Author: Frangulian Shushan
Female candidates running for president in Artsakh
Out of 14 candidates running for president in the Republic of Artsakh, two are females. They have shared about their expectation ahead of the nation-wide elections slated for April with Azdarar Tv programme.
“I am ready to assume the role of the head of the state. I am confident I will be able to work harder than any other previous leader. Furthermore, the Republic of Artsakh led by me will be the best place to live,” one of the candidates, Bella Lalayan, said.
Economist Kristine Balayan is the other female candidate nominated for the presidency.
US congressmen to send election observers to Artsakh
Several US Congress members have unveiled their intention to send representatives to Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) to observe the March 31 presidential and parliamentary elections in the country in response to an invitation by the Artsakh authorities.
Speaking to Voice of America’s Armenian service, Congresswoman Jackie Kanchelian-Speier said they are interested in the conduct of free and fair elections in Artsakh.
Azerbaijan, which does not recognize Nagorno-Karabakh, brands all the electoral processes in the country as a “political show in occupied territories.”
Jackie Kanchelian-Speier, who is of Armenian descent, is convinced that life in Artsakh will proceed as normal despite Azerbaijan’s position. She also highlighted the continuity of the ongoing democratization process in the country.
Congressman Frank Pallone’s senior legislative assistant James Johnson will be among the congressional staff members to observe the elections.
The legislator hailed all the previous ‘free, fair and transparent’ elections in Artsakh and expressed hope that they will be free this time as well.
Congressman Frank Pallone stressed the need for raising global awareness about the established democracy in Artsakh.
Despite a group of congressmen’s decision, the US Department of State has never recognized the elections in Karabakh.
Pashinyan indicates to Aliyev, ‘Regard that as a mutual task, Armenia and Artsakh are prepared’
“It has been thirty years that the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia are repeating the same thing. I don’t think that’s right. We repeat the same things every time. I am worried that the international community will grow tired of hearing the same things. I believe that it is important for us to push new ideas forward,” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said during the discussion panel on the Artsakh conflict at the Munich Security Conference. President of Azerbaijan had repeated the “Artsakh is Azerbaijan” statement, which Nikol Pashinyan had responded to.
“When I became Prime Minister as a result of the Velvet Revolution, I understood that it is not possible to resolve a conflict that lasted for thirty years in one or two steps. I thought that revolutions need to take place in order for the issue to be resolved, so I carried out small revolutions,” Nikol Pashinyan said. As far as what Pashinyan expects from the international community for the Artsakh issue, he emphasized, “I expect that the international community will say that the Artsakh conflict does not have a military resolution. If anyone thinks and says otherwise, I think that the people of Artsakh will respond that the conflict has already been resolved. I, however, think that we need lasting peace. Armenia does not represent Artsakh in the negotiations process, but Armenia and Artsakh are prepared to make efforts in order to ensure lasting peace in the region. This is not only my responsibility to my country, but to the region. I suggest that Aliyev regard this as a mutual task.”
President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, in regards to the possible role of the international community, initially claimed that his earlier statements were 100 percent factual and he called upon people to find that information in the appropriate documents on the Internet. “Armenia, unfortunately, is trying to find justification for what they did in Khojaly. Mutallibov said many times that he was not the one who said Khojaly was organized by Azeris.”
Speaking about his expectations of the international community, Aliyev gave the following message, “They need to explain to Armenia that Karabakh is Azerbaijan and it is not an independent country. Secondly, there needs to be more pressure against Armenia to carry out the resolution of the UN Security Council.”
Luiza Sukiasyan
Munich Security Conference 2020 kicks off: Armenian PM in attendance
17:40,
MUNICH, FEBRUARY 14, ARMENPRESS. The 56th Munich Security Conference launched on February 14.
Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan is also participating in the Conference, Armenpress correspondent reports from Munich. Pashinyan arrived at the hotel Bayerischer Hof, the venue of the Conference, which gathered global leaders.
