Armenia to export meat to United Arab Emirates

Category
Society

The Ministry of Climate Change and Environment of the UAE and the State Service for Food Safety of the Ministry of Agriculture of Armenia have been engaged in negotiations for a long time over exporting meat and meat products from Armenia.

The State Service for Food Safety reported that authorities of both countries have already confirmed the certificate of exporting meat and meat products from Armenia to the UAE.

The service said that the exports will not only encourage trade turnover growth, but will also contribute to strengthening of bilateral business ties and development of mutually beneficial cooperation.

‘I believe Armenia-Georgia cooperation will become more active in various fields’, says PM Mamuka Bakhtadze

Categories
Politics
Region

Georgian Prime Minister Mamuka Bakhtadze says he believes that relations between Armenia and Georgia in various fields will be activated even more.

Speaking at a press conference in Yerevan after the meeting with Armenian counterpart Nikol Pashinyan, PM Bakhtadze stressed that they have discussed issues related to cooperation in the fields of transportation, energy, culture, tourism and humanitarian issues.

“After independence our countries have established mutually beneficial cooperation. I believe that our relations will become more active in different fields. We understood during the discussions that we have untapped potential,” Bakhtadze said.

The Georgian Prime Minister noted that soon the sitting of the Armenian-Georgian intergovernmental commission will take place which will be tasked to design a development plan for relations between the two countries in different fields.

PM Bakhtadze also stressed that Georgia welcomes the activation of Armenia-EU ties.

Yerevantsis bloc presents campaign program

Category
Politics

Ararat Zurabyan, mayoral candidate of Yerevan running for the city council from the Yerevantsis bloc, presented their campaign program to reporters today. The bloc is comprised from the ANM and Armenian Fatherland parties.

“We will have numerous meetings in different communities, we will present ourselves in all available formats,” he said. “Our city has sectoral problems and complete solutions will be given,” he said.

He suggested a unique solution for the public transportation issue of the city. “The Yerevan City Hall will establish a public joint stock company and will propose individual citizens to become shareholders of the Yerevan transportation system. We will do everything for Yerevan to have a completely new transportation system,” he said.

Georgian Prime Minister honors Armenian Genocide victims at Yerevan memorial

Category
Politics

Georgian Prime Minister Mamuka Bakhtadze, who arrived in Armenia on an official visit, has visited the Tsitsernakaberd Armenian Genocide memorial today to pay tribte to the victims of the genocide.

PM Bakhtadze laid a wreath at the memorial and the Eternal Flame.

He was accompanied by foreign minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan and acting Mayor of Yerevan Kamo Areyan.

Acting director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Marine Margaryan accompanied the guests.

PM Bakhtadze also planted a symbolic fir tree at the tree lane.

Howick and Lili given last-minute reprieve: ‘Now we hope our mother can join us’

DutchNews.nl
Sept 10 2018
 
 
Howick and Lili given last-minute reprieve: ‘Now we hope our mother can join us’
PoliticsSociety
 
Lili and Howick on Dutch children’s television
 
Two Armenian children who were given a last-minute reprieve from deportation by junior justice minister Mark Harbers at the weekend say they hope their mother will be allowed to rejoin them in the Netherlands.
 
The disappearance of Howick, 13, and his 12-year-old sister Lily sparked a public outcry and a frantic round of behind-the-scenes lobbying in The Hague. The pair fled their grandparents’ home on Friday night, hours before they were due to be put on a plane to Jerevan, after lawyers failed to persuade a court to halt their departure.
 
The children told AD.nl they were grateful to Harbers for his change of heart and were looking forward to going back to school. ‘I know now that I can go there with no stress and I can stay there,’ said Howick.
 
Lili added: ‘Every time I went I felt like we’re learning now, but it might all soon be for nothing. Now at least we have a future.’
 
Hiding
 
Dutch media reported that Harbers himself had spent time in a safe house last week after receiving threats. The national security co-ordinator (NCTV) confirmed that ‘appropriate measures’ had been taken to ensure the minister’s safety.
 
The Council of State ruled last month that Harbers was not obliged to give the children residency visas, despite claims that their mother, who was deported to Armenia last year, was unfit to care for them. The children have grown up in the Netherlands after arriving from Russia 10 years ago.
 
Harbers resisted growing calls last week to use his discretionary power as a minister to allow Howick and Lili to stay. ‘The case has been reviewed eight times in the courts and in each case the decision was that they have no right to stay because Armenia is a safe country,’ he said.
 
Prime minister Mark Rutte backed the minister’s stance, arguing that ‘you have to be tough sometimes’ to maintain the credibility of the asylum system.
 
Social media
 
But other voices, ranging from children’s ombudsman Margrite Kalverboer to right-wing shock blog GeenStijl, argued that Howick and Lili should be allowed to stay. Princess Laurentien, sister-in-law of king Willem-Alexander, pleaded on a radio show for a ‘creative solution’ to be found.
 
The children had never lived in Armenia, barely speak the language and Dutch officials had been unable to find them a place to stay or a suitable school in Jerevan.
 
On Saturday morning a police appeal for help to find the children prompted a storm of protest on social media. Under the hashtag #ikwerknietmee – ‘I will not co-operate’ users vowed to shelter the children if they found them rather than hand them over to the authorities. Crime reporter Peter R. de Vries tweeted: ‘Anyone who gives them up is an NSB’er’, referring to the wartime Dutch Nazi party.
 
Coalition strain
 
The issue also placed severe strain on the coalition. Joël Voordewind, an MP with the ChristenUnie, the smallest of the four parties in the cabinet, said on Twitter there could be ‘no question of deporting’ the children until proper arrangements had been made to house and educate them in Armenia.
 
Voordewind, the CU’s spokesman on asylum issues, said the party wanted to extend the amnesty for asylum seeker children who had settled long-term in the Netherlands. Howick and Lili were ineligible because their mother was deemed to have obstructed efforts to repatriate the family.
 
MPs from the progressive liberal party D66 also voiced its concern after coming under pressure from members to oppose the decision. Little over an hour later Harbers announced he had granted the children permission to stay. ‘Developments in the past few hours have shown that the welfare and the safety of the children could no longer be guaranteed,’ he said.
 
Safe return
 
Shortly afterwards the children’s lawyer said they had returned to their grandparents’ home and had made contact with their mother.
 
Lili said she and her brother feared the worst when judges rejected their plea late on Friday night to be allowed to stay in the country. Lawyers argued that their mother was suffering from post-traumatic stress syndrome and was unable to care for her children.
 
‘The idea that we should have been in Armenia right now was unbelievable,’ said Lili. ‘At moments like that you feel terrible. But when something happens at the last minute, you think, see? You should always keep fighting.’
 
Howick said he hoped his mother would now be allowed to rejoin her family in the Netherlands. ‘The big question for us is how long it will take. But it’s our dream ultimately for the three of us to be able to live here together.’

Syrian PM visits Armenian pavilion at Damascus int’l fair

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 10 2018
Economy 12:36 10/09/2018 Armenia

At the opening of the 60th Damascus International Fair, Prime Minister of Syria Imad Khamis visited the Armenian pavilion to be welcomed by Armenian Ambassador to Syria Arshak Poladian, Business Armenia said in a press release.   

Presented in a single pavilion Armenia participates in the 60th International Fair in Damascus held on September 6-15. Samples and catalogues of 33 companies represent the machine building, construction materials, pharmaceutical, and food industries of Armenia.

The Syrian PM welcomed the participation of the fellow state Armenia, expressing hope that the fair will boost the Armenian-Syrian trade and economic cooperation. Ambassador Poladian noted that Armenia’s producers are ready to make maximum efforts for the mutually beneficial cooperation.   

Armenia was awarded for the participation, with the award granted to Ambassador Arshak Poladian by Syrian Minister of Economy Mohammad Samer al-Khalil.

The Armenian pavilion is in the center of attention of the distributors and major buyers-visitors who are mainly interested in the offerings of the Armenian companies producing food, construction materials and renewable energy. Considering the great interest in the solar energy systems, on 12 September the CEO of Stigen, Hayk Shekyan will present the production, capacity, competitiveness and export potential of the company.     

The Domascus international fair has brought together over 1700 companies from 48 countries.  

Pashinyan gives Russia specialists access to US labs in Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Sept 10 2018
 
 
Pashinyan gives Russia specialists access to US labs in Armenia
11:09, 10.09.2018
 
Russian specialists were permitted to enter American labs in Armenia, and which research biological materials, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told Kommersant newspaper of Russia.
 
“Russian specialists were allowed to enter the laboratories literally ten to fifteen days ago, with my personal instruction,” he noted.
 
Pashinyan clarified that these labs are completely overseen by the Armenian authorities.
 
“We [Armenia] are ready for cooperation,” the Armenian PM added. “And Russian specialists have already been there and become convinced that there is nothing terrible in those laboratories.”
 
“It [these labs] can in no way be used against Russia,” Nikol Pashinyan concluded. “On the contrary, we invite Russian specialists, and we are ready to discuss the matter of joint use of those laboratories.”

Russian specialists visit U.S. funded Armenian bio-laboratories

Aysor, Armenia
Sept 10 2018
1
Read Aysor.am inTelegram

Russian specialists visited the bio-laboratories created in Armenia with U.S. investments.

“10-15 days ago with my assignment Russian specialists were allowed to enter the laboratories. These laboratories have become available after I have become country’s PM,” Pashinyan told Russian Kommersant.

He said the laboratories are under full control of Armenian authorities.

“The Russian specialists got convinced that there is nothing terrible ongoing there. These are high-quality laboratories and can by no means be used against Russia. We invite Russian specialists and are ready to discuss the joint usage of these laboratories,” he noted.

In Moscow Pashinyan gets along with Putin, clashes with Russian-Armenian philanthropist

EurasiaNet.org
Sept 10 2018
 
 
In Moscow Pashinyan gets along with Putin, clashes with Russian-Armenian philanthropist
 
The businessman accused Pashinyan of “disrespecting” foreign investors.
 
Ani Mejlumyan Sep 10, 2018
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet in Moscow. (photo: kremlin.ru)
 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan visited Moscow on September 8 for his third meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the last four months. Pashinyan said the frequency of the meetings testified to the strength of the relationship, but he also tangled with a prominent Armenian-Russian businessman and philanthropist who accused Armenia’s new leadership of damaging the country’s investment climate.
 
The Armenia-Russia relationship is in a turbulent phase, as the Kremlin mistrusts the new leadership in Yerevan, which is populated by many pro-Western liberals.
 
Sharpening Russian concerns are the criminal charges that Armenian investigators have filed against Yuri Khachaturov, the current general secretary of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, a Russia-led military bloc, for his role in the violent crackdown against protesters in Yerevan in 2008. Prosecutors also have filed charges against former defense minister Mikael Harutyunyan, and Russia has refused to extradite him.
 
Nevertheless, the official part of Pashinyan’s Moscow visit appears to have gone smoothly. “We didn’t discuss private issues,” Pashinyan told journalists after the meeting with Putin, when asked about the Harutyunyan case. “I think it’s a matter of further cooperation between the Armenian and Russian law enforcement agencies.”
 
Alongside Putin following their meeting, Pashinyan alluded to the rocky period in relations but chalked it up to uninformed speculation. “Despite certain pessimism evident in both the Armenian and Russian media and in social networks, it is my belief that our relations are developing dynamically … I am sure that these issues will be resolved and we will continue to base our allied relations on mutual respect for the interests and the sovereignty of our countries, and the principle of non-interference.”
 
“There is no need to qualify our relations: they are very special,” Putin said, for his part. “It has been so for centuries, not just since you and I have started working together.”
 
The reception was less cordial with Ruben Vardanyan, a billionaire businessman-philanthropist, who clashed with Pashinyan at a forum with Russian-Armenian business leaders, calling the new leader “disrespectful.”
 
At issue was the new government’s closure of the Center for Strategic Initiatives, a government-run effort to attract foreign investment that opened in 2016 and with which Vardanyan has worked.
 
The Center was founded and chaired by former Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan, of whom Vardanyan was an outspoken supporter. “If Karen Karapetyan and his team succeed, that means we all succeed, and vice versa,” Vardanyan said in 2016. “His failure will be our failure as well, and Karen Karapetyan’s success is vital for all of us, and I would especially emphasize, for Artsakh.” (Artsakh is the Armenian word for Nagorno-Karabakh, the territory disputed between Armenia and Azerbaijan.)
 
“My friends and I have invested more than $600 million in Armenia over the past 18 years. It’s not a small amount. Do whatever you want. I just think you need to maintain dialogue,” Vardanyan said at the meeting with Pashinyan. “You have the right to do whatever you want with your organization, but if it’s created jointly with the private sector, and you do not even ask before closing it, but you notify us. To say the least this is disrespectful.”
 
Pashinyan justified the move by saying it was using state money without delivering results. “People working in these centers and foundations receive two to three times more wages than ministers and the prime minister, and they do nothing,” Pashinyan said. “From now on nobody will get money for doing nothing.”
 
Vardanyan also asked Pashinyan if he could guarantee “predictability” for business in Armenia, and Pashinyan fired back. “Now, different people, the press, talk about instability, civil war, I don’t understand. Today, the government in Armenia belongs to the people and it will always be that way. You want me to announce myself a lifelong monarch, so you could say there is a stability. It won’t happen.”
 
Vardanyan is well known in Armenia for his philanthropic work. He founded the IDeA foundation, which conducts development projects and holds the the high-profile Aurora Prize awards. He is also a founder of the United World College in Dilijan, an elite school.
 
He also has relationships with the leaders that Pashinyan ousted, including Karapetyan and former president Serzh Sargsyan. In 2016, two Russian State Duma candidates of Armenian origin, Semyon Bagdasarov and Roman Babayan, received support from Armenia’s Presidential administration, Babayan’s campaign manager told Eurasianet.
 
The Babayan campaign official said that at the request of the Sargsyan administration, both campaigns were funded by Russian-Armenian businessmen, including Ruben Vardanyan.
 
Vardanyan also is an investor in Lydian International, the company involved in the controversial Amulsar gold mining project.
 
Vardanyan’s interests aside, official Armenian state statistics have indicated that foreign direct investment in the second trimester of 2018 – roughly coinciding with Pashinyan’s time in office – is down 43.5 percent over the same period the year before.
 
With reporting by Grigor Atanesian. Ani Mejlumyan is a journalist based in Yerevan. Grigor Atanesian is a freelance journalist who covers Armenia.
 
 

Gladys Berejiklian apologises as Liberals face Wagga Wagga byelection wipeout

The Guardian
Sept 10 2018
 
 
Gladys Berejiklian apologises as Liberals face Wagga Wagga byelection wipeout
 
Premier says NSW government will work hard ‘to win back the trust that we have clearly lost’

The New South Wales premier, Gladys Berejiklian, has apologised to voters after a disastrous showing in the Wagga Wagga byelection looked set to see the seat slip out of the Liberal party’s grip for the first time in 60 years.

The party is almost certain to lose the previously ultra-safe seat in the Riverina region as the messy leadership spill in Canberra cost the sitting state government dear in Saturday’s poll.

“It’s likely that we’ll get the highest primary vote, but, of course, not enough to hold the seat,” Berejiklian said on Sunday. “It’s the most likely outcome is that independent Joe McGirr will win the seat.”

She apologised to voters for the byelection forced by the resignation of the disgraced MP Daryl Maguire.

“I want the people of Wagga to know that my government will work hard across NSW, but especially in that region, to win back the trust that we have clearly lost.

Acknowledging the impact of the ructions in Canberra that replaced Malcolm Turnbull with Scott Morrison, she said: “The overwhelming message I was getting is that people were sick of politicians fighting amongst themselves and sick of the perception that politicians were in it for themselves and not the community.

“And the circumstances which forced the previous member to resign, plus what happened at a different level of government, exacerbated those feelings that people had.”

Results so far show a projected swing of about 29% against the state’s Coalition government, with McGirr most likely to take the seat ahead of Labor.

Speaking to supporters in his Wagga backyard on Saturday night, McGirr said he was feeling “quietly optimistic” but didn’t expect a result until Sunday.

The doctor and academic ruled out joining the Coalition once in government.

The NSW Liberal state director, Chris Stone, on Saturday told the party’s election-might function that “on current projections it will be very difficult for us to get there”. The Liberal candidate, Julia Ham, told the subdued crowd she would consider running in the statewide election in March.

The Labor candidate, Dan Hayes, declared that the community had “made Wagga marginal again” after arriving at his party’s election-night reception to rapturous applause. Hayes said the local and national scandals had stoked community anger.

The premier and several senior colleagues acknowledged that Turnbull’s knifing had deterred some voters in Wagga but the federal senator Jim Molan dismissed those concerns, saying it “wasn’t a factor”.

“People were very disappointed that we were spending time taking about ourselves and to ourselves but it’s something that every now and again that you’ve got to go through,” Molan said. “We don’t go through leadership spill for fun, I can tell you that.

The deputy prime minister, Michael McCormack, wouldn’t be drawn on whether the federal Coalition would be to blame for a Liberal loss, saying the government wasn’t intending on losing the seat.