Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 02-09-21

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 21:29, 2 September, 2021

YEREVAN, 2 SEPTEMBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 2 September, USD exchange rate is down by 0.06 drams to 493.54 drams. EUR exchange rate is up by 1.55 drams to 584.89 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate is up by 0.03 drams to 6.78 drams. GBP exchange rate is up by 1.69 drams to 680.74 drams.

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

Gold price is down by 51.90 drams to 28749.06 drams. Silver price is down by 2.03 drams to 379.55 drams. Platinum price is up by 172.61 drams to 16058.09 drams.

Armenpress: Due to the delay of the Yerevan-Tbilisi flight, the passengers remained at the airport

Due to the delay of the Yerevan-Tbilisi flight, the passengers remained at the airport

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 21:44, 2 September, 2021

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. MyWay airline's Yerevan-Tbilisi flight scheduled for 18:30 has not taken place yet, the passengers are left at the airport. ARMENPRESS reports "Zvartnots" airport recommends to apply to the airline to check the flight time. We tried to contact MyWay, but to no avail, there is no answer.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/02/2021

                                        Thursday, September 2, 2021


Russia ‘Ready’ To Facilitate Turkish-Armenian Rapprochement

        • Aza Babayan

RUSSIAN -- Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova gives a press 
conference in Moscow, July 1, 2021


Russia expressed readiness on Thursday to help Armenia and Turkey normalize 
their relations, saying that would boost peace and stability in the region.

The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, said Moscow took note 
of a recent “exchange of positive signals” between Yerevan and Ankara.

Zakharova recalled in that context Russia’s stated support for the 2009 
protocols on normalizing Turkish-Armenian ties.

“Now too we are ready to assist in a rapprochement between the two neighboring 
states based on mutual respect and consideration of each other’s interests,” she 
told reporters.

Ankara never implemented those protocols, continuing to link the establishment 
of diplomatic relations with Yerevan to a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict. As a result, Armenia’s former government annulled the Western-brokered 
agreements in early 2018.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian spoke on August 27 of “some positive signals” 
sent by the Turkish government of late and said his administration is ready to 
reciprocate them.

Commenting on Pashinian’s remark the following day, Turkish President Recep 
Tayyip Erdogan said regional states should establish “good-neighborly relations” 
by recognizing each other’s territorial integrity and sovereignty. “If Yerevan 
is ready to move in that direction Ankara could start working on a gradual 
normalization of relations with Armenia,” he said.

In that context, Erdogan was understood to echo Azerbaijan’s demands for a 
formal Armenian recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Eduard Aghajanian, a senior lawmaker representing Pashinian’s Civil Contract, 
responded by saying earlier this week that Armenia will not accept any Turkish 
preconditions for improving bilateral ties.

“Unfortunately, Erdogan’s statement contained points resembling preconditions, 
which do not help to launch that [normalization] process at all,” Aghajanian 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Turkey completely closed its border with Armenia in 1993 out of solidarity with 
Azerbaijan. It provided Azerbaijan with decisive military support during last 
year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh.



Health Minister Sees Falling Vaccine Hesitancy In Armenia

        • Narine Ghalechian

ARMENIA -- People prepare to get vaccinated against the coronavirus disease 
(COVID-19) at a mobile vaccination center in Yerevan, July 19, 2021


Although vaccine hesitancy remains widespread in Armenia, many more of its 
citizens are now willing to get inoculated against the coronavirus, Health 
Minister Anahit Avanesian said on Thursday.
Avanesian cited a recent opinion poll showing that the proportion of Armenians 
ready take coronavirus vaccines has risen to over 40 percent from just 10 
percent in March.

“This testifies to a change in public opinion,” she said during a weekly cabinet 
meeting in Yerevan. “But of course we still have a lot to do in terms of 
combating disinformation and other vicious phenomena.”

The Armenian government’s immunization campaign launched in April has made slow 
progress so far, with less than 5 percent of the country’s population fully 
vaccinated against the coronavirus as of August 29.

Avanesian told fellow cabinet members that the process accelerated significantly 
this week. She said Armenian health workers administered a record 6,227 vaccine 
shots on Wednesday, raising to almost 294,000 the total number of inoculations.

The increase may have to do with the health minister’s decision late last month 
to require many public and private sector employees refusing vaccination to take 
coronavirus tests twice a month at their own expense.

Among those covered by the directive are civil servants, schoolteachers and 
workers of private firms involved in the services sectors of the Armenian 
economy.


Armenia - Health Minister Anahit Avanesian holds a briefing after a cabinet 
meeting in Yerevan, September 2, 2021.

The government is keen to speed up the vaccination process amid a steady 
increase in coronavirus cases which began two months ago and is now putting the 
national healthcare system under growing strain.

The Armenian Ministry of Health recorded on Wednesday 636 cases and 21 
coronavirus-related deaths, the highest single-day death toll from COVID-19 
reported in months.

The government has pledged in recent weeks to toughen its lax enforcement of 
anti-epidemic rules, notably mandatory mask wearing inside buses, shops and 
offices.

Avanesian acknowledged that the rules are still ignored by most Armenians. “Yes, 
we do have room for improving our enforcement,” she told journalists.



Armenian Government Shuns Karabakh Anniversary Events

        • Gayane Saribekian

Nagorno-Karabakh -- The parliament building in Stepanakert, September 7, 2018.


Armenian government officials declined to attend on Thursday official ceremonies 
in Stepanakert to mark the 30th anniversary of the establishment of the 
unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

Armenia was represented in the ceremonies instead by a multi-partisan delegation 
of its parliament led by deputy speaker Ruben Rubinian.

A government spokesman told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that Pashinian did not 
travel to Karabakh on the occasion because he is currently on vacation.

Armenia’s Minister of High-Tech Industry Vahagn Khachaturian said, however, that 
the prime minister and members of his cabinet shunned the low-key celebrations 
for political considerations.

“A political decision was made Don’t look for other reasons,” Khachatrian told 
reporters. He did not elaborate.

Tigran Abrahamian, an opposition member of the parliamentary delegation visiting 
Karabakh, deplored the absence of Armenian government officials, saying 
Pashinian did not want to anger Azerbaijan.

“If we accept the rules of the game dictated by Azerbaijan we will accelerate 
and complete the loss of Artsakh (Karabakh),” Abrahamian said, referring to 
Armenia’s defeat in last year’s war over Karabakh.

Pashinian last visited Stepanakert during the six-week war stopped by a 
Russian-brokered ceasefire in November.

The premier congratulated the Karabakh Armenians on the anniversary of the 
proclamation of their republic, not recognized by any country, in a statement 
issued on Thursday. He reiterated that the Karabakh conflict remains unresolved 
and that Yerevan will continue to champion a settlement based on the Karabakh 
Armenians’ right to self-determination.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has repeatedly stated that Azerbaijan 
essentially ended the conflict with its victory in the war. He has said that 
Yerevan should therefore recognize Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh through 
a “peace treaty” proposed by Baku.

Other Armenian politicians, notably the Karabakh-born former Presidents Serzh 
Sarkisian and Robert Kocharian, also issued statements on the occasion. 
Sarkisian again blamed Armenia’s current leadership for the outcome of the war.

“We would have won had they not discredited and purged our armed forces and 
replaced experienced commanders with conformists prior to the 44-day war and 
ineptly managed the war,” he charged.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Remains of two more fallen serviceman found in Artsakh search operation

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2021

Artsakh rescuers on Wednesday found the remains of two fallen Armenian soldier as a result of their search operations for the 2020 Artsakh war casualties.The remains were retrieved from the occupied Jrakan (Jabrayil) region, the State Service of Emergency Situations of Artsakh’s Interior Ministry reported. The bodies are yet to be identified through a forensic medical examination.

Since the end of hostilities, a total of 1,654 bodies of Armenian soldiers and civilians have been found and recovered from the Artsakh territories temporarily occupied by Azerbaijan as a result of the 44-day war unleashed by it.

Robert Kocharyan: We must do everything to protect the Artsakh Republic

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2021

First President of the Artsakh Republic, second President of Armenia and Artsakh Hero Robert Kocharyan has sent a congratulatory message on Independence of the Artsakh Republic.

"Dear Artsakh Armenians,

I warmly congratulate you on the Artsakh Republic Independence Day. As a result of the 44-day war Artsakh suffered severe losses and faces uncertainty at present. Your unbending will to live on your own land and develop is the guarantee for preserving the Artsakh statehood. I am confident you realize the seriousness of the situation. We must do everything together to defend the Artsakh Republic," the message read. 

The war unleashed against Artsakh triggered a new round of challenging developments – Serzh Sargsyan

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2021

Former President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan has issued a message on the Artsakh Republic Day, marked on September 2. In his message, Sargsyan notes that thirty years ago, the document on the proclamation of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic was adopted at the joint session of the NK central and Shahumyan regional councils in Stepanakert, which was the first important step on the way to ensuring the survival of the Artsakh-based Armenians in their historic homeland. Months later, that document was followed by the referendum on reinstating Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence.

"The Artsakh-based Armenians’ decision to take the once illegally annexed Autonomous Region of Nagorno-Karabakh out of Azerbaijan as the latter advocated and fostered Armenophobia was based on bitter lessons of history. None of us had forgotten that in 1921 another part of Armenia, Nakhichevan, was handed over to Azerbaijan in the same illegal manner resulting in pogroms, planned displacement and resettlement of Armenians in the Armenian-populated settlements of Azerbaijan and destruction of millenia-old Armenian monuments," said Sargsyan. He recalls that the same sad fate of Nakhichevan, which had been purged of Armenians, would befell Artsakh, if we failed to form self-defense units, and later on the Artsakh Defense Army, dealt a heavy blow on the invaders and threw them out of our homeland. A remarkable state-building campaign was initiated in Artsakh, which rapidly developed with the support of all Armenians.

"The war unleashed against Artsakh in 2020 and the November 9 document stealthily signed by the Capitulator who still holds the office of Prime Minister in Armenia, triggered a new round of challenging developments in Artsakh and Armenia, the consequences of which we feel every day in our border settlements. The incumbent authorities which keep promising that we may enjoy peace and will benefit from unblocked regional infrastructures, sustainable and safe development, are meant to weaken our people’s vigilance, to sow fear and distrust in our strength and eventually undermine the safety of the two Armenian states. In the meantime, Azerbaijan’s President confessed on several occasions that he was being “urged behind closed doors to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence,” the message said. 

In Sargsyan's words, they waged a challenging but victorious war in the 1990s. "I can insist today that at that time we managed to have the upper hand in a protracted, heavy and unequal war. Some say that Azerbaijan boasted more money, weaponry, ammunition and troops. That is right, but for me, the war was unequal because the strong fought against the weak, and we were strong. The freedom-lovers fought against the invaders, and we were freedom-lovers; the righteous fought against the unjust, and we were the embodiment of justice. We won because we believed in sanctity of our land and family. Similarly, we would have won the 44-day war, if the incumbent authorities had not squeezed our fighting spirit, ousted our best field commanders, mismanaged the war, failed to give vain promises of an imminent victory. As a result, part of our homeland was surrendered to the enemy, several thousands of our troops were killed and hundreds of Armenian prisoners of war were left unattended," added the former president. 

"Thirty years ago, Artsakh made a historical decision, and its status is to live safely outside of Azerbaijan, which is the legitimate right of the Artsakh-based Armenians. Any talks on the status of Artsakh should seek to enshrine that fundamental right, to achieve legal and historical justice, and bearing in mind the events of not so distant past, to prevent Artsakh from being purged of Armenian. All this will come true, if we have a strong army, highly professional diplomats and a strong faith in national values, if we keep working hard, if we glorify our heroes and victories and hold firm to our national values," according to the message.

Prominent Nigerian journalist Dele Olojede joins the Aurora Prize Selection Committee

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2021

The Aurora Humanitarian Initiative is glad to announce that prominent Nigerian journalist Dele Olojede, the first African-born person to win a Pulitzer Prize, has joined the Selection Committee of the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. As the press service at IDeA Foundation reported, in this new capacity, he will assist Nobel Laureates, former presidents, prominent political figures, highly respected humanitarians and well-known human rights activists dedicated to recognizing modern-day heroes and their exceptional impact. Every year, members of the Selection Committee review a shortlist of candidates and select the Aurora Humanitarians to later name one of them the Aurora Prize Laureate.

60-year-old Dele Olojede is a writer, editor, and publisher whose career in journalism spans nearly four decades and took him to more than 100 countries. He was the founder and publisher of NEXT, a groundbreaking investigative newspaper in Lagos, Nigeria, that circulated in the 2000s.

In 2005, Dele became the first African-born winner of the Pulitzer Prize for his reporting on the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide. He is also a public speaker, particularly on what constitutes the good society and how we might hope to achieve it, preferably in our lifetimes.

“We are delighted that Dele Olojede has made the decision to join this Committee. For decades, he has been the voice of the underserved and overlooked communities in distress, and we are very pleased to have him onboard and appreciative of his invaluable input and expertise. I’m positive that his contribution to the work of the Aurora Prize Selection Committee will greatly benefit the humanitarian cause we all serve,” said Lord Ara Darzi, Chair of the Aurora Prize Selection Committee.

Dele Olojede is the founder and host of the annual Africa in the World festival, which brings together provocative thinkers from around the world in the Cape winelands of South Africa to discuss some of the largest challenges and opportunities facing Africa. Besides this, he is a fellow of the Aspen Global Leadership Network, and a moderator of Aspen leadership seminars. Dele Olojede serves on the global advisory board of Luminate, the board of EARTH University in Costa Rica and various other organizations and is a Distinguished Alumnus of Columbia University.

