Ambassador: The presence of Japanese tourists in Armenia speaks of the country’s safety

Panorama, Armenia
Politics 13:59 21/07/2018 Armenia

Armenia is safe country in terms of terrorist threats another forms of crimes, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Japan to Armenia Jun Yamada stated Saturday at a meeting with the Chief of Armenian National Security Service (NSS) Artur Vanetsyan.

As the press service at NSS reported, Ambassador Yamada attributed that to the effecient of of the security service of Armenia, adding the presence of Japanese tourists in Armenia speaks of the country’s safety.
NBSS Chief Vanetysan expressed condolences over the on the tragic consequences of the recent floods in Japan and the innocents victims.

During the meeting Vanetyan expressed readiness to cooperate with Japanese special services on exchange of information and experience.

The issue of Armenia’s obtaining of special security equipment envisaged for security services was discussed during the meeting. Arthur Vanetsyan noted the meeting will lay firm ground for future cooperation and partnership between the security agencies of the two countries, the release said.

How Britain enables routine, everyday corruption and fraud in former USSR

The Herald (Glasgow), Scotland
Friday
How Britain enables routine, everyday corruption and fraud in former USSR
 
by David Leask
 
 
IN Armenia and Siberia there are questions about millions of dollars of missing tax. In Kazakhstan, holidaymakers are complaining about a hard-sell timeshare scheme.
 
These are all routine stories of crime, corruption and unethical trading published in the former Soviet Union over the last few months.
 
They all have one thing on common: at their very centre is the alleged abuse of a Scottish limited partnership or SLP, the corporate structure long dubbed “Britain’s home-grown secrecy vehicle”.
 
In fact, there are so many international revelations, big and small, about SLPs and similar English, Northern Irish and Scottish entities called limited liability partnerships or LLPs, that we would need a special edition of The Herald just to cover them all.
 
This article catalogues just a few recent scandals to emerge since UK Government – under pressure from the SNP and transparency campaigners – announced in the spring that it would reform SLPs (but not English or Scottish LLPs). A consultation on those changes ends this weekend.
 
Let’s start with a big story from Armenia. Its National Security Service recently arrested three officials at a business called Norfolk Consulting which last year secured a monopoly on handling customs processing for cargo from neighbouring Turkey, China and the United Arab Emirates.
 
The men have been charged with serious tax evasion. Local media suggest some $7 million in import duties has been lost between August of last year and May of this year.
 
Armenia said Norfolk Consulting was owned by a business registered in Edinburgh last year, Norfolk Project. This SLP was created just as the UK Government last summer forced such entities to name a person of significant control, or PSC.
 
This policy was designed to deter abuse. Norfolk Project has named its official owner, a man with an Armenian name who lives in Moscow.
 
The case in Armenia continues. The general director of Norfolk Consulting was last month remanded in custody pending trial.
 
Armenia’s story has echoes thousands of miles away. Journalists in the Siberian republic of Khakassia, part of Russia, are asking questions about tax there. They want to know why a huge open-cast coal mine is selling millions of tonnes of coal at below-market prices to a Russian-registered intermediary, which then sells the fuel on to two British firms. One of those UK businesses is an SLP and shares an Edinburgh address with Norfolk Project. The other is an English LLP. Neither have revealed their owners. Local news sites have found paperwork for the Russian intermediary. One of its beneficiaries, they said, is the 90-year-old father of an MP.
 
Just across the border from Khakassia, in Kazakhstan there is a rolling row with consumers saying they have been given an unfair hard-sell by a holiday company flogging timeshares. Customers entered into deals through the holiday firm with a London LLP and an SLP registered at the same address, a well-known mass mailbox, as Armenia’s Norfolk Project and the Khakassian coal case SLP.
 
At the other end of the old former Soviet Union, in the Latvian capital Riga, there are questions about a lawyer gunned down earlier this year.
 
Martins Bunkus was working on the insolvency of a Trasta Komercbanka, which lost its licence over breaches of money-laundering and counter-terror rules two years ago. Trasta was where shell firms involved in the Russian Laundromat – the biggest ever scandal to feature SLPs and LLPs – had many of their accounts.
 
Mr Bunkus was killed in his Range Rover. He also drove an Aston Martin. Both were leased by a firm ultimately owned by LLPs registered in Milton Keynes.
 
Latvia is currently cleaning up its banks, which have started to drop their offshore clients, including many SLPs and LLPs and their usually secret ultimate owners. It has come under pressure from the US and European Union to do so, not least because of a series of money-laundering scandals involving the rest of the former Soviet Union.
 