The Munich Security Conference is an annual conference on international security policy which gathers several dozen heads of state and government, public, political figures, diplomats, security experts under one roof. This year’s Conference will focus on topics whether the EU countries are more closely cooperating in the defense field, whether the world is facing security challenges caused by climate change, etc.
The three-day Conference will host more than 500 delegates. Presidents, prime ministers, foreign and defense ministers from over 40 countries of the world will participate in the Conference. Among the participants are French President Emmanuel Macron, Prime Minister of Canada Justin Trudeau, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Russian and Iranian foreign ministers are expected to deliver remarks at the event.
On the sidelines of the Conference the Armenian PM will have several bilateral meetings with his foreign counterparts and other officials.
Armenian President Armen Sarkissian attended the 2019 Munich Security Conference and this year as well will participate in the opening of the Conference.
Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan
12 people hospitalized from Armenia airport test negative for coronavirus
PanARMENIAN.Net – 12 passengers who were hospitalized from Armenia‘s Zvartnots airport tested negative for the coronavirus, a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Health revealed in a Facebook post on Friday, February 7.
Alina Nikoghosyan’s comments came in response to media publications suggesting that “more than 10 citizens arrived from China with a high temperature and were immediately hospitalized.”
“Twenty tests were performed overall, all with a negative result,” Nikoghosyan said.
The death toll from the virus was at least 638 as of Thursday evening. All but two of the deaths were in mainland China, with one person succumbing in the Philippines and another in Hong Kong. More than 31,000 people have been infected with the virus worldwide, the vast majority of them in China.
RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/05/2020
Wednesday,
Tycoon Rebuked Over ‘Threat’
• Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- The national police headquarters in Yerevan, February 4, 2020.
A deputy chief of the Armenian police on Wednesday criticized a wealthy
businessman close to the country’s former leadership for an angry statement
which he made after being briefly detained in Yerevan on Tuesday.
The controversial businessman and former parliamentarian, Ruben Hayrapetian,
spent nearly three hours in police custody and was set free without charge. The
police said he was detained on suspicion of illegal arms possession.
Hayrapetian, who claims to own firearms legally, laughed off this explanation
after his release. He said the police action was part of government attempts to
intimidate him.
Speaking to journalists outside the national police headquarters, he also said:
“One day I will make them lie on the ground and wipe my feet on them.”
The remark prompted strong condemnations from political allies of Prime Minister
Nikol Pashinian. Andranik Kocharian, the pro-government chairman of the Armenian
parliament committee on defense and security, described it as a “blow” to the
police and the government.
“I don’t remember anyone daring to make such a statement under police walls
before,” Kocharian told reporters. He said that the police should have taken
strong action in response to what he called a threat voiced by Hayrapetian.
But Vartan Movsisian, a deputy chief of the national police, reacted more
cautiously to the controversial remark.
“I cannot evaluate at this point whether or not it was a threat,” said
Movsisian. “It may have been a mere emotional outburst. But such statements are
certainly not welcome regardless of who makes them.”
Movsisian also defended Hayrapetian’s detention, saying that the police did not
break any laws.
Citing similar “suspicions,” the police also detained several anti-government
activists last week. The latter denounced the police actions as politically
motivated.
Authorities Move To Replace High Court Judges Through Constitutional Changes
• Gayane Saribekian
Armenia -- Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian (C) reads out a ruling
on an appeal lodged by former President Robert Kocharian, Yerevan, September 4,
2019.
In a move denounced by the Armenian opposition, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s
My Step bloc has drafted constitutional changes that would dismiss seven of the
nine members of Armenia’s Constitutional Court locked in a bitter dispute with
the government.
The amendments were unveiled on Wednesday one day before an emergency session of
the Armenian parliament which will discuss a separate My Step bill limiting the
court’s powers.
They call for the replacement of the court’s embattled chairman, Hrayr
Tovmasian, and six other judges who were installed by the former Armenian
governments.
An explanatory note released by 37 co-sponsors of the proposed changes argues
that they are not covered by the 2015 constitutional changes envisaging shorter
tenures for new members of the country’s highest court. It also claims that the
court lacks “democratic legitimacy.”
“The three branches of government in Armenia were usurped by the former
authorities: [former Presidents] Serzh Sarkisian and Robert Kocharian and their
satellites,” said deputy parliament speaker Alen Simonian.
“The people of Armenia liberated the government and the National Assembly from
their claws and they are now going to liberate the judicial system as well,” he
added, referring to the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that toppled Sarkisian and
brought Pashinian to power.
Representatives of the two parliamentary opposition parties rejected the
proposed changes and questioned their legality, however.
“This path chosen by the authorities carries a great danger for the rule of law
in Armenia,” Edmon Marukian, the leader of the Bright Armenia Party (LHK), told
RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “It could set a bad precedent for any future
government to oust judges and handpick new ones in the same way.”
Marukian also warned that the authorities risk putting Armenia at odds with the
Council of Europe. “If they want to get Armenia in serious trouble and relegate
us to the level of Azerbaijan, which is criticized for similar problems, then it
means they … do not realize what dangers this decision is fraught with,” he said.
Tovmasian has faced in recent months growing government pressure to resign, with
the ruling political team accusing him of maintaining ties to the “corrupt
former regime” and impeding judicial reforms. Prosecutors charged him in late
December with abusing his powers when serving as justice minister from 2010-2014.
The Constitutional Court chairman rejects the accusations as politically
motivated. He said last week that he has no intention to resign.
Earlier in December, the parliament passed a government bill offering Tovmasian
and the six other Constitutional Court judges financial incentives to retire
before the end of their mandate. None of them has accepted the offer so far.
In a statement released on Monday, the president of the Council of Europe’s
Venice Commission, Gianni Buquicchio, warned against “any undue political or
personal pressure on the judges concerned.”
Speaking to reporters later in the day, Marukian said that the authorities are
planning to hold a referendum on the draft amendments to the constitution. He
deplored their unwillingness to have the Venice Commission examine the
amendments before such a vote.
The parliament may debate the amendments as early as on Thursday. The official
agenda of its extraordinary session, approved by the parliament leadership after
repeated delays on Wednesday evening, includes a package of other legal
amendments also drafted by the ruling bloc. They would allow the 132-member
National Assembly, in which My Step holds 88 seats, to bypass the Constitutional
Court to amend the constitution.
Under existing Armenian laws, the high court has to examine and validate any
constitutional changes before they can be put on a referendum or be passed by
the National Assembly.
Senior Armenian Official Held For Bribery
• Robert Zargarian
Armenia -- Vahagn Vermishian, head of the Urban Development Committee, speaks at
a news conference in Yerevan, July 1, 2019.
The head of the Armenian government’s Urban Development Committee, Vahagn
Vermishian, was arrested on Wednesday for allegedly taking bribes from real
estate developers.
The National Security Service (NSS) arrested Vermishian as well as two other
individuals hours after searching his office. NSS officers confiscated a
computer and documents kept there.
In an ensuing statement, the NSS said Vermishian has admitted receiving five
bribes, worth between 1 million drams ($2,100) and 2.5 million drams each, from
private construction firms that were given privileged treatment by various
government bodies in return. It said that the kickbacks were channeled into an
architectural firm which the official had set up and registered in a friend’s
name.
According to the NSS, Vermishian, who has headed the government agency since
March 2019, also received $5,000 in cash and $4,800 worth of construction
materials last October to secure a state award to the unnamed owner of several
construction firms. It was not immediately clear whether that businessman was
also taken into custody.
