Azerbaijanis suspected of organizing illegal migration to Italy from Africa

news.am, Armenia
July 2 2017
 
 
Azerbaijanis suspected of organizing illegal migration to Italy from Africa

20:25, 02.07.2017

Italian police are investigating the case against two Azerbaijani citizens suspected of organizing illegal migration from Africa.

On July 1 the Italian police picked up the trail of a group of 45 migrants who landed on the shore near Gallipoli in Italian Apulia. A group of 29 men, 5 women and 11 children arrived on a boat under the American flag. Two Azerbaijani citizens were detained together with the group on suspicion of organizing the transportation of migrants.

Since the beginning of the year more than 83 thousand people have arrived in Italy. Last year, this figure was 70 thousand people.

Armenia: This Time, EU Deal Meets Russian Approval

EurasiaNet.org

European Council President Donald Tusk (right) meets with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan in Brussels in late February. Brussels and Yerevan have gone back to the drawing board and worked out a new partnership agreement, expected to be signed in November. (Photo: European Council)

The last time Armenia negotiated closer ties with the European Union, in 2013, Russia swooped in at the last minute with a better offer to join the rival Customs Union and persuaded President Serzh Sargsyan to abandon the EU deal. The affair dealt a seemingly fatal blow to Yerevan’s hopes for substantive integration with the EU and cemented Russia’s position as the dominant player in Armenia.
 
But now Brussels and Yerevan have gone back to the drawing board and worked out a new deal. And by all accounts, this new agreement is likely to be signed without the drama seen four years ago, primarily because the deal is watered-down enough to not threaten Russia’s position in the country.
 
The new agreement, called the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement, has been tentatively approved by Brussels and Yerevan and is expected to be signed in November, at a summit of the EU Eastern Partnership program. The document has not been made public, but Armenian and European diplomats say it is very similar to the agreement reached in 2013, minus the provisions on free trade that would now conflict with Armenia’s obligations to the Eurasian Economic Union, the successor organization to the Customs Union.
 
Russian officials have not publicly commented on the deal, but behind the scenes “Lavrov has given his green light,” a European diplomat in Yerevan told EurasiaNet.org, referring to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
 
“Through the process of consultations with all interested parties, including Russia, we explained that there’s not any more the issue of the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement,” said Armenia’s deputy foreign minister and chief negotiator of the new agreement, Garen Nazarian, in an interview with EurasiaNet.org. That free trade component “was the main obstacle of signing the Association Agreement, because of our decision to join the then-Customs Union,” Nazarian said.
 
As modest as the deal is, it does provide Armenia with a somewhat weightier counterbalance to its close ties with Russia. “For a long time we’ve been conducting a multivector foreign policy, and it’s our goal to maintain a very balanced dialogue between our important partners, Russia, the European Union, and the United States,” Nazarian said.
 
Some in Armenia still remain wary of Moscow’s ability to play the spoiler. “You never know, because tomorrow Russia could take a gun out of its pocket and put it on the table, as it was in 2013,” said Alexander Iskandaryan, director of the Caucasus Institute think tank in Yerevan. Then, as Armenia and the EU were negotiating the Association Agreement, Russia pointedly announced that it was selling billions of dollars worth of arms to Armenia’s enemy, Azerbaijan, and floated rumors that it could dramatically raise the price of the natural gas it provides to Armenia, Iskandaryan recalled. “It was clear, they didn’t even need to say anything,” he said.
 
Concerns about a possible scuttling of the deal were heightened recently when a controversy erupted after the EU ambassador to Yerevan criticized Armenia’s electoral commission as lacking “credibility.”
 
Officials from the governing Republican Party of Armenia responded sharply. Justice Minister Davit Harutiunian on June 15 called the criticism “an attempt to interfere in our internal political affairs,” and some in Armenia’s opposition expressed concern that Harutiunian’s comments were the result of Russian pressure aimed at undermining the EU deal.
 
But most observers believe that this time, the agreement is not in danger.
 
