Anti-government demonstrators rally in central Yerevan

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 17:17,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. Anti-government protesters are again rallying at Republic Square in Yerevan, demanding the resignation of the Pashinyan Administration and the formation of an interim government.

The demonstration began with a prayer, and then a moment of silence was held in honor of fallen troops as the rally is taking place on January 28 – Army Day.

A prominent filmmaker in attendance, Arshak Zakarian, announced that this gathering has no affiliation with any political party. “Of course, here I saw people representing various political parties. But we’ve all come here as Armenians, as citizens of Armenia. Representatives of national minorities are also here,” he said, adding that the demonstrators will march down the street to continue protesting outside the prosecutor’s office.

Renowned artist, actor Hrant Tokhatyan, who was also in attendance, told reporters: “Many of my colleagues are here. Some of them are not, I don’t know why they aren’t here, perhaps they support the incumbent government. Some of them think that going out to the streets is unnecessary.”

Photos by Hayk Manukyan

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Belarus, Armenia plan to hold session of inter-parliamentary committee in Minsk

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 17:19,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. On January 27 Ambassador of Belarus to Armenia Alexander Konyuk met with Vice Speaker of Parliament Vahe Enfiajyan to discuss issues relating to boosting and further deepening the cooperation between the Belarusian and Armenian Parliaments, BelTA reports.

The meeting focused on the prospects of holding the next session of the Armenia-Belarus inter-parliamentary cooperation committee in Minsk this year.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 28-01-21

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 17:31,

YEREVAN, 28 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 28 January, USD exchange rate stood at 518.16 drams. EUR exchange rate stood at 628.06 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate stood at 6.89 drams. GBP exchange rate stood at 711.59 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price stood at 30929.52 drams. Silver price stood at 423.14 drams. Platinum price stood at 18408.45 drams.

Airplane bringing 5 Armenian POWs lands in Yerevan

 

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 19:06,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. A while ago the airplane bringing 5 Armenian war prisoners landed at Yerevan’s Erebuni airport.

ARMENPRESS reports, they are undergoing a medical examination.

Earlier today, Deputy PM Tigran Avinyan had said that another 62 Armenian POWs held telephone conversations with their families.




UN in Armenia and partners launch a Plan to support conflict-affected people from Nagorno- Karabakh

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 19:21,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. Under the joint leadership of the UN Resident Coordinator and UNHCR, the United Nations Country Team, together with NGO partners, launched the Armenia Inter-Agency Response Plan. The plan has been presented to both Government and donor partners, ARMENPRESS was informed from the UN Department of Global Communications.  

In line with Government support initiatives, this Response Plan runs until end of June 2021 and serves as a coordination and advocacy tool. It outlines priorities for the humanitarian response, and achievements to date as well as appealing for the resources necessary to address the needs of the 90,000 people who have sought refuge in Armenia and of the hosting communities who have welcomed them. The Reponse Plan involves 36 humanitarian partners and 188 projects with total financial requirements amounting to USD 62.6 million across six key sectors: protection, including child protection; education; shelter and non-food items; food security and nutrition; health, and early-recovery.

“Together with our partners here in Armenia, the UN Country Team have been working hard since the beginning of the conflict to help meet the critical needs of people forced to flee their homes, and this Plan represents an important new opportunity for even greater support and solidarity through enhanced humanitarian donor engagement.” noted UN RC in Armenia, Shombi Sharp at the launch.

Government representatives including key line Ministries expressed appreciation for the the collaboration with the UN, international community and NGOs on the crisis response and recognized the importance of the Response Plan in further scaling up this partnership.

“While the conflict has ended, people who are in a refugee-like situation in Armenia have urgent humanitarian needs, which are further aggravated by winter. The plan presents our collective efforts to support the Government’s response to help these people, both immediately and in the medium-term. It also includes host communities who have shown great hospitality to new arrivals,” added UNHCR Representative in Armenia Anna-Carin Ost.

To ensure effective linkages between humanitarian and development interventions, this Response Plan has been developed in line with the COVID-19 Socio-Economic Response and Recovery Plan and the upcoming United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF), which will articulate UN priorities for partnership with Armenia from 2021 to 2025.

The plan seeks to expand significant support already provided by UN Armenia, together with humanitarian and development partners, having made  an important impact for those displaced from the early days of the conflict.

