Artsakh leader: It’s the duty of each and every Armenian to maintain national unity

Panorama, Armenia
June 6 2019

Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan has hailed the ongoing consultations with the Armenian authorities as a very honest and principled process aiming to achieve a final settlement in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

In an interview with Artsakhpress on Wednesday, Bako Sahakyan also re-emphasized the importance of returning Artsakh to the peace talks to avoid unnecessary speculations.

The full interview published by Artsakhpress is presented below:

– Mr. President, during a briefing with journalists today, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan stated that the leadership of Artsakh was unaware of the details of the negotiations over the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) conflict settlement during the term of office of the former Armenian government. Was the official Stepanakert really unaware of those details? 

– When Nikol Pashinyan assumed the office of Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia, the process of negotiations was one of the first issues that we discussed. I can view the discussions as sincere and of principle.

Recently, the Armenian PM provided me with some documents on the process of negotiations. In its turn, the Artsakh leadership transmitted its package of documents to the prime minister.

In general, in the past and now, the Armenian authorities would keep the leadership of Artsakh aware of the issues discussed and latest developments before and after negotiations with Azerbaijan.

Overall, I would like to emphasize that restoration of the full format of negotiations, that is, with the direct participation of Artsakh, is the best and perhaps the only opportunity to disallow speculations.

– Prime Minister Pashinyan also declared that there are certain conspirators and representatives of the government of Artsakh who urge their assistants to post comments on Facebook stating that Pashinyan is selling lands. What do you have to say about this?

– I have been asked similar questions, particularly during my meeting with members of the My Step faction of the National Assembly of Armenia and journalists on May 20 this year. I said if there are conspirators, they will be punished, and if anyone knows of specific people and has evidential facts of conspiracy, they should let us know about that, and we will take appropriate actions.

Unity is one of the major achievements of the Armenians, and I consider any step aimed at destroying that unity inadmissible, be it in Artsakh, Armenia or the Diaspora. If anyone has doubts about or lack of confidence in this or that phenomenon, person or official, I think it is important to discuss them and come to terms in an atmosphere of mutual respect. We have one homeland, and it’s the duty of each and every Armenian to maintain national unity.

FM: Armenia expects final approval of EU-Armenia deal roadmap on 13 June

Panorama, Armenia
June 6 2019

Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Poland, Luxemburg, Denmark, Malta, Romania, the United Kingdom, Finland, Hungary and Slovakia have so far completed the domestic procedures for the ratification of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) signed between the EU and Armenia in November 2017, Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan told lawmakers on Thursday.

Speaking at a joint session of the National’s Assembly Standing Committees on European Integration and Financial-Credit and Budgetary Affairs, the FM reminded that the Foreign Affairs Committee of the French parliament has unanimously passed a law envisaging ratification of the agreement. On April 4, the German parliament approved the EU-Armenia deal, which is yet to be signed by the country’s president. The Czech Chamber of Deputies ratified the agreement in the second reading on April 18, signed by the country’s president on 23 May.

The FM said the roadmap for the implementation of the EU-Armenia agreement is expected to be completely approved at the second Partnership Council meeting scheduled for June 13.

“Armenia has submitted the final draft roadmap for the implementation of the agreement to the EU side. It has been approved at the May 17 session of the interdepartmental commission coordinating the implementation of the agreement and EU-Armenia Partnership Priorities Document,” the minister said.

“We expect that during the second meeting of the Partnership Council in Brussels on June 13 the document will be fully approved between the two sides. This roadmap will be the joint property of the EU and Armenia.”

Also, the minster said the EU is set to provide 40 million euros in assistance to Armenia, with an additional fund of 25 million euros envisaged. “Thus, we will receive a total of 65-million-euro support from the EU,” he said. 

Is Russia Cultivating ‘Symmetric Separatism’ in Karabakh?

The Jamestown Foundation
June 5 2019


Former advisor to Vladimir Putin, Modest Kolerov (Source: Aravot)

Moscow’s mistrust of the Armenian government headed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan dates all the way back to his rise to power last year in the so-called “Velvet Revolution.” And that mistrust has persisted despite Pashinyan’s various foreign policy gambits designed to win Russia’s confidence (see EDM, March 21). At the same time, Pashinyan’s domestic agenda—specifically, his determination to dismantle the previous regime’s oligarchic/kleptocratic order, including by prosecuting former president Robert Kocharyan for abuses of power—seems to be increasingly irking Moscow as well. For years, Russia has fostered numerous collaborationist “deep state” assets in various levels of the decision-making apparatuses in both Yerevan and Armenian-backed Stepanakert, the capital of the province of Karabakh, which broke away from Azerbaijan in 1991. As a result, Moscow is able to benefit politically from the current deepening rift between certain segments of the Armenian political elite. Karabakh (or “Artsakh” as it is known in the Armenian historical designation), the political status of which has long been disputed between Armenia and Azerbaijan, to date is the only ethno-political conflict in the post-Soviet space where Russia possesses neither boots on the ground nor explicit direct control. Nevertheless, for years, Moscow has periodically sought to use the local authorities in Karabakh as a proxy tool of coercive diplomacy against both Baku and Yerevan.