One reason is that the geopolitical situation has changed dramatically since 2013. Ukraine, under then-President Viktor Yanukovych, was negotiating an Association Agreement similar to Armenia’s with the EU. Russia was intent on scuttling it, and Armenia was collateral damage, used to intimidate Yanukovych. “It was never about Armenia, it was about Ukraine – it was a signal to Ukraine, look what we can do,” the European diplomat said. (Yanukovych was subsequently overthrown and the new government completed negotiations with the EU on an Association Agreement, which is scheduled to enter force in September).
 
Another is that the new deal is relatively harmless from Russia’s perspective. It commits Armenia to political reforms, many of them potentially difficult, while offering few economic and no security ties to Europe in return. “Now they [Russians] see that the geopolitical component is out,” said Tevan Poghosyan, a pro-Western Armenian politician and president of the Yerevan-based International Center for Human Development.
 
“The Russians don’t really care about Armenia,” the European diplomat said. “What they care about is their military base. They want to keep their soldiers here – they have soldiers on the border with Turkey, they have soldiers on the border with Iran, and they’re looking forward to deploying peacekeepers in Nagorno Karabakh. That’s what their interest is in.”
 
Armenia also was scrupulous in making sure that the deal did not conflict with its Eurasian Economic Union obligations, to the extent that it was “over-cautious” about it, the diplomat said, jokingly paraphrasing Armenia’s commitment to the EU as, “We’ll do this with you, unless Russia tells us we don’t like it.”

Editor’s note: 
Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at EurasiaNet, and author of The Bug Pit.

Music: Music Day to be celebrated in Armenia tomorrow

Panorama, Armenia

Music celebration taking place on 21 June on the summer solstice.

The concept of an all-day musical celebration was originated by the French Minister of Culture, Jack Lang. Launched in 1982 in France as the Fête de la Musique, it is now held on the same day in more than 750 cities in 120 countries.

This year the holiday will take place at Yerevan Lovers’ Park starting at 18;00 Yerevan time.  The concert program will feature Armenian and French music, “Miqayel Voskanyan and friends band with jazz and rock performances, Goght ensemble, performing on traditional Armenian music instruments as well as other bands and solo performers are expected to  appear during the event.

Twelve Turkish agents to reportedly be charged for DC melee

Fox News

Police are set to announce charges against a dozen Turkish security agents who were involved in a violent altercation when Turkey’s president visited Washington last month, a U.S. official said Wednesday.

The DC police are expected to say that seven men are being charged for felonies, and another five for misdemeanors. The official wasn’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter and spoke only on condition of anonymity ahead of a Thursday news conference that includes Washington’s mayor and police chief.

The action is likely to exacerbate what has become a major irritant in U.S.-Turkish ties. Relations were severely strained even before the May 16 clash, which happened as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrived at the Turkish ambassador’s residence in Washington after a White House meeting with President Donald Trump.

The NATO allies are still at odds over a U.S. decision to arm Syrian Kurdish rebels fighting the Islamic State group in Syria. Turkey considers the fighters to be an extension the Kurdish insurgency in Turkey known as the PKK, and claims without evidence that protesters who showed up during Erdogan’s visit to Washington last week were themselves associated with the group. U.S. officials have said law-abiding Americans were affected.

Erdogan’s security detail returned with him to Turkey after his visit, so it is unclear if any will face legal repercussions in the United States. However, they could end up being threatened with arrest if they return to the U.S. If any are still in the country, they could be expelled if Turkey refuses to waive diplomatic immunity.

Video of the protest showed security guards and some Erdogan supporters attacking a small group of protesters with their fists and feet. Men in dark suits and others were recorded repeatedly kicking one woman as she lay curled on a sidewalk. Another wrenched a woman’s neck and threw her to the ground. A man with a bullhorn was repeatedly kicked in the face.

After police officers struggled to protect the protesters and ordered the men in suits to retreat, several of the men dodged the officers and ran into the park to continue the attacks. In all, nine people were hurt.

Earlier Wednesday, police said two men were arrested for their role in the fracas.

The Metropolitan Police Department said in a brief statement that Sinan Narin had been arrested in Virginia on an aggravated assault charge. It said Eyup Yildirim had been arrested in New Jersey on charges of assault with significant bodily injury and aggravated assault.

