Armenia’s public debt grows by $6 million over one month

ArmBanks, Armenia
Aug 20 2020

20.08.2020 16:15

YEREVAN, August 20. /ARKA/. Armenia’s public debt increased by $ 5.9 million from May to June 2020 and reached $ 7.721 billion, according to the data published by the National Statistical Committee of Armenia.

Since the beginning of the year, Armenia’s public debt has grown by $ 397.6 million.

According to the report, there have been changes in the structure of the state debt, since a decrease in external and an increase in internal loans were recorded.

The country’s foreign debt amounted to $ 5.984 billion at the end of June 2020, decreasing by $ 13.5 million, compared to the previous month.

Armenia’s domestic debt at the end of June amounted to $ 1.737 billion, an increase of $ 19.3 million.

According to the ministry of finance, the level of public debt to GDP in Armenia at the end of 2019 amounted to 53.6%, but it is completely manageable and there is the possibility of new funds.

Armenian Finance Minister Atom Janjughazyan said earlier that the country will increase the debt burden by 260 billion drams amid COVID-19, and as a result, the budget deficit in 2020 may reach 324 billion drams.

According to the National Statistical Committee, the total public debt of Armenia at the end of December 2019 amounted to $ 7,324.167 million, having increased by $ 158.091 million over the month.

The country’s foreign debt amounted to about $ 5,789.729 million in late December 2019 after increasing by $163.477 million over one month. Around $5 300.412 here is the government’s debt (up by $186.278 million) and $489.317 million is the debt of the central bank (a decrease of $ 22.801 million). Armenia’s domestic debt at the end of December reached $ 1,534.439 million, having decreased by $ 5.386 million ($ 1 – AMD 486.3). -0-

Nagorno-Karabakh: A peace process with little peace and little process

Emerging Europe
Aug 20 2020

Armenian President shares plans for club of small countries with Singaporean counterpart

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 20 2020

HRW slams Azerbaijan’s crackdown on opposition after rally demanding war with Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 20 2020

CivilNet: Armenia-Made Military Drones Have Been Tested

CIVILNET.AM

20:47

  • Six out of the twenty hospitals treating Covid patients have returned to normal operations.
  • The victims’ relatives of the 2016 hostage crisis demand harsh sentences for the perpetrators.
  • The Asian Development Bank will provide $2 million for Armenia’s coronavirus response.
  • 350 Armenian students will receive full scholarships.
  • Armenia’s domestically made strike drones have been tested. 

HRW: Azerbaijan: Relentless Crackdown on Opposition

Human Rights Watch
Aug 19 2020

Halt Abuses, Ensure Due Process, Investigate Ill-Treatment

Berlin) – Azerbaijani authorities arrested numerous opposition activists and leaders on spurious criminal charges following a July 14, 2020 unsanctioned rally in Baku, Human Rights Watch said today. Thousands of people gathered that day to support the country’s armed forces amid an escalation of military tensions with neighboring Armenia. The charges range from violating lockdown rules related to the Covid-19 pandemic to destruction of property and an attempted coup.

Late on the evening of July 14, a small group of protest participants briefly broke into the parliament building and damaged property before police removed them. The authorities claimed it was an attempt masterminded by the political opposition to violently overthrow the government, and rounded up dozens of activists over the following days.

“The latest wave of arrests in Azerbaijan follows the well-documented pattern of politically motivated arrests and prosecutions and threatens to decimate one of the country’s oldest opposition parties,” said Giorgi Gogia, associate Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The authorities should immediately end the crackdown, release those unjustly imprisoned, and investigate law enforcement’s conduct.”

Human Rights Watch spoke with 11 lawyers and reviewed the court documents of 10 people detained since July 15 and the authorities’ official statements.

The arrests followed a nationally televised speech by President Ilham Aliyev, accusing the opposition Azerbaijan Popular Front Party (APFP) of instigating the violence, calling them “traitors,” “enemies,” and the “fifth column” and promising to “resolve” the issue.

Following minor clashes between a small group of the rally participants and the police outside parliament, police violently dispersed the crowd, using teargas, water cannons, and rubber bullets. According to an official statement, at least seven police officers were injured, and 16 cars damaged, two of them destroyed.

