaryan said.

It should be noted that since the beginning of the year, 10  servicemen became victims of unlawful acts committed in the Armenian  Armed Forces and the Artsakh Defense Army. On February 12, it became  known that two more military servicemen had died.

“The response of the country’s leadership to this tragedy is only  silence. The defense ministers of Armenia and Artsakh are silent, the  presidents are silent, the speaker and parliamentarians are silent.  The Prime Minister delivers speeches, but for some reason only on  other topics. He also prefers to remain silent on this subject”   Baghdasaryan wrote  on his Facebook page.

Baghdasaryan notes that the whole nation is discussing a referendum  with a view to dismissing 7 judges of the Constitutional Court, and  he expresshis conviction that the question of deposition of judges of  the Constitutional Court is certainly not worth one soldier’s life.

On the fact of the death on February 12 of two servicemen from  gunshot wounds, criminal cases were opened. According to the  Investigative Committee, an investigation is underway, necessary  investigative and other procedural actions are being taken to ensure  a comprehensive, complete and objective investigation.

On February 12, at around 11:30 a.m., on a military position of the  Defense Army soldier of the NKR Defense Army, born in 2000 Tigran  Manvelyan, received a fatal gunshot wound and died on the way to the  military hospital. On the same day, at around 13:00, another soldier,  Tigran Mkhoyan received a gunshot wound to the head. He also died on  the way to the military hospital. 

Will there be direct air communication between Armenia and Jordan?

Arminfo, Armenia
Feb 13 2020

ArmInfo. It is planned to establish direct air communication between Armenia and Jordan. At the February 13 meeting, the RA National Assembly ratified the agreement  between the Government of the Republic of Armenia and the Government  of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan on air traffic.

According to the Chairperson of the Civil Aviation Committee of the  Republic of Armenia Tatevik Revazyan, the agreement was signed on  November 1, 2018 in Aman. The document provides for equal rights for  air carriers of the two countries, while liberalizing issues such as  the appointment by the parties of their air carriers, price  regulation, frequency of flights, and service destinations. At the  same time, the parties commit themselves to ensuring the safety of  air transportation, ensuring equal competitive conditions. The Head  of the Committee emphasized that the ratification of the agreement  would enhance bilateral relations, increase tourism flow and  positively affect the country’s economy.

At the same time, she admitted that at this stage, airlines operating  in Jordan and Armenia have no interest in organizing direct flights  between the two countries to increase tourist flow, however, this  does not mean that this issue does not need to be regulated. “Today,  new directions began to develop very quickly, and it turned out that  there were countries with which we did not have any agreements at  all, and this would create obstacles if we did not resolve this  situation,” Tatevik Revazyan added. She found it difficult to say  whether it is possible in principle to organize flights to Jordan,  since, as she admitted, today there are many different kinds of  obstacles, including visa ones, however, through transit, with  certain restrictions, it is possible. The head of the Committee also  said that similar agreements are currently in effect with 49  countries, and the next step is to conclude an agreement with the  European Union.