Criminal cases launched after bomb threat in Armenian, Belarus embassies in Moscow

 News.am, Armenia
Jan 9 2022

The buildings were examined and no explosive devices or explosives were found…

Police officers opened criminal cases after anonymous reports with threats to blow up the embassies of Armenia and Belarus in Moscow, if the troops of these countries are not withdrawn from the territory of Kazakhstan, a law enforcement source reported.

On January 7, unknown persons sent letters threatening an explosion to the e-mail of the embassies of Armenia and Belarus. They demanded that the troops of the countries be withdrawn from the territory of Kazakhstan. The buildings were examined and no explosive devices or explosives were found.

Unknown senders send bomb threat e-mails to Armenian, Belarussian Embassies in Moscow

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 15:05, 8 January, 2022

YEREVAN, JANUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. The Embassies of Armenia and Belarus in Moscow, Russia, received e-mails threatening a bomb attack yesterday, TASS reports.

In the e-mails unknown people were demanding that the two countries withdraw their troops from the territory of Kazakhstan.

According to TASS, the Embassy buildings were examined, no explosive devices have been found.

On January 2, protests sparked in several cities of Kazakhstan. In several days, they escalated into mass riots and assaults at the bodies of authority in many cities. Thousands of people were injured, and there were casualties. President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev asked the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) for assistance. CSTO peacekeepers have already commenced their mission in Kazakhstan. Armenia sent 100 peacekeepers to Kazakhstan as part of the CSTO mission.




Armenia deploys 70 soldiers to Kazakhstan as part of CSTO peacekeepers


Kazakhstan – Jan 6 2022

AKIPRESS.COM – The Armenian military are deployed to Kazakhstan as part of the CSTO peacekeeping forces, Sputnik Armenia reports.

Some 70 soldiers will be deployed as part of the CSTO to protect the strategic facilities amid mass protests in Kazakhstan.

The collective peacekeeping forces may include special military, police and civilian personnel and forces sent by the CSTO countries. Russia’s contingent includes a unit of airborne troops.

Asbarez: Armenian, Turkish Envoys to Meet on January 14 in Moscow

Special envoys to navigated Armenia-Turkey normalization from left, Ruben Rubinyan and Serdar Kilic

Special envoys appointed by Ankara and Yerevan to negotiate the normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey are scheduled to meet in Moscow on January 14, Armenia’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Vahan Hunanyan reported on Wednesday.

Armenian announced last week that it had appointed the chairman of the parliament’s foreign affairs committee, Ruben Rubinyan as its special envoy. Rubinyan is a close ally of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and a leader of his Civil Contract party.

Turkey announced last month that its special envoy will be its former Ambassador to the United States, the notorious Armenian Genocide denier Serdar Kilic.

During a December 24 press conference, Pashinyan said that Armenia is entering normalization talks with Turkey without any preconditions.

From the onset of this renewed process, Ankara has place preconditions on talks, among them calling on Armenia to recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity that includes Artsakh, as well as push for the opening of a corridor linking mainland Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan through Armenia. This is the so-called “Zangezur Corridor” scheme laid out by Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev.

Despite numerous rejection of such a corridor by Yerevan, the leaders of Turkey and Azerbaijan continue to tout it as an important aspect for opening up regional transit links.

Moscow, which has touted this new round of normalization talks, has gone on record to say that any opening of transit links in the region must respect the sovereignty and the territorial integrity of the country through which the roads and other transport links pass.

Earlier this week, the vice-president of Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development party (AKP) said that it was the wish of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that the issue of the Armenian Genocide be left to historians and called on other nations to end efforts to recognize the events of 1915 as Genocide.

Armenia ends ban on Turkish imports

EurasiaNet.org
Jan 4 2021
Joshua Kucera Jan 4, 2022
Armenia’s Alex Textiles. (photo: Economy Ministry of Armenia)

Armenia has ended its embargo of Turkish imports as the two sides move toward restoring relations.