Ukraine is the country which most frequently throws up stories involving SLPs and LLPs, frequently with Latvian banks and often with Trasta.
 
Only this week Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau or Nabu announced it was looking at the accounts of the country’s publicly owned research institute for the nitrogen industry. Nitrogen is a big deal in an agriculturally rich place like Ukraine: think fertiliser.
 
Nabu has a formal criminal investigation in to the alleged theft of some $7.5m from the institute, which goes by the Ukrainian acronym UkrGIAP. Detectives from Nabu said the institute had ordered goods and services from seven overseas firms for the $7.5m, with payment up front to Baltic banks. The goods were never delivered, according to court filings made as part of the investigation and reported in local media.
 
The firms paid? Two were SLPs: Fukuyama Invest of Edinburgh’s Montgomery Street and Europe Inter Corp of Glasgow’s Bath Street. Both firms dissolved on the same day almost a year ago. Two were LLPs, both from London.
 
Nabu has secured court permission to ask UK authorities for support in the case. The agency also wants Britain’s help on the “possible theft” of $2.5m from a state enterprise which reconditions aircraft, Aviakon.
 
According to court filings, Aviakon overpaid for new fuel tanks it bought for helicopters from a business in the notorious tax haven of Nevis. Nabu says money from those deals went to offshore firms, including an LLP in Leith and a Berkshire business of the same kind.
 
An LLP from Newcastle been named in the Ukrainian press as part owner of a factory producing cigarettes so cheap there have been questions about whether excise has been paid.
 
An opponent of the now ousted president Viktor Yanukovych, senior Ukrainian MP, Borislav Rozenblat, was last year caught on tape describing how a “Scottish firm” could be used to export Ukrainian amber falsely described as Polish. He denies any wrongdoing.
 
Now Ukraine’s defence ministry is buying military-grade drones from a firm in neighbouring Moldova owned by his wife. The drones were made from parts supplied by an SLP.
 
Chris Law, an SNP MP, earlier this year visited Ukraine as part of a party delegation meeting senior figures in the country. Scottish shell firms were firmly on the agenda, he said. “We were left in no doubt, by those at the highest levels, that SLPs pose a real threat, not only to the Ukrainian economy, but to security as well, as faith in the democratic process is undermined by the dead weight of corruption,” Mr Law said. “Stopping this abuse of SLPs would be probably the most significant support the UK Government could make to help Ukraine to becoming a full democracy, by allowing it to use the wealth it creates for the benefit of the Ukrainian people.”

Writer William Saroyan’s Longtime Fresno Home Opens as Museum

Fresno State Univ.
Friday 7:58 AM EST
Writer William Saroyan’s Longtime Fresno Home Opens as Museum
 
FRESNO, California
 
 
The Fresno house where famed writer William Saroyan spent the last two decades of his life will open as a museum on Aug. 31, the 110th anniversary of his birth, with a private reception. Beginning in September, the William Saroyan House-Museum will be open for tours by appointment online.
 
A grand opening celebration for the William Saroyan House-Museum will be held at Fresno State’s Satellite Student Union at 7 p.m. on Aug. 31. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. with an exhibition devoted to Saroyan’s life. A formal program will begin at 7 p.m. with a movie about the Saroyan House-Museum project, speakers and musical performances, followed by a reception. Entrance is free, but preregistration is required.
 
In 2016, Arthur Janibekyan, founder of the Renaissance Cultural and Intellectual Foundation, purchased Saroyan’s house (2729 W. Griffith Way), saving it from foreclosure.
 
“The opening of the Saroyan House-Museum in Fresno marks an important milestone in the history of our community,” said Barlow Der Mugrdechian, coordinator of the Armenian Studies Program at Fresno State. “I am particularly happy that the main opening ceremonies will take place at Fresno State, since the Armenian Studies Program has had a long history teaching courses on Saroyan and organizing numerous conferences dedicated to him. It is the right time for the opening of the house-museum.”
 
Saroyan was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1940, the New York Drama Critics’ Circle award and, in 1943, he won the Academy Award for Best Story for the film adaptation of his novel “The Human Comedy.”
 
The museum will be full of interactive and innovative exhibits, making it unique in the region. Technology will allow a hologram of Saroyan to greet visitors. The museum will feature a large digital archive, including exclusive photos and examples of his graphic and literary work.
 