On May 20, Pashinyan sharply rebuked the decision of an Armenian court to release Kocharyan from pre-trial detention. The judge in the case had acted in part based on a “guarantee request” submitted by the former and incumbent “presidents of Artsakh,” Arkadiy Ghukasyan and Bako Sahakyan, respectively (Armenpress.am, May 16). Whether intended this way or not, Kocharyan’s release deepened the preexisting rifts in Armenian society and was interpreted as a challenge to Pashinyan’s rule (see EDM, June 3). The Armenian prime minister urged his fellow citizens to reject outside efforts to drive a wedge between Armenians living at home and in Karabakh. “I call upon the people of Artsakh to support only those powers who support the people of Armenia and its legitimate representative government,” Pashinyan concluded (YouTube, May 20).

At the same time, however, several individuals close to the Kremlin intensified their malign activities in Stepanakert. In particular, Modest Kolerov, an former advisor of Vladimir Putin on the “near abroad” and head of the Gazprom Media–affiliated Regnum news agency, visited Karabakh to agitate for the region’s “right to a dignified sovereign existence”—separate from Armenia and Azerbaijan but under Russia’s patronage (Regnum, May 24). Kolerov was accompanied on his trip by well-known Russian propagandist Stanislav Tarasov. In attempting to set Stepanakert against Yerevan, the Russian visitors employed emotionally manipulative language in combination with fake narratives and disinformation-based tactics (Lragir.am, May 22). While meeting local students and scholars, Kolerov and Tarasov equally spoke against Azerbaijan and Armenia, while discrediting the Minsk negotiation process and the “Miatsum” idea (translated as “Amalgamation”) of ultimate unification of the breakaway province with Armenia—once a bedrock of the Karabakh movement in 1987–1990.

Meanwhile, Ambassador Evgeniy Mikhailov, a Russian professional diplomat and, as some assert, a military intelligence (GRU) officer with the rank of major general, arrived in Stepanakert with a “package of proposals” for some candidates who might be best placed to represent Moscow’s interests in the future. Furthermore, famously neo-imperialist Konstantin Zatulin, the deputy chair of the State Duma (Russian lower house of parliament) committee for the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and relations with Russian nationals abroad, also arrived in Stepanakert in recent days (Zatulin.ru, June 3). Speaking under anonymity, an official close to Bako Sahakyan surmised that “Moscow seeks to buy political power in Stepanakert using cash, dossiers and blackmailing tactics” (Author’s interview, May 27). Russia will undoubtedly meddle in next year’s “presidential elections” in Karabakh.

The conspicuous Russian activity prompted a reaction in Stepanakert. Specifically, 11 political parties and non-governmental organizations launched the “Miatsum” Alliance inter alia to derail Moscow’s local interference efforts (News.am, May 28). Such Russian actions risk reviving the long-harbored antagonistic sentiment in Karabakh, dating back to the Soviet military’s “Koltso” (Ring) operation in 1991, which led to mass deportations and killings of local Armenians—helping to spark the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict (Aniarc.am, August 30, 2015).

Although the majority of Karabakh’s population identifies Miatsum as the overarching national desire (Eufoa.org, November 17, 2016), some local authorities, along with Russian emissaries, are instead agitating for “Artsakh’s sovereignty.” That said, the concept of Karabakh gaining “independence” has long been advocated by the government of Armenia, which presumed that such “diplomatic cunning” would nonetheless ultimately end in unionism. However, that approach was always fraught with many tangible vulnerabilities. In particular, the formula of an “independent Artsakh” clashes with the reality of Moscow’s encroachments in supposedly “independent” South Ossetia, Transnistria or Abkhazia. A comparable scenario looks feasible vis-à-vis Karabakh. The above-mentioned Russian assets and deep state structures that already exist there are providing the groundwork for individuals close to the Kremlin to embed an ethno-regional context into the local discourse by cultivating the idea of a “symmetric separatism” between Armenia and Karabakh.

Indeed, earlier this year, populist-nationalist Russian politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky openly suggested that the “solution to the Karabakh conflict” requires its incorporation into Russia (Arminfo, January 18). Moreover, in 2018, the Russia-Artsakh Friendship Union was established in Moscow, designed to buttress the sense of Karabakh’s “independence” from Armenia, while advocating for direct Stepanakert-Moscow ties without Yerevan’s involvement (Armedia.am, February 27, 2018). In this vein, former Armenian military commander Samvel Babayan, currently on trial for corrupt financial machinations and close ties with various shady Moscow-based circles, proposed that Karabakh might apply to become a Russian territorial mandate, which would clearly entail troop deployments (Civilnet.am. March 19).

Evidently, the evolving political atmosphere in Yerevan has encouraged some in President Putin’s close circles to try to exploit the divisions among Armenian elites in order to expand Russian influence in Karabakh. Individuals pursuing Moscow’s interests on the ground can also provoke such a scenario. It is worth recalling an episode, in 2015, when Bako Sahakyan was visiting Moscow. At the press conference orchestrated by the aforementioned Modest Kolerov, Sahakyan suggested that the Russian military could “exploit the airfield near Stepanakert” for “anti-terrorist purposes in Syria” (YouTube, November 17, 2015). Prior to this, the late Igor Muradyan, a prominent policy expert, relying on his private data, warned that “the incumbent authorities of Artsakh intend to turn” the breakaway region into a “Russian zone” that will be progressively distanced from Yerevan (Azatutyun.am, February 5, 2015). Having been a key figure in the Karabakh movement in the late 1980s, Muradyan once assumed that Russian emissaries’ proclivities had much to do with derailing the original Miatsum agenda and eventually replacing it with the “independent Karabakh” idea (Author’s interview, 2017). Though initially a somewhat alien phenomenon for Armenian society, the foreign-imposed notion that Karabakh should become independent falls well in line with Russia’s modus operandi of exploiting unrecognized ethno-political entities for coercive diplomacy.



Putin expects SPIEF will be useful for Armenian premier, attending it for the first time

TASS, Russia
June 6 2019
 
 
Putin expects SPIEF will be useful for Armenian premier, attending it for the first time
 
Business & Economy
June 06, 18:31 UTC+3 ST. PETERSBURG
 
Russia is Armenia’s leading trade-economic partner, accounting for 26% of its foreign trade, the president reiterated
 
ST. PETERSBURG, June 6. /TASS/. At talks with the Armenian prime minister, Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed hope that the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) would be useful and interesting for Nikol Pashinyan, who is taking part in it for the first time.
 
“I have no doubts that it will be interesting, and I hope useful, for you to take part in discussion within the framework of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. This is a good platform for meeting with colleagues, communicate, exchange opinions on current issues of the economic agenda, discuss certain political issues. A useful and major event,” Putin told the Armenian prime minister.
 
Russia is Armenia’s leading trade-economic partner, accounting for 26% of its foreign trade, Putin reiterated. Direct Russian investment in Armenia amounts to almost $2 billion.
 
“There are many other points that show a special allied nature of our relations,” Putin summed up.
 
The 2019 St. Petersburg International Economic Forum is being held on June 6-8. The forum’s motto this year is “Creating a Sustainable Development Agenda”. The organizer for SPIEF-2019 is the Roscongress Foundation. TASS is a media partner, the official photo hosting agency and the operator of SPIEF’s presentation zones with support from multinational firm EY, and the Foreign Investment Advisory Council in Russia.
 
 

Armenia abstains from voting against Georgian IDP resolution at UN for first time

OC Media
June 6 2019

This post is available in:Russian

(OC Media)

Armenia has abstained from voting on a UN res­o­lu­tion calling for the return of IDPs to Abkhazia and South Ossetia for the first time since 2008, when the res­o­lu­tion was first intro­duced. Armenia had pre­vi­ous­ly always voted against the res­o­lu­tion in the annual votes at the UN General Assembly.

On 4 June, during the 73rd session of the UN General Assembly, the res­o­lu­tion was adopted with 79 countries voting in favour, 15 against, and 57 absten­tions.

In a statement, the Georgian Foreign Ministry said that ‘the res­o­lu­tion condemns the forced demo­graph­ic changes in the occupied regions, empha­sis­es the right of all inter­nal­ly displaced persons and refugees, regard­less of their ethnicity, to a safe and dignified return to their places of origin, and focuses upon the need to fully respect and protect their property rights. The res­o­lu­tion reit­er­ates the impor­tance of unimpeded human­i­tar­i­an access in the regions of Abkhazia and Tskhin­vali Region.’

This year, the res­o­lu­tion was put forward by Georgia and 44 other countries.

In a speech to the General Assembly, Georgia’s Permanent Rep­re­sen­ta­tive to the UN, Kaha Imnadze, said that the security and human rights situation inside Abkhazia and South Ossetia remained ‘extremely alarming’.

‘People endure kid­nap­pings, arbitrary deten­tions, seizure of property, as well as continued dis­crim­i­na­tion on the grounds of ethnic origin including severe restric­tions on free movement and residence, and access to education in their native language’, said the statement of Georgian Foreign ministry.

According to them, Imnadze also stressed that it was ‘heart­break­ing to see the Secretary-General’s latest report referring to the “tragic loss of life” of the Georgian IDPs while in detention by the occupying power. Such cases happen far too often and far too many: Basharuli, Otkho­zo­ria, Tatu­nashvili, Kvaratskhe­lia’.

Ivane Abra­mashvili, the executive director of Georgian think-tank Caucasian House, told OC Media that Armenia had pre­vi­ous­ly rejected the res­o­lu­tion because embracing it would mean they also supported Azerbaijan’s policy on Nagorno-Karabakh.

He referred to article 8 of the res­o­lu­tion, according to which the General Assembly committed to dis­cussing during the next session the ‘pro­tract­ed conflicts in [Georgia, Ukraine, Azer­bai­jan, and Moldova] and their impli­ca­tions for inter­na­tion­al peace, security, and devel­op­ment’.

He said Armenia’s change of tack could mean two things: that it was seeking to improve Georgian-Armenian relations and taking a step to emphasise a sig­nif­i­cant angle of dialogue with Azer­bai­jan. ‘It has neu­tralised the problem existent in its relations with Georgia and at the same time, gained points in the eyes of the Inter­na­tion­al Community and Azer­bai­jan’, he said.

‘The influence of the “Karabakh clan” has softened in the new gov­ern­ment; the pressure has been basically lifted and this is a concrete step forward in relation to Azer­bai­jan’, said Abra­mashvili, but added that it was too early to predict how the move might influence Armenia’s relations with Russia.

Richard Giragosian, the Founding Director of the Regional Studies Centre, an Armenian think-tank, said that the move could be seen as ‘a more careful and cautious diplo­mat­ic position on the issue’ than the country had pre­vi­ous­ly taken.

‘For Armenia, despite expec­ta­tions and perhaps pressure from Russia, the absten­tion may have been a com­pro­mise, aimed at no longer angering its important neighbour, Georgia, while seeking more flex­i­bil­i­ty from the Moscow line in UN votes’, Giragosian told OC Media.

‘Despite the coming to power of a more open and more demo­c­ra­t­ic gov­ern­ment in 2018, Armenian diplomacy remains rather neither as inno­v­a­tive nor as strategic as it needs to be’.

‘That defi­cien­cy is most evident in terms of address­ing any diplo­mat­ic question over ter­ri­to­r­i­al integrity or any issue that would have influence or hold prece­dence over the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) conflict.’

Giragosian said that this was not a sign of con­fi­dence or com­pe­tence in diplomacy ‘rather, Armenia’s voting record reflects a dis­turb­ing trend of either being overly fearful and sub­mit­ting to Russian pref­er­ences, or of failing to uphold the moral high ground, when it comes to the Russian seizure of Crimea, the war in eastern Ukraine, or on Syria, where any blind alle­giance to Moscow’s policy pref­er­ences only under­mines and undercuts Armenia’s demo­c­ra­t­ic cre­den­tials and diplo­mat­ic cred­i­bil­i­ty’.

There have been no official nego­ti­a­tions between Armenia and Azer­bai­jan on the set­tle­ment of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict since the Velvet Rev­o­lu­tion in Armenia.

However, Aliyev and Pashinyan met on 29 March in Vienna for the first time under the auspices of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

[Read more about Armenian-Azer­bai­jani relations on OC Media: Armenia hopes for Nagorno-Karabakh’s return to the nego­ti­at­ing table]

According to the OSCE, they exchanged views about several key issues of the set­tle­ment process and ideas of substance.

‘The two leaders under­lined the impor­tance of building up an envi­ron­ment conducive to peace and taking further concrete and tangible steps in the nego­ti­a­tion process to find a peaceful solution to the conflict. Recalling their con­ver­sa­tion in Dushanbe, the leaders recom­mit­ted to strength­en­ing the ceasefire and improving the mechanism for direct com­mu­ni­ca­tion. They also agreed to develop a number of measures in the human­i­tar­i­an field’, said OSCE statement, elab­o­rat­ing that the two leaders also agreed to continue their direct dialogue.


