Armenian acting PM slams ARF

News.am, Armenia
Nov 27 2018
Armenian acting PM slams ARF Armenian acting PM slams ARF

17:23, 27.11.2018
                  

YEREVAN. – The supply of weapons continues in a due course, said Armenian Acting PM Nikol Pashinyan addressing to the residents of Vanadzor on Tuesday.

His remarks came commenting on ARF Bureau representative Hrant Markarian’s statement that weapons have not been supplied to Armenia since May.

“Firstly, I would like to disappoint the ARF Bureau representative: the supply of weapons continues in a due course, according to the plan,” Pashinyan said assuring that both the Armed Forces and the Armenian people, despite the ARF and RPA representatives, are ready to fully defend their homeland.

Asbarez: Congressional Leaders Recognized by ELAC at D.C. Event

Members of the ANCA-WR staff and ANCA Burbank with Representative Lucille Roybal-Allard

MONTEREY PARK, Calif.—East Los Angeles College (ELAC) and the ELAC Foundation recognized Members of Congress Nanette Diaz Barragán, Judy Chu, Lucille Roybal- Allard, Jimmy Gomez, Linda T. Sánchez, and Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis for their participation in the Washington D.C. Gateway Internship Program (WGIP) during a reception on October 30.

This last summer, Congress members Nanette Diaz Barragán, Judy Chu, Lucille Roybal-Allard, Jimmy Gomez, Linda T. Sánchez each hosted a WGIP participant this summer and have served as strong advocates for the program.  The ELAC Foundation’s Washington D.C. Gateway Internship Program (WGIP) offers East Los Angeles College students an all-inclusive summer internship opportunity in an effort to promote civic engagement and foster leadership. The WGIP provides students with an opportunity to participate in the legislative, political, and administrative process in Washington D.C. The summer internship has become a shining example to our students and to the communities we serve of the quality of care we have in creating comprehensive students who are civically engaged in our communities.

Dr. Armond Aghakanian, Director of Development and Alumni and Corporate Relations at ELAC and member of the Burbank Unified School District Board of Education, addressing the attendees at the reception.

The Armenian National Committee of America is a partner with the ELAC Foundation to further collaborate and foster relations between the organization’s programs. In August of 2017, participants of ANCA’s Leo Sarkisian Internship Program and Hovig Apo Saghdejian Capital Gateway as well as the ELAC Washington Hilda Solis Internship Program met up at the ANCA headquarters in Washington D.C. and discussed their experiences and opportunities for future cooperation at a networking dinner celebrating public service. The meeting allowed the interns the opportunity to network, collaborate, sharing ideas on developing their professional and personal identities and become better advocates in assisting each other’s respective underrepresented communities.

“This program reinforces East Los Angeles College’s commitment of empowering students to expand their individual potential outside of the classroom. The stories of the interns are truly inspiring and strengthen ELAC Foundation’s mission of transforming lives. I am proud to continue the partnership with the Armenian National Committee of America,” said East Los Angeles College President Marvin Martinez.

“The ANCA-WR is a proud partner of the ELAC Foundation and looks forward to working together to promote student involvement in public service,” said ANCA-WR Government Relations Coordinator Serob Abrahamian who was present at the reception.

Established in 1986 and named in memory of the late ANCA Eastern U.S. community leader who spearheaded Armenian American grassroots advocacy for more than four decades, the ANCA Leo Sarkisian Internship program now has hundreds of alumni across the world, spreading the message of truth and justice for the Armenian Genocide, freedom for Artsakh, and a secure, prosperous, and democratic Armenian homeland.

Launched in 2003, the ANCA Hovig Apo Saghdejian Capital Gateway Program helps secure permanent employment and professional internships in Washington, DC for young Armenian American professionals and students. Through the years, the ANCA has developed many relationships in and around Capitol Hill and identified a wide range of opportunities in the Washington, DC area. The CGP utilizes these resources and contacts to help candidates identify and secure jobs that fit their interests and needs.

