Armenian foreign ministry condemns assassination attempt on Iraqi Prime Minister

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 18:15, 7 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian foreign ministry condemned the assassination attempt on Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi.

“We strongly condemn assassination attempt on PM of Iraq Mustafa Al-Kadhimi”, the foreign ministry tweeted. “We express our support & solidarity to friendly Iraq in its fight against terrorism & efforts aimed at regional & domestic security & stability.”

Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi escaped unharmed in an assassination attempt by armed drone in Baghdad on Sunday.

Six members of Kadhimi’s personal protection force stationed outside his residence in the Green Zone were wounded, Reuters reported citing security sources.

Three drones were used in the attack, including two that were intercepted and downed by security forces while a third drone hit the residence, the Iraqi state news agency INA reported.

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Pashinyan assures daily work being done for return of Armenian captives from Azerbaijan

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 23:18, 7 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan assures that the government is taking daily actions for the return of the Armenian captives from Azerbaijan.

“We must work tirelessly for the quick return of our brothers. And we do so. Work is being done on this direction every day”, he said in an interview to Public TV.

Pashinyan said that work needs to be done with the international partners, the international community and also with Azerbaijan for this issue to be solved as soon as possible.

Despite the commitments assumed by the 2020 November 9 statement on the ceasefire in Nagorno Karabakh, Azerbaijan still refuses to return all Armenian captives.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Deputy Assistant Secretary Olson Visits Armenia

US Embassy in Armenia
Nov 2 2021
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Erika Olson, the newly appointed Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs at the U.S. Department of State, will travel to Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia to promote regional cooperation and discuss bilateral issues. While in Yerevan, DAS Olson will   participate in a regional Chiefs of Mission meeting in November 2-4, joining U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Lynne M. Tracy, U.S. Ambassador to Georgia Kelly C. Degnan, and U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan Lee Litzenberger, as well as Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations Andrew Schofer and USAID Deputy Assistant Administrator Alexander Sokolowski.  We are excited to resume this long-standing tradition and gather with our colleagues from the region and from Washington, DC, to exchange ideas and information to better coordinate our policy in respect to all three countries in the region.  The participants will engage in internal discussions as well as informational meetings with representatives of the Armenian government and civil society.  Most recently, U.S. Embassy Baku and U.S. Embassy Tbilisi hosted regional Chief of Mission meetings in 2019 and 2018, respectively.

Armenian President talks to Biden, Macron, Merkel, other world leaders

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 2 2021


On a working visit to Glasgow Armenian President Armen Sarkissian talked to a number of world leaders.

On the sidelines of the United Nations Climate Change Conference, President Sarkissian talked to US President Joe Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Prince Albert II of Monaco, Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, President of Egypt Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić, Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades, Argentine President Alberto Fernández, Montenegro President Milo Đukanović, President of Kyrgyzstan Sadyr Zhaparov, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Lebanon’s Prime Minister Najib Mikati, Luxembourg’s Prime Minister Xavier Bettel, Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Löfven, Austrian Chancellor Alexander Schallenberg, President of the European Council Charles Michel.

President Armen Sarkissian is expected to address the United Nations Climate Change Conference today.

CivilNet: Remembering Mariam Shahinyan, Turkey’s first professional female photographer

CIVILNET.AM

07 Nov, 2021 06:11

When writer and researcher Anahit Ghazaryan saw Mariam Shahinyan’s work, it was love at first sight. 

It all started in Istanbul, with a little photo of a girl with long hair taken by Shahinyan. 

An Armenian genocide survivor, Shahinyan  is Turkey’s first female studio photographer. Outside some corners in Turkey, very few know about her work. 

Anahit Ghazaryan spent five years researching and finding original photos by the artist, who died in 1996 after dedicating 50 years of her life to photography. 

Anahit gathered a small collection of the photos taken by the artist and opened a temporary exhibition in Yerevan, titled “Living room of images”. The collection honors Shahinyan’s work. 

Armenia reports 2330 daily COVID-19 cases

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 11:17, 4 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. 2330 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 315,004, the ministry of healthcare reports.

12,188 COVID-19 tests were conducted on November 3.

1270 patients have recovered in one day. The total number of recoveries has reached 274, 878.

The death toll has risen to 6532 (41 death cases have been registered in the past one day).

The number of active cases is 32,277.

The number of people who have been infected with COVID-19 but died from other disease has reached 1317.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

There are thousands of vacancies in Armenia, PM says

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 12:20, 4 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan says today there are thousands of vacancies in Armenia.

