CivilNet: Partnership Agreement and Karabakh on agenda as Mirzoyan heads to Brussels

CIVILNET.AM

10:05

  • Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan left for Brussels, where he is set to meet with European Commission Vice President Josep Borrell and other high-level EU officials.
  • The Karabakh conflict has taken an especially heavy toll on both Armenian and Azerbaijan elders, according to new reports by Amnesty International.
  • Police detained hundreds of anti-government protesters in Yerevan who blocked streets across the capital in acts of civil disobedience. They are demanding Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation.

Iran, Armenia hold talks on transportation cooperation

MEHR News Agency, Iran


TEHRAN, May 16 (MNA) – The Iranian Minister of Roads and Urban Development says he has held talks with his Armenian counterpart on developing transporting cooperation between the two countries as part of the north-south transit corridor (INSTC).

At the end of the talks between the Iranian Minister of Roads and Urban Development Rostam Ghasemi with the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure of the Republic of Armenia, the Iranian minister stated that Iran and Armenia’s geographical locations could be used as transit road route from east to west and north to south if there is serious cooperation between the two countries.

Ghasemi said that there is not a lot of transportation cooperation between Iran and Armenia in the current situation, but the construction of a new route between the two countries will be a step toward achieving high-level transportation cooperation.

He said that there are currently restrictions on the movement of Iranian trucks on the Armenian side of the border, adding, “We are trying to use Iranian companies to widen this route and standardize it.”

The Iranian minister also said, “We can deliver the goods needed by Armenia from the port of [Iranian] Shahid Rajaei [in the south] to Julfa [on the Iranian side of the border with Armenian] by rail and from there to Armenia.”

Ghasemi announced that the Armenian infrastructure minister will visit the Tehran-North freeway in Iran and the 6.5-kilometer bridge built on this route which connects and shortens the road between the Iranian capital with the northern provinces.

As regards linking the Iranian Chabahar port to the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), the Iranian minister said, “The construction of the port itself has been physically completed and we have signed an agreement with the Indians regarding the transfer of equipment to the port and operationalizing it, but there are still some disputes between the Iranian Ports and Maritime Organization and the Indians that we are resolving.”

Regarding the Chabahar-Zahedan railway project, Ghasemi said, “In recent years, the [Iranian] National Development Fund has provided resources for the construction of the Chabahar-Zahedan railway, but with this amount, the project will not be completed. We are looking to provide more budget for the Chabahar-Zahedan railway from other sources.”

KI/5491431


https://en.mehrnews.com/news/186847/Iran-Armenia-hold-talks-on-transportation-cooperation



Pashinyan says Armenia not pleased with CSTO countries’ response

“The problem is not new. Armenia has raised and discussed it many times in a working order. This issue needs further discussion. The issue of rapid response is important for Armenia. As you know, last year these days the Azerbaijani army infiltrated into the sovereign territory of Armenia. Armenia applied to the CSTO for the use of mechanisms envisaged by crisis response procedure.

 

Unfortunately, the organization’s response was not the one Armenia had expected. Also for a long time we were raising the issue of CSTO member states selling weapons to the countries unfriendly to Armenia and used against Armenia. The response of the CSTO member states during and after the 44-day war in 2020 did not make Armenia and the Armenian people very pleased,” he said.

Turkish press: Turkiye’s minorities celebrate Foundations Week

Rabia İclal Turan   |16.05.2022

(File Photo) Bedros Sirinoglu, head of the Armenian Foundations Union in Istanbul

ISTANBUL

Turkiye has long been celebrating Foundations Week in the second week of May every year. But over the recent years, it has acquired a special meaning for many foundations belonging to the country’s minority communities.

“There was no such thing until today to invite minority foundations to the events held for the foundations week,” Bedros Sirinoglu, head of the Armenian Foundations Union in Istanbul, told Anadolu Agency in an interview.

“They have accepted us as foundations, but they did not invite us to the events,” he said.

“Now, all foundation managers, Muslim or non-Muslim, are being invited,” he added, for which he thanks Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“We owe this to our president and we are grateful to him,” he said.

Many foundations across the country come together throughout the week and hold several events, which were halted for two years due to the pandemic.

“It is important in terms of bringing all foundations together and creating the opportunity to chat with the minister, general manager (of foundations) and regional managers,” said Sait Susin, president of the Syriac Kadim Foundation.

