Russian research institute ROSDORNII interested in Armenia’s road construction market

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 11:51, 4 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure of Armenia Kristine Ghalechyan received the delegation led by General Director of the Russian Road Scientific Research Institute ROSDORNII, Stanislav Naboko, the ministry reports.

The meeting was also attended by the Executive Director of the Road Department Foundation of Armenia Stepan Machyan.

The cooperation opportunities were discussed during the meeting. The sides considered the collaboration in road construction, exchange of experience, training of specialists as prospective areas.

Agreement was reached to specify the concrete cooperation directions during the future discussions and use the existing potential to develop the field.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Newspaper: Opportunity created for change of power in Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Dec 4 2021

YEREVAN. – Hraparak daily of Armenia writes: On the last day of the campaign for the LSG [local self-government] elections set for December 5, the candidates of the authorities held final rallies in virtually all communities. And although we were receiving reports throughout the day that the candidates are using administrative levers to bring in people, the photos of the rallies were not impressive at all.

Today is the day of [election] silence, campaigning is prohibited by the Electoral Code. The results will become clear tomorrow.

These LSG elections differ from the previous ones in that as a result of them there will be enlargement of communities [in Armenia], and the elected community leaders will have greater influence in the provinces, so this is also an opportunity to carry out a change of power at the local level.


Armenian customs officers already on duty at Goris-Kapan road

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 11:31, 1 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. Customs officers of the State Revenue Committee are already engaged in service on the Goris-Kapan road, the State Revenue Committee Chairman Rustam Badasyan told reporters.

“They haven’t yet started performing customs functions itself, this will happen when a relevant vehicle will cross the Armenian border and there’ll be a need for customs control. Now certain works are ongoing to ensure additional working conditions for customs officers,” Badasyan said.

Earlier in November, the Armenian authorities said that the Azerbaijani authorities have set up customs checkpoints in a part of the Goris-Kapan road.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 23-11-21

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 17:57,

YEREVAN, 23 NOVEMBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 23 November, USD exchange rate is up by 0.63 drams to 477.15 drams. EUR exchange rate is down by 0.29 drams to 537.18 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate is down by 0.06 drams to 6.37 drams. GBP exchange rate is down by 1.54 drams to 638.28 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price is down by 12,696.64 drams to 15816.29 drams. Silver price is down by 27,479.81 drams to 27859.53 drams. Platinum price is down by 15,492.29 drams to 379.72 drams.

Armenia announces ceasefire after Azerbaijan border clashes

Al-Jazeera, Qatar
Nov 16 2021

The Armenian defence ministry says the ceasefire was brokered by Russia, after clashes that sparked fears of a new flare-up.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have reached a ceasefire, mediated by Russia, ending hostilities that erupted earlier in the day along their border, the defence ministry in Yerevan said.

The clashes that Armenia said left one of its soldiers dead and a dozen others captured on Tuesday sparked fears of another flare-up a year after the two sides fought a war over the disputed mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“Under the mediation of the Russian side, an agreement was reached to cease fire at Armenia’s eastern border from 18:30 (14:30 GMT). The situation has relatively stabilised,” the Armenian defence ministry said in a statement.

The Azerbaijan government did not immediately confirm the ceasefire.

Earlier, Armenia’s defence ministry reported fatalities and injuries among Armenian troops as a result of the fighting, adding that the number of casualties was being verified and that Yerevan had “lost control of two military positions”.

The ministry later said that 12 Armenian servicemen were captured by the Azerbaijani military.

Last year’s six-week armed conflict for control of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region killed more than 6,500 people and ended in November with a Russian-brokered truce.

Since last year’s war, the countries have reported occasional exchanges of fire along their shared border [File: Armenia’s government press service/AFP]Under the 2020 ceasefire agreement, Armenia ceded swaths of territory it had controlled for decades.

Earlier on Tuesday, the two sides traded accusations of the other side initiating fighting along their shared border.

