85% of respondents approve PM Pashinyan’s activity – poll

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 13:54, 3 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 3, ARMENPRESS. 85% of the respondents in Armenia approve Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s activity, according to a survey conducted by MPG LLC, a full member of the GALLUP International Association in Armenia.

“We asked the citizens to answer to the question on how they assess the activity of the aforementioned institutions – the opposition (22.7%), the Parliament (54.7%), the government (67.9%), the President (79.3%) and the Prime Minister (85%)”, Director of MPG LLC Aram Navasardyan said.

The survey was conducted by phone. A total of 1,002 citizens participated in the survey. Alternative research error – 3%. The selection is representative according to the age-sex and place of residence of Armenian citizens. The survey was conducted from June 10 to 27.

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Turkish Press: Minister of Interior unaware of attacks targeting Armenians in Turkey

BIAnet, Turkey (IPS Communication Foundation
July 2 2020
Minister of Interior unaware of attacks targeting Armenians in Turkey
In answering a Parliamentary question by CHP MP Tanrıkulu about the attacks against Armenians, Interior Minister Soylu has said, “Security measures are taken in places of worship so that our Armenian citizens can worship freely.”
             
Ruken Tuncel İstanbul – BIA News Desk

The Parliamentary question of main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) MP Sezgin Tanrıkulu about the attacks targeting Armenians has been answered by the Ministry of Interior after over a year.

İstanbul MP Sezgin Tanrıkulu actually addressed his Parliamentary question to Vice President Fuat Oktay and asked him a series of questions in the wake of a knife attack carried out against an Armenian woman named Arpine T. in Samatya, İstanbul on May 31, 2019.

In his question, he asked whether the perpetrator of the attack was caught or not. The question of Tanrıkulu has been responded by Minister of Interior Süleyman Soylu, who has said that the legal proceedings initiated by the İstanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office are still underway.

The Parliamentary question of Tanrıkulu was not only about the attack against Arpine T., but also about the attacks against Armenians all together.

So, he asked whether the marks left on Armenians’ houses in Samatya were investigated, how many perpetrators involved in physical attacks against Armenians or marking of their houses had been identified in the last three years, how many of them were caught and faced a legal action.

CLICK – ‘Do You Think President’s Hate Speech Has a Role in Attack Against Armenian Church?’

However, leaving these questions unanswered, Minister Soylu has said, “Necessary security measures are taken in our Armenian citizens’ places of worship and their demands relating to security services are meticulously evaluated so that they can worship freely.”

The Minister has also referred to the Article 10 of the Constitution in his answer and said, “As per the provision of ‘everyone is equal before the law without distinction as to language, race, colour, sex, political opinion, philosophical belief, religion and sect, or any such grounds,” our all citizens living in our country are under the protection and guarantee of our State.”

Speaking to bianet about the answer of the Minister, Tanrıkulu has noted that since the Presidential Government System entered into force in Turkey, they have been unable to receive answers to their questions:

“Parliamentary questions are one of the tools that the MPs can use to inspect the government. But after the Presidential system, our questions are not answered or they are simply avoided, as in the case of this question.

“In the Parliamentary question, we asked the ways in which the life safety of Armenian citizens is protected in the places where they live. However, there is no answer to this question of ours.

“Moreover, we submitted the question right after the incident took place last year; however, there occurred other attacks targeting the churches in the meantime. The spouse of Hrant Dink and the attorneys of Dink family were threatened. The responsibility in all this directly belongs to the government.”

CLICK – Hate Attack on Armenian Church in İstanbul

Other questions by Tanrıkulu were as follows:

“Is the Ministry of Interior doing any works to prevent the attacks and threats regularly targeting the Armenians, especially the one in Samatya? Has a conclusion been drawn as to whether the attacks and threats targeting Armenian citizens are led by a particular organized group?

“Have any investigations been launched against the law enforcement officers who did not stop or could not prevent the attacks and threats against Armenian citizens How many social media users have faced proceedings over their messages targeting the Armenian citizens on the basis of ethnicity and beliefs and inciting violence and attacks against them over the last year?

CLICK – One Person Detained over Armenian Church Attack

In early morning hours on May 31, 2019, Arpine T. sent off her husband Sarkis T. Shortly afterwards, the door of their house in Samatya was knocked. Two unidentified persons wearing masks injured Arpine T. with a knife and told her that “it was just the beginning” in running. Arpine T. was taken to the İstanbul Training and Research Hospital after the incident.