Czech Republic: Court Rules To Extradite Narek Sargsyan To Armenia

Eurasia Review
June 6 2019


Czech Republic: Court Rules To Extradite Narek Sargsyan To Armenia

PanArmenian: Czech Republic may extradite Armenia’s third President, Serzh Sargsyan’s nephew, Narek Sargsyan to RA. The Prague City Court made a positive decision on the matter last week. The information was announced by the Press Secretary, Market Puchi as reported by Czech Tyden.

According to the local press, the Minister of Justice is still to examine the extradition of the accused of illegally keeping and selling weapons.

Armenian law enforcers accused Narek Sargsyan of illegally keeping weapons and drugs in his apartment in the center of Yerevan in the summer of 2018. Moreover, this is not the full list of the charges against Sargsyan.

The Armenian police also stated that when discovered, he provided a fake passport of Guatemala with the personal details of a certain Franklin Gonzales.

A criminal case has been instituted against Sargsyan for the purpose of acquiring, selling, keeping, transporting or carrying illegal weapons, ammunition or explosives as well as for selling, marketing illegal drugs or substances.

https://www.eurasiareview.com/06062019-czech-republic-court-rules-to-extradite-narek-sargsyan-to-armenia/

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 05-06-19

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 05-06-19

Save

Share

18:07, 5 June, 2019

YEREVAN, 5 JUNE, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 5 June, USD exchange rate down by 0.23 drams to 479.79 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.37 drams to 541.30 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.02 drams to 7.38 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 1.87 drams to 609.96 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price вup by 100.56 drams to 20427.36 drams. Silver price вup by 0.12 drams to 227.06 drams. Platinum price вup by 240.89 drams to 12587.29 drams.

Nikol Pashinyan congratulates leaders of a number of countries on Islamic Eid al-Fitr holiday

Nikol Pashinyan congratulates leaders of a number of countries on Islamic Eid al-Fitr holiday

Save

Share

18:12, 5 June, 2019

YEREVAN, JUNE 5, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan has congratulated leaders of a number of countries on the occasion of Islamic Eid al-Fitr holiday.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister of Armenia, the PM conveyed his best wishes to the Sultan of Oman, the King of Jordan, the King of the Kingdom of Bahrain, the Emir of Qatar, King of Morocco, President of Tunisia, President and Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates, Emir of Kuwait and Prime Minister, Crown Prince of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, President of Egypt, President of Syria, Prime Minister of Lebanon, and Prime Minister of Iraq.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




Russia makes all efforts for the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict – Russian MFA

Russia makes all efforts for the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict – Russian MFA

Save

Share

18:12, 5 June, 2019

YEREVAN, JUNE 5, ARMENPRESS. Russia makes all efforts for the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict, ARMENPRESS reports official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry Maria Zakharova said, answering the question referring to the recent escalation of situation on the border and contact line.

”We do everything that the regional conflict that has lasted so long is settled”, Zakharova said.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




Nikol Pashinyan, Perch Sedrakian discuss process of AGBU’s programs and planned initiatives

Nikol Pashinyan, Perch Sedrakian discuss process of AGBU’s programs and planned initiatives

Save

Share

19:11, 5 June, 2019

YEREVAN, JUNE 5, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan received AGBU President Perch Sedrakian, head of the AGBU Armenia office Vasken Yacoubian and AGBU Armenia Executive Director Talar Kazanjian.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan highly appreciated the activities of the AGBU for fostering the spiritual, educational and cultural development of the Armenian people and expressed readiness to assist the initiatives and projects aimed at the preservation of the Armenian identity in Armenia and the Diaspora.

Perch Sedrakian noted that Armenians of the Diaspora are very enthusiastic over the positive developments in Armenia, including the development tendencies in economy and tourism. The AGBU President underlined that the projects implemented by the support of the Union are aimed at strengthening Diaspora-Motherland links and solutions of the problems facing the Diaspora. According to him, their goal is synchronization of the AGBU projects with the Government programs, which will foster the effectiveness of the projects.

During the meeting the interlocutors discussed the process of projects implemented by the AGBU in various spheres, particularly education, science, and tourism, as well as the initiatives planned for the near future.

Nikol Pashinyan and Perch Sedrakian also exchanged views on consolidating the Diaspora-Armenians on national goals, preservation of the Armenian identity and other issues.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan