Armenia opposition activist gets 10.5-year prison sentence (PHOTOS)

News.am, Armenia
Armenia opposition activist gets 10.5-year prison sentence (PHOTOS) Armenia opposition activist gets 10.5-year prison sentence (PHOTOS)

11:35, 20.03.2018

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s opposition Founding Parliament initiative leader Jirair Sefilian has been sentenced to 10.5 years in prison, the Armenian News-NEWS.am reporter informed from the court in capital city Yerevan.

The prosecution, however, had motioned for an 11-year sentence for Sefilian.

Jirair Sefilian was charged with preparing to organize mass unrests and to seize buildings and constructions, with the use of weapons.

Azeri activists protest against Aliyev regime in Washington rally (video)

Category
World

Azeri activists held a protest rally March 14 outside the Azerbaijani Embassy in Washington D.C..

The activists were protesting against the dictatorial regime of Azeri President Ilham Aliyev, the Azerbaijani Azadliq news agency reported. “This is our first step, but this will continue. Our goal is to make our voices hear in Azerbaijan,” one of the activists said.

The protesters were wearing masks and holding posters saying “Resist Aliyev”, “Freedom to the people of Azerbaijan”, “Same Dictator Different Century” “Protect Human Rights”.

The activists also addressed the hundreds of political prisoners currently jailed in Azerbaijan, demanding Baku to immediately release them. The activists, who have fled Azerbaijan due to oppression, criticized the state-sanctioned pressures against their families back home and demanded the resignation of Aliyev’s government.

“In addition of Ilgar Mamedov, Afghan Mukhtarli, Giyas Mamedov and Gyozal Bayramli, there are more than 200 political prisoners in Azerbaijan. As people living abroad who love their country, we too express our discontent and demand the release of all political prisoners [in Azerbaijan],” they said.

Voice of America asked the protesters why they are wearing masks, and the activists said it is a precaution in order to protect their families in Azerbaijan.

Lebanese businesses could take advantage of Armenia’s preferential trade regimes – PM

Public Radio of Armenia
11:02, 13 Mar 2018

On an official visit to Lebanon, Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan had a meeting with Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun.

Thankful for the warm welcome, Karen Karapetyan said he was happy to be in Lebanon. “No more than two weeks ago we had the opportunity to exchange views on the whole spectrum of multifaceted relations between Armenia and Lebanon in Yerevan. We highly value the ongoing close contacts and high-level political dialogue between friendly Lebanon and Armenia. As I mentioned at our previous meeting, we must tap as much as possible the economic potential inherent in our bilateral relations,” the Prime Minister pointed out.

Welcoming Karen Karapetyan to his country, the President of Lebanon expressed confidence that the visit would contribute to the further development of the Armenian-Lebanese friendly relations. Michel Aoun expressed readiness to back the two governments’ initiatives and support the implementation of joint programs.

While discussing issues related to the expansion of trade and economic ties, the interlocutors touched upon the possibilities for Lebanese businesses to take advantage of Armenia’s preferential trade regimes and the prospects for promoting cooperation in different spheres.

The Prime Minister noted that the imperative of catalyzing the economic component calls for combining the competitive assets of Armenia and Lebanon. In this context, he stressed that Armenia’s economy boasts good growth dynamics that will be maintained over the coming years. The Premier said he had earlier  discussed with his Lebanese counterpart the possibility of establishing an Armenian-Lebanese venture fund to support businesses interested in Lebanon and Armenia.

The sides highlighted the role of the Armenian community as a bridge between the two countries that can help strengthens bilateral relations.

Sports: Arsenal fans delighted as Henrikh Mkhitaryan scores first Gunners goal and continues his impressive Europa League record

The Sun, UK
March 9 2018

Seven of his last nine goals have come in the competition to give Arsene Wenger some respite

HENRIKH MKHITARYAN loves scoring in the Europa League.

The Armenian, 29, scored his first Arsenal goal at a crucial time as the Gunners went 1-0 ahead at the San Siro.

ALBERTO LINGRIA
Seven of Henrikh Mkhitaryan’s last nine goals have come in the Europa League

Seven of his last nine goals in all competitions have come in the Europa League.

And Mkhitaryan has contributed towards 15 strikes in the competition since the start of the 2015-16 season – more than any other player.

Arsene Wenger’s side headed into their last-16 tie under massive pressure to get a result following four straight defeats.

And they got off to the perfect with just 15 minutes in the clock.