The Turkish Jewish Community Foundation also took part in the events throughout the week

“In this context, an exhibition and a concert are held every year in our Grand Synagogue of Edirne, which was restored by our State’s General Directorate of Foundations,” Ishak Ibrahimzadeh and Erol Kohen, presidents of the Jewish Community of Turkiye, told Anadolu Agency in an email interview.

Minorities of Turkiye

When asked about how it feels about being an Armenian in Turkiye, Bedros Sirinoglu said: “Living in Turkey gives us happiness. This country is our country. We are citizens of this land.”

“I am a man who has traveled the world, spent 24 days touring America, but missed my country, Turkiye, on the 10th day,” he said.

In recent years, he said a church was built and many churches and schools were renovated without any hurdles from state institutions — something unheard of in the past.

Sait Susin of the Syriac community said: “Assyrians, who have a history of 5,000 years on these lands, were born in the last century, left their places of residence and dispersed all over the world. Currently, a large part of our population of 25,000 people lives in Istanbul.”

Kohen and Ibrahimzadeh said Jewish communities have settled and lived all over Turkiye.

They underlined that the weight of this “rich cultural history” is a huge responsibility for the present-day “considerably diminished Jewish community.”

The first synagogue ruins ever discovered in the world are located in Turkiye, in the ancient city of Sardis, right on the border of Izmir, the representatives of Turkish Jewish community recalled. “These ruins are estimated to be 2,200 years old,” they said.

Regulations regarding minority foundations

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan last year in March announced a “human rights action” plan, including several reforms and regulations regarding the community foundations of the minorities.

“This plan was highly welcomed by our community,” Ishak and Kohen said.

“We look forward to its release and implementation (at the) soonest possible,” they added.

The Syriac community also welcomed the plan and some legal amendments, Susin said. “For the first time in the last 20 years, we have a school that provides education in Syriac language.”

We are also trying to build a church in Istanbul on land that was allocated to us by President Erdogan — setting a precedent in Turkiye, Susin said.

“Most probably” trade with Russia will drop, says Armenian cenbank

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 11:22,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s trade with Russia will “most probably” drop due to the impact of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, the Vice Governor of the Central Bank of Armenia Hovhannes Khachatryan said.

“We have 2,5 billion dollars of international trade with Russia, where around 800 million is exports and 1,7 billion is imports,” Khachatryan said at the parliamentary committee on financial-credit and budgetary affairs where he was presenting the Central Bank’s annual report.

“The existing information gathered in the dynamic developments of the past one and a half months is not enough to make far-reaching assumptions, but most probably trade will drop,” Khachatryan said, adding that the cenbank hasn’t yet issued a final assessment on which direction the trade change will occur.

He added that Armenia has small volumes of trade with Ukraine – 160 million dollars, from which 120 million is imports. “If this hasn’t dropped to zero [yet], then it is near to zero,” he said, adding that these volumes will somehow be recouped in other ways.

Speaking on projections on the Russian economy, the Vice Governor said: “The projections on the Russian economy are naturally negative, we’ve projected 8%. But we’d made this projection in very big and unclear developments, now very different projections are being voiced, such as 10-15%, 6-7%.”

Russia has experienced nearly 15% inflation due to the uncertainties and devaluation of the Russian currency. Changes are expected given the recent stabilization of situation and the changes of the Ruble currency rates.

Armenian President congratulates Poland’s Andrzej Duda on 50th birthday

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 11:49,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan sent a congratulatory letter to President of Poland Andrzej Duda on the 50th birthday, the Armenian President’s office said.

“Armenia attaches importance to the constant strengthening of the friendly relations and constructive dialogue with Poland both in bilateral format and within the frames of the European Union”, the President said in the letter. “I am convinced that all preconditions exist for raising the mutual partnership of our countries to a qualitatively new level with joint efforts”.

Lebanon’s new parliament to have 6 ethnic Armenian members according to preliminary results

Lebanon’s new parliament to have 6 ethnic Armenian members according to preliminary results

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 11:57,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. The preliminary results of the parliamentary elections held in Lebanon on May 15 have been announced. Editor-in-chief of the Lebanon-based Azdag daily Shahan Gantaharyan told Armenpress that there will be 6 ethnic Armenian MPs in the parliament of Lebanon.