The authorities opened an investigation into “violating public order and resistance or use of force against a government representative.” Activists say that at least 80 people were detained on spurious administrative and criminal charges, although the exact figures are unknown.

Among them are 17 APFP members, none of whom, the lawyers said, were in the group that broke into the parliament. Many were not even at the rally. Yet 16 face criminal charges of using violence against an official, violating public order, and destruction of property, and one is accused of spreading an infectious disease. Five detainees – Asif Yusifli, Mammad Ibrahim, Fuad Gahramanli, Bakhtiyar Imanov, and Ayaz Maharramli – are members of the party’s presidium, a decision-making body; Gahramanli and Ibrahim face an additional charge of attempting to overthrow the government, punishable by up to 20 years or life in prison.

Four of the detained presidium members say that they did not participate in the rally. Courts sent all but one of the arrested party members to pretrial custody for up to four months. One, Elvin Mammadov, was released on his own recognizance.

One of the imprisoned party members, Mahammad Imanli, is facing criminal prosecution for “violating anti-epidemic, sanitary-hygienic or lockdown regimes,” with the authorities falsely alleging that he spread the Covid-19 virus. Imanli’s lawyer said that a district police officer detained Imanli at his apartment on July 16 and said he had to speak with the district police chief. He was arrested at the station.

Although Azerbaijani law prescribes that detainees must be brought before a judge within 48 hours of arrest, Imanli’s hearing took place six days later, on July 22. To cover up the violation, police claim in both the police report and the court’s pretrial detention decision document, reviewed by Human Rights Watch, that they apprehended Imanli on July 20 on a Baku street for not wearing a mask, tested him in a police station, and after the test came back positive, charged him with spreading the disease and endangering lives. Imanli’s lawyer said that his client had no symptoms when they met in custody, and Imanli denies the charges.

Mehdi Ibrahimov, son of the APFP deputy chairman Mammad Ibrahim, is also facing charges of violating sanitary-hygiene rules and remains in pretrial detention, based on a police claim that he had tested positive. Mehdi Ibrahim participated in the rally. His lawyer said that police rounded him up with over 100 participants the next day. Most were released within 24 hours, but Mehdi was kept in detention after it became known that he is the son of a well-known opposition member.

On July 22, a district court placed Ibrahimov in pretrial custody for three months and the authorities transferred him to the Penitentiary Service’s Specialized Medical Facility No.3, which used to be a tuberculosis ward, but currently houses inmates who have tested positive or have Covid-19 symptoms. On July 31, a doctor at the facility informed Ibrahimov’s lawyer that his client is in good health, that he does not have Covid-19 symptoms, and that the test taken in custody came back negative, leading Ibrahimov and his lawyer to question the grounds for the charges. The authorities did not share the tests results with lawyers for Ibrahimov and Imanli. Ibrahimov’s family members said that he is on a hunger strike, protesting his wrongful imprisonment.

In March, Azerbaijan toughened criminal sanctions for violating the health/hygiene and lockdown rules, making transgressions punishable by a fine up to 5,000 manat (approximately US$3,000) or up to three years in prison. Transgressions leading to the spread of disease or negligent death or other grave consequences could lead to three to five years in prison. Human Rights Watch has urged governments not to arrest or detain people for violating Covid-19 restrictions on movement.

Laws creating criminal sanctions for spreading Covid-19 are not a legitimate or proportionate response to the threat posed by the virus, Human Rights Watch said. Criminalization of exposure to and transmission of Covid-19 might also have negative public health consequences, including by discouraging people from seeking testing and care, and the use of such laws by authorities to target marginalized populations, minorities, or dissidents. The use of these laws against Imanli and Ibrahimov seems like clear retaliation for their political activity.

Police detained Mammad Ibrahim on July 26, as he carried a food parcel for his detained son. On July 28, a court sent him to four months in pretrial custody on charges of public disorder, damaging property, resisting police, and attempting to violently overthrow the government, even though Ibrahim was not at the July 14 rally.