Antilias – THE MEETING OF THE JOINT ASSEMBLY OF THE GREAT HOUSE OF Cilicia Catholicosuthean West Armenians in Antilias Province

Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
PO Box : 70 317 Antelias – LEBANON
Tel: (+961-4) 410 001 / 3
Fax: (+961-4) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]



BIG THE HOUSE Cilicia CATHOLIC CHURCH WESTERN ARMENIAN MEETING THE MEETING ANTILIAS TO THE STATE IN

Thursday, 29 November: 2018-in, chaired by N:.S:.Oh.T:.T:. Aram: A:. to the Catholicosand chaired by Yeruand Pampukian, Big At home of Cilicia Catholicos Western Armenian of the commission the meeting place had in the Capital of Antilias:

Working meeting in the process widely were discussed done the works in private spelling related guide: Some changes back, remember guide shall to be sent to the commission Diaspora անդամներուն՝ to receive for to them the point of view։The same the guide as well shall to be installed of the Catholic Church to the website on, so that linguists, teachers, intellectuals and: Western Armenian expert nationals can transfer to the commission their the views.


The meeting also examined this work is vocational along the way our of the people to the children to provide the possibilities:

To the meeting at the end, His Highness The Patriarch emphasized, whether opposite our faced difficulties, Big At home of Cilicia Catholicos Western Armenian protection this the job shall to be continued, because Western Armenian Diaspora in of Armenian preservation important from the crows one does make up:


Communication & Information Department

Water price may be raised in Armenia

ARKA, Armenia
Nov 20 2018

YEREVAN, November 20. /ARKA/. The Public Services Regulatory Committee of Armenia is conducting public discussions to raise water prices for consumers. 

Veolia Jur, the sole water distributor and sewerage operator in Armenia, which is a subsidiary of France’s Veolia Generale des Eaux, has applied to the Public Services Regulatory Committee of Armenia to increase water prices.  

In its application, the company proposes to raise the price for drinking water from the present AMD 191,414 per one cubic meter to AMD 205,125 (VAT included). 

The price-making process is impacted by changes in retail sales volumes, inflation, the electricity price and other indicators. 

In accordance with the concession management program, the company had to operate with AMD 186 per one cubic meter in 2018, in 2019 the price is stipulated at AMD 194.4 and in 2020 at 202.8. 
After the peaks to AMD 2012.4 in 2023, it will start going down until it reaches AMD 129.6 per one cubic meter in 2031. 

The Armenian regulator has considered the company’s request, conducted its own monitoring, taking into account all factors, and now proposes to set the price for drinking water at AMD 202,272, which is lower than the price proposed by the company by AMD 2,853. 

The price for the company’s retail services, sewerage and waste water depuration is AMD 191,414 (VAT included) from January 1, 2018. –0—-

Vigen Sargsyan offers his services to Pashinyan

  • 09.11.2018
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  • Armenia:
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Former Minister of Defense Vigen Sargsyan, who will lead the RPA list in the extraordinary parliamentary elections, made another post.


“Pashinyan needs a strong opposition in the parliament like air, first of all, to face the inevitable international pressure on him over the Karabakh issue. 


Parliamentary diplomacy is also a powerful foreign policy tool. And in matters of security and defense, it is simply necessary to search for cross-party, consensus decisions and solutions. This is possible only through debate and interaction with a constructive and experienced team,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

Iran Sanctions Herald Energy Trouble for Caucasus Nations

Lobe Log
Nov 10 2018
    
Oil fields near Baku (Juraj Kamenicky via Shutterstock)

by David O’Byrne

The resumption of wide-ranging American sanctions on Iran promises economic uncertainty for the Islamic Republic’s neighbors in the Caucasus: Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia.

Washington’s goal of reducing Iran’s oil exports to zero will not directly impact any of three Caucasus states, as none of them imports Iranian crude. All three, however, have to various extents relied on Iran for natural gas, and stand to be affected – if only by uncertainty until the exact scope of the sanctions becomes clearer.

