Moscow police arrest Doxa editor Armen Aramyan outside of Investigative Committee headquarters

Meduza
Sept 29 2021
5:55 pm,
Source: Doxa

Moscow police arrested Doxa editor Armen Aramyan as he was leaving the Investigative Committee’s headquarters on Tuesday, September 29, the student journal reported. 

According to lawyer Leonid Solovyov from the rights group Agora, police officers detained Aramyan in order to draw up misdemeanor charges against him. Where the police took the student journalist remains unknown, Doxa said. The publication didn’t specify the accusations brought against Aramyan.

Update. Leonid Solovyov located Armen Aramyan at the Tverskoy District Police Station, Doxa reported. The lawyer also found out that he is being charged with a misdemeanor under Administrative Code Article 20.2, section 2 (violating the procedure for holding a meeting or rally). This is punishable by up to 10 days in jail.

Armen Aramyan and three other Doxa journalists — Alla Gutnikova, Vladimir Metelkin, and Natalya Tyshkevich — are facing felony charges for allegedly involving minors in illegal protests.  In April, they were all placed under de facto house arrest pending trial and banned from using communication devices, or communicating with anyone except their lawyers and close relatives. A Moscow court later eased the preventive measures against them slightly, allowing them to leave their homes for two hours per day.

 

St. Gregory The Illuminator: Feast Day Sept. 30- A Man For All Seasons

Catholic 365
Sept 30 2021

University of California Approves Blair’s Armenian Academy IB Literature Class; Added to A-G List with Honors Weight

Pasadena Now, CA
Sept 29 2021


The Armenian Academy at Blair High School (BHS) Armenian International Baccalaureate (IB) Literature Class has been officially approved by the University of California. It has been added to the A-G list with Honors weight. It is the FIRST of its kind in the world approved by the IB Organization outside of Armenia. PUSD congratulates the Armenian Academy at Blair for this spectacular achievement. ~ Brian McDonald, Ed. D – PUSD Superintendent

California State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Tony Thurmond, is making a special visit to Blair this Thursday because he has heard “great things about Blair”. He will be seeing the amazing International Baccalaureate Program BHS have and the dynamic international community that exists here. The Armenian Academy is proud to be part of such an outstanding school. Applications of Interest for the 2022-2023 school year are open. 6th-12th grades. Any student from ANY city welcome. www.armenianacademy.org

Armenian Academy at Blair. (Credit: Maro Najarian Yacoubian Facebook page)

 

A peek into Ms. Linda Kalachian’s wonderful class. Students are working in groups on Google slides to create presentations on Hripsime church. Ms. Linda is always filling the room with Armenian spirit! (Credit: Maro Najarian Yacoubian Facebook page).

Blair High School, 1201 S. Marengo Avenue, Pasadena, (626) 396-5820 or visit www.pusd.us/site/Default.aspx?PageID=55.

Sports: Arman Tsarukyan Wants Dan Hooker Or Tony Ferguson In December

Sept 29 2021

The talented Armenian is currently on a four-fight win streak in the UFC. After his rough debut against Islam Makhachev in April 2019, the Armenian quickly redeemed himself by securing unanimous decision victories over Olivier Aubin-Mercier, Davi Ramos and Matt Frevola in his next three fights.

Since then, Tsarukyan hasn’t looked back.

The No.13-ranked 155-pound contender was in action earlier this month at UFC Vegas 37.

Going into this fight, Tsarukyan knew he would need a knockout before he could call any bigger name in the division. And he did exactly that by knocking out Christos Giagos emphatically in the first round with just 2:09 on the clock.

With this victory, his tally of wins has risen to four with just one loss in the UFC.

Recently, Tsarukyan has developed a fierce feud with New Zealander Hooker. The two have a short history of bad blood between them.

After his strings of wins in the UFC, Tsarukyan called out Hooker, which he responded by labeling him a “dumbass.” This remark did not go very well with the Armenian.

While talking to MMA News, the Armenian revealed what Hooker has told him if his fight with Nasrat Haqparast didn’t happen at UFC 266 for any reason.

