Iran’s Khamenei cautions Erdogan against any policy of blocking the border between Iran and Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia – July 19 2022

Iran will oppose any policy of blocking the border between Armenia and Iran, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei said at a meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Khamenei and Erdogan discussed the war unleashed by Azerbaijan in 2020, during which Turkey supported the latter by sending fighters and arms during the war.

Referring to the fact that parts of Nagorno Karabakh are now controlled by Azerbaijan, Ali Khamenei said: “We are pleased to see Karabakh return to Azerbaijan. Of course, if there is a policy to block the border between Iran and Armenia, the Islamic Republic will oppose it because this border has been a communication route for thousands of years.”   

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also advised Turkey’s President not to launch a new military operation in Syria.

A new military operation would “be to the detriment of Syria, Turkey and the region,” Khamenei said.

Current authorities must be removed immediately, opposition leader reiterates

Panorama
Armenia –

ARF Armenia Chairman Ishkhan Saghatelyan, an MP from the opposition Hayastan alliance, met with a group of ARF intellectuals, scientists and famous public figures on Wednesday.

“The meeting focused on challenges facing Armenia and Artsakh. The attendees expressed their concerns and made suggestions,” Saghatelyan wrote on Facebook.

“Also, we talked about the further steps and plans of the resistance movement. All opinions and observations of the attendees were marked by the common line, “We must oust the current authorities immediately and embark on rebuilding the homeland,” the opposition leader said.

Armenpress: From dram appreciation to logistic issues: What problems Armenian exporters face?

From dram appreciation to logistic issues: What problems Armenian exporters face?

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 09:51,

YEREVAN, JULY 22, ARMENPRESS. Companies exporting from Armenia complain over the recent appreciation of the dram. They say they greatly suffer, plus inflation is also creating difficulties because the price of raw material purchased for a good prepared for export has also increased. In addition, they also mention logistic problems.

The dram appreciation and the dollar depreciation in Armenia are impacting exporters as the contracts for export are mostly signed in dollars.

The main export destination of Armavir Fruit processing agricultural goods is the United States. The company is exporting canned fruits and vegetables, dried fruits and other products to the USA. The company founder Hayk Manukyan told Armenpress that at this moment their main problem is the fluctuation of the foreign currency and the appreciation of the dram. Thanks to state assistance programs, people have started to build orchards, greenhouse farms, and the volumes have increased.

“But when have a problem, it is automatically transferred to rural people. Under dram appreciation we are not able to process that volume. In terms of price, our agreement with our foreign partners has a history of years, it changes very little over the years. For instance, 8-9 years were required for positioning in the US market and selling a product. And now, if we change, increase the price, we will lose a market”, he said.

He says they cannot raise the price of exported good, even if they raise the price, they will lose competitiveness in that market. Under the conditions of dollar decrease by around 20%, exporting some goods is even not beneficial for a company now, however, this year, they continue exporting in order not to lose a market, but the company founder emphasizes that they are losing financial resources.

Logistic company Spinnaker Group co-founder Norayr Gevorgyan states that the fluctuation of the foreign currency is a problem for all exporters. “At this moment absolutely all exporters suffer from the fluctuation of the foreign currency and the appreciation of the dram. The dram appreciation, of course, is not something bad. But when it happens immediately, it is a problem”, he said.

He said that the prices in the field of cargo transportation are calculated in dollars, adding that this leads to price increase as most of the expenditures in Armenia is in drams.

The Central Bank, however, believes that the artificial depreciation of the dram will cause serious problems. CBA Governor Martin Galstyan earlier commented on the proposals to artificially depreciate the dram and stated that in that case they will create a new inflationary wave that will impact all citizens of Armenia, including exporters.

As for the logistic problems, the Upper Lars border checkpoint is also a problem for exporters as the checkpoint is regularly shutting down because of bad weather and there are major queues there, particularly Armenian cargo trucks were greatly suffering.

Armavir Fruit is also exporting goods to Russia, but not in a bigger scale. “We will soon have major agreements with the partners of the Russian market. So, the problem of Lars checkpoint is going to be very relevant for us. We also make imports for reprocessing, and face problems in this sense as well”, Hayk Manukyan said.

