Armenia’s deputy economy minister reportedly arrested for corruption

Jan 31 2024
 

Armenia’s Deputy Minister of Economy, Ani Ispiryan, has reportedly been detained as part of an investigation into corruption in the ministry. 

The Economy Ministry announced on Wednesday that an investigation was underway in the ministry. 

‘We consider the fight against corruption extremely important, at the same time we are guided by the presumption of innocence,’ the message stated.

Armenian media began to claim that Ispiryan and other employees of the ministry had been arrested on Wednesday afternoon. 

The Minister of Economy’s spokesperson soon after confirmed that Ispiryan had been ‘taken’ by law enforcement officers, but did not clarify the conditions of or reason for her detention. 

A day earlier, Ispiryan was dismissed from her position in a decision from Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. 

Gor Abrahamyan, the spokesperson of Armenia’s Investigative Committee, neither confirmed nor denied that the former deputy minister had been arrested, when speaking to RFE/RL

He stated, however, that searches had been launched in 15 locations in both the Ministry of Economy and a number of personal homes in relation to two criminal cases.

‘Urgent investigative and other large-scale judicial actions are being carried out by investigators of the Investigative Committee and employees of the National Security Service,’ stated Abrahamyan.

Minister of Economy, Vahan Kerobyan, told journalists that he was not aware of the reasons for the search, but stated that investigative bodies usually entered state administration bodies in relation to cases of corruption. 

However, Kerobyan suggested that Ispiryan’s dismissal was unconnected to the investigation. 

‘Ani said a month and a half ago that her husband got a job in Holland, they are going to move and she submitted her resignation a few days before moving,’ said Kerobyan.

https://oc-media.org/armenias-deputy-economy-minister-reportedly-arrested-for-corruption/

Manchester United, a UN agency and even Ferrari have turned to Armenian IT brainchild for cybersecurity

 10:15,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. A startup founded by Armenian IT experts a few years ago is already used for business cybersecurity solutions by more than 40,000 enterprises and companies across the world.

EasyDMARC offers easy Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting and Conformance (DMARC) deployment, an email authentication protocol, designed to protect companies from phishing attacks.

“EasyDMARC is building the world's largest DMARC ecosystem. We are committed to ensuring businesses' security in cyberspace. Our solution prevents companies from data leakage, protects them from financial loss, and email phishing attacks, averts customer loss, secures their email accounts and prevents the unauthorized use of domains,” reads the company’s description online.

“93% of cyberattacks starts from an email,” EasyDMARC co-founder and CTPO Avag Arakelyan explained to Armenpress.

DMARC is a technical solution protecting companies’ domains. However, its deployment has some risks, or unintended consequences, such as preventing not only emails sent by scammers or hackers, but also genuine ones. That’s where EasyDMARC steps in and offers a solution. “Our product mitigates the risks and enables businesses to deploy DMARC without any additional problems,” Arakelyan said. 

According to Arakelyan, 100,000 domains of more than 40,000 companies from 130 countries now use EasyDMARC. The list of users includes tech company Picsart, Italian luxury sports car manufacturer Ferrari, the Japanese multinational electronics company Panasonic, as well as the English football club Manchester United and even the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, also known as UN Women.

Google and Yahoo have made it mandatory for companies to deploy DMARC.

In a 2022 article for Forbes, EasyDMARC CEO and co-founder Gerasim Hovhannisyan argued that DMARC will become mandatory in a few years.

Armenpress: Head of EU observer mission, Austrian ambassador to Armenia observe the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border

 21:52,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22, ARMENPRESS. Markus Ritter, Head of Mission of the European Union Mission in Armenia  hosted the Austrian ambassador to Armenia, Thomas Mühlmann, during his patrol on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, the EU Mission in Armenia said in a post on X.

“Regardless of the weather conditions, the Mission continues its patrolling activities on the ground,” reads the post.

N. Korea claims to have successfully launched hypersonic IRBM

 10:09, 15 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS. North Korea said Monday it successfully test-fired a solid-fuel intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) carrying a hypersonic warhead the previous day as part of regular activities to develop powerful weapons systems, Yonhap news agency reports.

The missile loaded with a hypersonic maneuverable controlled warhead was launched Sunday afternoon in a bid to verify the warhead's gliding and maneuvering capabilities and the reliability of newly developed multi-stage high-thrust solid-fuel engines, Yonhap reported citing the North Korean KCNA.

According to North Korea, the test was part of the Missile General Bureau and its affiliated defense science institutes' "regular activities for developing powerful weapon systems.”

North Korea also said the test-fire "never affected the security of any neighboring country and had nothing to do with the regional situation."

South Korea's military said Sunday it detected the launch from an area in or around Pyongyang at about 2:55 p.m., and the missile flew approximately 1,000 kilometers before splashing into the sea.

It marked North Korea's first missile launch since firing the solid-fuel Hwasong-18 intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) on Dec. 18 and its first known firing of a solid-fuel IRBM loaded with a hypersonic warhead.

Crossroads of Peace project presented to int’l community, including Azerbaijan and other regional states

 12:12,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s Crossroads of Peace project shows all roads and railways that the country is ready to open, a Member of Parliament has said.

“Armenia has presented the Crossroads of Peace project which clearly shows all the roads, railways, possible connections, which it is ready, and wants to, and is interested in opening,” MP Arusyak Julhakyan told reporters when asked whether or not Azerbaijan has offered to open any specific road.

“And regarding what the President of Azerbaijan is saying, specifically which part of our project he is interested in, that’s his agenda, I don’t think it would be right for us to enter that agenda. I think it’s right to advance our own agenda,” Julhakyan said.

The MP added that Armenia has presented the Crossroads of Peace project to the international community, including Azerbaijan and other regional countries.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s abandoned capital transforms under Azerbaijani rule

eurasianet
Jan 11 2024

It's a ghost town that looms large in the minds of both Armenians, who know it as Stepanakert, and Azerbaijanis, who know it as Khankendi. 

It served for three decades as the de facto capital of the self-proclaimed, now-defunct Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR).

It was home to the majority of the republic's 100,000-some population, nearly all of them Armenians, who fled to Armenia after Azerbaijan's lightning offensive to seize the whole of the NKR on September 19-20. As they fled they endured a gas explosion that killed over 200, a days-long traffic jam during which 64 people reportedly died, and faced an uncertain status once they reached their destination.

Azerbaijan never accepted the existence of the NKR, nor even the term "Nagorno-Karabakh," let alone the idea that it had a capital. But the town of Khankendi is of enormous symbolic importance for it, too, as its seizure represents the total nature of Baku's victory in Karabakh.

It was Khankendi where President Ilham Aliyev delivered his most triumphant victory speech, raised the Azerbaijani flag and mocked the detained former NKR leaders

And it was Khankendi where the victory in the 2020 war against Armenia over Karabakh was celebrated with a military parade attended by Aliyev and his family in November. 

“During these 20 years [of my presidency], I never doubted that this day would come and a military parade under the Azerbaijani flag would be held in the city of Khankendi,” he told the parade. “I once said [during the 2020 war] that without Shusha, our work would be incomplete. However, even then, I knew that without Khankendi and Khojaly, our work would be incomplete.” 

Footage posted on social media from Khankendi by a handful of Azerbaijanis with access to the town shows virtually no signs of life. According to the Armenian government, more than 100,000 people had left Nagorno-Karabakh for Armenia within the 10 days following the NKR's surrender after Azerbaijan's lightning offensive. 

In December, Azerbaijani media reported, citing the country's commission for Internally Displaced Persons affairs, that 50 Azerbaijani families, originally from Khankendi, would soon be resettled in the town. While the town served as the seat of the government of Soviet Azerbaijan's Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (1923-91), its population was overwhelmingly Armenian with an Azerbaijani minority. Its population was 11 percent Azerbaijani according to the latest Soviet census conducted there in 1979. 

The Azerbaijani government created a "reintegration portal" for Armenians deciding to remain in their homes and accept Baku's rule. It claimed in October to have received 98 applications, but the International Committee of the Red Cross estimates that only about 20 have stayed behind. 

While Armenia says that the local Armenians' flight in the face of Azerbaijani military advance amounted to ethnic cleansing, Azerbaijani officials insist that they left by their own will, as Aliyev reiterated in an interview with Euronews in December. 

“Our public communications with Karabakh Armenians, and what we did after, demonstrated that we wanted them to stay. We openly announced that and I, during my appeal to the Azerbaijani people after the end of the anti-terror operation [the September offensive], said that they could stay,” he said. “We opened the electronic portal of registration. All of those who want to come back have this right. Their property is duly protected. All the historical and religious sites are duly protected.”

In the reports of meetings of Azerbaijani officials with Armenian residents in Karabakh for the purpose of registration, we see mainly elderly people who were likely too weak to join the exodus. 

Azerbaijan disclosed its reintegration plan for Karabakh Armenians publicly only in October, after the vast majority of the population had fled the region. Vague as it is overall, it makes one thing clear: as expected, there will be no special treatment for Armenians; they are to have the exact same legal status as Azerbaijanis or other ethnic minorities. 

“The word reintegration, which I use many times, unfortunately, was met with a kind of irony, both from the Armenian government and also from the separatists. The same separatists who now wait for the verdict in the detention center,” Aliyev said in a forum in early December. 

“We even delivered the message to them that we will have a municipal election at the end of 2024, so they will participate. They will select their representatives, who will be the leaders of the municipalities. So, what else should we have provided or offered? It was the maximum and it was totally transparent.”

He also spoke to the forum about how Azerbaijani social workers were taking care of the Armenians who stayed behind. “[Y]ou have to eat, you have to have heating, you have to have other means of living. Not many of them, I would say, remained. But those who remain, they have been taken care of and those who want to come back, they can use this mechanism,” he said. 

A few Karabakhis have mused on social media about possibly going back to their homes given the difficulties they face in settling in Armenia. 

But it's not clear how widespread or serious the intention is, especially given the social pressures against accepting Azerbaijani rule. 

When it comes to the physical landscape, as soon as it restored its sovereignty, the Azerbaijani government rid Khankendi of all flags and other attributes of the former NKR. A presidential decree established "Karabakh University" in place of what had been known as "Artsakh University" under Armenian rule. And the seats at the local stadium had been arranged in such colors as to form the NKR flag but are now arranged to spell out "Karabakh is Azerbaijan." 

 

Russia, Ukraine exchange hundreds of prisoners

 10:25, 4 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. Russia and Ukraine have exchanged hundreds of prisoners of war in the biggest single release of captives since the war began in February 2022.

Russia said on Wednesday that 248 of its soldiers were returned while Ukraine said 230 of its prisoners were released after mediation by the United Arab Emirates.

“On January 3, 2024, as a result of a complicated negotiation process, 248 Russian servicemen were returned from the territory controlled by the Kiev regime. The return of the Russian servicemen from captivity was made possible thanks to the humanitarian mediation of the United Arab Emirates,” TASS news agency quoted the Russian Defense Ministry as saying in a statement. 

Al Jazeera quoted Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman, Dmytro Lubinets, as saying that 230 Ukrainian prisoners, including six civilians, had been released, marking what he said was the 49th exchange between the two sides.

Armenian Winemaker with Local Ties Celebrated in Special Lincoln Theater Event

The Lincoln County News, ME
Dec 30 2023

Damariscotta businesses Bred in the Bone, Damariscotta River Grill, and Lincoln Theater collaborated in a special dinner and wine event on Thursday, Dec. 21, to celebrate a documentary made about an Armenian father-daughter team making wine.

The documentary, “Cup of Salvation,” the fourth film in the “Somm” series, directed by Jason Wise, follows Aimee Keushguerian and her father Vahe, along their journey of reviving the grapes and wines of their Armenian homeland. Their production facility, WineWorks, is in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital.

Aimee Keushguerian, who attended Great Salt Bay Community School in Damariscotta and Lincoln Academy in Newcastle, said wine was a critical component of Armenian culture until the 19th century when the nation was absorbed by the Soviet Union.

During this time, the Soviet Union directed Armenian’s to abandon their longstanding vineyards and start production on brandy, according to Keushguerian, favoring grapes better suited for that production.

Prior to the showing of the documentary at Lincoln Theater, Armenian-inspired dinners were served at both the Damariscotta River Grill and Bred and the Bone, where diners were able to enjoy cuisine that paired with wines from the Keushguerians’ vineyard.

Tim Beal, co-owner of Damariscotta River Grill, said that when Christina Belknap, the organizer of the event and executive director of Lincoln Theater, reached out about participating in the event, it was an easy call.

“It was a no brainer,” Beal said.

Keushguerian, who was in attendance at Bred in the Bone with family in friends, including her mother, Andrea Keushguerian, a Damariscotta Select Board member, spoke about each of the wines being served with dinner.

Wines included Zulal Areni, a medium bodied red wine with bright acidity; Zulal Voskehat, a dry, light to medium body white wine using Aremenia’s signature white wine grape; Keush Origins, an invigorating and fresh brut; Keush Rose, an extra brut rose aged for 22 months; and Keush Ultra, a Blanc de Noirs aged for at least 36 months.

After diners had their fill, they crossed Main Street in Damariscotta to Lincoln Theater for the documentary, where the wines served at dinner were also available for purchase.

Belknap said the event was a success and that aside from learning about a local wine connection, she got to see the community come together.

“The best part of this, aside from learning about wine and the connection with the community, was that we has such great partnership with so many businesses right here in Damariscotta,” Belknap said.

Aimee Keushguerian, who moved to Maine from Italy in 2008, said she learned a lot from living in Maine, but that community was one of the most important lessons.

And while she and her father have had to try an reinvigorate Armenia’s post-Soviet infrastructure, the lesson of living in Maine are ones she’s held close.

“Community,” Keushguerian said.” “You really can’t build a nation without a community behind you.”

Jenny Begin, co-owner of event sponsor Salt Bay Trading Co., said her kids went to school with Keushguerian, and these types of events really bring the community together.

“This is the sort of event that makes me so excited to live in this town,” Begin said.

For more information about the documentary, go to sommfilms.com/cup-of-salvation or wineworks.am to learn more about Keushguerian and her father’s efforts in the Armenian wine industry.

Armenpress: Aliyev invites Lukashenko to visit Azerbaijan

 20:56,

YEREVAN, 26 DECEMBER, ARMENPRESS.  President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev has invited President of Belarus Alexander Lukashenko to visit Baku,  BelTA reports.

"We are waiting in Azerbaijan," BelTA quoted Aliyev, as saying.

The two leaders discussed the international agenda and Aliyev provided a detailed overview of the situation in the Caucasus region.

The meeting of the leaders of Azerbaijan and Belarus took place in St. Petersburg, where they had arrived to take part in the unofficial summit of the heads of CIS member states.

Armenian Prime Minister, Russian President may talk on sidelines of St. Petersburg summit – Kremlin

 17:27,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin will have an opportunity to talk on the sidelines of the events attended by Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) leaders in St. Petersburg, TASS reported citing Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

"They will have a great opportunity to talk on the sidelines of the upcoming events," the Kremlin spokesman said in response to a question whether there would be individual talks between PM Pashinyan and President Putin.