Ucom Customers to Transfer 105 Million Drams to Insurance Foundation for Servicemen

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 12:09,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 12, ARMENPRESS. (Press Release) Ucom will transfer 105 million drams on behalf of its subscribers to the Insurance Foundation for Servicemen, taking into account the direction and importance of the latter’s activity. The decision has been made on the basis of the results of free SMS-voting and calls among Ucom fixed services’ subscribers.

The anonymous SMS-voting was carried out by “Nikita Mobile” company through the collection of the subscribers’ opinions on the disposal of the amount, sent to 1004 short number. 74.85% of thousands of subscribers have voted in favor of transferring 105 million AMD to the Insurance Foundation for Servicemen, while 25.15% voted in favor of distributing the amount among the subscribers.

“Despite this difficult period for the Company: the simultaneous departure of a large number of employees, technical and financial challenges, the Company has put continous efforts to resolve all tasks. We wouldn’t have liked the results of internal processes and settlement works to be visible to our subscribers, for which we apologize. We are really grateful to our customers for their patience, understanding and loyalty, and the decision to allocate funds is just our way of being thankful. The vast majority of subscribers preferred to transfer the entire amount to the Insurance Foundation of Servicemen and thus assist to solve one of the important issues in this country”, said Ara Sergei Khachatryan.

Opposition LHK party to introduce motion seeking to end state of emergency

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 14:15,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 12, ARMENPRESS. The opposition Bright Armenia party (LHK) faction of the Armenian parliament is planning to introduce a motion seeking to end the coronavirus-related state of emergency in the country.

The party said it deems the extension of the state of emergency to “harm all sectors of the country”.

LHK says “reasonable” restrictions can be maintained with amendments to existing laws on public health safety and emergency protection of population.

The government extended the state of emergency, originally declared in mid-March, until September 11th.

The restrictions have been significantly reduced.

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia revises mandatory face covering rules

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 14:37,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 12, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian COVID-19 response task force is planning to make changes in the rules of mandatory face coverings.

“The mandatory face mask requirement in personal vehicles will be lifted, but the rule of wearing masks in public transport and taxis will remain in force,” Deputy PM Tigran Avinyan, the head of the task force and Superintendent of the State of Emergency operations told lawmakers in parliament.

“The requirement on wearing masks in some open public areas such as in the nature, forests will be revised”, he said.

The maximum number of permitted patrons for a single table at restaurants will also be revised, he said.

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Coronavirus battering Armenia’s wine industry – and what’s being done to stop it

JAM News
Aug 13 2020

    Gayane Mkrtchyan, Yerevan
 

The coronavirus pandemic has also hit Armenian wine producers. Official data shows that 7,000,000 liters of wine are sold annually on the domestic market of Armenia, while another 3-4,000,000 are exported.

This year, consumption of wine and brandy fell both on the domestic and foreign markets. Armenian wine and brandy companies are currently operating at half capacity. Experts believe that the situation will not improve until next summer.

And this worries the farmers who have grown large vineyards in recent years. The harvest this year is good, but they will face big losses if wine and cognac producers accept only a small part of the harvest or buy it at a low price.

What’s going on in Armenia and how they are trying to neutralize the crisis – more details below.

Hopes and risks for farmers

Manvel Sargsyan, who has been working as a wine producer for 14 years, is worried that the coronavirus pandemic will prevent him from being able to sell his large, quality harvests.

“I have five hectares of grape vines, and a harvest of over 100 tonnes. The Yerevan Brandy Factory has already cut their purchases in half, and have changed their preliminary contracts with farmers. We also had contracts, but they have already reported that they were denied a loan, and they might not be able to pay us either. Soon we will harvest our crop, and we will have to face the facts”, says Manvel Sargsyan from Armavir region.

Vanush Fakhuryan, a resident of the village of Kakhtsrashen in the Ararat region, expects 12-15 tonnes of Kakheti grapes. Moreover, this year he hopes to charge even more than last year, given the high quality of the crop.

“This type of grape is permitted to be exported and is intended specifically for wine production. If winemakers who buy grapes from companies are facing problems, it means that we have problems as well. I think the government should help winemakers and provide them with loans. This will help us too,” says Vanush.

Government action

Zaruhi Muradyan, executive director of the Armenian Winemaking and Viticulture Foundation and head of the Wine Academy, is worried that winemakers will not be able to purchase the entire harvest of wine grape varieties.

“To solve the problem, the government, with the help of the fund, is monitoring the projected volumes of crops and purchases in order to understand how much of the expected harvest may remain unused. The government is doing its best to help both producers and farmers,” says Zaruhi Muradyan.

At a meeting with representatives of large wine-producing companies, Minister of Economics Tigran Khachatryan said that the government intends to do everything to ensure that the good harvest of grapes will not go to waste, so that it does not remain in the hands of farmers, but so that the businesses also emerge with no losses:

“We need to find balance and compromise in our solutions. We recently made changes to the program to subsidize interest for loans to agricultural businesses.

