Garo Paylan: Putin Made Erdogan Sit under the Statue of Catherine the Great who Symbolizes Russia’s Victory over the Ottomans

ArMedia
March 6 2020
 
 
Garo Paylan: Putin Made Erdogan Sit under the Statue of Catherine the Great who Symbolizes Russia’s Victory over the Ottomans
 
03.06.2020, 20:02
 EEU,  Region,  World
 
Armenia’s MP of the Turkish Parliament Garo Paylan criticized Turkish President Recep Erdogan over negotiations with Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Moscow.
 
“Erdogan suffered a great defeat in Russia, and Putin got everything he wanted. Moreover, Putin had Erdogan sit under the statue of Catherine the Great who symbolizes Russia’s victory over the Ottomans in 1878. What a shame,” wrote Paylan.
————–
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Garo Paylan – Karo Paylan

12 hours ago

Erdoğan suffered a great defeat in Russia.
Putin her istediğini aldı.
Yetmezmiş gibi, Erdoğan’ın ekibini Osmanlı’yı defalarca yenen Katerina heykelinin altına dizdi.
Rusya’nın 1878’deki Osmanlı’ya karşı zaferini betimleyen biblo ise Erdoğan’ın tam arkasındaydı.
What a disgrace!


 
 

PM Pashinyan receives representative of ARF Dashnaktsoutyun Party Bureau Hakob Ter-Khachatryan

PM Pashinyan receives representative of ARF Dashnaktsoutyun Party Bureau Hakob Ter- Khachatryan

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 20:49, 4 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 4, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan received representative of ARF Dashnaktsoutyun Party Bureau Hakob Ter-Khachatryan. Representative of Supreme Body of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutyun (ARF-D) Ishkhan Saghatelyan and High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs of Armenia Zareh Sinanyan were present at the meeting.

During the meeting the sides exchanged views on pan-Armenian and regional issues.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/28/2020