“I’m very honored and excited about this new challenge in my career. I think the Aurora Prize is extremely important as it raises awareness of the plight of those who need our immediate help and of the heroic actions of people who put themselves at risk to help them. As a journalist, I believe visibility and representation matter, so I’m honored to have this opportunity to ensure both for those doing the heroic work of preserving and improving human life in our time, and across the globe,” said Dele Olojede.

The 2021 Aurora Prize Ceremony and accompanying events will take place in Venice, Italy, on October 8-10, 2021. There will be ample opportunities for the guests and participants, including members of the Aurora Prize Selection Committee, Aurora Humanitarians, and other representatives of Aurora’s community, to explore the rich legacy of this location. In the meantime, nominations are still open for the 2022 Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. Until October 31, 2021, any person can submit a nomination for the candidates they believe have overcome great personal challenges to help others.

 

Azerbaijani soldiers deliberately set fire to grassy area near Armenia’s Black Lake

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2021

Azerbaijani servicemen have deliberately set fire to the grassy area near Black Lake (Sev Lich) in Armenia’s Syunik Province, Pastinfo reported, citing Telegram channels. The fire is reportedly spreading to the Armenian positions.

It is not the first time that Azerbaijanis have taken such actions. On July 19, Azerbaijani forces opened fire at the Yeraskh border section, causing a fire in the area between the Armenian and Azerbaijani positions.

Yeraskh village head Radik Oghikyan was slightly injured in Azerbaijani gunfire while organizing efforts to extinguish the fire that broke out as a result of the Azerbaijani actions.

In addition, Azerbaijanis deliberately set fire to the grass in the buffer zone late on August.

Then they set fire to an area of about 28 hectares in Agarak and the grassy areas of 4 villages in Gegharkunik Province near the border with Azerbaijan in late August.

In particular, Azeris roll a burning tire down the hayfields and pastures of the villages. As a result, some 270 hectares of pastures and 150 hectares of hayfields have been burnt in the villages of Azat, Kut, Norabak and Sotk of the Geghamasar community in Gegharkunik since August 29. The hay stacked by Armenian villagers for the winter season is being destroyed.

Armenia bloc: We have no right to deviate from our political rights, just demands

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2021

The opposition Armenia alliance issued a statement on the 30th anniversary of the independence of the Artsakh Republic marked on September 2. The full text of the statement is provided below.

“Dear compatriots,

Thirty years ago, the Declaration on Proclamation of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic was adopted in Stepanakert. This historical document became the birth certificate of the second Armenian state. The will of self-determination of the NKR population on their historical land, the building of an independent statehood and the determination to defend their rights were consolidated.

The potential of all Armenians was focused on the Artsakh liberation struggle. The irreversibility of Artsakh's independence was confirmed by a referendum on December 10, 1991.

The next thirty years were difficult times of state-building and imposing peace. Artsakh was a symbol of victory and pride that united all Armenians. Unfortunately, the political force that came to power in Armenia in 2018 was unable to strengthen and defend the position of the Republic of Artsakh in the negotiation process.

Moreover, as a result of an unbalanced, anti-national foreign and domestic policy, we found ourselves in international isolation, unable to counter the Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression.

The November 9 tripartite statement confirmed the fact of a heavy defeat, making the two Armenian states face serious security threats and an uncertain future and also undermining the sovereignty of the Republic of Armenia.

Nevertheless, we have no right to deviate from our political rights and just demands. The Artsakh Republic Independence Day anchored on the principle of self-determination of nations and its message make us reaffirm that the security of Artsakh will remain a priority on our political agenda.

We are obliged to do the impossible to protect the right of the people of Artsakh to a free life and to fix the status of the Artsakh Republic.

Full of optimism, we congratulate Artsakh on the Independence Day, expressing confidence and determination that the Armenian Artsakh will exist forever.”

Catholicos Karekin II visits famous Armenian doctor Armen Charchyan

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2021

His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, on Wednesday visited prominent Armenian doctor Armen Charchyan, an MP from the opposition Armenia alliance, his lawyer Erik Aleksanyan told Yerkir Media.

"The meeting lasted an hour, I was present at the meeting," the lawyer said.

Charchyan’s health condition significantly deteriorated one day after being arrested again last week and he was moved to a civilian hospital. The professor has suffered a heart attack, has hypertension and diabetes.

Aleksanyan has filed a motion to the Court of General Jurisdiction to release his client on bail.

Charchyan, who headed Yerevan’s Izmirlian Medical Center, has been charged for allegedly pressuring his employees to participate in the June 20 parliamentary elections and vote for the Armenia bloc.