Yildirim made his first appearance before Federal Magistrate James Clarke in Newark, N.J., who ordered him held without bail pending his next court date in Washington.

Public defender David Holman sought home confinement, arguing that Yildirim wasn’t a flight risk and had never been convicted of anything before. Clarke said he was less concerned with him being a possible flight risk and more concerned about the nature of the crime.

Holman told the judge that Yildirim has received death threats because of the case. He said Yildirim is a business owner with three kids and ties to the local community. Prosecutors told the judge Yildirim had been arrested twice in the late 90s on simple assault charges, but the charges were later dismissed.

Narin and Yildirim were both participants in the protests, according to a U.S. official familiar with the case. On the day of the violence, police detained two members of Erdogan’s security detail but released them shortly afterward. Two other men were arrested at the scene — one for aggravated assault and the other for assaulting a police officer.

The U.S. official, who was not authorized to speak publicly to the matter and demanded anonymity, said DC police had identified 34 of 42 people who were involved in the fight, and are seeking their arrests. Police are expected to release photos of the other eight possible suspects and appeal to the public for information on their identities, the official said.

American officials strongly criticized Turkey’s government and Erdogan’s security forces for the violence; the State Department summoned Turkey’s U.S. ambassador to complain. The Turkish Foreign Ministry then summoned America’s ambassador to address about the treatment of the detained security guards.

Turkey’s U.S. embassy alleged the demonstrators were associated with the PKK, which has waged a three-decade-long insurgency against Turkey and is considered a terrorist group by the United States.

Turkey’s official Anadolu news agency said they chanted anti-Erdogan slogans, and that the Turkish president’s team moved in to disperse them because “police did not heed to Turkish demands to intervene.” The Turkish Embassy claimed the demonstrators were “aggressively provoking Turkish-American citizens who had peacefully assembled to greet the president. The Turkish-Americans responded in self-defense and one of them was seriously injured.”

Sports: Armenian boxing team leaves for European Boxing Championships

Panorama, Armenia

The Armenian national boxing team has departed for Kharkiv, Ukraine to take part in the European Boxing Championships.

As the Armenian National Olympic Committee told Panorama.am, the draw of the tournament, as well as the weigh-in ceremony of the athletes will be held on June 16.

Eight boxers will represent Armenia in the European Boxing Championships – Artur Hovhannisyan (49kg), Narek Abgaryan (52kg), Karen Tonakanyan (60kg), Hovhannes Bachkov (64kg), Vladimir Margaryan (69 kg), Arman Darchinyan (75kg), Narek Manasyan (91kg) and heavyweight Gurgen Hovhannisyan.

Sports: Armenia’s U-21 team beats Gibraltar Euro-2019 qualifier

Public Radio of Armenia
11:41, 14 Jun 2017
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Armenia’s U-21 team beat Gibraltar in a UEFA U-21 Euro-2019 qualifying round group 7 match at Algarve stadium in Faro, Portugal.

Armenia went ahead due to a goal by Narek Petrosyan on the 9th minute. Alik Arakelyan made it 0:2 on the 74th minute, while Petros Avetisyan added a third one on the 85th minute. Armenia started the Euro-2019 campaing with a comfortable win.

Appathurai: NATO all allies will welcome the signing of agreement between Armenia and EU on deep and extended partnership

ARMINFO News Agency, Armenia
 Monday
Appathurai: NATO all allies will welcome the signing of agreement
between Armenia and EU on deep and extended partnership
Yerevan June 12
Marianna Mkrtchyan. All NATO allies will welcome the signing of an
agreement between Armenia and EU on a deep and expanded partnership.
On June 12, during the press conference in Yerevan, NATO Secretary
General's Special Representative for the Caucasus and Central Asia
James Appathurai said, answering the question of how the Alliance
relates to the signing of the Armenia-EU framework agreement in autumn
this year.
"NATO allies will be happy that Armenia will be able to use all the
benefits which can give cooperation with EU, as it does with the other
side (European Economic Union-editor's noted)", NATO General Secretary
representative said.
In autumn of the current year in Brussels, during the Summit of
Eastern Partnership, signing of frame agreement between Armenia and EU
is scheduled.
To remind, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and European Council
representative Donald Tusk on February 27 in Brussels announced the
finish of the negotiations on Armenia-EU agreement over new frame
agreement. And on March 21 Armenia and EU initialed an agreement on
integral and extended partnership in Yerevan.
To note, on October 12, in Luxembourg, the Council authorized the
European Commission and the High Representative to open negotiations
on a new, legally binding and overarching agreement with Armenia, and
adopted the corresponding negotiating mandate. This agreement will
replace the current EU-Armenia partnership and cooperation agreement.
The EU is committed to further developing and strengthening
comprehensive cooperation with Armenia in all areas of mutual interest
within the Eastern Partnership framework. On December 7, at the EU
Headquarters in Brussels, Edward Nalbandian, Minister of Foreign
Affairs of Armenia and Federica Mogherini, High Representative of the
European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, announced the
launch of negotiations on the new Armenia- European Union framework
agreement. The first round of the talks took place in Jan 2016. In
late 2016, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian expressed hope
that the talks on the new framework agreement will be over in the near
future.

Music: Aznavour: ‘Pour toi Arménie’ may be new anthem of Armenia

Tert, Armenia

18:24 • 12.06.17

Famous French-Armenian singer and song-writer Charles Aznavur has shared his impressions of the recent trip to Armenia and his son’s baptism in the ancestral homeland.

Speaking during the radio show Le Club de Richard Findykian, the musician also addressed his popular song Pour toi Arménie which he said could be the “new anthem of Armenia.”

“I think Pour toi Arménie can be the anthem of Armenia. I would very much like it to be,” he added.

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Aznavour visited Armenia from 27 May to 2 July to attend the second annual Aurora Prize Award. His son Nicolaս got baptized at the St Peter and Paul Monastery of Tatev (Syunik region).
 

Commenting on his plans for future, the singer shared his vision of the Aznavour foundation. “Nicolas is managing all the affairs, and he is doing his job perfectly,” he said, adding that the foundation’s objective will be providing aid to the Armenians across the globe.  

He said that he is positive also about the plan to open his museum in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan. Aznavour said he hopes that it will be not only a cultural institution but also a youth center. “It will try to attract young people willing to demonstrate their talent in art and to realize their potential,” he said.

Sports: Belmopan First Division Tournament update

Amandala, Belize
June 3 2017
Sports — by Dean Flowers – Vice-Chairman, BFA

BELIZE CITY, Mon. May 29, 2017–The Belmopan First Division Closing Tournament 2017 continued over the weekend with 5 games at the Isidoro Beaton Stadium.

On Friday, May 26, in a Group B opener, Roaring Creek United shut out Wingz FC, 4-0, with goals from Amir Torres (39’), Kenny Williams (70’ & 91’) and Jermaine Joseph (90’). And in the Group A nightcap, Police FC crushed Juventus FC, 4-1, with a goal each from Kishane Pech (19’), Khalid Martinez (47’), TV Ramos (80’) and Kyle Thomas (88’). Juventus’ only goal was by Belhem Guzman (33’).

In game 1 on Sunday, May 28, Group B’s Cavetubing.Bz Strikers bombarded Heights FC, 13-nil, with 7 goals from Jose Sanchez (4’, 9’, 50’, 52’, 56’, 60’ & 61’), 4 from Radi Ramirez (23’, 48’, 59’ & 66’), and 1 each from Tommy Quevedo (38’) and Marlon Miranda (58’). Game 2 was another Group B encounter, and saw Armenia Hummingbirds with the 3-2 win over Maya Mopan Rangers. All 3 Armenia goals were by Brian Samayoa (54’, 65’ & 90’); while Dennis McKoy (32’ & 36’) got both goals for Maya Mopan. And in game 3, from Group A, Madrid FC dropped Capital United, 2-0, with a goal apiece from Enrique Gonzalez (10’) and Angel Xis (70’).

Upcoming games at Isidoro Beaton Stadium:

Friday, June 2
6:30 p.m. – AC Milan vs Cavetubing.Bz Strikers
8:30 p.m. – Police FC vs Cotton Tree FC

Saturday, June 3
6:00 p.m. – Heights FC vs Wingz FC

Sunday, June 4
2:00 p.m. – Armenia Hummingbirds vs Duck Run-2
4:00 p.m. – Valencia YWAM vs Las Flores FC
6:00 p.m. – Roaring Creek United vs Maya Mopan Rangers

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/26/2017

                                        Friday, 
No Major Changes Planned In Armenian Cabinet
Armenia -- Government session, Yerevan, 22May2017
No significant changes will be made in the next Armenian government,
Eduard Sharmazanov, a leading member and spokesman for the ruling
Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) said late on Thursday.
Speaking to media after the meeting of the party's executive body,
Sharmazanov said that the HHK "has decided to give the current cabinet
of Karen Karapetan an opportunity to continue its work without
significant changes."
"At this stage we positively evaluate the work of the cabinet of Prime
Minister Karen Karapetian," he said.
According to Sharmazanov, one ministerial position, which is currently
held by the chief of government staff, will be abolished in the next
cabinet, and David Harutiunian, who held that position, will be
appointed minister of justice to succeed Arpine Hovannisian who was
elected to parliament and then become its deputy speaker.
"All other ministers, including our colleagues from the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), will be reappointed," the
HHK spokesman said.
The HHK and Dashnaktsutyun renewed their political cooperation earlier
this month forming a coalition in the wake of the April 2
parliamentary elections swept by the ruling party.
Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian, the leader of the HHK, signed
decrees late on Thursday, reappointing a majority of the
ministers. The head of state is expected to issue more decrees on the
reappointment of ministers soon.
EU Rep Says Sarkisian `Ready To Sign Ambitious Agreement'
 . Sisak Gabrielian
Armenia - Armenian and European Union flags displayed during
negotiations in Yerevan, 4Nov2015.
The European Union hopes that Armenia will sign a new EU-Armenia
Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement, a senior European
parliamentarian said following a meeting with President Serzh
Sarkisian on Thursday.
Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the European Parliament
David McAllister, who led a delegation on a visit to Armenia as part
of a regional tour, spoke at a press conference at the end of a
two-day visit that included meetings with top officials and political
representatives in Armenia.
McAllister said: "I am very thankful for the president giving us so
much of his precious time. We know that he is, of course, a very busy
man. But it also showed that President Sarkisian was very interested
in hearing the views of the members of the European Parliament and
answered our questions in a very detailed way."
Armenia was on track to sign a far-reaching association agreement with
the European Union in 2013, but in a surprise policy U-turn in
September that year President Sarkisian announced that his country
would join a Russian-led economic grouping, something that made the
planned deal with the EU impossible due to its major economic
component.
Since then Armenia and the EU have been negotiating a less ambitious
accord that was inched in Yerevan in March and is due to be signed at
the next Eastern Partnership summit in Brussels in November.
"Armenia is a member of the Eurasian Economic Union. What happened in
2013 happened. But now President Sarkisian is ready to sign an
ambitious agreement with the European Union and this is important for
us, as the European Union, because we make clear that our Eastern
Partnership policy isn't a zero sum game," the representative of the
European Parliament said.
"It's not about competition with other regional actors like Russia. I
strongly believe that each country of the Eastern Partnership needs a
tailor-made relation with the European Union which covers, of course,
not only our interest, but also the interest of the specific country."
McAllister expressed a hope that "the complicated negotiations in
detail can be concluded." "Because this will be beneficial for the
people in Armenia and for businesses," he underscored.
School Optimization Plans Raise Concerns In Armenia
 . Tatev Danielian
Armenia -- The new school year begins on the Day of Knowledge -
September 1, Yerevan, 01Sep2016
The recently announced government plans to carry out the so-called
optimization of schools across Armenia have raised concerns among some
teaching staffs and parents, but Minister of Education and Science
Levon Mkrtchian sees no reasons to worry about the process.
"There will be no segmental, mass layoffs," Mkrtchian has told media.
Under Prime Minister Karen Karapetian's order the Ministry of
Education is due to submit a plan to optimize the work of some schools
in the country. It will apply to schools that are located in cities
and towns, have up to 300 students, occupy a disproportionately large
area compared to the number of students they have.
Concerns have been raised in Armenia recently that the program means
these schools will be closed down and their premises will be used for
other purposes. Another major concern is the possibility that some
teachers will lose their jobs. The Ministry still has no answers to
these questions.
Ashot Arshakian, the chief of the Ministry's Public Education
Department, said that this is still at the stage of calculations. "In
case of schools with fewer students enlargement schemes may be applied
and there can be readjustments in the case of schools with a larger
number of students. This is not yet determined," he said.
As a benchmark the Ministry has assumed the indices of the Asian
Development Bank, under which each student should have a space of 8-12
square meters.
Schools that use up to half of their territory, while the number of
their students does not exceed 300, are considered under-loaded. Along
with schools having fewer students, especially in capital Yerevan,
there are schools that have a reputation of elite learning
environments and are usually overloaded. The Ministry, however, is
vague on this issue, too.
In two schools in Yerevan with fewer than 200 students that were
visited by an RFE/RL correspondent principals said they were unaware
of their future status. Only as a result of the closure of these two
schools alone 60 teachers will become unemployed.
Teachers at the schools who agreed to talk off camera said they are
not going to give up easily if optimization plans affect them. The
parents of some students also said they are unhappy about such
plans. They think the government should first solve social problems.
"There are fewer students in the country because families don't want
to have many children without proper livelihood," a middle-aged woman
complained.
Education expert Serob Khachatrian does not agree with the term
"optimization" used by the government, considering that this term can
be used only when conditions are improved. The expert, meanwhile,
argues that this is not the case in the current process. "Social and
economic reforms are needed first and only then optimizations in the
education sector can be implemented, so that teachers or other
specialists who lose their jobs in schools can be provided with
alternative jobs," Khachatrian said.
Today nearly 37,000 teachers are employed in 1,385 schools across
Armenia attended by about 357,000 students. Studies have shown that
most of urban schools are either under-loaded or overloaded. The
number of schools with an average load makes about 16 percent.
According to the official website of the government, 20 schools have
already been identified for optimization. But education officials
still avoid giving their names.
Jailed Radical Opposition Leader Goes On Trial
 . Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia -- Zhirayr Sefilian, a radical opposition leader, in
court. 26May, 2017
A trial of Zhirayr Sefilian began in Yerevan on Friday almost one year
after the radical opposition figure was arrested on charges of
plotting an armed revolt against the Armenian government.
Sefilian, who leads the Founding Parliament opposition movement,
stands accused of acquiring weapons and forming an armed group in late
2015 to seize government buildings in Yerevan. Several other suspects
in the case are also under arrest and are defendants in the trial.
Justice Tatevik Grigorian, the judge presiding over the proceedings,
made a decision today to adjourn the hearing as the lawyer of one of
the defendants was absent. The next court hearing is scheduled for May
30.
After the court hearing Sefilian's lawyer Tigran Hayrapetian claimed
that the investigative body had failed to prove the oppositionist
indeed committed the acts he is charged with.
State prosecutors claim that the alleged plot was foiled when the
weapons allegedly acquired by Sefilian were discovered by the
police. According to their indictment submitted to the court, some
members of the armed group also refused to participate in what the
prosecutor describe as Sefilian's plan to launch an attack that would
have endangered the lives of Armenian army soldiers. The investigators
have not yet elaborated on this allegation.
Sefilian and other senior members of Founding Parliament deny the
charges as politically motivated.
Sefilian was arrested in June 2016 less than one month before three
dozen gunmen affiliated with Founding Parliament seized a police
station in Yerevan. The gunmen demanded that President Serzh Sarkisian
free their leader and other "political prisoners" and step down. They
surrendered to law-enforcement authorities following a two-week
standoff which left three police officers dead.
Russian-led Trade Bloc Flaunts Economic Growth
 . Aza Babayan
Russia -- Heads of government of the CIS countries meet in Kazan,
26May2017
For the first time since the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) was
established in 2015 all of its member states have registered economic
growth, Tigran Sargsian, the president of the Eurasian Economic
Commission's Board, said on Friday during a gathering of the prime
ministers of the Russian-led trade bloc in Kazan.
Sargsian, who represents Armenia's rotating presidency of the EEU,
said that it was only in 2016-2017 that the member states agreed to
eliminate 60 barriers in the internal market and reached major
agreements in the electricity, oil, gas and transportation sectors.
The EEU, whose founding members are Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan,
also include Armenia and Kyrgyzstan. Some opposition members in
Yerevan have criticized the government's decision to join the EEU
despite the fact that Armenia has no land border with the rest of the
union's members. Besides, some critics also believe that Armenia,
which has no fuel resources, does not fit into the customs union led
by such major oil and gas producers as Russia and Kazakhstan. They
pointed to the poor economic performance of Armenia that followed its
accession to the EEU. Armenia's government, on the contrary, has all
along defended its decision regarding the EEU membership, arguing that
otherwise the country would have fared much worse in conditions of
global economic turbulence.
Armenian Prime Minister Karen Karapetian attended the May 26 gathering
of the prime ministers of the Commonwealth of Independent States
(CIS), including EEU member states, in the capital of the Russian
republic of Tatarstan.
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev stated that trade among EEU
member countries has increased almost threefold.
In Kazan, the heads of CIS member countries' governments signed a
number of documents aimed at deepening cooperation in various fields,
in particular in the fields of innovative cooperation and
international transportation. The next meeting of the CIS Council of
Heads of Government is scheduled to be held in November.
The Armenian governmental delegation led by Prime Minister Karapetyan
also participated in the official reception given on behalf of the
Russian prime minister to the delegations attending the gathering.
The only intrigue of the meeting was the absence of the Moldovan prime
minister, who boycotted the event due to some disagreements between
Russia and Moldova.
In Kazan, Karapetian also held a bilateral meeting with Belarus Prime
Minister Andrei Kobyakov. According to a press release of the Armenian
government, the prime ministers of the two countries discussed the
agenda of Armenian-Belarusian economic relations and prospects of
their further development.
Press Review
"Haykakan Zhamanak" suggests that Armenia's international soccer star
Henrikh Mkhitaryan, who became an UEFA Europa League winner together
with the English Premier League side, Manchester United, is making
history for Armenian soccer like Yerevan's Ararat club did in 1973 by
winning the USSR championship. The paper suggests that Armenian soccer
fans will long remember the crucial goals scored by Mkhitaryan and
trophies won by him.
The editor of "Aravot" writes that for him the most impressive thing
about Mkhitaryan was when he celebrated the victory in the Europa
League final with an Armenian tricolor, that is, the national flag of
the Republic of Armenia, wrapped around his shoulders. "And in this
sense this victory is bigger than victories of other world-renowned
Armenians who are citizens of other countries. We, ordinary citizens
of the Republic of Armenia, perhaps are not so talented, but we, too,
should feel this flag wrapped around our shoulders in our daily lives
- beginning from most common situations and ending with intricate
social relationships. We should remember that we are citizens of the
State," the editor stresses.
"Chorrord Ishkhanutyun" comments on President Serzh Sarkisian's recent
statement that by 2040 Armenia's population should reach at least 4
million: "It is already several days that different officials keep
stating that this is quite realistic. Maybe someone indeed has not
understood that for the population to increase it is necessary to curb
the current outmigration and encourage people to have more children#
According to official data, during the nine years of Sarkisian's rule
as president about 400,000 people have emigrated from Armenia. The
question now is what should change for emigration to be replaced by
immigration, for the birthrate and life expectancy to be increased?"
"Zhoghovurd" writes on Karabakh war veteran and activist Volodya
Avetisian, who was released from prison on Thursday and went straight
to the government building to start a protest there: "Avetisian is a
rare war veteran who, since 2012, has been consistent in raising
social issues of veterans. The campaign he launched did not pass
without consequences. Voices raising similar issues after him have
increased in number and the government had to make certain
reforms. Avetisian's release may become a new headache for the
authorities. The statements of the war veteran that his opinion about
the current government and personally Serzh Sarkisian has not changed
showed that imprisonment for more than three and a half years had no
impact on the activist's principles."
(Tigran Avetisian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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