Mkhitaryan danced his way into the box and his deflected effort left Gianluigi Donnarumma with no chance in the AC Milan goal.

Getty Images – Getty
Henrikh Mkhitaryan scored his first goal for the Gunners

It was only a few days ago that their high-profile January signing was being slated in Arsenal’s dismal run of form.

But football fans have short memories, and it appears he is back in the good books with supporters.


Azerbaijani press: MP: Confession of Armenian lobby – a signal to establish military tribunal

2 March 2018 17:04 (UTC+04:00)

Baku, Azerbaijan, March 2

By Elchin Mehdiyev – Trend:

Confession by one of the leaders of the Armenian lobby on the Khojaly genocide during hearings on the 30th anniversary of the Sumgait events at the California State Senate, organized by the radical Armenian lobby in the US, is a serious signal for international community that a military tribunal should be set up for Armenia, said Azerbaijani MP Elman Nasirov.

Nasirov said that following the hearings, young members of the Azerbaijani community in California made harsh statements and exposed the false information they heard during the hearings.

“They left both the senators and representatives of the Armenian lobby in a difficult situation. They asked why at a time when Sumgait events are discussed, no one talks about the Khojaly tragedy, more than one million refugees and internally displaced persons who were exiled from their native lands as a result of Armenia’s aggression against Azerbaijan, why nobody from the Azerbaijani community was invited to the hearings, and why were the issues viewed from a unilateral approach,” he said.

The MP stressed that facing such serious arguments, pro-Armenian senators and representatives of the Armenian lobby fell into difficult situation.

“In such a desperate situation, Armenian Assembly’s Western Region Director Mihran Toumajan confessed. So far, the Armenian leadership and their patrons have tried to show that Armenia was not involved in the Khojaly tragedy, Armenia did not participate in this tragedy and so on. However, this time one of the main figures of the Armenian lobby was forced to recognize that the Khojaly genocide was committed by Armenia. Saying “we have created a corridor for people to leave Khojaly, but some of them left and others stayed, and that is why such a tragedy happened”, he confessed that the Armenian armed forces committed a genocide in Khojaly,” said Nasirov.

“This confession is very important. If today the representatives of the Armenian lobby in the United States recognize that they committed this genocide, then the international community must show its position on this issue. I think it is a serious signal for international community and international organizations to set up a military tribunal over Armenia,” he said.

Entertainment: Kanye West All Smiles After Supporting Armenian American Art Magnate

The Blast
March 2 2018
        

Kanye West showed a rare glimpse of utter delight after a night of rubbing elbows with one of the most powerful wheelers and dealers of fine art in the world.

West was leaving the Gagosian Art Gallery Thursday night in Beverly Hills, smiling ear to ear after checking out the colorful exhibit of artist Damien Hirst.

The Gagosian gallery is owned by famed Armenian American art dealer Larry Gagosian, who was once listed #1 on Forbes’ “Top Ten Art Dealers.”

Kanye has leaned into his newly acquired cultural heritage and shown lots of love for the Armenian community since joining the Kardashian family.  He even performed a free concert in the Armenian capital of Yerevan during a 2015 trip with Kim and the Kardashians.

Kanye’s clearly got lots to smile about lately, especially with the arrival of his new daughter, Chicago.  It’s been a remarkable turnaround for the rapper, who went through a dark time in 2016 when he was hospitalized.

It’s obvious family, and possibly his love for Kim’s heritage and culture, are putting the infamously ornery star in an extremely happy place.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/14/2018

                                        Wednesday, 
.S. Intelligence Chief Warns Of `Large-Scale' Fighting In Karabakh
U.S. -- National Intelligence Director Dan Coats speaks to reporters
after a swearing-in ceremony at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, March
16, 2017
The unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict could escalate into
"large-scale" fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces, the
U.S. director of national intelligence, Dan Coats, warned late on
Tuesday.
"Tension over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh could devolve
into a large-scale military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan,
which could draw in Russia to support its regional ally," Coats said
at the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee's annual hearing on
"Worldwide Threats."
"Both sides' reluctance to compromise, mounting domestic pressures,
Azerbaijan's steady military modernization, and Armenia's acquisition
of new Russian equipment sustain the risk of large-scale hostilities
in 2018," he added.
Russian military assistance to Armenia stems from a defense alliance
between the two countries. At the same Russia has been Azerbaijan's
leading supplier of weapons. Moscow and Baku signed arms deals worth
at least $4 billion in 2009-2011.
Armenian officials say those deals contributed to four-day hostilities
around Karabakh that broke out in April 2016 and left at least 180
soldiers from both sides dead. It was the worst fighting in the
conflict zone since a Russian-brokered truce stopped a full-scale
Armenian-Azerbaijani war in 1994.
Together with France, the United States and Russia have long been
spearheading international efforts to end the Karabakh
dispute. Diplomats from the three world powers called on the
conflicting sides on Sunday to take "additional steps" to reduce
tensions on the frontlines.
In a joint statement issued after their latest tour of the region, the
mediators also said Yerevan and Baku have expressed readiness to
continue "intensive" peace talks in the months ahead. The Armenian and
Azerbaijani presidents pledged to intensify the peace process when
they met in Geneva in October.
Coats mentioned Karabakh in the context of Russia's efforts to
maintain a strong influence on other ex-Soviet states. "The Kremlin
will seek to maintain and, where possible, expand its influence
throughout the former Soviet countries that it asserts are in its
self-described sphere of influence," said the U.S. intelligence chief.
Armenian President-In-Waiting Admits Public Skepticism
 . Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Presidential candidate Armen Sarkissian holds a copy of a
once popular video game during a visit to the Yerevan headquarters of
Synopsis Armenia company, .
Armen Sarkissian, the man widely expected to become Armenia's next
president in April, acknowledged on Wednesday that many citizens are
skeptical about his ability to achieve positive change in the country.
"There are different expectations," he said of his ongoing meetings
with Armenian politicians, business leaders, intellectuals as well as
ordinary Armenians. "A large part of the public has an inertia
thinking that that the president is someone who has a top-down
vertical power and can answer all questions. There is also the other
extreme, with people saying that the presidential powers are so modest
that the president cannot do anything."
"Part [of the public] says change is necessary and it will be good if
you can change something within the bounds of your powers," Sarkissian
told reporters. "But there is also a large segment that doesn't
believe in change, regardless of who the president of the republic
will be. And for me this is the most unfortunate phenomenon because
change can occur only if the society or citizens feel like [real]
citizens."
"I do understand the reasons for that," he said. "But I don't think
that is enough of a reason for people to think that nothing can be
done."
"The biggest challenge in our country is to ensure that people again
have hopes and faith," added the former scholar who had briefly served
as Armenia's prime minister and is currently its ambassador to
Britain. He made clear that he believes economic and other
improvements in the country can only be achieved "step by step."
Armenia - Presidential candidate Armen Sarkissian (R) meets with IT
executives at the Yerevan headquarters of Synopsis Armenia company, 14
February 2018.
Sarkissian was offered by the outgoing President Serzh Sarkisian (no
relation) last month to become the next head of state to be elected by
the Armenian parliament on March 2. The former premier, who has lived
in Britain for nearly three decades, said he will decide whether to
accept the offer after holding consultations.
With Armenia switching to a parliamentary system of government, the
next president of the republic will have few executive
powers. Sarkissian has downplayed this fact in his public statements.
Sarkisian said on Wednesday that he will meet with the outgoing
president and announce his decision "in the coming days."
The presidential candidate made the comments during a visit to the
Armenian subsidiary of the U.S. company Synopsis, one of the world's
leading microchip designers which employs hundreds of engineers in
Armenia. Speaking to young Synopsis Armenia staff, he confirmed
reports that he was one of the authors of Tetris, a world-famous video
game designed in the Soviet Union in the 1980s. He presented them with
a copy of Wordtris, a Tetris offshoot released in 1992.
A physicist and mathematician by education, Sarkissian worked at the
Cambridge University before being first appointed as ambassador in
London in 1991.
Police Urged To Investigate Yerevan Council Brawl
 . Anush Muradian
Armenia - Yerkir Tsirani party leader Zaruhi Postanjian argues with
police officers moments after a violent incident at Yerevan's
municipal council, 13 Februay 2018.
The Armenian police have received differing complaints about a bitter
altercation between opposition and pro-government members of Yerevan's
municipal council which turned violent on Tuesday.
The incident occurred during a regular session of the council chaired
by Mayor Taron Markarian. Two female councilors affiliated with the
opposition Yerkir Tsirani party were confronted by their
pro-government colleagues when they tried to give Markarian glass
containers filled with sewage collected from a damaged sewer pipe in
the city's Nubarashen district. They called the foul-smelling