He says that Lars is very important for each exporter because they have contracts. “If the problem of Lars is not solved, it means we should have reserves in Russia in order not to violate the contract”, he said.

Spinnaker Group co-founder Norayr Gevorgyan also mentioned the problem of Lars. “The problem of Lars is not something new. Everyone, who has worked in this direction, knows that it is always problematic, there are problems both in winter and summer. But this year this problem was supplemented by the major flow of vehicles from other countries which cannot travel to Russia via Europe, therefore, Lars served as an alternative route for them. But Lars doesn’t have that capacity to serve so many cars”, he said.

The company has not exported apricot this year. “We knew that we won’t be able to quickly pass Georgia as there are queues. There were other reasons as well”, he added.

In order to mitigate the problem of Lars, a ferry communication is expected to launch. Its launch was expected to be on June 15th, but it is being delayed because the Dutch company, the Poti port operator, has not granted permission yet and this company has also imposed sanctions against Russia.

Both companies believe that the ferry transfer will mitigate the problem, but note that this is not a solution because much more goods are exported from Armenia and it’s impossible to transfer all of them via a ferry.

Many countries, including Armenia, are facing inflation. Hayk Manukyan states that despite the decline of foreign currency the prices are not falling. He says that the dram depreciation could negatively affect the economy from inflation perspective. He proposes to provide support to exporting companies, particularly compensation.

Meanwhile, Spinnaker Group founder Norayr Gevorgyan says that the fluctuation of a foreign currency is a global problem and does not depend on Armenia only. However, he states that exporters suffer from this, and a respective approach should be provided to them.

“If there is no compensation for suffering sectors, they will appear in a very difficult situation. There should be a sectoral assistance to exporting companies, to those which have contracts in dollar”, he said.

Reporting by Anna Grigoryan




Toyota Fortuner chosen as police cruiser in provinces

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 13:00,

YEREVAN, JULY 21, ARMENPRESS. The government approved redistributions in the state budget to allocate over 3,1 billion drams for acquisition of 175 SUVs for the new police force which will soon be launched in the provinces of Aragatsotn, Gegharkunik, Kotayk and Tavush.

The police cruisers will be Toyota Fortuner SUVs.

Out of all car companies represented in Armenia, only Toyota Yerevan was able to supply the vehicles in line with the required characteristics.

Apart from the SUVs, new sedans will also be bought for the police force as highway patrol vehicles.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/20/2022

