Armenian analyst: Turkish-Azerbaijani military drills accompanied by false, exaggerated information

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 3 2020

Propaganda is one of the key elements of the ongoing joint Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises, head of the Yerevan-based Henaket analytical center Tigran Abrahamyan said.

“That’s why the military drills are accompanied by strong propaganda campaigns, false and obviously exaggerated information and beautifully packaged photos and videos,” he wrote on Facebook.

“However, all this does not in any way reduce the military threats stemming from the exercises,” he added.

An explosion occurred near the building of the regional department of the RA Police

Arminfo, Armenia
Aug 3 2020

ArmInfo.Investigation department of Berd of Tavush Regional Investigation Department of the RA Investigative Committee is conducting an investigation to clarify all the circumstances of the explosion that occurred near the  administrative building of the Berd Department of the Tavush Regional  Department of the RA Police.

According to the Investigative Committee, on August 2, 2020, at  04:00am, on the territory of the Tsaghkanots park near the  administrative building of the Berd department of the Tavush Regional  Police Department of the RA, an unknown person set off an explosion  with the help of an explosive device illegally stored in his  possession, as a result of which the walls of the police building and  glass windows in the offices were damaged, and significant property  damage was caused.

A criminal case was initiated under clause 1 of part 2 of article 185  (intentional destruction or damage to property) and part 1 of article  235 (illegal acquisition, sale, storage, transportation or carrying  of weapons, ammunition, explosives or explosive devices) of the RA  Criminal Code.

During the preliminary investigation, an inspection of the scene was  carried out, during which a grenade ring and its component were  found. An investigation is underway. In order to clarify the  circumstances of significant importance in the criminal case, a  forensic technical, forensic commodity and forensic construction and  technical expertise was appointed. Measures are being taken to  identify and locate the source of the acquisition of ammunition, the  identity of the alleged offender. The preliminary investigation body  was given instructions. 

The court rejected the motion to arrest the former deputy mayor of Yerevan

Arminfo, Armenia
Aug 3 2020

ArmInfo. The court rejected the investigator’s petition to arrest the former deputy mayor of Yerevan Vahe Nikoyan and the former head of one of the companies subordinated to the mayor’s office Gevorg Hakobyan.

According to the Special Investigation Service, Nikoyan and Hakobyan  were charged under part 2 of article 308 (abuse of office) and part 1  of article 314 (official forgery) of the RA Criminal Code. Other  details of the criminal case were not disclosed.

Vahe Nikoyan was appointed Deputy Mayor in January 2012. In 2018, the  mayor of the capital, Hayk Marutyan, offered him to take the post of  adviser, but Nikoyan refused.

Tsarukyan met with musicians who lost their earnings due to COVID-19

Arminfo, Armenia
Aug 3 2020

ArmInfo.The leader of the Prosperous Armenia Party Gagik Tsarukyan, continuing a series of meetings with representatives of various social groups, recently held a meeting with musicians and performers at their initiative. The  lawmaker, press secretary of Gagik Tsarukyan Iveta Tonoyan announced  this on her Facebook page.

As Tonoyan recalls, due to the restrictions caused by the coronavirus  epidemic, their field of activity was paralyzed, and a significant  number of musicians were left without work. “Expressing unconditional  support to the meeting participants, Gagik Tsarukyan suggested  finding solutions together. The PAP Chairman instructed the Tsarukyan  Foundation experts to study international experience, draw up and  submit a package of concrete proposals to him, “the statement says.

Earlier, musicians and performers held protests in front of the  Government building, expressing dissatisfaction with the fact that  the ban on the activities of closed restaurants and holding mass  events deprives them of the opportunity to earn money. In particular,  it was noted that before the coronavirus epidemic, their main income  came from performances during weddings and other events; with the  introduction of the state of emergency and the resulting  restrictions, they practically lost their main job. 

Sports: Mori Kone is Armenia’s best player of 2019/20 season

News.am, Armenia
Aug 3 2020

Football Federation of Armenia has revealed the results of the Best player award of the 2019/20 season in Armenia.

Mori Kone, FC Shirak forward is the winner with 137 points.

Maksim Mayrovich, FC Noah forward, is ranked second with 31 points.

Jonel Desire, Lori FC forward is third with 22 points.

In third place is Lori forward Jonel Desire (22 points).


Armenia’s Armed Forces go on high alert in snap combat readiness check

Aysor, Armenia
July 31 2020
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From early in the morning today the units of the Armenian Armed Forces have gone on high alert in accordance with the 2020 surprise combat readiness check plan of the country’s Armed Forces.

The snap check is aimed at assessing the efficiency of the troops, the ability to act operatively in the created situation, spokesperson of Ministry of Defense Shushan Stepanyan reports.



Why Armenia and Azerbaijan Are Shooting at Each Other

Atlantic Sentinel
July 31 2020

This time, it’s not in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Written by

Kristijonas Medelis

In what have been some of the worst clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan in years, sixteen soldiers and one civilian have been killed in the last two weeks. Armenia has threatened to bomb an Azerbaijani reservoir. Azerbaijan has threatened to destroy an Armenian nuclear plant. These may be empty threats, but they speak to the level of tension between the two countries.

What exactly happened, why, and what is the likely outcome?

Armenia claims Azerbaijan initiated hostilities with an attempted drone strike against the town of Berd, north of Lake Sevan. Azerbaijan insists they were fired on first.

The fact that the conflict didn’t start in the disputed region of Karabakh gives credence to the Azerbaijanis.

As a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, Armenia could count on the support of Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan if it were attacked. However, Nagorno-Karabakh isn’t internationally recognized as part of its territory. Azerbaijan, which also claims the region, has staged provocations there in the past. Since the ongoing hostilities broke out farther north, it is more likely a case of Armenian brinksmanship gone wrong.

The conflict is related to Nagorno-Karabakh. In short, the region is occupied by Armenia but internationally recognized as belonging to Azerbaijan.

Both sides have reasonable claims to the territory, and both sides engage in unreasonable historical revisionism going back to the fourth century.

The most recent relevant date is 1923, when the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast was established within the Azerbaijani Soviet Republic. During the Soviet period, the dispute was largely moot. When the Soviet Union began to collapse, the majority-Armenian enclave declared its independence from Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan responded with a heavy hand, prompting Armenia to intervene. A full-scale war lasted two years. A ceasefire was signed in 1994. Armenia and Azerbaijan fought another, four-day war in 2016.

Some remain optimistic. The EU has been trying to reconcile the two parties by facilitating dialogue. However, European inconsistency on questions of self-determination and territorial integrity make it an imperfect mediator.

Even if the EU had more credibility and will, it might not accomplish much. The capture of Nagorno-Karabakh plays an important role in the Armenian national consciousness. It’s hardly less a matter of pride for Azerbaijan. Neither has shown a willingness to compromise on the issue. Both have been willing to fight for it — to the death.

July 30, 2020July 31, 2020

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Newspaper: Armenia PM rebukes commissioner for diaspora affairs

News.am, Armenia
July 31 2020

09:36, 31.07.2020
                  

Azerbaijani- Turkish old-new agenda for Armenia

Modern Diplomacy
July 31 2020
 
 
 
 
 
on July 31, 2020
 
By Anna Barseghyan
 
                              
 
The armed forces of Turkey and Azerbaijan are set to conduct large-scale military exercises on Armenian border of Nakhijevan. As reported by the Turkish Defense Ministry, the military exercise will involve military personnel, armored vehicles, artillery, and mortars, as well as military aviation and air defense equipment. The exercises will be held from July 29th to August 10th, and will be hosted in various cities in Azerbaijan including-Baku, Ganja, Kurdamir, and Yevlakh.
 
Turkey and Azerbaijan have a tight military cooperation with one another, and often joint conduct military exercises. However, what is different with this particular exercise is that it was unplanned and follows a series of provocative border skirmishes Azerbaijan has had towards neighboring Armenia which have been escalating since mid-July. The choice of Nakhijevan to host these exercises is symbolic. Nakhijevan is an autonomous republic within Azerbaijan which was ceded to Soviet Azerbaijan according to a Soviet-Turkish Moscow Treaty from 1921. Nakhijevan is not connected by land to the rest of Azerbaijan, and has only a tiny border with Turkey.
 
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Azerbaijan has been engaging in a systematic culture cleansing of the country’s historic Armenian heritage in Nakhijevan which is considered the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century.
 
To make matters worse, the border of Nakhijevan is only 40 km far from the Armenian capital Yerevan and is even less of a distance from Metsamor. Metsamor being a strategic city where Armenia’s only nuclear power plant is located. On July 17, Azerbaijani Defense Ministry spokesman Vagif Dargyakhly made a statement threatening that their weapons “are capable of hitting the Metsamor Atomic Energy Station with high accuracy, which will turn into a catastrophe for Armenia.”
 
Undoubtedly such a scenario will turn into nuclear catastrophe not only for Armenia but for the entire region including neighboring countries such as Georgia, Iran but ironically even Turkey and Azerbaijan themselves. Such statements were an open call to state terrorism and should be properly condemned by the international society.
 
Members of the European Parliament, 29 MEPs from 7 main political groups, sent a letter to the EU HR/VP of the European Commission, Josep Borrell. The MEPs called on the EU to use its leverage to put in place genuine and effective confidence-building measures mechanisms, and urge Azerbaijan to install the OSCE investigative mechanism for cease-fire violations.
 
“It is crucial that the EU uses its leverage to put in place genuine and effective confidence-building measures, notably the OSCE investigative mechanism for cease-fire violations which would prevent the sides from blaming each other for initiating deadly attacks. Armenia has agreed to discuss the details of the mechanism. Azerbaijan must do the same”, -mentioned in the letter.
 
Indeed, the investigative mechanism could be a solution. For over the past several decades each time hostilities erupt, each side ends up blaming one another for initiating hostilities. However, in the era of cutting-edge technology, it is now easier to reveal who is the culprit for initiating the violation of the ceasefire, and who is on the defense.
 
The main mediator of the conflict, the OSCE Minsk Group, has tried several times, calling on the Presidents of both Armenia and Azerbaijan to accept a mutually agreed upon OSCE mechanism to investigate ceasefire violations.
 
In a Press Statement by the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, they stated, “Without such a mechanism, the sides will continue to blame each other for initiating deadly attacks on the Line of Contact and Armenia-Azerbaijan border.  Armenia has agreed to discuss the details of the mechanism, and we urged Azerbaijan to do the same.”
 
However, these calls from the OSCE Minsk Group continue to remain ignored from the Azerbaijani side which has refused all proposals for international mediators on producing confidence-building measures that are aimed at the consolidation of another ceasefire.
 
Armenia is also among 170 countries that endorsed UN ceasefire appeal during the COVID crisis.  Azerbaijan refused to join this initiative. Moreover, right after these skirmishes began, protests erupted in Baku, where approximately 30.000 people came out into the streets demanding war with Armenia, and challenging the government to take a harder approach towards the conflict. From the other side, Turkey also fuels regional tensions to incite unrest.
 
Moreover, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made inflammatory comments threatening Armenia that it will finish the Armenian Genocide. He pledged arms and aid to Azerbaijan, sending a chilling warning to Armenia and the at-risk Armenian population still within the territory of present-day Turkey. And yet despite such comments, Turkey and Azerbaijan aspire to make Turkey one of the mediators of the conflict at the OSCE negotiations. Azerbaijan refuses the suggestions of the OSCE Minsk Group and has a destructive approach to undermine the efforts of international mediators. However, in the sake of global peace, and regional stability the international society should be supportive of the OSCE Minsk group as the only legal framework to resolve the conflict.
 
***
 
The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is over Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh), a part of historical Armenia, and Armenian populated autonomous region (89% were Armenians during the Soviet time) which was forced to join the Azerbaijani Soviet Republic in 1920 by the will of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. Since the Gorbachev reforms in 1988, the people of Artsakh raised their voices, using their constitutional rights, to secede from Azerbaijani SSR. As a result, Azerbaijani SSR imposed a war which ended in 1994 with the victory of the Armenian forces.  Since 1992, Nagorno Karabakh has proclaimed its independence and is currently an unrecognized republic. The main mediator of the conflict is the OSCE Minsk group including co-chairs from France, Russia and the USA. The negotiations are still ongoing.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

After reopening, Armenian economy continues to struggle

BNE Intellinews
July 31 2020
Yerevan can’t shake off the economic storm that is COVID-19.
By Ani Mejlumyan for Eurasianet July 30, 2020

On a normal evening, the Calumet bar in central Yerevan has a packed crowd of hipster locals, repatriated Armenians, and tourists dancing to modern versions of classic Armenian folk tunes. After midnight on weekends, it’s so crowded the Armenian phrase applies: “If you drop a needle it won’t pass through.”

These days, it’s a very different scene. On a recent visit, there were fewer than 10 customers. The music was soft, and several of the clientele were playing checkers or backgammon.

Customers are afraid of the closed space – the bar is underground with no windows – and in any case aren’t spending much. “Indoor places frighten people,” said Sevag Davidian, a co-owner. On top of that, he told Eurasianet, “customers can’t spend as much as they used to. Almost nobody is ordering expensive drinks,” opting for $1-2 beers rather than the $8 Long Island iced teas. Overall, business is down 80 percent, Davidian said.

When Armenia ended its coronavirus lockdown in early May, even as the epidemic’s spread was accelerating, the government cited the need to keep the economy going and let people get back to work. For a time after reopening, Armenia had one of the world’s worst infection rates. And nearly three months on, the economy has continued to suffer.

Nevertheless, many Armenians believe the government had no choice. “We have enough information now, including the reactions of people and businesses to these kind of [lockdown] measures, to say that fully shutting down the economy is not the most effective measure,” Artak Manukyan, an economist and a member of parliament for the ruling My Step coalition, told Eurasianet.

For the most part, Armenians have supported the government’s strategy. Ninety percent of Armenians are worried about the coronavirus’s impact on the economy, with 71 percent “very concerned,” according to a newly released poll by the International Republican Institute. At the same time, 71 percent of those polled were overall satisfied with the government’s response.

Some economists disagree. “Lifting the lockdown in May was a mistake,” said Hrant Mikaelian, an economist at the Yerevan think tank Caucasus Institute. Mikaelian draws a comparison with neighbouring Georgia, which imposed a stricter lockdown and kept it in place for much longer than did Armenia.

While Georgia has had a significantly lower spread of the disease – 1,160 total infections and 17 deaths, compared to more than 38,000 infections and 728 deaths in Armenia – its economy performed roughly the same. In May, according to government data, Armenia’s economy contracted 12.8 percent compared with May 2019, while Georgia’s contracted 13.5 percent. “Georgia’s economic decline is very similar to what we see in Armenia,” Mikaelian told Eurasianet. “But compared to Armenia, Georgia saved hundreds of lives.”

In June, Armenia’s economy declined 7.5 percent compared with the same month a year before; the comparable statistics for Georgia are not yet available, but it was in late May and early June that Georgia ended its lockdown. “From what we could observe in May, the absence of the lockdown did not save the Armenian economy. It was the pandemic that hit the economy hard, not the lockdown itself,” Mikaelian said.

In its July update on Armenia, the World Bank also suggested that the ongoing spread of the disease could continue to slow the economy: “The recovery is likely to remain sluggish. The lifting of most mobility restrictions was accompanied by a strong increase in new infections (on average 550 new cases in the first week of July). This remains a barrier to economic recovery.”

Armenia’s service sector, including bars and restaurants, has led the slowdown.

Many small business have been able to stay afloat with the help of a variety of government stimulus efforts. Kond House, another trendy bar in Yerevan, got an interest-free loan and its employees a one-time payment that helped it survive the difficult spring, said owner Narek Bakhtamyan. Now, helped by a large outdoor space and a clientele of mostly locals, the bar is relatively thriving, he said.

“It was definitely the right decision to open up in May,” Bakhtamyan told Eurasianet. “There was a time at the beginning of the pandemic when even if we were allowed to stay open no one would have come, everything was confusing. During the one-and-a-half months of lockdown, they managed to strengthen the health care system and opened up the economy as quickly as they could.”

But Davidian, of Calumet, said the government aid he got wasn’t enough and that there really was no choice but to reopen his basement bar, given what he saw as the futility of the coronavirus fight and the ineffectiveness of the bailout.

“If the lockdown had been properly implemented in the beginning, the situation would be different, but it wasn’t. By May it made no sense to keep the economy closed, the damage was already done,” he said. “And if the government support was more comprehensive, businesses could handle a longer lockdown, but in this case it wasn’t.”

Economic projections around the world have become progressively more pessimistic as time has passed, including in Armenia. “Before, we were projecting a 2 percent decline [for 2020], now the central bank says it will be 4 percent,” Manukyan of My Step said.

To help soften the blow from the service sector decline, the government has been spending on infrastructure to try to jump start the economy: Manukyan said that the government has started 100 new construction projects. “It’s clear that the 2020 decline will linger, affecting the economy for two more years,” he said. “In 2023 there is a chance to fully return to normal.”

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

This article originally appeared on Eurasianet .