                                        Friday, 
Authorities Accused Of Foul Play Before Referendum
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- Gevorg Gorgisian of the opposition Bright Armenia Party at a news 
conference in Yerevan, May 13, 2019.
An opposition leader accused the Armenian authorities on Friday of using their 
administrative resources to try to win the upcoming referendum on their drive to 
replace most members of the country’s Constitutional Court.
“We are already receiving reports from various provinces that their governors 
are summoning village mayors and forcing them to ensure that a ‘Yes’ vote wins 
in their villages,” claimed Gevorg Gorgisian, a leading member of the opposition 
Bright Armenia Party (LHK).
Gorgisian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that the local community chiefs are 
told to “do everything” for that purpose. He refused, however, to name the 
“three or four provinces” whose governors are allegedly engaged in such foul 
play.
A senior representative of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step bloc 
dismissed the allegations, while challenging Gorgisian to substantiate them. 
“Such a thing is not possible,” said Vahagn Hovakimian.
“Let them show which governor or village mayor [is using administrative 
resources,]” added Hovakimian.
Armenia’s provincial and local community administrations are overseen by 
Minister for Local Government Suren Papikian. He is also the manager of My 
Step’s campaign for a “Yes” vote in the referendum scheduled for April 5.
Papikian insisted on Wednesday that the ruling political team will not use its 
government levers to secure around 650,000 votes needed for the adoption of 
constitutional amendments drafted by it.
“Let nobody, be it a city or village mayor, do the authorities such a 
disservice,” he told a news conference. “We don’t need that.”
“I hope that after making that appeal Mr. Papikian is not issuing other, 
confidential instructions to governors,” Gorgisian said in this regard.
Armenia’s former authorities routinely pressured public sector employees and 
exploited their administrative resources otherwise to win elections and 
referendums marred by fraud allegations.
EU Envoy Hopeful About Visa Liberalization Talks With Armenia
        • Anush Mkrtchian
Armenia -- European Union Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin speaks at a conference on 
judicial reform in Yerevan, September 27, 2019.
A senior European Union diplomat has expressed hope that the EU will start 
“soon” formal negotiations with Armenia on lifting its visa requirements for 
Armenian citizens.
EU leaders pledged to launch a “visa liberalization dialogue” with Yerevan at 
their Eastern Partnership summit with Armenia and five other former Soviet 
republics held in Brussels more than two years ago. The pledge followed the 
signing of a Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between the 
EU and Armenia.
Both the current and former Armenian governments have since pressed the 
27-nation bloc to set a date for the start of the dialogue.
Andrea Wiktorin, the head of the EU Delegation in Armenia, said late on Thursday 
that the European Commission acknowledges the Armenian authorities’ 
implementation of a 2013 agreement on “readmission” of Armenian illegal migrants 
seeking asylum in Europe.
“The Commission sees a possibility of starting such a dialogue,” she told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “But this is a decision that has to be made by all EU 
member states. We hope that we will soon reach the point where the member states 
agree to start the dialogue.”
Wiktorin cautioned at the same time that “several” European countries still have 
concerns about the large number of Armenian asylum seekers on their soil. “The 
challenge is to convince these EU member states,” she said.
Citing the “example of other countries,” the diplomat also said that visa 
liberalization dialogue could take “years” of preparation.
Tens of thousands of Armenians have emigrated to Europe for mainly economic 
reasons since the early 1990s. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stated in 
September that the number of such migrants has fallen considerably since the 
2018 “Velvet Revolution” that brought him to power.
Pashinian cited official EU statistics showing that there were 1,815 first-time 
Armenian asylum applicants in the EU in the first half of 2019, down from 2,475 
in the same period of 2018. The number of Armenia asylum seeks stood at 3,250 in 
the first half of 2017.
Tsarukian’s Party Avoids Cooperation With Referendum ‘No’ Campaign
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- Gagik Tsarukian and other deputies from his Prosperous Armenia Party 
attend a parliament session in Yerevan, July 9, 2019.
Businessman Gagik Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) appears to have 
refused to cooperate lawyers campaigning for a “no” vote in the upcoming 
referendum on a government proposal to oust most Constitutional Court judges.
The 61 lawyers critical of the Armenian government have been registered by the 
