This is not the field, where we may justify the savings. Saribek Sukiasyan on development of science and its issues in RA

 09:50, 23 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 22, ARMENPRESS. It is not a secret that the state plays a key role in development and funding of science. The development of science in line with the world is a strategic and agenda issue for Armenia, which is being discussed for years and it is possible to develop the field only through investments.

According to 2023 state budget, the funding of science increased by 155% compared to 2018, and by 21% compared to 2022. It should be mentioned that the science expenses in 2022 amounted to AMD 24 bln and 957 mln. In 2021 more amounts were allocated from the state budget for the re-equipment of scientific equipment centers than in the previous 10 years taken as a whole. Till 2025, it is intended to double, in some cases triple the salaries of more than 3,357 scientists with the introduction of certification systems.

In recent years, mailnly the development of several directions plays a crucial role in the strategy of science development. The directions include: modernization of scientific infrastructures, scientific and scientific and technical theme, creation of centers of excellence for joint use in the field of science within the framework of EU-supported grant programs.

The Chairman of ARMECONOMBANK OJSC Board Saribek Sukiasyan reffered to the role of the state in the field of science development in an interview with lragir.am website in 2022. "This is not an area where we can justify savings." The solutions raised a decade ago are relevant even nowadays.

“As to me, the minimum threshold for science financing, should be at least in the amount of 1% of the GDP,– noted Saribek Sukiasyan and explained that the lower threshold of science funding relative to GDP is a national security issue.  The low indicators of financing will definitely be noticeable . "In science, there is an almost elimination of applied science, aging of scientists. The situation can be fixed only with the strong intervention of the state".

Saribek Sukiasyan considered the development of the scientific field to be the result of comprehensive interaction between the public and private sectors "In line with ensuring the specified funding threshold of at least 1% of the GDP, it is desirable that the state discuss the issue with representatives of the private sector and give clear guarantees that private sector investments will be protected by the appropriate legal framework. In such case the private sector will be keenly interested in investing in science”.

At the same time, while presenting his considerations in science, Sukiasyan highlighted the following. “All the scientific programs submitted for funding must undergo international expertise along with local expertise. I consider it necessary to adopt the law “On Scientific Expertise”, which will enable to carry out the appropriate expertise in abroad. With the adoption of this law, the state will guarantee that the expertise is fair."

The Chairman of ARMECONOMBANK OJSC Board also evaluated the efforts of scientists, overcoming difficulties for years and moved a step forward to the international arena  “Armenian representatives of exact science, despite the difficult conditions for them, are quite active in the international arena, many of them are published in prestigious international periodicals, – it should be noted that in the recent years, the representation of the Armenian scientific potential on international platforms is also one of the axes of the state policy, because, for example, the publication of scientific monographs was one of the funded directions.

Nevertheless,  Sukiasyan pointed out that it is necessary that the state stays focused on some branches of economy bringing them out of isolation. "Many candidate and doctoral theses are defended every year in the fields of economics, but most of those who defend them do not know that there are international periodicals, they do not know on level they are, let's say, international economic thought. According to Saribek Sukiasyan, it is necessary to encourage the integration of our economics into the international scientific flow, establish awards, and create a competitive environment”.

Armenian National Committee of America accuses USAID of ‘epic failure’ during Nagorno-Karabakh humanitarian crisis

MEDYA News
Nov 24 2023

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) spent more on photographers for Samantha Power’s, the agency’s administrator, October visit to Armenia than it did on humanitarian programs within Artsakh over the past three years, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) said on Tuesday.

“No aid. No airlift. Outright abandonment. An epic USAID failure on every level,” the Committee added.

ANCA’s remarks were in response to Power’s Tuesday statement regarding the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh two months after the aggression of Azerbaijan forced over 100,000 Armenians to flee their homes and seek refuge in neighbouring Armenia.

In her statement, Power announced an additional $4 million in aid to assist the displaced individuals, bringing the total US humanitarian assistance for the Nagorno-Karabakh response to $28 million since 2020.

Power also expressed gratitude for the Armenian government’s generous reception of the displaced population and said that the US support in ensuring that those affected receive the necessary assistance would continue.

“On my recent visit to Armenia, I got to hear directly from many of the displaced people from NK [Nagorno-Karabakh] about the tremendous hardship, and heartbreak, of having to flee their homes,” said Power.

During the recent conflict between Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh to Armenians), which resulted in the displacement of most of the Armenian population, USAID had faced criticism that the amount of humanitarian aid it provided to civilians in the region was too low.

According to the ANCA, the US government had also sent military aid to Azerbaijan and refused to impose sanctions on the country despite calls from the Armenian community, while also failing to allocate aid to the region since the 2020 war.

The lightning offensive against the self-declared Republic of Artsakh was launched by neighbouring Azerbaijan on 20 September and eventually resulted in Azeri forces taking control of the region, forcing an estimated 70,500 Armenians to flee the region in the following days.

Ethnic Armenians in the enclave had been defending the self-declared republic for three decades. Despite its geographical location within Azerbaijan’s territory, the region had functioned autonomously for decades and maintained its de facto government.

https://medyanews.net/armenian-national-committee-of-america-accuses-usaid-of-epic-failure-during-nagorno-karabakh-humanitarian-crisis/

Armenia: Grants up to €45,000 for CSOs in Sunik providing social services

Nov 24 2023

People in Need, a Czech non-governmental organisation, has announced a European Union-funded grant competition for civil society organisations operating in Syunik, Armenia. 

The call aims to support local CSOs in providing time-sensitive community-based social services needed by local communities and forcibly displaced individuals from Nagorno-Karabakh. The applicant CSOs should have at least 1 year of experience in providing social services.

CSOs can propose the establishment of a neighbourhood centre; the provision of local social services to prevent trafficking, labour exploitation and drug use; the launching of a Social Taxi service; the introduction of home care specialists for the long-term care of elderly people living alone or people with mental health problems, etc.

Applicants can come up with several proposals/ideas, but it may be that only one receives an award.  

People in Need intends to award five grants (up to €45,000 each, in AMD equivalent).

The deadline for applications is 10 December.

For additional questions or clarifications, an online information meeting will be held on 27 November at 12:00.

Find out more

Press release

December 10, 2023
Calls for proposals

Armenia skipping CSTO summit angers Lukashenko

yahoo! news
Nov 24 2023

Self-proclaimed President of Belarus Alexander Lukashenko was outraged by Armenia's decision not to participate in the summit of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) in Minsk, Belarusian news agency BelTA reported on Nov. 23.

"We also discussed the situation in the Caucasus and some dissatisfaction of one of the members of the Collective Security Council," Lukashenko said, referring to Armenia skipping the summit.

Read also: Armenia joins over 65 nations in Malta to chart course for ending war in Ukraine

The Belarusian dictator added that "there have always been and will be problematic issues," but they should be "resolved at the negotiating table, not by making demarches for no reason."

Read also: Armenia officially delivers humanitarian aid to Ukraine

The CSTO summit began on Nov. 23, in Minsk, Belarus.

On Nov. 14, Lukashenko invited Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan to the CSTO meeting, but the latter refused the invitation.

Secretary of the Armenian Security Council Armen Grigoryan stated that Armenia's presence in the CSTO, which is essentially led by Russia, creates "certain problems" for Armenia, while it is important for Yerevan to cooperate with Western partners on security issues.

Read also: Armenian PM claims his country not Russia’s ally in war against Ukraine, Kremlin reacts

On Nov. 15, Pashinyan assured that his country is not preparing to withdraw from the CSTO, despite the fact that it will not participate in the next meeting of the CSTO Security Council.

The CSTO is a military alliance that includes Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan.

Read the original article on The New Voice of Ukraine

Turkish Press: Armenia’s Pashinian claims discussion on enclave exchange evolving with Azerbaijan

Nov 25 2023
Politics  |Editor : Kevser Erbay
2023-11-25 09:42:03 | Last Update : 2023-11-25 10:48:03

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan addressed the ongoing discussions regarding the potential exchange of enclaves between Armenia and Azerbaijan. 

Pashinyan confirmed talks had occurred with Baku, emphasizing the need for a peaceful resolution. The proposed options include confirming sovereignty over specific territories or maintaining the current situation under legal validation. Pashinyan highlighted the forthcoming peace treaty as the platform for resolving these issues.

Tensions between the two nations trace back to the early '90s when Armenia occupied Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding regions, recognized internationally as part of Azerbaijan. A significant portion of this territory was reclaimed by Azerbaijan during the 2020 conflict, mediated by Russia, paving the way for normalization.

Recent events include an Azerbaijani anti-terrorism operation in Karabakh, resulting in the surrender of separatist forces. Azerbaijan, now asserting full control in the region, has extended invitations for the Armenian population in Karabakh to integrate into Azerbaijani society.

The dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan remains ongoing, with the hope of finding a diplomatic resolution to longstanding territorial disputes.

Source: Anadolu Agency

https://www.turkiyenewspaper.com/politics/17337

Disputed land deal threatens future of Jerusalem’s Armenian community

The Irish Times
Nov 26 2023

It’s almost midnight and a group of people nervously talk among themselves on Armenian Orthodox Patriarchate Road in Jerusalem’s old city. One man holds a muzzled dog, while another speaks anxiously on a phone. The group becomes agitated as an Israeli police car drives down the narrow street towards the car park that lies on land owned by the local Armenian church.

Inside the car park, about 200 local residents of the Armenian quarter are gathered at the site that they say is under threat from an Israeli-Australian property developer. Known as the Cow’s Garden, the site includes a seminary, community hall, five homes and represents 25 per cent of the Armenian quarter’s land in the old city. Surrounded by historic ramparts, the car park is an important space for the 1,000 Armenians who still live within the old city and a possible site for affordable housing.

Many protesters are descendants of those displaced by the Armenian genocide committed by Turkish Ottomans more than a century ago, although the Armenian presence in Jerusalem dates back more than 1,600 years. “There were contacts between Armenia and Palestine even before Christ, and the Cathedral of St James – which stands today at the heart of Jerusalem’s Armenian community – was founded around 420 AD,” says Matthew Teller, author of Nine Quarters of Jerusalem. Like Palestinians in the old city, Armenians are technically stateless and deemed residents rather than full citizens of Israel, after its forces occupied East Jerusalem and the West Bank in 1967.

The Armenian community’s future is under threat after its local religious leader, known as a patriarch, Nourhan Manougian, entered into a controversial deal in 2021 to lease church land to Xana Capital, a United Arab Emirates company owned by an Israeli-Australian property developer who plans to build a hotel. The developer did not respond to a request for comment sent on LinkedIn.

Local resident Kegham Balian says the deal undervalued the old city site and should never have been agreed to without the community’s consent. One priest who was heavily involved in the deal has since been defrocked and after significant backlash, Manougian says he cancelled the deal with Xana Capital last month – although members of the community have not yet seen the letter cancelling the lease.

Despite the deal supposedly being cancelled and no court order enforcing the lease, armed Israeli settlers turned up at the car park on November 5th with dogs and pepper spray; while diggers remain at the site, after arriving earlier this month and knocking down one wall and digging up in one section of the car park. The Armenian community rallied in response and set up a 24-hour watch to prevent further demolition, which senior church leaders in Jerusalem criticised as “illegal actions”.

On this night, those gathered at the car park were joined by patriarch Manougian – who arrived in a black Mercedes and refused to speak to these pages – and several priests who led locals in prayers. “We’re peaceful and we get on with our Jewish and Palestinian neighbours,” says Balian, “but if we don’t make a stand here, the entire Cow’s Garden will be gone.”

Earlier that evening, Setrag Balian says the Israeli police arrived with a private security company and told them that if they didn’t leave the site, they would be forced to by Israeli soldiers. The next day armed settlers arrived again, accompanied by Israeli police who arrested three Armenians while demanding they produce evidence that the land is theirs.

An Israeli military spokesperson referred The Irish Times to the Israeli police for comment, who said: “The Israel Police is not a party to civil or contractual disputes and it is not part of its role. Upon receiving reports or complaints in suspicion of a criminal offence, they are dealt with by the police accordingly.”

The Armenian Quarter sits beside the old city’s Jewish Quarter and includes one of the main routes to the Western Wall, one of Judaism’s holiest sites.

Israeli lawyer Daniel Seidemann, who founded Terrestrial Jerusalem which tracks development that harms the status and stability of the contested city, says that “settlers are interested in creating an uninterrupted bridge between Jaffa Gate and the Jewish quarter of the city” and describes this as dovetailing with a wider strategy backed by the Israeli authorities to encircle the old city with settlements and biblically-inspired settlement projects. As examples, he cites Israeli encroachment in the Palestinian neighbourhood of Sheik Jarrah and proposals for a settler-run national park on the Mount of Olives.

Multiple properties in Jerusalem’s Muslim and Christian neighbourhoods have become embroiled in opaque transactions often involving shell companies which sometimes lie dormant for years before groups aligned with settlers take legal action to force possession through the Israeli courts.