Azerbaijan’s defence ministry said: “Armenia’s armed forces committed a large-scale provocation at the state border at 11:00 am (GMT 07:00).

“Armenian troops attacked Azerbaijani positions in the districts of Kelbajar and Lachin,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that two Azerbaijani troops were wounded in the clashes.

Azerbaijani troops “stopped the enemy’s advance, surrounded and detained Armenian servicemen,” it added.

Armenia’s defence ministry said Azerbaijani forces “attempted to break through the Armenia’s state border, at the eastern direction” before being repelled by Armenian troops.

Officials from the United Nations, European Union and Russia had urged the two sides to halt the fighting.

Russia has a military base in Armenia as well as a peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Since last year’s war, the countries have reported occasional exchanges of fire along their shared border, sparking fears of another flare-up in their territorial dispute.

On Sunday, they traded accusations of opening fire at their border near Karabakh.

On Saturday, Nagorno-Karabakh authorities said the only road connecting Armenia to the separatist enclave – the Lachin corridor – was briefly closed due to an incident between the two sides.

Ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, and the ensuing conflict killed about 30,000 people.

 

Violent Flare-Up A Reminder Of Need For Long-Term Azerbaijan-Armenia Peace – OpEd

Nov 19 2021

By Arab News

By Luke Coffey*

The one-year anniversary of the end of the Second Karabakh War between Armenia and Azerbaijan passed last week. After much indifference, dithering and disinterest from the international community, Russia finally brokered a November 2020 ceasefire agreement that stopped the fighting. The end result saw Baku liberating much of its land previously occupied by Armenia, the establishment of a small Russian peacekeeping force in the region, and a fragile situation along the Azerbaijani-Armenian border.

Since the ceasefire, much of this border has not been demarcated. So, it is not surprising that, earlier this week, renewed fighting broke out along the border. Although official details are scarce, media reports suggest that several soldiers from each side were killed, with many more wounded, in intense clashes.

It is not clear who instigated this most recent round of fighting. Renewed fighting would probably mean a bigger Russian peacekeeping presence in the region. As one of its client states, a bigger Russian presence would benefit Armenia.

Ever since last year’s war, Armenia has wanted to drag Russia into the fighting on its behalf. Many Armenians were left disappointed during the Second Karabakh War when the Collective Security Treaty Organization failed to intervene on their behalf. The CSTO is an intergovernmental security organization led by Russia. Armenia is a member and Azerbaijan is not. Despite Armenian pressure, the CSTO remained out of last year’s war. Since the fighting was taking place inside the internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan, the organization said it had no obligation to assist Armenia. Now that Armenia claims its territory has been attacked during the recent clashes, it has requested CSTO assistance once again.

It is equally unclear what motivation Azerbaijan would have for a resumption of hostilities with Armenia right now. It is not in Baku’s interest to have the Russian peacekeeping force on its territory any longer than needed. More clashes along the undefined border give Moscow further justification to maintain its peacekeeping force in Azerbaijan.

Also, most of Baku’s military objectives, namely the return of occupied regions to its control, was achieved during the war last year. Since the end of hostilities, Azerbaijan has focused on rebuilding and repopulating its newly liberated territory. It is also trying to attract international investors to the region. Obviously, any breakout of hostilities could complicate, if not derail, these efforts.

Azerbaijan also has a significant security dilemma on its southern border with Iran, which makes it unlikely to want to increase military tensions with Armenia right now. The relationship between Azerbaijan and Iran has become fraught in recent years. Tehran has criticized Baku’s good relations with Israel. Meanwhile, Iran’s cozy relationship with Armenia is a constant source of concern for Azerbaijan. Last month, Iran conducted large-scale and provocative military exercises along its border with Azerbaijan, in a section that was under Armenian occupation until last year.

These maneuvers rattled policymakers in Baku.