                                        Wednesday, 
COVID-19 Cases Rising Again In Armenia
        • Anush Mkrtchian
Armenia -- Medics at the Surb Grigor Lusavorich Medical Center in Yerevan, 
Armenia's largest hospital treating COVID-19 patients, June 5, 2020.
Mirroring a global trend, coronavirus infections in Armenia are rising rapidly 
again after falling to record low levels in May, government data shows.
The Armenian Ministry of Health recorded a total of 629 COVID-19 cases last 
week, up from 354 cases in the previous week and 174 cases in the period from 
June 27 to July 3.
The ministry reported an average of several cases a day in May. The country’s 
infection rates remained negligible until the end of June.
Despite the soaring cases, health authorities in Yerevan have reported no 
coronavirus-related deaths so far this month.
“Severe cases are not registered in large numbers yet,” Romela Abovian, a senior 
official from the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention, explained 
on Wednesday. “There are hospitalized people but many of them were vaccinated 
and are coping [with the disease] well.”
Abovian blamed the resurgence of the virus on the even more contagious BA.4 and 
BA.5 sub-variants of Omicron which are becoming prevalent around the world.
Davit Melik-Nubarian, a public health expert, said that waning vaccine 
protection is another factor behind what appears to be a new wave of infections.
Armenia - A man is vaccinated against coronavirus at a mobile vaccination center 
in Yerevan, October 24, 2021.
According to the Ministry of Health, less than half of Armenia’s population has 
received two doses of a coronavirus vaccine. The vast majority of them were 
vaccinated last fall and winter.
Only 60,000 or so people in the country of about 3 million have received a third 
“booster” shot to date. The vaccination process practically ground to a halt in 
May.
Melik-Nubarian said the COVID-19 resurgence could intensify after schools and 
universities across the country reopen their doors in September. Still, he 
suggested that it will be less severe than the previous waves “in terms of the 
loss of human lives.”
Abovian said that the authorities will consider restoring mandatory mask-wearing 
and reimposing other restrictions if the upward trend continues unabated in the 
coming weeks.
Melik-Nubarian was skeptical on that score, arguing that such restrictions were 
barely enforced in Armenia when they were in force.
The Armenian authorities have registered more than 10,300 coronavirus-related 
deaths since the start of the pandemic.
Yerevan Silent On French-Armenian Leader’s Deportation
        • Artak Khulian
France - Mourad Papazian, a leader of the French-Armenian community, speaks at 
an Armenian genocide remembrance ceremony in Paris, April 24, 2022.
The Armenian authorities have declined to explain their decision to ban a leader 
of France’s influential Armenian community critical of Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian from entering Armenia.
Mourad Papazian, co-chairman of the Coordination Council of Armenian 
Organizations of France (CCAF), was detained at Yerevan’s Zvartnots 
international airport and deported back to Paris last Thursday. He says that 
said immigration officers there gave no reason for his deportation.
The National Security Service (NSS), which is in charge of passport control at 
Zvartnots, on Wednesday refused to explain what was a rare entry ban slapped on 
a prominent Armenian Diaspora figure. The NSS only cited a legal provision which 
allows it to withhold such information if it breaches “the secrecy of a person’s 
private or family life.”
Papazian, who is also a leading member of Dashnaktsutyun, a pan-Armenian party 
in opposition to Pashinian’s government, insisted, meanwhile, that his expulsion 
was politically motivated.
“Mr. Pashinian doesn’t accept opposition both inside and outside [Armenia,]” he 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “There is a serious problem with democracy 
behind this affair.”
France/Armenia - French President Emmanuel Macron speaks during the 
Co-ordination Council of Armenian Organisations of France (CCAF) annual dinner 
in Paris, 05Feb, 2019
The CCAF, which is an umbrella structure uniting France’s leading Armenian 
organizations, condemned Yerevan’s decision as an “attack on democracy” and 
“brutal blow” to the French-Armenian community.
“Armenia also belongs to the Diaspora, to the sons of survivors of the [1915] 
genocide, especially when they fight for their rights,” the CCAF said in a July 
15 statement. “And no one can decide to exclude activists of the Armenian cause 
from it to settle political scores.”
The Armenian government has still not reacted to this criticism echoed by its 
domestic political opponents.
Zareh Sinanyan, the government’s Armenian-American high commissioner for 
Diaspora affairs, claimed this week that he does not know why Papazian was 
denied entry to Armenia. Sinanyan at the same time accused the CCAF and 
Dashnaktsutyun of pressuring European politician not to cooperate with the 
authorities in Yerevan.
Some Armenian pro-government media outlets have said that Papazian was deported 
because the authorities believe he was behind an anti-Pashinian demonstration 
staged during the prime minister’s June 2021 visit to Paris.
Papazian denies any involvement in that protest. He was able to visit Armenia as 
recently as in May.
Death Of Arrested Government Critic ‘Investigated’
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Activist Armen Grigorian at a rally in Yerevan, November 28, 2020.
Law-enforcement authorities have pledged to investigate the sudden death of a 
vocal critic of the Armenian government who was controversially arrested two 
months ago.
Armen Grigorian, a well-known entertainment producer, collapsed in a courtroom 
on Friday as he stood trial on charges of insulting residents of two Armenian 
regions supporting the government.
Grigorian had made disparaging comments about them a year before his arrest 
condemned by the Armenian opposition as politically motivated. He was taken into 
custody by the National Security Service, which normally deals with grave crimes.
The 57-year-old activist’s death sparked outcry from opposition leaders as well 
as the country’s human rights ombudswoman, Kristine Grigorian (no relation). The 
latter demanded “clarifications” from prosecutors and the Ministry of Justice, 
which runs Armenia’s prisons.
The Investigative Committee said this week that it has opened a criminal case in 
connection with Grigorian’s death, the precise cause of which is still not known.
The Office of the Prosecutor-General specified that the law-enforcement body is 
conducting an inquiry into prison medics’ failure to adequately perform their 
duties, rather than the wisdom of holding Grigorian in detention.
“Throughout the confinement period Armen Grigorian was under the surveillance of 
medical personnel and received treatment,” the Ministry of Justice insisted for 
its part.
In a statement, the ministry revealed that Grigorian complained of headaches, 
high blood pressure and dizziness right after being taken to a prison 50 
kilometers west of Yerevan. But it said that neither the activist nor his lawyer 
formally notified the prison administration of his health problems.
Armenia - Angry opposition supporters protest outside the prime minister's 
office in Yerevan following the death of an arrested government critic, July 15, 
2022.
The lawyer, Ruben Melikian, said on Friday that his client, who was a medic by 
education, did not allow him to “speak up about those problems in the court or 
any other bodies.”
Melikian and opposition leaders have blamed the country’s political leadership 
for Grigorian’s death. They have linked his May 18 arrest to daily 
antigovernment protests launched by the opposition in Yerevan on May 1.
More than two dozen other opposition activists are also currently under arrest. 
Most of them are accused of assaulting riot police during the protests aimed at 
forcing Pashinian to resign. The authorities maintain that the accusations are 
not politically motivated.
The opposition has accused Pashinian’s administration of weaponizing pre-trial 
arrests to try to neutralize its members and supporters fighting for regime 
change.
Zaruhi Hovannisian, who leads a team of civic activists monitoring Armenian 
prison conditions, likewise criticized on Wednesday the authorities’ excessive 
recourse to such arrests.
“Both under the former authorities and now pre-trial arrest has been used for 
pressuring individuals or as a punitive measure against them,” Hovannisian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Wednesday. “This does not correspond at all to 
objectives set in the Criminal Code.”
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Expert calls for strategic partnership between Armenia, Iran

Panorama
Armenia –

Turkologist Varuzhan Geghamyan stresses the need to take relations between Armenia and Iran to a new level of strategic partnership.

His comments came after Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned against attempts to “block” the Armenian-Iranian border at a meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday.

“If there is a policy to block the border between Iran and Armenia, the Islamic Republic will oppose it since this border has been a communication route for thousands of years,” Khamenei said.

He made a similar statement at a private meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“The Islamic Republic will not tolerate policies or plans that lead to the closing of the Iran-Armenia border,” Khamenei said in a tweet, separately.

“Remarkably, Syunik remains Armenian primarily thanks to Iran. Thus, Armenian-Iranian relations should be taken to a new strategic level, making it one of the foundations of our new security architecture,” Geghamyan wrote on Facebook on Wednesday.

Also, he condemned the Armenian authorities for handing over a section of the existing Armenia-Iran highway to Azerbaijan.

“Instead of deepening cooperation with Iran, Armenia’s capitulant authorities ceded the only road connecting Armenia and Iran to Azerbaijan, and there is no new [alternative] road,” the expert said.

Armenia-EU Readmission Agreement’s annual implementation highly appreciated at Joint Committee’s session

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 17:26,

YEREVAN, JULY 14, ARMENPRESS. The Armenia-EU Joint Readmission Committee held its 8th session on July 14.

From the Armenian side, the session was attended by representatives of the Department of Return and Reintegration of the Migration Service, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Passport and Visa Department of the Police and the border troops of the National Security Service, the Migration Service said.

The meeting was held online.

The Co-Chair of the Committee, Head of the Migration Service of Armenia Armen Ghazaryan highly valued the cooperation with the EU partners in the field of readmission, as well as EU’s support to Armenia’s planned institutional reforms in migration management field, also within the frames of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement.

“The expert, technical and financial support that we get from the European Union is really important for us, because in the context of reforms we move on the path of digitization of processes”, he said, introducing the single electronic platform workpermit.am, that was launched on January 1 this year for providing foreigners with employment-based residence status, as well as presenting the effective operation of the readmission management electronic system since 2019.

The Committee Co-Chair, Deputy Head of the Irregular Migration and Return Policy Unit, European Commission Mauro Gagliardi in his turn highly appreciated Armenia’s performance and constructiveness within the frames of the partnership in the field of readmission. “Currently, we are working on a third assessment report about readmission cooperation with non-EU states. Armenia’s figures in the previous reports have been quite impressive”, Mauro Gagliardi said.

Council of Armenian Parliament puts into circulation draft decision on stripping opposition MPs of mandate

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 15:51,

YEREVAN, JULY 11, ARMENPRESS. The Council of the National Assembly of Armenia put into circulation a draft decision which envisages applying to the Constitutional Court on stripping members of opposition “Hayastan” and “I have an Honor” factions of mandates, the Parliament’s press service said.

According to the draft decision, the list of MPs does not include lawmakers Taguhi Tovmasyan and Ishkhan Zakaryan, who were elected to the Parliament with the quota of “I have an Honor” faction.

Earlier Ishkhan Zakaryan announced leaving “I have an Honor” faction.

By the way, the list does not include also the name of Martun Grigoryan, who received a parliamentary mandate after Artur Vanetsyan resigned on June 30. Grigoryan is included in the “I have honor” faction.

U.S. Congresswoman calls for State Department report documenting reasons for providing military aid to Azerbaijan

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 12:11, 6 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 6, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Congresswoman Jackie Speier (D-CA) introduced an ANCA-backed amendment to the FY2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) calling for a State Department report which documents the reasons behind the Biden Administration’s waiver of Section 907 restrictions on U.S. aid to Azerbaijan and whether that aid has undermined the Artsakh peace process, ANCA reports.

Amendment #992 is co-sponsored by Representatives Judy Chu (D-CA), Frank Pallone Jr. (D-NJ), and Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA).

“The ANCA is leading a grassroots effort to secure additional co-sponsors prior to next week’s House Rules Committee consideration of the amendment.

NDAA amendments ruled “in order” by the House Rules Committee will be voted on by the full U.S. House”, the ANCA said.  

U.S. President Joe Biden has, yet again, waived Section 907 restrictions on U.S. aid to Azerbaijan, clearing the way for continued U.S. assistance to the corrupt, anti-Armenian Aliyev regime.

Section 907, enacted in 1992, establishes statutory restrictions on U.S. assistance to the Government of Azerbaijan “until the President determines, and so reports to the Congress, that the Government of Azerbaijan is taking demonstrable steps to cease all blockades and other offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.” Congress included a Section 907 waiver in the FY2002 Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act. U.S. presidents – Republican and Democrat – have waived Section 907 annually ever since.




Delegation of Armenia visits Georgia to deepen cooperation

Georgia Online
July 9 2022

The delegation of the Republic of Armenia, led by the Minister of Finance Tigran Khachatryan and the Chairman of the State Revenue Committee Rustam Badasian, visited Georgia.

ByMarcin Kentacky

The delegation of the Republic of Armenia, led by the Minister of Finance Tigran Khachatryan and the Chairman of the State Revenue Committee Rustam Badasian, visited Georgia.

The purpose of the visit was to deepen mutual cooperation, to share experience in the field of public finance management, accounting, reporting and audit supervision, as well as in tax and customs directions, and as a result, to increase the efficiency of the respective services of both countries.

The members of the delegation met with the Minister of Finance of Georgia, Lasha Khutsishvili and the head of the revenue service of the Ministry of Finance, Levan Kakawa.

The extended meeting was attended by the deputies of the Minister of Finance and the Head of the Revenue Service, and the heads of various departments from the Georgian side.

The parties reviewed issues of cooperation between the two countries. The guests got acquainted with macroeconomic policy issues in the direction of budget transparency, as well as reforms implemented by Georgia in recent years in the tax and customs sphere.

Within the framework of the visit, the Head of the Revenue Service of the Ministry of Finance of Georgia, Levan Kakava, and the Chairman of the State Revenue Committee of the Republic of Armenia, Rustam Badasyan, signed the protocol “On the full implementation of the preliminary electronic system of data exchange”. 

The mentioned law allows the parties the opportunity to provide advance information exchange on cargo and vehicles moving between the borders of the two countries. Implementation of the protocol will facilitate effective cooperation between customs administrations, enforcement of security requirements and legal trade.

Electronic exchange of information in operative mode will significantly simplify customs formalities and increase the efficiency of control measures, both at customs checkpoints and in economic zones of clearance.