With media attention focused on the war in Gaza and in the West Bank, Seidemann believes settlers see an opportunity to quickly take possession of the strategic Armenian site. “What is happening there is not only a threat to the community, it is a threat to the integrity of the city,” he says. “Jerusalem would not be Jerusalem without a vibrant Armenian community.”

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https://www.irishtimes.com/world/middle-east/2023/11/26/disputed-land-deal-threatens-future-of-jerusalems-armenian-community/

Is BP financing Armenia’s destruction?

Nov 24 2023
BELTWAY CONFIDENTIAL

As Hamas partisans continue the calumny that Israel’s counterterror operations equate to genocide, real genocide looms in the South Caucasus. In September, Azerbaijani troops seized the entirety of Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing the exodus of its 120,000 indigenous Christians.

Both Azerbaijan and Turkey long used the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute to justify hostility to Armenia. Their actions subsequent to the conquest of the largely Christian region, however, hint that diplomatic dispute was more an excuse for their hostility rather than its true cause.

Driving along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border, military fortification in Azerbaijan is obvious. Whereas Armenia builds customs posts and observatories, Azerbaijan constructs helicopter landing pads, airfields, rocket installations, and advanced radar stations. Barracks house dozens of troops at remote locations along the border. Azerbaijani forces have already seized territory within Armenia. President Ilham Aliyev, meanwhile, says that even Armenia’s capital Yerevan is Azerbaijani territory. The implication is clear: Azerbaijan prepares for a new war rather than a lasting peace.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan encourages such belligerence. In the wake of the Israel-Hamas war, he declared, “Like Armenia, Israel will fail too.” His description of the terror war as a struggle between “crescent and cross” reflects his true mindset. American and British diplomats may see Turkey’s army as an important NATO contingent, by Erdogan himself describes it as the “Army of Muhammad.” Both Erdogan and Aliyev regularly belittle Armenians, insult rivals by calling them Armenian, and describe Armenians as dogs or insects.

There are ample reasons why the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention has issued a “red flag alert” warning of the possibility of Azerbaijan perpetrating genocide against Armenia and Armenians. The question policymakers should ask is why after 30 years, the frozen Nagorno-Karabakh conflict suddenly erupted and why Aliyev so confidently dismisses diplomacy.

Some pundits may cite developments in Turkey or Russia, but they miss the forest for the trees. The reason why beginning three years ago, Azerbaijan rebuffed diplomacy and turned instead to war was a change in the regional balance of power.

The Azerbaijani economy is a one-act show. SOCAR, its state oil company, works in conjunction with BP (formerly British Petroleum) to finance the Azerbaijani government. BP has little interest in the quality of Azerbaijan’s government or its descent into a brutal dictatorship. While ordinary Azerbaijanis wallow in poverty, the Aliyevs spend hundreds of millions of dollars on London real estate and billions of dollars on new weaponry.

Azerbaijan imported nearly 70% of its arsenal in recent years from Israel. In one extreme example, an Israeli drone company seeking to win an Azerbaijani contract demonstrated its system by attacking an Armenian military position. Earlier this month, Baku purchased a $1.2 billion Barak MX air defense system from Israel.

So long as Azerbaijan can undertake a military buildup to give itself both a qualitative and quantitative edge over its neighbors, the chance for peace in the region is zero. Military balance matters. While democratic states fund their people more than their militaries, Aliyev does the opposite. In effect, he diverts the revenue BP’s decades-old contract provides to finance aggression and perhaps even genocide. BP may not be legally responsible, but it is shortsighted. As Aliyev ignores his own public, the risk of assassination or even revolution increases in the long term. No ex-Soviet dictatorship expects a color revolution until the day it erupts.

Should Aliyev order an outright invasion of Armenia, the resulting disruption will likely end BP’s ability to transport its gas from Azerbaijan to Turkey. If Azerbaijan, overconfident in its gas windfall, seeks to end the oldest Christian state completely, BP may shrug its shoulders, but it will be impossible for BP to sidestep its reputational stain. Simply put, its contract enables Azerbaijan to purchase weaponry from Israel and Turkey to pursue genocide against Armenian Christians.

BP may want to sidestep politics, but Aliyev will not give it the chance. It is time for BP to tell Aliyev: Enough is enough, BP will not be party to any dictator’s genocidal ambition.

Michael Rubin (@mrubin1971) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner's Beltway Confidential blog. He is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/is-bp-financing-armenias-destruction 

Azerbaijan seemingly not interested in Crossroads of Peace project – Pashinyan

 15:02,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijan is seemingly not interested in the Crossroads of Peace project proposed by Armenia because Baku is implementing the project on opening connections with Iran, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said in response to a question from the public.

He was asked whether there are guarantees that Armenia itself will carry out customs and border control on its territory in the event of the Crossroads of Peace project being realized.

Pashinyan stressed that one of the principles of the Crossroads of Peace project is that each country will carry out customs and border control on its territory through its institutions. 

“This is the proposal we are making to our international partners, including Azerbaijan, Turkey, Iran, Georgia. And Azerbaijan’s first reaction is the following, that they, it seems, are no longer interested in this project, because they are carrying out that connectivity project with Iran. We are absolutely not against that. But that’s our proposal. In case of accepting our proposal the project will be realized,” the PM said.

The citizen asking the question pointed out that there are Russian border guards in Armenia’s Zvartnots airport. Pashinyan said this is another matter, which has a history. “But our policy is that the level of Armenia’s sovereignty must steadily increase also institutionally. And the Crossroads of Peace is one of those cases,” he said.

The Crossroads of Peace project is about creating new infrastructures or improving the scope and quality of the existing ones. Armenia is ready to establish five checkpoints on the Armenia-Azerbaijan borders for road infrastructures including in Kayan, Sotk, near Karahunj, near Angeghakot , and Yeraskh.

Also, to establish two checkpoints on the Armenia-Turkiye border in Akhurik and Margara for road infrastructures.

Armenia is prepared to ensure communications between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkiye, by restoring four railway sections in the territory of the Republic of Armenia. Armenia is ready to restore the Nrnadzor-Agarak railway section and to establish checkpoints near the borders, to restore the railway section from Yeraskh to the border of Nakhchivan and to establish a checkpoint in Yeraskh, to restore the depleted parts of the railway from Gyumri to the border of Turkiye and to establish a checkpoint in Akhurik. Also, Armenia is prepared to restore the depleted parts of railway from Hrazdan to Kayan and to establish a checkpoint in Kayan. This will create new links between all the countries of the region. The principles of the Crossroads of Peace are: all infrastructures including roads, railways, airways, pipelines, cables and power lines operate under the sovereignty and jurisdiction of the countries through which they pass; each country, through its state institutions, in its territory ensures border control, customs control and security of the infrastructures, including the passage through its territory of vehicles, cargo and people; All infrastructures can be used for both international and domestic transportation; countries use all the infrastructures on the basis of reciprocity and equality, and in accordance with these principles border and customs controls can be facilitated through mutual consent and agreement. As missing sections of railways and roads are restored and infrastructures unlocked, it will become possible to establish a seamless connection between the Persian Gulf, the Gulf of Oman, the Black Sea, the Caspian Sea and the Mediterranean Sea via a consolidated, regional railway network and via the North-South and East-West roads. The Government of the Republic of Armenia reaffirms its commitment to contribute its share to the region’s peace and stability, and to make practical measures to build the Crossroads of Peace




Pashinyan comments on possibility of withdrawing from CSTO

 16:55,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS. The CSTO’s actions do not address its obligations towards Armenia, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said.

Pashinyan was asked at an online Q&A with the public why Armenia isn’t withdrawing from the military bloc and whether there’s lack of political will.

Pashinyan said that Armenia has political will and a decision will be made based on necessity, which will stem from Armenia’s interests.

“Why aren’t we making a decision, or are we going to make a decision on withdrawing from the CSTO or suspending our membership in the CSTO? We will decide based on Armenia’s state interests. At this moment if we have or haven’t made any decision, our guideline for orientating has been the state interest of Armenia. Our records show that the CSTO’s de-facto actions or inactions do not address its obligations towards the Republic of Armenia. In this regard the CSTO’s actions do not meet Armenia’s interests. And we have been raising this issue in a transparent manner,” Pashinyan said.

He said that Armenia wants to do everything until the last chance to fully understand the CSTO and make its stance understandable for the CSTO.

Armenia, Azerbaijan agree to hold border delimitation talks

 11:08,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Armenia and Azerbaijan will hold a meeting on border delimitation, foreign ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan has said.

The meeting will take place on the state border.

“According to preliminary agreement, the next meeting of the Commission on State Border Delimitation and Border Security between the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Azerbaijan, from the Armenian side, and the Commission on State Border Delimitation between the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Republic of Armenia, from the Azerbaijani side, will take place on November 30 on the state border of the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Azerbaijan,” Badalyan said.