Expert: War could have been averted if Armenian authorities had not destroyed state systems

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 26 2021

Information security expert, coordinator of the specialized military website Razm.info Karen Vrtanesyan on Tuesday denounced the claims of the current authorities that the recent war in Artsakh and Armenia’s defeat were “inevitable”, adding they are simply trying to clear themselves of any guilt.

“Some examples of propaganda theses based on these claims are the following: “The war was inevitable because the former authorities had brought the negotiation process to a standstill”, “The defeat was inevitable because the former authorities had robbed the army”, “The defeat was inevitable, because Turkey was fighting against us”, “The defeat was inevitable because the Russians did not help us” (this is spread from the Ministry of Defense in the form of gossips like “I will say something, but don’t tell anyone else”),” he wrote on Facebook.

“The reality is the following:

1. The war could have been averted if the Armenian authorities had not destroyed the state (especially the defense) systems before the whole world, they had not divided the society, had not resorted to adventures in international relations and had not demonstratively failed the coronavirus fight, making it clear to the enemy that they are just idle talkers and incompetent ignoramuses. In short, if they had just done their job normally, at least not worse than the former authorities.

2. It could have been possible not to suffer defeat in the war and even to win it, regardless of the use of mercenaries and even Turkish drones, if the right orders had been given in time and they had worked normally instead of going hysterical in live videos, spreading panic, destroying the rear and accusing the former regime,” the expert said, adding power could have been handed over to experienced people during the war.

“But the most important thing for them was to cling to power, rather than to win the war or at least not to suffer defeat,” he stated, adding even in the event of defeat, capitulation was not inevitable and there were different ways to get out of the situation with minimal losses.

“3. Therefore, you are the one responsible for the start of the war and the disgraceful defeat with maximum losses,” Vrtanesyan said. 

Stepantsminda-Lars highway open only for trucks

Save

Share

 11:52, 26 January, 2021

YEREVAN, JANUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian ministry of foreign affairs has told Armenpress that the Stepantsminda-Lars highway is open only for trucks.

“As of morning of January 26 the Stepantsminda-Lars highway is open only for trucks. The checkpoint is operating normally”, the ministry said.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia: Human Capital Investments are the Key to Resilient Growth in the Era of COVID-19

Modern Diplomacy
Jan 28 2021

By Fadia M. Saadah

– Modern Diplomacy

Following the launch of the Human Capital Project in 2018, the government of Armenia and the World Bank undertook a systematic diagnosis of the constraints to human capital development. We report our findings in Survive, Learn, Thrive: Strategic Human Capital Investments Toward a More Prosperous and Inclusive Armenia, which identifies catalytic investments that can help Armenia’s children and youth compete in the global marketplace of tomorrow.

Fadia M. Saadah, World Bank Human Development Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia, reflects on the opportunity to build back better in the era of COVID-19 through human capital formation and activation in Armenia.

Q. What do you see as the main challenges facing human capital formation and activation in Armenia?

In many ways, Armenia has made significant improvementsin ensuring health and learning through access to services. Enrollment in primary and middle school is above 90 percent, 100 percent of childbirths are attended by a skilled health care provider, and improvements in targeting of social transfers have helped reduce poverty and increased access to education and health care in low-income households. Between 1990 and 2017, life expectancy increased from 73.3 years to 78.7 years for women and from 66.7 years to 72.4 years for men.

There is still room for improvement, however. Armenia’s Human Capital Index is 0.58, meaning that a child born today in Armenia would be 58 percent as productive as she could have been as an adult if she had enjoyed full health and had benefited from a complete education. Learning outcomes also vary widely by gender and income, high out-of-pocket payments reduce access to health care services, and labor market programs that are necessary to activate human capital are few and small-scale.

The gains of the past two decades are at risk because of the COVID-19 pandemic, which is projected to lead to a contraction of real gross domestic product of 6.3 percent in 2020. Poverty rates are projected to rise and competing needs for public spending will reduce fiscal space for health and education.

Q. What strategic investments do you recommend in the short and medium term for Armenia to confront the challenge of recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic while investing in human capital development?

The report highlights the importance of human capital investments for economic growth in Armenia. Given the COVID-19 pandemic, the objective of reforming health, education, social protection, and jobs systems is linked to the urgent task of increasing resilience to future shocks.

In the health sector, doing so will involve establishing comprehensive surveillance systems, investing in quality primary health care, and reforming health financing to ensure that people have access to services through a financing scheme that provides incentives to reduce out-of-pocket payments and improve health. COVID also revealed the important role for technology in the social sectors. Telemedicine and other digital tools, for example, offer opportunities to close gaps in physical access to care during and after the pandemic.