U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton recently visited all three countries to try to shore up support for Washington’s efforts to isolate Tehran, though his results were inconclusive. When Washington imposed the new round of sanctions on November 5 it exempted eight countries, including neighboring Turkey, but none of the Caucasus states were spared.

As a major exporter of both crude oil and natural gas, and a sometime importer of Iranian gas, Azerbaijan’s position is most complex.

Azerbaijan shares long land and maritime borders with Iran, as well as ownership of a number of undeveloped Caspian oil and gas fields subject to a joint development agreement signed in March this year.

Development of those fields is now unlikely to proceed, but other joint ventures have advanced beyond the point where even Washington can impose a halt.

Azerbaijan’s main gas field, Shah Deniz, is being developed by a consortium led by UK oil giant BP, but in which Iran’s national oil company, NIOC, holds a 10 percent stake.

Shah Deniz is currently the only source of gas for the long-planned, EU-backed Southern Gas Corridor (SGC), aimed at lessening Europe’s dependence on Russian energy.

Already in August, Washington made the position of Shah Deniz and the SGC project clear when the Treasury Department granted a permanent waiver from Iran-related sanctions for “the development of natural gas and the construction and operation of a pipeline to transport natural gas from Azerbaijan to Turkey and Europe.”

That concession means that neither BP, the Azerbaijani state oil company SOCAR, nor the other three shareholders will face sanctions related to that project.

Azerbaijan also stands potentially to benefit from any increase in global oil prices caused by the halting of Iranian exports. That uncertainty also would lead to an increase in natural gas prices, which are for the most part indexed to oil prices.

“Azerbaijan may well reap some secondary benefits from U.S. sanctions on Iran, since it stands to gain if oil prices increase as a result of heightened tensions in the Persian Gulf,” Caspian energy analyst and Atlantic Council fellow John Roberts told Eurasianet, though he cautioned that any potential benefits are unpredictable as they rely on factors beyond Baku’s control.

Roberts added that Azerbaijan’s position is further complicated by its position as an importer of natural gas from Iran.

Azerbaijan imports small volumes of Iranian gas into its exclave of Nakhchivan for local consumption. Also, in recent years, gas from Turkmenistan has transited via Iran into mainland Azerbaijan to supplement its own production and to meet export commitments to Georgia, which is expected to import around 2.7 billion cubic meters of gas from Azerbaijan this year.

SOCAR spokesman Ibrahim Ahmadov told Eurasianet that the company’s gas imports via Iran have now stopped thanks to increased domestic production.

“A big part of the imported gas was used to fill our gas storage during summer which is then re-exported in winter when there is higher demand,” Ahmadov said. With more than 3 billion cubic meters currently in storage, and further imports due from Russia before the end of the year, SOCAR doesn’t anticipate shortages. “There should be no problems with the gas supply in Georgia,” Ahmadov said.

Sandwiched between Iran and Armenia, and with a tiny outlet to Turkey, Nakhchivan’s geography limits its alternatives.

An agreement with Ankara for a pipeline link to bring gas into Nakhchivan from Turkey was signed in 2010, but to date no pipeline has been laid, leaving the exclave still dependent directly on swap arrangements with Iran.

Such barter deals would not necessarily put Baku in breach of the U.S. sanctions. Ahmadov confirmed that SOCAR is “not planning any payment-based transactions with Iran in the near future.”

If Azerbaijan’s gas exports to Georgia will indeed be unaffected, then Georgia – which with its Black Sea coast has no need to import Iranian petroleum products – should be little troubled by the U.S. sanctions.

Few Options for Armenia

The same, though, cannot be said for Armenia, whose landlocked geography and regional political isolation leave it few options.

With few natural resources of its own, and still getting over 40 percent of its power supply from the aging Metsamor nuclear power plant, Armenia has become increasingly dependent on imported gas to meet its energy needs.

The bulk of Armenia’s gas is imported from Russia (via Georgia), but Yerevan also imported about 400 million cubic meters of gas from Iran in 2017, and sends Iran power in exchange. In late 2017 an agreement was announced for Armenia to boost Iran gas imports by up to 25 percent, and to increase power exports by a similar amount.