At the Cabinet meeting today, the PM said that there is a problem in the construction sector.

“The most frequent alarm coming from the business now is the problem of labor force, moreover, in all spheres, starting from construction to high technologies. We have a problem of jobs everywhere”, he said, adding that they must solve this issue.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Fan gets the ultimate Norwich City birthday surprise… in Armenia

Norwich Evening News, UK
Nov 5 2021

Norwich City fan, Duncan Sharp, was given a unique birthday present from his friend in Armenia this year. – Credit: Duncan Sharp

Some people get socks for their birthday, others get chocolate. But this Norwich City fan got something completely different – a mural in Armenia.

Duncan Sharp, 32, is a lifelong supporter and has such a passion for the football club that his friend Sona, who lives in capital city Yerevan, arranged a mural of Norwich’s famous canary close to the city’s main train station for his birthday at the end of October.

“She called in a favour with a graffiti artist she knows and they crept along the railway tracks at night.

“Apparently the artist was a little perplexed when she told him what she wanted him to paint. The end result was this fabulous mural though.”

Despite growing up in Newmarket in Suffolk, there was never a question of which team he would support.

“My family all supported Norwich and were season ticket holders so I didn’t have a choice – not that I’d have wanted one as there was only ever one team for me.”

Now living in London, Mr Sharp doesn’t get to as many games as he’d like to these days but is going to this weekend’s match against Brentford.

“I feel for Daniel Farke because he’s tried to approach this season differently and it hasn’t really worked,” he said.

“I like him and I’m still hopeful that he will turn it around.”

The mural in Armenia follows the one of Daniel Farke that is splashed on the Fat Cat and Canary Pub on Thorpe Road.

Painted by talented artist Gnasher Murals, it was part of Along Come Norwich to make use of empty walls around the city following promotion to the Premier League.

[Armenian News note: Watch the video at the link below]

A Geopolitical Reshuffle In South Caucasus – Analysis

Nov 5 2021

By Geopolitical Monitor

By Robert M Cutler*

One of its most important points in the trilateral statement signed by Armenia’s prime minister Nikol Pashinyan, Azerbaijan’s president Ilham Aliyev, and Russia’s president Vladimir Putin in Moscow on 10 November 2020—which established the ceasefire and capitulation of armed forces of the Republic of Armenia in the Second Karabakh War—is the unblocking of transport communications in the South Caucasus region.

Although the trilateral statement mentions reconnecting the Nakhchivan exclave with the main body of Azerbaijan (via the Zangezur corridor) in particular, its ninth point begins with the simple and universal statement: “All economic and transport connections in the region shall be unblocked.”

For the last year, Armenia has found different ways to block the implementation even of the Zangezur Corridor project, even though it is to everyone’s benefit. In the most recent weeks, however, this has been changing. Obstacles in Armenian domestic politics appear to be in the process of being overcome, as Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan succeeds more and more in institutionalizing his government.

Pashinyan won snap parliamentary elections in Armenia in June 2021, despite Yerevan’s catastrophic loss of the Second Karabakh War a year ago. This occurred because of the complete political bankruptcy of the “Karabakh clan” that was hegemonic on the Armenian political scene from the late 1990s through 2018. Since the election earlier this year, Pashinyan has been able to install practical cooperation-minded personnel in key ministries and reduce the influence of the Yerevan “war party.”

The former defense minister Davit Tonoyan, for example, whose infamous slogan, “new war for new territories” typified the aggressive outlook of the old regime, is now under arrest for corruption along with other figures in the defense sector of the economy. On October 15, Pashinyan visited Moscow and agreed to open a railway between Nakhchivan and Azerbaijan proper, across the southern Armenian region Syunik, which borders Iran.

As the noted Russian military expert Igor Korotchenko correctly observed in a recent interview, the Zangezur corridor will make it possible to launch international transport communications in the full region. In his assessment, pragmatic Armenian politicians understand the benefits of the Zangezur corridor for Armenia and are ready to participate in it, but “they are afraid of becoming victims of a witch-hunt.” There are threats of terrorist attacks and assassination attempts even against Pashinyan and his family. Korotchenko is editor-in-chief of the authoritative review National Defense and a former chairman (and current member) of the Public Council at Russia’s Ministry of Defense.

Further according to Korotchenko, despite the “revanchism” (literally, “revenge-seeking”) of “part of the population and part of politicians in Armenia,” nevertheless “Yerevan has an understanding of the benefits of the Zangezur corridor.”

Peace and the development of Armenia are now incompatible with territorial claims against Azerbaijan. “I think they are [finally] ready participate in projects to unblock communications, including work on the opening of the Zangezur corridor,” Korotchenko recently said. This is frustrating to the militant fringes of the Armenian diaspora, particularly in the United States, which has become even more vituperative and aggressive in its attacks on the “peace party” in Yerevan, in Baku, indeed in Washington itself.

The Zangezur transport corridor is the headline project here but not the only one. It will catalyze the development of economic ties within the so-called “3+3” initiative (also called the “Six-way platform”) that brings together the three South Caucasus countries plus Iran, Russia, and Turkey. To take just one example, Armenia, which lost its land connections with Iran that had gone through the de-occupied Azerbaijani territories, will gain a rail connection with Iran through Nakhchivan.

But that is not all. Azerbaijan has surprised observers with the strength and resolve of its efforts to develop the de-occupied territories. According to one estimate, Baku has already invested almost $3 billion to promote such redevelopment. High-profile projects include roadways to improve connections to the rest of the country and airports (notably,  but not only Fizuli, which has already opened) that will also promote international links, including tourism.

The Azerbaijani government has provided tax benefits and created economic development zones in order to promote its initiatives. There are also initiatives to build “smart villages” and renewable-energy infrastructure. Most phenomenally, almost the whole region now has electrical power, including parts did not have it even before the last war. It is indeed likely that the Karabakh region will become, as Rosbalt’s correspondent Irina Dzhorbenadze put it, “an investment center of Azerbaijan” for years to come.

With the price of oil not far from $100 per barrel, whereas Baku’s state budget had been planned according to an expectation of $45 per barrel, Azerbaijan has become and will continue to be the economic driver of economic development in the South Caucasus region for the foreseeable future. Past Armenian governments, led by the now politically bankrupt “Karabakh clan” had earlier refused Turkish proposals for all-round economic cooperation and development. That was nearly a generation ago, and the Armenian public is tired of mass poverty and elite corruption.

Pashinyan is not a newcomer to Armenian politics. He had long been a supporter of Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the country’s president from 1991 until his forced resignation in 1998. When Ter-Petrosyan ran for president again in 2008, eventually losing to Serzh Sargsyan of the Karabakh, Pashinyan was one of his most outspoken supporters. Pashinyan made accusations of vote-rigging and fraud, and he was eventually jailed for “organizing mass disorders.”

Before becoming prime minister during Armenia’s “velvet revolution,” Pashinyan had been notable for his criticisms of Armenian state dependence—indeed vassalage—to Russia. The “back-story” to present-day state-to-state relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan is therefore more complicated than appears at first glance.

Russia, however, is well aware of this back-story, and it was a signal that they remained neutral in the 2021 snap parliamentary elections. These elections were an electoral battle mainly between Pashinyan and the other dominant Karabakh-clan politician, Robert Kocharyan, who had been president from 1998 to 2008. Today, even Russian security elites have pragmatically recognized that in some ways good relations with Baku are more important to Moscow than is the subjection of Yerevan.

*About the author: Robert M. Cutler is a Fellow at the Canadian Global Affairs Institute.

Source: This article was published by Geopolitical Monitor.com

Conference of heads of US missions in South Caucasus organized in Armenia: US Ambassador to Azerbaijan also participates

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 19:40, 4 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. US Ambassador to Armenia Lynn Tracy, US Ambassador to Georgia Kelly Degnan and US Ambassador to Azerbaijan Lee Litzenberger, US Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Oslon, Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations Andrew Schofer and USAID Deputy Assistant Administrator Alexander Sokolowski participated in the Conference of heads of the US missions in South Caucasus, which took place in the US Embassy in Armenia, ARMENPRESS was informed from the US Embassy in Armenia.

“We were unable to hold this conference last year due to the coronavirus, but we are pleased to restore this long tradition of meeting with our partners in the region and from the capital, Washington, to exchange ideas, and information.

Prior to the new coronavirus pandemic, such conferences were organized at the US Embassies in Baku and Tbilisi, in 2019 and 2018 respectively.

On the eve of the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations with Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan, we emphasize our commitment to strengthen our partnership, to support the peoples of the region in building of a more secure, stable and prosperous future”, reads the statement issued by the Embassy.