In addition, according to Saroyan’s will, a research area will be created within the house for students, scholars and other interested individuals to benefit from the vast heritage that Saroyan left behind.

Russian expert: Russia as a strategic ally should give Armenia clear guarantees of its security

Arminfo, Armenia
Russian expert: Russia as a strategic ally should give Armenia clear guarantees of its security

Yerevan July 17

Marianna Mkrtchyan. The practical aspect of the Armenian-Russian relations needs to be strengthened, Russian expert in the field of politics, defense and security Grigory Trofimchuk expressed this opinion during the round table “Youth and Humanitarian Dimension of the EEU Space” held on July 17 in Yerevan.

According to him, the Armenian-Russian relations have a solid foundation, reflected in a number of blocks, including the CSTO, the EEU. “The potential for further cooperation is solid, but it is necessary to strengthen the practical aspect so that every citizen of Armenia feels all the positive results that the official Yerevan enjoys due to its membership the Eurasian Economic Union,” the Russian expert said. At the same time, he added that this should be expressed, including in the form of lower prices for essential goods. Trofimchuk also expressed his conviction that it is necessary to eliminate all the elements of mistrust existing in Armenia and Armenian society in relation to Russia, a strategic ally. In addition, he believes that at the expert level, the interests of Armenia should be defended more actively. “Moreover, the Armenian society should receive clear answers to the raised questions so that there will not be disintegration activities. An important element of our relations is ensuring stability in the South Caucasus,” the expert said, and in this context recalled the escalation of the situation in the Karabakh conflict zone in April 2016, which was stopped due to the efforts of Russia. However, Trofimchuk expressed his conviction that the frozen situation can not last forever, and the more the situation remains unresolved, the more it carries threats, including for the Armenian-Russian relations.

The Russian expert believes that Russia, as a strategic ally, should give Armenia clear guarantees of security. “All kinds of statements, especially from the Russian side, such as ‘ Armenians have occupied the Russian media’ are not acceptable. In addition, we do not need experts who during the visit to Azerbaijan make one statement, while during the visit to Armenia state the opposite, such practice harms security. There should be experts who express a clear position that fits into the triangle of Armenia-Russia- Azerbaijan relations, “he said.

Trofimchuk also pointed at the concealment of the fact that the EEU is not the USSR, which creates grounds for anti-propaganda.


Businessmen from Armenian Diaspora formed a group of investors

Arminfo, Armenia
July 12 2018
Businessmen from Armenian Diaspora formed a group of investors

Yerevan July 12

Naira Badalian. World-class businessmen from the Diaspora initiated the creation of a group of investors, which announced the launch of the “Build Armenia” project.

As the statement of the group of investors says, the project’s goal is to ensure the flow of large-scale investments to Armenia in order to stimulate repatriation. At the same time, it is planned to create a socio- economic favorable environment, which due to the formation of appropriate infrastructures will be able to accept the flow of repatriates.

The appeal of the group of investors, in particular, notes that taking into account the migration flows of Armenians from the Middle East, the Republic of Armenia faces the task of consolidating the Armenian potential, being responsible for preserving the identity of every Armenian, ensuring his well-being, security and development. At the same time, it is noted that the continuing assimilation of Diaspora Armenians threatens national identity.

According to the authors of the document, in the absence of a long-term and coordinated vision of development, the Armenian people continue to live and create in different parts of the world, not using their own unified potential. In addition, from the first day of the proclamation of the independence of the Republic of Armenia, the republic is in the blockade of the Turkish-Azerbaijani tandem, bearing the consequences of the militaristic and xenophobic rhetoric of these countries.

Since 1991, as the authors of the draft note, from Armenia there is an uncontrolled outflow of human capital, which threatens the national security of the country. In the Diaspora, financial capital has been formed, which does not serve the implementation of large-scale programs because of the lack of consolidation.

“An appropriate environment has been formed in the Republic of Armenia to accept the flow of returnees, and in the Diaspora there is a need to translate the long-standing idea of turning Armenia into the center of implementation of all-Armenian projects,” the document says. In this regard, according to the initiative group, Armenia should be ready to accept compatriots in the social and economic terms. “We, the undersigned, start the project” Build Armenia “with an unprecedented initiative from the point of view of finance and geography that will ensure large-scale investments in Armenia, while we urge Armenian businessmen to join the initiative,” the document says.

The first forum of entrepreneurs gathered around this idea will be held in the first quarter of 2019 in France.

The document was signed by Vartan Sirmakes, Switzerland, Arden Sellefyan, Switzerland, Hayk Hovhannisyan, Switzerland, Vartkess Knadjian, Belgium, Harout Missirian, Lebanon, Abraham Odemis (Abraham Odemis, France), Hratch Kaprielian (USA), Anushavan Nazarian, Kuwait, Harutyun, Hakob, Raffi, Shant Stampouli (Haroutune, Hagop, Raffi & Chant Istanboulli, Italy & United Arab Emirates), Patrick Arapian (France), Roy Arakelyan (France) and Sevak Artsruni (Armenia).

168: $42 million and counting in unpaid taxes restored by authorities in just 45 days

Category
BUSINESS & ECONOMY

20 billion 622 million drams in tax evasion damages have been restored in one and a half months alone as of July 1, PM Nikol Pashinyan said at today’s Cabinet meeting.

“As you know, since the formation of the government the combat against corruption and black market is actively ongoing in Armenia,” he said. Pashinyan said that 20 billion 622 million drams or 42 million dollars, in unpaid taxes have been restored amid criminal cases initiated by different law enforcement bodies. “This is a very important indicator and we must continue working in this direction,” he said.

State Revenue Committee president Davit Ananyan said the money was restored due to joint efforts of the national security service, the State Revenue Committee itself and the police. Ananyan said the figure is changing day by day.

The Prime Minister said that the money will be transferred to the state budget. “This figure relates solely to tax obligations, this figure doesn’t relate to corruption occurrences or illicit enrichment. We will restore the damage to the state to the end with no retreat.”

Medieval Armenia is the focus of The Met’s new exhibition

PanArmenian, Armenia
July 2 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Metropolitan Museum of Art will soon unveil “Armenia!”, which explores Armenian arts and culture through its history, Blouin Artinfo reports.

Charting the history of Armenia from its conversion to Christianity in the early fourth century to its prominent role in international trade routes in the 17th century, the show looks at how Armenians developed a national identity. It also emphasizes on how they upheld and transformed their traditions as they traveled to other parts of the world.

The display features more than 140 gilded reliquaries, richly illuminated manuscripts, rare textiles, liturgical furnishings made of precious materials, khachkars (cross stones), church models, and printed books. “These demonstrate Armenia’s distinctive imagery in their homeland and other major Armenian sites, from the Kingdom of Cilicia on the Mediterranean to New Julfa, in Safavid Persia,” the museum writes. Also on view would be select comparative works that highlight how Armenians interacted with other cultures.

The exhibition focuses on major Armenian centre of production covering from west to east. “The emphasis is on images of Armenians, from self-portraits to depictions of male and female rulers, donors, theologians, and historians,” the museum adds. “Special attention is given to works by major artists such as T’oros Roslin, Sargis Pidzak, Toros Taronatsi, and Hakob of Julfa working in the Armenian homeland, the Kingdom of Cilicia, and New Julfa.”

Almost all the works in the exhibition are provided by major Armenian repositories and most of them are on view in the U.S. for the first time. More than half of the works on display are on loan from The Republic of Armenia with the support of The Ministry of Culture. Additional works are drawn from The Met and other American and European institutions. According to the museum, “photographs of Armenian architecture and landscapes by noted Armenian-Canadian photographer Hrair Hawk Khatcherian and his assistant Lilit Khachatryan will provide context for the works in the exhibition.

“Armenia!” runs from September 22, 2018, through January 13, 2019, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 5th Ave, New York, NY 10028, USA.

Music: Serj Tankian Redirecting Songs Intended for System of a Down for Solo EP

Loudwire


David Ignatius: Small miracle of Armenia’s ‘velvet revolution’

The Topeka Capital-Journal
 
 
David Ignatius: Small miracle of Armenia’s ‘velvet revolution’
 
 
By David Ignatiusn
 
YEREVAN, Armenia — If you’re looking for some good news from a faraway land, here’s a tale of Armenia’s “velvet revolution,” which just deposed a corrupt, authoritarian government and installed a team of eager young reformers to govern a tiny nation perilously bordering Russia.
 
Maybe it’s the start of a counter-trend, in a world where so many indicators of freedom and good governance have been pointing downward. But it must be said, time is not on the revolutionaries’ side. The squeeze on Armenia, from its neighbors and domestic power brokers, could undo the gains of the bottom-up protest movement that toppled the long-entrenched, pro-Moscow government of Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan.
 
For now, there’s something of a festival atmosphere here, as Armenians enjoy the aftermath of what the new prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, described to me as a “revolution of love and solidarity.” Bands play in the streets, people spontaneously cheer Pashinyan in public, and the post-Soviet haze seems, for now, to have cleared.
 
Pashinyan spoke with me for an hour last Friday at his grand office on Republic Square, in the center of the capital. He looked slightly uncomfortable in a dark business suit. The popular image of him is of a guy in a baseball cap who led a march on the capital that grew so large it paralyzed the government. Barricading the streets were jazz musicians atop a piano, a chamber quartet and a young boy halting traffic with a line of toy trucks.
 
The protests became so widespread that Sargsyan faced a choice of using force on fellow citizens or stepping down. In a nation whose political identity is tied to its tragic history, Sargsyan wisely chose the latter: On April 23, the day before the annual commemoration of the 1915 Ottoman genocide that killed more than a million Armenians, Sargsyan resigned.
 
The miracle of this revolution is that it happened at all. Russia had long supported Sargsyan and his oligarch cronies. But in May, after Sargsyan’s fall, the Kremlin didn’t block Pashinyan’s accession to prime minister. That’s partly because Pashinyan declared, as he told me, that his movement had “no geopolitical agenda.”
 
President Vladimir Putin could still make life very difficult for the new Armenia. In Yerevan last weekend, I heard reports from diplomats that if Moscow doesn’t receive new pledges of fealty, it might halt arms sales, on which Armenia depends to counter neighboring Azerbaijan in the disputed area known as Nagorno Karabakh. Russia’s tolerance for political liberalization may come at a price.
 
What’s next for the velvet revolution? Pashinyan outlined his program, but it was long on democratic idealism and thin on specifics.
 
 
Pashinyan’s first priority is to stop the corruption that has been leaching away the creative and entrepreneurial spirit for which Armenians are often known. “Unfortunately, Armenia was a very corrupt country in the last 25 years,” Pashinyan told me, with cronies close to the leadership taking what amounted to a private tax on the economy. “People were fed up with that situation,” he said.
 
Linked to Pashinyan’s anti-graft campaign is a commitment to break up the monopolies that dominate key sectors of the economy. Armen Grigoryan, the new national security adviser, worked previously for Transparency International, an anti-corruption group. He explained in an interview that the Armenian economy can grow if the new government can shed more sunlight on its operations and “decrease interaction between the state and the citizen.”
 
The new government will need to put teeth into this anti-corruption push, by holding some of the bribe-takers accountable. “I’m not going to give orders to judges,” Pashinyan insists, but he warns: “We will try to identify and bring to responsibility the most corrupt people.” To combat monopolies, he’ll need to capitalize new, smaller companies, perhaps through a national investment bank.
 
Breaking free of the gravitational field of the past will take all of Pashinyan’s idealism and energy — and also some raw political power. He told me it’s “very likely” he’ll hold a snap election for a new parliament by October or November, well before the April deadline. And the courts are already releasing some prominent political prisoners.
 
Armenia is a subject on which I’m hardly neutral, as my father’s family has Armenian roots. During my visit here, I helped host the Aurora Humanitarian Awards, created by a group of prominent Armenians to honor human-rights champions from other countries. Armenia has experienced more than its share of bad news, historically and in the recent, post-Soviet past. So it was encouraging to see Yerevan as a city of smiles after its dramatic moment of change.

Sports: Armenian cadet weightlifters may participate in 2018 tournaments

MediaMax, Armenia
 
 
Armenian cadet weightlifters may participate in 2018 tournaments
 
 
Photo: Mediamax
 
 
Armenian national cadet weightlifting team will be able to participate in the European Championship starting on July 20, Milan.
 
International Weightlifting Federation made a decision to cancel the disqualification of 9 countries including Armenia.
 
The statement reads that Armenia met all the demands, the anti-doping agency was focused on the Armenian weightlifters, and the team paid the fine.
 
“I knew that we would be able to participate in tournaments this year, but I was waiting for the official invitation. The decision is now valid for cadets only, who currently hold training camps and get prepared for the European Championship,” Secretary General of Armenian Weightlifting Federation Pashik Alaverdyan told in a conversation with Mediamax Sport correspondent.
 
He noted that similar decision for adults is expected in August. Before that men’s and women’s teams will continue trainings and preparation for the World Championship in autumn.
 
The International Federation disqualified 9 countries, test results of athletes from these countries revealed use of prohibited substances. The doping test was positive for the following athletes from the Armenian team: Tigran Martirosyan, Hripsime Khurshudyan and Norayr Vardanyan.