Gagik Isagulyan: We must be prepared to be able to turn military exercises into concrete actions (video)

In terms of military equipment and military potential, Russia is the number one in the world, Garnik Isagulyan, advisor to the Permanent Representation of the Republic of Artsakh in the Republic of Armenia, told journalists today.

“In all of Putin’s interviews, it is shown in what conditions was Russia before Putin, and what is status it has now during the pre-electoral period. Putin’s messages are particularly noticeable by the fact that the Russian Federation is one of the most important poles in the world. ”

Speaking about the election campaign, Garnik Isagulyan said that that time he was technically able to achieve perfection.

“After 1990’s nobody doubted the fact that Russia would break apart, in fact, Putin did not accept a non-existent state, and in the 4th pre-election period, he shows that, at least, Russia is the number one state from the point of view of military.”

 

Garnik Isagulyan said that Armenia should have had a balanced policy both with the West and the East, but the ratio of forces should be carefully estimated.

Speaking about the Azerbaijani military exercises, Garnik Isagulyan noted that that was not the first case when Azerbaijan violated all agreements, making large-scale military exercises.

“We must be ready at any moment, with any encroachments and be able to give a stronger answer. We must be prepared to be able to turn military exercises into concrete actions. “

Lebanon PM Hariri honors Armenian counterpart Karen Karapetyan’s visit with official dinner (video)

Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri honored Armenian counterpart Karen Karapetyan’s visit with an official dinner in the evening of March 12 in Beirut.

Armenia’s PM Karen Karapetyan delivered remarks, saying:

“Dear Mr. Prime Minister,

Ladies and gentlemen,

I would like to once again thank Mr. Hariri for the invitation to visit Lebanon and the warm reception.

We all know that the Armenian-Lebanese relations and ties have always been unique, which is due to the historical friendly relations between our peoples. Certainly the Lebanese-Armenian community has key and appreciable role here with its peaceful and creative conduct.

The experience of the past years only reaffirms that the Armenian-Lebanese partnership is harmonious in both bilateral and international arenas. We are only left with ensuring the continuation of joint efforts for the further deepening of this, and the protection of our mutual interests.

We currently need to develop and strengthen the economic component of our bilateral relations even more.

I am hopeful that the issues which we’ve discussed these days and the agreements which we’ve reached will be realized soon and will convey new momentum and quality to the deepening of the multifaceted partnership of the Armenian and Lebanese peoples.

Following the tragic and unfortunate events unfolding in the region and directly next to Lebanon in the recent years, I would like to emphasize Armenia’s readiness to support its friend Lebanon and to express hope that the people of Lebanon, who bear wisdom of centuries and patriotic values, will withstand all challenges with honor and inherent unity, will maintain the balanced stance of the country and normal development course.

Dear Mr. Prime Minister,

I wish you good health and all the best, and I wish peace, stability and further economic prosperity to the people of Lebanon.

Long live Lebanon and long live the Armenian-Lebanese friendship.

Lebanon’s PM Saad Hariri said in his remarks:

“Dear Mr. Prime Minister,

Dear friends,

We host our respected guest, Prime Minister of Armenia Karen Karapetyan and his delegation, with great honor this evening.

First of all, I congratulate the election of the 4th President of Armenia in the beginning of this month.

Last year we marked the 25th anniversary of establishment of diplomatic relations between independent Armenia and Lebanon, but the cultural and historic ties between the two countries have a history of more than 2000 years, from the days of Tigranes the Great.

Currently Lebanon and Armenia have successful relations in various fields, especially in business. Academic exchange between universities also exists, and bilateral active partnership in cultural, arts and tourism areas is also carried out.

The Lebanese-Armenian [community] plays a great role in the development of these relations, especially taking into account that they are considered active actors in both the Lebanese national life, business, industry, cultural , educational and arts sectors.

Exchange of investments between the countries in also in an active phase, the latest results of which is the involvement of two Lebanese banks in Armenia’s financial system.

Mr. Prime Minister and friends,

The development of relations between the two countries was under the attention of martyred Prime Minister Rafic Hariri, and he became the first Lebanese high-level official to visit Armenia three times since 1997. I hope to continue his mission by always having the interests and friendly relations of the two peoples in mind.

Thank you and once again I welcome your visit to the Lebanese Government.

Long live the friendly relations of Lebanon and Armenia, long live Armenia and Lebanon.”

Turkish software continues to attack Armenian mobile phones (video)

Despite warnings, users continue to download and use the Turkish “Get Contact” phone software. Doing so, they endanger not only their personal information, but their contacts.

“This program is a great threat, because every person, by downloading it on his android and IOS phone, automatically retrieves his contacts from the “Get Contact” database. That is, if I’m not in the database, my friend or relative will automatically include my phone number. If you have a phone number, you can easily find the phone’s IP code and wire the phone, take phone softwares, be it a picture, etc.,” said security expert Vahan Azibekyan.

On December 10, 2017, the Armenian Ministry of Justice has warned about the negative effects of this software, but after the warning, the downloads have not diminished. Some have started to download the software because of curiosity, some for having fun.

“The girls, for example, write the number and say, oh, look, someone has registered me as “Cuties”, let’s know who he is. The boys want to know who is registered by their nicknames. They do not realize the seriousness of this project,” Vahan Azibekyan said.

 

The software is easy to download, and the phone number can also be removed, for which you need to access the appropriate site, but it is no longer possible to prevent the information leakage.

“As the program was installed in the phone, the phone number has been fixed in their database. They will receive a message if you remove it. but the contact will still remain,” said the expert.

Some Armenian users, who are aware of the program’s harmfulness, remove it from the phone, some find it is not dangerous, they are retaining only for interest. At the same time, not everybody knows how to remove their phone number from the “Get Contact” database.

The program has been downloaded by more than 5 million people and has raised a great deal of dissatisfaction in many CIS and European countries. Measures are taken to prevent its spread. Particularly, they are banned in Russia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan.

Moscow refuses to answer London-based ultimatum on “Scripal Case”

The Russian side will not respond to the London-based ultimatum of the “Scripal Case”, as long as Britain did not fulfill its obligations under agreement on the prohibition on chemical weapons. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said commenting on former Russian spy Sergei Scripal’s and his daughter Julia’s nervous system to be poisoned with parasitic substances.

“Before presenting an ultimatum, Great Britain must fulfill its obligations under international law, in this case, an agreement on the prohibition of chemical weapons,” Lavrov said.

It should be reminded that earlier in Russia it was reported about slaughtering the substance of poisoning and stopping production of this substance.

Spring vacations to start on March 19

Spring holiday will begin on March 19 in public schools. According to the “Standard educational curricula of the 2017-2018 academic year of the educational institutions implementing basic general, specialized and special state curricula”, pupils of grades 2-12 will be given spring vacation from March 26 to April 1, 2018 inclusive. First graders will have a spring vacation from March 19 to April 1 inclusive, RA Ministry of Education and Science reports.




Newly appointed Malaysia Ambassador hands credentials

Today, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Malaysia to the Republic of Armenia Datuk Mat Dris bin Haji Yaacob (residence in Moscow) presented his credentials to Serzh Sargsyan.

Serzh Sargsyan congratulated the Ambassador on appointment and wished him every success in his activities. Noting that this year marks the 25th anniversary of establishing diplomatic relations between Armenia and Malaysia, Mr Sargsyan underscored that the deeply rooted historical affinities between our two peoples, which date as far back as to the 17th century, provide a solid basis for upgrading these warm ties of friendship to high-level interstate relations and effective cooperation in different spheres. Serzh Sargsyan made a point of establishing and expanding the legal framework between the two countries that will add momentum to the ongoing cooperation.

The interlocutors hailed the effective cooperation between Armenia and Malaysia in international organizations. On behalf of the Republic of Armenia, Mr Sargsyan expressed readiness to step up interactions in that direction.

Ambassador Datuk Mat Dris bin Haji Yaacob assured that he would spare no effort to build on the Armenian-Malaysian ties, promote close contacts and mutually beneficial cooperation. The Ambassador presented his views concerning the possibilities of developing cooperation in a number of spheres. Welcoming his ideas, the President of Armenia stressed that the Ambassador’s practical stance inspires optimism that the bilateral relations will be activated in the near future.

Tank exercises

According to the plan, tank exercises started at the Defense Army on , aiming at teaching the staff to practice theoretical knowledge, improving their professional skills and increasing their ability to make decisions independently during combat tasks.

During the training special attention will be paid to the forms and methods of fire, the peculiarities of destroying the suspected targets in accordance with the combat situation.

Charge pressed for committing violent sexual actions against foreigner

Category
Society

Preliminary investigation of the criminal case initiated on violent sexual actions committed against foreign citizen was completed in Lori Regional Investigative Department of the RA Investigative Committee.

On March 2, 2018 28 year-old woman who was a citizen of Check Republic submitted a report informing that on March 1 a young man attempted to commit violent sexual actions against her.

A criminal case was initiated in Lori Regional Investigative Department of the RA Investigative Committee according to the Part 1 of the Article 139 of RA Criminal Code and in the result of necessary investigatory and other procedural actions circumstances of the case were found, the person having committed the alleged crime was identified; he is a resident of Lori region, born in 1994.

Through preliminary investigation actual data were obtained on the allegation that on the day of the incident at about 19:30 the 28 year-old foreigner got lost while riding a bike in Gugark and found herself in a deserted field where a young man approached her and taking advantage of other people’s absence committed violent sexual actions against the woman.

On the base of the obtained evidence charge was pressed against the young man according to the Part 1 of the Article 139 of RA Criminal Code. The criminal case with the bill of indictment was sent to prosecutor supervising the legality of preliminary investigation.

Note; Everyone charged with alleged crime offence shall be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.

Armenia’s President-elect Encourages Open Dialogue with Diasporans as the Way Forward

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Website: www.agbu.org
PRESS RELEASE
Tuesday, 
ARMENIA’S PRESIDENT-ELECT ENCOURAGES OPEN DIALOGUE WITH DIASPORANS AS THE WAY 
FORWARD
On , Armen Sarkissian, who will be sworn in as the new President 
of the Republic of Armenia in April, visited AGBU’s Central Office in New York 
for a candid conversation with young professionals in the Armenian community. 
His purpose was to initiate and foster a renewed engagement with the homeland, 
as the way forward for Armenia’s future success. 
Mr. Sarkissian contended that after 26 years of war, financial setbacks and 
social hardships, Armenia is now poised to achieve the dream of having “a small 
republic but a global nation.” This was a recurring theme throughout the 
evening, along with other concepts such as good citizenship, engaging Armenians 
who are not connected to their heritage with real success stories and, most 
important, achieving unity of Armenia and diaspora. 
Moderator Lara Setrakian, CEO and Executive Editor of News Deeply, framed the 
discussion as the start of an ongoing dialogue, a forum for the exchange of 
ideas with the new president.  “This is a potential turning point for the 
Republic of Armenia,” she said. “We feel very fortunate to be having this 
conversation now.” 
When she opened the floor to questions for the President-elect, Mr. Sarkissian 
turned the tables by saying “I am here to listen to you rather than to tell 
you. I am here to understand what are the expectations of the next generation 
of Armenians.” He addressed the audience: “How do you see Armenia today?  What 
is the first thing that comes to your mind when you think of Armenia?  If you 
were elected president of Armenia, what would you like to change?”  
These provocative questions sparked a lively and freewheeling interaction with 
the audience, which covered the gamut of issues from doing business in Armenia, 
social justice, emigration, and an independent judiciary to womens’ rights, 
diasporan representation in the Parliament, and many related topics. 
On the subject of diasporan engagement, for example, the President-elect was 
emphatic: “You have to keep a passport in your soul and believe you are a 
citizen of the country. You have to believe that you are Armenian and Armenia 
has to believe that you are Armenian. Armenia has to be your homeland and it 
has to take care of you,” he stated. 
Referring to a comment about lost Armenians in far flung places who have no 
connection to the homeland or their identity, Mr. Sarkissian said that Armenia 
had to have more success stories to attract these outliers. “It’s amazing what 
we have achieved as a nation”, referring to the great victory of Arstakh. 
“After hundreds of years we showed that we can be victorious. The other way 
around is very damaging…Bringing back the sweet feeling of victory is 
fantastic,” he added.
Addressing concerns about Armenia’s business environment, the President-elect 
injected another theme into the discussion—good citizenship. “We’ve seen many 
successes and we see new projects every day, but we’ve also lost the great 
feeling of citizenship.” He suggested that fighting corruption is not only a 
matter of governance and passing laws but also developing responsible citizens. 
“That is the way forward and the president is the one to use his office to lead 
the way. A president must lead by example as a good citizen.” he underscored. 
He also asserted that, unlike the past, Armenia is a unique country as it is 
both a member of the Eurasian Economic Union and the European Union. He 
explained what it means to have access to the financial support, liquidity and 
technology from relations with Europe, applying those inputs to Armenian talent 
and ingenuity and selling that output to a huge market of 200 million without 
custom barriers. “We are the only country that has good relations with both the 
European Union and Eurasia. It’s a fantastic opportunity…if we are smart we 
will use it…” Emphasizing the critical time to act on this exceptional 
position, he noted “Armenia has to have friends everywhere.”
Talking about gender equality, Mr. Sarkissian noted that although traditionally 
Armenian women did not have many rights, the young generation is excelling in 
many fields and “more women are now in the current Parliament than before.” But 
he is also confident that more equality could be reached. “Of course, at the 
end of the day the natural ratio should be 50/50,” he opined, also calling on 
the diaspora to not hold back from being part of the ongoing conversations 
inside Armenia about domestic abuse and selective abortions. “It’s a national 
problem and everyone from here is to contribute,” he added. 
For Mr. Sarkissian, poverty is a big issue which jeopardizes the well-being of 
women, children, and families. “There are several problems that we are to 
handle in the country, and one of them is poverty. Poverty is connected to the 
demographic issue and is related to other issues, including rights,” he noted 
and added that women and children become more vulnerable in the face of 
emigration, especially when men go abroad for employment opportunities. 
At the same time, the President-elect does not deem poverty as the primary 
cause of emigration. The lack of hope and injustice make people seek a better 
future on foreign lands. He suggested that Armenia should become more 
attractive both for its citizens and the diaspora. “It is important to return 
that hope to those who live in Armenia and create hope for those who live 
outside of Armenia so that they see the potential life in Armenia,” said 
Sarkissian. 
According to the President-elect, locals can do a lot to help their own country 
prosper economically, and internal tourism is one way of doing it. He proposed 
to instill the culture of internal tourism which would not only bring economic 
benefits to the country but also help locals discover their culturally and 
geographically diverse homeland. This does not require much investment, he 
noted. “If we have 250,000 people visiting Artsakh, its budget will be 
doubled,” he said.
He acknowledged that the model of success is something we all knew over 100 
years ago, that our strength is our unity. He said he believed that the next 
ten, twenty years will be favorable for Armenia if we invest in the future of 
our children, our country, and new technology. 
For the President-elect, the opportunity for collective forums like the one 
held in New York are crucial to achieving the outcomes Armenians we envision. 
He described the current relationship between Armenia’s national citizens and 
diaporans as somewhat problematic, likening it to an “invisible Berlin 
Wall”—one that needed to fall down in order for the global Armenian nation to 
face the challenges of the 21st century. Having open, free dialogues such as 
the gathering at AGBU was a groundbreaking step in that direction. 
 
He concluded the evening by saying “I have the feeling that I am becoming 
president of a country at a good time. There are many ingredients to success 
and one of them is luck. I think I am lucky. Because I am becoming president at 
a time when there is a big opportunity for our nation.”
Established in 1906, AGBU (www.agbu.org) is the world's largest non-profit 
Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU preserves and 
promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through educational, cultural and 
humanitarian programs, annually touching the lives of some 500,000 Armenians 
around the world.
 
For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please visit 
www.agbu.org.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/13/2018

                                        Tuesday, 
Armenia Slams Azerbaijan Over Large-Scale War Games
 . Lusine Musayelian
Large-scale military exercises in Azerbaijan in April 2017
Official Yerevan has accused Baku of failing to meet its obligations
to an international organization after Azerbaijan launched large-scale
war games on Monday.
"Azerbaijan began its military exercises without notifying in advance
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) member
states and with a gross violation of its obligations before the
organization," Tigran Balayan, a spokesman for Armenia's Ministry of
Foreign Affair, wrote on Twitter.
Azerbaijan's five-day war games involving about 25,000 troops and a
large number of military hardware come weeks before the country's
early presidential election scheduled for April 11.
The issue of Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian-control region that broke
away from Azerbaijan as a result of a war in the early 1990s, is
likely to feature prominently during the campaign leading up to the
vote in which current President Ilham Aliyev is expected to win his
fourth consecutive five-year term.
Military authorities in Azerbaijan do not specify the location of the
current war games, only mentioning that they are unfolding "in the
difficult conditions of the mountainous terrain."
Some 250 tanks and other armored vehicles, up to 1,000 artillery units
of different calibers, multiple rocket launcher systems and mortars,
as well as up to 50 units of army and front-line aircraft are also
involved in the exercises, according to Azerbaijan's Ministry of
Defense.
According to official sources in Azerbaijan, during the exercises
"army units will repulse the attack of the conventional enemy and will
launch a counteroffensive."
During the five-day exercises, the Azerbaijani armed forces will also
reportedly use a number of new types of weapons recently acquired from
Russia, Israel and the Czech Republic.
Responding to the criticism coming from Yerevan regarding the conduct
of the exercises, Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman Hikmet Hajiev
insisted that the war games taking place "in the sovereign territory
of Azerbaijan" correspond to "the OSCE's Vienna document of 2011".
In 2017 Azerbaijan conducted several military exercises, causing the
wrath of the Armenian side. The largest exercises last year were held
in April and involved some 30,000 troops. Those war games came a year
after the deadliest Armenian-Azerbaijani fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh
since the 1994 ceasefire known as a four-day war.
Public TV Show Criticized For `Ridiculing' Female Prison Inmates
 . Nane Sahakian
Armenia -- The logo of Armenian Public TV's Lav Yereko (Fine Evening)
show, undated.
A report aired during last week's evening show on Armenia's Public
Television sparked criticism among human rights activists who insist
that female prison inmates featured in the program became a target of
unsolicited ridicule.
As part of the "Fine Evening" show broadcast on March 8, a public
holiday marking Women's Day in Armenia, a young woman apparently
posing as an ing nue reporter interviewed seven female convicts
serving their sentences in a penitentiary in Abovian, a town some 15
kilometers to the northeast of capital Yerevan. The reporter asked
some frivolous `girly' questions, including whether there were any
"cute guys among the guards", and the answers of the women were
accompanied with off-screen giggles.
Zaruhi Hovannisian, a member of the public group engaged in prison
monitoring, said the show raised some questions that needed to be
answered by the Ministry of Justice.
"Were these women aware of how their words would later be edited [for
the report] and whether a laugh track would be added? Secondly, did
these women have the opportunity to choose whether to answer or not or
the prison administration itself chose the women who were to answer
the reporter's questions?" she queried.
The show also raised eyebrows in the media community because dozens of
journalists in Armenia are known to have difficulty in accessing
prisons for filming. Some have to wait for months before their
requests are likely to be rejected for some reason.
"It turns out that access to prisons for investigative journalists is
banned and for those who film for entertainment purposes it is not,"
complained Grisha Balasanian, a journalist writing for the Hetq
magazine.
Balasanian said he had been waiting for permission to film at the
hospital for convicts for already a year. "I have made a request to
the chief of the establishment and have also turned to the minister of
justice# During the year I have periodically received rejections with
the explanation that they are too busy," the investigative journalist
said.
The Hraparak daily encountered the same attitude from the penitentiary
department as its request for filming inside a prison located in a
Yerevan suburb for the purpose of getting acquainted with the
conditions of prison cells, the library and the canteen was rejected.
"We make a request to visit some convict at some penitentiary and get
a cynical reply that they cannot let a journalist in because of the
[administration's] being busy," Hraparak editor Armine Ohanian said,
adding that the ombudsman officially confirmed to her that the refusal
was unlawful.
RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) asked the Penitentiary
Department of the Ministry of Justice to clarify the situation and was
still waiting for the reply to its written inquiry at the time of this
posting. Neither the Public Television of Armenia has reacted to the
criticism yet.
Ex-Justice Minister Named As Chairman Of Armenian Constitutional Court
 . Tatevik Lazarian
Hrair Tovmasian (an archive photo)
Less than two weeks after being elected member of the Constitutional
Court Armenia's ex-Minister of Justice Hrair Tovmasian has been named
as a candidate for the post of the Court's chairman.
The nomination of the 47-year-old co-author of Armenia's Basic Law was
made on Tuesday by Armenian Parliament Speaker Ara Babloyan.
Earlier, Babloyan terminated the powers of Gagik Harutiunian as
chairman of the Constitutional Court following his resignation and
election as Chairman of the Supreme Judicial Council, a new body
established under Armenia's reformed Constitution.
The post of the chairman of the Constitutional Court has become vacant
before April 9, which means that the 2015 Constitution will not apply
to the election of the new chairman. Accordingly, under the 2005
Constitution, it is the National Assembly that will elect the new
chairman of the Constitutional Court within a period of 30 days.
If the elections were to be held in accordance with the Constitution
reformed in 2015, the Constitutional Court would elect its chairman
from among its judges for a period of six years without the right to
be re-elected. Meanwhile, under the provisions of the Basic Law passed
in 2005, the chairman of the Constitutional Court, who shall be
elected by the National Assembly, will serve until he or she attains
the age of 65.
Artak Zeinalian, a member of the parliament's opposition Yelk faction,
thinks that the authors of the Constitution, including Tovmasian
himself, have foreseen such a development. "The goal is to ensure that
Tovmasian will serve as chairman of the Constitutional Court until
2035 when he turns 65. Formally, there seems to be no problem... But I
think that with this trick the logic of the new Constitution is
blocked. Under the new Constitution, the members of the Constitutional
Court are replaceable and a more democratic mechanism is to be
applied. But I think this was done specifically to neutralize it and
for the chairman of the Constitutional Court to carry out the
political will of the political majority. That is, it was done so as
to turn the Constitutional Court into a politicized body," he charged.
Eduard Sharmazanov, a deputy parliament speaker and spokesman for the
ruling Republican Party of Armenia, meanwhile, said that it is "quite
logical" that the norm supposed to be applied before April 9 will be
applied in the election of the new chairman of the Constitutional
Court.
"I believe that Tovmasian is the person who can be a worthy successor
to Gagik Harutiunian," he concluded.
The election of the new chairman of the Constitutional Court by secret
ballot will take place at the National Assembly during the four-day
session commencing on March 20.
Experts In Armenia Raise Concerns Over `Discriminatory' TV Ad
 . Narine Ghalechian
Armenia -- A screenshot from a TV commercial, Yerevan, 12Mar2018
An Armenian television commercial using comparisons of prices and
quality of goods with people of different age, color of the skin and
physique has sparked criticism against its authors who have been
accused of showing a discriminatory approach.
On the video advertizing one of the building materials markets in
Yerevan a construction foreman explains to his workers, among whom
there are an elderly man, a man with a black skin, an obese person and
others, why one should buy goods at a particular store, making
references to the peculiarities of these people for instructive
purposes.
Eduard Aghayan, the head of the marketing department of the Yerevan
Fair, said they had no intention of insulting anyone by showing this
TV commercial. He called it just humor. In a written reply to RFE/RL's
Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) Aghayan said: "We have never sought to
ridicule anyone or spread racism. It's just a humorous video and for
greater imagery and better presentation we invited actors who play
these parts, and there is no insult to these people. The goal was to
make it interesting for people to watch."
The company representative said that an Armenian could have played the
part of the black person. "There can be nothing racist in it. It's
just a humorous advertisement. We realize what age it is now to afford
such a thing," Aghayan added.
Meanwhile, media expert Suren Deherian said that the advertiser should
also bear social responsibility. "For some, there may be different
levels of humor, but this ad should not have contained this cynicism,
which I think forms a negative attitude towards another person."
Varduhi Aramian, head of the Armenian Camp NGO that deals with
disability issues, voiced concern that TV commercials like the one in
which in her view people are ridiculed because of their physical
parameters, age or color of their skin do the opposite to what her
organization has been doing for years through social ads and various
programs - trying to overcome discrimination in society.
"It turns out that people are equated to goods as their qualities are
compared. This is a bad trend. Perhaps the next time someone will
decide that a person without one leg should be compared to a table or
a chair missing one leg. Such commercials are a stimulus for deepening
these stereotypes. That's why we sound the alarm, because one video,
which has an impact on a wide audience, undoes all our long-term
work," she said.
The Yerevan fair whose store was advertized in the controversial TV
commercial belongs to well-known Armenian entrepreneur Khachatur
Sukiasian. Earlier this year, his company was criticized for the "Our
Country" advertising board depicting cows dressed in Armenian women's
national costumes. Ethnographers then said that comparing an Armenian
woman to a cow was offensive, while the company manager explained that
the billboard was humorous.
Prosecutor-General's Office Sees No Reasons For Questioning Kocharian
 . Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- Former president Robert Kocharian gives an interview to
RFE/RL, Yerevan, 05Sep2015
There are no grounds for instructing the investigation body to
interrogate former Armenian president Robert Kocharian in connection
with the 2008 post-election violence, the Prosecutor-General's Office
told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) on Tuesday.
Last week leader of the parliamentary faction of the opposition Yelk
alliance Nikol Pashinian asked the country's prosecutor-general to
subpoena Kocharian for questioning over his ordering the use of lethal
force to suppress protests held by the opposition in the wake of a
disputed presidential election ten years ago.
Pashinian, an active participants of the protests who was later tried
and convicted as one of the organizers of the unrest, in a video post
on his Facebook account on March 5, in particular, said that Kocharian
must explain where from he got the information about gunshots fired by
opposition supporters at security forces, which was a key formal
excuse for the authorities to quell the nonstop anti-government
protests.
Pashinian's application to the prosecutor-general came less than two
weeks after a senior ruling party lawmaker who led a parliamentary
investigation into the deadly events years ago repeated that same
question once addressed to Kocharian during hearings in parliament on
the eve of the 10th anniversary of the events.
In its reply the Prosecutor-General's Office said that Pashinian had
no status as a participant of criminal proceedings related to the
March 1-2, 2008 events. "Therefore, there is no legal basis for
admitting Pashinian's application for an investigative action in
criminal-procedural manner," it said.
The Prosecutor-General's Office also insisted that "according to the
data collected by the investigation body so far there are no grounds
for ordering the interrogation of Kocharian as a witness."
Remarkably, head of Kocharian's office Viktor Soghomonian brushed
aside Pashinian's move on Monday, describing the oppositionist as the
main "provocateur and organizer" of the 2008 unrest.
Ten people, including two police officers, were killed in the 2008
melees followed by a continued crackdown on the opposition during and
beyond a 20-day state of emergency imposed by the then outgoing
president Kocharian. No one has yet been charged with murders
committed back then.
Press Review
"Zhamanak" comments on the reaction of ex-president Robert Kocharian's
office to opposition leader Nikol Pashinian's request to the
prosecutor-general to subpoena the former leader for questioning over
the 2008 deadly post-election events. "Of course, to put it mildly, it
is very unlikely that the prosecutor-general will respond to this
petition affirmatively. On the other hand, Kocharian is likely to have
grown concerned about the fact that not only the opposition lawmaker,
but also ruling Republican Party MP Samvel Nikoyan, who once led a
parliamentary probe into the post-election violence, spoke about the
need for interrogating him. It is not ruled out that this very
circumstance made Kocharian treat seriously the petition of Pashinian
and break a durable silence through his mouthpiece," the paper writes.
"Past" writes on the large-scale war games that began in Azerbaijan on
March 12 and the negative reaction to them from Armenia. Commenting on
the matter, political analyst Ruben Mehrabian said that he saw
parallels between the war games and the planned visit of Karabakh
leader Bako Sahakian to the United States and the related negative
reaction from Azerbaijan. According to the analyst, Azerbaijan is
getting prepared for war and the current military exercises are "an
important stage of preparations."
"Haykakan Zhamanak" writes on the upcoming presidential elections in
Russia where, it says, like in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan,
Belarus and other post-Soviet countries the notion of "elections" is
downgraded to a "legal" term. "Simply from the legal point of view the
start of another presidential term of Vladimir Putin will be
registered. The contrast between Russia and the West will be
accentuated even more deeply. Society may face a dilemma: to choose
the future, development and real stability or the Middle Ages,
darkness, the era of irreplaceable leaders and fathers of the people,"
the Armenian daily comments.
(Anush Mkrtchian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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