From October until December 2020, the UN agencies and partners distributed over 33,330 non-food items, including bedding items, towels, hygiene supplies, and household items, while providing 1,000 foldable beds and covering the utility costs for 64 collective shelter facilities. 11,500 school-age children who are currently enrolled in secondary education in Armenia were assisted too. Further, hundreds of metric tons of food assistance has been provided to approximately 18,000 people each month, along with a number of other actions.

Armenia returns 1 Azerbaijani POW in exchange of 5

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 20:21,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenia returned 1 war prisoner to Azerbaijan and 5 Armenian war prisoners returned from Baku, ARMENPRESS reports, citing TASS, as quoting commander of the Russian peacekeeping units in Nagorno Karabakh Lieutenant-General Rustam Muradov.  

‘’The Russian airplane transported 1 POW to Baku, 5 POWs returned to Armenia’’, Muradov said.

Armenpress: OSCE MG Co-chairs plan to pay a visit to Nagorno Karabakh – Zakharova

OSCE MG Co-chairs plan to pay a visit to Nagorno Karabakh – Zakharova

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 20:30,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. The OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs plan to pay a visit to Nagorno Karabakh, ARMENPRESS reports official representative of the MFA Russia Maria Zakharova said in a briefing.

՛՛The OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs plan to pay a visit to Nagorno Karabakh, the date of the visit is not known yet, it’s being discussed with the sides”, Zakharova said.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/28/2021

                                        Thursday, 
More Armenian POWs Freed By Azerbaijan
        • Naira Bulghadarian
ARMENIA -- People stand at a Russian military plane with some of Armenian 
captives upon its arrival at a military airport outside Yerevan, December 14, 
2020
Azerbaijan released on Thursday five more Armenian prisoners of war (POWs) in 
line with the Russian-brokered agreement that stopped the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh on November 10.
They were flown to Yerevan by a Russian plane and immediately taken to a 
military hospital for examination.
A senior Karabakh official, Boris Avagian, told reporters that the five men were 
among 62 Armenian soldiers who were taken prisoner in early December when the 
Azerbaijani army seized the last two Armenian-controlled villages in Karabakh’s 
Hadrut district occupied by it during the six-week war.
Azerbaijani officials have branded those soldiers as “saboteurs” and 
“terrorists,” signaling Baku’s intention to prosecute them on relevant charges. 
Yerevan has condemned those plans as a gross violation of international law and 
the Karabakh ceasefire agreement.
According to Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian, Azerbaijani authorities 
allowed all 62 prisoners to speak with their families by phone earlier on 
Thursday.
Avagian stressed the importance of the release of “the first group” of these 
POWs. “This means that the process is moving forward,” he said.
The truce agreement calls for the unconditional exchange of all prisoners held 
by the conflicting parties. Dozens of them were swapped in December.
The latest repatriation raised to 59 the total number of Armenian POWs and 
civilians freed to date. More than 100 others are believed to remain in 
Azerbaijani captivity.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian discussed their fate with Azerbaijani President 
Ilham Aliyev during their January 11 talks in Moscow hosted by Russian President 
Vladimir Putin. The three leaders announced no agreements on the issue.
Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazian again demanded on Thursday the unconditional 
release of the remaining Armenian prisoners.
“Azerbaijan should understand that this is a humanitarian issue and if this 
issue continues to be exploited it will become problematic for Azerbaijan as 
well,” Ayvazian told reporters.
Kocharian Eyes Election Victory
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian greets supporters during his trial, 
Yerevan, February 25, 2020.
Former President Robert Kocharian has said that he and his political allies will 
participate in snap parliamentary elections and win them even if they are held 
by Armenia’s current government.
“We have a full toolkit and a team necessary for political struggle,” he said in 
a televised interview publicized late on Wednesday.
Kocharian indicated that he continues to believe that such elections must take 
place after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation and a certain “time 
lag.”
“But if the authorities manage to force the elections sooner -- and they seem to 
have enough votes in the parliament -- I don’t think that not participating [in 
them] will be right. I think that participating will be right. Or else, we will 
enable these people [in power] to reestablish their rule,” he told three media 
outlets.
Pashinian expressed readiness late last month to hold fresh parliamentary 
elections after weeks of street protests staged by a coalition of 17 opposition 
parties blaming him for Armenia’s defeat in the autumn war with Azerbaijan. They 
want him to resign and hand over power to an interim government that would 
organize the polls within a year.
Armenia -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian talks to a wounded soldier at 
a military hospital in Yerevan, .
The opposition alliance called the Homeland Salvation Front has rejected 
Pashinian’s offer until now, saying that the country is not prepared for the 
vote now and that the authorities would rig it. Some of its leaders have already 
called for an election boycott.
Kocharian, who has backed the anti-government protests, said he shares the 
opposition concerns. “But if these people [in power] do not understand that 
holding elections in these conditions would be dangerous for the country and 
take that step after all, I don’t think leaving them alone with the public in 
the elections will be right. That is why we will participate [in the elections] 
and win.”
The 66-year-old ex-president, who ruled Armenia from 1998-2008, shed no light on 
the likely composition of his electoral “team.” Nor did he say if he will top 
its list of election candidates and aspire to the post of prime minister.
Kocharian has been at loggerheads with Pashinian’s government ever since it took 
office following the “Velvet Revolution” of April-May 2018. He was arrested in 
July 2018 on coup charges rejected by him as politically motivated.
Kocharian was released on bail in June 2020 pending the outcome of his ongoing 
trial. The trial resumed on January 19 nearly four months after being 
effectively interrupted by the war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Armenia -- Supporters of former President Robert Kocharian demosntrate outside a 
prison in Yerevan, June 25, 2019.
Hrachya Hakobian, a pro-government lawmaker and Pashinian’s brother-in-law, 
scoffed at Kocharian’s political ambitions on Thursday, saying that the 
ex-president stands no chance of winning the elections. “Our people have already 
seen ten years of Kocharian’s rule, the political and other murders committed 
during Kocharian’s rule,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.
Hakobian said Pashinian’s My Step bloc can win the polls despite the outcome of 
the war. “Whatever government was in power, this war would have taken place and 
we would have lost it,” he claimed, laying the blame on the country’s former 
rulers.
In his latest interview, Kocharian again harshly criticized Pashinian’s handling 
of the six-week hostilities that left at least 3,500 Armenian soldiers dead. He 
also accused Pashinian of severely jeopardizing Armenia’s national security and 
effectively turning the country into a Russian “protectorate.”
Armenia Continues To Rise In Global Corruption Rankings
Armenia - The main Armenian government building in Yerevan, 29 March 2018.
Armenia has further improved its position in an annual survey of corruption 
perceptions around the world conducted by Transparency International.
It ranked, together with Jordan and Slovakia, 60th out of 180 countries and 
territories evaluated in the Berlin-based watchdog’s 2020 Corruption Perception 
Index (CPI) released on Thursday.
Armenia and two other countries shared 77th place in the previous CPI released a 
year ago. Transparency International assigned the South Caucasus state a CPI 
“score” of 42 out of 100 at the time. The watchdog raised the score to 49 in the 
latest survey.
“It is the second largest [CPI score] increase in the world after Maldives,” it 
said in an explanatory note.
Armenia was 105th in the corruption perception rankings two years ago. It still 
trails neighboring Georgia but is ahead of its three other neighbors: 
Azerbaijan, Iran and Turkey. Georgia occupies 45th place in the 2020 CPI.
“A country to watch last year, Armenia has taken a gradual approach to reform, 
resulting in steady and positive improvements in anti-corruption,” says a 
Transparency International report.
“However, safeguarding judicial independence and ensuring checks and balances 
remain critical first steps in its anti-corruption efforts,” it adds. “The 
effectiveness of those efforts is additionally challenged by the current 
political and economic crisis as a result of a recent Nagorno-Karabakh conflict 
and the subsequent protests against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian over a 
ceasefire deal.”
Pashinian has repeatedly claimed to have eliminated “systemic corruption” since 
coming to power in May 2018. Armenian law-enforcement authorities have launched 
dozens of high-profile corruption investigations during his rule. They mostly 
target former top government officials and individuals linked to them.
Earlier this month the Armenian parliament began debating a government bill that 
calls for the creation of a special law-enforcement agency tasked with 
investigating corruption cases. The government also plans to set up new courts 
dealing only with such cases.
Armenian Church Head Insists On Pashinian’s Resignation
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia -- Catholicos Garegin II visits the Yerablur Military Pantheon, Yerevan, 
.
Catholicos Garegin II, the supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, 
reiterated on Thursday calls for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation.
“There is no change in our convictions and positions,” he told reporters when 
asked about his stance on the continuing political crisis in Armenia.
In a televised address to the nation aired on December 8, Garegin said Pashinian 
lacks popular trust after the “disastrous” war in Nagorno-Karabakh and should 
step down to prevent violent unrest and end the “deep political crisis.” He said 
he made this clear at a face-to-face meeting with the embattled premier.
Similar statements were also made by the number two figure in the church 
hierarchy, the Lebanon-based Catholicos Aram I, and other top clergymen in 
Armenia and its worldwide Diaspora. Some of them denounced Pashinian in 
unusually strong terms.
Garegin again insisted on Thursday that the ancient church, to which the vast 
majority of Armenians nominally belong, is not meddling in politics or siding 
with opposition forces trying to topple the government.
“The church is guided by national and state interests, and if the church’s 
position is in tune with the views of one or another political faction that must 
not be construed as a church bias in favor of a particular political party. The 
church is above politics,” he said.
President Armen Sarkissian and Armenian many public figures have also urged 
Pashinian to step down and hand over power to an interim government. The premier 
has rejected these calls while expressing readiness to hold fresh parliamentary 
elections.
Garegin spoke to journalists as he visited Yerevan’s Yerablur Military Pantheon 
to mark the 29th anniversary of the establishment of Armenia’s Armed Forces. 
Many of at least 3,500 Armenian soldiers killed during the recent war were 
buried there.
Garegin had traditionally prayed and laid flowers at Yerablur together with the 
country’s political leaders. But he was conspicuously absent from a 
wreath-laying ceremony led there by Pashinian this time around. The prime 
minister was joined by parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan and several members of 
his government.
Pashinian and his entourage declined to attend a Christmas mass celebrated by 
Garegin at Yerevan’s St. Gregory the Illuminator’s Cathedral on January 6.
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.
 

Information about newly appointed head of Karabakh’s State Service for Emergency Situations

News.am, Armenia
Jan 27 2021

By the decree of the President of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), Colonel of the Rescue Service of Artsakh Mekhak Arzumanyan has been appointed Head of the State Service for Emergency Situations operating in the system of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

Arzumanyan was born in Stepanakert. He studied at the Civil Defense Academy of the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations, served in the Defense Army of Artsakh and passed fixed-term compulsory military service in the Defense Army.

He has held various positions as a rescuer. In 2011, he was appointed commander of the Special Unit for Rapid Response. On June 2, 2020, he was appointed Head of the Department of Rescue Forces. On December 1, 2020, by the decree of the head of the State Service for Emergency Situations, he was appointed Deputy Director of the Service.

In 2021, by the decree of President of Artsakh, he has been appointed Head of the State Service for Emergency Situations at the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Artsakh.

He is married with two children.

Robert Kocharyan: If Armenia’s Prime Minister was Turkey’s agent, he would do everything that has already been done

News.am, Armenia
Jan 27 2021

All efforts have been made to split the society into blacks and whites, rich and poor, pro-Russian and anti-Russian. This is what second President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan said in an interview with several media outlets today, responding to a reporter’s question if there is an impression that the leader of Armenia favors Turkey and Azerbaijan.

“I have to answer your question indirectly. How does one state act against another state, if it considers that state a threat or it views that state as an enemy? First, it splits the society. Then, it weakens the army and all security system. Later, it instills lack of confidence in state institutions and destroys the state’s relations with allies and friendly states. Which of these actions has the Prime Minister of Armenia not taken? All efforts have been made to split the society into blacks and whites, rich and poor, pro-Russian and anti-Russian. The army has been destroyed, and attempts have been made to discredit Armenian heroes. There was no assignment to detect a network of the enemy’s agents in Armenia,” he said.

According to the second President, Armenia didn’t know when the war would begin because the normal people working within public administration bodies were assigned to seek devils, and they were doing that.

“After all the lies that have been told, nobody can believe in the state institutions in Armenia. It’s not only about the lies told during the 44 days of the war, but also the lies told over the past three years. I can’t say that the authorities of Armenia are Turkey’s agents, but I can say that if the Prime Minister of Armenia was Turkey’s agent, he would take all the actions that have been taken in Armenia. Is this by chance, or is it a pattern? Was this done with lack of understanding? This is a big issue that needs to be clarified. Every citizen of Armenia can think that, yes, there is a serious issue that needs to be identified,” he added.