600 new jobs already created in Armenia’s smallest province this year

News.am, Armenia

YEREVAN. – Around 42 thousand tourist visited Armenia’s Vayots Dzor province last year and 20.4 thousand in the first half of this year, Armenian PM Karen Karapetyan said during a meeting in the resort town of Jermuk.

According to the program of development of the regional cities of Armenia, it is planned to invest $ 10 million into the development of Jermuk. Forty million drams will be allocated for the prokect development.

The process of enlargement of municipalities continues in the region. Three municipalities were created out of 18 last year, and it is planned to enlarge another 24 municipalities by the end of this year.

In the first half of 2017, two investment programs launched in the region were estimated at 1 billion 230 million drams and $ 117 million, while 600 new jobs were created.

Armenian businessman: Training of Armenian IT companies can be in demand in Iran

News.am, Armenia

YEREVAN. – Training of Armenian IT companies can be in demand in Iran, head of a company that is  a major distributor of computer equipment in Armenia told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Armen Baldryan, General Director at Unicomp CJSC, said in addition to Armenia, there are other countries through which Iran can receive and i actually receiving computers and their parts.

“They also have local production, with local brands. There are companies from Arab countries, and China. But, in general, there is demand on the Iranian market. And there you can not only resell computers and accessories, but also offer advice and training for the administration of networks, communication systems and other areas. These are services with a much higher added value,”he said.



US urges Turkey to release arbitrarily jailed journalists

Panorama, Armenia


The United States has urged Turkey that it expects the release of journalists who are being held arbitrarily under the emergency rule with regards to the ongoing trials of 17 executives and journalists of the daily Cumhuriyet, Hurriyet Daily News reported.

“We continue to urge the government of Turkey to respect and ensure freedom of _expression_, fair trial guarantees, judicial independence, other human rights and fundamental freedoms, and to also release the journalists and others who we believe are being held arbitrarily under the government’s state of emergency,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert told reporters at a daily press briefing July 27, as quoted by the source.

Nauert’s remarks came when asked about the ongoing trials of 17 executives and journalists from Cumhuriyet. Twelve out of 17 journalists have been behind bars since November 2016.

Russian analyst signals ‘hazards’ of Armenia’s European integration

Tert, Armenia

11:13 • 29.07.17

A policy choice allowing Armenia to opt for European integration would imply open borders with Turkey, a Russian political analyst said Friday, commenting on the parliamentary opposition’s recent call for revising country’s membership in the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU).

Modest Kalerov sees nothing surprising about the proposal raised by the political bloc Yelk, which he said stood out with pro-Western western approaches back in the pre-election period.

Speaking to Tert.am, he highlighted two possible choices for Armenia: membership in either the EEU or EU,  or no membership at all in any political or economic bloc or union.

“Two of Armenia’s neighbors, Georgia and Turkey, are heading towards EU integration. So the question for Armenia is whether wants membership in a [supra-national] body which may also accept Turkey as a member or whether it wishes to remain a sovereign state. EU membership implies membership based on the territorial integrity principle. So the question Yelk needed to have raised while making that proposal is whether Armenia is ready to open its borders with Turkey to shift the policy choice towards the European Union. European integration implies open borders with Turkey,” he added.  

According to Kolerov, Armenia has better chances to maintain its sovereignty in the Eurasian Economic Union. “The EU Association Agreement which Armenia didn’t sign was aimed at handing over the country’s sovereignty to the European Union. Those who insist on the contrary are either liars or fools,” he added.

 

Asked whether Armenia’s Eurasian integration really matters for Russia, the analyst said, “Russia’s position is that it is Armenia’s internal affair, as Armenia became an EEU member on its own initiative. President Serzh Sargsyan expressed the country’s willingness to join the union on September 3 [2013]. This is what Russia will say. Likewise Russia will say that if you have changed your minds, you are free to make another decision, because it is again your country’s internal affair, and the decisions rest with you,” Kolerov said, adding that he doesn’t absolutely expect Armenia’s possible decision to leave the EEU to undermine the union.

Armenia PM: We must provide our children with the best education

News.am, Armenia

YEREVAN. – If we want to have a good country, we must provide our children with the best education, Armenian Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan said at the July 28 meeting in the resort town of Jermuk, Vayots Dzor province of Armenia.

Representatives of the education and health sectors reported on the optimization work. As a result, the Ministry of Education saved 56 million dram, while the Ministry of Health– 24 million.

“We have a quite good potential for effective spending. The main thing for us is not to save money, but to provide our children with a modern, best quality education. Simply, given our capabilities, we need to spend on it as efficiently as possible,” Karapetyan said.

According to representatives of the Ministry of Education, schools in Vayots Dzor region successfully conduct video lessons, cooperate with Yerevan-based Ayb school, the Physics and Mathematics School and the School after Mkhitar Heratsi.

Expert: Solar plants can be effective in Armenia’s Ararat plain

News.am, Armenia

YEREVAN. – Solar power plants can be effective in Ararat plain of Armenia.

Founder and director of Shtigen LLC, a company dealing with the import and assembly of solar panels, Hayk Shekyan, who takes part in the construction of a power plant for International Masis Tabak LLC, told the aforementioned to Armenian News – NEWS.am Saturday.

As compared to a mountainous area, the intensiveness of solar radiation is lower in Ararat plain, but it is still possible to get a good return from solar panels there. The Electric Networks of Armenia is, for its part, ready to receive the entire solar power generated there,” he added.

At the end of last year, a 10 mW quota of solar power stations was declared in Armenia. The companies which apply for construction licenses will receive a 42,6 mW preferential tariff without VAT, but each of them will be able to construct a plant of at least 1 mW.   

Putin grants pardon to Marina Janjgava and Annik Kesyan convicted for high treason

News.am, Armenia

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday granted pardon to Marina Janjgava and Annik Kesyan, who were convicted for high treason, Meduza reports. 

The respective decrees, published on the official internet portal of legal information, will enter into force ten days after their publication.

Marina Janjgava and Annik Kesyan were convicted for sending SMS on Russian military equipment, which they saw on the Sochi railway shortly before the conflict in South Ossetia. 

Sports: Armenia take their first-ever gold on a magnificent triple-double by MVP Aslanian

FIBA.com – U16 Women’s European Championship – Basketball

35 Anna Aslanian (ARM) – 23 Lia Mikiashvili (GEO) – Armenia v Georgia, 2017 FIBA U16 Women’s European Championship Division C (GIB), Gibraltar – Tercentenary Sports Hall(GIB), Semi-Finals,

GIBRALTAR (FIBA U16 Women’s European Championship 2017, Division C) – A stunning triple-double by Anna Aslanian paved the way for Armenia to a 63-44Final win over Malta.

The entire team from Malta had six blocks throughout the Championship. Aslanian saved twice as many just for the Final outing, finishing the game with 22 points, 31 rebounds, 12 blocks and 7 assists. She almost singlehandedly outrebounded Malta, who had 39 rebounds.

Aslanian’s performance gave her a 57 player efficiency rating, and she had a nice supporting cast in Kristina Melikyan and Ani Hovhannisyan. Melikyan collected 17 points, Hovhannisyan had 16, as Armenia played superb defense in the second half and held Malta to just 19 points after the break.

Malta struggled with their shooting percentage, connecting on 19-of-79 shots from the field. With such a poor shooting performance, they could not make their 18-7 edge in steals count. Michaela Zammit Cordina was their lone ranger in double figures with 15 points.

Joining them on the podium were Georgia. A 16-5 first quarter ensured a stressless game for them against Wales. The final result was almost a carbon copy of the final, Georgia winning 66-45, as Mariam Okropiridze put up 32 points, 7 steals, 5 rebounds and 5 assists.

Kosovo made sure that they wrapped up 5th place. Enisa Kamerolli channeled her inner Aslanian and also signed off on a triple-double performance with 17 points, 15 rebounds and 12 assists, more than enough for Kosovo to secure a 95-44 win over Gibraltar.

With all the games played, final standings are set: Armenia finish ahead of Malta, Georgia and Wales. Kosovo finish fifth, followed by Gibraltar and Monaco.

FIBA


At historic Aleppo hotel, nostalgia for a Syria lost

Reuters


At historic Aleppo hotel, nostalgia for a Syria lost

6 MIN READ

A view of a damaged room at the Baron Hotel in Aleppo, Syria July 14, 2017. Picture taken July 14, 2017.Omar Sanadiki

ALEPPO, Syria (Reuters) – On the terrace of the Baron Hotel in Aleppo, the owner’s widow, Roubina Tashjian, sorted through old photographs of its happier past in a more peaceful Syria.

Founded by an Armenian family in 1911, the Baron played host to adventurers, writers, kings, aviators, Bedouin chiefs and presidents until war forced it to close five years ago.

Tashjian sees the Baron as part of a Syria that values religious and ethnic diversity, openness to the outside world, culture and respect for the country’s great antiquities.

“A Syrian is a mixture of all these ethnic groups and cultures … this is a big pot and it’s all mixed up. But we cook the same kibbeh,” she said, referring to a Levantine dish.

Trying to revive that vision of Syria amid a war that has aggravated social fractures would involve reconciliation between political opponents, religious sects and economic classes.

But with hundreds of thousands dead, more than half the country’s pre-war population displaced and fighting ongoing, there seems little hope of that for now.

For the Baron, whose business depended on stability, safety and the draw of Syria’s cultural treasures, the 2011 uprising was a catastrophic assault on everything that allowed it to thrive.

During most of the fighting, Aleppo’s government-held western districts were subjected to shellfire, an influx of refugees and shortages of water, electricity and food.

East Aleppo, held by rebels until December when the army swept through it after months of siege and air raids, was left all but a wasteland.

The Baron, in west Aleppo near the front line, was hit by mortar bombs, including one that sprayed shrapnel across an upper floor and another that crashed through the window of its “Oriental Room” onto delicate floor tiles but failed to explode.

The tail fin from that round now sits in the Baron’s cabinet of curiosities alongside such relics as pottery given by visiting archaeologists and T.E. Lawrence’s hotel bill.

In the upstairs room she always took during her frequent stays in Aleppo stands the glass-topped wooden desk where Agatha Christie wrote part of Murder on the Orient Express.

For supporters of President Bashar al-Assad it is the fault of rebels they describe as terrorists, viewing them as Islamist militants who despise diversity and criminal gangs who loot cultural treasures.

Assad has cast his state as a secular protector of Syria’s minorities and cultural heritage against Sunni rebels backed by hostile foreign states whose ranks include many hardliners.

It was a view shared by some of the audience at a concert in an Old City church, fluttering fans in the summer heat of the open basilica, its roof ruined by shelling, as they listened to Mozart’s Mass in C Minor.

A view shows the interior of the Baron Hotel in Aleppo, Syria July 14, 2017.Omar Sanadiki

But any characterization of Assad’s Syria as diverse, secular, open and tolerant is rejected by the opposition, as well as some Western countries and rights groups. Critics say Syria’s government has long been one of the most oppressive in the Middle East and this was a root cause of the war.

The privileged position of Assad’s Alawite sect under him and his father, the late President Hafez al-Assad, fed grievances among many in the Sunni Muslim majority even as other Sunnis including urban elites backed the government.

While the government has promoted the idea of a secular Syria throughout the war, the conflict’s sectarian edge has been hard to miss.

As rebels rallied around Sunni Islamist slogans, Assad drew on allies including Shi’ite Islamist militias backed by Iran. They played a big part in the campaign to retake eastern Aleppo.

In the city, the conflict’s socio-economic dimensions are readily apparent. Areas where the rebellion was strongest included places bypassed by economic growth and poor quarters to which rural people flocked.

One west Aleppo resident, who had driven through devastated eastern districts after the fighting ended, said the inhabitants had brought ruin upon themselves by consorting with rebels.

Slideshow (4 Images)

“Those people were the cause. Yes, it’s sad, but…” the person said.

In the Baron, the wood-panelled dining room, the bar stocked with antique bottles, the pink furniture of the high-ceilinged smoking room and the bedrooms all seem worn and tired.

It stopped taking paying guests in 2012 – bar a few old friends – when Syria’s civil war came to Aleppo and mortars and sniper fire began to plague the streets around.

Tashjian, a 66-year-old former teacher, chases away street kittens that creep through broken french windows into the dining room and tries to keep the mostly deserted hotel from falling further into disrepair in a city with little electricity or water.

Her husband, Armen Mazloumian, the grandson of the hotel’s founder, died in 2016, two years after they married following a 30-year friendship. The Baron now belongs to his sisters, who left Syria years earlier, she said.

On the terrace from which Egypt’s nationalist leader Gamal Abdel Nasser once addressed a huge crowd, the boxes of old photographs were surrounded by other detritus recently hauled from a basement after the fighting abated.

Kilims, antique sewing machines, a set of 1950s towels, and moldering linen imported from Europe and embroidered with the hotel’s name, cascaded from large rattan trunks.

During the fighting, the hotel took in refugee families from east Aleppo. While they were there they used so much water cleaning the floors of their rooms each morning that the elegant geometric tiles were damaged, Tashjian said.

In the late afternoon heat, the hotel is cooled by a breeze that drifts in through broken windows on the ground floor and up the grand staircase.

“Syria was the most comfortable, the most secular country in the Arab world,” said Tashjian. “It was embarrassing if people asked if you were a Christian or a Muslim.”

Editing by Tom Perry and Giles Elgood