IBA opens registration for the next Extraordinary Congress to be held in Yerevan

IBA opens registration for the next Extraordinary Congress to be held in Yerevan

Save

Share

 19:28,

YEREVAN, JULY 29, ARMENPRESS. The International Boxing Association (IBA) opened online registration for participants of its next Extraordinary Congress which will take place on 25 September 2022. As was previously announced on 15 July, the IBA Board of Directors decided that the Congress will be held in Yerevan, Armenia, ARMENPRESS was informed from IBA’s official website.

The main agenda of this Extraordinary Congress is for the National Federations to decide on the necessity of the new Presidential elections. 

IBA President Umar Kremlev said: “I encourage all National Federations to register for the upcoming Congress because in our fight for good governance, IBA strives for absolute transparency when it comes to important decisions such as a Presidential election.”

Foreign guests of FemInno are interested in the Armenian IT ecosystem. They got acquainted with the activities of Tumo

Save

Share

 20:23,

YEREVAN, JULY 29, ARMENPRESS. The guests of FemInno international innovative women's conference to be held in Armenia for the first time, got acquainted with the activities of Tumo creative technologies center.

In a conversation with ARMENPRESS, the founder of the conference, Seda Papoyan, mentioned that the invited speakers, in addition to being happy to participate in the conference, are also fascinated by the IT sector of Armenia, and discovered that the IT community is active in the country.

"Within the framework of FemInno, we have technology and innovation-linked guests from Canada, Germany, Italy, Poland, Nigeria, Switzerland. Grasping the opportunity, we try to introduce them to the IT ecosystem of Armenia. We also managed to visit the PMI research center. I am glad that as a result of cooperation with Tumo, we have the opportunity to organize this visit and show where many of our talents in the field are born," said the founder of the conference.

Papoyan emphasized that after getting to know the Tumo Center for Creative Technologies, the conference speakers will understand how big "unicorn" companies are created in small Armenia. According to her, the Tumo Center is the best example to show that Armenian youth have the opportunity to enter the digital world from a young age.

The founder of the conference stated that they aim to present the technological companies operating in Armenia and their impact on the entire ecosystem to the guests.

Jumoke Dada, the founder and executive director of the Taeillo company founded in Nigeria, said that it was interesting for her to know that it is possible to create a "unicorn" company in Armenia. She is also interested in the activities of Tumo Center. In her opinion, the sector is developing in an interesting way in such a small country.

On July 30-31, the FemInno innovative international women's conference will be held for the first time in Armenia, during which the results of the competition of startups created by both Armenian and foreign women and girls will be summarized.




Armenpress: Armenian, Egyptian foreign ministries refer to establishment of peace in the region during the political consultation

Armenian, Egyptian foreign ministries refer to establishment of peace in the region during the political consultation

Save

Share

 21:25,

YEREVAN, JULY 29, ARMENPRESS. Political consultations between the Ministries of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia and the Arab Republic of Egypt were held in Yerevan on July 29. The Armenian delegation was headed by Deputy Foreign Minister Mnatsakan Safaryan, the Egyptian side was headed by Ihab Nasr, Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Arab Republic of Egypt for European Affairs.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, the parties noted the high level of relations and political dialogue between Armenia and Egypt, based on the historical, cultural and civilizational ties and friendship of the Armenian and Egyptian peoples.

During the consultations, reference was made to the current situation in Armenian-Egyptian bilateral relations in a number of areas and the necessary steps for their further expansion and strengthening. The parties emphasized their willingness to work together towards the further development and deepening of relations between Armenia and Egypt, exchanged thoughts on a number of issues of regional and international agenda of mutual interest.

The sides referred to Armenia's steps aimed at establishing peace and stability in the region. In the context of the humanitarian problems caused by the 44-day war unleashed by Azerbaijan, the Armenian side emphasized the need for the repatriation of Armenian prisoners of war, hostages and other detained persons, as well as the need to preserve the Armenian cultural heritage in the territories that have passed under Azerbaijani control.

Following the consultations, Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan received the Egyptian delegation. Minister Mirzoyan attached importance to the political consultations between Armenia and Egypt, as well as contacts and mutual visits at different levels, which contribute to the expansion and deepening of multi-sector bilateral cooperation.

Asbarez: Over 60 French Officials Urge EU to ‘Abandon’ Gas Deal with Azerbaijan

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen (left) signed an MoU with President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan


More than 60 French officials are urging the European Union to abandon a recently signed agreement to import gas from Azerbaijan, which they say would make Europe dependent on Azerbaijan for decades to come.

The appeal was presented in the form of a letter published in the prominent French daily newspaper, Le Monde, through the efforts of the Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations of France (CCAF).

Earlier this month the European commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, hailed Azerbaijan as a “crucial” and “reliable” energy supplier, as she announced an agreement with Baku to expand the southern gas corridor, the 3,500km pipeline taking Caspian Sea gas to Europe.

Standing alongside Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev, Von der Leyen said the EU was diversifying away from Russia and turning “towards more reliable, trustworthy partners”, adding she was glad to count Azerbaijan among them.

The signatories urge the European Commission to abandon the project of gas import from Azerbaijan and call on EU heads of state and governments, as well as the European Parliament not to ratify the agreement, which, they say, “would have the effect of replacing dependence on Russian gas with dependence on Azerbaijani gas.”

“The 44-Day War of fall 2020 illustrated Azerbaijan’s appalling intentions,” the French officials wrote, reminding that during the war Turkey recruited jihadists to help the Azerbaijani army in the war, and noting the use of phosphorus bombs prohibited because of the human and ecological disasters they can cause.

The French officials also emphasized the torture of prisoners of war held in Azerbaijani jails in disregard for international conventions.

They also warned that by choosing Azerbaijan as a gas supplier, European commission president Ursula von der Leyen is actually weakening the European Union and urge her to abandon the project.

Last week, prominent human rights groups, among them Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, have criticized an EU deal to ramp up gas supplies from Azerbaijan, as Europe scrambles to secure non-Russian sources of energy, The Guardian reported.

Human Rights Watch said the EU should not have signed the memorandum, nor enter a mooted new bilateral agreement, without insisting on political reforms: the release of scores of political prisoners and changes to laws that heavily restrict non-governmental organizations and the media.

Azerbaijan uses oil and gas “to silence the EU on fundamental rights issues,” said Philippe Dam, acting EU director at Human Rights Watch. “The reality is that Azerbaijan authorities have been famous for cracking down on civil society activists investigating corruption, especially when it comes to oil and gas.”

“The EU should not say a country is reliable when it is restricting the activities of civil society groups and crushing political dissent,” Dam said.

Other campaigners accused the EU of undermining its climate goals, while enriching autocrats. “It is extraordinary that the EU seems intent on not learning from its current predicament, and is pushing to build more pipelines which would lock us into gas in the long term,” said Barnaby Pace, a senior gas campaigner at Global Witness. “A rapid boost for renewable energy and home insulation should be the obvious answer to the crises Europe is staring at – and certainly not repeating the mistakes that have taken us to this point.”

Eve Geddie, director of Amnesty International’s Brussels office, said “repressive and unaccountable regimes are rarely reliable partners” and added that “privileging short-term objectives at the expense of human rights is a recipe for disaster.”

Yerevan Wants to ‘Actively’ Separate Karabakh Issue from Armenia-Azerbaijan Relations

The Armenia-Azerbaijan border


A notion introduced by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan who suggested to separate the Karabakh conflict settlement issue from the effort to normalize relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, was revived on Friday when Armenia’s National Security chief Armen Grigoryan proposing that such an approach must be “actively discussed.”

“We have repeatedly said that the Karabakh issue is not a territorial issue for us. In that sense, the security and rights of Karabakh Armenians are fundamental for us,” Grigoryan told Armenpress in an interview published Friday. “In one of his speeches in the National Assembly, Prime Minister Pashinyan mentioned that there is an idea to separate the Nagorno-Karabakh issue from Armenia-Azerbaijan relations. We must now actively discuss that option and decide how to proceed.”

Grigoryan invoked the government’s stated “peace agenda” policy as a strategy, and claimed that an opportunity to normalize relations with Azerbaijan exists.

“That possibility becomes even more grounded when we consider that the Armenian government—the political majority—is taking responsibility for the implementation of the peace agenda, realizing that it is not an easy way. I think the commitment of the Armenian government and the political majority to the peace agenda is an important factor for the assessments coming from different international platforms,” Grigoryan told Armenpress.

Grigoryan’s interview is another sign of the government’s ongoing effort to distance itself from Artsakh, constantly invoking the November 9, 2020 agreement, which ended the military aggression but saw Armenian territorial concession to Azerbaijan. Earlier this month, the government announced that by September the Armenian Armed Forces would completely pull out from Artsakh.

The National Security chief was opaque when asked about the fate of Artsakh and its Armenian residents, saying that there was a possibility that a peace agreement would be signed with Azerbaijan, without a final status determination for Karabakh.

As for security guarantees for Artsakh Armenians, Grigoryan claimed that there were “international guarantees” in place to ensure the security of Artsakh residents, which he said “is the presence of the peacekeeping troops of the Russian Federation. We need to work on the further improvement of that guarantee, but the demilitarization of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem is an important idea.”

Grigoryan said that the government is following a roadmap to advance normalization of Armenia-Azerbaijan relations. That so-called roadmap includes the processes of delimitation of borders, as well as the opening of transit routes being ironed out by two separate commissions. He announced that the delimitation commission will hold another meeting in mid-August in Moscow.

However, he did acknowledge that Azerbaijan has accused Armenia of delaying the opening of the transit links, but added that Armenia has expressed its willingness to open regional communications.

When asked about whether the so-called peace treaty would include Armenia recognizing Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, Grigoryan said that in 1991 Armenia already passed legislation to that end.

“We have said many times that Armenia and Azerbaijan have recognized each other’s territorial integrity and inviolability of borders by the agreement on the formation of the CIS signed in 1991 and later ratified. And this is part of the legislation of both Armenia and Azerbaijan today. It should be expressed at the bilateral level as well. And as we said, there is nothing unacceptable for us in such a perspective, and Armenia, yes, has no territorial claims from Azerbaijan,” said Grigoryan.

He also touched on the humanitarian toll of the 2020 war saying that resolving those issues “is a necessary component of peace. Including issues of preservation of cultural heritage.”

“All those questions, of course, need to be addressed. By the way, in the last two years, Armenia has transferred 130 bodies of Azerbaijanis missing since the first Karabakh war to Azerbaijan. We are ready to cooperate actively on this issue as well and we expect the same from Azerbaijan. The Armenian side has more than 770 missing persons since the first Karabakh war. The number of our missing persons in the 44-day war is 203,” announced Grigoryan.

As for the normalization process between Turkey and Armenia, Grigoryan reflected on the agreements reached on July 1 between the special envoys, who decided that the land border between the two countries would open to third country citizens and air cargo transportation will also commence.

“It is clear that we will remain committed to those agreements, especially given that Russia, the United States, France, Iran, Georgia, and the EU support the process of normalization of Armenia-Turkey relations,” said Grigoryan.

Asbarez: Construction of Road Bypassing Lachin to Begin Next Month

The fate of the Aghavno village in Berdzor (Lachin) is threatened


The construction of a road connecting Armenia with Artsakh, but bypassing the current road in Berdzor (Lachin) will begin in August, Armenia’s Territorial Administration Ministry announced on Friday.

The road known as M2 will go through Kornidzor, a village adjacent to Berdzor.

The new road is a stipulation of the November 9, 2020 agreement that ended the military actions in Artsakh and saw the hand over of Armenian lands to Azerbaijan, among them Berdzor, which for decades has been corridor that has connected Armenia with Artsakh.

The November 9 agreement stipulates that “…within the next three years, a plan will be outlined for the construction of a new route via the Lachin Corridor, to provide a connection between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, and the Russian peacemaking forces shall be subsequently relocated to protect the route.”

To this end, Azerbaijan, employing Turkish construction companies, announced that its road to Lachin in its final phase of completion.

The rerouting of the road to bypass Berdzor poses threats to two Armenian-populated villages in the area—Aghavno and Sus—that are viewed as the last Armenian bastions in the area.

Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan, sounded a conciliatory note when addressing lawmakers in parliament in late June, saying that the likelihood of Armenians living in Berdzor was “very small.” https://asbarez.com/artsakh-president-says-likelihood-of-armenians-living-in-berdzor-lachin-is-very-small/

He said that Stepanakert has given its consent to an alternative route connecting Armenia to Artsakh, adding that the Artsakh authorities will continue to fight for the Aghavno village. He said there have been several options, but the Artsakh authorities have chosen an option, by which Berdzor will be bypassed.

“We have things to do in connection with Aghavno. Negotiations in that regard are continuing. We have not told anyone to ‘get out of Berdzor,’” Harutyunyan said in June.

Harutyunyan claimed last month that the Azerbaijani road being constructed has received the approval of his government.

AW: ANCA mobilizing grassroots pro-Armenian activism across the US

ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian offered local advocates detailed analyses of the ANCA’s legislative strategy.

WASHINGTON, DC – The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) – in a series of online and in-person briefings – is rallying Armenian American communities across the United States in support of a series of legislative initiatives to defend Artsakh, strengthen Armenia and hold Turkey and Azerbaijan accountable.

In the weeks leading up to US House passage of four ANCA-backed amendments to the Fiscal Year 2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), the ANCA Board coordinated two national online, interactive briefings, bringing local chapter grassroots advocates from both the eastern and western ANCA regions up to speed on the challenges and opportunities facing Armenia and Artsakh in our nation’s capital. The calls engaged the full array of ANCA stakeholders in a nationwide campaign, aligned with the organization’s mission of advocating for a safe and secure Armenian homeland and Artsakh. The calls contributed meaningfully to the passage of three amendments targeting Azerbaijan’s aggression and a fourth, creating roadblocks to Turkey’s acquisition of new US F-16 fighter jets. During these sessions, ANCA executive director Aram Hamparian and Government Affairs director Tereza Yerimyan offered detailed analyses of the ANCA’s legislative strategy, and Gev Iskajyan, of the ANCof Artsakh, provided first-hand reports from Stepanakert on the crisis facing Artsakh and the urgent necessity for global advocacy for security, self-determination, and freedom.

“Our array of ongoing local, regional, and national work sessions – in person, online and virtual – inform our chapters, educate our activists, and inspire our grassroots to advance our shared ANCA policy priorities,” said ANCA National Board member Dzovinar Hamakordzian. “Our coordinated national strategy contributes to the survival of Artsakh, the security of Armenia, and accountability for Turkey and Azerbaijan – three urgent short-term objectives that align with our enduring commitment to the long-term viability of the Armenian nation.”

Chief Strategies resident Areen Ibranossian discussed the Armenian American community’s impact in the June 2022 California primaries and opportunities in the November general elections.

Following the two successful national online briefings in June, on July 16 Hamparian joined ANCA National Board members Aida Dimejian and Zanku Armenian for an in-person strategic briefing in Burbank, California bringing together over a dozen local western US chapters and leading advocates, with other chapters from outside southern California participating online. He was joined by nationally respected veteran political consultant Areen Ibranossian, president of Chief Strategies, who offered a detailed overview of how the Armenian American community and voters made an impact in the June 2022 California primary elections and where the opportunities are for the November general elections. Ibranossian also made a case for including as much youth in the political process as possible, citing his own career history where his early experiences with the ANC made a long-lasting impact on his career in politics.

Glendale Mayor Ardy Kassakhian urged ANCA local advocates to continue to carry the torch for the Armenians of Artsakh and Armenia.

The program closed with inspiring remarks by Glendale mayor Ardy Kassakhian, a longtime community leader and advocate. Kassakhian stressed how the ANCA has always been at the forefront of defending justice and the rights of the Armenian nation both in the US and around the world and that in this difficult moment in Armenian history the ANCA is needed more than ever, urging the western region local chapters and activists not to be discouraged and carry the torch for the Armenians of Artsakh and Armenia.“The existential challenges facing Artsakh’s survival and Armenia’s security require a redoubling of the grassroots mobilization driving our urgent foreign policy priorities.  We must meet the threats to our homeland with unprecedented activism – at every level, in every district, across every state,” stated Dimejian.
ANCA National Board Member Aida Dimejian told local advocates, “The existential challenges facing Artsakh’s survival and Armenia’s security require a redoubling of the grassroots mobilization driving our urgent foreign policy priorities.”
“As a national grassroots movement, we have, for more than a century now, drawn energy and inspiration from deep ties and robust engagement with communities across America – diverse in so many ways, but united in our collective resolve, our enduring resilience, for the sacred cause of our nation,” said Armenian.

“These most recent briefings, including the in-person briefing to the national ANCA’s US western region local chapters, were organized around our national legislative strategy and are great examples of the strong, sustained, and effective leadership the ANCA is providing across the American political and policy-making landscape. The large turnout for our in-person briefing in Burbank demonstrates that our ANC local leaders throughout our western region are fully engaged and stand ready to lead our community’s grassroots mobilization,” added Armenian.

A scene from one of two ANCA national ZOOM sessions with local advocates, discussing a series of legislative initiatives to defend Artsakh, strengthen Armenia, and hold Turkey and Azerbaijan accountable.
The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is the largest and most influential Armenian-American grassroots organization. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters and supporters throughout the United States and affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCA actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/29/2022

                                        Friday, 


Armenian Opposition To Continue Boycotting Parliament


Armenia - Opposition leader Ishkhan Saghatelian addresses a rally in Yerevan, 
.


Armenia’s two main opposition forces indicated on Friday that they will continue 
to boycott sessions of the National Assembly despite government threats to strip 
them of their parliament seats.

One of their leaders, Ishkhan Saghatelian, dismissed the threats as “blackmail” 
when he addressed supporters demonstrating in Yerevan against Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian.

“Once again I must repeat what I’ve been saying for the last three months: if 
the opposition returns to the parliament it will do so only go with its own 
agenda formed by the people in this square,” said Saghatelian. “That agenda is 
clear: Nikol’s departure and our efforts to counter threats to Armenia and 
Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) and address vital issues facing them.”

“The clique controlling the National Assembly cannot draw us into its treasonous 
conspiracies with threats to strip us of our [parliament mandates,]” he told the 
crowd.

The 35 members of the 107-seat parliament representing the opposition Hayastan 
and Pativ Unem alliances began the boycott in April in advance of their daily 
demonstrations demanding Pashinian’s resignation. They failed to force him to 
step down before deciding in mid-June to scale back the protests sparked by 
Pashinian’s apparent readiness to make major concessions to Azerbaijan.

Saghatelian admitted that many opposition supporters are now “disheartened” by 
the failure to achieve regime change. But he said the opposition movement has 
succeeded in at least delaying a “new capitulation agreement” with Baku.

“We need to regroup, mobilize our forces, wage a prolonged struggle and chase 
victory … There is still no alternative to our fight in the streets,” declared 
the opposition leader.

Saghatelian also said that the opposition is unlikely to hold further rallies in 
August and plans instead to spend the next month reinforcing its regional 
chapters and organizing a “pan-Armenian” conference in Yerevan.



Armenian Central Bank Accused Of Forcing Out Oppositionist’s Brother

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia -- A statue symbolizing the national currency, the dram, outside the 
Central Bank building in Yerevan.


An opposition figure prosecuted on what he sees as politically motivated charges 
said on Friday that his brother holding a senior position in Armenia’s Central 
Bank was forced out because of his political activities.

Ara Chalabian has headed the bank’s Department of Corporate Services and 
Development for the last two years. He announced on Thursday that he is “no 
longer working at the Central Bank” but gave no reasons for his exit.

Armenian news websites claimed earlier this month that the bank chairman, Martin 
Galstian, has told Chalabian to resign, citing an order from Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian. An article subsequently posted on Hetq.am cited the brothers’ 
father as saying in a recent private conversation that Galstian told Chalabian 
that he himself will have to resign if the latter refuses to quit.

Chalabian’s indicted brother Avetik, who leads a small opposition party, 
effectively added his voice to these allegations when he spoke to journalists 
during his ongoing trial in Yerevan.

“They demanded that he quit,” he said. “When this criminal case passes its peak 
we will talk about that [in greater detail] because that demand was absolutely 
illegal. There are no grounds for forcing my brother out from his job.”

Armenia - Avetik Chalabian stands trial in Yerevan, July 26, 2022.

“While being a senior employee of the Central Bank he always maintained complete 
political neutrality and had nothing to do with my political activities,” added 
Avetik Chalabian.

The Central Bank again did not confirm or deny the alleged government pressure 
exerted on Ara Chalabian. Nor did it explain why he lost his job, saying that it 
cannot comment without his consent.

Pashinian’s office has likewise declined to comment on the allegations that the 
prime minister ordered the Central Bank governor to get rid of the 
oppositionist’s brother.

Avetik Chalabian was arrested on May 13 on charges of trying to pay university 
students to participate in daily anti-government demonstrations in Yerevan. He 
rejects the charges as government retribution for his active participation in 
the protests aimed at forcing Pashinian to resign.

The 49-year-old was released from custody on Wednesday one day after the start 
of his trial.



Armenia Set To Start Work On New Corridor To Karabakh

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia - A road sign at the entrance to the village of Kornidzor, June 7, 2022.


Armenia is due to start building next month the Armenian section of a new 
highway that will replace the existing corridor connecting it with 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

The five-kilometer-wide Lachin corridor became Karabakh’s sole overland link to 
Armenia following the 2020 war with Azerbaijan. Armenian forces pulled out of 
the rest of the wider Lachin district under the terms of the Russian-brokered 
ceasefire that stopped the six-week hostilities.

The truce accord calls for the construction by 2024 of a new Armenia-Karabakh 
highway that will bypass the town of Lachin and two Armenian-populated villages 
located within the current corridor protected by Russian peacekeeping troops.

Azerbaijani and Turkish construction firms have been rapidly building a 
32-kilomer-long highway that will link up to new road sections in Armenia and 
Karabakh.

Armenia’s Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures said on 
Friday that work on the Armenian section will start in August.

In late June, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s cabinet allocated funding for a 
geodetic survey and map design needed for the road’s construction. A group of 
surveyors and other construction specialists were afterwards spotted near 
Kornidzor, an Armenian village close to the Lachin district.

“Surveyors came and took measurements in an area through which [the road] will 
pass,” Lusine Karamian, an official from the village administration, told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“According to our information, the road will pass through fields adjacent to 
Kornidzor, said Karamian.

Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, sought to allay concerns about the 
loss of the current Lachin corridor and its security implications when he 
addressed local legislators in June. He stressed that the route of the bypass 
road built by Azerbaijan was approved by Karabakh’s leadership.

For many residents of Armenian and Karabakh villages located along the planned 
new corridor, those security concerns outweigh its potential economic impact on 
their communities. As one of them put it, “If you can tell me what will happen 
tomorrow, I will tell you whether or not the [new] road will be good for us.”



Former Yerevan Mayor May Face Criminal Charges

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- Yerevan Mayor Hayk Marutian speaks to journalists, February 15, 2019.


An Armenian government agency has asked prosecutors to investigate its 
allegations of serious financial irregularities committed by Yerevan’s municipal 
administration during former Mayor Hayk Marutian’s tenure.

Marutian was ousted by the city council last December after falling out with 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. Just days after his removal, the State Oversight 
Service (SOS), which is headed by a staunch Pashinian loyalist, began auditing 
the municipality’s financial operations.

The SOS claimed late on Thursday to have found evidence of various “violations” 
worth a combined 8.5 billion drams ($20 million). It said the bulk of the 
alleged financial damage to the state resulted from a miscalculation of 
Yerevan’s property and land tax base.

The SOS said nothing about Marutian’s involvement in the alleged irregularities. 
Nor did it clarify whether it believes the ex-mayor or other Yerevan officials 
personally benefited from them.

The government agency sent the findings of its inspection to Armenia’s Office of 
the Prosecutor-General. The law-enforcement agency will now look into them and 
decide whether they warrant a formal criminal investigation.

Marutian did not react to the allegations as of Friday afternoon. There was also 
no reaction from Yerevan’s current mayor, Hrachya Sargsian. The latter served as 
a deputy mayor during Marutian’s tenure.

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) and his My Step bloc's mayoral 
candidate Hayk Marutian attend an election campaign rally in Yerevan, 20 
September 2018.

Marutian, who used to be a close political ally of Pashinian, commented 
scathingly on July 1 after several pro-government websites alleged that the 
mayor’s office embezzled or misused otherwise as much as $40 million on his 
watch. He suggested that the allegations are aimed at discouraging him from 
participating in the next municipal elections.

“Guys -- and also girls -- I have made no decision yet on participating or not 
participating in the next Yerevan elections. You can breathe a sigh of relief 
and calm down,” the ex-mayor wrote on Facebook.

Marutian himself accused Pashinian’s administration of corruption on December 22 
as Yerevan’s Council of Elders deposed him in a vote of no confidence initiated 
by its pro-government majority.

He claimed that during his three-year tenure he routinely received phone calls 
from unnamed “various officials” asking for construction permits, land 
allocations, tax advantages and other privileges for “people close to them.” He 
did not name any of them, saying only that he rejected all such requests.

Marutian, 45, is a former TV comedian who actively participated in the “velvet 
revolution” that brought Pashinian to power in May 2018. Pashinian chose the 
popular entertainer to lead his bloc’s list of candidates in the last municipal 
elections held in September 2018

Relations between the two men deteriorated after the 2020 war over 
Nagorno-Karabakh. Marutian increasingly distanced himself from the prime 
minister’s political team and pointedly declined to support it during snap 
parliamentary elections held in June 2021.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Graduates of the Diplomatic School have become the basis of Armenia’s foreign political service. FM Mirzoyan

Save

Share

 19:33,

YEREVAN, JULY 28, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan gave a speech at the ceremony of handing over diplomas to graduates of the Diplomatic School, noting that the Diplomatic School of Armenia has had about two hundred graduates during its 13 years of operation, most of whom became diplomats and became the basis of our foreign political service today.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, Ararat Mirzoyan said in his speech,

“Dear President of the United Nations General Assembly,

Dear Ambassador Gabrielyan,

Dear graduates,

Mr. Shahid,  before the main part of my speech, I would like to once again welcome your visit to the Republic of Armenia. During the 3 quite heavy days, you had important meetings with my colleagues from the executive and legislative bodies, as well as with representatives of the civil society. And I am very glad that you also accepted my invitation to participate in the ceremony of handing certificates to graduates of the "International Relations and Diplomacy" course of the School of Diplomacy. 

Referring to the main actors of the day- dear graduates,

I warmly congratulate all of you on the occasion of successfully completing the "International Relations and Diplomacy" course of the School of Diplomacy. Indeed, you have achieved another important height in your life. And  whether some of you will soon join the ranks of the diplomats of the Republic of Armenia or will continue their journey in a different direction, contributing to the promotion of various spheres of public life, today everyone has succeeded.

Why? Because the knowledge, experience and community of the like-minded that you have acquired during a year of the School will serve you and will be with you for the rest of your lives. As much as the current world is changing and full of surprises, one thing remains unchanged: a person armed with leading knowledge, skills and abilities is behind the success of any initiative and work. And at the Diplomatic School of Armenia, you have had the opportunity to keep in pace with the achievements of the world's scientific thought and professional skills. From international relations theory to real negotiations, from foreign policy analysis to the ability to navigate difficult  situations -  all of these are solid foundations for succeeding in any field.

Dear attendees, 

During the 13 years of its activity, the Diplomatic School of Armenia had about two hundred graduates, most of whom became diplomats and managed to become the basis of our foreign political service today. Here I would like to express my special gratitude to Mr. Gabrielyan, director of the Diplomatic School, for his contribution to the generational change of diplomats and for promoting the development of human and professional potential in the diplomatic system.

I would like to emphasize that perhaps there is no better time to become a diplomat. The ongoing revolutionary changes in the world, the situation in our region, of course, create great challenges, but at the same time, they also create great opportunities for a diplomat with a flexible mind, innovative approach and an indomitable will to express, bring real changes in his field and create additional value for his people.

Under these conditions, the diplomatic service of the Republic of Armenia has become much more important, much more responsible and requires much greater self-sacrifice. And despite the great demands and small resources, I am sure that we will accept the challenge and carry out our mission, for the benefit of the Armenian people and the advancement of all humanity.

Dear Graduates,

Once again I congratulate you and wish you good luck in your future professional career. I hope to meet many of you here soon in daily work”.

FM Mirzoyan, OSCE MG Co-chair discuss wide range of issues related to NK conflict

Save

Share

 20:04,

YEREVAN, JULY 28, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan received on July 28 the Russian Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, the special representative of the Russian Foreign Minister Igor Khovaev, ARMENPRESS was informed from the MFA Armenia.

During the meeting, a wide range of issues related to the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the Nagorno Karabakh conflict were discussed.

Minister Mirzoyan emphasized the importance of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs’ format and using its experience in accordance with its international mandate.