Central Election Commission as the sole “No” side in the referendum campaign. 
The official status allows them to have free airtime on state television and 
appoint two of the seven members of each precinct-level election commission that 
will be formed for the April 5 vote.
They thus need to recruit over 4,000 people ready to join those commissions, a 
difficult task for the mostly Yerevan-based lawyers.
Last week, the No campaign appealed to the BHK and three other major opposition 
parties to help fill its quotas with their members and supporters. The Bright 
Armenia (LHK), Republican and Dashnaktsutyun parties replied that their licensed 
members are free to take up the commission seats despite their calls for a 
boycott of what they describe as an unconstitutional referendum.
Ruben Melikian, a “No” campaign coordinator, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on 
Friday that the BHK has turned down its proposal.
A senior BHK representative, Arman Abovian, explained that Tsarukian’s party 
will not “officially” dispatch its members to the precinct commissions. But he 
would not say whether they can join the commissions in an unofficial capacity.
The BHK, which has the second largest group in the Armenian parliament, has been 
more cautious than the three other parties in opposing the controversial 
constitutional changes which Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s political team has 
put on the referendum.
This stance has fuelled speculation that Tsarukian does not want to antagonize 
Pashinian for fear of a government crackdown on his businesses. Aides to the 
tycoon deny that.
Armenian AIDS Clinic Staff Quit In Protest
        • Susan Badalian
Armenia -- Protesting employees of the Republican Center for the Prevention of 
AIDS talk to reporters outside the main government building in Yerevan, February 
27, 2020.
The work of Armenia’s sole medical center specializing in the treatment of HIV 
and AIDS was disrupted on Friday as 80 percent of its employees resigned in 
protest against the government’s decision to merge it with another clinic.
The Armenian Ministry of Health, which initiated the decision earlier this year, 
says that the Republican Center for the Prevention of AIDS must be incorporated 
into a Yerevan hospital which treats other infectious diseases, including the 
flu and similar viruses.
Health Minister Arsen Torosian insisted earlier in February that Armenia no 
longer needs a specialized HIV/AIDS clinic and that it now makes more sense to 
have all infectious diseases treated by a single medical institution. “The fight 
against AIDS must be integrated into the overall healthcare system,” he said.
The affected HIV/AIDS medics strongly disagree, saying the dissolution of their 
center, which has detected up to 450 cases of HIV annually in Armenia, would 
break up what they describe as a well-functioning system of preventing, tracking 
and treating the immunodeficiency disease.
“In three, four or five years from now we will have … an uncontrolled epidemic,” 
Arshak Papoyan, who heads one of the center’s divisions, claimed on Friday.
The government’s decision also sparked protests by many of the HIV-positive 
Armenians who receive free antiretroviral drugs and counseling at the center. 
Earlier this week, about 150 of them signed a joint letter to Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian urging him to reverse it.
The HIV/AIDS patients are particularly worried about Torosian’s intention to 
“decentralize” services provided by the Republican Center. That includes 
transferring the distribution of antiretroviral drugs from the center to regular 
policlinics across the country. According to Torosian, this will destigmatize 
HIV and AIDS and get people suffering from it out of social “isolation.”
HIV carriers counter that any breach of the confidentiality guaranteed by the 
center would only worsen discrimination encountered by them and the stigma 
associated with their disease. “None of us will go to a policlinic or the Nork 
hospital [in Yerevan,]” one of them told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
On Wednesday, Torosian fired the center’s longtime director, Samvel Grigorian, 
for his refusal to help implement the controversial merger. Just hours later, 
Grigorian’s deputy, Aram Hakobian, was briefly detained by police for allegedly 
refusing to hand the clinic’s official seal to Artur Berberian, its acting 
director appointed by the minister.
It emerged on Friday at least 86 of the 108 people working at the center have 
tendered their resignations in response to the government’s failure to meet 
their demand.
“The conditions that have been created by various Ministry of Health officials 
make our continued work impossible,” Hakobian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
“It’s not about an individual, it’s about preserving a system,” said another 
senior HIV/AIDS medic, Janetta Petrosian.
Berberian deplored the mass resignations of the center’s staff. He warned that 
their “inactivity” could be deemed a criminal offense.
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.
 

