Zakharova names optimal format for negotiations to unblock transport communications in South Caucasus

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 28 2021

The most efficient format of the talks on unblocking the transport communications in the South Caucasus is a trilateral working group led by the deputy prime ministers of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told a weekly briefing on Thursday.

“Eight meetings in this format have already been held and all sides highly appreciate the work of the working group,” she said.

“We believe it is right to adhere to the statements and steps that contribute to the implementation of trilateral agreements to unblock all economic and transport links in the Transcaucasus,” the spokeswoman noted.

Four Armenian soldiers slightly wounded due to careless handling of ammunition – Defense Ministry

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 28 2021

Four Armenian soldiers were slightly injured due to careless handling of ammunition, the Defense Ministry of Armenia reported.

The incident occurred at one of the military positions in eastern Armenia on Thursday, at around 10am.

The injured immediately received first aid. An investigation into the circumstances of the incident is underway.

Earlier on Thursday, Deputy Defense Minister Arman Sargsyan said he was unaware of such an incident in response to reporters’ questions in the parliament.

Opposition MP: Nikol Pashinyan ‘crossing the line’

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 28 2021

The With Honor opposition faction in the Armenian parliament has nothing to discuss with Nikol Pashinyan other than the issue of his resignation, MP Tigran Abrahamyan from the same faction told reporters on Thursday.

His comments came after Pashinyan invited the two opposition parliamentary factions to hold a discussion on Wednesday.

Abrahamyan noted the authorities had missed the opportunity to discuss various issues with the opposition. He recalled that the National Security Service (NSS) director, defense minister and prosecutor general ignored the opposition call to appear before the parliament and provide clarifications on the border issues.

In addition, the MP said instead of the foreign minister, NSS chief and defense minister, the commander of the NSS border troops and the deputy chief of the army’s General Staff were involved in the urgent parliamentary debates on the border situation and demarcation issues.

“The latter were not authorized to answer 90% of the questions on the agenda,” Abrahamyan said, adding the officials provided no significant information with regard to the other issues raised.

“As for a meeting with Nikol Pashinyan, the secretary of our faction has already announced that its can only focus on his resignation,” the MP said.

In Abrahamyan’s words, Pashinyan, in fact, fails to answer the questions addressed to him during a Q&A session in the parliament, is “crossing the line” and addressing a completely different issue to avoid answering a question.

“Therefore, I don’t consider it expedient to meet with Nikol Pashinyan to discuss any issue,” Abrahamyan said.

Armenian Ombudsman published facts about unlawful reinforcement near the border villages in Gegharkunik province

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 28 2021

SOCIETY 12:31 28/10/2021 REGION

Then Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan published on Thursday new facts about the unlawful locations of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces and reinforcement works carried out in the vicinity of Armenian border villages. 

“As a result of unlawful acts of the Azerbaijani servicemen, a registered business company in Armenia is unable to use 200 hectares territory allocated to it by the Government Decree from December 31, 2000, in the Sotk mountain pass, while the total damaged caused as a result of Azerbaijani actions amounted to 5 million USD,” the report said. 

The facts gathered by Armenian Human Rights Defender were used in the international claims and reports to justify the compensation; unlawfulness of the action of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces. 

It is noted that apart from unlawful locations and unlawful reinforcements, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces open regular fires at RA villages, keep the Armenian villages under direct target. Furthermore, people are deprived of the possibilities to use their pastures and grasslands as well as engage in agriculture. People are deprived of family income sources which resulted in dramatic increase of social issues along with security problems, the report said. 

Satanovsky: Moscow was setting forth much more favorable ideas for Armenia than what had to be accepted

News.am, Armenia
Oct 28 2021

In reality, in the past, Armenia could have resolved the conflict with Azerbaijan independently, if it had listened to the advice from Moscow along with Baku. This is what President of the Russian Institute for the Near East Yevgeny Satanovsky said during an interview with Armenian News-NEWS.am today.

“I’m referring to the several official and non-official meetings, negotiations and talks that were held over the past two decades. Here the Armenian side was much more persistent than the Azerbaijani side, even until the end of the second war in Nagorno-Karabakh. The ideas that Moscow was setting forth for resolution of the crisis before and in the beginning of the war were much more beneficial for Armenia than what Armenia was forced to accept. But nobody listened, and there was an idea that Stepanakert would seize Baku. However, we see the results. Today it is sad for Yerevan, but rather good for Baku and Ankara,” he said.


Armenia ombudsman releases video on Azerbaijan army units’ unlawful deployment in Gegharkunik Province

News.am, Armenia
Oct 28 2021

We publish a factual analysis of one of the unlawful deployments and unlawful fortification work by the Azerbaijani armed forces in the immediate vicinity of the villages of Gegharkunik Province. The Human Rights Defender (ombudsman) of the Republic of Armenia (RA), Arman Tatoyan, wrote this on Facebook, attaching a respective video.

“Due to their criminal actions and presence, an RA business company is unable to use the 200 hectares of land legally allocated to it by the decision of the RA government and the ownership certificate of the Cadastre Committee, on 75 [hectares] of which it has built two windmills, is unlawfully deprived of the right to do business, and the damage suffered—by its calculation—is 5 million [US] dollars.

Moreover, due to the unlawful deployments of Azerbaijan, the civilian population has appeared in the target of the Azerbaijani armed servicemen. It is at risk, the peaceful life and safety of the people are disrupted by regular [Azerbaijani] shelling, the right to life is violated, the people are deprived of the right to property and the opportunity to earn a family income from agriculture.

These facts will be sent to the relevant international bodies, as well as to the RA state bodies and NGOs—for use in their work,” Tatoyan wrote as attachment to this video.

Cavusoglu: Turkey working jointly with Azerbaijan on normalization of relations with Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Oct 28 2021

Turkey is working jointly with Azerbaijan on the matter of normalization of relations with Armenia. The statement came from Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu in an interview with CNN Turk.

“During the Turkish president’s recent visit to Azerbaijan, we discussed, with [Azerbaijani] Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov, the issue of normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations,” he added.

Here’s Why Armenia Is Emerging As The Next Food And Wine Travel Destination

Forbes Magazine

Oct 29 2021

Ann Abel, Senior Contributor
Travel

Noravenk, the “new monastery” in Armenia DAVID EGUI

“My life is different because of Armenia,” said Veronica Joy Rogov as she welcomed guests to the final dinner of an audacious project at an audacious restaurant in Armenia. We had flown from all over the world to this small mountain village an hour outside the capital, Yerevan, to discover something new, to let ourselves be surprised and perhaps to be part of the beginning of something wonderful.

Rogov, a hospitality and wine consultant for Michelin-star restaurants, had flown in from the U.S., along with chef Mads Refslund—a cofounder of the original, wildly influential Noma in Copenhagen—and a team of other restaurant geniuses. They immersed themselves in all things Armenian for a month, learning traditional recipes and meeting purveyors, and then worked with the staff at the new Tsaghkunk Restaurant to create and serve a series of unforgettable dinners.

Their mission—along with providing a whole lot of pleasure to diners who made the journey—was to help one of the oldest countries in the world develop its future contemporary culinary language. That meant a thorough exploration of this unique but forgotten (or misunderstood) land at the crossroads between Europe, Asia and the Middle East, and then a deep sharing of knowledge.


Mount Ararat above Armenian vineyards DAVID EGUI

The project was a collaboration between Hrachya Aghajanyan, the former Armenian ambassador to Denmark and Norway, and his friend Kristian Brask Thomson of Bon Vivant Communications, whom he used to introduce as the Ambassador of Pleasure because of his work organizing dining extravaganzas that connect people from around the world. (Food being the most enjoyable kind of diplomacy.) That’s what they’re doing here, not just with the Refslund collaboration but with the restaurant (whose resident chef, Susanna Guckasyan, and team were fantastic even before they gained inspiration and know-how from the foreigners), and with a spotlight trained on Armenian food and culture in general.

They rightly believe Armenia deserves some of the attention that its neighbor Georgia gets as a destination for food and wine. Culinary tourism has a way of attracting high-value, low-impact travelers, who redirect their wealth into local economies.

But as Rogov said, Armenia makes an impact on anyone who visits. (It was country number 100 for me, and it still managed to leave me struggling to find comparisons.) There is, as she also said, a certain heaviness to it, thanks to sheer weight of its millennia of history.

Sharing laughs and wine at Trinity Canyon[+]DAVID EGUI

Some of that history is quite awful (and the reason that are more than twice as many Armenians in the diaspora than in the country itself). I won’t dwell on it. Because aside from talking about it with our hosts and guides, I didn’t think about it. I especially didn’t feel it, particularly in Yerevan, with its European-ish vibe and lively nightlife.

First there’s the kindness and generosity. I felt that at Yerevan’s sprawling GUM Food Market, where vendors were impossibly generous with free samples of dried fruits, candied almonds, pickled cucumbers and (entire heads of) garlic, and salty underground-fermented cheese. (I mean, we already had our hands full of snacks.)

And I felt it at the boutique Van Ardi Estate winery, where owner Varuzhan Mouradian pouring refills of whichever wine we liked best as the sun set over the ancient winemaking region of Aragatsotn. And at every single meal, where the hospitality is so abundant that food ends up being placed (on stands) on top of other food, and everything is shared by a big group of people gathered around the table. As Armenian minister of economy Vahan Kerobyan said, “Love to guests is in our genes.”

The ancient monastery above Sevan Lake DAVID EGUI

Then there’s the smiles and the joy. I felt that at Trinity Canyon Vineyards in the southern highlands (near the world’s oldest wine producing site, which dates back some 6,100 years), where executive director Hovakim Saghatelyan broke into an easy laugh as he clinked his glass with his visitors and later played for us a song he wrote “when I fell in love the 56th time.” And I felt it at Lavash restaurant in Yerevan, where an exuberant server coaxed me out of my chair to dance as he presented roasted pumpkins stuffed with rice, dried fruit and sometimes lamb (delicious) to the table.

And then there’s the intellectualism. I felt that in so many of my conversations. Chess is a national sport. Gregory the Illuminator is known for establishing Christianity in Armenia, in the year 301, making it the first Christian country in the world. But “illumination” in its more modern meaning continues to be a value. Displayed in the museum complex of the Matenadaran are old printed books, precious bindings, manuscripts, colorful book illustrations and miniatures from the organization’s collection of 23,000 manuscripts. It says a lot about the Armenians that during the genocide perpetrated against them by the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century, they chose to protect their beautiful books.

Now, the new generation is trying to position education, the illumination of knowledge and technology as exports. (The app Pixel was an Armenian unicorn.) The United World College in the northern town of Dilijan attracts students from all over the globe—and sends them home with some uniquely Armenian enlightenment.

Ani Harutyunyan at Armenian Food Lab DAVID EGUI

Dilijan is also home to a new endeavor that combines knowledge and understanding with food. The Armenian Food Lab is a project of art historian Ani Harutyunyan. In it she explores the ingredients, traditional culinary techniques and nutrition culture in Armenia. She also welcomes guests with plenty of consumable (and visual) aids, on another table laden with fresh and foraged products, from bitter herbs to black walnuts.

Like any cuisine, Armenian food is varied, but a few patterns emerged. There are lots of fresh herbs and pomegranate seeds, rather than spices. Lamb, eggplant, yogurt and various fresh and salty cheeses are recurrent. There are always copious amounts of lavash, the flash-baked flatbread that’s such an integral part of Armenian culture that it’s on UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage list. There’s often aveluk, an indigenous wild sorrel, which is delicious. Sometimes there’s lake trout.

Refreshingly, there are no tourist restaurants (too few tourists). Nor is there Starbucks or McDonald’s. Rather, there are places like Imtoon, also in Dilijan, a stylish mountain restaurant and guesthouse, and like Vostan, a heritage restaurant with honest cooking and traditional wooden interiors, in Yerevan.

An Armenian baker making lavash DAVID EGUI

There is also the strangest cooking technique I’ve seen anywhere in the world. It appeared on my itinerary as “satellite trout.” The fish is placed in a glass baking dish with apricots and fresh walnuts, and then the whole thing is suspended above an enormous mirrored structure that looks like a satellite dish. The mirrors reflect the sun’s rays into the baking dish, where their heat evenly cooks the fish.

It sounds like a gimmick, but it’s the opposite. Engineers donated their time to design the structures, which were set in the garden at Machanents House, a tourism and art social enterprise in the holy capital of Ejmiatsin. It’s an experiment in sustainable cooking, as it doesn’t require electricity, any other fuel or cooking oil. There are hopes of making it scalable, building more and set them up in remote mountain villages. The idea left me a bit in awe.

That wasn’t the only time. I felt awe at the history of the Orthodox (called Apostolic) churches that have stood for centuries upon centuries, from the 9th-century monastery complex of Sevanavank in the north to the 13th-century Noravank (“new church”) in the south. The most moving of all is Etchmiadzin, outside Yerevan, built in 303AD and often considered the Vatican of the Armenian Apostolic Church. (The world’s most famous Armenian, Kim Kardashian West, apparently felt that same awe.)

There was plenty of awe at the natural landscapes too. Some 80% of the country is mountainous. There is beauty everywhere, especially the high-altitude Lake Sevan and the rugged and wild terrain of the south (including stretches of the actual Silk Road). Indiana Jones and James Bond comparisons flew as we rode over a long, bumpy road to the mountains of the Syunik Province, high up with hostile land on both sides.

Satellite trout DAVID EGUI

There, the Wings of Tatev, the longest double-track cable car in the world, takes visitors on a stunning, five-kilometer ride over mountainous terrain to the Tatev Monestery, whose restoration is in progress. It’s another project to develop the right kind of tourism and create new jobs in the area.

Because Brask Thomsen organized the trip, the cable car was stopped midway across, some 1,000 feet above a deep gorge, sparkling wine was popped, and sweet snacks were prepared by an Armenian celebrity chef. (It’s a big car.) And after the return, a few of boarded an Airbus H130 flown by Armenian Helicopters for a dazzling ride back to Yerevan as the sun was setting. Along with 100 countries, I’ve also been in more than my share of helicopters, and that one was something else.

Granted, those experiences aren’t available to everyone. Nor were the dinners with Refslund, which are over now anyway. But they show the level of investment that some dreamers are making in Armenia—and that the country is ready for the attention.


Ann Abel
I’ve been an award-winning travel writer and editor for 19 years – including several as a senior editor at ForbesLife

In the Armenian pantry

Oct 28 2021

Various dehydrated fruits sold at Gum Market, the covered market in Yerevan, one of the mandatory destinations in Armenia (all photos from David Egui)


For its magic landscapes and monasteries, Armenia is a fairy tale country worth putting at the top of your wish list right away, we were saying. But its food and wines are worth discovering and tasting too.

As often the case with many countries that were under the thumb of the Soviets, the new generations have the desire of giving value to ingredients, recipes and preparations pre and post-USSR (1936-1991) since the culinary basin of Armenia (if you exclude sea fish which is almost absent) is the _expression_ of a microclimate very similar to the Mediterranean one.

The Valley of Ararat is a gigantic basin of vegetables (especially in the spring) and fruits (summer): apricots, even dehydrated, are a sort of national emblem almost as much as the sacred lavash (see photo below). Tomatoes and cucumbers, marvellous in season, are available almost everywhere throughout the year (from greenhouses). In the autumn apples, quince, and persimmon but also cabbage, potatoes, walnuts and other nuts are very popular. Among herbs, parsley, coriander, dill and basil are the most common; as for pomegranates, you can find their grains almost everywhere.

Among the local specialties, there’s the ubiquitous trout from Lake Sevan, prepared in all sorts of ways, as well as crayfish (from freshwater as Armenia has no access to the sea). Other popular dishes include dried beef basturmadolma (fermented cabbage leaves), baklavalahmajo (a sort of Armenian pizza), chickufta (a sort of steak tartare) and harisa (a delicious type of porridge). The diet is rich in pork, duck, lamb and lots of cheese (usually not mature). The soviet influence is clear in dishes like salat vinaigrette as well as in the common use of the classic trio of potatoes, sour cream and vodka.

Like Georgia, Armenia claims its role as the world cradle of wine. Which one of the two countries first began is a futile argument. For sure, in the Areni cave, there are proofs of rites of cannibalism, with tastings of blood and wine, dating from over 6 thousand years ago. A custom that can be found in ancient paintings, in which heaven is often depicted as a vineyard. In the few wineries we visited, the European wine making style (small and large barrels) prevails on amphoras (which are much more popular in Georgia).

Below, you can find fragments and protagonists of an intense 3-day trip. The Armenian pantry would deserve a much deeper exploration.


Armenian News note: go to the link below for more photos.

https://www.identitagolose.com/sito/en/98/29328/zanattamente-buono/in-the-armenian-pantry.html






COVID spikes in Armenia even as vaccine mandate goes into effect

EurasiaNet.org
Oct 29 2021
Ani Mejlumyan Oct 29, 2021
More Armenians are getting vaccinated against COVID, but the numbers remain the lowest in the region and the country is going through its worst wave of the disease yet.

According to the most recent government data, at most 7 percent of Armenians are fully vaccinated against COVID. That compares to 22 percent in Georgia, and 42 percent in Azerbaijan. And Armenia’s real numbers are in fact likely lower than that, as a significant portion of those who have gotten vaccinated in the country are visitors.

But Armenia’s pace is picking up: The number of those who have gotten their first shot is double that of the fully vaccinated, apparently in reaction to a new government mandate that requires employers to demand from their employees either a proof of vaccination or regular negative PCR tests.

Nevertheless, the number of registered new infections has reached more than 2,000 per day and the deaths due to COVID have been breaking domestic records, with highs of as many as 57 deaths in a day recorded in the last week. More than 6,000 Armenians have now died of COVID, in a population of under three million.

There have been nearly no COVID-related movement restrictions in the country since the beginning of the pandemic, and the government has signaled that it does not intend to implement strict ones even now. “There are countries that are returning to lockdown. […] Armenia won’t have a lockdown,” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at an October 28 cabinet meeting. “Instead, we have to toughen the restrictions, maybe even making wearing masks outdoors mandatory.”

The employee vaccine mandate is the most significant step that the government has taken toward stemming the spread of the disease, and October 14 was the first day that employers were supposed to start enforcing the new rules. A visit by Eurasianet to Polyclinic 22 in Yerevan on that day found a mob scene, with doctors trying in vain to enforce social distancing rules on the large numbers of people who showed up to get vaccinated.

Many Armenians prefer to get vaccinated at polyclinics rather than the mobile clinics the Ministry of Health has set up around Yerevan and other cities. In Yerevan, those clinics are particularly crowded with foreigners, especially Iranians, who come for the relative ease of getting the jab in Armenia.

The vaccine in highest demand in Armenia is now the Chinese-produced Sinopharm, partly because it has a shorter wait time between doses (28 days) than the other vaccines on offer. There also is a widespread belief that Sinopharm’s side effects are weaker than those of the other vaccines.

Sputnik V and AstraZeneca also have been available in Armenia since May, and Armenia also has recently gotten supplies of Moderna. The latter was developed at a firm led by diaspora Armenian Noubar Afeyan, which has given it somewhat of a popularity boost among Armenians. But reports that the vaccine also is linked to heart problems among young adults has dampened enthusiasm.

At Polyclinic 22, supplies of Sinopharm ran out quickly and doctors told people hoping for that vaccine to return on November 1, when they expected to receive more supplies.

One 60-something man, Samvel (who didn’t give his last name), had been waiting outside the door of the clinic for three hours when a clinic worker came out to tell him: “Mr. Samvel, please go home, we only have 25 doses of Sinopharm and more than 50 people in line ahead of you.” But he was undeterred: “If I come on November 1, can you guarantee that I won’t have to wait for hours? I don’t think so.” He ended up waiting anyway and so many ahead of him in line got discouraged that he got his shot in the end.

On October 18, the Health Ministry announced it was importing a further 200,000 doses of Sinopharm, and four days later it said it was receiving a donation of 620,000 doses of Moderna.

In spite of the vaccine shortages, the government announced on October 26 that it was lifting restrictions on foreigners getting the vaccines; previously visitors had to prove that they had been in the country for at least 10 days to get inoculated.

Under the new employment regulations, the government can make random checks on places of employment to make sure that employees have either proof of at least one dose of a vaccination or a recent negative PCR test. The fine for individuals who violate the rules ranges from about $40-$80, for companies it is $250.

It’s not clear how many employees have yet to be vaccinated. The Ministry of Health has recorded about 200,000 people fully vaccinated in the country and 400,000 with one dose, but it doesn’t distinguish between Armenian citizens and foreigners in those numbers. The country has more than 600,000 legally employed people, according to government statistics, and the Armenian Statistical Service and the World Bank have estimated the number of unregistered workers in the country at between 300,000 and 700,000. It’s unclear to what extent these workers will be subject to the mandate.

As in many other countries where various forms of vaccine mandates have been introduced, some in Armenia are taking shortcuts. On October 13, the National Security Service announced that it had identified more than 700 people with fake vaccination certificates in the second city of Gyumri. Ten doctors have been charged in the case.

As of October 28, there were 3,100 people in Armenia hospitalized with COVID, of those 97 percent had not been vaccinated, Minister of Health Anahit Avanesyan said at the cabinet meeting. About 90 percent of the hospitalized had contracted the especially aggressive Delta variant of the disease. Of the 3,100, half are in critical condition, and of those 99 percent had been unvaccinated. Two hundred more infected are waiting to be hospitalized because there aren’t enough beds, she added.

Some hospitals have reported ventilators for COVID patients breaking down from overuse, and patients who need them having to do without. At the Vedi Hospital in the Ararat region, of 85 COVID patients only one of them – who had been vaccinated – didn’t require oxygen, deputy hospital director Samvel Khachataryan told RFE/RL.

Universities had opened for in-person classes this school year but on October 27 they moved back to online-only. Schools have extended the already-scheduled fall break for another week in response to the growing outbreak.

Meanwhile, there are regular scandals of senior officials and other elites openly flouting social distancing and other COVID regulations. President Armen Sarkissian hosted participants of a conference, the Armenian Summit of Minds, indoors at his residence; photos of the event showed none of the dozens of people wearing a mask, including Avanesyan, who regularly advocates for even vaccinated Armenians to wear masks. Current regulations require everyone to wear a mask in indoor places.

Anti-vaccine sentiment also remains widespread; Pashinyan tried to mitigate it by sharing his own family’s experience.

“There are questions regarding the effectiveness of the vaccines; I want to bring a personal example,” he told the October 28 cabinet meeting. “Six people in my family are vaccinated, except for the two underaged kids. Recently my 14-year-old daughter caught the virus. […] But nobody else in my family got it despite finding out late and having been in intensive contact with her.” Still, he added: “We could also get the virus. The protection is not 100 percent.”

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.