RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/03/2018

                                        Tuesday, 
Leaders Deepen Rift In Armenian Opposition Bloc
        • Karine Simonian
Armenia - Edmon Marukian (L) and Nikol Pashinian, leaders of the opposition 
Yelk alliance, address supporters rallying in Yerevan, 19Jan2018.
Disagreements within the opposition Yelk alliance seemed to deepen on Tuesday 
as two of its top leaders publicly traded verbal barbs over how to fight 
against President Serzh Sarkisian.
The bitter exchange came as one of them, Nikol Pashinian, continued to prepare 
for a series of demonstrations in Yerevan aimed at forcing Sarkisian not to 
extend his decade-long rule. Pashinian and a group of activists of his Civil 
Contract party began touring Armenia’s northern and central regions on foot for 
that purpose on Saturday.
The two other parties making up Yelk, Bright Armenia and Republic, have refused 
to join this campaign, saying that anti-Sarkisian protests will not attract 
large crowds. The Bright Armenia leader, Edmon Marukian, criticized Pashinian’s 
tactics in an op-ed article posted on Aravot.am.
In particular, Marukian said his opposition ally is seeking “short-term glory” 
and following a “path trodden by defunct political forces” which failed to 
achieve regime change in the country. “It is reckless to do the same thing 
every time and to expect to achieve a different result every time,” he wrote.
Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian and his supporters pose for a 
photograph in Lori province, 2 April 2018.
Pashinian hit back at Marukian as he and his associates walked through the 
northern Lori province in heavy rain. “The path drawn in Mr. Marukian’s article 
has been repeatedly trodden, including by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation 
and the Orinats Yerkir party,” he said, referring to parties that have closely 
collaborated with Sarkisian during his rule.
“I am convinced that my actions reflect the will of the overwhelming majority 
of Yelk’s voters,” insisted Pashinian. He argued that the Yelk leadership has 
unanimously spoken out against Sarkisian’s “third term in office” before.
The Civil Contract leader is due to finish his 200-kilometer-long walking tour 
in time for his first anti-government rally in Yerevan slated for April 13. His 
party is planning to rally supporters in the city’s Liberty Square for at least 
four consecutive days.
The Armenian parliament dominated by Sarkisian’s supporters is scheduled to 
elect a new prime minister on April 17. The outgoing president, whose second 
term expires on April 9, is widely expected to take up what will now be the 
country’s top executive post.
Yelk finished third in last year’s parliamentary elections, winning 9 seats in 
the 105-member National Assembly.
Tax Breaks Fuel IT Startup Growth In Armenia
        • Emil Danielyan
Armenia - Young people at the annual DigiTec Expo tech exhibition in Yerevan, 
30 September 2017.
The Armenian government reported on Tuesday a sharp rise in the number of new 
information technology (IT) firms that have qualified for tax breaks introduced 
three years ago to boost Armenia’s rapidly growing IT sector.
Under a government bill passed by the Armenian parliament in late 2014, such 
firms employing up to 30 people can be fully exempt from profit tax. They are 
also eligible for a preferential income tax rate for their employees, 
equivalent to 10 percent of their gross wages.
Nearly 430 IT startups have been granted the tax breaks, valid for five years, 
by a special government commission since then. According to the Armenian 
Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology, 281 of them 
received such exemptions last year, up from around 100 in 2016.
The ministry touted the privileged tax regime on Tuesday in a statement and a 
video report attached to it. The footage featured interviews with the founders 
of three Armenian tech firms set up in the last few years.
One of them, Himnark, specializes in accounting software development. “We 
provided services to one foreign company and our resulting profit wasn’t 
taxed,” said its young owner, Ruben Osipian. “We invested it in developing new 
software. Had it not been for the tax exemption, we would have obviously 
invested less.”
“Our income tax is lower and that allows us to pay higher [real] wages,” said 
Vahram Bleyan, one of the two founders of another startup, Mamble. The company 
claims to mainly sell software to a large corporate client in the United States.
Armenia - Prime Minister Karen Karapetian visits an IT company in Yerevan, 30 
March 2018.
IT is the fastest-growing sector of the Armenian economy, having expanded by 
over 20 percent annually in the past decade. The sector employing more than 
15,000 people grew by almost 30 percent last year, according to government data.
Deputy Transport Minister Amalya Yeghoyan predicted last week that this rapid 
growth will continue unabated this year. “I am sure that the number of jobs 
will increase,” she said, according to the Armenpress news agency.
The government-funded Enterprise Incubator Foundation (EIF) estimates that the 
combined turnover of at least 650 IT firms currently operating in Armenia 
reached $765 million in 2017. The figure, which includes Internet service 
provision, was equivalent to over 6.5 percent of the country’s Gross Domestic 
Product.
The sector’s largest companies include the Armenian branches of U.S. tech 
giants like as Synopsys, National Instruments, Mentor Graphics and VMware. Its 
steady expansion is also increasingly driven by homegrown Armenian companies.
“Local firms are now in better shape than they were five years ago,” the EIF 
said in a recent report. “They have more employees, attract venture investment, 
and demonstrate an improvement in technical expertise and knowledge of the 
market. In addition, they are implementing more complex and value-added 
projects.”
A lack of skilled personnel is widely seen as the main challenge facing the 
sector. Local IT executives have long complained about the inadequate 
professional level of many graduates of IT departments of Armenia universities. 
The latter often need to undergo on-the-job training after graduation.
“This is a problem,” said Yeghoyan. In her words, there are now at least 2,000 
job vacancies in the sector.
German Embassy Suspends Visa Service Outsourcing
        • Anush Muradian
Armenia - German Ambassador to Armenia Matthias Kiesler gives a press 
conference in Yerevan, 22 November 2016.
The German Embassy in Armenia has effectively suspended its decision to 
outsource consular services to a Turkish-based company which is being 
investigated by the Armenian authorities, it emerged on Tuesday.
The embassy has long processed visa applications from Armenian nationals 
planning to travel to Germany and five other European Union member states. It 
announced last week that starting from April 3 this will be done by Vizametric, 
a Turkish-Russian private firm registered in Turkey.
The announcement raised fears in Armenia that the Turkish government will gain 
access to sensitive personal data of many Armenians. The latter are required to 
disclose their incomes, bank details and other personal information in their 
applications for so-called Schengen visas valid in virtually all EU member 
states.
The Armenian government’s Agency for Personal Data Protectionsaid on Friday 
that it has ordered the Vizametric office in Yerevan avoid accepting visa 
applications pending its investigation aimed at “preventing possible 
violations” of Armenian law.
The German ambassador to Armenia, Matthias Kiesler, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service (Azatutyun.am) that his mission will therefore continue to provide 
consular services for the time being. “We have to wait and see how the process 
goes,” he said.
“I want to reassure that the agreement between the German Foreign Ministry and 
Vizametric stipulates that the protection of personal data must be at the 
highest level and that it cannot be passed on to a third party,” stressed 
Kiesler.
Meanwhile, the head of the Armenian government agency, Gevorg Hayrapetian, said 
it is scrutinizing the visa service provider to see whether the latter would 
comply with Armenia’s law on personal data protection. Vizametric must prove 
that there would be no “illegal” access to information collected by it, he said.
Hayrapetian denied that the Turkish origin of the company was not the reason 
for the launch of the inquiry. He noted, though, that Turkey is known for 
adequate protection of personal data.
Turkey refuses to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia and fully 
supports Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
Ruling Party Figures Defend ‘Real Opposition’
        • Astghik Bedevian
Armenia - Eduard Sharmazanov, spokesman for the ruling Republican Party, at a 
news conference in Yerevan, 14May2017.
Senior representatives of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) praised 
on Tuesday an opposition leader who has criticized other opponents of President 
Serzh Sarkisian for planning rallies against his continued rule.
Edmon Marukian and his Bright Armenia party have refused to join the campaign 
launched by the Civil Contract party of Nikol Pashinian, a fellow member of the 
opposition Yelk alliance. In a newspaper article, Marukian said voters 
essentially allowed Sarkisian to become prime minister during last year’s 
parliamentary elections. Nothing can therefore stop the outgoing president from 
remaining in power, he wrote.
Pashinian insisted on the opposite. He said Armenians should take to the 
streets and thwart Sarkisian’s “third term.”
Gagik Melikian, a senior HHK parliamentarian, said Marukian “told the truth.” 
“I highly appreciate Edmon Marukian’s political and legal knowledge,” he told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). “What Edmon Marukian is saying is 
written in our constitution, electoral code and the National Assembly statutes.”
Another senior HHK figure, Eduard Sharmazanov, was careful not to openly take 
sides in the deepening dispute within the Yelk leadership. Still, he said: “To 
my knowledge, Bright Armenia has never spoken of fighting against concrete 
persons or disputing the April 2 [2017] election results in the streets. That 
is why I’m not surprised [by Marukian’s stance.] Pashinian’s behavior is more 
unexpected.”
“In democratic countries around the world, the real opposition is not those who 
cry loudly but those who consistently follow their ideological path,” added 
Sharmazanov.
Sarkisian stated in 2014 that he will “not aspire” to the post of prime 
minister if Armenia becomes a parliamentary republic immediately after his 
second and final presidential term ends on April 2, 2018. He is now widely 
expected to be named premier by the HHK later this month.
HHK representatives deny that the outgoing president is about to break his 
pledge. They claim that he never explicitly promised to leave office in April 
2018.
Press Review
“Zhamanak” comments on opposition leader Nikol Pashinian’s and his supporters’ 
200-kilometer-long walking tour of Armenia aimed at drumming up popular support 
for their upcoming anti-government rallies in Yerevan. The paper says this is 
not the first opposition attempt to “take Yerevan politics to the regions” and 
it is likely to fail just as the previous ones have.
“The small group of young oppositionists has decided to pass through at least 
half of the country on foot and to inform people who live in towns and village 
and are cynical and indifferent towards everything about the rallies that will 
start on April 13,” “Hraparak” writes on the same subject. “The public has 
split in two parts. The larger part -- namely those who prefer a problem-free 
life and are ready to run risks only in case of having a 100 percent guarantee 
of success -- is extremely pessimistic. They consider Nikol Pashinian to be 
crazy or adventurist. The other, smaller section thinks that one has to fight 
even if the likelihood of victory is very small.”
“Zhoghovurd” laments the fact that none of the high-ranking state officials 
laid flowers on Monday at the graves of Armenian soldiers who were killed in 
the four-day war in Nagorno-Karabakh which broke out exactly two years ago. The 
paper says that only some officials from the Armenian Defense Ministry visited 
the Yerablur military cemetery in Yerevan for that purpose. It wonders whether 
President Serzh Sarkisian and key members of his entourage forgot the war 
anniversary or just did not want to look the soldiers’ relatives in the eyes.
“The commander-in-chief of Armenia’s armed forces, Serzh Sarkisian, did not 
visit Yerablur,” writes “Haykakan Zhamanak.” “Nor does the presidential website 
contain any message on the second anniversary of the April war.” Instead, the 
paper says, Sarkisian on Monday congratulated Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah 
el-Sisi on winning another term in office.
(Tigran Avetisian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

