OSCE Representative on Freedom of Media meets with Ambassador of Armenia

Save

Share

 16:09, 8 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media (RFoM), Teresa Ribeiro, met with Ambassador Armen Papikyan to discuss media freedom developments in Armenia and areas in which the RFoM’s institution can provide assistance, the OSCE website reports.

Ribeiro welcomed the assurances that media freedom and safety of journalists are important topics on the government’s agenda. She expressed her readiness to provide support to Armenia on issues regarding media freedom and the freedom of _expression_.

Ribeiro and Papikyan talked about the challenge of “fake news” and its effects on media freedom, including the importance of media literacy as one of the elements to address the issue.  

Ribeiro and Papikyan further spoke about the regional South Caucasus Media Conference, organized annually by the RFoM’s Office, and agreed to engage in further discussions about the upcoming 2021 event. They also discussed the prospects of co-operation in other areas and a possible visit of the RFoM to Armenia.

1st President of Armenia, French Ambassador discuss domestic situation

Save

Share

 17:19, 8 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. First President of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosyan hosted on February 8 Ambassador of France Jonathan Lacôte, 1st President’s spokesperson Arman Musinyan said on Facebook.

“The talk lasted over an hour during which they discussed the situation in Armenia and Artsakh, the domestic political development prospects in Armenia, as well as a number of economic, social and humanitarian issues”, the spokesperson said.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 08-02-21

Save

Share

 17:31, 8 February, 2021

YEREVAN, 8 FEBUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 8 February, USD exchange rate up by 0.67 drams to 521.80 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 3.46 drams to 627.67 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.06 drams to 7.01 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 1.86 drams to 715.34 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 324.50 drams to 30246.75 drams. Silver price up by 2.75 drams to 445.07 drams. Platinum price up by 644.08 drams to 18806.19 drams.

Amid disregard from authorities, families of missing Azerbaijani troops turn to Armenian PM for help

Save

Share

 17:40, 8 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. The families of Azerbaijani servicemen who are missing in action in the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh War are now appealing to the Armenian Prime Minister for help in order to reveal the fates of their loved ones after being ignored by the Defense Ministry of their own country.

Azerbaijani news media reported that mothers of the missing soldiers are holding demonstrations outside the Defense Ministry building in Baku.

“I need Pashinyan’s help. Please”, an Azerbaijani woman trying to find out the fate of her son said at the protest.

“I’ve looked for my son. No one from the Defense Ministry helped me,” she said ,adding that now the only solution for her is to address the Armenian Prime Minister.

The mothers of missing troops are saying that the authorities in the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry are refusing to receive them and are ignoring their calls.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan




CivilNet: The Garrison State & Military Keynesianism: A tool of Security and Economic Development

CIVILNET.AM

9 February, 2021 15:01

And if we have ruled, only with our books

If we have prevailed, only with our talents

And if we have ever oppressed, it has only been with our wounds 

Paruyr Sevak. “We Are Few But We Are Called Armenians”

Enough of such sentiments. Next time we prevail, it will be using the deadliest weapons we manufactured used by the meanest and best trained men and women to have ever walked the earth. 

Armenia needs a new military.  The goal of our new national defense should be to rebuild a military that is capable of defending Armenia and the people of Artsakh against the most competently led and armed opponents. 

To achieve this goal, for the next 20 years we must become an army that has a country rather than a country that has an army.  Our national security should be the first, second and third priorities of the State.  All domestic policies from education, energy and food security should be seen through the prism of national security. 

There are two important corollaries to this approach, the first is that regardless of this change in priorities the military must always remain subservient to civilian and democratic governance. Just as importantly the re-orientation should not be a drain on our national economic resources but actually be the basis of a growing economy.  This will ensure that we bring back industry, science and research.

We must begin with a serious study of the failures of the Artsakh 2020 war. WE NEED A REFORM COMMISSION.  A look into our failures will provide critical recommendations to  reform and  modernize the Army. 

There are countless examples of such military reforms in our region that we can learn from.  The Russian military implemented a reform after its underperformance in the 2008 war with Georgia. The Israeli Winograd Commission studied the Israeli failures in the 2006 war against Hezbollah in Lebanon. 

All roads in reforming the military will likely lead to the creation of a military industrial complex.  The focus will be on the weapons of tomorrow: communication, robotics, drone and anti-drone technologies. 

The key to establishing this industry is a multi-year commitment written into law.  This law should mandate a certain percentage of the procurement budget be spent on local products that are competitive to the quality of foreign-produced hardware. 

In order to speed up military reform, we need to begin outsourcing activities that do not involve soldiers carrying weapons. The outsourcing of food services to the private sector has been one of the most popular actions taken by the current government. There is no reason why we should not outsource to our efficient service and tech sectors.   The management of military hospitals, communications, logistics, electronic and signal intelligence will be better managed and more competent. This will allow our proficient people in the private sector to immediately upgrade our military. 

Ordinarily the State is the biggest buyer of services in every country in the world.  As our State begins to outsource, the economies of scale will propel our local services providers to compete for similar contracts internationally and expand their business further.  This is yet another positive impact of military modernization.

We need to create a synergic loop between economic growth and military modernization.  In which military reform and modernization expands the economy, while economic growth enables us to invest ever greater resources into our military modernization programs. 

Another element of reform we should consider is doing away with military conscription.  We should create a smaller Army of professional soldiers heavily focused on special forces with an emphasis on speed, mobility and air superiority.  The gravest fear of all parents in Armenia today is that their children will be forced to serve in an Army run by corrupt and incompetent commanders who know nothing about modern warfare.  Once the reform instills confidence only then can we reinstate conscription.

If we create a smaller Army of professional soldiers, it must be backed up by a much larger Army of volunteers and reservists.  The volunteers and reservists should be a part of a singular well-run reserve system which includes commitments to monthly training and mobilizations.  All local and political party militias must be disbanded to be reorganized as part of the new centrally run military reserve system. 

As we create the new weapons of tomorrow from our own locally manufactured drone and robotic industries, we must increase the role of women in our Armed Forces that can run these systems guarding our borders. They can then run the remote-controlled weapons and monitoring systems of tomorrow. 

One way to accomplish this is to move the most effective people from the useless state bureaucracy to the military ranks through compulsory competency exams and other such markers.

We must also consider the establishment of an Armenian Volunteer Legion. There are thousands of ethnic Armenians that have served in the Russian, Syrian, French and other western militaries. Their experience especially while serving in urban combat is invaluable in reforming and upgrading our Armed Forces. 

At the same time as we learn to tell our story, we can attract numbers of idealist who understand our struggle in universal terms. The truth is that our borders to the east and west are civilizational in nature and not simply state boundaries.  Across those borders Armenia and Artsakh are islands of democracy and civilization.  We are the modern moral equivalents of the first Spanish Republic which is in a face off against two regimes which are the modern reflections of fascist depravity. 

We need to look at establishing Armenian-owned or private military contact firms located in Armenia. The truth is that no one fights their own wars entirely using their own armed forces, neither should we.  This is true for the great powers like the United States and Russia and to the lesser regional regimes like Turkey and Azerbaijan who used international terrorists in their war of aggression against Artsakh. 

The story of the next 20 years will be driven by two factors.  The first is the effects of climate change, and the second is the start of the end of the carbon economy.  This will translate into mass immigration and state collapse in multiple countries stretching from Africa through the Middle East to the current and future failed states stretching between Armenia and China.  In such a world if you do not have seat on the table of the business of war, you are on the menu.  

We as a people have always rightly hated war and have not been interested in it, but war unfortunately has been very interested in us. We have paid the price for trying to be a cultural light to the world for millennia while always demanding moral and universal justice from a cruel world. The lesson of those 44 days last year was that kind of thinking needs to end.  

New rule: More weapons less Churches.

Russia to relaunch Armenia and Azerbaijan flights

eTurbo News
Feb 4 2021

Russia Federation resumes international air service on a reciprocal basis with more countries

Russian government’s press service officials announced that Russian Federation will restart air service with Armenia and Azerbaijan starting February 15.

Two flights per week will be performed between Russia’s capital city of Moscow and Azerbaijan’s capital Baku, and four flights – between Moscow and Armenia’s capital city of Yerevan.

“It has been decided to resume international air service on a reciprocal basis with Azerbaijan (Moscow-Baku, two flights per week) and Armenia (Moscow-Yerevan, four flights per week) starting ,” the report said.

The number of regular passenger flights to Kyrgyzstan (Moscow-Bishkek route) will also be increased on a reciprocal basis from one to three per week starting February 8.

Russia suspended all commercial passenger flights to other countries amid the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. A gradual resumption of international air service started last summer.

Azerbaijani top diplomat discusses Nagorno-Karabakh with UK minister

TASS, Russia
Feb 9 2021
WorldFebruary 09, 20:22

BAKU, February 9. /TASS/. Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov has discussed the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh with Wendy Morton, Minister for European Neighborhood and the Americas at the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, the press service of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry informed on Tuesday.

"Bayramov informed his British colleague [Wendy Morton] of the current situation in the region and the process of adhering to the provisions of the trilateral agreements on Karabakh dated November 9 and January 11. It was noted that adherence to these agreements would help ensure peace and security in the region and create opportunities for cooperation," the message says. The Azerbaijani minister stressed that the republic had taken all the necessary steps from its side to adhere to the provisions.

For her part, Morton stressed the importance of cooperation between both states in the sphere of gender equality, fight against climate change and development of green energy. The minister stressed that the UK is ready to aid Azerbaijan’s demining of its territories.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry noted that the sides had exchanged opinions on a number of bilateral issues, namely in the sphere of energy.

Earlier on Tuesday, Morton met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. During the meeting, he said that the seventh session of the Southern Gas Corridor Advisory Council is set to take place in Baku this week. Achievements and prospects of cooperation will be considered, he said.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, 2020, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. The conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory that had been part of Azerbaijan before the Soviet Union break-up, but primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, broke out in February 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1992-1994, tensions boiled over and exploded into large-scale military action for control over the enclave and seven adjacent territories after Azerbaijan lost control of them.

On November 9, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh starting from November 10. The Russian leader said the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides would maintain the positions that they had held and Russian peacekeepers would be deployed to the region. Besides, Baku and Yerevan must exchange prisoners and the bodies of those killed.

Iran speaker welcomes Russia’s efforts in Karabakh, points to latent threats in the region

TASS, Russia
Feb 9 2021
WorldFebruary 09, 19:48

MOSCOW, February 9./TASS/. Iran welcomes Russia’s efforts towards a peace settlement of the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, but notes that the region is still facing latent threats, Iranian parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said on Tuesday.

"If this conflict had continued, this could have affected security on the northern borders of Iran," the speaker said in a speech at the Diplomatic Academy of the Russian Foreign Ministry. "We are glad that Russia was putting efforts into having this war end as soon as possible. But I think that the region faces latent threats,"the Majlis speaker stressed, explaining that the presence of terrorist forces in that region should be prevented.

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said that the importance of establishing stable cooperation among the countries of the region was on the agenda. This would also open new possibilities for the development of relations between Iran and Russia, he stressed.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

On November 9, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh starting from November 10. Under the document, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides stopped at the positions that they had held and Russian peacekeepers were deployed along the engagement line in Nagorno-Karabakh and along the Lachinsky corridor that connects Armenia with the enclave to exercise control of the ceasefire observance. Apart from that, a number of districts came over to Baku’s control.

The situation in Nagorno-Karabakh stabilized following the deployment of peacekeepers. Tens of thousands of people who had to flee the region because of hostilities have returned to their homes.

MPs call on Dutch government to recognise 1915 Armenia massacre as genocide

EuroNews
Feb 9 2021


While the exact amount of people killed in the massacre is disputed, Armenia says that as many as 1.5 million died.   -   Copyright  AP Photo, File

Dutch MPs have urged the country's government to officially recognise the 1915 massacre of Armenians as genocide.

Between 1915 and 1917, an estimated 1.5 million Armenian citizens were driven from their homes and murdered by the Ottoman Empire, alongside other Christian minorities.

n 2018, Dutch lawmakers in the lower house of parliament voted overwhelmingly to acknowledge this act as genocide. But the decision did not become the country's official policy and terminology. Thursday's vote, in the upper house of parliament, seeks to change this.

Turkish authorities have denied that the events of over a hundred years ago constitute a genocide. Indeed Dutch caretaker prime minister, Mark Rutte, has said that recognising it as such will not contribute to reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey.

But lawmaker Joël Voordewind from the ChristenUnie (Christian Union) – the smallest party in the departing coalition – said the Dutch government's vague position was "absurd".

"The government still uses the phrase 'the issue of the Armenian Genocide' or speaks of 'the terrible events'," Voordewind added in a statement.

"In doing so it evades the truth; that it was a planned and deliberate genocide."

Turkey continues to dispute the description, saying the toll has been inflated and that those killed were victims of a civil war.

But the Christian Union has been trying to get the Dutch government to acknowledge the deaths as a genocide since 2004.

Its proposal has received support from other members in the Dutch Parliament including the Greens, the Socialist Party, and the Christian Democratic Appeal.

"This recognition is very important, the genocide is an open wound for the Armenian community," said Voordewind.

"The fact that many countries, including the Netherlands, did not even want to recognise that it was a genocide makes it all the more painful."

"For that reason alone, it is important that our government speaks out clearly about what happened in the past."

"Recognising the past is a crucial first step for reconciliation and to prevent repetition," he added.

In 2018, a member of the Dutch cabinet attended the annual commemoration of the killings in the Armenian capital Yerevan for the first time.

Five years ago, German MPs overwhelmingly voted to declare the 1915 massacre as a genocide in a historic vote in the Bundestag, angering Turkey.

Ankara also recalled its French ambassador in 2011 after Paris passed a law making it illegal to deny that the early 20th-century slaughter of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire constituted a genocide.

The Dutch government has not responded to Euronews' request for a statement on the matter.

 

CSUN’s Armenian Studies Program Accepting Scholarship Applications

SCV News
Feb 9 2021
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE | TUESDAY, FEB 9, 2021
CSUN is accepting applications for a scholarships available to any student interested in studying or working with the Armenian community through advocacy, humanitarian, cultural or philanthropic work. Photo by Lee Choo.

 

California State University, Northridge is accepting applications for a scholarships available to any student interested in studying or working with the Armenian community through advocacy, humanitarian, cultural or philanthropic work.

The Armenian History and Cultural Scholarship Fund was created last year by an anonymous $3 million gift to the university to support Armenian studies and students. A majority of the gift, $2.5 million, was designated for scholarships, while the rest was earmarked to support activities within CSUN’s Armenian Studies Program.

“This generous gift will benefit a broad segment of CSUN’s student population, and will promote Armenian history and culture, thereby becoming yet another venue for mutual understanding and appreciation among the various constituent groups of our society,” said Vahram Shemmassian, head of the Armenian Studies Program.

Scholarships of up to $15,000 per year are available to undergraduate CSUN students — currently enrolled or planning to enroll at the university in fall 2021 — who have demonstrated financial need and maintain at least a 3.0 grade point average. The scholarship money can be used to defer the cost of tuition, fees, books, and room and board. Scholarship recipients can apply again in subsequent years, as long as they meet the criteria and funding is still available.

Those interested in applying for the scholarship can click [here] for details.

Scholarships will be awarded to students who best meet one or more of the following criteria:

– Is a descendent of an individual who survived or was killed in the Armenian Genocide of 1914-1924;

– Can demonstrate a commitment to the support of and advocacy for the Armenian community through humanitarian, cultural and philanthropic work, or athletic programs and endeavors;

– Is minoring in Armenian studies;

– Is a language and cultures major with Armenian language or studies as a concentration and/or

– Is a liberal studies major with Armenian language or studies as a concentration, or is enrolled in the Integrated Teacher Education Program in CSUN’s Liberal Studies Program, with a minor in Armenian studies.

For more information about the scholarship, visit https://csun.academicworks.com/opportunities/2777.