“3 of the ethnic Armenians elected to the parliament are the candidates of the ARF – Hagop Pakradouni, Hagop Terzian and George Bouchikian. They were elected by the lists of the electoral bloc formed with different political forces of Lebanon. Jihat Pakradouni was elected by the list of the Lebanese Forces party. Jean Talouzian will take the seat reserved for the Armenian Catholic community, Paula Yacoubian was elected by the list of the public movement. I want to repeat that these are very preliminary results, as the official results are not published yet”, Shahan Gantaharyan said.

Two servicemen arrested in ongoing investigation into Private’s suicide

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 14:59,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. Two servicemen of the Armenian Armed Forces are arrested on charges of abetment of suicide in the ongoing investigation into the death of Private Argishti Yeghyan, the Investigative Committee said.  

According to investigators, Rifleman-Assistant Grenadier Private Argishti Yeghyan killed himself using his service rifle while on duty at a military position in the morning of May 11.

The two comrades of Private Yeghyan are suspected in negligently causing his suicide, a crime under the Armenian Penal Code. The two suspects have been remanded into custody.

They face up to 9 years imprisonment if found guilty.

Russian MFA warns of “significant dangers” of Sweden’s accession to the NATO

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 21:24,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. The Russian Foreign Ministry responded to Sweden’s announcement about accession to the NATO membership, ARMENPRESS reports, Ria Novosti informs.

“Sweden’s accession to the NATO will significantly damage the security of Northern Europe, the continent of Europe as a whole,” the Ministry said.

On May 15, Sweden’s ruling Social Democrats announced their intention to apply for NATO membership. Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson said that joining NATO will have a positive impact on the security of Sweden and the Swedish people.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/16/2022

                                        Monday, 
Armenian Police Stop Opposition Motorcade Rallies
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia - Police arrest a participant of a motorcade rally held by the Armenian 
opposition in Yerevan, .
Police detained more than 90 people on Monday to break up fresh motorcade 
rallies organized by the Armenian opposition as part of its ongoing civil 
disobedience campaign against the government.
Dozens of vehicles driven by opposition activists were stopped by security 
forces as they slowly traveled to the center of Yerevan from the city’s 
outskirts in several simultaneous processions that began early in the morning.
The drivers were forcibly removed from the cars that were subsequently towed 
away by the police amid traffic jams.
Opposition leaders condemned the police actions, saying that the drivers did not 
violate traffic rules and simply exercised their legal right to peaceful 
assembly.
“The policemen that you are seeing are a minority in the [law-enforcement] 
system, and let this police minority bear in mind that it will be held 
accountable,” one of them, Aram Vartevanian, told reporters.
Vartevanian accused the police of seriously damaging some of the impounded cars.
Armenia - A car belonging to an opposition protester is towed away in Yerevan, 
.
A police statement released later in the day defended the arrests and the 
dispersal of the motorcades, saying that they disrupted traffic in the city. It 
urged opposition supporters not to “restrict other citizens’ freedom of movement 
by interfering with traffic.”
The police did not halt similar processions organized by the country’s leading 
opposition forces last week.
They broke up the latest motorcade rallies as the daily anti-government protests 
entered their third week. The opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances 
pledged to step up the pressure on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian as thousands 
of their supporters again marched through central Yerevan on Sunday.
Pashinian has rejected opposition demands for his resignation sparked by his 
recent statements on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
Pashinian Again Criticizes Russian-Led Military Bloc
        • Aza Babayan
Russia -- Russian President Vladimir Putin and the leaders of other CSTO member 
states arrive for a summit in Moscow, .
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian again criticized the Russian-led Collective 
Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) on Monday for not openly siding with Armenia 
in its border dispute with Azerbaijan.
“As you know, one year ago Azerbaijani troops invaded Armenia’s sovereign 
territory,” Pashinian told a CSTO summit in Moscow. “Armenia appealed to the 
CSTO to activate its mechanisms for crisis situations. Unfortunately, we cannot 
say that the organization reacted in a way that was expected by Armenia.”
Armenia appealed to the CSTO for help shortly after Azerbaijani troops 
reportedly crossed several sections of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and 
advanced a few kilometers into Armenian territory in May 2021. It asked the 
alliance of six ex-Soviet states to invoke Article 2 of its founding treaty 
which requires them to discuss a collective response to grave security threats 
facing one of them.
Russia and other CSTO member states expressed concern over the border tensions 
but did not issue joint statements in support of Armenia. The bloc’s secretary 
general, Stanislav Zas, said last July that the Armenian-Azerbaijani dispute is 
not serious enough to warrant a CSTO military intervention.
In an apparent jibe at Russia, Pashinian also criticized his country’s unnamed 
ex-Soviet allies for selling weapons to Azerbaijan, which he said were used 
against “Armenia and the Armenian people” during the 2020 war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.
Tajikistan - CSTO holds a military exercise in 2021.
At the same time, Pashinian again acknowledged Russian President Vladimir 
Putin’s “special role” in stopping the six-war through a ceasefire brokered by 
Moscow in November 2020. He further declared that Yerevan remains committed to 
the CSTO because it regards the bloc as a “key factor of stability and security” 
for Armenia and the entire “Eurasian region.”
In his opening remarks at the summit, timed to coincide with the 30th 
anniversary of the CSTO’s creation, Putin focused on the continuing war in 
Ukraine. He briefed the leaders of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and 
Tajikistan on Russia’s “special military operation” there during an ensuing 
discussion held behind the closed doors.
Belarus is the only non-Russian CSTO country to have publicly backed the Russian 
invasion. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko chided the other member 
states for adopting a more cautious stance and not acting in a united front 
against NATO’s eastward expansion.
“If there is no unity in our ranks we may not exist tomorrow,” warned Lukashenko.
A joint statement released by the CSTO leaders after the summit makes no 
explicit mention of the conflict in Ukraine.
Armenian Government Under Fresh Fire Over Peace Treaty With Azerbaijan
        • Astghik Bedevian
Armenia -‘Opposition leader Ishkhan Saghatelian speaks at a rally in Yerevan, 
May15, 2022
Armenia’s political leadership has come under fresh fire after trying to dispel 
opposition concerns about its position on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty 
sought by Azerbaijan.
In March, Baku presented Yerevan with five elements which it wants to be at the 
heart of the treaty. They include a mutual recognition of each other’s 
territorial integrity. The Armenian government said they are acceptable to it in 
principle, setting the stage for official negotiations on the issue.
Armenian official revealed earlier this month that they came up with six other 
issues that should also be included on the agenda of the talks. They said the 
proposals relate to the future of status of Karabakh and the security of its 
ethnic Armenian population.
Edmon Marukian, a recently appointed ambassador-at-large, shed more light on 
them in an interview with Armenian Public Television aired on Friday.
In particular, he said, Yerevan made clear to Baku that “the issues of 
guaranteeing the security of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians, respecting their 
rights and freedoms and determining the final status of Nagorno-Karabakh are 
fundamental to the Armenian side.” Marukian said this disproves opposition 
allegations that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is ready to accept all 
Azerbaijani terms of the deal.
Armenia - Edmon Marukian, the leader of the Bright Armenia Party, speaks at an 
election campaign meeting in Yerevan, June 18, 2021.
Pashinian triggered anti-government street protests after declaring last month 
that the international community is pressing Armenia to “lower the bar” on the 
status issue and signaling his readiness to do that.
Reacting to Marukian’s remarks, leaders of the country’s two main opposition 
alliances staging the protests said they are now even more convinced that 
Pashinian wants to help Azerbaijan regain full control over Karabakh.
“Can Nikol Pashinian explicitly state that Artsakh can never be a part of 
Azerbaijan and that they see no solution along these lines?” one of them, 
Ishkhan Saghatelian, told a weekend news conference. “Everything else is 
manipulation.”
Pashinian’s stance was also denounced by Levon Zurabian, a top aide to former 
President Levon Ter-Petrosian who has long advocated a compromise solution to 
the Karabakh conflict.
Armenia - Opposition supporters rally in Yerevan, .
Zurabian said Pashinian’s administration did not specify the status of Karabakh 
and mechanisms for determining it acceptable to the Armenian side. Nor did it 
make clear that the issue must be on the agenda of peace talks with Baku, he 
said in a Facebook post.
“It once again became clear to us that today Armenia has a government that does 
not understand anything about diplomacy and is literally insane,” he wrote.
“It turned out that Armenia has no idea what it wants to include in the peace 
treaty or what it wants to change in Azerbaijan's proposals,” added Zurabian.
Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said on May 10 that the document 
presented by Yerevan “can’t be called proposals.” Pashinian complained 
afterwards that Baku wants the planned talks on the peace accord to focus only 
on its own ideas.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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