The traditional charity exhibition-fair “The breath of Syrian-Armenian culture in Yerevan” was opened

Please find the attached press release of the Ministry of Diaspora.
Sincerely,
Media and PR Department:
( 374 10) 585601, internal 805
----------------------
Sincerely
Department of Press and Public Relations
( 374 10) 585601, extension 805


91. The opening of the exhibition of handicrafts of Syrian Armenians took place.docx

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Last lecture in Great War series at ASU set for April 5

San Angelo Standard Times, California
April 2 2018


The final spring 2018 installment of the Great War Centennial Commemoration Lecture Series is set for April 5. 

Hosted by Angelo State University’s Department of History, the free public lecture titled “The Armenian Genocide and America’s Responses: 1915 to the Present,” beings at 7 p.m. in Room 100 of the ASU Cavness Science Building, 2460 Dena Drive.

Julien S. Zarifian, associate professor of American history at the University of Cergy-Pontoise (France) and Visiting Fulbright Scholar at the Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research at the University of Southern California, will discuss the Armenian Genocide and how America has reacted.

The three-year lecture series began in September 2015 to commemorate World War I, also known as the Great War, and is partially funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities. 

For more information, contact the Department of History at 325-942-2324 or 

The only Armenian living in Derik district of Turkey’s Mardin Province celebrates Easter at Armenian Church

ArmenPress, Armenia
April 2 2018
The only Armenian living in Derik district of Turkey’s Mardin Province celebrates Easter at Armenian Church


YEREVAN, APRIL 2, ARMENPRESS. Zekeria Sabuncu of Armenian origin who returned to Derik district of MardinProvincefrom Istanbul 5 years ago celebrated Easter at St. Gevorg Church, ARMENPRESS reports Istanbul-based “Agos” informs.

Zekeria Sabuncu visited St. Gevorg Church, rang the church bells, lit a candle, prayed and again left for Istanbul to celebrate the holiday with the family”, the periodical writes.

Derik’s St. Gevorg Church was built in 1650. The settlement was looted by Turks in 1895 during the Hamidian massacres of Armenians.

In late 19th century 60 families lived in Derik.

English –translator/editor:Tigran Sirekanyan

Situation in NK conflict zone is consequence of Azerbaijan’s policy of aggression, ethnic cleansing – Armenia foreign ministry

ArmenPress, Armenia
April 2 2018
Situation in NK conflict zone is consequence of Azerbaijan’s policy of aggression, ethnic cleansing – Armenia foreign ministry



YEREVAN, APRIL 2, ARMENPRESS. Tigran Balayan, spokesperson of the Armenian ministry of foreign affairs, commented on the April 2 statement of the Azerbaijani foreign ministry on the NK conflict.

In response to a question from ARMENPRESS, spokesperson Balayan said: “The statement clearly seeks to divert attention from the Azerbaijani aggression against Nagorno Karabakh, which was unleashed on this day two years ago, which was accompanied by gross violations of international humanitarian rights – the killing of a child near a school, DAESH-style beheadings, mutilation of corpses, torture and murder of elderly people in their own homes. Azerbaijan is responsible not only for committing these deplorable crimes but also for the massacres of Armenians in Sumgait, Baku, Kirovabad, Maraga and other places. Baku is attempting to evade these through its usual lies and fraud.

It is clear that the existing situation in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone is the consequence of the policy of aggression and ethnic cleansing which for 30 years Azerbaijan is carrying out against the people of Artsakh in an attempt to oppress through the threat of force and use of force the indissoluble right to self-determination and to live freely of the Artsakh people, which is enshrined in international rights.

Baku continues to refuse the proposals of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs for the settlement of the Karabakh conflict, by also refusing to implement the actions of strengthening trust – the agreements which were reached in the Vienna, St. Petersburg and Geneva summits, by continuously violating the commitments which were assumed by itself under the 1994-1995 Nagorno Karabakh, Azerbaijan and Armenia trilateral ceasefire and end of hostilities termless agreement. A bright example of this was the new aggression which was unleashed by Azerbaijan against Artsakh on this day two years ago.

English –translator/editor: Stepan Kocharyan

Tragedy as regularity or the chief threat for Armenia

Aravot, Armenia
March 27 2018
Tragedy as regularity or the chief threat for Armenia

Ruben Mehrabyan
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from the Russian edition of Aravot]
 
The dramatic developments, which unfolded in Kemerovo [reference to the 25 March mall fire, which claimed lives of 64 people, mostly children], is sure to turn the spotlight on many more things. This enormous human tragedy began with a chance factor with a number of systemic regularities in the depth of it.

Kemerovo fire and Armenia

Certainly, it is Russian society that has to see to all this, particularly as what this implies is simple things, if you ask me. And besides, I would not have touched on this issue, had Russia not penetrated into Armenia to such a degree or played as destructive a role as it currently does.

The Kemerovo tragedy exposes the very systemic gangrene, which has affected “one sixth of the world [an _expression_ used to refer to the Soviet Union]”. In the established system, each link, starting with the Emergencies Ministry and ending with the presidentcy, is not only a bubble, but also these bubbles burst over the heads of their own citizens, claiming their lives and their children’s lives. And all this unfortunately happens against the background of cynical and thick-skinned indifference, which ensures this “state system” operating on the territory of the homicide, which is still called a “state”, owing to a misunderstanding.

To add insult to injury, this kind of state also ensures our security, trying to explain to everyone and his brother how ‘important” this is for us. As regards TV stations belonging to this “state”, different not quite sober and quite hysterical people philosophise about a multi-polar world, nuclear weapons, and “the Russian world”, raising the eternal Russian question: “And do you respect me?”

No, we do not respect! And we are not going to respect. Do not hold your breath! How can one respect petty thieves, who have captured a whole state, who are engaged in terrorism, using chemical weapons and showing support for terrorists, who “take under their wings” different organised criminal syndicates in other countries, who get involved in affairs, which go beyond their capacities, and who embezzle astronomical sums of money, remaining as they are: Petty thieves plundering themselves?

At first, the United States and the EU countries began kicking off spy nests in their countries, which are called “embassies” through a misunderstanding. As for Moscow, it is “indignant”, considering everyone as “Russophobes”, while it is Moscow proper that tries to intimidate and blackmail “Western partners” by means of its animated films.

All this is on the surface and those, who have eyes will be able to see and those who have ears will be able to hear. However, as one can see, Yerevan apparently has problems with both eyes and ears.

Russian troops in Armenia, Caucasus, Ukraine

On that very Monday, when the whole world made statements about the suspension of the Russian presence, the press service, which was formed under the name “the Southern Military District of the Armand Forces of the Russian Federation”, announced “good news” about the subdivisions of the Military Police of the Russian Federation to be deployed in Armenia. According to the statement, they are being formed “to maintain military discipline, ensuring road traffic safety and guarding the facilities of the Gyumri-based garrison of the Russian military base in Armenia“. The statement also said that the service personnel would also receive special equipment and be armed with standard weapons, military hardware and special means. Moreover, “by the beginning of the summer training, it is planned to form yet another military police subdivision in the Yerevan-bases garrison.”

So, is this now a “nation-army” [reference to the blueprint of the Armenian government for the development of the army]? Or a new manifestation of “both … and” [reference to Yerevan’s declared balanced relations with both the EU and Russia], which no-one knows anything about, except “the Southern District of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation? And all we have for the moment is the given statement and a deafening silence on the part of official Yerevan. And in this context, instead of offering condolences to Putin, who, together with his friends, has led his nation to serious trouble, it would be better to offer condolences to the Republic of Armenia. The thing is that whatever is called political field does not aim to steer clear from all this. Instead, it is turning into a constituent part of this entire ailment, infecting the whole texture of statehood.

This is not “Russophobia” or a mere assertion, but just a statement of simple and direct cause-and-effect relationship. And what has this formation under the name “Southern Military District of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation” been engaged until now? It was engaged in counterinsurgency in the North Caucasus, occupation of [Georgia’s breakaway regions of] Abkhazia and South Ossetia, invasion of east Ukraine, infiltration of “little green men” all over Crimea, turning the whole Black Sea into the sources of danger, terrorist activities, and subversive acts on the territory of Ukraine, abduction of people from the territories of Georgia, and mobilisation of mercenary soldiers to this end. And following all this, it is engaged in “ensuring Armenia’s security” and securing the sanctity of “centuries-old brotherhood”, arming Azerbaijan to the teeth.

It appears that this is not enough for Russians. They fall short of the “military police”, which would comprise mercenary soldiers, to “ensure” “military discipline”, road traffic safety, and other marvellous things, if you can believe this.

Armenia in need of ‘defence from defenders’

All this would have been funny, of course, if it was not so sad. After all this, there arises a question: After all, who is going to ensure Armenian citizens’ security in a situation, when the country’s doors are open wide to this danger with Kemerovo mines, which its citizens learn about from statements from outside?

They are not going to defend us. This is for sure. We first and foremost need defence from defenders of the kind, as well as from those, who have eyes, but are not able to see, and those, who have ears, but are unable to hear, allowing to turn the country into a mine field in this unpredictable world.

For our “strategic partner”, tragedies have become regularity. And Armenia needs to dissociate itself from regularities of the kind, repulsing this regularity.

As for Moscow, it did not trust tears earlier. However, now that it has been captured by petty thieves, it is not only your tears that it does not trust. It does not care a damn about your tears from head to heels, all your “agreements” on CSTO [Collective Security Treaty Organisation] and EEC [Eurasian Economic Union], your “both … and” and your “tourism commercials” at least to the same extent as it cares about the lives of its own citizens and their children.

P.S. I would like to extend my deep condolences to the families and friends of those who died in Kemerovo.


Turkish Press: Turkey, Azerbaijan aim to improve judicial cooperation

Yeni Şafak , Turkey
April 3 2018

Turkey, Azerbaijan aim to improve judicial cooperation

16:43 Anadolu Agency

Turkey and Azerbaijan are aiming to consolidate bilateral judicial cooperation, according to Turkish justice minister on Tuesday.

Abdulhamit Gul met his Azerbaijani counterpart Fikret Memmedov as part of his official visit to the country.

Gul said the projects that are realized with the view of “one nation, two states” — such as the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, Baku-Tbilisi-Kars (BTK) railway project and Trans-Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline (TANAP) — were part of efforts to boost Turkish-Azerbaijani relations.

Stressing that political and economic stability provides growth, he said both countries achieved much to become stronger. “We hope the cooperation to be in the best level.”

Speaking about Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Gul said: “We believe that Azerbaijan’s demands in this issue are rightful. Turkey supports Azerbaijan in this regard and it will continue to do so.”

Azerbaijan and Armenia remain in dispute over the occupied Karabakh region. Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan in 1991 with Armenian military support, and a peace process has yet to be implemented.

“Our biggest problem is Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We have always seen support from Turkey in this matter,” said Azerbaijani Justice Minister Memmedov.

He also touched on the issue of Turkey’s defeated coup in July 2016 and said the incident shook them as well, but the Turkish nation had shown that they were on the side of democracy, development and justice.

Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO) orchestrated the defeated coup of July 15, 2016 in Turkey, which left 250 people martyred and nearly 2,200 injured.

Noting that Azerbaijan is benefitting from Turkey’s experience in judicial subjects, Memmedov said around 220 agreements have been signed between the two countries in different fields.

There are 30 more agreements in preparation phase, he added.

– ‘Turkey’s strength is Azerbaijan’s strength’

Justice Minister Gul also met Azerbaijan’s President of the Court of Cassation Ramiz Rzayev.

Expressing his pleasure with the fact that his first official visit abroad was to Azerbaijan, Gul said: “We will increase cooperation in the field of judiciary like in all other fields.”

Turkish-Azerbaijani brotherhood is going to last forever, he added.

Rzayev, for his part, reiterated that both countries support each other. “Turkish education institutions have big role in educating, especially, our judges,” he added.

Rzayev also praised Turkey’s success in Syria’s northwestern Afrin, as its center was liberated from terrorists during Turkey’s Operation Olive Branch. “Turkey’s strength is our strength.”

Turkey on Jan. 20 launched Operation Olive Branch to clear terrorist groups from Afrin, northwestern Syria, near Turkey’s border, amid growing threats from the region.

On March 18, Turkish-backed troops liberated the town of Afrin, which had been a major hideout for the terrorist organization PYD/PKK since 2012.

The Turkish Armed Forces are working to restore normal daily life in Afrin by providing necessary humanitarian aid to the region.

A total of 1,096 terrorists were “neutralized” in March as part of the operation, enabling civilians to return to their homes.