substance a "gift" from Nubarashen residents.
The two sides scuffled and shouted insults at each other. Yerkir
Tsirani's Marina Khachatrian, slapped a male councilor representing
the ruling Republican Party (HHK) after being jostled by him. The
latter slapped her in response. Khachatrian and two other Yerkir
Tsirani members, including the party leader Zaruhi Postanjian, were
then physically forced to leave the council auditorium.
Postanjian sent a "crime report" to the police later on Tuesday. The
police also received a separate complaint from an unnamed official
from the municipal administration.
Armenia - Pro-government members of Yerevan's municipal council wrest
sewage containers from Yerkir Tsirani party's Marina Khachatrian, 13
February 2018.
A national police spokesman told RFE/RL's Armenian service
(Azatutyun.am) on Wednesday that the police department of Yerevan's
central administrative district is "preparing materials" to decide
whether to launch an official criminal investigation. No formal
criminal case has been opened yet, said the official.
"I think that law-enforcement bodies are failing to perform their
duties," said Postanjian. The outspoken opposition politician insisted
that the incident constituted a violent assault on herself and her two
associates that tried to approach the mayor.
For her part, Khachatrian said that she slapped the HHK's Edmond
Kirakosian because he groped her during the fracas. Neither Kirakosian
nor another HHK councilor, who pulled her hair, could be reached for
comment.
Markarian and his aides blamed Yerkir Tsirani for the unprecedented
violence. A statement released by the Mayor's Office accused the
opposition party of trying to discredit the municipal assembly with
actions "not befitting sane persons."
Postanjian also said on Wednesday that Markarian has brought more
police officers into the municipality building and banned a Yerkir
Tsirani car from using an adjacent parking lot. "We consider this to
be a continuation of yesterday's violence," she charged.
Israeli Parliament Rejects Armenian Genocide Bill
 . Artyom Chernamorian
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L), delivers his speech
next to Israeli President Reuven Rivlin (R), at the opening of the
winter session of the Knesset (Parliament) in Jerusalem, Israel, 23
October 2017.
Israel's parliament voted down on Wednesday an opposition motion to
officially recognize the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey.
The Knesset rejected the bill introduced by Yair Lapid, the leader of
the Yesh Atid party, by 41 votes to 28 after a first-ever debate on
the sensitive issue held on the Israeli parliament floor.
The bill describes the World War One-era extermination of some 1.5
million Armenians as genocide and calls for its official remembrance
in Israel.
Lapid made a case for the passage of the measure in a 3-minute speech
that preceded the vote. He said an official Israeli recognition of the
genocide is "a matter of conscience for Jews and non-Jews." Also, he
said, the mass killings and deportations of Armenians inspired Adolf
Hitler to mastermind the Jewish Holocaust.
However, Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely voiced the Israeli
government's opposition to the measure during the heated
discussion. She cited the "complexity" of the issue and its
"diplomatic repercussions."
Successive Israeli governments have opposed Armenian genocide
recognition lest it antagonize Turkey, a former security partner of
Israel. Some Israeli politicians have openly challenged this policy in
recent years. The Knesset speaker, Yuli Edelstein, called the Armenian
massacres a genocide and urged the Jewish state to recognize it in
2015.
The Knesset debate on the genocide issue coincided with a visit to
Israel by a delegation of Armenian parliamentarians. The five
lawmakers representing various Armenian political groups were offered
to attend the debate but declined to do that.
Press Review
"Zhoghovurd" condemns pro-government male members of Yerevan's
municipal council for assaulting their female colleagues from the
opposition Yerkir Tsirani party during Tuesday's session of the
legislature. The paper says Mayor Taron Markarian criticized not this
violence but his loyalists' failure to act more quickly against the
three Yerkir Tsirani councilors that tried to "present" him with
sewage collected from a damaged sewer pipe in the capital. "The
behavior of HHK-affiliated female members of the council was the most
disgusting," it says. "In their interviews, they justified the
beatings of their female colleagues."
"Aravot" says, by contrast, that both sides are to blame for the
embarrassing incident. The paper says the Yerkir Tsirani councilors
were well aware what kind of a reaction their actions would provoke
from thuggish HHK members. "These Republican members of the council
don't know and will not know any other way of making a point and
proving their arguments except throwing punches," editorializes the
paper. In that sense, it says tartly, Zaruhi Postanjian and the two
other members of Yerkir Tsirani made a correct political
"calculation."
"Had there been no violence we would have been able to soberly discuss
what Yerkir Tsirani councilor Marina Khachatrian did," writes
"Hraparak." "We might have criticized or mocked that action and
reminded the opposition that the [Yerevan] Council of Elders is not a
circus and that they can't solve issues by spraying it with foul
smell. Nothing kept councilors from raising the problem and achieving
its solution. After all, the problem of cleaning up sewage in
Nubarashen [district] is not about ousting the Republicans from
power." The paper suggests that Yerkir Tsirani deliberately provoked
the incident to gain "the status of victims." At the same time it
strongly disapproves of the HHK councilors' violent reaction.
"Haykakan Zhamanak" looks into a more than 7 percent rise in the
amount of various taxes collected by the Armenian authorities last
year. "This is certainly not a bad indicator, especially given that
this increase in tax revenue was not accompanied by a harassment of
businesses. At least there have been no reports of such systematic
abuses. However, when we examine tax collection from separate
taxpayers the picture is not that rosy." While acknowledging a
"certain" shrinkage of the informal sector of the Armenian economy,
the paper sees no "qualitative" economic growth in Armenia.
(Tigran Avetisian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

The Failed Istanbul Armenian Patriarchate

Archbishop Aram Ateshian (left) has been creating obstacles for Istanbul Patriarchate Lcoum Tenens Archbishop Karekin Bekdjian (right)

BY RAFFI BEDROSYAN

The never-ending manipulations and power games at the Istanbul Patriarchate took a turn for the worse this week.

In 2008, the Istanbul Patriarch Archbishop Mesrob Mutafyan had suffered an incurable dementia disease, incapacitating him into a vegetative state. The cleric next in line at the Patriarchate, Archbishop Aram Ateshian was appointed the Acting Patriarch at that time, with the expectations that unless Patriarch Mutafyan recovers miraculously, elections should be held to decide a successor. For the past nine years, Acting Patriarch Ateshian resisted all attempts of the Istanbul Armenian community, other Patriarchate clerics and even the Echmiadzin Catholicosate, to hold the elections. Finally in March 2017, Arch. Ateshian relented the Religious Council of the Patriarchate to start the election process, which elected Archbishop Bekjian from the Diocese of Germany as ‘locum tenens’, a caretaker cleric until a new Patriarch is elected to replace the ailing Patriarch Mutafyan and the Acting Patriarch Ateshian. Both Ateshian and Bekdjian were supposed to be candidates in the elections, along with four other eligible clerics.

But now, following a meeting with the Turkish Minister of Interior and a letter received from the Istanbul Governor, the Religious Council of the Istanbul Patriarchate has declared that there will be no elections and Arch. Ateshian will continue serving as Acting Patriarch until Patriarch Mutafyan dies. Arch. Bekdjian has resigned and is on his way back to Germany. How is all this possible?

It is possible because Arch. Ateshian is a favourite of the Turkish government and the Turkish government returns the favour by calling null and void the election process and the selection of the ‘so called or alleged’ locum tenens caretaker Arch. Bekjian to oversee the election process, even though these are all spelled out in the legal authority of the Istanbul Patriarchate and the Lausanne Treaty defining the legal rights of the minorities to freely elect their religious leaders. But however the government, or more appropriately, the leader of the government President Erdogan interprets the laws, that is what counts. Arch. Ateshian is ‘proud to call President Erdogan as my brother’. Arch. Ateshian was a fierce critic of Germany for passing the Armenian Genocide resolution in June 2016. Arch. Ateshian wished Erdogan success in starting the Afrin invasion in Syria, killing Kurdish (and some Armenian) civilians. It is natural that the Turkish government will interfere to the benefit of an Armenian religious leader so much in line with its priorities.

I have had two occasions to communicate directly with Arch. Ateshian. First was when I planned to give a concert at the newly reconstructed Surp Giragos Armenian Church in Diyarbakir, during the Centenial Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide in April 2015. As part of the concert program, in addition to my piano performance of Armenian composers, I had proposed to invite a well-known Armenian and a Kurdish opera singer to present songs of Komitas, a noted victim of the Genocide. Arch. Ateshian opposed the idea of the concert in ‘his church’ and suggested that I hold the concert somewhere else in Diyarbakir. At the end, the concert did take place in the church of course, in the presence of more than a thousand attendees, including elected officials, local Kurds and Turks, but most significantly, hundreds of hidden Armenians. Instead of the two singers, I ended up playing the Komitas works in the church myself, so meaningful and symbolic, hundred years after the Genocide. The other occasion was when my friends and I approached him about the subject of the thousands of abandoned Armenian churches in Turkey. For a few years in the early 2010’s, there was a window of opportunity by an apparently liberalized Turkish government to allow return and reconstruction of Armenian churches. The reconstruction of Surp Giragos Church is one example, even though the situation has dramatically worsened in the past two years. But earlier on, there was some willingness by the government to return or restore Armenian churches, as our cultural heritage in Anatolia. We even had discussions with government officials on specific churches in Van, Sivas and Malatya.

Unfortunately, Arch. Ateshian turned down these attempts by stating:’ I (meaning the Patriarchate) cannot even take care of the Armenian churches in Istanbul, what do I need to have more churches in Anatolia?’ I am not sure whether to call this line of thinking shortsightedness or toeing the line in the eyes of the state. But my intention is not to blame Arch. Ateshian or the Turkish government that sees him as their man. I would like to focus on the attitude of the Istanbul Armenian community and more specifically, its non-religious leaders, who are the elected leaders of dozens of charitable organizations attached to the Istanbul Armenian churches, schools and hospitals. The charitable organizations are all supposed to be under the control of the Istanbul Patriarchate and act in unison, with the wealthier foundations owning large assets supposed to help the less fortunate foundations. But this rarely happens, and as long as there is no interference from the Patriarchate, most of the leaders, with a few exceptions, treat the charitable organizations as their own personal empire without much consideration for the overall benefit of the community. The community itself is deeply divided, apathetic or unable to voice any protest, except for a few young intellectuals gathered around the Agos daily and a few progressive NGOs.

After what happened this week at the Patriarchate, one would expect the community to organize and take some protest actions against the unilateral takeover by Arch. Ateshian. A possible protest action could have been boycotting the church where religious services were to be conducted by Arch. Ateshian and instead attend church services at other Armenian churches. But the church where he delivered mass was full this Sunday and there was only one lonely Armenian lawyer lady among the crowd who dared protest, by singing aloud a prayer “Der Voghormya.” Upon instructions from Arch. Ateshian, she was immediately removed from the church by Turkish police officers and taken to the police station.

As the saying goes, people deserve the leaders they have. While we lament and complain and protest against unfair treatment of Armenians by other nations, we should also recognize our own weaknesses.

First Armenian organization registered in REX system for exporters

ARKA, Armenia
Feb 7 2018

YEREVAN, February 7. /ARKA/. An Armenian company has become the first organization to get registration in Registered Exporter System – REX, operating as part of the European Union’s GSP+ trade preference scheme, and has received an appropriate certificate, the press office of the Armenian economic development and investments ministry reported on Tuesday.   

REX electronic system was introduced in Armenia in January 2018. 

Registration in the system allows exporting goods to the European Union under GSP+ scheme without a certificate on country of origin. 

Along with application of REX system, the certificate on country of origin may be provided within 12 months of transition to those exporters who have not registered in the system yet.  

The registration is carried out by the Armenian economic development and investments ministry for free. 
Armenia enjoys GSP+ preferences scheme from January 1, 2014. 

Formal membership of a country in 27 international conventions is almost enough to grant it GSP+ preferences.

Presidential candidate Armen Sargsyan meets with Armenian community of Milan, presents vision and ideas

Armenpress News Agency, Armenia
February 3, 2018 Saturday
Presidential candidate Armen Sargsyan meets with Armenian community of
Milan, presents vision and ideas
YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 3, ARMENPRESS. Armen Sargsyan, the Republican
Party’s nominee for the upcoming presidential election in Armenia, had
a meeting on February 2 with representatives of Armenian national and
spiritual establishments of Milan.
The Diocese of Italy told ARMENPRESS that the meeting took place in
the Hay Tun (Armenian Home) National Institution.
Armenian clergy, the Honorary Consul of Armenia in Milan Pietro
Kuchukyan, executives and representatives of various organizations,
such as the AGBU and the Youth Council of the Armenian Community of
Milan, attended the meeting.
Armen Sargsyan presented his vision on the future of Armenia, listened
to the participants’ views and ideas regarding the involvement of the
Diaspora in various programs of Armenia in the new administration
format – the parliamentary system.