The high-profile arrest came nearly four months after Sarhat Petrosian, the
prominent head of the government’s Cadaster Committee, resigned in protest
against government policies on urban development. Petrosian hit out at
Vermishian and the previous head of the Urban Development Committee, Avetik
Eloyan, after tendering his resignation.
In particular, Petrosian claimed that Eloyan, who now works as an adviser to
Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian, has used his position to win lucrative
contracts for an architectural firm registered in his brother’s name in May 2019.
Avinian and Vermishian dismissed those claims at the time. The deputy prime
minister also denied that government regulation of urban development in Armenia
has “regressed” since the 2018 “Velvet Revolution.”
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 29-01-20
17:28, 29 January, 2020
YEREVAN, 29 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 29 January, USD exchange rate down by 0.29 drams to 478.58 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 1.90 drams to 526.53 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.10 drams to 7.65 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 3.92 drams to 622.87 drams.
The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.
Gold price вup by 156.22 drams to 24218.67 drams. Silver price вup by 5.61 drams to 276.58 drams. Platinum price down by 301.68 drams to 15109.74 drams.
Armenian PM highlights making efforts for creation of EAEU common energy and transportation markets
14:49,
YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan emphasized the importance of elimination of current barriers and restrictions in the Eurasian Economic Union (EAE) in his remarks at today’s session of the Eurasian Inter-Governmental Council in Almaty, Kazakhstan.
“This is our first meeting this year under the Belarusian chairmanship. We support the main integration directions recorded within the Belarusian presidency. In this regard I would like to emphasize the importance of eliminating the existing barriers and restrictions that undermine the formation of a common economic space. It’s also necessary to intensify efforts aimed at creating single EAEU energy and transportation markets based on non-discriminative approaches in the fields of price increase, tariffs, availability of services. The increase of efficiency of the EAEU bodies and the development of transportation and logistics infrastructures is also another direction which should be under our focus”, the Armenian PM said.
He added that once again the process of work on eliminating the barriers within the operation of the domestic market was also discussed. “Today we have made decisions regarding these barriers. Nevertheless, as I have stated repeatedly we believe that it is necessary to unite efforts to eliminate the current barriers and create conditions to rule out their repetition in the future. As for the 2025 Eurasian Integration Development Strategy directions, I would like to note that we attach a special importance to the final approval of this document based on the cooperation forms enshrined by the EAEU treaty”, Pashinyan said.
He added that Armenia traditionally is actively participating in and supporting the process of creating and implementing the EAEU digital agenda. The Prime Minister said the creation of ecosystem for digital transportation corridors will enable to reduce the distance between the consumer of goods, services, the producer and the seller. “This will greatly reduce the time of searching for optimal options and methods to deliver and transport the goods, making the market more effective in this respect”, Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan said.
Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan
Nikol Pashinyan ruled out possibility of returning to a semi-presidential system of governance in near future
ArmInfo. The last 20 years have shown that a semi-presidential system of governance is not the best option for Armenia. This was announced on January 25 at a press conference by Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan.
According to him, he was repeatedly advised to return to the semi-presidential system of government, but, in his opinion, it has one significant minus – almost all responsibility for what was happening lay with the prime minister, but the levers of power were concentrated in the hands of the president. And replacing the prime ministers, the head of state threw off responsibility. The prime minister said that, in his opinion, the head of state should not shift his responsibility to others. “The semi-presidential system is an irresponsible system of government. We should not have any semi- systems in our country. Either the system of government in the country should be parliamentary or presidential. It seems to me that the current system of government should not be changed until it becomes obvious cons. However, now, this model of government demonstrates its positive aspects, “Pashinyan emphasized.
The prime minister noted that the main goal of constitutional reforms is to change the country’s judicial system and ensure the rule of law and democratic values.
It should be noted that earlier the Armenian National Congress issued a statement urging Nikol Pashinyan to return to the semi-presidential system of government. The statement noted that otherwise, the current model of government will lead to a political crisis in Armenia.