Dolma Festival held in Odessa, Ukraine

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 16:04, 7 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. Dolma Festival was held in the Armenian community of Odessa on July 5 during which 17 types of the favorite dish made by the members of the Women Committee and the Union of Mothers were presented.

AnalitikaUA.net reported that Armenia and the Armenian communities abroad are regularly holding Dolma Festival on the sidelines of the events aimed at developing and preserving the Armenian culinary traditions.

Earlier head of the Union of Armenians of Ukraine Vilen Shatvoryan stated that they “are proud of the rich cultural and historical heritage of Armenians in Ukraine and do everything possible to preserve and popularize it”.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/07/2020

                                        Tuesday, July 7, 2020
Aliyev Slams Karabakh Mediators
        • Heghine Buniatian
Azerbaijan -- President Ilham Aliyev speaks in Ganja, June 25, 2020.
Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev has lambasted the U.S., Russian and French 
mediators trying to broker a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and said 
the most recent Armenian-Azerbaijani talks were fruitless.
In an interview with Azerbaijani television aired on Tuesday, Aliyev denounced 
the mediators co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group for reiterating last week that 
“there is no military solution to the conflict.”
“Their main point is that the problem cannot be solved militarily,” he said. 
“Who said that? We expect more serious, clear and targeted statements from the 
mediators.”
“In essence, no negotiations are held right now,” claimed Aliyev. “The video 
conferences of the [Armenian and Azerbaijani] foreign ministers are meaningless 
and are only leaving the impression that the Minsk Group exists.”
“As I have said before, we will not negotiate for the sake of negotiating and we 
want substantive negotiations without any change in their format. In that case, 
we will participate in them. Otherwise, I see no need for pointless 
negotiations.”
Foreign Ministers Zohrab Mnatsakanian and Elmar Mammadyarov as well as the three 
mediators most recently talked via video link on June 30. They reported no 
progress towards a Karabakh settlement.
In a joint statement issued right after the talks, the Minsk Group co-chairs 
said they urged the conflicting parties to “take additional steps to strengthen 
the ceasefire and to prepare the populations for peace.” They also said the two 
ministers agreed to hold another video conference in July and to meet in person 
“as soon as possible.”
Yerevan and Baku traded bitter recriminations both before and during the latest 
round of peace talks. Speaking at a June 25 meeting with Azerbaijani army 
officers, Aliyev described Armenia’s post-Soviet history as “shameful,” saying 
that his country’s arch-foe was for decades ruled by “criminals and thieves.” He 
also said that the 2018 popular protests that brought Nikol Pashinian to power 
were not a democratic revolution.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry hit back at Aliyev, saying that he leads one of 
the world’s most corrupt and repressive regimes which feels threatened by 
“democratic changes taking place in Armenia.”
Lack Of Quorum Prevents High Court Hearing On Kocharian Case
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- The main meeting room of the Constitutional Court, Yerevan, September 
3, 2019.
Armenia’s Constitutional Court did not make a quorum on Tuesday to start 
hearings on the legality of coup charges brought against former President Robert 
Kocharian.
The court has been in limbo since the Armenian parliament passed late last month 
constitutional changes calling for the immediate dismissal of three of its nine 
judges. They also stipulate that Hrayr Tovmasian must quit as court chairman but 
remain a judge.
Tovmasian and the three ousted justices have rejected the changes as 
unconstitutional, filing relevant appeals in the European Court of Human Rights 
(ECHR).
In what appeared to be a related development, Tovmasian and another remaining 
judge, Arevik Petrosian, went on vacation last week.
Consequently, the majority of the Constitutional Court members did not show up 
for a court session which was due to discuss the case against Kocharian along 
with several other issues.
Kocharian is prosecuted under Article 300.1of Armenia’s Criminal Code dealing 
with “overthrow of the constitutional order.” The accusation rejected by him as 
politically motivated stems from the 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan that 
left ten people dead.
The current code was enacted in 2009. Kocharian’s lawyers maintain that the 
article in question cannot be used retroactively against him. They argue that 
the previous code, which was in force during the dramatic events of March 2008, 
had no clauses relating to “overthrow of the constitutional order” and contained 
instead references to “usurpation of state power.”
Prosecutors say that there are no significant differences between the two 
definitions of a crime allegedly committed by the man who ruled Armenia from 
1998-2008.
Kocharian’s legal team last year asked the Constitutional Court to declare the 
coup charge illegal. A Yerevan judge who initially presided over the 
ex-president’s trial likewise asked the court to pass judgment on the legality 
of the accusation.
The Constitutional Court in turn decided in July 2019 to request an “advisory 
opinion” on the matter from the ECHR as well as the Venice Commission of the 
Council of Europe. The Strasbourg-based court’s Grand Chamber released a lengthy 
and complex opinion in May, while the Venice Commission offered its assessment 
in June.
One of the six remaining Constitutional Court judges, Vahe Grigorian, was 
earlier barred by his colleagues from dealing with the Kocharian case. They 
argued that Grigorian cannot make impartial decisions on the matter because he 
had represented relatives of nine of the ten people killed in March 2008.
One of their current lawyers, Tigran Yegorian, demanded on Tuesday that 
Tovmasian and three other justices be also excluded from the high-profile case 
because of what he described as a conflict of interest and political bias. A 
lawyer representing Kocharian dismissed the demand, saying that Yegorian is not 
in a position to voice such demands.
Another Armenian Nursing Home Hit By COVID-19 Outbreak
        • Satenik Kaghzvantsian
        • Susan Badalian
Armenia -- The entrance to a nursing home in Gyumri, July 7, 2020.
At least 55 elderly people living in a nursing home in Gyumri have been infected 
with the coronavirus following similar outbreaks of the disease reported at 
Armenia’s two other elderly care centers.
A spokeswoman for the state-funded institution, Nune Grigorian, said on Tuesday 
that 37 of them have been hospitalized.
“We also have 12 infected personnel, one of whom was also taken to hospital,” 
she told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “The 18 other [infected residents] are 
asymptomatic and have been isolated along with the [infected] personnel.”
Grigorian did not deny reports that one of the elderly persons has died. “We 
don’t yet know whether [the death] was connected with the coronavirus because 
the patient suffered from a severe pre-existing disease: cancer,” she said.
The Gyumri nursing home has 160 residents and 66 employees looking after them. 
Grigorian insisted that its administration has followed anti-epidemic guidelines 
issued by the health authorities.
Armenia has only three nursing homes where a total of 580 retirees live and 
receive care and, if necessary, medical assistance. All of them were placed in 
strict lockdown in late February even before the authorities registered the 
first coronavirus case in the country.
One of these care centers located in Yerevan was the first to be hit by a 
COVID-19 outbreak in mid-May. At least ten of its residents infected with the 
disease reportedly died as of June 25. The Armenian Ministry of Health said on 
Monday that all others have already recovered and been discharged from hospital.
The other care home, also located in the Armenian capital, reported two dozen 
infections late last month.
Meanwhile, the total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Armenia rose by 
349 to 29,285 on Tuesday morning. The Ministry of Health also reported that 17 
more people infected with the virus died in the past day.
The ministry said COVID-19 was the primary cause of 12 of those deaths. The 
country’s official death toll from the epidemic thus rose to 503.
Armenia Launches Production Of Kalashnikov Rifles
Armenia -- A worker shows Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian a Kalashnikov AK-103 
rifle assembled at the Neitron company plant in Abovian, July 7, 2020.
An Armenian company has started manufacturing advanced models of Russia’s famous 
Kalashnikov assault rifles which are due to be supplied to Armenia’s armed 
forces and sold abroad.
The Neitron company launched the production operations this month in line with 
an agreement reached by Russia’s Kalashnikov Concern and another Armenian-owned 
firm, Royalsys Engineering, two years ago.
A follow-up deal signed by the Russian small arms manufacturer and Neitron in 
May this year granted the latter a 10-year license to produce Kalashnikov’s 
AK-103 models designed in 1994.
Neitron executives told Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Tuesday that their 
company will assemble 50,000 such guns annually as they showed him around their 
new production facility located near Abovian, a town 15 kilometers north of 
Yerevan.
One of those executives, Igor Gordienko, told the Sputnik news agency last month 
that Neitron will initially use rifle parts supplied by Kalashnikov but plans to 
manufacture them as well in the future.
An Armenian government statement cited Pashinian as welcoming the development 
and saying that it was made possible by Armenia’s close military ties with 
Russia. The Russian ambassador in Yerevan, Sergey Kopyrkin, was among officials 
who accompanied the prime minister during his visit to the new Neitron plant.
Armenia -- An Armenian soldier shoots a Kalashnikov rifle during a military 
exercise in Vayots Dzor province, April 16, 2020.
According to the statement, the AK-103 rifles will be delivered not only to the 
Armenian army but also foreign buyers.
Kalashnikov’s older AK-74 rifles and PK machine guns have long been the army’s 
principal light weapons. The launch of Neutron’s new production operation 
suggests that the Armenian Defense Ministry plans to replace all AK-74s in its 
arsenal with the more modern AK-103 model.
The government statement also revealed that Neitron will pay $24 million to buy 
new Russian equipment for modernizing and expanding its separate production of 
Kalashnikov cartridges. In addition, it said, the company will start producing 
night-vision gun sights and surveillance devices for the Armenian military later 
this year.
Kalashnikov Concern opened an official representation in Yerevan in 2014 at a 
ceremony attended by then Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian. The latter stressed 
the importance of Russian-Armenian agreements allowing Armenian and Russian 
defense companies to supply each other with equipment, assembly parts and other 
materials needed for the production, modernization and repair of various weapons.
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.
 

CivilNet: Two Years After Velvet Revolution, Armenia Sees Increased Public Trust in Institutions

CIVILNET.AM

7 July, 2020 18:39

By Mark Dovich

“Significant increase in public trust in state institutions” is what the latest data from the Caucasus Barometer shows, more than two years after the 2018 Velvet Revolution ushered in dramatic changes to the country’s domestic political landscape. The annual household survey—and the largest coordinated data collection effort in the South Caucasus—was last conducted in Armenia from February 21 to March 15, 2020 by the Caucasus Research Resource Centers think tank network.

When asked about each of the 15 state institutions included in the survey, as well as two major international organizations, the EU and the UN, respondents expressed significant increase in public trust in each institution. According to the 2020 survey, any given institution experienced an average increase in public trust of nearly 16 percentage points since the previous wave of the survey, which was conducted from October 13 to October 27, 2017.

Five institutions saw increases in public trust of more than 15 percentage points between 2017 and 2020: local government (increase in trust by 18 points), the police (22 points), the president (60 points), executive government (50 points), and the National Assembly (27 points).

As a result of such dramatic increases, there are now seven institutions in Armenia that enjoy the trust of the majority of the general public: the educational system (with 51 percent of respondents expressing trust), the army (88 percent), executive government (71 percent), the president (78 percent), the police (51 percent), local government (51 percent), and religious institutions (80 percent). In contrast, only the army and religious institutions registered majorities of public trust in 2017, with 77 percent and 74 percent, respectively.

At the same time, the survey makes it clear that the Armenian public remains distrustful of key institutions, with the plurality of respondents still expressing distrust in the banking system (40 percent), the court system (48 percent), and political parties (45 percent).

Nonetheless, the survey shows that, overall, significant progress has been made since the 2018 Velvet Revolution in overcoming deep historical distrust in state institutions among the Armenian general public that predates the country’s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. Social science research has consistently found that public trust “is a necessary element for a society to prosper,” with high levels of public trust contributing to democratic stability, economic development, and social integration. Though Armenia’s post-Velvet Revolution government still has a long way to go in enacting policies that meet citizens’ sky-high expectations for reform, the survey makes it clear that real, significant, systemic change has occurred since 2018.

The army and religious institutions have long been the most trusted state institutions in Armenia.

Since 2017, levels of public trust in the president and executive government have increased most sharply among all the institutions included in the survey.

Improvement in public trust in institutions from 2017 to 2020.

Armenia won’t send athletes to CIS Games due to COVID-19 concerns

Reuters
July 7 2020

(Reuters) – Armenia will not send athletes to the first Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) Games in the Russian city of Kazan in September due to concerns about the coronavirus pandemic.

The landlocked South Caucasus country, which has recorded more than 29,000 cases of the virus and over 500 deaths, became the first nation to withdraw from the Games which will feature competition in 22 sports for athletes aged between 14 and 23.

“We deeply regret to say that due to the current situation in the world our country will be unable to participate in the CIS Games,” Armenia’s Deputy Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sport Artur Martirosyan said.

The inaugural Games of the CIS – a grouping of former Soviet Republics – was scheduled to be held in Kazan from Aug. 20-27 but organisers on Monday pushed the event back to Sept. 4-11 due to the health situation.

Belarus, another ex-Soviet country, said on Tuesday it will send a 390-member delegation to Kazan.

“Athletes miss competitions,” Belarusian Sport and Tourism Minister Sergei Kovalchuk said. “They all dream of meeting their peers and competing. The CIS Games will give them a great opportunity to do so.”

Music: Make the Covid-19 Go: Little Singers of Armenia present new video

Public Radio of Armenia
July 7 2020

Sports: Armenia joins UEFA’s PlayMakers

News.am, Armenia
July 7 2020

Armenia has joined the UEFA PlayMakers, inspired by Disney Company.

UEFA PlayMakers is a sports activity that delivers a fun and safe introduction to learning football, for 5-8 year old girls, through movement, play, and the magic of Disney storytelling.

Armenia is one of the first countries to be involved in this program. The launch will take place in March 2021.

30 centers will be opened in Armenia (2 centers in each region, 10 centers in Yerevan).

Two Armenian coaches will undergo a training before the program’s launch.

Armenia ex-ruling party holding flash mob outside government building

News.am, Armenia
July 7 2020

13:43, 07.07.2020

YEREVAN. – A group of representatives of the youth organization of the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) are holding a flash mob, entitled “Voronezh and Krasnodar,” in front of the government building.

Hayk Mamijanyan, the head of the RPA youth organization, said that this flash mob of theirs would be continuous, as, according to him, the government thinks it will be able to “cover up” its scandalous corruption stories and illegalities. “With this action, we remind that it will not be possible to make those problems become forgotten,” he added, in particular.

Mamijanyan noted that according to the results of polls conducted in November 2019, only 60 percent considered that corruption is a serious problem in Armenia. “But now, according to their polls, it’s about 80 percent; this is how they ‘fight’ against corruption. We have heard the version of citizen Mikael Minasyan [former ambassador to the Holy See and son-in-law of ex-President Serzh Sargsyan] about this whole process. A criminal case has been opened in Russia, but none of the Armenian authorities has spoken about it,” the RPA representative said, adding that the Armenian authorities should try to refute the story of smuggled cigarettes, but it seems that will not work.

Asked on the basis of the claim that members of the serving Armenian government are involved in the story of smuggled cigarettes, Mamijanyan responded that Armenia is in a deep lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and therefore all passenger and cargo transportation to and from the country is limited. “And in the meantime, several planes of cigarettes are being taken out of the country. Are you saying that the government should not be aware of this? I can’t believe that,” he added, in particular.

Azerbaijan’s Aliyev says Karabakh peace talks could be stopped

News.am, Armenia
July 7 2020

15:42, 07.07.2020
                          

Azerbaijan will not change its position on the Karabakh settlement, because it is fair. This was stated by President Ilham Aliyev in an interview with several television channels of the country on Monday, Turan news agency reported.

“Our position is based on historical justice and international law. The conflict should be resolved within the framework of the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan; we will not allow the creation of a second Armenian state on Azerbaijani land,” Aliyev said.

Also, he criticized the OSCE Minsk Group for passivity. “The OSCE Minsk Group does not respond to the statement of the Armenian Prime Minister that Karabakh is Armenia. This statement disrupts the negotiations and makes them meaningless,” he said.

 The OSCE Minsk Group did not give an adequate answer to Yerevan’s attempts to change the format, demanding that Azerbaijan begin negotiations with the “separatists” of Nagorno-Karabakh, the Azerbaijan President noted. “Today, in fact, there are no negotiations on the settlement; there is no sense in the videoconferences of the Foreign Ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia either. This is just an imitation of activities of the OSCE Minsk Group. If the negotiations are not substantive, we will not participate in them,” Aliyev emphasized.

A new article sheds lights on Armenia’s military ties with UK in 1918-1920

MediaMax, Armenia
July 7 2020

It has been published in English in the Review of Armenia Studies, the science magazine of Armenian National Academy of Sciences. The full text of the article is available here.

 

“The study of archived documents and notes of involved Armenian and British figures makes it clear how important military cooperation was between Armenia and Great Britain. The information about the batch of weapons and other military supplies, which Great Britain delivered to Armenia in 1920, sheds light not only on the history of foreign relations but also on the real reasons of Armenia’s military failures that happened in the fall of the same year,” notes Artsrun Hovhannisyan.