Maestro Tigran Mansurian visits AMAA’s Avedisian School in Yerevan

Aravot, Armenia
Feb 25 2020

                                                       

THE TRIANGLE. Years will pass by and today’s Avedisian School students will grow, yet many of them who were in the School’s Auditorium on February 21, 2020 will say, “I have seen and heard the greatest Armenian composer of our time, Tigran Mansurian.” Or, “I personally asked the Maestro a question, and he answered me.” Or, “I held my breath listening to the Maestro,” “I’ll never forget …” and they will recount many other unforgettable memories of the day.

Hosting the great Maestro under the roof of the Avedisian School was truly a memorable event, as the beloved composer, at the zenith of his respectable life, taught a small but invaluable lesson to the students.

What was Maestro Mansurian talking about with the Avedisian students? He advised the students to see only the good and be forgiving; on the path of real victory to know also to be conquered. He Also talked about the freedom of the creative soul; about the character of an intellectual or artist, and many other subjects that touched the soul of the students.

The living legend Maestro Mansurian was engaging. There were more students who wished to ask a question, than those who did. Then he approached the piano, sat down slowly and his fingers touched the keyboard. And the sounds of his famous music from the film “A Little Sky” first spread then began to soar to great heights. Even the air became noble… and the hall held its breath…

Culture: Yerevan to host festive procession dedicated to Great Barekendan

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 22 2020
Society 17:53 22/02/2020 Armenia

The Armenian Apostolic Church will mark the eve of Great Barekendan with a festive programme, the Ararat Patriarchal Diocese reported in a press statement. On February 23, at 13:30 the festive procession dedicated to Great Barekendan – Armenian religious holiday – will start from St. Sargis church of the Ararat Patriarchal Diocese of AAC. The participants will walk along Mashtots avenue to Freedom square where a festive programme is planned.

The programme features national dances and songs, thematic and theatrical performances, demonstration of games and contests among them.

As the Ararat Patriarchal Diocese reports the Great Barekendan celebration has turned into one of beloved holidays in capital Yerevan that brings together children and adults. The event is organized with the support of Yerevan Municipality.

This year the period of Great Lent starts on February 24. It lasts 48 days beginning from the Eve of Great Lent (Barekendan) to the Eve of the Feast of the Easter. The word Barekendan means “good living” or “good life”, as we are called to live cheerfully, joyfully, and to be happy on these days preceding fasting periods.

Asbarez: ‘Family and Community’ Opens Daycare Center in Artik


ARTIK, Armenia—A new daycare center was officially inaugurated today in the town of Artik, in Armenia’s Shirak province, by “Family and Community,” a non-governmental organization. The new center, renovated by the Tufenkian Foundation, will provide daycare for children who come from vulnerable families.

Artik’s center became the fifth hub in the NGO’s map, alongside ones in Armavir, Metsamor, Noyemberyan, and Ijevan. The center opened its doors for the children of Artik due to a generous donation from Ralph and Armik Yirikian. The opening ceremony has united the residents of Artik as well as Ralph Yirikian, the Foundation’s executive director Raffi Doudaklian, Governor Tigran Petrossian, Member of Parliament Sofya Hovsepian, and other government officials.

The center is first of its kind in Artik and surrounding villages. For the current year, about 100 children will be able to visit the center after school hours and participate in various extracurricular classes and activities such as singing, pottery, drawing, and more.

“Such centers are significant for our society, as they keep children away from the streets and help them become good people and citizens. We are delighted and proud that children in Artik will now have such an opportunity,” remarked Ralph Yirikian, the primary sponsor of the construction. The center will operate in an old Soviet-era building that went through a complete reconstruction and renovation organized by the Tufenkian Foundation earlier in 2019. The municipality of Artik has provided the building for the center.

“We are trying to expand the network of such centers in Armenia, and we are glad that the decision fell on opening the new one in Artik, as Gyumri is the only city in the region that has such centers. Once again, we are thankful to our donors, the team that worked hard to make this center a reality, and, of course, we are happy for the children of Artik, who will have the opportunity to receive various social services from a team of expert social workers,” stated the Executive Director of Tufenkian Foundation, Raffi Doudaklian.

“Family and Community” currently runs four other centers in four towns of Armenia: Metsamor, Armavir, Ijevan, and Noyemberyan. The core idea in the philosophy of the organizatoin is the concept of family. “The environment that a family creates for a child leaves an impact on them [the child] for the rest of their life. We strongly believe in the values that come with the idea of family,” said Knarik Garanfilyan, the director of the organization.

After the welcoming speeches, the local children participated in the ribbon cutting ceremony, officially launching the operations of the center. Soon, the center will operate in its full capacity.

“Family and Community” NGO is one of the main beneficiaries of the Tufenkian Foundation. The organization implements programs for social and psychological support, empowerment of families, capacity building for the youth, identification, and development of their resources, development, and empowerment of communities, and organizes daycare for school-aged children. While working together, the lives of many children have changed for the better. The Foundation currently runs online fundraising for further development of the center.

Founded in 1999 by entrepreneur James Tufenkian, the Tufenkian Foundation has worked in Artsakh for over 15 years. Its on-the-ground efforts feature the promotion of resettlement, infrastructure, healthcare, and other development programs.

Verbal dueling in Munich and which gun won the day

USA Tribune
Feb 16 2020
 
 
 
(c) Munich Security Conference
 
By Robert Horowitz The USA Tribune
 
From history lessons and European literature, we have come to know the importance of dueling, practiced by the disgruntled men in early modern Europe to defend their honor and dignity. As a form of exposition dueling has found home in many cultures, extending as far as the Wild West. So, make no mistake – it’s been an international sport for many centuries.
 
In the world today, dueling has found home in international relations, albeit with verbal exchanges rather than arms, which in itself could be a lot more powerful. Think about it for a minute. What comes out of a mouth of a leader can solidify or loosen an argument before the international audiences. That’s exactly why, international media chases all and every leaders in an effort to catch those verbal expressions that potentially change the course of history.
 
Main venues for verbal duels in modern world are the United Nations Security Council, General Assembly, Davos Forum, Munich Security Conference and other forums where leaders regularly appear to exercise their sabre rattling. Munich Security Conference, for instance, is an annual conference on international security policy held in Munich for the last six decades, where many issues pertaining to international affairs and security are debated. With social media breaking all possible boundaries of information containment, this annual gathering has become a must-attend forum for many, if not all leaders of states, seeking to consolidate their international positions and standings on issues.
 
This year’s security conference which took place on February 14-16 was remarkable for the people of former Soviet Union because security issues, and specifically protracted conflicts were at the fore of the discussions.
 
One of the most remarkable events that took place within the sidelines of the conference was the discussion on “New developments in Nagorno Karabakh conflict” with leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan took the stage to debate the three-decade conflict in South Caucasus.
 
The leaders of the parties who had found themselves in a negotiations deadlock in the past year, were there to speak out why this conflict was nowhere close to be resolved. The moderator skillfully handled the verbal duel allowing the Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to lay out the facts, as they saw it.
 
The leaders went many years and centuries back to justify their sovereignty over Karabakh region. The Armenian leader went round and round reiterating an already exhausted argument that Armenians were allegedly the indigenous habitants of South Caucasus and that Karabakh was part of historical Armenia. The Azerbaijani leader, certainly, rebuked the claim, by presenting the Azerbaijani version of the history.
 
Pashinyan’s main argument, as far as history is concerned, was that Nagorno Karabakh was initially given to Armenia in 1921 by the Kavburo (Caucasian Bureau of the Communist Party) but then the decision was reversed by none other than Joseph Stalin who allegedly conspired with Lenin and Ataturk and “gave” Karabakh to Azerbaijan. This, however, flies in the face of history, as this allegation is certainly misrepresented. The Kavburo, which had more ethnic Armenian members than Azeris, indeed, decided to give the mountainous part of Karabakh to Armenia, but then reversed the decision on July 5, 1921 after considering that Karabakh has more ties with Azerbaijan than with Armenia. The actual text of the ruling uses the word “retain” in relation to Azerbaijan: “As a necessity in bringing interethnic peace between Muslims and Armenians, taking in consideration the economic bond between Upper and Lower Karabakh, its permanent ties with Azerbaijan, Upper Karabakh shall be retained within A.S.S.R (Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic), having been given a wide oblast autonomy with an administrative center in the town of Shusha, located within autonomous oblast itself.” This surely means that Karabakh was part of Azerbaijan already, and Kavburo decided to retain it within Azerbaijan rather than transfer it to Armenia.
 
In his statement rebuking Pashinyan, that’s what Aliyev referred to asking the audience to search and verify these facts themselves if they so liked by going to Internet.
 
Pashinyan then went on to discuss international law, which by many observers would agree, he knows nothing about. He claimed that if Azerbaijan respected territorial integrity of the Soviet Union, it wouldn’t become an independent state and if it did, it should respect Nagorno Karabakh’s right to its own self-determination because as per the Prime Minister, Nagorno Karabakh Armenians exercised the same right as Azerbaijanis and broke up from Soviet Union. The Prime Minister, however, lacks the proper knowledge of international law to understand that Nagorno Karabakh was a constituent part of Azerbaijan SSR and under Soviet Constitutions, any move to secede from the republic, it would have to conform with both the Constitution of Azerbaijan SSR and the Soviet Constitution. That is, Azerbaijani and Soviet legislatures would have had to approve the move to transfer or detach Nagorno Karabakh from Azerbaijan for it to be able to become independent or part of Armenia. Neither happened: Soviet parliament and Azerbaijani parliament both rejected the move. Aliyev repeatedly stated that what Pashinyan said was simply untrue and did not hold water.
 
Pashinyan also made a poor choice by going into discussion around the four UN Security Council resolutions on Nagorno Karabakh claiming that UN SC had allegedly asked to immediately and unconditionally institute ceasefire.
 
In fact, as the Azerbaijani leader said, the UN SC resolutions 822, 853, 874 and 884, actually, demand Armenian troops to cease their military offensive and demand their immediate and unconditional withdrawal from occupied territories of Azerbaijan, as well as asks to allow the return of all internally displaced persons into their lands.
 
“Prime Minister of Armenia interprets unsuccessfully the true meaning of the UN Security Council resolutions, falling in forgetfulness that the UN Security Council resolutions demand immediate and unconditional withdrawal of Armenian troops”, Ilham Aliyev said.
 
Aliyev asked the international community, and the OSCE Minsk Group specifically to increase pressure on the Armenian government to abandon its unconstructive stance and start real negotiations. “The OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs should explain to Armenia that Nagorno-Karabakh is not Armenia. No country recognized Nagorno-Karabakh,” said Azerbaijani President.
 
(c) Munich Security Conference
 
Pashinyan told the audience that Armenia wants Nagorno Karabakh authorities to join the negotiations to represent themselves. Pashinyan even went as far as calling his proposal a “micro revolution” as if this was something new. In fact, attempt to draw in Nagorno Karabakh authorities into the negotiation has been Armenia’s long term policy for over 20 years. Azerbaijan, however, rejects the three-party format simply because the very negotiation format is based on the formula of two principal parties to the conflict (Armenia and Azerbaijan) and two interested parties (Armenian and Azerbaijani communities of Nagorno Karabakh region). Azerbaijan says that Karabakh Armenian authorities who have been installed by official Yerevan in Khankendi (Stepanakert) have no legitimacy as they ethnically cleansed the Azerbaijani community of Karabakh during the war.
 
Aliyev continued: “…all Armenian leaders tried differently to hold the status quo. Azerbaijani IDPs should return back to their territories. More than 80% of armed forces in the occupied lands are Armenian soldiers. They think that they can keep these territories forever. Never”.
 
Either by happenstance or by merely not realizing his mistakes, Pashinyan confirmed that servicemen of Armenian armed forces serve in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan. The Armenian Prime Minister openly stated that his own son serves in Nagorno Karabakh, effectively dismantling the Armenian propaganda that Karabakh Armenians are enforcing their security on their own, through the “self-defense army” they had established.
 
In response to questions from the moderator on the ways to resolve the conflict, Aliyev said: “We need to resolve this conflict in phases, liberation of part of territories and return of IDPs. Status of Nagorno-Karabakh can be defined later. Status must not interfere with the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. All Azerbaijanis are ethnically cleansed from the occupied lands, from Shusha. Armenians destroyed our cultural heritage in the seized lands. There is no historical heritage of Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh.”
 
Rebuking Pashinyan’s claims to Karabakh, Aliyev said at the end of his remarks that “Nagorno-Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan is recognized by the whole international community.” He said that the Armenian people have self-determined themselves already by proclaiming independence of Republic of Armenia in 1991. Aliyev suggested that if they wanted to self-determine for the second time, they should do so elsewhere on Earth, not in Azerbaijan.
 
Verbal dueling might not have ended well for Pashinyan, as he took some serious wounds from Aliyev’s statements and suffered immensely by his own lack of ability to make proper fact-based arguments.
 
Nagorno Karabakh region and seven adjacent districts of Azerbaijan fell under the military control of Armenian forces in 1992-1994 after a brutal war that killed over 30,000 people on both sides. No country or international organization recognizes Nagorno Karabakh as an independent states or Armenia’s sovereignty over it. The negotiations have continued under the OSCE Minsk format but the resolution is nowhere to be seen.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Pashinyan, Aliyev to attend discussion on NK conflict in Munich

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 18:00,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 14, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and president of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev will attend a discussion on Nagorno Karabakh conflict in the sidelines of Munich Security Conference, ARMENPRESS was informed from the official website of the Conference.

The discussion will take place on February 15, from 17:30 to 18:15 local time (20:30-21:15 Yerevan time). The facilitator will be President and Chief Executive Officer of US Russia Foundation Celeste Wallander.

The 56th Munich Security Conference launched on February 14.

Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan is also participating in the Conference. 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 Tigran Sirekanyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/07/2020

                                        Friday, 
Former Armenian Security Chief To Set Up Party
        • Nane Sahakian
Armenia -- Former National Security Service Director Artur Vanetsian is 
interviewed by Armenian newspaper editors, Yerevan, February 5, 2020.
Artur Vanetsian, the former head of Armenia’s most powerful security service, 
has announced his entry into active politics, saying that he will set up a party 
to challenge Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government.
In an interview with the editors of nine Armenian newspapers publicized on 
Thursday, Vanetsian said the party will strive to disprove government claims 
that the country’s former leaders are the main political rivals of the current 
authorities.
“A very important practice has emerged in Armenia, which is called dividing the 
society into [pro-government political] whites and [opposition] blacks,” he 
said. “I think that it’s a false political agenda that has been brought to our 
landscape; a political agenda whereby the former rulers are the alternative to 
the current authorities. I can assure you that there is no such thing.”
“There will be no return to the past,” added Vanetsian. “I am someone who will 
be fighting against a return to the past.”
Pashinian appointed Vanetsian as director of the National Security Service 
(NSS), the former Armenian branch of the Soviet KGB, immediately after coming to 
power in the “Velvet Revolution” of April-May 2018.
Vanetsian worked as a deputy chief of the NSS’s Yerevan division up until the 
revolution. He quickly became one of the most influential members of Pashinian’s 
entourage, overseeing a number of high-profile corruption investigations 
launched by the new authorities.
Vanetsian was unexpectedly relieved of his duties in September just a couple of 
months after being promoted to the rank of NSS general. He criticized 
Pashinian’s “impulsive” leadership style following his dismissal, triggering a 
bitter war of words with the premier.
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) and National Security Service 
Director Artur Vanetsian visit the Football Academy in Yerevan, March 25, 2019.
Vanetsian, 40, claimed in his interview that he himself decided to step down. He 
said his refusal to “participate in developments unfolding around the 
Constitutional Court” was one of the main reasons for that decision. He referred 
to controversial government efforts to replace the court’s chairman, Hrayr 
Tovmasian, and six other justices.
The former NSS chief also pointed to the latest concerns voiced by Council of 
Europe officials over the Armenian government’s and parliament’s standoff with 
the high court judges. “That is a very serious issue for us also in terms of 
national security because it relates to our country’s international standing,” 
he said.
Pashinian’s public feud with Vanetsian was reignited last month by the “Haykakan 
Zhamanak” newspaper controlled by the prime minister’s family. In an extensive 
article, the paper accused him of organizing a smear campaign against 
Pashinian’s family allegedly conducted by anti-government media. Hrachya 
Hakobian, a pro-government parliamentarian and Pashinian’s brother-in-law, 
alleged afterwards that Vanetsian was fired in September because he was plotting 
a coup.
Pashinian stated later in January that Armenian security services have thwarted 
a “hybrid” anti-government conspiracy hatched by current and former officials.
Vanetsian denounced the “Haykakan Zhamanak” article as slanderous. He went on to 
call on the ruling Civil Contract party to consider installing a new prime 
minister.
“A person who attempted a coup d’état should have been placed in an appropriate 
institution,” Vanetsian told the editors of other publications. “Of course I did 
not have such a desire.”
Armen Grigorian, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council and a Pashinian 
ally, scoffed at Vanetsian’s declared entry into politics later on Thursday. 
Grigorian described him as an “echo of the past” who will hardly attract a large 
following.
Armenia To Upgrade Iran Border Crossing
Armenia/Iran - The Arax river separating Armenia and Iran.
The Armenian government has secured over 21 million euros ($23 million) in 
funding from the European Union and the European Bank for Reconstruction and 
Development (EBRD) for its plans to modernize and expand Armenia’s sole border 
crossing with Iran.
Finance Minister Atom Janjughazian and the head of the EBRD office in Armenia, 
Dimitri Gvindadze, signed on Friday agreements to that effect at a ceremony in 
Yerevan.
In a short statement, the Armenian Finance Ministry said EU grants will make up 
just over half of the sum needed for the project’s implementation. An EBRD loan 
will presumably pay the rest of the bill.
The statement did not specify when work on the new Armenian-Iranian border 
facilities, located near the southeastern town of Meghri, will start and be 
completed.
The Meghri checkpoint processes up to one-third of goods shipped to and from 
landlocked Armenia.
Also, Iran is a major trading partner of the South Caucasus state. According to 
Armenian government data, Armenian-Iranian trade rose by 12 percent, to $409 
million, last year despite U.S. sanctions imposed on the Islamic Republic.
Armenia has already rebuilt and upgraded in recent years its three border 
crossings with Georgia, its most important commercial conduit to the outside 
world. The $60 million project completed in 2017 was mostly financed by the EU 
in the form of a loan and a grant.
Council Europe Scrutiny ‘Not Mandatory’ For Constitutional Changes
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- Speaker Ararat Mirzoyan chairs a parliament debate on constitutional 
changes, Yerevan, February 6, 2020.
A senior lawmaker stressed on Friday that the Armenian authorities are not 
obliged to consult with the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission before holding 
a referendum on controversial constitutional changes drafted by them.
The proposed amendments call for the dismissal of seven of the nine members of 
Armenia’s Constitutional Court accused by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian of 
remaining linked to “the corrupt former regime.” The Armenian parliament 
controlled by Pashinian’s My Step bloc decided to put them on a referendum on 
Thursday.
Amid a heated parliament debate on the issue, two representatives of another 
Council of Europe structure, the Parliamentary Assembly (PACE), urged the 
authorities in Yerevan to send the amendments to the Venice Commission for 
examination “as soon as possible.”
“We believe that this opinion … would be valuable to all stakeholders, including 
the Armenian electorate if a referendum were to be held,” they said in a joint 
statement.
Commenting on that statement, Vladimir Vartanian, the pro-government chairman of 
the Armenian parliament committee on legal affairs, said the authorities are 
under no legal obligation to have the draft amendments examined by the 
Strasbourg-based watchdog.
Vartanian said they might consider doing so only after President Armen 
Sarkissian endorses the parliament’s decision to hold the referendum.
Armenia -- Bright Armenia Party leader Edmon Marukian speaks to RFE/RL, 7Feb2020.
Leaders of the two parliamentary opposition parties insisted, however, that 
requesting a Venice Commission opinion is essential for the legitimacy of the 
process. Naira Zohrabian of the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) said this would 
be a “sensible” move on the part of the authorities.
For his part, Bright Armenia Party (LHK) leader Edmon Marukian again claimed 
that the far-reaching changes sought by Pashinian are unconstitutional and were 
passed with serious procedural violations. They must also be scrutinized by the 
Constitutional Court, he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
Marukian also accused Pashinian of illegally threatening and pressuring the 
seven judges in a speech delivered on the parliament floor during Thursday’s 
debate.
The BHK, which is led by businessman Gagik Tsarukian, has been more cautious in 
opposing the proposed changes. Zohrabian said its final position on the 
referendum depends on the findings of the Venice Commission. But she would not 
say what her party will do if the authorities bypass the commission.
Three Armenian Soldiers Killed In Avalanche
Armenia - The Defense Ministry building in Yerevan.
An avalanche in southeastern Armenia killed three soldiers and injured another 
on Friday.
The Armenian Defense Ministry said that rescuers found the bodies of the three 
contract soldiers -- Private Karapet Nazarian, Sergeant Tigran Arzumanian and 
Sergeant Nver Shahbazian -- at an Armenian army post in the mountainous Syunik 
province which was hit by the powerful downslide.
The fourth soldier, Private Hamlet Mirzoyan, suffered minor injuries and was 
rescued from under the snow, the ministry said in a statement. It described his 
condition as “satisfactory.”
“An investigation is conducted to ascertain circumstances of the incident,” 
added the statement.
The soldiers were apparently deployed on Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan’s 
Nakhichevan exclave. The Defense Ministry did not reveal the precise location of 
their outpost.
Avalanche casualties among military personnel and civilians in Armenian have 
been relatively rare.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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