Council of Europe Group Says Baku Has Not Implemented Key Priorities

Council of Europe

The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance on Thursday published conclusions on the implementation of two priority recommendations made to Azerbaijan in 2016.

Firstly, ECRI recommended that the authorities create conditions under which a diverse and independent civil society can develop. In this regard ECRI notes some positive developments, such as the adoption of a presidential decree on measures to simplify grant registration procedures for foreign donors and to ensure their transparency, the ongoing development of e-services to manage the electronic registration of grants, and the launch of a platform for dialogue between the Government and civil society.

While ECRI welcomes these developments, it notes that the continuing use of restrictive regulations by the authorities fails to offer favourable conditions for the proper and independent functioning of NGOs and leads, in some cases, to these organisations being unable to resume their work. In view of these considerations, ECRI concludes that its recommendation has not been implemented.

Secondly, ECRI recommended that the authorities fulfill the promise given when acceding to the Council of Europe to enact legislation on alternatives to military service as already foreseen in Article 76 of the Azerbaijani Constitution. The Committee notes that the Azerbaijani authorities have not taken any initiative to enact such legislation and concludes therefore this recommendation has not been implemented.

The conclusions are based on the response from the Government and information gathered from other sources. They concern only the priority recommendations and do not aim at providing a comprehensive analysis of all developments in the fight against racism and intolerance in Azerbaijan.

The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) is a human rights monitoring body which specialises in questions relating to the fight against racism, discrimination (on grounds of “race”, ethnic/national origin, colour, citizenship, religion, language, sexual orientation and gender identity), xenophobia, anti-Semitism and intolerance.

No Progress in Karabakh Talks Without Artsakh’s ‘Decisive Voice’

Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan briefed parliament on June 6

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan told Parliament on Thursday that that without Artsakh’s “decisive voice” there will be no progress in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution process, adding that returning Stepanakert to the negotiations table is a matter of principle.

Mnatsakanyan also said that the cooperation between the governments of Armenia and Artsakh has been and remains principled and effective.

“We are always working with the Artsakh government. Before or after each negotiation we always work with Artsakh’s leadership. I personally have very close cooperation with my colleague [Artsakh Foreign Minister] Masis Mayilyan and also with [Artsakh] President Bako Sahakian, as does Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan,” said Mnatsakanyan.

“We have a clear format of closely working together, which reflects the political line that is drawn by our government and refers to Artsakh’s participation in the negotiations process. The issue of Artsakh’s participation is a difficult, but principled, and important,” explained Mnatsakanyan.

“The issue concerns Artsakh, which is an entity, and without Artsakh’s decisive voice we will not have productive progress. Our cooperation with Artsakh’s authorities has been and remains very principled and productive,” Mnatsakanyan said.

Asked about the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ view regarding the suggestion to include Artsakh itself in Karabakh talks, Mnatsakanyan saud the “co-chairs accept what will be acceptable for the parties. We don’t have a debate over this issue with the co-chairs, the debate is with Azerbaijan.”

Mnatsakanyan also said that a date for an upcoming meeting with his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov will be announced soon, adding that there were no immediate plans for a meeting between Pashinyan and Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev.

168: The AGBU Women Entrepreneurs Program Launched in Artsakh: FRUITFUL ARMENIA Foundation is the partner

Category
BUSINESS & ECONOMY

The press conference of AGBU Armenia and Fruitful Armenia on launching the Women Entrepreneurs Program in Artsakh took place on June 4, 2019.

AGBU Women Entrepreneurs (W.E.) in Artsakh is implemented together with Fruitful Armenia Charity Foundation to boost the entrepreneurial skills of women in Stepanakert and the regions and help them succeed in the world of business. The project is part of the AGBU Women Empowerment Program which began in Armenia in 2017 to help promote human rights and equal opportunity for women in Armenia.

“The majority of the employees of companies governed by Mr. Eurnekian are women. We believe that women can make a great contribution to the economic development of Armenia and Artsakh. That is why we, specifically FRUITFUL Armenia Foundation, are  happy to be the main sponsor of the project this year, a project that will give the women entrepreneurs of Artsakh an opportunity to develop their business skills”, said  Jorge Del Aguila-Eurnekian, Board Member of Fruitful Armenia Foundation and Converse Bank.

Converse Bank is also one of the supporters of Women Entrepreneurs ProgramRepresentatives of the Bank will give lectures on the financial management and relations with financial institutions. Moreover, the Bank has expressed willingness to provide the attendees of the lectures comprehensive banking services on preferential terms, offer business consultation, as well as help the  women entrepreneurs to sell their products.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/06/2019

Thursday, 
Former Senior Policeman Indicted Over 2008 Crackdown (UPDATED)
Հունիս 06, 2019
        • Naira Bulghadarian
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia -- Riot police confront protesters in Yerevan, March 1, 2008. Կիսվել
Կարդալ մեկնաբանությունները
 Տպել
A former deputy commander of Armenian interior troops has been formally charged 
with killing an anti-government protester in the wake of a disputed 
presidential election held in 2008. The retired officer, Gegham Petrosian, was detained by the Special 
Investigative Service (SIS) on Tuesday. A spokeswoman for the SIS, Marina Ohanjanian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on 
Thursday that the murder accusation leveled against him carries between six and 
twelve years in prison. Ohanjanian said the law-enforcement agency has also asked a court in Yerevan to 
allow Petrosian’s pre-trial arrest. The district court was expected to rule on 
the petition later in the day. Petrosian flatly denied responsibility for the death of Zakar Hovannisian, one 
of the opposition demonstrators who clashed with security forces in Yerevan on 
March 1-2, 2008. Hovannisian died in hospital hours after sustaining a gunshot 
wound. Petrosian’s lawyer, Vagharshak Gevorgian, said the accusation is based on 
testimony by a purported eyewitness who claims that the police officer shot 
Hovannisian when the latter attempted to hit him with a metal bar. Gevorgian 
insisted that the SIS has not come up with any forensic evidence corroborating 
that testimony. “They say that he was shot from a pistol, but there is no such pistol,” the 
lawyer told reporters. “Nor has the cartridge case been found. The bullet was 
found, but no forensic tests were carried out after that.”
The violence erupted as security forces broke up opposition protests against 
alleged fraud in the February 2008 presidential election. Eight protesters as 
well as an officer and a soldier of interior troops, which are part of the 
national police service, died as a result. Petrosian is the first person prosecuted in connection with the fatalities. Jailed General Again Hospitalized
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia -- Reitred General Manvel Grigorian stands trial in Yerevan, May 13, 
2019. Manvel Grigorian, a retired Armenian army general facing a string of criminal 
charges, was rushed backed to hospital on Wednesday night just two days after 
being again sent to prison. Grigorian, who suffers from multiple diseases, was already hospitalized in 
February one month after being arrested for a second time. Investigators 
transferred him from the private Nairi Medical Center to a prison hospital in 
Yerevan against his will on Monday. The once powerful general refused to undergo treatment there. His lawyers 
insisted that his life is at risk and that he cannot receive adequate medical 
aid in the prison facility. “At around midnight his health condition drastically deteriorated and they had 
to call an ambulance … and take him to the Surp Grigor Lusavorich [Medical 
Center,]” one of the lawyers, Arsen Mkrtchian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. According to the hospital’s deputy director, Grigor Manukian, Grigorian’s 
condition remained “severe” as of Thursday afternoon. Manukian suggested that 
he will have to remain in intensive care for three or four more days. The 
doctor singled out diabetes when he described the causes of Grigorian’s poor 
health. The 62-year-old general, who had served as Armenia’s deputy defense minister 
from 2000-2008, has also suffered from lung cancer. An Armenian prosecutor said 
last month that he had recovered from the disease years ago. Grigorian stands accused of illegal arms possession, embezzlement, extortion 
and tax evasion. Some of these charges have also been brought against his wife, 
Nazik Amirian. The couple continued to deny any wrongdoing when it went on 
trial on May 13. Grigorian was first arrested in June last year following searches conducted at 
his properties in and around the town of Echmiadzin. Investigators found there 
many weapons, ammunition, medication and field rations for soldiers provided by 
the Armenian Defense Ministry. They also discovered canned food and several vehicles donated by Armenians at 
one of Grigorian’s mansions. An official video of the searches conducted by the 
National Security Service (NSS) caused shock and indignation in the country. Pashinian Orders Crackdown On ‘Violent’ Groups
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian arrives for a cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan, June 6, 2019. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Thursday ordered law-enforcement authorities 
to clamp down on groups which he said are advocating political violence in 
Armenia as part of a “hybrid war” waged against his government. Opening a weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan, Pashinian said that “forces 
directly or indirectly connected to the former corrupt system” are among those 
who are trying to destabilize the political situation in the country. “We have operational information that a section of those circles has decided to 
form groups of people dressed in black that will walk around the city, try to 
create a certain mood, distinguish themselves with some impudent actions and so 
on,” he told government ministers. Armenia’s police and National Security Service (NSS) must take “very tough” 
action against such groups as well as any calls for violence, said Pashinian. “As regards those groups dressed in black, you have to locate them, sort out 
their black clothes, attach colorful bow ties to them, and escort them to a 
normal, civilized and lawful life,” he add, appealing to the heads of both 
law-enforcement bodies present at the cabinet meeting. The national police chief, Valeri Osipian, and the NSS director, Artur 
Vanetsian, assured Pashinian that they will execute the order. Osipian told 
reporters afterwards that he has already issued relevant instructions to his 
subordinates. But he refused to give any details. Armenia -- Police chief Valeri Osipian (L) and National Security Service 
director Artur Vanetsian attend a cabinet meeting in Yerevan June 6, 2019. Pashinian also accused the same allegedly subversive forces of spreading 
“disinformation” that the government has scrapped tuition fee discounts for 
university students who participated in the April 2016 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. “It’s the same people and the same circles,” he said. “And this is really a 
national security issue, Mr. Vanetsian. Those people are waging a hybrid war 
against the Republic of Armenia.”
“Should these scoundrels feel good in this country?” the prime minister went 
on. “They must walk under sidewalks, wearing camouflage. Who do they think they 
are?”
Although Pashinian said that “their names and surnames are known,” he did not 
name anyone. His comments prompted sarcastic responses from several prominent members of the 
former ruling Republican Party (HHK) and other bitter critics of the current 
government. They posted on Facebook pictures of themselves wearing only black 
clothes. “Before arrest,” HHK spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov wrote under his 
photo. On Wednesday, Pashinian lambasted the opposition Armenian Revolutionary 
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) for justifying a violent attack on a young activist 
of a rival party. “All those individuals who propagate violence must be held 
accountable,” he said. Dashnaktsutyun representatives accused the activist of insulting 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s leaders and assaulting a veteran Dashnaktsutyun figure. They 
also claimed that the authorities are turning a blind eye to their supporters’ 
violent actions and hate speech. Dashnaktsutyun was part of Armenia’s former government from 2016-2018. It also 
two received two ministerial posts in Pashinian’s first cabinet formed 
following last spring’s “velvet revolution.” Pashinian sacked his 
Dashnaktsutyun-affiliated ministers in October, accusing their party of 
secretly collaborating with the former regime. Yerevan Seeks Russian Boost For Economic Growth In Armenia
Russia -- Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian in St. Petersburg, June 6, 2019. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian expressed hope that Russia will help to maintain 
robust economic growth in Armenia when he met with Russian President Vladimir 
Putin in Saint Petersburg on Thursday. The meeting was held on the sidelines of an international economic forum held 
in Russia’s second largest city. According to the Kremlin, the two leaders 
discussed Russian-Armenian relations and “regional cooperation.”
Putin praised bilateral ties in his opening remarks at the talks also attended 
by other senior Russian and Armenian officials. “I want to remind that Russia is Armenia’s leading trading partner: 26 percent 
[of Armenia’s foreign trade,] almost $2 billion in direct investments and many 
other things which show the special, allied character of our relations,” he 
said. Pashinian described those relations as “strategic” before touting a 7.1 percent 
economic growth rate recorded in Armenia in the first quarter of this year. “I’m talking about this because obviously these are good indicators not only 
for Armenia but also the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU), because our economic 
indicators are connected in large measure to our relations in the EEU and 
Armenian businesses’ access to the Russian market,” he told Putin. “This is 
very important.”
“I hope that we will manage to find solutions on some issues which will not 
break this good pace of economic growth,” added the Armenian leader. It was not clear whether Pashinian referred to the price of Russian gas for 
Armenia or other economic factors shaped by Moscow. Putin’s and Pashinian’s 
press offices did not disclose details of their discussions on economic issues. In December, Russia’s Gazprom raised the wholesale price of its gas delivered 
to Armenia by 10 percent. The retail price for Armenian consumers has remained 
unchanged so far. Press Review
“Haykakan Zhamanak” denounces the Armenian Revolutionary Federation 
(Dashnaktsutyun) for justifying a violent attack on an activist of Levon 
Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress (HAK). “In other words, 
Dashnaktsutyun claims responsibility for that violence,” writes the paper. “With such actions, they are attempting to instill in the public consciousness 
the notion that the society has no right to express an opinion about 
individuals who had provided some services to the country in the past. That is 
to say that they are attempting to cast doubt on the principle of everyone’s 
equality before the law.” It says they are “exploiting the past because they 
simply have no other means of dodging the law.”
“Zhamanak” reports and comments on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s latest 
criticism of Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership. In particular, he claimed on 
Wednesday that Armenia’s previous government did not inform Stepanakert about 
details of Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks. “It means that although Armenia’s 
prime minister is more frank in his dealings with Stepanakert the latter shows 
solidarity with representatives of the former regime, something in which 
Armenia’s prime minister sees an element of conspiracy,” writes the paper. “Past” quotes Andranik Kocharian, the pro-government chairman of the Armenian 
parliament committee on defense and security, as saying that lawyers like Vahe 
Grigorian, whom President Armen Sarkissian has nominated for the Constitutional 
Court, “must run our judicial system.” “This may be the confirmation of reports 
that … the authorities will be trying to exert pressure on [Constitutional 
Court Chairman] Hrayr Tovmasian so that he resigns and they can appoint Vahe 
Grigorian as Constitutional Court chairman,” claims the paper. “The authorities 
have already taken the first steps. Several persons yesterday gathered outside 
the Constitutional Court and demanded Tovmasian’s resignation.”
“Zhoghovurd” says that over the past year “a considerable part of the public” 
has demanded that the new authorities “relentlessly” jail and dispossess 
members of the former regime. “Societies have always formulated such demands 
during revolutions in various countries,” writes the paper. “It is not 
accidental that in Europe revolutions were always accompanied by bloodbaths. Nevertheless, the [Armenian] authorities have avoided pleasing crowds and are 
instead guided by their own decisions.” It says that they can explain and sell 
those decisions to Armenians through a “constant dialogue.”
(Anush Mkrtchian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org

President: Armenia, Morocco have untapped potential for cooperation

Panorama, Armenia
June 6 2019
20:10 06/06/2019Armenia

The newly appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Kingdom of Morocco to the Republic of Armenia Faus El Ashabi presented on Thursday her credentials to President Armen Sarkissian.

As the press department at the President’s Office reported, President Sarkissian congratulated the Ambassador on her appointment and expressed hope Faus El Ashabi will use her years-long experience to invigorate bilateral relations between Armenia and Morocco

The president next noted that Armenia and Morocco with millennia-long histories have an untapped potential for cooperation which needs to be revealed.

Speaking of the mutually beneficial cooperation, President Sarkissian specifically pointed to perspective areas of cooperation such as high technologies, information management, and artificial intelligence.

The interlocutors also highlighted the need to boost the tourism sector for the development of bilateral relations and mutual recognizability, the source said. 

Armenia Sends Another Group Of Sappers, Medics To Syria

ReliefWeb
June 6 2019


Report

from Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Published on 05 Jun 2019 View Original

YEREVAN — Armenia says it has sent a new team of demining experts and other personnel to Syria as part of what it describes as a humanitarian mission with the assistance of Russia.

The Defense Ministry said on June 5 that the group arrived in the northwestern city of Aleppo the previous day, and will conduct mine-clearing efforts and provide medical assistance.

They are replacing a team of 83 demining experts, medical personnel, and security officers who were sent to Syria in February.

One of the Armenian sappers lost his foot while clearing land mines near Aleppo in March.

More than 100,000 ethnic Armenians lived in Aleppo prior to the Syrian civil war. Many ethnic Armenians have fled, including thousands to Armenia.

Syrian government forces regained control of the city in December 2016.

Russia has given crucial support to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad throughout the conflict, which began with a government crackdown on protesters in March 2011.

AGBU Women Entrepreneurs Program kicks off in Artsakh with support of Fruitful Armenia

Banks.am, Armenia
June 6 2019
 
 
AGBU Women Entrepreneurs Program kicks off in Artsakh with support of Fruitful Armenia
 
06.06.2019 | 16:56 Home / News /

AGBU Armenia and Fruitful Armenia have held a press conference on launching the Women Entrepreneurs Program in Artsakh on June 4, 2019.
 
Converse Bank said that AGBU Women Entrepreneurs (W.E.) in Artsakh is implemented together with Fruitful Armenia Charity Foundation to boost the entrepreneurial skills of women in Stepanakert and the regions and help them succeed in the world of business.
 
The project is part of the AGBU Women Empowerment Program which began in Armenia in 2017 to help promote human rights and equal opportunity for women in Armenia.
 
“The majority of the employees of companies governed by Mr. Eurnekian are women.
We believe that women can make a great contribution to the economic development of Armenia and Artsakh. That is why we, specifically Fruitful Armenia Foundation, are happy to be the main sponsor of the project this year, a project that will give the women entrepreneurs of Artsakh an opportunity to develop their business skills,” said Jorge Del Aguila-Eurnekian, Board Member of Fruitful Armenia Foundation and Converse Bank.
 
Converse Bank is also one of the supporters of Women Entrepreneurs Program. Representatives of the bank will give lectures on the financial management and relations with financial institutions.
 
Moreover, the bank has expressed willingness to provide the attendees of the lectures comprehensive banking services on preferential terms, offer business consultation, as well as help the women entrepreneurs to sell their products.

European Union will provide 65 million euros to Armenia as financial assistance

ARKA, Armenia
June 6 2019

YEREVAN, June 6. /ARKA/. In 2019, the European Union will provide 40 million euro assistance to Armenia and has also earmarked 25 million euros as additional support, Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan said on Thursday.  He said the overall assistance is much larger than in 2018

Armenian Finance Minister Atom Janjughazyan noted that in 2018 some 11.2 billion drams worth grants had been provided to Armenia, of which about 41% had European origin.

“As for expenses, European grants to the tune of 11.7 billion drams were used, which made 0.8% of our total spending. In other words, all these amounts and expenses cannot be considered too important for us,” the minister noted. ($1 – 479.79 drams). -0–

Armenian FM: Issue of Azerbaijan’s undeclared drills raised within OSCE

Panorama, Armenia
June 6 2019

The issue of Azerbaija’s undeclared military exercises has been raised within the OSCE, Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan said at the National Assembly on Thursday.

His comments came in response to a question by opposition Prosperous Armenia lawmaker Tigran Urikhanyan whether Azerbaijan’s move could be viewed as a demarche not only against Armenia or Artsakh, but also against the international community and a number of international organizations.

“Don’t you plan to apply to the UN Security Council to have Azerbaijan’s dossier reviewed?” the lawmaker asked.

“This concern falls within the framework of regional security and stability. Any issue has its format and specific platforms. And that format and platform in this case is the OSCE. Thus, the issue has been raised within it to allow the use of the necessary tools,” he added. 

Gold of contention: Armenia land dispute in spotlight as government steps in

Thomson Reuters Foundation
June 6 2019


by Umberto Bacchi
Protests against a gold mine have divided locals, some of whom say it will provide much-needed employment

By Umberto Bacchi

JERMUK, Armenia, June 6 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Tonnes of gold that lie under a snow-capped mountain in Armenia have locked locals and international investors in a bitter land dispute, with the country’s new government being watched closely in coming weeks as it tries to resolve the conflict.

For almost a year, protesters worried about potential damage to the environment have blocked access to works to complete a mine that its Anglo-American operator says would generate hundreds of jobs and millions in tax revenue for the state.

But their protests have angered some locals eager for jobs in the remote, mountainous region, with mining firm Lydian International saying it has had to axe more than 1,000 jobs and lost more than $60 million since the blockade began.

With a government-commissioned assessment into the mine’s environmental impact expected to be released within weeks, international investors were said to be watching closely to see how Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan handled the dispute.

“There are more valuable things than gold,” said Gagik Margaryan, one of a few dozen residents of the southern town of Jermuk and nearby villages that have taken turns since last June to watch over Amulsar, the mountain overlooking their homes.

The group has set up makeshift checkpoints on unpaved roads leading to extraction and treatment facilities built on the summit’s slopes, preventing access by workers.

The protests have divided locals, some of whom say the mine will provide much-needed employment to Jermuk, a town of about 3,000 people, and to rural communities in the area about 170 km (105 miles) southeast of the capital Yerevan.

Minerals and metals make up about half of Armenia’s exports and mining accounted for about 3% of the country’s economic output in 2017, government data showed.

FOREIGN JITTERS

An environmental impact assessment commissioned by Lydian to get approval to start work in 2016 stated there would be no significant impacts on the environment and local water supplies.

The company, which has invested almost $500 million in the project, said it fulfilled all legal requirements to start work.

Lydian Armenia’s managing director Hayk Aloyan warned the dispute was putting more at stake than just his own company’s business interests in the former Soviet republic.

“Imagine your biggest investment project is blockaded illegally,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in his office in Yerevan.

“It is a huge reputational damage. We are too small a country to have the luxury of damaging our reputation”.

Drastic political changes in Armenia last year emboldened protesters to act against the planned mine.

In April 2018 mass protests against corruption and cronyism resulted in a peaceful revolution that propelled journalist-turned-politician Pashinyan to power with his authority as prime minister bolstered by an election win in December.

But the new government has found itself in a quandary, said Richard Giragosian, director at the Regional Studies Centre, a think tank based in Yerevan.

“(The government’s) heart is with the environmental protesters, but the economic importance of the mining companies is too big to ignore,” he said.

Last November the government commissioned a new independent assessment of the mine’s environmental impact, responding to what it said was public demand for full compliance of mining projects with environmental standards.

Results of that assessment are expected over the next month.

Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan said in emailed comments that mining activity in Amulsar could proceed if the investigation found “the environmental risks are manageable”.

Lydian said it would go to arbitration if forced to shut.

GOLDEN WATER

The Amulsar gold mine is surrounded by three rivers and two artificial lakes.

One of these, the Kechut reservoir, is connected by a Soviet-era underground tunnel to Lake Sevan, Armenia’s largest reservoir and the Caucasus region’s biggest body of water.

Mine opponents fear toxic discharge from gold extraction could contaminate water used for drinking and irrigation locally as well as in the Ararat valley, a key food-producing region.

“Amulsar is situated in a very sensitive area,” said Arpine Galfayan, an activist with the Armenian Environmental Front.

Lydian said it would implement measures to prevent cyanide, a chemical used to dissolve gold, and other potentially harmful substances from leaking into the environment.

Locals also fear the mine might deter tourists from visiting Jermuk, a spa town renowned for its hot water springs, and could push hotels out of business.

“People who want to recover their health will not come to a place where there are industries with heavy chemical elements involved,” said Tigran Margaryan, a Jermuk hotel owner. “This town will become a miners’ town.”

Lydian said it has invested more than $3 million in social projects, such as local businesses and infrastructure, to mitigate the mine’s impact, and it was ready to invest more to establish a natural park.

The company said it would source at least 30% of the mine’s 700-strong permanent workforce locally but added most of the roughly 1,400 people hired during construction work had now lost their jobs due to the protests.

“When I started to work for Lydian, I understood what it means to get a salary,” said Mkhitar Arshaikyan, a former biology teacher hired by Lydian as an environmental consultant.

Young people struggling to find jobs in farming communities around Jermuk will again be forced to seek employment far from home, he added during a closed-door meeting of mine supporters at an unmarked Lydian office in the city in May.

Yet others feel bargaining their mountain for a mine that would only operate for 16 years was not a good deal.

Samuel Poghosyan, 70, said he decided to protest last spring after dust from the mine covered the green slopes surrounding his house and his kitchen tap started spewing mud.

Construction work had damaged water pipes leading to his village, he said as he sat inside a rusty metal container serving as one of the blockade checkpoints.

Lydian said it had apologised for the incident and that such disruptions would end with construction works.

But the retired factory worker, with a penchant for flowers and books on U.S. capitalism, said he spends at least four days a week at the post to prevent the region’s natural beauty from being “annihilated” and would continue even if the government gave the mine the go-ahead.

“This is a paradise land that we received from our ancestors … and we are obliged to leave it to our future generations at least in the current conditions,” he said. (Reporting by Umberto Bacchi @UmbertoBacchi, editing by Astrid Zweynert, Zoe Tabary and Belinda Goldsmith Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women’s and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit