Turkish press: Azerbaijani Air Force conducts drill using Turkish drones

The Azerbaijani Air Force conducts a drill using Bayraktar TB2 drones in Baku, Azerbaijan, Dec. 2, 2021. (IHA Photo)

The Azerbaijani Air Force used unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) made by Turkey’s drone magnate Bayraktar in their recent military drill, the country’s Defense Ministry said Thursday.

The drill, which included live-fire training flights, aimed to improve the Azerbaijani Air Force’s combat skills.

“During live-fire training flights, the aerial reconnaissance was conducted in cooperation with units of other types of troops, and the coordinates of the imaginary enemy’s land-based targets were determined,” the ministry said in a statement.

The Azerbaijan Defense Ministry also released the drill’s video footage.

The state-of-the-art drones helped Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan defeat Armenia-backed occupying forces in Nagorno-Karabakh.

https://www.dailysabah.com/business/defense/azerbaijani-air-force-conducts-drill-using-turkish-drones

Turkish press: Engineers create bird bots that can perch and grab objects

This undated handout image courtesy of William Roderick/Stanford University shows the grasping robot that Stanford engineers developed based on studies of birds. (Photo by William RODERICK/Stanford University via AFP)

Inspired by how birds land and perch on branches, a team of engineers at Stanford University has built robotic graspers that can fit on drones, enabling them to catch objects and grip various surfaces.

The advance could allow flying robots to conserve power in situations where they might otherwise be required to hover – for example in search and rescue missions – or help ecologists collect data more easily in forests.

“We want to be able to land anywhere – that’s what makes it exciting from an engineering and robotics perspective,” David Lentink, who co-authored a paper about the design in Science Robotics released Wednesday, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The team has dubbed their project “stereotyped nature-inspired aerial grasper,” or SNAG.

Roboticists often look to animals to resolve difficult engineering problems, but mimicking the way birds fly and perch after millions of years of evolution is no easy feat.

Branches differ in size, shape and texture. They can be covered in lichen or moss, or might be slippery from the rain.

The team studied previous data they’d gathered on parrotlets – the second smallest species of parrot – using high-speed cameras to watch how the birds landed on perches of different sizes and materials, including wood, foam, sandpaper and Teflon.

The perches also contained sensors to capture the level of force associated with landing, roosting and takeoff.

What they found was the birds approached every landing the same way, using their feet to deal with any variability they encounter.

Specifically, birds curl their claws around a perch, and they also have soft, wrinkly toe pads that provide reliable friction.

The team had to build a grasper large enough to support a small quadcopter drone and so modeled their design on the legs of a peregrine falcon.

It has a 3D-printed structure that took 20 iterations to perfect, with motors and fishing line standing in for muscles and tendon.

Its clutching action takes 20 milliseconds, and once wrapped around the branch, an accelerometer in the right foot tells the robot it has landed.

This in turn triggers a balancing algorithm, which tilts the bot forward to avoid falling, again like real birds.

The finished bird bot successfully caught items thrown at it like bean bags and tennis balls and was able to land in real-world conditions in the forests of Oregon.

Beyond the potential future applications for drones, Lentink said that building such robots can give rise to new insights into avian morphology.

For example, the team tried out the two most common toe arrangements seen in birds – three toes in front and one in the back, versus two in front and two in the back – and found they did not make a difference to the bot’s grasping ability.

This tells biologists that these evolutionary differences arose for other reasons.

“Part of the underlying motivation of this work was to create tools that we can use to study the natural world,” co-author William Roderick said in a statement.

Turkish press: ‘Great number of EU, NATO countries interested in Turkish drones’

Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu speaking at the Global Strategies in Defense and Aerospace Industry Conference in Antalya province, Turkey, Dec. 4, 2021 (AA Photo)

Ahuge number of European Union and NATO countries are interested in Turkish drones as well as the country’s defense industry in general, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said on Saturday, not indicating which the specific countries were.

Speaking at the Global Strategies in Defense and Aerospace Industry Conference in the Antalya province, Çavuşoğlu said that several ministers and high-level officials praised the Turkish defense industry during his talks in Riga on the sidelines of the NATO foreign ministers’ meeting.

The foreign minister also indicated that the industry served as a platform to enhance diplomacy and bilateral relations with several countries.

The foreign ministry will soon establish a defense industry department to further coordinate efforts in this regard, Turkey’s top diplomat added.

“Because you can’t be strong at the table without being strong on the field. The way to be strong in the field is to have a domestic, national, effective and independent defense industry.”

“We live in a difficult geography. For our national security, we need to use our deterrent power together with diplomacy,” Çavuşoğlu pointed out.

The growing interest in domestic drones is a boost for the Turkish government as it tries to increase exports and underline the growing importance of armed drones in modern warfare.

The Turkish military used drones last year in Syria as well as in Libya where Ankara backed the Tripoli-based government against eastern forces supported by Russia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Egypt.

In Nagorno-Karabakh, the drones helped Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan defeat Armenia-backed occupying forces.

Turkish press: ‘Turkey, UAE have potential in defense industry cooperation’

Presidency of Defense Industries (SSB) Chairperson Ismail Demir speaks to journalists in Antalya province, Turkey, Dec. 4, 2021. (Courtesy of the SSB)

Turkey and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have the potential to work together in the defense sector, Presidency of Defense Industries (SSB) Chairperson Ismail Demir said, indicating that Abu Dhabi has shown interest in the Turkish sector.

“When we look at our defense industry figures, we see that our defense industry relations continued even during times of crises. There was contact even when relations were not at their highest,” he said on the sidelines of the Global Strategies in Defense and Aerospace Industry Conference held in Turkey’s Antalya province.

“I would like to point out that these contacts will be better when relations improve,” Demir said, stressing that it is still early to make concrete predictions.

Abu Dhabi’s powerful crown prince visited Ankara in November, making his first official trip to Turkey since 2012 and the highest-level visit by an Emirati official since relations between the two countries hit a low point.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan (MBZ), who’s seen as the de facto leader and the force behind the UAE’s foreign policy posture, oversaw the signing of nearly a dozen cooperation deals during the visit while a top Emirati official said the UAE has earmarked $10 billion (TL 137 billion) for investment in Turkey.

Bloomberg on Friday reported that Turkey has sold more armed drones to Ukraine amid Kyiv-Moscow tensions.

Demir clarified that Turkey has sold one batch of unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) to the country and that the current process is nothing new but a continuation of the initial agreement. “It has no connection to the latest developments.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin told Erdoğan Friday that Ukrainian forces are carrying out “provocative activity” using Turkish-made Bayraktar drones in the conflict zone in the Donbass region, sticking to “destructive” behavior.

Relations between Russia and Ukraine are in the spotlight as Kyiv says Moscow has amassed thousands of troops near the Ukrainian border and may be gearing up for a military offensive. Moscow denies plans for an offensive operation.

Ukraine has bought and deployed Turkish drones in the war against Russian-backed forces in its eastern Donbass region, angering Russia.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu has said Turkey could not be blamed for Ukraine’s deployment of Turkish-made drones.

In October, Russia accused Ukraine of destabilizing the situation after government forces used a Bayraktar TB2 drone to strike a position controlled by Russian-backed separatists.

On the other side, Demir highlighted that Turkey and Russia have a wide range of areas where they can cooperate, including the National Combat Aircraft (MMU). He stated that cooperation with Russia is possible in the progressive phases of the MMU.

“With time, there will be a gradual process of developing and changing specific systems by renewing and localizing them.”

The Turkish defense industry has exported 228 products to 170 countries in the last 10 years, Demir underlined, pointing to the progress in the sector.

“When we look at the point where our defense industry has reached in the last 20 years, as Turkey has made progress in every field, the numbers show this fact much better,” Demir said at the conference earlier.

“While only 62 defense projects were carried out nearly 20 years ago, today this number has exceeded 750. About half of these projects have been launched in the last five years.”

“While defense projects with a budget of $5.5 billion were carried out, the project volume of approximately $60 billion has been reached with an increase of approximately 11 times at the point we have reached,” he added.

Saying that the defense and aerospace exports increased by 40% in the first 11 months of this year compared to the same month of the previous year, reaching $2.79 billion,” Demir said: “We expect to complete 2021 with exports of over $3 billion.”

Turkey’s defense industry has been developing in leaps and bounds in recent years with local production, while the companies eye opportunities to expand their revenues with new export deals. Demir himself has recently played up the great potential of Turkey’s defense industry.

The country is in the process of rolling out new defense industry products and upgrading existing ones with new sophisticated systems as the number of countries interested is gaining pace.

According to the Turkish Exporters Assembly (TIM), defense and aerospace industry exports have already exceeded the overall sales seen in 2019, which also marked an all-time high.

Asbarez: Sen. Bob Dole, A Staunch Supporter of Armenians, Passes Away

Ambassador Varuzhan Nersesyan after presenting Bob Dole with Armenia’s Order of Honor in 2019

Bob Dole, a Republican Senator from Kansas who rose to become Majority Leader and later nominated as the Republican Party presidential candidate in 1996, passed away on Sunday. He was 98.

His affinity for Armenians and the Armenian cause came from Dr. Hampar Kelikian, who helped Dole recover from serious injuries during World War II. Kelikian shared the story of his family who experienced unfathomable horrors during the Armenian Genocide.

Dole became a staunch advocate for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide and in February 1990 fought for the passage of a resolution, which would ultimately not pass, due to a filibuster by Virginia Democrat Robert Byrd.

“For the one million Armenians in this country, the wounds have been open for almost 75 years, and the hurt is not going to be able to heal because the world has not faced up to the truth of the suffering of the Armenian people in this period of 1915-1923…because the world stood by and did nothing,” Dole said on the Senate floor during the debate on the resolution in 1990.

“Dole had planted a seed and finally lived to see the House of Representatives, Senate, and the Executive Branch end the longest-lasting foreign gag rule in American history and dealing a major setback to Turkey’s century-long obstruction of justice for this crime against humanity,” said the Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region in a tribute posted on the organization’s social media platforms on Sunday.

Dole hailed President Joe Biden’s recognition of the Armenian Genocide this year, calling it a pound moment for the United States.

“I’m very pleased that he [President Biden] has officially recognized the Armenian genocide. This is a proud and historically significant moment for the United States, for Armenia, and for Armenians around the globe. It’s been a long time coming,” Dole said.

He and his wife, Elizabeth, who would later become the president of the American Red Cross, traveled to Armenia in 1989 and assessed the damage of the devastating earthquake.

Mere weeks before last year’s 44-Day War, Armenia’s then Ambassador to the United States Varuzhan Nersesyan signed an agreement with the law firm Alston & Bird, where Dole would assist Armenia in building a strategic partnership with the United States.

In December 2019, Nersesyan presented Dole with Armenia’s Order of Honor medal for his unwavering commitment to Armenia and the Armenian people.

“America lost a worthy son and soldier, and the Armenian people lost their great and loyal friend, who was closely connected with us, Armenians, and was always by our side, especially during trying times,” President Armen Sarkissian said in a tribute to Dole on Monday.

“After the devastating earthquake of 1988, Robert Dole visited Armenia and played an indisputable role in the organization of US humanitarian aid to our country. His efforts to recognize the Armenian Genocide are also invaluable,” said Sarkissian said, adding that “Mr. Dole’s the memory will always be bright in our hearts.”

Asbarez: Azerbaijan Returns 10 Captured Soldiers

A plane carrying 10 Armenian captives landed in Yerevan on Dec. 5

Azerbaijan has repatriated to Armenia 10 soldiers its forces had captured during an invasion attempt on Armenia’s southeastern borders on November 16.

A day after the foiled invasion attempt, Armenia’s Defense Ministry said that Azerbaijani forces had captured 13 Armenian soldiers, while another 24 had gone missing.

There are still unknown numbers of Armenian POWs and civilians, who were captured during and immediately following last year’s war, being held by Azerbaijan.

Below are the names of the repatriated soldiers, as reported by Armenpress.

Yerimyan Narek Volodya
Arakelyan Arayik Arshaluys
Amirkhanyan Serzhik Samson,
Hakobyan G. Arayik,
Nalbandyan Robert Mamikon,
Sargsyan Harut Aramayis,
Manasyan Artyom Suren,
Avetisyan Eric Hunan
Tosyanan Arman Arthur,
Hakobyan Tigran Armen

The California Courier Online, December 9, 2021

1-         Celebrity Dr. Oz Running for US Senate;

            Do We Need a Second Trump in Washington?

            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com
2-         Bob Dole, former Senator and a great friend of Armenians, dies at 98

3-         Australia’s House of Representatives Unanimously Calls for
Recognition of        Armenian, Assyrian, Greek Genocides

4-         Letter to the Editor

5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against COVID-19

************************************************************************************************************************************************

1-         Celebrity Dr. Oz Running for US Senate;

            Do We Need a Second Trump in Washington?

            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com
TV Celebrity Dr. Mehmet Oz announced on Nov. 30 his Republican
candidacy for one of the two U.S. Senate seats from Pennsylvania.

Just like his idol Donald Trump, Dr. Oz has no background in politics.
He has not even served as a City Councilman. The American public and
the world-at-large suffered enough in the hands of the incompetent
celebrity Trump who appointed Dr. Oz to the White House council on
sport, fitness and nutrition, after appearing on “The Dr. Oz Show” as
a presidential candidate.

Besides his lack of political experience, there are several other
issues that should discourage or disqualify Dr. Oz from running for a
Senate seat. Even though he is a medical doctor, he has offered plenty
of baseless medical advice and promoted questionable treatments, such
as diet pills and hydroxychloroquine, Trump’s fake cure for
coronavirus, in order to enrich himself, jeopardizing the health of
the American public. He shockingly suggested on FOX-TV that “a 2-3
percent increase in COVID-19 mortality from reopening schools
nationwide might be a worthwhile trade-off.”

According to Wikipedia, Dr. Oz “has promoted pseudoscience and
alternative medicine, and has been criticized by physicians,
government officials, and publications, including the British Medical
Journal, Popular Science, and The New Yorker, for endorsing unproven
products and non-scientific advice. The British Medical Journal
published a study in 2014 that found more than half of the
recommendations on medical talk series, including “The Dr. Oz Show,”
either had no evidence or contradicted medical research.”

Another problem is that Dr. Oz is running for the Senate from
Pennsylvania, even though he is not a resident of that State. He lives
in a mansion in New Jersey which violates the residency requirement to
run for political office in that State. In late 2020, he changed his
voter registration to a home owned by his mother-in-law in
Pennsylvania. The only link he has with that State is that he
graduated from the University of Pennsylvania over three decades ago
in 1986.

Finally, without wanting to say anything disparaging about his Turkish
background, it remains to be seen, if elected, Dr. Oz will act as the
mouthpiece of the Turkish government or serves the interests of the
United States. In the few days since announcing his candidacy, several
articles have been written questioning his exclusive allegiance to the
United States as a dual Turkish and American citizen. Even though Dr.
Mehmet Oz was born in Ohio, he spent his childhood summers in Turkey
and served for two years in the Turkish army.

Regarding his position on Armenian issues, there are two indications:

1) In 2014, the Assembly of Turkish American Associations
headquartered in Washington, DC, announced Dr. Oz’s participation in
its “master plan” to deny the Armenian Genocide in advance of the
Centennial of the Armenian Genocide in 2015. However, a spokesman for
Dr. Oz said in an email to the Armenian Asbarez newspaper that “Dr. Oz
is not involved in this in any way.”

2) In 2008, when I was being awarded the Ellis Island Medal of Honor
in New York, Dr. Oz was also one of the recipients of that medal.
During the official ceremony, in my acceptance speech, the minute I
said that I was a descendant of survivors of the Armenian Genocide,
Dr. Oz got up from his chair and left the hall. To be fair to him,
this could have been a mere coincidence.

Nevertheless, it is up to Dr. Oz to clarify his position on the
Armenian Genocide which is already recognized by both Houses of
Congress and the President of the United States. Dr. Mehmet Oz’s true
allegiances will be revealed if he shows any reluctance to criticize
the grave human rights violations committed by his good friend, the
President of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Despite his celebrity status, Dr. Oz will face an uphill battle in his
political campaign. He will be competing with a dozen other Republican
candidates in the race for the Senate. If he overcomes that major
hurdle, he would then go up against his Democratic rival. The current
Republican Senator Pat Toomey has announced his retirement.

Dr. Oz has come under relentless attacks from the American media for
his questionable past statements. Dr. Dale Summers wrote an article in
The Daily Beast titled: “Please Don’t Elect Dr. Oz—He’s a Disgrace to
Our Profession.” Summers stated: “I greet this prospect with the same
enthusiasm I’d have for contracting dysentery…. He’s been promoting
pseudoscience on his show for years.”

In another article, The Daily Beast’s Matt Wilstein reported the
sarcastic comments made on TV by comedian Stephen Colbert about Dr.
Oz’s political prospects. The article was titled: “Stephen Colbert
Exposes Known ‘Liar’ Dr. Oz Ahead of Pennsylvania Senate Run.” Colbert
ridiculed Dr. Oz’s statement that his candidacy will “help re-light
the ‘divine spark’ inside every American.” He noted that Dr. Oz,
before tossing his hat in the political ring, had a “lucrative career
as a liar, peddling questionable health advice on TV.” Colbert then
added: “But Dr. Oz may not just have fake medical claims; he may have
fake Pennsylvania claims, because he’s running there despite living in
New Jersey for years.”

Karen Tumulty, Deputy Editorial Page Editor and Columnist for the
Washington Post, wrote an article headlined: “What Dr. Oz’s Senate
campaign is missing.” Tumulty stated: “Oz has now offered himself as a
prescription for what ails politics. Count me as skeptical that
Pennsylvania voters will buy the idea that he is the cure they are
looking for.”

It remains to seen whether Dr. Oz’s celebrity status will overcome his
political inexperience and fake medical cures.

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2-         Bob Dole, former Senator and a great friend of Armenians, dies at 98

(Combined Sources)—U.S. statesman, former Senator, 1996 Republican
presidential nominee, and a great friend of Armenia and Armenians, Bob
Dole passed away on Sunday, December 5 at the age of 98. He had served
the United States of America faithfully for 79 years.

Dole advocated for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide in
1980-90s, but was never able to achieve that goal because it was
blocked by his Senate colleagues. But Dole had planted a seed and
finally lived to see the House of Representatives, Senate, and the
Executive Branch end the longest-lasting foreign gag rule in American
history and dealing a major setback to Turkey’s century-long
obstruction of justice for this crime against humanity.

Senator Dole always remembered his great friend, Doctor Hampar
Kelikian, who saved his life during the WWII and shared his tragic
family history amid the horrors that began in 1915 when the Turkish
Ottoman Empire undertook a years-long campaign of ethnic cleansing.

He had announced in February that he was being treated for advanced
lung cancer. President Joe Biden visited Dole shortly after learning
of the diagnosis.

Biden on Sunday released a statement mourning Dole. “Bob was an
American statesman like few in our history. A war hero and among the
greatest of the Greatest Generation. And to me, he was also a friend
whom I could look to for trusted guidance, or a humorous line at just
the right moment to settle frayed nerves,” Biden said. “I will miss my
friend. But I am grateful for the times we shared, and for the
friendship Jill and I and our family have built with Liddy and the
entire Dole family.”

Biden on Sunday evening ordered that flags at the White House and
other public buildings and facilities be flown at half-staff in honor
of Dole, according to a proclamation released by the White House.

Dole is survived by his wife, former Sen. Elizabeth Dole of North
Carolina, and daughter Robin Dole.

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3-         Australia’s House of Representatives Unanimously Calls for
Recognition of        Armenian, Assyrian, Greek Genocides

CANBERRA—On November 29, the Federal Parliament’s House of
Representatives unanimously debated in favour of a motion calling on
the Australian Government to recognize the Armenian, Assyrian, and
Greek Genocides, reported the Armenian National Committee of
Australia.

The motion urged Australia’s Government to uphold its obligations as a
signatory to the UN Genocide Convention by recognizing “the genocide
committed by the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923 of Armenians,
Assyrians, Greeks and other Christian minorities”.

Member Trent Zimmerman moved the motion in the Australian Parliament’s
Federation Chamber, and it was seconded by his co-convenor of the
Australia-Armenia Interparliamentary Union and former Defence Minister
of Australia, Joel Fitzgibbon. They were joined as speakers on the
motion by John Alexander, Josh Burns, Julian Leeser, and Steve
Georganas.

“The House of Representatives has spoken. The Australian Government
has just received a bipartisan and unanimous call to recognize the
Armenian, Assyrian and Greek Genocides, from their Parliament’s
largest and most representative legislative chamber,” said Executive
Director of the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU),
Haig Kayserian on behalf of the Joint Justice Initiative.

The Joint Justice Initiative was formed by the public affairs
representative organizations of the Armenian-Australian,
Assyrian-Australian and Greek-Australian communities to advocate for
national recognition of the genocides suffered by their ancestors.

“This historic outcome is the first legislative success of the Joint
Justice Initiative, and it means our elected parliamentarians reject a
foreign dictatorship’s hold on this line in Australia’s foreign
policy, and they join our communities’ call on Prime Minister Scott
Morrison and his Government to do the same, and call genocides by
name,” Kayserian added.

Kayserian added on behalf of the Joint Justice Initiative: “The
Armenian-Australian, Assyrian-Australian and Greek-Australian
communities are now emboldened by the recognition and support of our
House of Representatives, and we will use this to redouble our efforts
to ensure Australia’s Government recognizes the crimes committed
against our ancestors by the Ottoman Empire as genocides.”

This major leap forward is the second time genocide has been used in a
motion in Australia’s Parliament, after a 2018 debate referred to the
Armenian Genocide through the prism of Australia’s first major
international humanitarian relief effort, which was to aid survivors
of the genocides of 1915.

**********************************************************************************************************************************************

4-         Letter to the Editor

Dear Editor,

Regarding Harut Sassounian’s column of Dec. 2: “Israeli Cluster Bombs
Sold to Azerbaijan Kill & Maim Innocent Armenian Civilians.”

My heart aches with this news.  I’m very sorry Armenians were
subjected to such inhumanity, despite international law and public
opinion. All too often such actions, horrible as they are, are not
surprising.

What is staggering is that Israel would inflict such terror on
Armenia, a population that much like Israel’s, was victimized by
Genocide. Has history taught us nothing?  How does one teach
conscience?

Peter Borisow

Los Angeles

***********************************************************************************************************************************************

5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against COVID-19

Armenia continues the fight against COVID-19, as the country continues
promoting the vaccination phase.

The U.S. State Department on July 26 warned American citizens to
reconsider travel to Armenia due to the increase in cases of the
Covid-19.

“The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued a
Level 3 Travel Health Notice for Armenia due to COVID-19, indicating a
high level of COVID-19 in the country,” said the State Department.

The State Department also urged U.S. citizens not to travel to the
Nagorno-Karabakh region due to armed conflict.

“The U.S. government is unable to provide emergency services to U.S.
citizens in Nagorno-Karabakh as U.S. government employees are
restricted from traveling there,” the State Department added.

WHO, with funding from the European Union, in September supplied X-ray
equipment to 7 COVID-19 frontline hospitals – 1 in the capital Yerevan
and in 6 other cities in Armenia.

A new law came into effect on October 1, by order of the Armenian
Ministry of Health, which mandates that all workers be vaccinated;
those who are not vaccinated must submit a certificate confirming the
negative result of the COVID-19 PCR test every 14 days. Those who do
not comply with the mandate face fines and penalties.

Armenia has the lowest vaccination rate in the region and Europe, with
only about 10 percent of its population having been inoculated against
COVID-19 so far. 620,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine were donated to
Armenia by Norway with the support of the EU Civil Protection
Mechanism within the framework of the Team Europe initiative is
already in Armenia.

“The entire infrastructure is ready to carry out a large number of
vaccinations. I add that vaccination does not exclude the disease, but
reduces the risk of contagion”, Armenian Health Minister Anahit
Avanesyan reported during a recent press conference, adding that the
late entry into force of the restrictive measures was a shortcoming of
her department. According to the minister, they are currently
considering the option of requesting certification of negativity from
Covid or vaccination to enter restaurants and attend concerts.

There were 11,243 active cases in Armenia as of December 6. Armenia
has recorded 340,818 coronavirus cases and 7,691 deaths; 321,884 have
recovered.

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RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/06/2021

                                        Monday, December 6, 2021
Armenia To Use First Domestically Produced COVID-19 Vaccine
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia - Health Minister Anahit Avanesian visits the Armenian company Liqvor 
producing Sputnik Light vaccine, Yerevan, December 6, 2021.
The Armenian government will soon buy the first batch of a domestically 
manufactured coronavirus vaccine and offer it to all over-18s as a booster jab, 
Health Minister Anahit Avanesian said on Monday.
An Armenian private company, Liqvor, began producing the Sputnik Light vaccine 
recently in line with a licensing agreement reached with its Russian developer.
“We are processing the substance supplied by the Russian side,” Liqvor’s chief 
executive, Sergei Matevosian, told journalists.
“The [production] volume is as follows: within three working days our company 
can meet Armenia’s one-year demand,” he said.
Avanesian announced the impending purchase of locally manufactured Sputnik Light 
vaccines after inspecting the company’s production facilities together with 
Economy Minister Vahan Kerobian.
“We will at first be carrying out that for booster shots,” Avanesian told a news 
conference held at Liqvor’s premises. She said they will be offered to 
individuals who received the second dose of a vaccine at least six months ago.
Armenia’s policlinics and other vaccination centers are now mostly using 
vaccines developed and manufactured by the U.S. biotech company Moderna and the 
Anglo-Swedish drug maker AstraZeneca.
The Armenian government is gearing up for revaccination against COVID-19 despite 
the country’s low vaccination rate.
Armenia - Vials of Sputnik Light vaccine manufactured by the Armenian company 
Liqvor, Yerevan, December 6, 2021.
According to the Ministry of Health, only about 517,000 people making up roughly 
one-fifth of its population have been fully vaccinated to date. About 320,000 
others have received one dose of a vaccine.
The immunization process has accelerated in recent weeks following the 
government’s decision to require virtually all workers to get inoculated or take 
coronavirus tests twice a month at their own expense.
Officials and health experts say this is one of the reasons for a significant 
drop in coronavirus infections and deaths caused by them in Armenia.
The Ministry of Health registered only 95 new coronavirus cases on Sunday, 
sharply down from over 2,000 cases a day routinely recorded in late October and 
early November.
“We must do everything to maintain these decreased numbers,” said Avanesian.
The minister again defended her government-backed decision to introduce on 
January 1 a mandatory health pass for entry to cultural and leisure sites. Only 
those people who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 or have had a recent 
negative test will be allowed to visit bars, restaurants, concert halls and 
other public venues.
Armenia’s Ruling Party Suffers More Local Election Setbacks
        • Nane Sahakian
        • Karine Simonian
Armenia - Voters at a polling station in Masis, December 5, 2021
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s party was defeated in Armenia’s third largest 
city of Vanadzor and several other major urban communities in local elections 
held on Sunday.
The Civil Contract party suffered similar setbacks in other parts of the country 
in October and November. It failed to install its members as mayors of the 
second largest city of Gyumri and the three main communities of southeastern 
Syunik province.
The latest polls were held in 36 other communities that were mostly enlarged by 
the Armenian authorities earlier this year. Voters there elected, on a 
party-list basis, new local councils empowered to choose community heads.
Citing preliminary vote results, Civil Contract claimed on Sunday night to have 
prevailed in 25 of those communities.
Opposition representatives disputed that claim on Monday. Some of them insisted 
that the ruling party won outright only in 15 municipalities, most of which 
comprise a city or town and multiple villages. They said that in all other 
communities Civil Contract fell short of a majority of seats in the local 
councils.
In what was arguably its biggest setback, Civil Contract won only 25 percent of 
the vote in Vanadzor, compared with about 39 percent polled by a local bloc led 
by Mamikon Aslanian, who served as the city’s mayor until October.
Armenia - Former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon Aslanian at an election campaign meeting 
with voters in Vanadzor, November 23, 2021.
Aslanian was affiliated with the then President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican 
Party of Armenia (HHK) when the former Vanadzor council elected him mayor in 
2016. He sought reelection not as a candidate of the HHK but as the leader of 
the bloc bearing his name.
Aslanian needs to cut a power-sharing deal with other election contenders in 
order to again become mayor. He did not indicate as of Monday afternoon whether 
he will try to team up with Civil Contract or another party that finished third 
with 14.5 percent of the vote. The party is led by Arkadi Peleshian, his former 
deputy.
During the election campaign Aslanian and Civil Contract’s mayoral candidate, 
Aram Khachatrian, harshly criticized each other and ruled out the possibility of 
a post-election alliance. Khachatrian is also the governor of Armenia’s northern 
Lori province, of which Vanadzor is the administrative center.
Pashinian’s party was also defeated in Abovian, a city 15 kilometers north of 
Yerevan that has long been a political stronghold of Prosperous Armenia Party 
(BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian.
The BHK was led in the local mayoral race by Eduard Babayan, Tsarukian’s former 
chief bodyguard, and won more than 45 percent of the vote. An alliance with the 
opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), which garnered 
over 5 percent, would be enough to make Babayan the new mayor of Abovian and 
nearby villages. Civil Contract got about 37 percent of the vote in the 
community.
Armenia - Businessman Gagik Tsarukian and his chief bodyguard Eduard Babayan (R) 
at an election campaign rally in Hrazdan, 11 April 2012.
Other municipalities won by opposition or nominally independent candidates 
included the capitals of Gegharkunik and Vayots Dzor provinces as well as the 
towns of Masis and Aparan.
By contrast, Civil Contract scored victories in three other provincial capitals 
and other major such as Echmiadzin, Spitak and Jermuk.
Pashinian sought to put a brave face on his party’s electoral performance, 
saying that the latest elections were free and fair and that this is more 
important than their results. He also said that his administration’s top 
priorities are currently “connected with external challenges” facing Armenia.
“I know and understand the view that it would have been better for us to have 
rigged elections but a higher degree of [national] security,” the prime minister 
wrote on Facebook. “But I remain convinced that it is the long-running practice 
of vote rigging that eroded the system of state resilience formed in the 1990s 
and … led to security disasters.”
While there have been virtually no allegations of serious and systematic fraud 
in the latest polls, Armenian opposition forces have for weeks accused 
Pashinian’s political team of abusing its government levers and bullying 
challengers to try to gain control of more local governments. The authorities 
deny the accusations.
Critics have also noted the abundance of former political allies of Armenia’s 
previous leadership among Civil Contract’s election candidates. They defected 
from the former ruling HHK after Pashinian swept to power in 2018.
A Civil Contract spokesman dismissed late last week suggestions that the strong 
presence of such individuals on the party’s electoral slates is at odds with 
Pashinian’s extremely negative characterizations of the country’s former rulers.
Azeri FM Cancels Talks With Armenian Counterpart
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- Foreign Ministers Ararat Mirzoyan (left) of Armenia and Jeyhun 
Bayramov of Azerbaijan.
Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov cancelled at the last minute a 
fresh meeting with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan which was due to be 
held late last week.
The two men had planned to meet in Stockholm on the sidelines of an annual 
meeting of foreign ministers of OSCE member states.
An Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said Baku called off the meeting in 
response to an Armenian parliamentary delegation’s “illegal visit” to 
Nagorno-Karabakh. She denounced the trip as a “provocation.”
The Armenian Foreign Ministry reported earlier on Saturday that Mirzoyan’s 
planned talks with Bayramov did not take place. But it gave no reasons for the 
cancellation.
The U.S., Russian and French mediators co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group regretted 
the ministers’ failure to meet for the fourth time in less than three months. In 
a joint statement issued over the weekend, they expressed readiness to host such 
a meeting “as soon as circumstances allow.”
An Armenian political analyst, Beniamin Poghosian, linked the meeting’s 
cancellation to Baku’s and Yerevan’s failure to put the finishing touches on an 
agreement to establish cross-border transport connections during the latest 
round of Russian-mediated negotiations.
The leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan reported further progress towards 
opening the Armenian-Azerbaijani border to passenger and cargo traffic after 
holding talks in another Russian city, Sochi, on November 26. Russian President 
Vladimir Putin said a trilateral working group will announce in the coming days 
“decisions which we agreed today.” The group made no such announcements after 
meeting in Moscow last Wednesday.
In a separate development, Azerbaijan freed and repatriated on Saturday ten 
Armenian prisoners of war in return for receiving more information from Armenia 
about minefields around Nagorno-Karabakh.
The soldiers were captured during the November 16 fighting on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border which left at least 13 troops from the two sides 
dead.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Three people put on trial for dancing on the gate of Armenian church in Istanbul

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 6 2021

A lawsuit has been filed against three people who danced on the gate of the Surp Takavor Armenian Church in Istanbul’s Kadıköy in mid-July 2021 and were briefly taken into custody over this act, Bianet reports.

With the indictment issued by the Istanbul Anadolu Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office, defendants Ozancan Y., Yunus Emre U. and Ömer Faruk A. are now facing up to 1 year in prison on charge of “publicly degrading the religious values of a segment of society.”

In the indictment lodged following the investigation into the incident, it is recalled that the defendants came in front of the church in a vehicle on the day of the incident. While defendant Ozancan Y. was playing music in the vehicle, other defendants Yunus Emre U. and Ömer Faruk A. got on top of the church’s front gate where a cross stands and danced there.

The indictment notes that this act sparked public outrage and was criticized by several citizens on social media. According to the indictment, the defendants, in their statements of defense, admitted to having committed the act, but said that they did not act with criminal intent.

The indictment indicates that the committal of the act by the defendants has been confirmed by witness statements and camera footage. Referring to the examination carried out at the church by the law enforcement officers and to the remarks of the church official, the indictment has added the act in question did not lead to any damage or dirt at the church.

Emphasizing that the act committed by getting on top of the church wall and dancing publicly “degraded the religious values embraced by a segment of society and disturbed public peace,” the Prosecutor’s Office has demanded that defendants Ozancan Y., Yunus Emre U. and Ömer Faruk A. be sentenced to 6 months to 1 year in prison each on charge of “publicly degrading the religious values embraced by a segment of society.”

The defendants will appear before the judge at the Istanbul Anadolu 27th Criminal Court of First Instance in the upcoming days.