The COVID pandemic created challenge for and risks to learning outcomes, which will have long-term impact on human capital. There is an urgent need to recover the losses in learning. Health protocols that prevent the spread of infections will need to be implemented so that schools can reopen safely.

At the same time, Armenia will need to support teachers with training and other tools to provide high-quality distance learning. Counselling, academic remediation, and financial incentives can help keep children and young people enrolled in schools and improve learning outcomes.

To ensure that no families are left behind, Armenia can build on the successes of the social protection system through the integrated social case manager program, which links poor and vulnerable households with social services. Jobs are another vehicle for activating human capital. Continued efforts to equip the workforce with skills that match evolving labor demand and job-matching interventions are important. A range of mechanisms, including web-based jobs portals, can link job seekers to employers in high-productivity sectors.

The report follows the narrative of a hypothetical family, the Harutyunyan’s, whose health, learning, and employment outcomes significantly improve with the implementation of catalytic human capital investments. It shows that if Armenia ensured complete education and healthcare, long-run per capita gross domestic product could be 1.75 times higher than it is today. Armenia is an early adopter of the Human Capital Project, an indication of the strong political commitment to rise to the challenge.

Q. The World Bank has partnered with Armenia on landmark reforms since independence. How do you see the engagement evolving over the next few years?

The report provides a starting point for developing, planning, and financing an intersectoral agenda to harness human capital. The World Bank Group remains committed to providing technical and financial support for operationalizing and implementing this ambitious strategy. We highlight important areas of engagement in education, health, social protection, and jobs below.

Education: The ongoing Education Improvement Project (EIP) is supporting the government’s efforts to create a network of stakeholders for accelerating knowledge creation and innovation; teach students job-relevant skills; and remove barriers to labor market participation, through increased access to early childhood education and care in rural areas to support working mothers.

A project funded by the European Union (EU4Innovation Project) that is being implemented with World Bank support contributes to the government’s efforts to develop and pilot modern teaching approaches, with the potential to be scaled up where successful. The project will also help identify cost-efficient interventions to address bottlenecks that prevent students from enrolling and performing well in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) subjects.

Health: World Bank Group engagement in health dates to 1997, with the Health Financing and Primary Health Care Development Project. The ongoing Disease Prevention and Control Project (DPCP) supports the government’s efforts to strengthen the prevention, early detection, and management of selected noncommunicable diseases at the primary health care level and increase the efficiency and quality of selected hospitals.

The DPCP also facilitates the emergency procurement of equipment and supplies for case management, as part of the COVID-19 response. Officials at the highest levels of government in Armenia recognize the urgent need for investments in health services to improve quality and ensure that every citizen has access to essential health care.

Toward that end, the World Bank Group has worked closely with counterparts to engage on policy issues and provide technical support in areas such as reforms to improve purchasing decisions and public financial management, strengthen primary healthcare, ensure integration between primary and specialist care, and inform efforts to expand fiscal space for health. This support can inform the next generation of reforms in Armenia, a country that is considered an innovator in health reforms among the former Soviet republics.

Social Protection and Labor: The ongoing Social Protection and Administration Project (SPAP II) supports the government’s efforts to create integrated service centers; develop monitoring and evaluation systems to administer social protection programs; and establish a unified information system to facilitate program management, monitoring, and evidence-based policy and decision making.

Through the Japan Social Development Fund, the World Bank Group is working with the government to upgrade Armenia’s social case management methodology and operational procedures. It is also providing small business grants to poor and vulnerable individuals to facilitate their graduation from public support and self-sufficiency.

Ongoing technical assistance and policy dialogue will continue to support better targeting of social assistance; the digitalization of social protection payment systems; and policies to support the integration into the labor market of returning migrants, women, and other vulnerable groups. 

World Bank

First woman gets private pilot license in Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 28 2021

The first woman named Diana has been granted a private pilot license in Armenia, Chair of Armenia’s Civil Aviation Committee Tatevik Revazian said in a tweet on Thursday.

“Meet Diana, the first female Private Pilot License (PPL) holder in Armenia. As the first female Director General of Civil Aviation Authority in Armenia it’s a BIG honour to see more female involvement. And guess what! She is pregnant,” she tweeted, adding “inspiration” and “femalepilot” hashtags.