In addition to properly delineating the Azerbaijani-Armenian border, there are two other areas of contention from the agreement that need to be addressed urgently if there is ever going to be an enduring peace.

The first issue is the establishment of the Zangezur corridor. For years, Baku has been desperate to have a direct land connection with its Nakhchivan enclave. Due to the frozen conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia prevented Azerbaijan from using its land or airspace to reach Nakhchivan. However, according to Article 9 of last year’s ceasefire agreement: “All economic and transport connections in the region shall be unblocked. The Republic of Armenia shall guarantee the security of transport connections between the western regions of the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic.”

A year later, no progress has been made on this issue and this has irked Baku.

Another issue that continues to be a big problem pertains to Article 4 of the ceasefire agreement. This states that Russian peacekeeping forces will be deployed to a rump section of Nagorno-Karabakh where a small Armenian minority resides, “concurrently with the withdrawal of the Armenian troops.” While Russian peacekeepers have arrived in the region, not all Armenian and Armenian-backed forces have withdrawn. Baku is reasonably frustrated with the lack of progress to implement this aspect of the peace agreement.

This border flare-up between Azerbaijan and Armenia is one more geopolitical challenge the broader European region is currently facing. There is a crippling political crisis in Georgia over the ongoing detention and treatment of former President Mikheil Saakashvili. Belarus has created a migrant crisis on the border with Poland, Lithuania and Latvia. Eastern Europe is facing a major energy crisis as winter approaches. Last week, Europe reported almost 2 million COVID-19 cases. Unbelievably, this is the most cases in a single week in Europe since the pandemic started. The last thing that the region needs is a new breakout of major fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The warning lights are flashing. The South Caucasus is on the brink of even more blood being shed. But with renewed diplomatic energy, conflict can be avoided. In the past, Armenians and Azeris traded with each other and lived peacefully together. Now is the time for the international community to build an enduring peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

• Luke Coffey is Director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy at the Heritage Foundation.

https://www.eurasiareview.com/19112021-violent-flare-up-a-reminder-of-need-for-long-term-azerbaijan-armenia-peace-oped/

​COVID-19 Pushes Armenian Families Into Poverty The government provided several one-time assistance payments in 2020

The Good Men Project
Nov 18 2021

COVID-19 Pushes Armenian Families Into Poverty The government provided several one-time assistance payments in 2020

by Global Voices  

By Chaikhana.media

Artyom Avetisyan, a father of two from Gyumri, Armenia, lost his job when the pandemic struck. Over the past 19 months, his family of four has skirted homelessness and struggled to pay for the medication and treatment his seven-year-old son, Felix, depends on.Before COVID-19 struck Armenia, Avetisyan says a steady stream of construction and day labor work kept his family fed and housed.“I had a lot [of work] before the virus but once the virus spread, I stopped getting calls for work,” he said. “I had a [monthly] income of about 150,000 drams (just over 300 US dollars), which my family lost.”While Avetisyan earned below Armenian’s median wage of 400 US dollars a month before Covid struck, the sudden loss of employment has affected his children’s lives on every level. Today, Avetisyan and his wife, Anna Davtyan, worry they will lose their apartment because they can no longer afford the 35,000-dram (75 US dollars) monthly rent.

The family has also struggled to pay for Felix’s medical therapy and treatments. Felix, a third-grader, has cerebral palsy. Before the pandemic, the family was able to pay for his treatments (a total of 152,000 drams a month, about 307 US dollars), in part due to the generosity of local charities and philanthropists.

But raising the necessary funds has been impossible since the pandemic started. Today the family is limited to the monthly disability assistance Felix receives from the state (roughly 50 US dollars).

While the lack of income is a constant concern, the family is also struggling to make sure Felix and his older sister, nine-year-old Donara, don’t fall behind in school after missing months of online classes since the family didn’t have a computer or smartphone.

The Avetisyan family is far from alone in the struggle to survive following the economic collapse caused by the pandemic. An estimated 720,000 Armenians slipped into poverty due to the pandemic ($5.50 2011 PPP poverty line).  The Armenian economy contracted by eight percent in 2020 due to COVID-19 and the lockdown measures that were imposed to slow the spread of the virus, according to the World Bank.

“The short-term impacts of COVID-19 on household labor and nonlabor incomes could substantially increase poverty rates in Armenia,” the World Bank noted in a report published in February 2021.

The report found the poverty rate could increase from 33.6 percent to 46.6 percent due to the pandemic, with the number of people living in extreme poverty increasing from one percent to seven percent.  “The economic shocks from COVID-19 could impoverish 370,000 Armenians. Over 720,000 (one in four) Armenians could suffer downward mobility, shifting to a lower-welfare group in 2020,” the report stated.

The Armenian government provided several one-time payments to help people survive the pandemic lockdown in 2020.

The assistance was allocated to specific groups that met certain criteria: each family received a single payment of 26,500 drams (53 US dollars) per child; the officially employed received 68,000 drams (136 US dollars) as compensation during one month of the lockdown; and business owners in hard-hit sectors, like retail and tourism, were given 10 percent of their 2019 fourth-quarter returns and their employees received the equivalent of half of one month’s pay.

As Avetisyan worked as a day laborer, he did not qualify for unemployment assistance. His family did receive the one-time payment allocated for children.

But months after that assistance ended, Avetisyan is still unemployed and has limited options until the economy recovers and he can find a job.

His situation is not uncommon for the Shirak region, where Gyumri is located. Even before the pandemic, the region had one of the highest poverty rates in Armenia — 48.4 percent lived below the poverty line according to the World Bank.

The situation is particularly dire for children in the region, where an estimated one out of every two children lives in poverty.

The pandemic has made things worse, as travel restrictions made it impossible for people to travel to Russia for work.

In Maralik, the Kirakosyan family lost their only source of income during the pandemic when the roads to Russia closed. For 7-year-old Davit, the lack of resources meant he couldn’t join online classes and he fell behind. Now a second-grader, he still doesn’t know all the letters of the alphabet and cannot read or write.

Vardan Ikilikyan, the head of Azatan, one of the largest communities in the Shirak region, says that although technically it is possible to get to Russia now, the burden of PCR tests and high travel costs effectively means people are stuck at home.

“About 30 percent of the population of Azatan go abroad for work, mainly to Yakutsk, Moscow, Sakhalin, Vladivostok, where most work in construction. Due to the coronavirus, the workers here were unable to leave,” he said, estimating that around 300 families were affected in Azatan alone.

This post was previously published on Globalvoices.org and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

U.S. congressman condemns Azerbaijan’s aggressive actions against Armenia


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 21:15,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. U.S. congressman Jim Costa condemned Azerbaijan’s military actions against the sovereign territory of Armenia, ARMENPRESS reports he made a note on his Facebook page.

“I condemn Azerbaijan’s aggressive actions against Armenia. I urge the State Department to help de-escalate this situation before more lives are lost. America must stand against human rights violations”, he wrote.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 10-11-21

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 17:29,

YEREVAN, 10 NOVEMBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 10 November, USD exchange rate down by 0.08 drams to 475.68 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 0.90 drams to 550.74 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.03 drams to 6.73 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 3.06 drams to 643.88 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 71.02 drams to 27945.75 drams. Silver price up by 1.39 drams to 372.78 drams. Platinum price up by 73.75 drams to 16211.07 drams.

Armenia bloc will hold a rally in Freedom Square

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 19:52, 3 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 3, ARMENPRESS. Armenia bloc will hold a rally in the Freedom Square on November 8 at 18:00, ARMENPRESS reports, the bloc informed in a statement.

In the statement of the alliance is mentioned that “it is necessary to form national resistance and reach a change of power which is the precondition of getting our country out of this condition, ensuring dignified peace, overcoming the socio-economic crisis.”