Thanks to government subsidies, zero-interest loans will be available until the end of the year, and the repayment period will be extended from one year to two years. This year, additional loans will also be provided for purchasing containers for storing raw materials for wine production. The government intends to help both winemakers and winegrowers to get out of the crisis without any major shocks.”

Only softening the blow

Avag Harutyunyan, the head of the Union of Winemakers of Armenia, believes that the government cannot stop the crisis, and that these measures will only soften the blow:

“These programs are aimed at mitigating the impact of the crisis for 3-4 months. These are local, topical measures, and the government is unable to do anything more. These are programs, some of which are socially oriented, some of which are focused on transferring credit resources or credit burden. A little here, a little there, everything in order to avoid total collapse.”

The head of the Union of Winemakers says that the demand for wine in Armenia comes from three different groups: the locals, tourists and exports.

“Residents buy wines for weddings, christenings, birthdays, drinks in pubs and restaurants. This is not the case now. In the coming year, people will still buy wine out of stress. And they will come out of it impoverished, they will not have the means and opportunities to buy as much alcohol as they consumed before. And there will be no tourists until next May.

For a month now, Russia has been buying wine and brandy, but at a very low price. Prices for French wines dropped to the level of Armenian wines. Our prices have also dropped to make up for this difference, but in the end, we have nothing left. There is no hope for the United States, they will buy for maybe another six months. In the best case scenario, we will reach net zero by next May,” says Avag Harutyunyan.

Hartunyan says that 90% of grapes purchases go to the production of cognac, and 10% to the production of wine. And the reduction in this 90% is what leads to the general economic crisis:

“As for the profitability of exports, in particular, to the Russian market, the profitability of cognac, which covers 80-90% of our total exports, fell by about 15% due to fluctuations in the exchange rate. Overall, profitability fell by 30% in all foreign markets. And the volume of exports to Russia, which is a key market for us, have been cut almost in half.”

Due to the fact that the sale of these products have dropped to almost nothing, only 30% of the barrels and other containers for storing wine at factories are being used. And this creates additional difficulties when purchasing grapes from farmers.

Avag Harutyunyan says that winemakers faced this problem back in April, and the government was asked to provide interest-free loans for the purchase of containers, exempting them from VAT:

“The government did this only a month ago, and the decision came too late. Grapes are harvested starting on August 20, but orders at the factories producing containers must be made in January-February. It’s too late now. I am sure that the entire grape harvest will be purchased, but at a very low price. This is the only way that the factories in their current position can purchase the entire crop.”

Overcoming the crisis

The head of the Union of Winemakers says that during the years of Armenia’s independence, the sector has gone through five crises. This one is both similar and dissimilar to the previous ones. All crises have political and economic elements.

“The way in which it is similar to previous crises is that the same mechanisms are being put into action, and they lead to the same consequences. Markets are closed, grapes are not being sold, barrels are not empty, money is not coming in, salaries are not paid. The situation is the same everywhere. In contrast to previous crises, the political background has changed.

During previous crises, international organizations and the state budget provided funding. But due to systemic corruption, the money flowed into the pockets of the oligarchs in the industry. Now, unlike those crises, money is spent in a targeted way, it is not embezzled, it is spent in accordance with the program. And this inspires hope that we will quickly overcome the crisis. But we will overcome it quickly, not in terms of growth and takeoff, but in order to reach a net zero profit,” says Avag Harutyunyan.


Armenian military unworried over prolonged Turkish-Azerbaijani drills

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 16:22,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 12, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian military is not concerned over the prolonged nature of the Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises, the Armenian Defense Ministry spokesperson Shushan Stepanyan told ARMENPRESS.

‘We aren’t concerned over the initiation or the long-term nature of the Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises, but given the fact that any international military exercises apart from combat readiness component also contains military-diplomatic, military-political messages, then the news about the presence of the Turkish high-ranking military-political delegation makes the drills concerning in terms of the unprecedentedness of the abovementioned messages,” Stepanyan said.

Azerbaijan has announced that its joint military drills with Turkey are being prolonged. The Turkish top brass departed for Baku to inspect the exercises.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian soldier who struck Azerbaijan’s ORBITER-3 UAV demobilized, shares memories

News.am, Armenia
Aug 13 2020
Armenian soldier who struck Azerbaijan’s ORBITER-3 UAV demobilized, shares memories Armenian soldier who struck Azerbaijan’s ORBITER-3 UAV demobilized, shares memories

23:06, 13.08.2020
                          

Vardan, 23, is one of the soldiers who downed Azerbaijan’s ORBITER-3 intelligence UAV in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) during the tense situation in Tavush Province of Armenia in July. On July 18, just two days before the end of his military service, Sergeant Vardan was given a major task that required a high sense of responsibility and that he had to accomplish with his detachment.

“We were serving on-duty and were given a task to find the adversary’s unmanned aerial vehicle. We found it and received an order to strike it, and we succeeded in accomplishing the task along with our chief,” Vardan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Vardan participated in the operation as a detachment commander. He and his friends used their knowledge precisely and downed the adversary’s UAV in minutes.

“We were very happy. We were all screaming with joy. Words can’t describe how we felt. After all, I had been given a task after two years and accomplished it brilliantly. Our hard work paid off,” Vardan said.

The members of the detachment were awarded by the President of Artsakh for this act. Vardan received the Medal for Combat Service. He ended his mandatory military serviced and returned home a few days ago.

“I’m trying to adapt to civilian life, but I keep thinking what my fellow servicemen are doing. They became more excited after the incident and are always ready to strike the enemy,” he said.

Vardan says he will continue to follow the situation on the border from his house in Kapan, but will remain vigilant so that he can help his friends-in-combat, if necessary.

Congress has secretly blocked US arms sales to Turkey for nearly two years

Defense News
By Valerie Insinna, Joe Gould & Aaron Mehta
WASHINGTON — Four key members of Congress, either individually or
collectively, have quietly frozen all major U.S. arms sales to Turkey
for nearly two years in a move to pressure Ankara to abandon its
Russian-built S-400 air defense system, Defense News has learned.
The legislative action, which has not been previously reported, is
another sign of the deeply fractured relationship between the two NATO
allies, a disruption that has already led to Turkey’s expulsion from
the F-35 joint strike fighter program.
While it is unclear exactly how many potential sales have been held
back, at least two significant deals are in limbo: a follow-on
contract for F-16 structural upgrades and export licenses for
U.S.-made engines that Turkey needs to complete a $1.5 billion sale of
attack helicopters to Pakistan. Historically, the United States is the
largest exporter of weapons to Turkey.
When Congress holds up sales of major weapon systems like tanks,
planes and ships, it is typically meant to rebuke a country’s specific
military or political actions, such as when lawmakers attempted to
block sales to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in 2019. But
freezing arms sales is a diplomatic tool that the United States hasn’t
used against Turkey since 1978, after the Turkish military invaded
Cyprus.
Defense News learned of the situation from a half dozen sources in
Congress, the administration, and the defense industry, all of whom
requested anonymity because of the sensitivities involved.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Jim Risch, R-Idaho, and
House Foreign Affairs ranking member Rep. Mike McCaul, R-Texas,
acknowledged they are part of the freeze after they were contacted by
Defense News.
The two other lawmakers who can sign off on foreign military sales ―
House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., and
Senate Foreign Relations Committee ranking member Sen. Bob Menendez,
D-N.J., are also part of the hold, according to multiple Capitol Hill
sources. Neither would comment for this story.
“There is serious concern over [Turkey’s purchase of the S-400] in
both parties and in both chambers on the Hill, and until the issues
surrounding this purchase are resolved I cannot and will not support
weapon sales to Turkey,” Risch said in an email to Defense News.
“An oh shit moment”
Turkey’s relationship with the United States has been strained for
several years — especially with Congress.
Lawmakers have blasted President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s deepening ties
with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Erdogan’s rejection of U.S.
offers to buy the Patriot surface-to-air missile system over the
Russian-made S-400 and Turkey’s military incursion last year into
Kurdish-controlled northern Syria also frustrated members of Congress.
“Turkey is a longtime strategic ally of the United States. That
relationship has deteriorated dramatically in recent years and is
quickly deteriorating further,” Risch said. “President Erdogan’s
purchase of the Russian S-400 significantly changed the nature of our
relationship. This purchase benefits our adversary Putin and threatens
the integrity of the NATO Alliance.”
Traditionally, during the arms sales process, the chairmen and ranking
members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and House Foreign
Affairs Committee — the so-called “four corners” — are granted an
opportunity to dissuade the U.S. State Department from approving arms
sales to foreign governments on an informal basis. The lawmakers have
used that notification period to block sales from moving forward, but
they consider such deliberations sensitive and rarely speak publicly
about them.
Engel has refused to sign off on military sales to Turkey since mid
2018, while Risch has maintained his own hold since Turkey officially
took possession of the S-400 in July 2019, according to multiple
congressional sources. McCaul doesn’t have a blanket hold, and has, at
certain points, signed off on sales specifically in support of NATO
operations.
“Nobody has signed off on anything, roughly, for the last year,” said
one congressional source. “Nothing moves in this process until all
four of the offices have said, ‘yea.’”
A second congressional source described Turkey taking possession of
the S-400 as “kind of, pardon my language, an oh shit moment.” The
source added that Turkey riled lawmakers further in November, when it
publicly targeted a Turkish F-16 with the S-400, a move interpreted as
an implicit threat against other F-16 users, such as the United
States.
“Not only was it intentionally provocative, but it happened the day
after Erdogan was in the Oval Office,” the source said.
Turkey’s September 2017 decision to purchase the S-400 created a major
rift between Turkey and its alliance partners. NATO officials quickly
sounded the alarm that Turkey would compromise NATO’s security if it
plugged the S-400 into allied systems, as the Russian system would be
sharing a network with sensitive alliance data. Most significantly,
American officials worried that the system would be able to gain
information about the F-35, compromising the stealth capabilities of
the jet. The presence of Russian contractors in Turkey to support the
S-400 was also a concern.
President Donald Trump has yet to engage in the sort of high-profile
confrontation with Congress over Turkey such as when he vetoed
Congress’s attempt to halt U.S. sales to Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates last year. But the administration has made efforts to
lobby lawmakers in favor of individual deals with Turkey, according to
the second congressional source, who noted opposition to Turkey is
both bipartisan and bicameral.
“Right now, the mood [in Congress] toward Turkey is enormous,” the
source said. “Unless Turkey wants to change the narrative and do a mea
culpa, the president could very easily lose a veto override vote.”
Just as the Trump administration has been quiet about the hold on
sales, so have the U.S. defense contractors who would benefit from
those purchases.
Two sources with ties to major defense primes said they had not seen
evidence of a full-scale lobbying push from industry to clear the way
for these deals, which include new sales and the renewal of existing
contracts typically viewed as routine.
Instead, an unspoken consensus exists among contractors to wait out
the holds until tensions between the United States and Turkey cool, or
until new policymakers in either a Biden or second Trump
administration shift the White House’s willingness to work with
Turkey.
“We’re operating under the impression that anything that requires
congressional notification will not move forward this year,” said one
source.
Risch in particular has evinced frustration the United States could
not reach a deal on the Patriot system. Similarly, when congressional
ire was peaking over Turkey’s invasion of Syria in October, Engel
called Erdogan an “authoritarian thug” whose rule is “a glaring black
mark on Turkey’s historic secular, democratic traditions.”
“We need to pressure him while ramping up diplomacy in the hopes of
getting Turkey back on the right track as a NATO ally,” Engel said at
the time.
Another motivating issue is the lack of action from the Trump
administration on implementing the Countering America’s Adversaries
Through Sanctions Act, or CAATSA.
Under that law, the Trump administration is bound to level sanctions
against any nation that purchase a major defense article from Russia,
but the administration has yet to impose those sanctions, much to the
consternation of Congress.
“Turkey’s purchase of the Russian S-400 is unacceptable and undermines
NATO’s mission to deter Russian aggression,” McCaul said in a email to
Defense News. “The Administration must impose the sanctions required
by law in response to this purchase. Turkey must reverse course on
this destabilizing action to renew the United States’ confidence in
our defense relationship.”
McCaul supports a proposal to lift CAATSA sanctions against Turkey,
once imposed, if Turkey no longer possesses the S-400. That proposal
passed as part of the House’s version of the annual defense policy
bill.
Melissa Dalton, a former Pentagon official now with the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, called the lack of resistance
from the administration “surprising, in the sense that Turkey is an
actual ally, whereas the Saudis are just a close partner.” But she
noted that Turkey falls on a seam between the European and Middle
Eastern subject teams, both at the Pentagon and at the State
Department, and so putting together “a coherent policy to start with
is tough.”
Through a spokesman, the State Department declined to comment on the
Turkey arms hold.
In a statement to Defense News, the Turkish embassy in Washington said
“There are a number of arms procurement cases for Turkey, pending
approval in Congress. As a staunch member of NATO and an ally of the
U.S., we are confident that approval of these requests without further
delay will be a natural outcome of our strategic cooperation.
“The U.S. is our number one trade partner in defense industry and we
believe that it is in the strategic interest of both Turkey and the
U.S. to further increase our bilateral cooperation in this field.”
Industrial impact
The defense industry is watching the export issue closely.
Arms deals between the United States and Turkey totaled nearly $1
billion from 2015 through 2019, according to data compiled by the
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. During that time,
Turkey ranked within the United States’ top 20 customers, with
purchases that included aircraft and missiles. Its military is now in
the market for trainer helicopters.
Not all arms deals to Turkey have stopped. Older cases that are
already underway have not paused, and any weapons sales — be it
Foreign Military Sales (FMS), where the U.S. government acts as a
go-between, or Direct Commercial Sales (DCS), in which the country
deals directly with industry — less than the $25 million threshold is
not subject to Congressional approval.
But direct commercial sales and low-tier FMS cases tend to be smaller
deals, such as spare parts, ammunition, and maintenance packages for
aging equipment. The tanks, planes and ships that form the core of any
modern military remain the province of major FMS sales.
The blockage has paralyzed negotiations for several deals, including a
follow-on contract for F-16 upgrades, according to one source with
knowledge of the matter.
Lockheed Martin is performing structural upgrades to a portion of
Turkey’s aging F-16 Block 30 fleet under a direct commercial sales
contract that expires this fall. Defense News reported in 2017 that it
would take until 2023 for Lockheed to complete modifications for all
35 F-16s included in the deal.
An industry source with knowledge of the F-16 contract said that
Lockheed is still “planning to complete the requirements” of the order
and does not “foresee any performance changes or requirement changes.”
When asked to comment about the Turkish F-16 upgrade contract,
Lockheed Martin officials said that “any questions related to F-16
sustainment work should be directed to the U.S. government.”
Another side effect of Congress’ hold is the endangerment of a $1.5
billion deal between Turkey and Pakistan for the sale of 30
Turkish-made T129s attack helicopters, an issue Defense News reported
on earlier this year.
Two major Turkish firms are licensed to domestically produce the T129
and its engine. Turkish Aerospace Industries manufactures the
helicopter through a partnership with Italian-British aerospace
company AgustaWestland. Meanwhile, the helicopter’s CTS800 engine —
originally designed by the Light Helicopter Turbine Engine Company, a
joint venture between U.S.-based Honeywell and U.K.-based Rolls Royce
— is made by Tusaş Engine Industries.
Because the CTS800 was originally produced in the United States,
Turkey cannot sell T129s — or any weapon system containing that engine
— without obtaining an export license from the U.S. government.
But those licenses are also being held back as a result of the
congressional block on arms deals, leaving Tusaş Engine Industries
racing to develop a replacement engine for the T129.
“Pakistan has agreed to give us another year [to resolve the problem].
We hope we will be able to develop our indigenous engine soon to power
the T129,” Ismail Demir, the head of Turkey’s top procurement agency,
said Jan. 6. “After one year, Pakistan may be satisfied with the level
of progress in our engine program, or the U.S. may grant us the export
license.”
Threatening the T129 sale to Pakistan hurts Turkey more than just
financially, said Joel Johnson, a Teal Group analyst who has
previously worked for the State Department and as a staff member on
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
For one, the sale cements a relationship between Turkey and a fellow
Islamic nation, signaling the country’s pivot from the West.
Increasing annual defense exports is also a key priority for Erdogan,
who vowed in 2015 to boost arms sales to $25 billion by 2023 and to
rid the Turkish defense industrial base of its reliance on foreign
suppliers.
“This is a nerve ending that is very sensitive to Erdogan. It’s not
the helicopters, per se, it’s the symbolism of the sale that hits him
in a way that hurts,” Johnson said.
Honeywell and Rolls Royce declined to comment for this story.
The current hold marks the first U.S. arms embargo on Turkey since
1975, after Turkey invaded Cyprus and Washington halted sales of
weapons and military assistance to Turkey for three years.
Some industry officials worry that if the hold extends much beyond
2021, the relationship between American and Turkish defense
contractors could diminish as legacy contracts expire, leading Turkish
firms to seek industrial partnerships elsewhere.
“What value [does] the Hill or the administration see in holding up
these legacy areas of cooperation? Do we really think that will
influence Erdogan’s decision making?” the source said. “Will industry
be able to simply restart the defense industrial cooperation once
Erdogan is out of power in the future? I think that’s the tricky part.
The policy decision makes sense, but the byproducts of that policy
decision and the implications down the road have the potential to hurt
industry and U.S. national security.”
But Teal’s Johnson countered that Congress’ block on sales could force
the White House to work with lawmakers more closely on issues related
to Turkey, including potential sanctions or punitive measures in the
wake of the S-400 acquisition.
“Congress can’t negotiate with Turkey. They can only really go
negotiate with the White House, so the question is, what do they want
the White House to do, and is anybody talking?” he said. “Normally, if
you had a normal president, the congressional staffers would be
quietly talking to the [National Security Council] and the State
Department about what they want. … It’s hard to see the way forward
with this group.”
Even if Turkey fulfills U.S. government demands and arm sales resume,
it remains to be seen whether Turkey will still line up to buy
American weapons.
Over the past 15 years, Turkey has drastically cut its spending on
weapons imports, going from the world’s third largest importer in the
1995-1999 timeframe to 15th in 2015-2019, according to SIPRI.
The last FMS deal approved by the State Department to Turkey was in
2018: an offer to sell 80 Patriot MIM-104E Guidance Enhanced Missiles,
and 60 PAC-3 Missile Segment Enhancement missiles — a last ditch
effort by the U.S. government to entice Ankara to cancel its S-400
purchase in favor of an American air defense system. It was never
completed, as Turkey pressed on with the procurement of the S-400.
Ultimately, the Patriot deal was taken off the table.
According to figures from the State Department, in 2017 the United
States authorized more than $587 million in DCS sales for Turkey and
shipped equipment worth more than $106 million. The next year, the
United States approved more than $600 million and shipped $136 million
in weapons. In 2019, more than $615 million was authorized and over
$66 million shipped.
Although the United States remains Turkey’s biggest foreign supplier
of weapons, the country makes a fair amount of military goods
domestically, has purchased Russian arms like the S-400, and even
flirted with buying a Chinese missile system in 2013.
“They have a reasonably capable defense industrial base that is
getting more capable because of investment going in from the
government. They’ve also become a little more of a catholic shopper,”
said Douglas Barrie, a military aerospace expert at the International
Institute of Strategic Studies. “They have some options. They wouldn’t
just have to look to Europe if the U.S. was no longer seen as a
supplier nation to them. I think, on some occasions, they may look
farther afield.”
It’s unclear whether a retaliatory action like the arms sale freeze
helps bring Erdogan to the table, or whether it pushes Turkey even
further into Russia’s arms.
“The alliance is incredibly troubled at the moment, but I don’t think
it’s beyond the pale,” Dalton said. “The U.S. has a lot at stake in
terms of Turkey’s trajectory, and the NATO alliance has a lot at stake
as well. So for all those reasons, [any actions] need to be framed as
part of a broader approach.
“I don’t have high confidence that it’s being framed in that way.”
 

Armenia Civil Aviation Committee on flights and quarantine

News.am, Armenia
Aug 13 2020

21:04, 13.08.2020
                  

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/12/2020

                                        Wednesday, 
Prosecutor Demands Lengthy Jail Terms For Sasna Tsrer Members
        • Artak Khulian
At the trial of Sasna Tsrer members,Yerevan, .
A prosecutor in a high-profile trial in Armenia has demanded lengthy prison 
terms for members of an armed group that seized a police base in capital Yerevan 
in 2016 and made political demands.
A majority of more than two dozen members of Sasna Tsrer, a fringe opposition 
group involving a number of prominent Karabakh war veterans, were set free 
pending the outcome of their ongoing trial after the change of government in 
Armenia in 2018. Many of them were released under personal guarantees of 
parliament members.
After seizing the police compound in Yerevan’s Erebuni district in July 2016 the 
gunmen led by retired army colonel Varuzhan Avetisian demanded that then 
President Serzh Sarkisian free jailed nationalist politician Zhirayr Sefilian 
and step down.
They laid down their weapons after a two-week standoff with security forces 
which left three police officers dead and was accompanied by hostage-taking.
In his closing arguments in court on Wednesday prosecuting attorney Artur 
Chakhoyan requested that Avetisian and another leader of the group, Pavel 
Manukian, be sentenced to 8 years and 9 months, and 9 years, respectively.
The prosecutor demanded life imprisonment and 21 years in jail for Sasna Tsrer 
members Smbat Barseghian and Armen Bilian, respectively, accusing them of 
committing the murders of police officers.
He sought between eight and a half and nine years in prison for other members of 
the group on trial.
During the trial Sasna Tsrer members have defied the case for the prosecution, 
claiming that they exercised their right to uprising against what they viewed as 
an oppressive regime.
A political party formed around the Sasna Tsrer movement and led by Avetisian 
took part in Armenia’s early parliamentary elections in December 2018. The party 
failed to clear the 5-percent threshold to enter the legislature by polling less 
than 2 percent of the vote.
Protesters In Armenia Demand Opportunity To Go To Russia
        • Robert Zargarian
Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian talking to protesters outside the 
government offices in Yerevan, .
A group of Armenian citizens on Wednesday gathered near the government offices 
in Yerevan to demand an opportunity to leave the country and specifically go to 
Russia.
Some Armenian citizens who live and work on a permanent basis in Russia had come 
to Armenia before the introduction of the coronavirus-related state of emergency 
in March and had to stay in the country due to the subsequent closure of 
international borders.
Five months on, many of them, including those who also hold Russian passports, 
say they cannot travel back to Russia either to rejoin their families or return 
to work there.
The protest comes on a day when the Armenian government has announced imminent 
removal of certain travel restrictions for foreigners to enter Armenia by air.
In presenting to parliament the decision to extend the state of emergency for 
another month, Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian said, however, that land 
border crossings with both Georgia and Iran will remain closed for now.
Avinian also made it clear that there are no restrictions for Armenian citizens 
to leave the country by air and that it was within the competence of the 
receiving country to remove any existing prohibitions.
At the same time, the official confirmed that the Armenian government was in 
talks with counterparts in Moscow regarding the possibility of Armenian citizens 
traveling to Russia.
Answering the question of opposition Bright Armenia faction leader Edmon 
Marukian on the fate of thousands of Armenians who travel to Russia as migrant 
workers, Avinian said: “As you know, the Russian Federation has publicly 
expressed its readiness for a mutual opening of borders. Now individual 
negotiations are being conducted. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is working in 
this direction. In other words, work is being conducted with the Russian 
Federation at this point over a mutual opening of borders and also over 
subsequent regulations.”
Some participants of today’s protest said they wanted to travel to Russia in 
their own cars. But even for citizens holding Russian passports this looks 
problematic given that they have to go through Georgia, a country with a much 
better coronavirus epidemiological situation than Armenia’s.
“We went to the [Russian] embassy, we went to the National Assembly... We have 
been raising this issue for three or four weeks now,” one protester complained.
Some Armenians who mainly live in Russia spent several nights in their cars at 
the Bagratashen border checkpoint in northern Armenia only to be turned away by 
border officials. “Many of us are Russian citizens. We all want to return home. 
We want to be given a corridor to go to Russia,” the protester said.
Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian came down to listen to the 
protesters. He explained to them that borders are opened and closed not only in 
Armenia, but in other countries as well. “At this moment Armenia has a system in 
place for other citizens to cross the border, and other countries have theirs. 
If our neighbors keep the border closed, that is their policy.”
Mnatsakanian said that it is the Russian authorities that should answer the 
questions raised by the protesters in Armenia.
One man claimed that they were being held hostage in Armenia. “There is no such 
[harsh] state of emergency,” he contended.
The minister countered: “Do you understand that there has been a pandemic? Do 
you follow the numbers? Do you see that the risks are very high?”
Since the start of the epidemic in March over 40,000 coronavirus cases have been 
identified in Armenia, making the infection rate in the South Caucasus country 
with a population of about 3 million one of the highest in the world. During 
this period 806 people in Armenia have died from COVID-19, the death of another 
234 patients infected with the virus, according to the health authorities, was 
primarily caused by other, pre-existing diseases.
Armenia Extends Coronavirus State Of Emergency
People wearing face masks in downtown Yerevan at the height of the coronavirus 
epidemic in June 2020
Citing the need to maintain the current positive trend in its fight against the 
novel coronavirus, the Armenian government has decided to extend the 
pandemic-related state of emergency by another month.
At the same time, the Armenian authorities have removed certain prohibitions and 
restrictions introduced in March, including the ban on political assembly.
At a special government meeting on Wednesday, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
said that he hoped that the fifth extension of the state-of-emergency rule will 
be the last, urging citizens to continue to follow anti-epidemic rules set by 
the authorities.
“Going through hell today and having had 806 deaths caused by the novel 
coronavirus and 234 deaths among coronavirus patients due to their other 
pre-existing diseases, we have a chance to get to a totally new situation in the 
fall, in fact to a situation of overcoming [the epidemic] regardless of what 
will be happening in the rest of the world,” Pashinian said.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian
The Armenian prime minister underscored that wearing face masks in all public 
spaces, which has been mandatory in Armenia since June, will continue to be the 
cornerstone of his government’s anti-epidemic strategy.
“If we show exceptional discipline in wearing face masks we can consider that we 
– I mean all of us, all our citizens – have practically solved the coronavirus 
problem. If not, we will get back to the July situation,” Pashinian warned, 
referring to the apparent peak of the epidemic in the first part of last month 
when more than 700 new coronavirus cases and about 15 deaths were reported in 
Armenia on a daily basis.
Since the start of the epidemic in March over 40,000 coronavirus cases have been 
identified in the South Caucasus country with a population of about 3 million. 
According to Armenia’s Ministry of Health, more than 33,000 people with the 
coronavirus have overcome the respiratory infection.
The monthly extensions of the state of emergency have increasingly been 
criticized by Armenian opposition groups in recent months. Some of them claimed 
that Pashinian was exploiting the coronavirus crisis to ward off anti-government 
street protests.
In its current decision the Pashinian government has removed restrictions on 
political rallies and public protests across the country, making them 
conditional on coronavirus safety rules that require all participants to wear 
face masks and maintain the social distance of at least 1.5 meters.
In presenting the government decision on the fifth extension of the state of 
emergency Justice Minister Rustam Badasian also said that Armenia will remove 
the ban on the entry to the country for foreigners by air, but will require that 
they either self-isolate for 14 days or produce a negative test taken in Armenia 
before being allowed to move freely.
Badasian said that people will also be allowed to hold and participate in family 
occasions and other entertainment events in both open and closed spaces, but 
with no more than 40 participants and maintaining all coronavirus safety rules 
set by the government. Also, the minister said, restrictions will be removed 
from transportation of goods through customs.
Pashinian stressed that all bans and restrictions introduced by his government, 
including on political assembly, were based on the epidemiological situation and 
their removal is also conditional on that. “If, God forbid, as a result of 
removing these restrictions we will see numbers climbing again, we will be 
forced to re-introduce them,” the prime minister warned.
The decision to extend the state of emergency until September 11 was discussed 
in the National Assembly later on Wednesday.
The parliament where Prime Minister Pashinian’s My Step alliance has a 
commanding majority overcame the challenge submitted by the opposition Bright 
Armenia faction against the extension of the state of emergency by a vote of 68 
to 22.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Conversation on Armenian News: Education Reform

Armenian News Network / Armenian News

ANN/Armenian News

Table of Contents

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In this Conversation On Armenian News episode, Asbed Kotchikian along with two esteemed guests delve into the norms, educational outcomes, success factors and pedagogy of the controversial government-proposed reforms of the K-12 educational system in Armenia. Today we focus specifically in the areas of Armenian history, and literature. 

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  • Prof. Asbed Kotchikian

  • Prof. Ara Sanjian

  • Prof. Siranush Dvoyan

  • Hovik Manucharyan

  • Asbed Bedrossian

In recent months, Armenia’s government has published its proposal for K-12 curriculum reform in Armenian schools. The new curriculum, which includes education standards and learning outcomes, proved to be quite controversial with many individuals and groups criticizing one aspect or another of the proposed curriculum notably the segments on literature and Armenian history. These criticisms ranged from in-depth critique of the content of the proposed plan to outlandish and sometimes baseless accusations. In order to shed some light on this issue specifically the history and literature components of the new proposed curriculum, this week we have invited two scholars who have been following these debates and the content of the new curriculum intimately.

Asbed Kotchikian is a senior lecturer of political science and international relations at Bentley University in Massachusetts where he teaches courses on the Middle East and former Soviet space. Prof. Kotchikian is also a consultant for international organizations on issues of judicial reform, ways to combat radicalization and on ethnic and religious minorities. He discusses the  proposed reforms with:

Prof. Ara Sanjian is Associate Professor of History and the Director of the Armenian Research Center at University of Michigan, Dearborn. He received his undergraduate degree from Yerevan State University (YSU) in what was then the Soviet Republic of Armenia, and has been involved in numerous academic projects in Armenia. His research interests focus on the post-World War I history of Armenia, Turkey and the Arab states of Western Asia. And:

Prof. Siranush Dvoyan is a literary studies scholar and associate professor of Armenian and Comparative Literature at the American University of Armenia. She is a graduate of YSU and taught there for over a decade.

Discussion areas:

  • Brief background

  • The background of the current proposed curriculum: When was it conceived and what has its development process been like and who were involved in the committee?

  • In terms of content, how does the proposed curriculum compare to the previous one? What are some of the main changes, additions, omissions?

    • In literature?

    • In history?

  • About the standards and measurements of the proposed curricula: How realistic and feasible are the norms, standards and measurable outcomes as defined by the new curriculum?

  • About the implementation (pedagogy) of the proposed curricula: how feasible is it? Is there a trained and knowledgeable workforce of teachers and instructors with mastery of the proposed content, to deliver it with excellence to students?

  • Rating of the current AND the proposed curricula.

  • The project of subject standards and programs is presented for public discussion – ESCS.am

  • “Challenge to hostile characters”. Turkish concept in the standards of KGSMSN – Yerkir.am

  • Maria Karapetyan’s response on FB to Yerkir’s article.

  • Lilit Mkrtchyan interview on Horizon Shant TV, also post-Yerkir article.

  • 5 TV‘s coverage of the history component of the curriculum.

  • Historians on history book standards. – YerkirMedia.

  • Interview with Lilit Mkrtchyan and Davit Tinoyan. – News

  • History Education in Schools in Turkey and Armenia: A Critique and Alternatives – Caucasus Edition

  • Armenian History: Turkish Manuscript? Application to the NSS

  • Standards of general education. where is the manipulation?.- A1+

  • New Roads – Unpacking Armenian Studies with Dr. Philip Gamaghelyan

  • Araik Harutyunyan’s failure to master the field will have very serious consequences for the political team1in TV

That concludes this week’s Conversation On Armenian News on Armenia’s debate on Educational Reform. Despite some of the rhetoric, we’re encouraged that so many segments of society have become engaged in this national discussion and are bringing their input into the mix. We’ll continue following this discussion and keep you abreast on the topic as it progresses.

We hope this Conversation has helped your understanding of some of the issues involved. We’d like to thank you for listening and supporting our podcast. If you like what you hear, we’d appreciate your help in reaching a wider audience by subscribing to our channel, liking, and sharing our podcasts. We are available on most major media platforms, including Youtube, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify and More.


We look forward to your feedback, including your suggestions for Conversation topics in the future. Contact us on our website, at Armenian News.org, or on our Facebook PageANN – Armenian News”, or in our Facebook Group “Armenian News – Armenian News Network.

Special thanks to Laura Osborn for providing the music for our podcast. I’m Hovik Manucharyan, and on behalf of everyone in this episode, I wish you a good week. Thank you for listening and talk to you next week.