 

Armenia merited artist on Robert Kocharyan and him running in possible elections

News.am, Armenia
Jan 28 2021

There can be talks about snap parliamentary elections when the incumbent authorities resign, after which a national salvation committee will be set up and will lead the country to new elections. This is what Merited Artist of Armenia Hrant Tokhatyan told reporters during the rally at Republic Square today.

When told that second President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan has declared that he will run in the possible elections and asked if people will unite around him, Tokhatyan said the following:

“Robert Kocharyan is highly experienced, and the country recorded economic growth during his administration, but later, there were major flaws, and perhaps this is the reason why we have the government we have today.”

Asked if he shares Kocharyan’s view that Armenia has turned into Russia’s protectorate, the actor said if things continue the way they are, it will become Russia’s protectorate.

Reporters also asked how he assesses the statement by the opposition Homeland Salvation Movement’s candidate for Prime Minister Vazgn Manukyan that the opposition movement will rebel if it doesn’t achieve Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation through the Constitution, Tokhatyan says he doesn’t support it, if it means rebelling with arms.

Asbarez: TUMO to Participate in 2021 Venice Architecture Biennale

January 26,  2020



The 2021 Venice Architecture Biennale will be held from May to November 2021

TUMO will participate in the Venice Architecture Biennale, with its own pavilion at the Arsenal, the main area at the Biennale, from May to November 2021. The Venice Biennale is one of the world’s largest architectural exhibitions. It is attended by some of the world’s most innovative architectural firms, and some of its most renowned scholars. The title of the 17th International Architecture Biennale is “How Will We Live Together?”.

TUMO’s “Learning to Learn Together” installation at the Biennale will explore the future of learning and showcase the international network of TUMOs. The installation is based on a forest of computer-generated “lifelines” that give voice to teenagers from Yerevan and Stepanakert to Berlin and Beirut. The participants of the exhibition will be able to “enter into a dialogue” with TUMO students and learn about their daily life, as well as their dreams and aspirations.

This year, the Biennale will focus on the new challenges currently facing the world, especially those related to architecture, and will propose solutions to these challenges. For this reason, the list of participants is as comprehensive as possible, including not only the entire architectural community, universities and major studios, but also artists, politicians, and journalists. This year’s Biennale curator is Hashim Sarkis, Dean of the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Venice, Italy

“We need a new spatial contract. In the context of widening political divides and growing economic inequalities, we call on architects to imagine spaces in which we can generously live together,” said Sarkis in an opening statement for the Biennale.

The Architecture Biennale, which is being held one year late due to the pandemic, is part of the Art Biennale founded in 1895. The main purpose of the Biennale, held every two years since 1980, is to offer architectural solutions to societal and technological problems. Despite the Bienniale’s international orientation, it also allows architects from around the world to present new projects of local significance. This year, 112 projects from 46 different countries will be presented at the Biennale. The Biennale is divided into two main sections: The permanent pavilion in the Biennale Gardens as well as the Arsenal, which hosts projects from numerous nations under one roof.

IDBank is placing the first USD bonds of 2021 through a public offer

Save

Share

 11:32, 22 January, 2021

On January 22 of this year, IDBank will issue bonds under the abbreviation AMANLBB2CER7. The total volume of the nominal coupon bonds of the first issue of 2021 is USD 5 million. The maturity of the bonds is 30 months, the annual coupon interest rate is 5%, and the coupons should be paid quarterly.

The bonds will be placed starting from January 22, 2021 to April 21, 2021, after which they will be listed in OJSC “Armenian Stock Exchange” and will be quoted by the Marketmaker.

To get bonds it is necessary to fill in the form and present it to the Bank, then the bonds will immediately become visible in Idram&IDBank application. To view the bonds, it is necessary to enter the “Banking” section in Idram&IDBank application, choose the “Bonds” section where all necessary information about the bonds is presented: the abbreviation, quantity, nominal value, annual coupon interest rate, payout date and the date of redemption. This means that the clients will have an opportunity to manage their funds in a more flexible way.

You can get the detailed information about the bonds here.

The funds attracted by means of nominal bonds are considered to be guaranteed bank deposits and are guaranteed by the Deposit Guarantee Fund of Armenia.

The Bond prospectus was registered by the CBA, resolution N 1/291A of the Chairman of the CBA. The electronic version of the prospectus and the  are available on the official website of the Bank.

THE BANK IS CONTROLLED BY CBA

HRW on Armenia in 2020: police violence, the Karabakh war and the coronavirus

JAM News
Jan 21 2021
    JAMnews, Yerevan

The main events in Armenia in 2020 included the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and the second Karabakh war.

The defeat in the war caused an acute political crisis in Armenia, as the opposition has been since demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

In its report on Armenia for 2020, Human Rights Watch examined all these events and human rights issues in the country.



The HRW report said that on September 27, Azerbaijan launched a military offensive which led to an escalation of hostilities between Azerbaijan and Armenia, as well as the de facto authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The report stated that the parties violated international humanitarian law, which “resulted in the injury of civilians”:

HRW report also noted that the Armenian military used banned cluster munitions in populated areas, which “led to dozens of civilian casualties”:

“During the conflict, Armenian forces carried out indiscriminate attacks, launched unguided artillery missiles, and fired heavy artillery shells and ballistic missiles at populated areas. Moreover, some of the attacks were carried out in areas with no obvious military targets, which resulted in the death and injury of civilians”.

Armenia confirmed its first coronavirus case on March 1. On March 16, the government declared a state of emergency and extended it five times, only canceling it on September 11.

The following example is given as a violation of human rights:

“In March, parliament passed amendments requiring telecommunications companies to provide the authorities with telephone records of all their subscribers to make it easier to track down people who might have been infected.”

The report said the authorities stopped tracking their data only after the state of emergency was lifted.

During the same period, about 4,000 children were affected by the closure of schools. Research conducted by World Vision Armenia on 3,000 families showed that almost 14 percent of school-age children did not attend online classes. Nearly 80 percent did not have the right equipment or internet connection.

According to the data of the Helsinki Committee of Armenia, which tracked about 30 protests and rallies during the state of emergency, the police response was selective.

The report states that in some cases the police did not intervene, and in others, they stopped gatherings with less than five participants and even single-person protests, “even when the protesters wore masks and observed social distance”.

In April, the government approved a strategy and action plan for police reform of 2020-2022. The plan includes rebuilding the Ministry of the Interior and strengthening parliamentary oversight of the police:

“The reforms also include the creation of a new patrol police and the enhancement of police investigative powers”.

That being said, the report states that investigations into past abuse of authority conducted by law enforcement agencies remain pending:

“Investigations into cases of police violence during the 2016 protests were reopened in 2019, but no charges were filed. In January, authorities indicted a police officer involved in the violent crackdown on protests in 2015 and suspended investigations into further incidents related to the same protests. In July, authorities also suspended police investigations of the summer 2018 protests”.

In all cases, the authorities stated that they were unable to identify the alleged perpetrators.

New report reveals organized hate speech and animosity towards Armenians in Azerbaijan

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 17 2021
New report reveals organized hate speech and animosity towards Armenians in Azerbaijan – Public Radio of Armenia

The Human Rights Defenders of Armenia and the Republic of Artsakh have published a joint ad hoc public report on Organized Hate Speech and Animosity towards Ethnic Armenians in Azerbaijan.

“President of Azerbaijan and other authorities speak of the entire Armenian people and population of Armenia with open threats of ethnic cleansing and genocide,” Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan says.

“They openly insult the dignity of the Armenian people, incite hostility, they do it to humiliate the personal dignity of every Armenian in the world, every person living in Armenia,” teh Ombudman says.

The monitoring of the staff of the Human Rights Defender of Armenia confirms that this is a policy of deep state hatred and enmity towards Armenians. It is institutional in nature and is based on ethnicity and, in some cases, religious affiliation.

New report reveals organized hate speech and animosity towards Armenians in Azerbaijan – Public Radio of Armenia

The Ombudsman draws attention to the fact that the Presidents of Turkey and Azerbaijan often compare the war of September-November 2020 with the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire and the massacres of Armenians in Baku. In particulate, he reminds of the praise for the organizers and perpetrators of those atrocities, including members of the Caucasus Islamic Army, in the speeches of December 10 (during the military parade in Baku).

Another issue the Human Rights Defender points to is that during this war, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces use the same words and expressions as the President of Azerbaijan when torturing Armenian soldiers and civilians, beheading them alive, mutilating the bodies of the victims and committing other atrocities.

Moreover, he says, the expressions of the President of Azerbaijan and other public figures became slogans inspiring atrocities against Armenians in this war (for example, “Azerbaijani soldiers chase them like dogs”, “Armenia is a worthless country … it is an artificial state created on the ancient lands of Azerbaijan,” “Azerbaijan is coming to end Armenian weddings,” etc.).

“In other words, the real causes of these war crimes are obvious. Moreover, the Azerbaijani military are proud of the atrocities, well aware that they will only be encouraged and praised for it in their own country,” ARman Tatoyan says.