Serious due process violations followed the detentions of the APFP members. The authorities provided state-appointed lawyers, even when the detainees requested and could have retained lawyers of their own choosing. At least three detainees’ lawyers tried to access their clients from the early hours of detention and presented the required official document. However, several investigators refused to accept them and demanded sending them by registered mail. As a result, the initial interrogations and the remand hearings took place in the presence of state-appointed lawyers, who are not regarded as independent in Azerbaijan. The police also did not allow most detainees to inform their families of their whereabouts.

Such blatant due process violations raise concerns of the risk of torture and ill-treatment. Human Rights Watch is aware of at least two allegations of ill-treatment and torture in custody. Seymur Ahmadov, a senior APFP politician detained on July 16, filed a complaint with the prosecutor’s office describing severe beating in custody. In his letter, publicized by the Voice of America (VoA) Azerbaijan service, Ahmadov says that he was repeatedly and severely beaten in a pretrial detention facility. “When the plain-clothed officer got the truncheon, he beat me continuously for an hour,” the complaint said. “It was so bad that I could no longer feel the pain … the plain-clothes man … shouted and threatened that if I did not apologize in front of the camera, I would be subjected to worse violence and beaten to death”

One of the lawyers shared another case of credible ill-treatment in custody, but requested confidentiality, fearing further retaliation against the detainee.

Azerbaijan is a party to a number of international treaties, including the European Convention on Human Rights, which prohibits arbitrary detention, guarantees the right to a lawyer, including one of the detainee’s choosing, during police custody, and provides for the absolute ban on ill-treatment in custody, Human Rights Watch said. The European Convention on Human Rights also guarantees the rights to freedom of _expression_ and assembly, both of which take on particular importance in connection to political speech, organizing, and participation.

On July 31, the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly rapporteurs on Azerbaijan expressed “grave concern” regarding “the troubling pattern of arbitrary arrest and detention of government critics,” and urged the authorities to “ensure full respect for the freedoms of _expression_ and assembly, the prohibition of torture, and the rights to liberty and security and to a fair trial.”

During his July 15 speech, President Aliyev emphasized that he would “not pay attention” to criticism from the Council of Europe and other international organizations about the crackdown.

“Azerbaijan’s international partners should not be intimidated by Aliyev’s belligerent speech and should speak up against the crackdown,” Gogia said. “They should urge the authorities in Azerbaijan to do the right thing – end the crackdown and release all those unjustly imprisoned.”


Garo Paylan challenges Turkish minister over the damaged Armenian cemetery in Ankara

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 20 2020

Armenian-Turkish lawmaker from Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) Garo Paylan has submitted a parliamentary question to Minister of Culture and Tourism Mehmet Nuri Ersoy about the photos showing the damage on an Armenian cemetery in  Ankara, Bianet news agency reports.

He noted that the Stanoz Armenian Cemetery was declared a protected area in the 1990s and added, “This area’s loot by treasure hunters and contractors deeply upset the Armenian community in Turkey and all our conscious citizens.” He asked the following questions to the minister:

Why don’t you protect Ankara Stanoz Armenian Cemetery?

Do you have a plan to protect the numerous Armenian cemeteries in the country?

Have you had an attempt to catch the treasure hunters, who loot the Stanoz Armenian Cemetery?

As the source reminds located in the Zir Valley in the Sincan district, the cemetery has a second-degree protection area status.

A part of the cemetery, which has agricultural lands next to it is also used as a picnic area. The barbed wires put by the Sincan Municipality to protect the cemetery are removed and cemetery’s land is added to the land of the vineyard houses in the valley.

The barbed wires around the cemetery pulled by the Sincan Municipality in recent years have been removed and added to the land of the vineyard houses built in the valley.

Photographs of human bones coming out of places dug by treasure hunters in the cemetery have been seen on social media many times. 


Armenia totally open for tourism — shortened quarantines

Cyprus Mail
Aug 20 2020

Armenia has opened its borders to air passenger tourists from all nations, with no requirement for previous testing for COVID-19, and with shortened quarantines.

The country has been open to tourist arrivals at airports from August 12, according to a statement by the Tourism Committee of the Ministry for the Economy. Entry via land travel is not yet permitted. More than 15 airlines have direct flights from major cities to Yerevan, the country’s capital.

All air passengers arriving are subject to immediate health check-ups at the airports to detect travellers infected with the novel coronavirus. Afterwards, all arrivals are sent into self-isolation quarantine.

“While this may last as long as 14 days,  travellers have the possibility (if they choose to) to undergo at their own expense, a coronavirus PCR test,” the statement says. “During the isolation, PCR sampling should be performed exclusively by a laboratory specialist executed at the individual’s self-isolation location. Based on the results of the latter, in case they are negative, the person can come out of the self-isolation before the 14 days are completed,” the statement explains.

Visitors to the country are encouraged to have health insurance that covers the novel coronavirus, although it is not a legal requirement.

While travelling through the country, wearing masks at public spaces both indoors and outdoors is mandatory, the statement adds.

The Tourism Committee has stated that it hopes, with this policy, to attract a much larger number of tourists — the policy should be particularly attractive to couples where each person is from a different country, and is thus covered by different travel bans in most destinations.

Armenia may also profit from the fact that visas are either not required for most countries in Europe, North America or South America, or a visa can be arranged on arrival. Some countries in Africa and Asia must request visas before coming to Armenia, however.


Lydian ‘applies for wind-up’ after failing to progress Armenian Amulsar gold mine blockaded by protestors

BNE Intellinews
Aug 20 2020
By bne IntelIiNews

Lydian International—which for two years has been trying but failing to progress its stalled, 75%-complete Amulsar gold mine project in Armenia, as it has been blocked from the site by environmental protestors—has applied to the Royal Court of Jersey to be wound up “on a just and equitable basis”, Mining Journal reported on August 18.

The wind-up is reportedly one of the final steps of the company’s plan of arrangement with secured creditors, under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) approved by the Canadian Superior Court of Justice in Ontario and effective as of July 6.

The company has faced numerous permitting and legal setbacks and has been unable to access Amulsar since June 2018 due to an illegal blockade over environmental concerns, the journal recapped.

It added: “Local media outlets have reported tensions at the blockade escalated this month after new management elevated security. There were reports of protestors’ cabins being removed, security running over three puppies and police arresting 10 protestors and two security personnel.”

Under the plan of arrangement, “substantially all” of Lydian’s assets were assigned to a new entity, or restructured Lydian, it was reported.

Lydian was granted CCAA protection in December after its lenders were not prepared to further extend a previously announced forbearance agreement. The company was delisted from the Toronto stock exchange (TSX) in February. 

It was targeting average annual production of 205,000 ounces of gold over an initial 12 years at Amulsar, according to a September feasibility update.

Amulsar gold mine is located 170km south of the Armenian capital, Yerevan, on the border between Vayots Dzor and Sunnik provinces.

Armenian ex-president gives first big press-conference since resignation in 2018

JAM News
Aug 20 2020

    JAMnews, Yerevan
 

rgsyan has kept silent for two years. He first broke his silence in April, 2020, when he was invited to a parliament committee session investigating the circumstances of the so-called April War of 2016, a four-day escalation of hostilities at the line of contact between the Armenian and Azerbaijani armed forces in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Afterwards the ex-president told journalists that when the state of emergency ended he would organise a press-conference and answer any questions on the April War.

Then the ex-president released a number of videos on the same topic. Even though it seems like everything has been said, he still called a press-conference, despite the fact that the state of emergency has not yet ended.

Thereafter, Sargsyan, true to form of his verbosity and frequent meetings with journalists during his presidency, meet with representatives of all media accredited by parliament. For three hours in a row he answered every question he was asked. However, he never once mentioned another meeting where he might touch on other topics of interest to the journalists.

A summary of the ex-president’s press-conference and answers to the questions that most interest the people of Armenia.

“The war was inevitable”

Serzh Sargsyan started the conference by honouring the memory of all those who had lost their lives during the April War, then he gave the journalists his account of the investigatory committee on the circumstances of the April War.

According to him, the war was inevitable, because Azerbaijan was not ready to compromise.

“There was only one way to avoid war. That would have been a unilateral surrender, which was not even discussed. It is an unthinkable course of action.

“By starting the war, Azerbaijan was pursuing its goal of fundamentally changing the course of the peace talks. They were trying to show that the issue could have a military resolution. The fact that the peace talks were not going in their favour was shown in the best possible way by Ilham Aliyev himself, having admitted in a session of the government of Azerbaijan in October, 2016 that the international community was forcing him to recognise the de facto independence of Nagorno-Karabakh behind closed doors.”

On ’80s weapons

After the April War, Serzh Sargsyan mentioned in an interview with the German media that the Armenian soldiers on the front lines were mainly armed with weapons from the 1980s. 

This fact shocked the Armenian people. Many perceived this as an admission from the government that they were unable to properly arm their troops with modern weaponry and blamed the leaders of the country for embezzling from the military budget.

However, Sargsyan averred that no army in the world had no weapons from the ’80s. 

“Even now it is not just our forces that are armed with weapons from the ’80s, but even those of the richest countries.

“My statement gave rise to speculation from people who had no idea what weapons from the ’80s meant. What I said really meant this: Gentlemen of the OSCE (Germany was, at that time, the chair of the OSCE), even though you have turned a blind eye to the fact that Azerbaijan is armed to the teeth, our soldiers are still able to defend their country”.

“High chance of war”

“The peace process to settle the Karabakh situation had come to a dead end, which increased the chance of war”, stated the ex-president.

Serzh Sargsyan considers the escalation of hostilities in July on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border to be a result of this dead end.

In his opinion, “The Nagorno-Karabakh question can only be decided with international intervention”.

“Not a single leader of Azerbaijan has ever recognized the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh in good faith”.

“We have nothing to apologize  to Baku for”

Recently Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, gave an interview to the BBC. The presenter of the program Hard Talk asked the head of government if he was prepared to apologize for the “war crimes committed by the Armenians during the Nagorno-Karabakh War”. Serzh Sargsyan also answered this question.

“Why should we apologize to Azerbaijan? For the fact that we, following the letter of the law, tried to exercise our right to self-determination, and they sent their gangs against us to try and oppress us with weapons? For the fact that they directed their fire against population centres, firing on peaceful civilians?

“Me and my military compatriots have no issue with asking for forgiveness. But there has to be a reason for it, and we have nothing to be sorry about. We haven’t done anything for which we would need to ask for forgiveness”.

Why wasn’t the Iskander ballistic missile system used?

During the April War the Armenians did not use the Iskander ballistic missile, which they had in their arsenal. Serzh Sargsyan explains:

“It was a large-scale military action, but it was not all-out war. If we had used the Iskander, it would have been, if you permit the _expression_, like using a cannon to kill a fly. The Iskander is an extremely powerful weapon, and its primary purpose is to deter the enemy”.

According to Sargsyan, one of the reason that Azerbaijan did not start a full-scale war in April, 2016 was the presence of the Iskander in Armenia.

“The answer is very simple. The Iskander rocket can reach all the way to Baku or even Ganja.“

Did Armenia intend to recognize Karabakh?

Had the April War continued, Armenia would have recognized the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh, stated Serzh Sargsyan.

“The armed forces of Armenia are a guarantee of the safety of Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia will use all the means at her disposal to protect the inhabitants of Karabakh. I am certain that if there was a full-scale war, it would be necessary for Armenia to recognize the independence of Karabakh”.

On Russia’s role

In 2016, when the current prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, was still just a member of the opposition, he stated that the April War had started with Russia’s approval. According to Pashinyan, their goal was to force Yerevan into territorial concessions to Baku and simultaneously to entice Azerbaijan to join the Eurasian Economic Union, led by Russia.

In January of 2020, Pashinyan, the incumbent prime minister, stated that he had discussed all of the problems worrying Armenia with the leadership of Russia and “received answers to all of the pressing questions”.

Sargsyan requested that the journalists ask Pashinyan what sort of discussion he had had with his Russian colleagues, and called the prime minister’s statements ignorant.

“When people spread unverifiable and damaging ideas about our allies, there will be serious consequences. Not necessarily just right away. Russia is one of our strategic allies. Such statements are equivalent to blaming our ally for provoking a war, which is treason. That is unacceptable”.

On giving up Armenian territory

Serzh Sargsyan answered the question of whether he intended to hand over any territory to Azerbaijan during his presidency.

“I never made any agreement with anyone which may have threatened our people. These rumours are simply shameful. It never happened and it never could”.