“He texted something like, ‘If you have balls, you gonna fight with me now.’ But he knows I had an (injury), I got injured after this fight, and I broke my ribs. That’s why he started speaking. But if he didn’t know about my injury, for sure he wouldn’t (say that).”

“He’s a tough opponent, and I’m tough, too,” he added. “And we had a conversation (with) each other, and I think UFC can do this part. And a lot of people know about me and him, and everyone wants to see this fight.”

Tsarukyan further stated that he would like to fight Tony Ferguson in December if the fight with Hooker doesn’t go to the plan.

 

Armenia detains wartime ex-defence minister over graft

The Daily Star, Bangladesh
Sept 30 2021


Armenia has detained on corruption charges the former defence minister who headed the country's military during last year's disastrous war with Azerbaijan, officials said yesterday.

Last autumn Armenia's armed conflict with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region claimed more than 6,500 lives and saw Yerevan cede swathes of territory it had controlled for decades.

The war sparked harsh criticism of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, with opposition parties accusing him of failing to prepare the army for possible large-scale hostilities and betraying national interests by agreeing to a humiliating truce.

Critics say Armenian armed forces were ill-equipped and lacked knowledge of modern warfare, while corrupt officials made a fortune on arms procurement contracts.

Armenia's state security service yesterday announced the detention of former defence minister David Tonoyan for alleged "abuse of office, forgery, and embezzlement while procuring weapons for the country's armed forces."

Tonoyan, 53, was appointed defence minister in 2018 and resigned shortly after the six-week war.

He is suspected of misappropriating some $4.7 million, the security service said, adding that "many more former and serving military officials" were being investigated for similar offences.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan as the Soviet Union collapsed, and the ensuing conflict claimed around 30,000 lives.

At the time, Armenians took control of the enclave as well as seven nearby districts of Azerbaijan — some 20 percent of the country's national territory.

A fresh war erupted last September and saw the technologically superior Azerbaijani military rout Armenian forces with Turkey's backing.

The war ended in November with a Russian-brokered truce under which Yerevan ceded parts of Karabakh and all of the surrounding districts.

Moscow has deployed some 2,000 peacekeepers in the area to oversee the ceasefire.


Armenian ex-defense minister arrested for embezzlement and faulty weapons purchases

EurasiaNet.org
Sept 30 2021
Ani Mejlumyan Sep 30, 2021
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan introduces then newly appointed Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan in 2018. (photo: mil.am)

The Armenian authorities have detained a former defense minister and a major arms dealer on charges related to purchases of faulty weaponry.

The National Security Service (NSS) announced on September 30 that it had detained former defense minister Davit Tonoyan on charges of “embezzlement of large sums of money, falsifications, committing publicly dangerous acts.” The NSS also detained David Galstyan, the head of a defense contractor supplying weapons to the Armenian armed forces. Together, the two are charged with stealing approximately 2.3 billion drams ($4.7 million).

The case involves the purchase of missiles – the seller, type of missile, or year when they were purchased was not identified – that were produced between 1985 and 1991. The NSS also said that “large-scale” investigations are continuing to fully uncover the chain of crimes and all the people involved.

On September 25, the NSS – citing the same amount of embezzled money – said that it had arrested another senior military figure, the head of the aviation department of the armed forces. According to the NSS, the officer knew in 2011 that the missiles were faulty and unusable, but bought them anyway. The statement did not name the officer, but from 2009 to 2019 that post was held by Major General Avetik Muradyan.

"Some of the missiles failed to fire shortly after delivery, and were taken out of the arsenal. The rest were not used at all, including during the 44-day war that began on September 27, 2020,” the NSS said in its statement. Deputy Chief of General Staff of the Armed Forces Stepan Galstyan was also questioned in the case, the NSS reported.

Davit Galstyan, the arms dealer, is already facing a similar charge that was filed in February. In that case, Galstyan’s firm Mosston Engineering (an offshore company registered in the Seychelles) is accused of embezzling $1 million. That case involved the purchase of artillery shells: Mosston was contracted in 2018 to supply the military with a certain type of shell, produced between 1983 and 1986, but the firm instead bought Czechoslovakian shells produced in 1977, which were “significantly inferior.”

Galstyan’s lawyer told journalists on September 30 that his client denied the charges, and that “this is a completely new case, has nothing to do with the old case.”

Tonoyan hasn’t been named in the first investigation, even as a witness, even though he was appointed defense minister in 2018.

Tonoyan has spent almost his entire career since the late 1990s in the armed forces and defense ministry. He appeared to enjoy an unusual amount of trust from Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, as his tenure lasted more than two years – a rarity in the quickly churning government. Tonoyan resigned last November, a week after the end of the war with Azerbaijan, following public pressure.

Galstyan has long been known as a murky operator. A 2011 United Nations Security Council report found that one of his firms, "DG Arms Corporation,” illegally bought and transported ammunition to Libya in violation of international sanctions. In another episode, Mosston was reported to have transferred 275,000 euros to an offshore account belonging to Ukraine’s then-president Petro Poroshenko for a VIP jet service.

None of that stopped the government from working with him.

On August 21, 2018, the Ministry of Defense announced that it had reached an agreement with a firm owned by Galstyan, Royalsys Engineering LTD, to produce Kalashnikov rifles in Armenia. No such company is registered in Armenia, but the Panama Papers leaks included information about a similarly named company with a spelling error: Royalsys Enginerring.

Tonoyan was confronted at the time by a journalist from the news outlet Civilnet about the fact that no such company existed in Armenia, but Tonoyan denied it. In 2019, Davit Galstyan was appointed adviser to Tonoyan.

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Armenia’s National Security Services confirm the detention of former defense minister


Sept 30 2021


    JAMnews, Yerevan

The National Security Service of Armenia (SNB) has the detention of former Defense Minister David Tonoyan, who held this post in 2018-2020. He is suspected of “embezzlement on an especially large scale”.

The SNB also confirms the detention of David Galstyan, the head of a company that supplied weapons to the Armenian army.

Both were detained in the framework of a criminal case investigating the abuse of high-ranking officials of the Ministry of Defense and the Armed Forces of Armenia in the process of supplying ammunition for the army.

On September 29, the Hraparak newspaper reported this, referring to its sources. The newspaper also said that a search had been carried out in the minister’s apartment before the arrest.


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Photo: aravot.am. Right – Tonoyan, left – Galstyan

The NSS reports that the detainees were charged with embezzlement of funds on an especially large scale – 2,277,323,840 drams [about $4.7 million], as well as “committing forgeries and socially dangerous acts”.

Petitions for their arrest were submitted to the court.

According to the National Security Service, within the framework of the criminal case, several criminal cases have been launched against other former and current high-ranking officials of the country’s Armed Forces.

However, the former minister’s lawyer reports that David Tonoyan does not admit his guilt. Moreover, the lawyer argues that both the arrest and the motion for arrest are illegal since the court had previously made a decision within the framework of the same criminal case. Tonoyan’s guilt has been refuted on the basis of evidence already obtained by the court.

As for David Galstyan, director of Mosston Engineering, which for many years was a supplier of weapons for the Armenian Armed Forces, he was arrested once in February 2020. However, in May, the Court of Appeal overturned the trial court’s decision and he was released.

According to the SNB, David Galstyan’s company in 2018 signed a contract with the Ministry of Defense for the supply of shells produced in 1983-1986, but supplied 1977 ammunition.

It was found that in terms of tactical characteristics they were significantly inferior to those required by the army, they “could not solve combat missions.” In this regard, the detainee is suspected of embezzling more than $1 million.

The lawyer for the head of Mosston Engineering said in February that the court had been presented with irrefutable evidence of the compliance of the supplies with the requirements of the contract:

“In fact, this episode, dating back to the 70s, is very funny, because the case materials with all the evidence presented, refute that the shells of the 70s were delivered. People who are not specialists, could not see the difference between the production date of a particular projectile and the specific numbers indicated on the details of the projectile. This is the problem”.

Since September 29, Armenian media have been reporting on the arrest of Stepan Galstyan, Deputy Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Armenia under the same case. The information fo him being invited to the National Security Service has been officially confirmed.

Earlier, the media published information about the detention of the former head of the aviation department of the Armed Forces, Avetik Muradyan.

The SNB report did not give a name, but it was said that a high-ranking military man knew that one of the supplying companies had imported expired and low-quality ammunition back in 2011, but this did not prevent them from purchasing them and paid $4.7 million from the state budget. From 2009 to 2019, Major General Avetik Muradyan served as the head of the aviation department.

The Armenian media outlets report that in the near future the arrest of the former Minister of Defense of Armenia Seyran Ohanyan and the former Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Yuri Khachaturov is possible. Both held these positions in 2008-2016.

The latest statement by the SNB says that “large-scale operational-search and investigative measures are being taken to fully disclose the entire chain of crime and identify all persons involved in it”.

Armenia: GRECO publishes its Interim Compliance Report of 4th Evaluation Roun

Council of Europe
Sept 30 2021
STRASBOURG 30/09/2021

© Shutterstock

The Group of States against Corruption (GRECO) of the Council of Europe has made public today its Interim Compliance Report of Fourth Evaluation Round on Armenia (on Corruption prevention in respect of members of parliament, judges and prosecutors), adopted by GRECO at its 88th Plenary Meeting (Strasbourg, 20-22 September 2021).

  • Interim Compliance Report of Fourth Round : English - French

 

More information:

  • Group of States against Corruption (GRECO) 

Turkish Press: Turkey’s TB2 drones minimized civilian casualties in Karabakh war: US analyst

Yeni Safak, Turkey
Sept 30 2021
News Service13:35


Turkey’s renowned TB2 drones “significantly” cut down civilian casualties during the recent Karabakh War, Irina Tsukerman, a New York-based human rights lawyer and analyst, told Trend News Agency on Thursday.

“The use of precision weapons, airstrikes, and new and emerging technologies such as the precision-guided high-end Bayraktar TB2 UAVs helped minimize civilian casualties,” noted Tsukerman.

According to Tsukerman, Armenian forces were taken by surprise during the war as they relied more on traditional warfare, choosing to decimate civilian quarters in a bid to get the Azerbaijani side to retaliate.

“The new generation warfare concept also included the long-distance jammers and, in general, was much more focused on air and missile strikes than on ground strategy. For that reason, Armenian forces were completely outplayed as they relied more on traditional conventional war attacks, as well as attempts to decimate civilian centers in an attempt to draw Azerbaijan into a reactionary response.”

  Instead, they were surprised with precision strikes that minimized civilian casualties and took out their capabilities, added Tsukerman.

Tsukerman also noted that with the Karabakh conflict winding down, there is “ample opportunity for economic integration of South Caucasus, as well as many opportunities towards working for joint goals with the European Union and other countries.”

Tsukerman concluded by praising the Azerbaijani Army’s “top-notch” coordination and morale, which was a decisive factor in the war.

  “The Azerbaijani army showed a great deal of military preparedness, high level of morale, excellent coordination among themselves and with the operators of the new technologies, and had acquired and been clearly trained in the top-notch equipment that had surpassed even what the Russians had provided Armenia with and what was once considered top of the line.”

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

During a subsequent 44-day conflict which ended under a deal signed Nov. 10, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages from Armenian nearly three-decade occupation.

The cease-fire is seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia, whose armed forces withdrew in line with the agreement.

Turkey’s combat drones had reportedly destroyed the Russian-made Pantsir missile systems in Syria, Libya and Nagorno-Karabakh, as Ankara’s deployment of UAVs was credited for the victories clenched by Turkey’s allies from Asia to Africa.

The Bayraktar TB2 armed UAV, which was developed and manufactured by Turkish defense company Baykar Technologies, has been used by the Turkish Armed Forces and the country’s Security Directorate since 2015, most recently credited for Azerbaijan’s military success in the Karabakh conflict.

Is Armenia-Turkey Détente Ahead?

UK – Sept 30 2021

Leaders of both countries have repeatedly hinted that direct talks on a rapprochement could soon begin.


Thursday,
Tigran Zakaryan, CONTRIBUTOR

Armenian analysts have responded with caution to apparent overtures between Yerevan and Ankara over a possible détente between the two countries.

Both Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan have repeatedly hinted in recent weeks that they were prepared to begin talks on repairing bilateral relations.

The two countries have never established diplomatic ties and their shared border has been closed since the early 1990s. Relations further deteriorated last year over the 44-day Nagorony Karabakh war, in which Turkish military support for Azerbaijan may have played a decisive role in its victory.

However, last month Erdogan said that Turkey was willing to open talks towards normalising ties if Armenia also “declares its readiness to move in this direction”. He has also raised the prospect of creating a regional platform that would help establish links from Turkey's Igdir to Azerbaijan, possibly via a rail route through Armenia.

In turn, Pashinyan told a September 8 cabinet meeting said that Erdogan’s remarks presented “an opportunity to discuss normalisation of Armenia-Turkey relations and de-blockade the Armenia-Turkey railroad and [other] communications. We are ready for such discussions”.

Pashinyan added that global players including Russia, US, EU, China and India would welcome such a move.

Oppositions figures have expressed scepticism about Pashinyan’s approach. Lawmaker Hayk Mamijanyan, of the Pativ Unem (I Have Honour) faction, said that Ankara’s lack of extensive preconditions made him question whether Turkey might have already have received some kind of assurances. Critics have previously accused Pashinyan of covert negotiations to end the Karabakh war, in which Azerbaijan took control of extensive territory previously controlled by Armenia.

Mamijanyan said that Pashinyan should “seek to dispel such doubts, or else [it means] he once again has decided to strike some sort of a backdoor deal”.  

However CCA lawmaker Eduard Aghajanyan, who heads parliament’s foreign relations committee, dismissed suggestions of any back door negotiations.

He said that progress could not be made without separating Armenia’ relations with Turkey from those with Azerbaijan.  

“We want Turkey to realise – and we ourselves need to do it too – that Azerbaijan and Turkey are totally different entities and individual players in the region, whose interests are not necessarily identical,” Aghajanyan said.

Eric Hacopian, a contributor to Civilnet media, noted that successive governments in Armenia had supported the idea of normalising relations with Turkey without achieving any kind of breakthrough. He said that Baku’s opposition may play a part in this stalemate.

“Azerbaijan thinks they can impose their will or get the worst for us-best possible for them deal and any kind of a Turkish rapprochement with Armenia actually would weaken the case,” Hacopian said.

He added, however, that domestic Turkish considerations might derail any fresh efforts to start talks, given that the National Movement Party (MHP) – part of Turkey’s ruling coalition – would likely oppose better relations with Armenia.

As a result, Erdogan would be reluctant to press forward with any dialogue as he will need MHP support in the upcoming 2023 elections.

“His [Erdogan’s] words are meaningless, only his actions matter,” Hacopian continued. “I do not see anything changing on the primary relationship between those two countries until the fall of the Erdogan regime.”

However, historian Hrant Ter-Abrahamyan said that the very fact of holding talks with Turkey was in itself significant, even though it was important to have realistic expectations about what could be achieved.

“There is a lot to talk about with Turkey and it is expected that Armenian society cannot have a positive attitude towards that state – that is quite natural for understandable reasons – but we need to be pragmatic,” he said. “If Armenia and Turkey have something to give and receive, if they expect something from us – and it is through a dialogue that such a thing can be revealed – then we should follow that path. We needed to have it done earlier.”

Ara Sahakyan of the opposition Hayrenik (Homeland) party, said that although Armenian-Turkish relations needed to be slowly normalised, the internal politics of both countries did not currently support this.

“It needs to be done slowly, stage by stage,” he said. “The authorities need to understand that succeeding in laying the foundations of Armenian-Turkish relations would be an achievement by itself. But it will take more than one generation to achieve that. Such matters are not resolved by an [Armenian] government which has 53 per cent of votes, but rather by large coalitions.”  

This publication was prepared under the "Amplify, Verify, Engage (AVE) Project" implemented with the financial support of the Foreign Ministry of Norway.