The house of the couple was reportedly marked two months before the incident. High Priest Zakeos Ohanyan from the Turkish Armenian Patriarchate spoke about the incident and said that papers containing hate speech were previously hung on their walls and a cross was drawn. (RT/SD)

Pashinyan: Development of Armenian Armed Forces important for ensuring peace and stability in the region

Aysor, Armenia
July 4 2020

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a working meeting with the leadership of the Ministry of Defense and the Armed Forces, headed by Defense Minister David Tonoyan and Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces, Lieutenant General Onik Gasparyan. Development scenarios in our region’s military-political situation and the plan for the use of the Armed Forces were discussed during the meeting.

Addressing those present, the Prime Minister said: “Today’s discussion is very important. From time to time we discuss a plan on the use of the armed forces in different formats. To begin with, I consider it important to highlight the high pace and quality in the development of Armenia’s Armed Forces. I want to state that this is the priority of all priorities for my government, since the goals that the Armenian people aspire for cannot be achieved unless our armed forces are adequate enough to respond to geopolitical challenges, both strategic and tactical. Here, I would like to underscore that the current pace of development of the Armenian Armed Forces is important in terms of ensuring peace and stability in the region.

At the latest meeting of the Security Council, I had the opportunity to refer to this topic and state that the policies we are pursuing and the goals that we have set in the face of existing and emerging challenges serve not only to ensure the security and stability of Armenia and Artsakh, but as a matter of fact, it also serves to achieve security and stability of the entire region. And I am glad that we perceive the mission of our armed forces in Armenia and in the region, as a whole.”

Western media coverage of the police raid at Armenian opposition TV channels

Panorama, Armenia
July 4 2020

Number of western media outlets have covered the Friday incident in Yerevan when the police officers showed up  at two opposition TV stations and filed administrative proceedings for alleged violation of infection-prevention rules.

In its story, The New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2020/07/03/world/europe/ap-eu-armenia-media.html?fbclid=IwAR0S90aEe4pV0d6O_BttkmYpN2bt8X0JLkolMMgsXxIoSXuf9MBg4BYzcgg) quoted Samvel Farmanyan, the co-owner of ArmNews TV station, saying the visit appeared to signal Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s intent to “declare war on the media.” “He will suffer a shameful defeat,” said Farmanyan.

ArmNews executives said they had been told by the head of the national broadcasting commission that it wasn’t mandatory for anchors to wear masks while on the air.

ABC News (https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/armenian-tv-stations-politics-police-checking-masks-71600739?fbclid=IwAR3dYa2jYbZSvYasMCHEU6l3rB13mbIhvDpiIj1MF1wM6owdj1frihSTBJA) reports that the police also visited another opposition-leaning TV station, Channel 5, to look into a similar complaint of anchors not wearing masks.

Both stations have been critical of Pashinyan’s activities, closely scrutinizing his government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic and its economic policies, said the source.

The incident was covered by the The Washington Times (https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/armenian-tv-stations-see-politics-in-police-checking-masks/2020/07/03/f7eb6262-bd67-11ea-97c1-6cf116ffe26c_story.html?fbclid=IwAR3pgzsmDTjnvxun0MFNqOKvnUiuTbjIoPoQxiwmvln4QTHEbZeLMCX9WIk) as well.

Armenia property tax reform raises gentrification fears

Reuters
July 4 2020
 
 
UPDATE 1-
 
by Umberto Bacchi, Thomson Reuters Foundation
 
July 4 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – A property tax rise in Armenia risks forcing elderly people from homes they have lived in since the Soviet era and which have risen dramatically in value since then, critics have warned.
 
The reform was signed into law this week and will bring thousands of homes that were previously exempt because of low historic valuations into the tax system.
 
But critics including the Armenian president say the hike penalises older people who are not rich but took ownership of apartments in the centre of the capital Yerevan when the country moved from Communism to a private property system.
 
“It’s going to be a huge burden for a lot of elderly people,” said Mark Grigorian, a Yerevan-based journalist who co-authored one of several petitions calling for changes in the law.
 
“These people will be forced out of the places, out the flats where they were born, where they spent all their lives, which is a tragedy.”
 
Vahan Artsruni, a 55-year-old musician who launched a Facebook campaign opposing the bill, said he feared he would have to sell the flat his family inhabited for generations and move to the suburbs.
 
“I’m freelance artist … and I have unstable income,” he said, adding that other artists, intellectuals and scientists might also have to move out, changing the face of a city that has so far largely resisted gentrification.
 
Armenia’s ministry of finance said that criticism of the law was largely based on “emotions” and “incomplete perceptions” of the new tax system, but added that it was open to bring in changes if needed.
 
“Our calculations based on the typical apartments and houses show that the increase in tax is not so big that owners will have to sell their properties and buy new, cheaper ones,” a ministry spokeswoman said in an emailed statement.
 
Under the current system, properties in Armenia are taxed based on their land registry value, which is often much lower than the market price.
 
More than 60% of Armenia’s flats are tax exempt, according to lawmaker Babken Tunyan, who heads a parliamentary committee on economic affairs.
 
The reform, which will be phased in from January, scraps an exemption for low-value homes and introduces a progressive tax based on market value.
 
The owner of a $80,000, 120-square metre flat in central Yerevan who currently pays around $19 a year would owe about $100 after the reform kicks in.
 
The average monthly salary in the country is around $380, according to official estimates.
 
“The idea here is to impose a higher tax on the wealthiest of society, property owners who have gotten away for too long with very, very low property tax,” said Richard Giragosian, director at the Regional Studies Centre, a Yerevan think tank.
 
“(But) a lot of the people who now own the most lucrative property in the city centre are pensioners,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.
 
Armenian President Armen Sarkissian has described the move as “untimely” due to the economic woes caused by the coronavirus pandemic, but said he lacked the authority to veto it.
 
Sarhat Petrosyan, an architect who advised the government on the reform as the head of Armenia’s Cadastral Committee up to October last year, said concerns surrounding the bill were “exaggerated”.
 
“I live in the centre of Yerevan and my apartments market value is $150,000 and I pay annually about $50 property tax. (For) my car, which costs maybe $20,000 I pay $70 property tax,” he said. “It’s not normal to have that kind of gap.”
 
The government could amend the legislation to allow people with low incomes to postpone payment of tax due until they sell the property, he added. (Reporting by Umberto Bacchi @UmbertoBacchi, Additional reporting Nvard Hovhannisyan, Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit )

Dubai-Yerevan flight expected on July 15

Public Radio of Armenia
July 4 2020

Sarkissian to Trump: Strong partnership between Armenia and US has always been marked by mutual trust

News.am, Armenia
July 4 2020

11:02, 04.07.2020
                  

Newspaper: Armenia President’s urgent statement on not signing Constitutional Court law was PM’s instruction

News.am, Armenia
July 4 2020
Newspaper: Armenia President’s urgent statement on not signing Constitutional Court law was PM’s instruction Newspaper: Armenia President’s urgent statement on not signing Constitutional Court law was PM’s instruction

09:10, 04.07.2020
                  

Netflix and over 400,000 websites banned in Turkey

Greek City Times
by Paul Antonopoulos
July 4, 2020
Over 400,000 websites, including Netflix, are banned in Turkey,
according to the “Bans on the Web 2019″ report published by the
Freedom of Expression Association (İFÖD).
The report found that as of 2019, a total of 408,494 websites, are
banned in Turkey, meaning the true number is likely much higher today.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan promised on Wednesday that
social media platforms will be controlled or shut down after his
family was insulted by social media users. The very next day, Netflix
was blocked in Turkey.
However, Erdoğan does not have his eyes only set on Netflix, but is
also looking at Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok and
others by requesting them to have legal representation in Turkey, so
courts can receive the identity of users, which would be a severe
breach of online anonymity.
The 2019 report found 130,000 websites, 7,000 Twitter accounts, 40,000
individual tweets, 10,000 YouTube videos, and 6,200 Facebook posts
were banned by law No.5651.
“Important statements that the Law No.5651 was used in a broad sense
that would lead to arbitrary practices were also included in the AYM
ruling,” the report said.
Video streaming giant YouTube was among the platforms that Turkey
banned for extended periods over the years, as reported by Ahval.
YouTube was first banned in 2007, when a Greek user uploaded a video
highlighting that Turkey’s founding father Mustafa Kemal Atatürk was
gay.
Unsurprisingly, among the hardest hit were news website, with at least
5,599 news articles banned in 2019, with news networks removing 3,528
of them to avoid a wider ban on their services, according to İFÖD.
Hürriyet removed 336 articles from its website, Milliyet 187 and T24
171.
Out of news websites more critical of the government, OdaTV removed
126 articles, showing 98 percent compliance, while the website Sol
removed 100 percent of its 69 banned articles. Evrensel followed with
46 articles removed, Ahaval corresponded.
Turkey is one of the lowest ranked countries for media freedoms in the
world, is the second most susceptible country surveyed on the European
continent to fake news, has the most journalists jailed in the whole
world, and 90% of media is government controlled.
 

Armenpress: Armenian defense minister receives Lithuanian Ambassador

Armenian defense minister receives Lithuanian Ambassador

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 17:20, 3 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 3, ARMENPRESS. Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan received today Ambassador of Lithuania to Armenia Inga Stanytė-Toločkienė and the military specialists who arrived in Armenia with the Lithuanian team on the sidelines of the anti-coronavirus fight, the ministry told Armenpress.

The Armenian defense minister thanked the Lithuanian government and in particular the defense ministry for the assistance provided to Armenia, highlighting the dedicated work of the military specialists in this difficult situation.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan