Armenian PM, chief of Russia’s Intelligence Service discuss processes taking place in the South Caucasus

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia – July 18 2022

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan received the Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation Sergey Naryshkin.

The Prime Minister noted that Mr. Naryshkin’s visit is another good opportunity to discuss issues on the agenda of Armenian-Russian allied relations. Nikol Pashinyan emphasized that this year marks the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries and expressed confidence that joint efforts will make the cooperation more effective and stronger.

Sergey Naryshkin expressed gratitude for the warm reception and emphasized the high-level political dialogue between Armenia and Russia, which contributes to the development and strengthening of cooperation in various fields.

The interlocutors discussed issues related to international and regional security. Reference was made to the processes taking place in the South Caucasus region.

https://en.armradio.am/2022/07/18/armenian-pm-chief-of-russias-intelligence-service-discuss-processes-taking-place-in-the-south-caucasus/

Levon Aronian wins FTX Road to Miami

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia – July 18 2022

Levon Aronian needed just three games on Sunday to wrap up victory in the FTX Road to Miami, adding the $25,000 top prize to his $5,500 earnings from the Prelims. Wei Yi came out all guns blazing, but a late blunder in the first game left him with an almost impossible task, Chess24 reports.

Levon Aronian finished 7th in the Prelims but ultimately won 7 games and lost just one on the way to triumph in the knockout stages. In the final he won three games, all with the black pieces.

Asked what most satisfied him with his victory, he commented: “The steady improvement, I think! Of course I didn’t really deserve to be Top 8 because my play was very, very poor, and then after that I think I got myself together and I think I played better.”

Aliyev demands EU to finalize new agreement between Azerbaijan and EU

News.am 
Armenia – July 18 2022

The new agreement between Azerbaijan and the European Union may be finalized in the next few months, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said in a joint press statement with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, APA reported.

“Of course, our agenda is quite extensive. We are working on a new agreement between the EU and Azerbaijan. We have discussed this with Madam President, and I hope that we can finalize it in the coming months. Of course, this would be an important contribution to our bilateral cooperation,” he said.

Ilham Aliyev noted that the EU is Azerbaijan’s main trading partner: “The implementation of our plans will certainly increase the overall turnover for the benefit of our nations. I am confident that EU-Azerbaijan relations will have a great future, and we will achieve everything we have planned,” he added.

Today Aliyev and von der Leyen signed an agreement to increase gas supplies to the EU.

Pakistan-Iran trade through Zero Point gate resumes – DAWN

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 09:40, 18 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 18, ARMENPRESS.  Tax free border trade through Zero Point, the gate between Pakistan’s Taftan town and Mir Javeh town of Iran, was resumed on Saturday after the trade gate reopened following a 10-day closure for Eid holidays, DAWN newspaper reports.

Taftan Assistant Commissioner Zahoor Ahmed Baloch told DAWN that mostly edible commodities were imported from Iran through Zero Point, adding these days nothing was being exported to Iran from Pakistan.

Number of births in Artsakh grows

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 10:53, 18 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 18, ARMENPRESS. 792 babies (406 boys and 386 girls) were born in hospitals across the Republic of Artsakh in 2022, the Ministry of Healthcare of the Republic of Artsakh said in a statement on July 18. 

In Q1 of 2021, 593 babies were born (270 boys and 323 girls), meaning the number of births grew by almost 200 in this year’s same period.

697 of the 792 babies were born in Stepanakert, the capital city. 66 births were recorded in Martakert and 29 in Martuni. 6 babies (3 boys and 3 girls) were born through IVF.

Prime Minister’s Cup Swimming Tournament to take place in Lake Sevan August 23

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 12:22, 18 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 18, ARMENPRESS. The Prime Minister’s Cup Amateur Swimming Tournament will be held on August 23, 2022 in Lake Sevan near Shoghakat, Gegharkunik Province.

Prizes include 1,000,000 drams for 1st place, 600,000 drams for 2nd place, 400,000 drams for 3rd place, 150,000 drams for 4th place, 100,000 drams for 5th place and 75,000 drams for 6-10 places.

Applications, including ID and waiver, are open until July 22 at [email protected] (Swimming Federation). 

Two age groups are defined for the tournament: Group A: 18-35 years old for women and 18-40 years old for men; Group B: 36 years old and above for women and 41 years old and above for men.

The tournament is a 1000 meter and 1500 meter swimming lane for women and men respectively.

The tournament is open for everyone above the age of 18, including amateur athletes, students, public and private sector employees, representatives of international organizations, diplomats, foreign tourists. Exceptions are persons who are included in sports rankings of swimming in Armenia or who have participated in national or international swimming tournaments in the last 5 years. 

The tournament is organized by the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport of the Republic of Armenia.

Heat wave to subside starting July 22, says chief meteorologist

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 12:44, 18 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 18, ARMENPRESS. The current heat wave in Armenia will start subsiding from July 22, the chief meteorologist Gagik Surenyan said at a news conference.

Until then, the temperature will range from 38 to 40 degrees Celsius.

Surenyan, the Deputy Director of the Center for Hydrometeorology and Monitoring said that no rains are expected anytime soon, and the only change in weather will be some cloudy conditions by midday.

“After July 22 the heat wave will weaken and retreat south, giving way to the comparably cold air currents coming from the Black Sea. In between July 22-25 air temperature will drop by 4-5 degrees. The air temperature in the Ararat valley and in the capital city will be 34-35 degrees instead of 38-40,” Surenyan said.

The current heat wave in Armenia came from the deserts of the Arabian Peninsula. Up to 41 degrees Celsius heat was recorded in Yerevan.

Turkey Wants To Lead The Turkic Countries To Form A World Superpower

July 4 2022

Turkey wants to become a world superpower. But, it cannot complete such an endeavor on its own; Turkey needs its neighbors on both sides of the Caspian Sea: Azerbaijan and the Central Asian countries. Hence why Turkey has the Turkic Council, which is really becoming the Turkic union. Just as the European Union has free trade and security cooperation, the Turkic Council is developing a system of integration involving trade and military alliances. Just as the EU is a major world power (with the biggest free trade zone) led by Germany, the Turkic Council is transforming into a major security bloc and trade zone, led by Turkey. Integration of the Turkic world would mean a powerful international force, a security bloc led by Turkey that the world would have to respect. Such a bloc would be a huge rival against Russia, and would act as a bulwark against Russia in both the Black Sea and Caspian Sea. You already can see Turkey forming this bloc with Azerbaijan. Turkey used Azerbaijan as a proxy to defeat Armenia and, together with their Azeri ally, took the region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Now that this region belongs to Azerbaijan (and by extension Turkey), Turkey now has a direct route through Azerbaijan’s region of Nakhichevan, Armenia (through a corridor that Turkey and Azerbaijan want to create), mainland Azerbaijan, into the Caspian Sea. This is significant given the fact that the Turkic Council want to make the Caspian Sea into a major trade route for its bloc. A confederacy of Turkic nations, led by Turkey, would be a major superpower, really an empire. The recent instability in Central Asia, with riots in Uzbekistan, (and also with the riots that happened in Kazakhstan in January of 2022) is indicative that Central Asia is a ticking time bomb, and such instability could be used by Turkey to push for more security cooperation between itself and the Central Asian countries.   

Riots erupted in Uzbekistan’s autonomous region of Karakalpakstan. The rioting was sparked as a response to proposed constitutional reforms which would have taken away Karakalpakstan’s right to secede. Violence was so bad that the government decided not to pursue the reforms. Under the current constitution, Karakalpakstan is a sovereign republic within Uzbekistan and has the right to secede through referendum. The government has cancelled the reforms that would have taken away this right due to the severity of the violence. Eighteen people were killed and 243 were injured, according to the Uzbek government. 516 people were arrested but have since been released. The president of Uzbekistan, Shavkat Mirziyoyev, said that there were “civilians and law enforcement officers” among the dead. The government reported that protestors stormed through the streets of the Karakalpakstan’s capital city of Nukus, threw stones, started fires, attacked police and tried to take over government buildings. The police, parliament and cabinet made a joint statement in which they said that “provocateurs” had attempted “to seize state institutions … split the society and destabilise the socio-political situation in Uzbekistan”. This is the second case in 2022 of instability in Central Asia. In January of 2022 there were massive riots in Kazakstan that saw at least 227 people dead, with nearly 10,000 arrested. When this happened, soldiers from the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) — which consists of Kazakhstan, Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan – were deployed to the country at the request of Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev.

When poorer countries are in conditions of chaos, more powerful countries arrive to bring about order, and ultimately to establish their rule.

Turkey wants to expand its hegemony into Central Asia, and one of the reasons for this is the Caspian Sea. According to a US government cable from 2008, Turkey is “striving for energy supply security and believes warmer relations with Central Asian leaders can create the conditions for Turkey to realize its Caspian energy objectives.” The same document reads that “ Turkey has offered to play a leading role in developing a trans-Caspian natural gas pipeline (TCP).” A US diplomatic cable from 2009 explains that Turkey “sees itself as a guide and leader for the other ‘developing’ Turkic countries.”

Turkey has several interests in Central Asia: there is of course the cultural aspect in all of this. It was from the lands of Central Asia where the Oghuz Turks  — violent marauders — came, storming into Anatolia (present-day Turkey) in the Medieval period, and spreading Islam. Thus, Turkey sees Central Asia as a continual part of cultural territory. And then there is the importance of resources. Kazakstan is a major source of oil, and Turkey wants in on it. As the 2009 US diplomatic cable reads

“Turkey is positioning itself to become a major

energy transit country, it is paying close attention to

Kazakhstan’s fossil fuel resources (REF A).  Kazakhstan

possesses large oil and gas reserves and analysts predict

that it will likely become one of the top 10 oil producing

nations in the near future.”

Turkey wanting to expand into Central Asia is also a counter against Russia and Armenia. A 2007 US diplomatic cable (found on Wikileaks) explains:

“Historical and cultural ties, expanding commercial interests, strategic competition with Russia and Iran, and  disenchantment with Euro-Atlantic relations are the traditional drivers of Turkey’s interest in the east. Increasingly, however, military officials justify intensified  security ties by citing threats to energy security from perceived Russian conniving with Armenia and Iran to “breach” U.S.-supported east-west routes for Caspian energy.”

Turkey just had a proxy war with Armenia through its main Turkic ally, Azerbaijan, in which the latter defeated the Armenians and took the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. Now that Nagorno-Karabakh is under Azeri control, Turkey seeks to have a corridor built that would go from the Azeri region of Nakhichevan (which borders with Turkey), through Armenia, into Azerbaijan (specifically where Nagorno-Karabakh is) and into the Caspian Sea, from where Turkey would have access into Central Asia. Thus, from Azerbaijan Turkey has direct access into the Caspian Sea and Central Asia.

This is part of the dream of establishing a Turkic union — or really a Turkic NATO — led by Turkey, of course. The umbrella organization for this is the Cooperation Council of Turkic Speaking Countries, and it is meant to be a power bloc of countries all sharing the Turkic heritage. Michael Wilson of Stratfor wrote in 2010: 

“The Council of Cooperation of Turkic-speaking countries will be the basis for a new regional Turkic union, designed to strengthen the unity of the peoples living in similar linguistic and cultural environment, and to strengthen political and trade relations.”

Turkey’s desire to deepen itself within Central Asia is seen in its trade and security agreements with Uzbekistan. But there is a rival that Turkey is dealing with — Russia. As Gorkem Dirik explains: “Nevertheless, Uzbekistan is not a hassle-free country and yet again, Russia stands as Turkey’s main rival on its path to penetrate Uzbekistan culturally and economically and to provide it with military assistance when necessary.”

While Turkey does have diplomatic ties with Russia, the two countries are still at odds, being historically enemies and rivals over Asia, especially the Middle East and Central Asia. In fact, Turkey regarded the collapse of the Soviet Union as its opportunity to expand its influence into Central Asia. Another security bloc that Turkey has formed as a way to establish its own Turkic coalition is the Organization of Turkic States (OTS), founded in 2009 and consisting of Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan, while Turkmenistan and Hungary have observer status. This group of Turkic states are becoming more and more into an equivalent to the European Union, but for Turkic countries. What we are seeing is the rise of a Turkic Union, and just as Germany leads the European Union, Turkey is leading its own union.

In 2019, Kazakhstan’s president, Nursultan Nazarbayev (who is also the honorary president of the Turkic Council) proposed coming up with a “Turkic World Vision 2040” for the Turkic Council at the Baku Summit. Nazarbayev proposed strengthening ties in “foreign policy”, indicating how this union wants to become a major international force. In the Baku Summit of 2019, it was said by General Secretary of the Turkic Council, Bagdat Amreyev, that the Turkic Council was entering a new phase of integration between Turkic countries: “The last decade was a period of development. We achieved this development thanks to the decisions we made for the political will and unity of the Turkic world. Now we have stepped into a new phase, the phase of great integration.” Just as there is integration between EU countries, the Turkic Council wants integration between its member countries. This, of course, would involve free trade. The Daily Sabah reported in 2021 that the 2040 vision for the Turkic Council entailed “signing free trade agreements, opening borders in transportation and strong cooperation between member countries.”

The Turkic Union wants to form a collective shipping company and establish the trans-Caspian trade route into a transport corridor. General Secretary Amreyev explained:

“We are bringing up the issue of creating the most favorable conditions in the field of shipping and customs in order to transform the Trans-Caspian route into an effective transport corridor in trade between East and West. It is imperative to reduce logistics costs while increasing the efficiency of shipping and customs operations along this corridor. For this, we are planning to establish a joint Caspian shipping company.” 

Turkey and Russia are rivaling over the Caspian Sea, and Turkey wants a Turkic Union to act as a counter to Russia and also to be a major international power. Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, declared: “We will strengthen our international power as we consolidate our unity without forgetting our roots”. So, Turkey wants to become a world superpower as the head of a union of Turkic countries with which it is partaking in a policy of integration involving trade and security cooperation. Since we know that Turkey wants the Turkic Union to become a world power, then we know that Turkey needs to penetrate Central Asia. Since Central Asia is in a moment of instability — be it riots in Kazakstan and Uzbekistan, or Afghanistan dealing with the aftermath of the US’s withdrawal — then it is evident that Central Asia is a ticking time bomb. An explosion, caused by a chaotic political, could be used to Turkey’s advantage to entrench itself deeper in the region. 


Armenian Lavash Celebrated in Traditional Folk Song


July 2 2022



Meg Pier | Published: July 2, 2019



Armenian lavash is celebrated by singer Anush Stepanyan in this traditional folk song that pays homage to the traditional thin bread that is an essential part of Armenian cuisine! Enjoy Anush’s beautiful and heartfelt ode to this delicacy that is part of daily life in Armenia. Making lavash is considered a ceremony, as there are many customs and beliefs associated with it; this folk song, “Hats Ktkhem Garia,” also praises the year’s successful harvest.

Armenian lavash, baked in a conical clay oven called a tonir, was inscribed as an item of Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO in 2014. Beyond being a staple of everyday Armenian cuisine, lavash has some symbolic significance; the bread plays a ritual role in weddings, where it is placed on the shoulders of newlyweds to bring fertility and prosperity.

If you are planing a trip to Armenia, then learn all about Armenian People.

Anush, 30 years old, is from Armenia’s capital of Yerevan and is the solo singer of “JNAR” Armenian Traditional Music Ensemble; when asked how long she has been singing, she says “Since I was born!” Her talent certainly is a natural gift!

 

Armenian students win six medals at 63rd International Mathematical Olympiad

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia – July 19 2022

Armenian schoolchildren won two silver and four bronze medals in the 63rd International Mathematical Olympiad held in Oslo July 6-16.

The event featured 589 students from 104 countries, of which 521 were male and 68 were female.

The Armenian team was represented by six students – five from the Shahinyan special school for physics and mathematics, and one from Quant school. Vahagn Hovhannisyan and Ruben Hambardzumyan, won silver medals, Hayk Karapetyan, Vahram Asatryan and Areg Mkrtchyan, and Arayi Khalatyan won bronze medals. The team was placed 26th in overall ranking.

The Armenian team was led by Smbat Gogyan (“Square” Educational Foundation of the National Academy of Sciences) and Gurgen Asatryan (Armenian State Pedagogical University).

The Armenian team had won two silver and three bronze medals at the 62nd International Mathematics Olympiad held online.