The ban was imposed at the beginning of 2021 in the wake of Armenia’s military defeat to Azerbaijan, in which Turkey also played a pivotal role. The embargo was justified by “the open and evident promotion and support by Turkey of Azeri aggression” and aimed to “put an end to the financial proceeds and fiscal revenues of a country with clear hostile attitude,” the Armenian government said at the time in its official notice announcing the ban. It was to last only six months (the maximum term under the rules of the Eurasian Economic Union, of which Armenia is a member) and was extended once.

Now, however, the situation with Turkey has changed. The two sides have slowly begun to discuss restoring their relations, which were broken nearly 30 years ago during the first war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The two sides have appointed special envoys for normalizing relations, who are supposed to meet for the first time in Moscow in January. Armenian and Turkish airlines have started preparing for direct flights between the countries.

“Politically, the processes are proceeding positively,” Armenia’s Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan told a December 29 press conference. “From this perspective, the justification for continuing the ban is weakening.” At that point, though, a final decision had not been made, and Kerobyan said that “there are differing opinions within the government.”

The next day, the ministry formally announced the end of the ban, citing reasons including inflation and difficulties for Armenian businesses that rely on Turkish products.

In 2021, the import of Turkish goods was only a tenth of what it was before the ban, the ministry reported. (The ban did not affect raw materials.) In 2020, about 5 percent of Armenia’s imports came from Turkey, mostly consumer goods, especially clothing. Meanwhile, the exports represented a minuscule fraction of Turkey’s total exports: $872,000 out of Turkey’s total of $170 billion exported in 2020.

Despite some modest successes, however, the ban wasn’t given enough time to let Armenian businesses develop to the point where they could replace Turkish products, Armenian businesspeople complained.

“This is not something that happens in one day or one year,” Hasmik Rashoyan, the head of a company representing several Turkish brands, told RFE/RL. The Economy Ministry had placed hopes on replacing Turkish imports with Chinese, but that proved to be difficult, Rashoyan said.

“Small or medium businessmen can’t go to China and bring back a bag with goods,” she said. “Businesspeople dealing with China ran into huge problems, because the entire world has huge problems with logistics particularly with China … we had to wait in line.”

The director of the window and door company Tiral-Plast, Ashot Gasparyan, told RFE/RL that he wasn’t able to replace the Turkish products he was not able to import. Russian equivalents were twice as expensive and not as high quality, he said. “Trade restrictions never result in anything good, whatever the motivation.”

Meanwhile, there were widespread reports that Turkish consumer products were making it through in spite of the ban. Imports from other Eurasian Union countries aren’t subject to customs controls, making it easy to reimport Turkish products from third countries.

“Economically, unfortunately this ban led to a situation where Turkish products were entering Armenia through different ways, because carrying out customs administration and control is practically impossible, and this simply led to prices of clothes, household items and other products in Armenia to grow, because these products are going through more complicated ways,” Babken Tunyan, the deputy chair of the Economic Affairs Committee of Armenia’s parliament, told the news agency Armenpress. “Meaning, the objective we’d initially set politically doesn’t serve its purpose.”

In his press conference, Kerobyan cited the devaluation of the Turkish currency as another justification for dropping the ban; the lira has lost roughly half its value over the last year making Turkish products still more attractive. Azerbaijanis have been flocking to Igdir, in far eastern Turkey on the border with Nakhchivan, and are “buying everything they can get their hands on,” Azerbaijani news site Haqqin reported.

“If we look at this issue from a patriotic perspective, what matters is: Why is there demand for Turkish products in Armenia?” Tunyan asked. “If we were to compare with the situation we had during the 44-day war when everyone was boycotting Turkish products, now we must understand why people are again willing to buy Turkish products. If there is demand for some product, that product will find its market and will reach its consumer, be it in [circuitous] ways or at higher costs. That’s why it’s not right to artificially do something. If we put aside the emotional part, we must evaluate its appropriateness from an economic perspective,” Tunyan said.

 

Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at Eurasianet, and author of .

Armenia’s new Israel envoy speaks 10 languages

PanArmenian, Armenia
Dec 29 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenia’s new ambassador to Israel Arman Akopian speaks 10 languages, including Hebrew, Latin and Coptic, according to his LinkedIn bio.

Akopian is multilingual – UN certified in English, French and Arabic; native speaker of Armenian and Russian; fluent in Hebrew; excellent command of Latin, Aramaic and Coptic; advancing in Portuguese.

He is a career diplomat with 30 years of experience in international relations, international security, international humanitarian cooperation and human rights, as well as 31 years of experience in academic research and professorship, with a PhD in Semitic philology.

Akopian has introduced Hebrew and Syriac/Aramaic studies to the University of Yerevan, Armenia, as well as authored numerous papers and three major books: “Modern Hebrew”, “Classical Syriac” and “Introduction to Aramaic and Syriac Studies”.

Russian PM sends New Year greetings to PM Pashinyan

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 16:02,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Russia Mikhail Mishustin congratulated Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan on the upcoming New Year and Christmas holidays, the Armenian Prime Minister’s Office said.

In a telegram sent to Pashinyan, Mishustin noted that in 2021 the Russian-Armenian relations based on friendship, good-neighborliness and strategic partnership have continued developing, and the trade-economic and investment cooperation are being expanded, while inter-regional and business ties are strengthening.

“I am sure that in 2022 joint efforts by our governments will ensure further progress of practical partnership. We will continue creating favorable conditions as part of the Eurasian Economic Union for the implementation of promising projects and integration initiatives. This is entirely in the interests of the Russian Federation and the Republic of Armenia,” Mishustin said, wishing good health and happiness to PM Pashinyan and his family, and peace and prosperity to the Armenian people.

Joaquin Capparos named Coach of the Year

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 12:14,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. The head coach of Armenia’s national football team Joaquin Caparros was named “Best Coach of the Year” for the second consecutive time.

The Football Federation of Armenia announced the voting results for the Best Coach of the Year 2021 category, with Caparros garnering 90 points.

FC Ararat Armenia’s Dmitry Gunko came in second with 54 points, while FC Ararat’s Vardan Bichakhchyan received 45 points.

Greek, Cypriot and Armenian forces complete Special Precision Snipers 2021 joint training

Dec 20 2021
by ATHENS BUREAU

A Special Precision Sniper (ESEA) joint training was carried from 6-7 December 2021 in Cyprus with the participation of forces from the Expedition Administration in the framework of the Tripartite Cooperation Program between Cyprus, Greece and Armenia.

The purpose of the joint training was to increase combat capability in the organisation, design and execution of ESEA missions.

In particular, the subjects of the training include the regular use of snipers, shots fired from medium and long distances, operational shots based on hypothetical scenarios and execution of Regular Exercise After Troops (TAMS), under the name “ESEA – 2021”.

The participation of Cypriot National Guard snipers in co-training gives the opportunity for gaining additional experiences and contributes to the increase of the operational possibilities of the special operations teams.

In addition, in combination with the implementation of the Tripartite Cooperation Program between Greece, Cyprus and Armenia, they reflect the excellent cooperation between the Armed Forces of the three countries.

https://greekcitytimes.com/2021/12/20/greek-cypriot-armenian-forces/

Artsakh Prosecutor General’s office releases a video revealing the lie of the Azerbaijani side

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 25 2021

On December 3, 2021, Seyran Sargsyan, a resident of Chartar settlement of the Martuni district of Artsakh was killed by Azerbaijani military. As the Prosecutor General’s office of the Artsakh Republic reports, the Azerbaijani side earlier issued false claims that Seyran Sargsyan had been neutralized near their positions when allegedly trying to attack the Azerbaijani post. 

“The investigatory and procedural actions conducted within the criminal case prove that Seyran Sargsyan was killed by a long-range shot, after which the Azerbaijani servicemen removed his body from the neutral zone and moved to their military post. This is proved by the examination of the footage recorded by video surveillance systems installed in the area,” the Prosecutor General’s Office said. 

It is noted that the circumstances for the latest criminal cases reiterate the truth that the Azerbaijani military posts located near the civilian settlements in Artsakh pose an immediate and real danger for the  peaceful life of the locals in their communities as well as their other vital rights.