The status of that agreement and of existing Iranian gas exports to Armenia is currently unclear.

On November 6, Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson Anna A. Naghdalyan tweeted that her ministry was closely monitoring developments. “A comprehensive examination of the effects the new sanctions will have on Armenia is ongoing,” she said. She did not respond by press time to queries from Eurasianet.

Armenia’s position is further complicated by the fact that much of its gas pipeline network is owned by Russia’s Gazprom. The two have long bickered over the price Gazprom charges for the gas it supplies.

Forcing Yerevan to abandon Iranian imports will thus leave it more dependent on Russia, and in a far weaker bargaining position.

David O’Byrne is an Istanbul-based journalist who covers energy. Reprinted, with permission, from Eurasianet.

Armenian Human Rights Defender informs about excessive workload in his office

Arminfo, Armenia
Nov 3 2018
Armenian Human Rights Defender informs about excessive workload in his office

Yerevan November 3

Tatevik Shahunyan. The Office of the Human Rights Defender has never been so overloaded before. Armenian Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan stated this at a joint meeting of the Standing Committee on Financial and Legal Affairs and Protection of Human Rights and the Standing Committee on Financial-Credit and Budgetary Affairs of the National Assembly on November 3. He stressed that the workload is significant.

”If to compare with the situation in previous years, now there are months when there are 10 times more complaints than before.

In general, in 2016 we received 5,113 complaints, in 2017 – 6417, and for 10 months of this year, this number is already about 10,000.

In addition, visits to places of detention increased almost 3-fold, ” Arman Tatoyan said.

Sasun Khachatryan’s comments after today’s government session

Head of the Special Investigative Service Sasun Khachatryan told reporters after today’s government session that the involvement of the army in the March 1 events is more than substantiated, without the announcement of the Special Investigation Service yesterday.

According to him, there are some doubts, but an investigation is being carried out in that direction, and they will inform about the results.

The head of the Special Investigation Service also informed that Vahagn Harutyunyan, who was involved in the March 1 case, had called to the investigators and said he could tell his whereabouts.

Sasun Khachatryan informed that there are doubts about who had instructed to change the proofs, but he did not mention any names. The investigation is underway.

Sports: Gibraltar enjoy historic first win over Armenia in UEFA Nations League after anthem blunder

The Daily Mail, UK
Oct 14 2018
  • The national anthem of Liechtenstein was mistakingly played before kickoff 
  • The Armenian FA has apologised to officials from the Gibraltar FA in Yerevan
  • Joseph Chipolina’s 50th-minute penalty secured first competitive victory  

Reuters

Gibraltar won a competitive international for the first time with a 1-0 Nations League victory over Armenia in Yerevan on Saturday after being mistaken for Liechtenstein.

The tiny British overseas territory beat an Armenia team including Arsenal’s Henrikh Mkhitaryan thanks to Joseph Chipolina’s 50th-minute penalty.

It was the first time they had won a match other than a friendly since joining UEFA in 2013 and their players danced with joy at the final whistle.


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-6273563/Gibraltar-enjoy-historic-win-Armenia-UEFA-Nations-League-anthem-blunder.html


16-year-old Turkish border trespasser released by Armenia

Category
Region

The 16-year-old Turkish boy who was arrested by Armenian authorities for illegally crossing the Armenian-Turkish border has been released, foreign ministry spokesperson Tigran Balayan told ARMENPRESS.

“We had announced this yesterday also, and I confirmed at today’s briefing that the father had arrived to take the boy,” he said.

Earlier the foreign ministry had said that the criminal case against Umur Ali Uzmen, 16, was dropped on humanitarian grounds. The foreign ministry had notified Turkey about the development through diplomatic channels. “Umut Ali Ozmen’s return to Turkey will be arranged upon receiving a respective reaction,” the ministry had said.

Specific details weren’t immediately clear.