Turkish press: Armenian population of Turkey dwindling rapidly: Patriarch – Turkey News

The Armenian population in Turkey, which makes up the largest Christian community in the country, “resembles an iceberg melting in the sea” with its some 60,000 members, the newly elected Armenian Orthodox Patriarch of Istanbul has said.

“Our biggest problem is the demography. Our population has been decreasing rapidly. We lose 26 of our adult individuals per 12 newborns. It’s alarming,” said Sahak Maşalyan, or Mashalian, the 85th Patriarch of Turkey’s Armenians, in an interview with daily Hürriyet.

He was enthroned as Sahak II in a ceremony held at the Surp Asdvadzadzin Patriarchate Church in Istanbul on Jan. 11.

“We are like an iceberg in a sea of 82 million people. And we are melting. We are also facing emigration. Now, we make up the largest non-Muslim minority in Turkey with a population of between 50,000 and 60,000,” he added, recalling that the number of Greek Christians, another minority protected under the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, has dropped below 2,000 in Istanbul.

The international treaty signed between countries including Turkey, France, the United Kingdom, Italy and Greece ensures the rights of the Christian minority communities in Turkey, however, the necessary internal legislations and regulations have not been made, according to Sahak II.

“Even the Armenian Patriarchate has not been defined. It makes many things extremely difficult, including resorting to the law or obtaining property. Even this building housing us doesn’t belong to the patriarchate, it is the property of the church on the opposite side of the street. We have 38 churches and 42 foundations. But those 38 churches are like 38 different duchies,” he said.

Almost a third of Turkey’s population was Christian a hundred years ago, the Armenian patriarch recalled, pointing to Christianophobia and the recent murder of three missionaries in the eastern Malatya province.

On the other hand, Sahak II hailed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s decision to extend a message of condolences to the descendants of Armenians killed during World War I.

“We wish that the Armenians who lost their lives in the context of the early 20th century rest in peace, and we convey our condolences to their grandchildren,” said Erdoğan in 2014, then a prime minister, ahead of April 24 commemorations marking the killing of Armenians in 1915 as genocide, a claim Turkey strongly rejects.

“The incidents of World War I are our shared pain. To evaluate this painful period of history through a perspective of just memory is a humane and scholarly responsibility,” the statement also said.

The day of April 24 should bring a new vision for the future instead of recalling the past, said Sahak II.

“All we want is the understanding of the losses and sufferings of the Armenian people,” he added.

Born in 1962 in Istanbul with the Turkish name Şahin Maşalı, he was ordained a priest in 1992, receiving the name Sahak.

On Dec. 11, Sahak II won the election held among Armenian Gregorian churches across the country after receiving 102 votes out of 119 against his rival Aram Ateşyan, who had served as acting patriarch during the absence of Mesrob II, the previous patriarch who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease from 2008 until his demise on March 8, 2019.

Armenpress: Several Armenians denied boarding on Ural Airlines flight from Chinese city, embassy taking measures

Several Armenians denied boarding on Ural Airlines flight from Chinese city, embassy taking measures

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 17:34, 2 February, 2020

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 2, ARMENPRESS. A group of Armenian passengers were not allowed to board an Ural Airlines flight from Xi’an to a Russian city despite having tickets. Among those who were refused check-in were also citizens of other countries.

“Given the situation over the coronavirus outbreak in China, a number of international airlines are gradually limiting their flights from Beijing and other Chinese cities. Citizens currently in China are required to contact the given airline beforehand to clarify information about the flight,” the foreign ministry of Armenia said.

“On February 1, a group of Armenian citizens were denied check-in with Ural Airlines flight tickets. At the same time, citizens of a number of other countries were also denied check-in to the same flight. They were compensated for the tickets. The Armenian Embassy in China has advised the Armenian citizens to head for the nearest city from where it will be possible to board another flight of other airlines to Armenia, and to clarify the given airline’s regulations beforehand. The embassy and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia are taking measures to prevent such developments. At the same time, we inform that the Embassy is maintaining constant contact with all Armenian citizens who are in China and who have registered with the Embassy and is responding to all questions,” the foreign ministry said.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




ACNIS reView from Yerevan #1, 2020_Editorial_To Govern Means to Capture People’s Hearts and Minds

Editorial      

 24 JANUARY 2020 

Armenia’s public is in a state of disorientation.  If last year life was comprehensible—the game was on between the “blacks” and the “whites” and the line between heroes and anti-heroes, the honest and corrupt was discernible—currently everything has gotten mixed up.  The colors have lost their distinction and have begun to dissolve into gray.

Why did it come to this, who is to blame, for what did hundreds of thousands of people take to the streets in 2018 and effect regime change?  The answer to these questions is very important, not only to understand what happened then, but to clarify what the new government had to do thereafter.  Oddly enough, these points of inquiry are presently absent from the agenda of Armenia’s political mind at a time when they had to be the principal theme of political life.

The goal of the struggle launched more than 30 years ago, in 1988, was clear: “Karabagh is ours.”  And the authorities of the day solved that issue to the best of their ability.  They had assumed no other obligation before the public.  In the next phase, however, the people apparently began to present a new demand to the authorities, but this time they did not pay attention to it.  Let us try to understand in comparison what Armenia’s society was desiring and accordingly what the present-day governors had to do.

“To realize power” means first and foremost to carry out intellectual work, that is to assess the past and to present to the public a new conception for development.  And any such platform is based on understandings of philosophy and worldview.  Among the principal precepts of political theories are Liberty, Equality, and Justice.  Each of those has had interpretations during every historical epoch.  From ancient Armenia to the present those approaches have been analyzed variously and have been set at the foundation of administrative systems of sequential states.

The motto “Karabagh is ours” was a matter of liberty; in other words, the people of Artsakh has the right of freedom and self-determination, in the name of which many went to war and won and yet others paid with their lives.  With that Armenia’s public consciousness registered a degree of growth, but as human history has shown the idea of liberty alone is not sufficient to build an efficient and just society.  In 2018 the public came to present another demand and that, it seemed, was the demand for justice and equality.

Our objective here is not to present and interpret these tenets—for this, one would need to study the history of man and the evolutionary flows of ideas.  Those demonstrate that taking any idea to its extreme can result in adverse consequences.  In particular, absolute freedom leads to anarchy, as a result of which the political mind takes to one other extreme the concept of absolute equality—communism—in which case people are deprived of their liberty and electoral rights but are legally equal.  And absolute justice gives rise to an atmosphere of hate and the validation of totalitarianism because in this guilty world it is hard to find a perfectly just personality.  A situation comes about where everyone becomes the target and that completes the path to totalitarianism and the establishment of a “witch-hunt” state.

The “Reject Serzh” slogan consolidated a large mass of people, but the force that came to power was unable to explain what “serzhism” meant in order to clarify finally what we had rejected and where we are going.  The new government’s refusal to choose any of the classical political “ism”s has placed it in an “intellectual trap” or, better perhaps, pressed it into a “vice of mental nothingness.”  It is no accident that in the National Assembly’s non-governmental factions there are individuals who can influence public opinion, whereas the media under government-related control are incapable of formulating a public agenda.

To govern is to capture the hearts and minds of people and to offer platforms for development.  To such things we do not bear witness and, in all probability, we shall not—but that is not the worst news.  The worst news is that the other political forces also find themselves in mental collapse, and so at least for now the political alternative is absent from the scene.

 

 

ACNIS reView from Yerevan #2, 2020_Weekly Update_18-25 January

Weekly Update   

26 JANUARY 2020  

 

  • President Xi Jinping said China was facing a “grave situation” as the death toll from the coronavirus outbreak jumped to 41, overshadowing celebrations of the Lunar New Year that began on Saturday, REUTERS reported. China also announced further transport restrictions. With more than 1,400 people infected worldwide, most of them in China, Hong Kong declared a virus emergency, scrapped celebrations and restricted links to mainland China. Australia confirmed its first four cases on Saturday, Malaysia confirmed four and France reported Europe’s first cases on Friday, as health authorities around the world scrambled to prevent a pandemic.
  • Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan believes that the President of Azerbaijan, the President of Artsakh and the Prime Minister of Armenia personally bear responsibility for peace and stability in the region, Armenpress said. “We are ready for constructive, normal work, as much as we understand how difficult of a work that is,” the PM said at a news conference on January 25. “But that’s our responsibility in the region. I have told my colleagues, that now we – the President of Azerbaijan, the President of the Republic of Artsakh and the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia – are personally bearing the responsibility of the future of peace and stability in the region. This is a personal responsibility, and to some extent also a common responsibility, and bearing this responsibility and [dealing] with it with honor is a very difficult task,” he said. Asked to elaborate on the NK talks, the PM emphasized that there is no secrecy around the negotiations.  “It is described and termed in my speech at the 2019 March joint Security Council session of Armenia and Artsakh in Stepanakert”, Pashinyan said. “In that speech I had outlined our circle of discussions in the negotiations process. It is this circle that we are now talking about. Currently there is no paper on the table for us to discuss. And we must work together to approach a more specific, more substantiated discussion phase,” the Armenian PM added.

 

  • A gunman surrendered to the Armenian police after reportedly bursting into an office building in Yerevan and opening fire there on Thursday, RFE/RL’s Armenian Service (Azatutyun.am) said. Police officers rushed to the Erebuni Plaza Business Center and cordoned it off shortly after the gunfire. “The situation is under control,” a police spokesman told reporters outside the building. In an ensuing written statement, the national police service said that its acting chief, Arman Sargsian, personally negotiated with the gunman and that the latter handed his weapon and surrendered as a result. The unidentified man was then taken to a police station in Sargsian’s car, according to the statement, “No citizens were injured,” added the statement. “All circumstances of the incident are being clarified.” The police said nothing about the man’s demands or motives.

 

  • Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan said he is ready to meet his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov in the near future, News.am said. When asked about the meeting by MP Arman Abovyan, Mnatsakanyan said they have certain arrangements. The Minister also noted that he attaches great importance to the participation of Karabakh in negotiations. “The issue of Karabakh’s participation in the peaceful settlement of the conflict remains on the agenda, and we have repeatedly explained the reasons. It is very important to have direct participation of an entity that has elected authorities, a political entity,” he added.

 

  • In the framework of the World Economic Forum in Davos, President Armen Sarkissian met with the President of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) Suma Chakrabarti, the Presidential Office informed. Noting that Armenia and EBRD are long-standing partners, President Sarkissian noted with satisfaction the efficient cooperation between the two and successful implementation of different projects in various areas. Suma Chakrabarti in his turn underscored the effective cooperation with the government of Armenia and said that EBRD was resolute to continue assistance to Armenia. President Sarkissian reiterated Armenia’s proposal to hold the 2021 annual meeting of EBRD in Armenia. The parties exchanged views on the prospects of implementation of new projects, development of the financial market, and new opportunities of cooperation in the IT area.

 

  • According to BBC, President Donald Trump’s legal team, representing him at his impeachment trial, has demanded that he is immediately acquitted by the Senate. In a brief submitted on Monday, they called the impeachment “a dangerous perversion” of the constitution. Meanwhile House impeachment managers submitted their own brief, saying Mr Trump engaged in “corrupt conduct… to cheat in the next election”. Impeachment hearings will begin on Tuesday at 13:00 (18:00 GMT). Mr Trump is charged with abusing his presidential power by asking Ukraine to investigate Democratic political rival Joe Biden – and of obstructing Congress as it looked into his conduct.

 

Sources: https://www.president.am, https://www.azatutyun.am/en, https://armenpress.am, https://news.am/eng/, https://www.reuters.com/, https://www.bbc.com/.

 

 

Azerbaijani press: Karabakh conflict discussed with US ambassador to Azerbaijan

29 January 2020 17:26 (UTC+04:00)

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Jan. 29

Trend:

At the initiative of US Ambassador to Azerbaijan Lee Litzenberger, a meeting has been held with Head of the Azerbaijani community of Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region Tural Ganjaliyev, Trend reports Jan. 29 referring to the community.

During the meeting, Ganjaliyev informed the US ambassador in detail about the Azerbaijani community of Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region.

The community head said that the members of the community are supporters of peaceful settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, as well as conveyed to ambassador the main wishes and demands of the community members for the withdrawal of the Armenian armed forces from the occupied territories, the return of all Azerbaijani IDPs to their homes, restoration of the violated fundamental rights and freedoms, including property rights.

Ganjaliyev also informed that as part of the extraordinary parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan, he put forward his MP candidacy from the Khankendi constituency No. 122, and, along with other candidates from this constituency, conducts an election campaign on equal and fair terms in accordance with the requirements of the law.

Lee Litzenberger emphasized that he is closely following the activities of the Azerbaijani community of Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region and is pleased with the meeting.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from Nagorno Karabakh and the surrounding districts.


Azerbaijani press: Meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian FMs lasted 7 hours

29 January 2020 22:41 (UTC+04:00)

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Jan.29

Trend:

The meeting of foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia in Geneva with mediation of OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs and personal representative of the OSCE chairperson-in-office lasted for 7 hours, Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva wrote on Twitter, Trend reports.

“The parties and co-chairs advocate for intensifying negotiations and achieving tangible results on all issues of the negotiation agenda. The meeting will continue tomorrow,” she wrote.


Turkish press: Turkey remembers diplomat killed in US in 1982 – Turkey News

Turkey remembered with respect its late distinguished diplomat Kemal Arıkan, who was the victim of an assassination on Jan. 28, 1982.

Arıkan, Turkey’s consul general in Los Angeles, was killed by Armenian terrorists affiliated with JCAG, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry said on Twitter.

“We call on the relevant U.S. Authorities not to release Hampig Sassounian, who brutally assassinated Consul General Arıkan,” said the ministry.

On Dec. 27 a California court ordered the conditional release of Sassounian, one of the assassins being Arıkan’s deliberate murder.

“Granting parole to this murderer will only serve the hands of extremists worldwide and give the message that hate crimes and terrorist attacks against foreign diplomats on duty can be pardoned,” the statement said.

The ministry also urged the international community “to show solidarity against such an outcome, which would establish an extremely dangerous precedent.”

Arıkan was shot to death 14 times by Sassounian and Krikor Saliba. Saliba escaped justice, but Sassounian was arrested and in 1984, he was sentenced to life in prison.

Since the 1970s, Armenian terror groups killed 31 Turkish diplomats and their family members.

The vast majority of the attacks were conducted by ASALA and JCAG.

The assassinations took place in the U.S., Austria, France, Italy, Spain, Lebanon, Greece, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Canada, Portugal, Iran, and the U.K.

Turkish press: How to get into photography: A beginner’s guide

YASEMIN NICOLA SAKAY
ISTANBUL
Published29.01.202013:30

More than any other camera component, the lens determines the quality of the image. (iStock Photo)

So, you want to take up photography as a hobby. There are endless possibilities. From your average point-and-shoot cameras to digital single-lens reflex cameras (DSLR) and recently-revived instant cameras, it’s hard not to feel overwhelmed by all the choices out there.

Information on the technical side of things abounds on the internet, but what if it all sounds too complex to you? Well, here’s the beginning of the beginning, the hardest part: deciding on what to buy and what to shoot.

I spoke to three of my friends and colleagues – İlhami Yıldırım, a professional photojournalist from Sabah daily, Şafak Karaöz, a Mimar Sinan University-educated local street photographer, and Daily Sabah’s Art Director Rahmi Osman Kaçmaz.

Let’s start with the camera’s body.

When you finally decide to buy a camera, the body – which is the part you hold when using a camera – may seem like its the most vital part of your purchase, but it’s not. On the contrary, the body is only there to serve as the building block of your future set and put you into an ecosystem.

“You will want to research a number of features for the body in your decision-making process, but before all of that, you should look at how easily you can access accessories such as lenses and flashes and how easily you can dispose of them if needed,” Karaöz said.

All three photographers and photography enthusiasts agreed on one point: It doesn’t matter how expensive your first camera is because it is highly likely that it won’t be your last.

I hate to burst your bubble, but according to Karaöz, the first camera you choose will probably be the wrong choice. “This is completely normal,” he assured, saying it’s only because your expectations will change over time the more you use it.

How do I choose my first camera?

Unless you will get into sports or wildlife photography, where the camera’s performance will be constantly tested, you really don’t need an expensive, high-tech body. Also, don’t get swayed by all of the fancy new releases incorporating the latest technologies such as 360 degree twist-flip LCD screens and voice-controlled shutters if you are a beginner – less is more.

Karaöz was the most direct on the topic: “It, of course, has to be secondhand and economical. Why, you ask? Because with this camera you will figure out your needs and what exactly you want from it. If it makes you happy, that’s great. If it doesn’t, at least you won’t have splashed out a lot of cash on it.”

He adds that if you decide to resell it, you won’t be losing much at all and might even be able to sell it for around the price you purchased it. “With a brand new item, you don’t have this opportunity,” he noted.

Kaçmaz echoed the same view, saying that budget-friendly options were the best way to go. He also advised that a beginner should choose a more old-school camera with a simple design. “Think of knobs and physical buttons, rather than digital touchscreens. Directly accessible shutter speed and aperture settings will be easier and more enjoyable to use,” he advised.

Yıldırım said people have the preconceived notion that if they have the best and most expensive camera, they’ll be able to take the best photo. “This is terribly wrong, especially for a beginner,” he said.

He brought to mind Armenian-Turkish photojournalist Ara Güler, who at the time had said, “You cannot become a good photographer with a good camera, just like you can’t be a good novelist because you bought the best typewriter and computer.”

“You need to understand that it is not the machine that takes the photo; it’s the person behind the lens,” he stressed.

Quoting another photography great French humanist photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, Yıldırım said: “To photograph is to put on the same line of sight the head, the eye and the heart.”

“Those are the three-ingredient formula to a good photo,” he said, adding: “I’ll go buy a TL 10,000 camera and take the best photo. There is no such thing. They need to forget this notion.”

Yıldırım also advised to start small with your first camera. A semi-professional DSLR is a good place to start, he said, which is roughly around TL 2,900-3,000.

“Why? The professional ones are very heavy. As a newbie, you can carry that weight for a day or two but then it becomes too much of a hassle. For pros and the ones actually getting paid, it’s not an issue, but if you are just looking at it as a hobby then it’s not worth it,” he said, adding that price and performance-wise, this will be the best choice for beginners.

In short? The less you spend on your first camera the better.

Get into the mode

All three were in favor of shooting in manual mode (M) or aperture priority (abbreviated as A or AV).

Kaçmaz said shooting in AV forces you to think consciously before hitting the shutter and helps you learn. “You get to be in control of the frame and are more engaged in the photo-taking process,” he said.

Yıldırım agreed, saying the camera should be there to teach you and help you learn.

“Forget about automatic mode while shooting,” Yıldırım said, underscoring the importance of actually changing the camera’s settings according to each photo. “They need to use it in manual mode to learn about aperture and shutter speed.”

“If you use it in automatic, the camera does all the work for you. It has preset settings that do it all. You, ‘the photographer,’ don’t get involved in the process at all; you just frame,” he said.

The eye of the camera

Now we come to the trickier part – the lens. Good, quality lenses don’t come cheap, which could put a real dent in your bank account.

Aesthetics-wise, the body itself won’t have that much of an impact on the photo, but lenses are a whole other story, Karaöz said. “With time and experience, you will see that you should be spending your hard-earned money on lenses, not the body.”

“Every lens has its own character. For example, let’s say you want to take a portrait. I have a cheaper camera with an 85 mm f/1.2 lens while you have a brand new camera that is 10 times more expensive than mine and a lens in your kit like 18-135 mm. The odds will definitely be in my favor because the lens on my camera was specially designed to aestheticize portraits, regardless of the body/machine used,” he said.

Yıldırım suggested starting with a good old 50 mm lens because it’s “the closest to the human eye.”

“It also stops the photographer from becoming too lazy over time. For example, if you have that lens and want to take a portrait, you will have to come closer to your target to get a crisper, more focused shot. You also get to determine the frame yourself,” he said.

Kaçmaz recommended starting with a prime lens such as 23 or 35 mm on a crop body, or its full frame equivalents of 35 and 50 mm. “A 50 mm lens will be good for portraits, while a 35 mm lens will be a good all-round choice.” Lenses with a fixed focal length, which are called prime lenses, do not allow you to zoom and are usually much smaller in size and weight. They create less distortion and yield higher image quality. “Using a prime lens also forces you to walk toward or away from the subject and think about the photo you want to take,” Kaçmaz said, suggesting that it will help in the learning process.

Karaöz also gave a handy tip for those who don’t want to pay full price for a new lens.

“If you choose a brand of camera that your friends use as well, you can always swap with each other. That way you will get to see whether you like the feel and the effect each lens gives without paying a single penny,” he said.

Who or what shall I shoot?

“First start by taking photos of your family. Your mom, your dad, brother, sister, spouse, etc. They will be much more comfortable with you when posing. Then you hit the streets. If you are in the city, you will go out to Taksim Square for example, and take photos while wandering in the streets,” Yıldırım said.

After you get a feel of different types of photography (fashion, portrait, macro, etc.), then you can choose which area you want to specialize in, he added.

“They later might say, ‘I want to go to Afghanistan to take these types of photos,'” he said.

Kaçmaz agreed up to a point but also underlined that to shoot people you need to have good communication. “Portraits are a good start but it all depends on your interests. The streets are a good starting point too; general photography, cityscapes, landscapes … you can just go and shoot.”

“What do you really like? That’s the question you really want to answer,” he said.

Kaçmaz also veered into “black and white” territory and said shooting monochrome could be quite educational.

“My advice would be to start with monochrome photos. It will help you focus on composition, light and texture, which are the most important elements of photography,” he said. Karaöz seconded Kaçmaz’s advice on black and white photos and said they were a great place to start to learn about light and dark.

What makes a good photo?

On the topic of what makes a good photo, Kaçmaz and Yıldırım touched on different areas.

For Yıldırım, technique is only important up to a point. The real deal, for him, is capturing the emotion behind it.

“The camera itself, its model or the technical features, none of them are important if you can’t get the composition right or, more importantly, can’t capture the emotion. You can always learn technique but your photos need to have emotions, tell a story,” he said.

However, he warned that nobody becomes a great photographer overnight. “This (conveying emotions) will happen in time.”

Meanwhile, for Kaçmaz it’s about studying good photographs taken by good photographers. He said beginners tend to fall into a trap of laziness and overconfidence.

“If you constantly look at your own photos only, your eyes will get used to it and you will start to think you are very good. This clouds your judgment and sets a barrier against your improvement,” he said.

“Alan Schaller, Steve McCurry and Hüseyin Aldırmaz are just a few of my recommendations,” he added.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/29/2020

                                        Wednesday, January 29, 2020
Chinese Nationals Hospitalized In Armenia For Virus Tests
January 29, 2020
        • Susan Badalian
China -- Medical staff members wear protective clothing to help stop the spread 
of a deadly virus accompanying a patient as they walk into a hospital in Wuhan, 
January 26, 2020.
Two Chinese citizens were taken on Wednesday to a hospital in Armenia and tested 
there for possible cases of a dangerous new virus which has infected thousands 
of people in China and killed at least 132 of them.
Officials in Yerevan said they were hospitalized after being barred from again 
entering neighboring Georgia at the main Armenian-Georgian border crossing.
According to Liana Torosian, a senior official from the National Center for 
Disease Control and Prevention, one of the Chinese travellers showed no symptoms 
of any virus while the other only had a mild fever and is now undergoing an 
X-ray examination of their lungs at a Yerevan hospital specializing in treatment 
of infectious diseases.
“Let’s see what results the X-ray will produce,” Torosian told reporters. “The 
condition of both patients is satisfactory at the moment. They will certainly 
remain under medical surveillance in separate insulated wards.”
Torosian insisted that the likelihood of either Chinese national suffering from 
the new kind of coronavirus is low because they had left China before the 
disease outbreak. “During the entire [two-week disease] incubation period they 
were in Georgia and Armenia and had no health issues,” she said.
There have been around 6,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus nationwide in 
China so far. Dozens of other cases have been confirmed outside mainland China 
as well, including in Europe, North America, and elsewhere in Asia.
Nobody has been diagnosed with the coronavirus in Armenia, according to the 
country’s medical authorities. Speaking at a joint news conference with 
Torosian, Deputy Health Minister Lena Nanushian said Armenia is considered a 
low-risk zone for the spread of the virus not least because of the absence of 
direct flights to China. Nanushian said the health authorities are examining 
Armenian citizens returning from China via third countries and taking other 
precautions.
The Foreign Ministry in Yerevan last week advised Armenians to refrain from 
travelling to China for now. It said six Armenians live in the Chinese city of 
Wuhan lying at the epicenter of the outbreak.
Torosian admitted that the authorities currently lack the capacity to 
definitively detect cases of the coronavirus through laboratory testing. But she 
said they should be equipped to do so by the end of next week.
High Court Chief Again Rules Out Resignation
January 29, 2020
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenia -- Constituional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian speaks to journalists, 
Yerevan, December 27, 2019.
Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian has said that he will not step 
down despite facing criminal charges and growing pressure from Armenia’s 
political leadership.
“What doesn’t kill us only makes us stronger,” Tovmasian told 168.am in a video 
interview posted late on Tuesday. “I will not respect myself if I back away, for 
the reasons mentioned by you, from the issues, the mission assigned to me.”
“You would not respect me, nobody would respect me [in that case,] and I would 
consider that a humiliation,” he said, adding that he will therefore “fight to 
the end” in the increasingly acrimonious standoff.
The remarks followed a series of renewed verbal attacks on him launched by Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian. Speaking at a weekend news conference, Pashinian 
labeled Tovmasian as a “representative of the corrupt former regime” who 
“offered his services” and cozied up to him following the 2018 “Velvet 
Revolution.”
Pashinian went on to state that law-enforcement authorities’ allegations that 
Tovmasian illegally became the head of Armenia highest court shortly before the 
revolution are “effectively proven and irrefutable.”
Tovmasian deplored that claim, saying that Pashinian violated the presumption of 
innocence guaranteed by the Armenian constitution.
“Are you a court?” he said, appealing to the premier. “Are you an investigator? 
Where did you get such information from to determine [Tovmasian’s guilt?] What 
will you do when national or international courts rule tomorrow that none of 
that happened?”
“If they want to pressure me in this way then I have to say that … they should 
not try in vain,” he added.
The Special Investigative Service (SIS) claimed in October that the former 
Armenian parliament elected Tovmasian court chairman as a result of an illegal 
seizure of the judicial authority by a “group of officials.” It said that took 
the form of forgery committed by former parliament speaker Ara Babloyan and one 
of his top staffers. Both men strongly deny relevant accusations leveled against 
them.
In late December, a senior prosecutor declined to endorse those accusations, 
ordering the SIS to conduct an “additional investigation.”
A few days later, Tovmasian was indicted on other, unrelated charges. 
Prosecutors said that he unlawfully privatized an office in Yerevan and forced 
state notaries to rent other premises “de facto” belonging to him when he served 
as Armenia’s justice minister from 2010-2014. Tovmasian rejects the accusations 
as baseless and politically motivated.
The chief justice also indicated in his latest interview that he may backpedal 
on his stated decision to file a defamation lawsuit against Pashinian.
“Maybe I got emotional at that point and spoke of going to court,” he said. “But 
I think that everything has become clear to the public and everyone now has the 
answer to that question. I will again talk to my legal team and decide.”
Soros Foundation In Armenia Decries ‘Smear Campaign’
January 29, 2020
        • Nane Sahakian
Armenia -- Larisa Minasian, director of Open Society Foundations-Armenia, speaks 
at a news conference in Yerevan, January 29, 2020.
The Armenian branch of U.S. billionaire George Soros’s Open Society Foundations 
(OSF) on Wednesday accused radical anti-government forces of conducting an 
“unprecedented” smear campaign against it and its local partners.
“A large-scale counterpropaganda and an unprecedentedly aggressive information 
campaign, accompanied by hate speech and often overt calls for violence, is 
waged against the foundation and our partners for quite some time,” the 
OSF-Armenia director, Larisa Minasian, told a news conference.
Minasian said that the effort is aimed at preventing OSF from supporting various 
reforms announced by the Armenian government.
“We realize that the civil society’s potential to demand and support systemic 
changes in Armenia is what made us and our partners the target of this smear 
campaign,” she said. “Also targeted is public trust in our country’s democratic 
institutions, the legitimately elected National Assembly and the government 
formed by it.”
Minasian complained that some Armenian media outlets help OSF detractors spread 
false claims about Soros and activities financed by his charity in Armenia and 
other countries. She insisted in particular that the prominent philanthropist 
has never provoked or assisted in any anti-government revolt.
“George Soros made his fortune in the financial markets of democratic countries 
that are strictly regulated by regulatory bodies,” she added.
Minasian also dismissed claims that OSF has been promoting a resolution of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict which would benefit Azerbaijan. “The foundation has 
never financed any propaganda of pacifism towards Azerbaijan or any initiative 
related to the Karabakh conflict,” she said.
Nationalist groups as well as some individual activists opposed to Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government have increasingly attacked OSF in their 
public statements made since the 2018 “Velvet Revolution.” They allege that the 
government is furthering Soros’s secret political agenda in Armenia which they 
say poses a serious threat to national security and traditional Armenian values. 
Some of them have gone as far as to claim that Soros was behind the “revolution” 
that brought Pashinian to power.
Minasian already shrugged off those claims during a March 2019 news conference 
in Yerevan. In a separate statement issued at the time, OSF-Armenia said it will 
continue to support “civil society organizations and all Armenians working to 
advance sustainable, systemic reforms.”
Over the past two decades OSF has provided a total of about $53 million in 
grants to Armenian non-governmental organizations and individuals. They have 
been spent on hundreds of projects implemented in a wide range of areas, 
including education, human rights, judicial reforms and media.
Former Armenian President To Go On Trial
January 29, 2020
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- Former President Serzh Sarkisian attends the funeral of former 
National Security Service Director Georgi Kutoyan, Yerevan, January 20, 2020.
Armenian prosecutors have paved the way for a trial of former President Serzh 
Sarkisian, formally endorsing corruption charges brought against him.
A spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor-General, Arevik Khachatrian, told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian service that the indictment was sent to a court in Yerevan on 
Wednesday.
Armenia’s Judicial Department said, though, that it has not yet received 
materials of the criminal case.
The Special Investigative Service (SIS) charged Sarkisian in early December with 
organizing the “embezzlement by a group of officials” of 489 million drams (just 
over $1 million) in government funds allocated in 2013 for the provision of 
subsidized diesel fuel to farmers.
The SIS claimed that Sarkisian interfered in a government tender for the fuel 
supplier to ensure that it is won by a company belonging to his longtime friend, 
businessman Barsegh Beglarian, rather than another fuel importer that offered a 
lower price. It also indicted Barseghian and three former government officials. 
All five suspects deny the accusations.
In a statement released last week, Sarkisian’s lawyers insisted that the 
accusations are baseless and are part of his “political persecution” by the 
current Armenian authorities.
Artashes Mayilian, a senior SIS official who led the probe, dismissed those 
claims when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service on January 24.
The high-profile case is reportedly based on former Agriculture Minister Sergo 
Karapetian’s incriminating testimony against the ex-president. Karapetian and 
his former deputy Samvel Galstian are among the five suspects.
Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) has also described the charges as 
politically motivated. It says that the ex-president is prosecuted in 
retaliation for his public criticism of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
Sarkisian, who ruled Armenia from 2008-2018, accused Pashinian’s government of 
jeopardizing democracy and stifling dissent in a November speech at a congress 
of the European People’s Party held in Croatia. He had kept a low profile since 
resigning in April 2018 amid Pashinian-led mass protests against his continued 
rule.
Pashinian has repeatedly implicated Sarkisian, his family and political 
entourage in corruption both before and after coming to power in the “Velvet 
Revolution.”
Parliament Majority Leader Wants Police To Explain Detentions
January 29, 2020
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- Lilit Makunts, the parliamentary leader of the ruling My Step bloc, 
at a news conference in Yerevan, May 6, 2019.
Lilit Makunts, the parliamentary leader of the ruling My Step alliance, said on 
Wednesday that the Armenian police must explain why they briefly detained at 
least four activists highly critical of the government.
The police said on Tuesday that two of the outspoken activists, Narek Malian and 
Konstantin Ter-Nakalian, were held in custody for several hours on suspicion of 
illegal arms possession. They did not comment on two other detentions which were 
reported later in the day.
Immediately after being set free without charge, the activists claimed that 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian ordered the police actions in a bid to humiliate 
and bully them.
Representatives of the two opposition parties represented in Armenian parliament 
expressed concern over the detentions. Arman Abovian of the Prosperous Armenia 
Party cited “quite serious questions” about their legality and timing.
Taron Simonian, a lawmaker representing the Bright Armenia Party, saw “no 
obvious grounds” for the detentions carried out by masked officers of a special 
police unit tasked with combatting organized crime. “I am asking and urging our 
police officers to stick to the letter of the law,” he said.
Makunts, who leads the parliamentary group of Pashinian’s My Step bloc, reacted 
to those concerns.
“I think that law-enforcement bodies should present explanations of the grounds 
on which they took the actions,” Makunts told reporters. “I don’t think that 
it’s right to evaluate those grounds that before the law-enforcers present them.”
“As for the detained individuals, if they think that their rights were violated 
there are all necessary legal provisions for them to protect their rights,” she 
said. “In the meantime, we will wait for the police explanations.”
Makunts added that she will raise the matter with the acting chief of the 
national police, Arman Sargsian, when he meets with My Step lawmakers on 
Thursday.
One of those lawmakers, Hayk Konjorian, denied that the radical activists are 
persecuted for their political views and activities.
“Only politicians can be subjected to political persecution in any hypothetical 
situation,” said Konjorian. “There is no political persecution in Armenia. 
Armenia has a fully democratic system. The individuals who were detained 
yesterday are not politicians.”
Malian used to work as an adviser to former police chief Vladimir Gasparian and 
now leads a group called Veto. Ter-Nakalian and another activist, Artur 
Danielian, are the leaders of the nationalist Adekvad movement. Both groups rely 
heavily on social media in their campaigns against the government.
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

Armenpress: Armenian FM, OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs meet in Geneva

Armenian FM, OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs meet in Geneva

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 09:30, 29 January, 2020

YEREVAN, JANUARY 29, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Zohrab Mnatsakanyan held a meeting in Geneva with the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Igor Popov (Russia), Stéphane Visconti (France), Andrew Schofer (US) and Andrzej Kasprzyk, the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, foreign ministry spokesperson Anna Naghdalyan said on Facebook.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan