[Press] From U.S. Embassy – 2022 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report Release

NEWS   RELEASE

20 հուլիսի 2022թ․


Հրապարակվել է «Մարդկանց թրաֆիքինգի մասին» 2022թ․ զեկույցը



2022թ․ հուլիսի 19-ին ԱՄՆ պետքարտուղար Բլինքենը հրապարակեց «Մարդկանց թրաֆիքինգի 
մասին» 2022թ․ զեկույցը։ Արդեն երկրորդ տարին անընդմեջ Հայաստանը տեղ է գրավում 
երկրորդ խմբի երկրների շարքում, ինչը մատնանշում է նախորդ հաշվետու 
ժամանակահատվածների համեմատ թրաֆիքինգի վերացմանն ուղղված կառավարության ջանքերի 
ընդհանուր մեծացումը։ Այս ջանքերը ներառում են ավելի մեծ թվով քրեական 
հետապնդումներ թրաֆիքինգ իրականացնողների նկատմամբ և ավելի շատ զոհերի նույնացում։ 
2014թ․ ի վեր առաջին անգամ դատարանի կողմից աշխատանքային թրաֆիքինգի գործով 
դատապարտում է եղել։ Կառավարությունն ընդունել է դիտազննման ցուցիչներ սոցիալական 
աշխատողների համար և կատարել է փոփոխություններ ընթացակարգերում` միօրինականացնելու 
տվյալների հավաքագրումն ու տեղեկությունների փոխանցումը, և ապահովել է համակողմանի 
վերապատրաստում այդ հարցերով զբաղվող անձնակազմի համար։



Զեկույցը նաև նշում է, որ Հայաստանն ամբողջությամբ չի բավարարում թրաֆիքինգի 
վերացման նվազագույն չափանիշներին, և առաջ է քաշում ապագա բարելավումների մի քանի 
ուղղություններ, մասնավորապես՝ զոհերի նույնացման ու աշխատանքային թրաֆիքինգի 
ասպարեզներում։ Միացյալ Նահանգները հանձնառու է գործակցել Հայաստանի հետ մարդկանց 
թրաֆիքինգի դեմ պայքարում։



Զեկույցը կարող եք ընթերցել այստեղ՝ 

 

###
                                                                                 
               July 20, 2022

2022 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report Release



On July 19, 2022, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken released the 2022 
Trafficking in Persons Report.  For the second year in a row, Armenia is on Tier 
2, in recognition of its overall increasing efforts towards the elimination of 
trafficking as compared with the previous reporting period.  These efforts 
included prosecuting more traffickers and identifying more victims.  Courts 
convicted a labor trafficker for the first time since 2014.  The government 
adopted screening indicators for use by social workers, amended procedures to 
standardize data collection and information sharing, and provided comprehensive 
training to relevant staff.



The report also notes that Armenia does not fully meet the minimum standards for 
the elimination of trafficking and suggests areas for future improvement, 
particularly in victim identification and labor trafficking.  The United States 
is committed to partnering with Armenia to advance its anti-trafficking efforts.



Read the report here: 

 

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Nagorno Karabakh: no support for Yerevan from the Council of Europe

Italy – July 18 2022
by Vladimir Rozanskij

First the Armenians must break their close ties with Russia. Europe condemns both Armenia and Azerbaijan for the 2020 conflict. Apart from historical cultural relations, Yerevan appears far from the prospects of any form of European integration.

Moscow (AsiaNews) – The participation of the Armenian delegation in the summer session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) opens up various interpretations of the possible development of relations between Yerevan and the Old Continent. According to the Armenian newspaper Graparak, the main purpose of the presence was to find support for the release of the many Armenian prisoners, who remained in the hands of the Azeris after the 44-day war in 2020 in Nagorno Karabakh, which Armenians call Artsakh.

According to representatives of the majority Armenian party 'Civil Contract', the Apce parliamentarians examined the text proposed by Yerevan, warning that there will be no support or agreement until Armenia decides which side it is on, with Russia or Europe. Indeed, it is not clear on what basis the Armenians are asking for support against the Azeris, without conceding anything in return, bearing in mind that Azerbaijan will certainly not be willing to meet its opponents' demands for free.

The question also concerns the ways in which Europe could effectively influence to distance Yerevan from Moscow, also taking into account the favour this hypothesis arouses in a large part of the Armenian population and also its political class. The main problem is Armenia's economic dependence on Russia, its main trading partner and historical protector from the enemies of the surrounding Islamic countries. The country's borders are guarded by Russian soldiers, who have stationed their own military base in the city of Gyumri, the 102nd ever to guard Armenia.

Armenian political scientist Rovšan Ibragimov, a professor at the Khankuk International University in Korea, commented in Azatutyun that 'this information is rather contradictory, and rather reflects Armenia's internal political competition, rather than the possibilities for agreement in the international arena. Moreover, the Aceh and the European Union are not the same thing, and the parliamentary assembly does not play a decisive role in these matters'.

Indeed, the documents of the Aceh in recent years on Nagorno Karabakh are rather ambiguous, condemning to varying degrees both Yerevan and Baku's actions, and are in any case only in the nature of recommendations. MPs do not vote on behalf of states, but of the parties they belong to, and Armenia is represented by only two MPs, as it is not a very populated country, and they too are from two opposing parties.

Armenia also, beyond its limited participation in European institutions, remains a member of the Eurasian Economic Union (Russian-driven) and Csto, the post-Soviet NATO controlled by Russia.

Yerevan appears far from the prospects of any form of European integration. The Caucasian country's historical and cultural ties with Europe and the Mediterranean, which date back centuries, and the solidarity of Westerners for the memory of the Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the 20th century remain, but today's history imposes quite different priorities.

 

​Fleeing Putin, Russian tech workers find a home in Armenia

July 19 2022
Fleeing Putin, Russian tech workers find a home in Armenia

“If Russia wins, everything in Russia will be bad. If Russia loses, everything will still be bad. I see no sense in returning there.”

By MASHA BORAK
Photography by ANUSH BABAJANYAN
20 JULY 2022 • YEREVAN, ARMENIA

In the weeks and months after Russia invaded Ukraine, Zvartnots International Airport in Armenia’s capital Yerevan was flooded with Russians leaving their country, among them a growing number of tech workers. Fearing flight cancellations, exit bans, and border controls, many booked their tickets at exorbitant prices, wiped their phones, and arrived in the small country nestled in the Southern Caucasus — sometimes carrying just one suitcase.

“The war started on February 23. In a day, I believe that the IT market in Russia collapsed,” said Ramazan Karavaev, a former IT project manager in Moscow, now settled in Yerevan.

IT job listings in large cities like St. Petersburg dropped by almost a third as of May, compared to listings posted in January. At least 1,000 foreign companies have stopped or limited their activities in Russia, among them a large number of tech firms, many of which moved their staff abroad. Some wonder whether more IT specialists may leave with their children once school is over, heading for destinations such as Armenia, Turkey, Dubai, Georgia, and Kazakhstan.

Armenia’s tech industry is currently small-scale, as the country’s educational system struggles to provide enough talent, according to local tech entrepreneurs like Zaven Naghasyan. Since February, Armenia welcomed the growing number of tech talent flowing into the country, when millions of Russians fled their country, driven by opposition to the war, fear of a draft, or the weight of the sanctions, and headed to neighboring countries with friendly immigration policies. In April 2022, the country registered almost 50% more IT workers than in the same period last year.

The Armenian government has set up a working group tasked with helping entrepreneurs and businesses relocate to the country, hoping that the next big Russian innovations will happen in Yerevan, rather than Moscow or St. Petersburg. But for many Russian tech workers who have left their families and homes behind, the future is still uncertain.

Grigory Buzmarev

Grigory Buzmarev had two choices: Armenia or Georgia. He leaned toward the former because his Russian Mir credit card would still be functional there, Armenia’s favorable visa policy, and its cultural closeness to Russia. “I say to people, “Barev dzez” [“hello” in Armenian], and they answer me, “Privet” [“hi” in Russian],” Buzmarev said. “I feel at home.”

The 32-year-old software developer left Moscow at the end of March and began working at Naghashyan Solutions (see CEO Naghashyan’ profile below) just a day after he landed in Yerevan. The company hired him a week prior, while he was still in Russia.

For now, the future for him and his wife seems uncertain: “I have learned not to make plans any longer than six months ahead.”

One thing that is clear, he said, is that Russia’s power in the IT industry is vanishing. Russia is now missing 170,000 IT specialists, according to the government: “A few years from now,” he said, “Russia will be like a village.”

Daniel Zelenkin

Daniel Zelenkin remembers paying 70,000 rubles ($1,217) for a ticket on the last official Aeroflot flight leaving Russia for Armenia on March 7: “I was terrified. I was scared we would not fly. It was stressful.”

The Russian branch of the international IT company, which Zelenkin asked Rest of World not to name for security reasons, where Zelenkin works as a sales specialist began offering temporary relocation to Yerevan shortly after the invasion. The 30-year-old was among those who took the offer with a gut feeling that he would not return home.

Like the rest of the IT industry, international sanctions made it impossible for his company to continue working out of Russia, he said. The ruble, which has since bounced back, dropped to a record low at the beginning of March. Visa and Mastercard stopped working with Russia, and the EU introduced its first SWIFT bans on Russian banks: transactions became increasingly hard.

Zelenkin is now receiving his salary in Armenian Drams. “I was a little happy that my taxes no longer went to Russia,” he said.

Zaven Naghashyan

As a co-founder and CEO of two IT companies, 37-year-old Armenian entrepreneur Zaven Naghasyan has been thinking about how to draw experienced IT talent from abroad for the past two years: “Armenia has a big lack of developers,” he said.

When the war started, the demand for experienced specialists for his two companies, Naghashyan Solutions and Imusic.am, solved itself. Naghashyan has recently hired three IT specialists from Russia, and two more are due to arrive by the end of the summer.

“A friend told me about a Telegram channel where IT vacancies [in Armenia] are announced,” Naghashyan said. “I tried to search there, and very quickly I found three to four people.”

Moving is easy for IT specialists — one needs only a computer and internet, Naghashyan adds. Russians are close to Armenians culturally, and the language is not a significant barrier. English is more necessary for work in this industry, he said.

Ramazan Karavaev

Ramazan Karavaev has always considered himself a highly qualified manager who would never stay unemployed in Russia. The 30-year-old former IT project manager quit his job at a large bank in Moscow in September 2021, to rest and travel.

Karavaev said that before the war he had two to three interviews with new companies per week, but after February 23 and until May, he had only two. “I was interviewed in a bank and was certain I would be employed, but at the last moment, there was a freeze on employment,” he said. “Everywhere, they stopped even interviewing.”

After the invasion into Ukraine, many large IT players left Russia, and smaller firms with foreign customers moved to Yerevan. IT specialists who were freelancers could no longer get paid, while the banking industry has suffered greatly after sanctions. “I think the IT market in Russia will roll back to the 1990s,” Karavaev said.

Now in Yerevan, Karavaev is working as an IT project manager at local firm Imusic.am. “I believe 20 to 30 percent of those who arrived here will stay,” he said. “And I think it will be a positive change for Armenia.”

Elena Nepushkina

As Russian soldiers marched toward Kyiv throughout March, the city of St. Petersburg, where 25-year-old Elena Nepushkina lived then, filled with rumors of martial law and bans on exiting the country. Russia had announced a decree ordering the draft of 134,500 new conscripts at the end of March, and both Nepushkina and her partner felt a wave of panic.

“We did not know what to expect the next day,” she said, as the threat of draft loomed over her partner, Ivan Krapivin. In the meantime, the quality of life in her country decreased.

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“Prices increased, and Russia became an outcast country,” she said. “Stores began to close. A lot of entertainment became unavailable. These details built an unpleasant larger picture, beginning with empty malls and ending with software, which some manufacturers refused to support in Russia.”

The pair moved to Yerevan on May 7. Nepushkina, a manual quality assurance engineer, managed to find a job after a few interviews.

“If the war officially ends, I would like to return. But I do not know when Russia will become a safe and comfortable place,” she said.

Gennady Haritonov

“Because of sanctions, many foreign customers — outsourcing companies among them — refuse to work with Russian companies,” said Gennady Haritonov, a 34-year-old software developer who moved with his family to Armenia in March.

Customers are refusing to work with not only Russian firms but also developers who are physically in Russia, he added. “[It is] not even because they do not feel sympathy but because they worry for their business.”

Haritonov’s company in Russia told him he would not be able to work for them if he left. So he found a job at an international company that was relocating its Russia office to Armenia, called Cyberhull. If he had remained in Russia and faced a mandatory draft, he would have had two choices: going to prison or going to the frontline to fight for something he did not believe in.: “There would be no choice in my case,” he said. “I would just refuse and go to prison.”

Martyn (Vladimir Martynenko)

The first thing 28-year-old Vladimir Martynenko thought about when he heard about the war was that he didn’t have a passport. Soon after, he felt his emotional state fall into disarray. “The quality of my work decreased dramatically,” he said. “I made mistakes much more often”

Based in Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania, he started feeling as though he was in an environment similar to Germany at the beginning of World War II. The threat made creative thinking feel impossible, he said. “I can physically work, but I cannot work intellectually,” Martyn said. “I think it happens to many [people].”

The decision on whether to leave Russia caused tension between him and his partner. They did not know anything about Armenia, but the fear of martial law in Russia was eating away at him. “I thought we needed to move quickly, that we may even need to leave the cat,” he said.

The couple and their cat are currently living in Dilijan, an old town in a national park that reminds Martyn of Kaliningrad. He lost his former job as a web technologies teacher but is now working remotely as a full-time contractor for Vilantis, a Lithuanian software company.

Ivan Kurilla

Twenty-six-year-old Ivan Kurilla was not happy working for his company in Russia, so he resigned and was planning to rest for a few months, when the war hit. As Telegram groups filled with people offering advice and support, it seemed as though everyone was suddenly leaving the country. Kurilla felt it was now or never.

He arrived in Armenia at the beginning of March with one suitcase and a phone number for his father’s friend. “Here, I found what I could not find in Russia,” he said.

Armenia is full of outsourcing companies with foreign clients. The local job he found gave him a chance to work with the international market — something he previously thought only moving to Europe could do. Kurilla is working as a C++ programmer at a local company called Energize Global Services.

“Most Russians moving to Armenia thought this would be a transition point for further travels,” Kurilla said. “I thought so, too, but changed my opinion.”

Ivan Krapivin

Twenty-five-year-old Ivan Krapivin said that before the war  he could find work as a junior quality assurance engineer easily in Russia, despite his limited experience. These days, it’s harder for beginners to find work in the country, he said. Some companies went bankrupt. Others, like Krapivin’s firm, cut jobs.

By the time he decided to leave St. Petersburg with his partner at the beginning of May, vacancies in the IT industry had decreased drastically in the Russian market. Nowadays, he is unemployed, looking for work in Yerevan.

Although Armenia’s welcome pleasantly surprised him, Krapivin said he would like to return to his apartment and neighborhood in St. Petersburg. The current political situation, however, makes it seem impossible.

“It was hard to ride the metro and know that 80% of people there supported Russia’s rhetoric of no peace,” he said.

Vasily Kovalev

Before boarding his plane from Nizhny Novgorod to Yerevan, Vasily Kovalev and his partner Alina Demeneva erased everything from their phones. The two 24-year-olds feared border police would check their electronics and stop them from leaving.

Leaving has been in Kovalev’s mind for a long time, ever since Russia annexed Crimea in 2014. Aside from allowing him to be close to his family, his life in Russia had few benefits, even before the war, he said. But when the 2022 invasion of Ukraine began, Kovalev felt that the country was increasingly militarizing and edging toward instability.

“People were detained for words against the war, for speaking for peace. I wanted to be away from all that for some time,” said Kovalev, who is working as a senior software developer.

Kovalev has been working with international clients for a company in Russia called SWTec and plans to continue doing the same in Armenia as a freelance contractor. “If Russia wins, everything in Russia will be bad,” Kovalev said. “If Russia loses, everything will still be bad. I see no sense in returning there.”

Alina Demeneva

Alina Demeneva lost her job as a junior quality assurance engineer in an IT company because of her decision to move to Armenia with her partner, who left because of his anti-war convictions. “I would not stay there [in Russia] alone,” she said. “I support his decision. We have had a similar take on politics through the years.”

Now Demeneva is looking for another opportunity but said that Armenia has scarce opportunities for junior positions in her field. Many senior-level engineers left Russia at the same time as Demeneva.

“It was obvious that people were leaving [for long] because many were with their pets,” Demeneva said. “The airplane was packed.”

Masha Borak is a journalist covering the intersection of technology with politics, business, and society.
Anush Babajanyan is a photographer based in Yerevan, Armenia, and a member of the VII Photo Agency.

 

Media: Azerbaijani military stop and turn back convoy of Russian peacekeepers

NEWS.am
Armenia – July 20 2022

The Azerbaijani military stopped and turned back a column of Russian peacekeepers, Minval reported, citing its own sources.

"The day before, at 17:15, a column of Russian peacekeepers consisting of 1 BTR 82A and 3 Ural vehicles was stopped for inspection at an Azerbaijani army checkpoint, which was going through Aghdam on the Askeran-Agdere route. And during the inspection of the vehicles, at least five Kalashnikov AKMs were found in the cargo compartment of one of the vehicles between the sleeping pads. In response to a gross violation of the rules – carrying weapons and ammunition without documents – the convoy was stopped and sent back," an Azerbaijani media report said.

Erdogan: Aliyev reported positive direction of processes between Armenia and Azerbaijan

NEWS.am
Armenia – July 20 2022

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan commented on the Zangezur corridor project supported by Azerbaijan and Russia's position on the issue, Anadolu news agency reported.

"Mr. Putin, if I am not mistaken, spoke to President Ilham Aliyev the other day. In his conversation with me, the Russian leader said he had brought greetings from Aliyev, whom he had previously told about an early meeting with me," he said.

According to the Turkish president, he himself recently had a conversation with the Azerbaijani president.

"Ilham Aliyev reported the positive direction of the processes. Earlier, as you know, a trilateral meeting of the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia and the EU was held. This meeting, according to Aliyev, also took place in a positive way. According to the information I have, everything is progressing as planned. The new airport will be opened soon in that area," Erdogan said.

Azerbaijani press: Armenian armed forces trying to create combat positions in Azerbaijan’s Khojaly – Why Russian peacekeepers ignoring it?

Politics Materials 20 July 2022 16:24


BAKU, Azerbaijan, July 20. The Armenian armed forces have begun work on creating combat positions in the direction of Azerbaijan’s Shushakand village, Khojaly district, Trend reports.

On July 19, the Armenian armed forces began to carry out engineering and construction work. In response to this illegal activity, units of the Azerbaijani army opened warning fire. The command of the contingent of Russian peacekeepers was also informed about this.

A group of peacekeepers who arrived on the scene sometime later, instead of stopping this illegal activity of the Armenian armed forces, ensured their safety and, moreover, created conditions for the continuation of work.

The question arises: where is the command of the Russian peacekeepers looking?

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijani soldiers detain, send back convoy of Russian peacekeepers in Aghdam

Politics Materials 20 July 2022 18:43


BAKU, Azerbaijan, July 20. A convoy of Russian peacekeepers [which are temporarily stationed in Azerbaijan’s Karabakh region following the trilateral statement of November 10, 2020 signed between Azerbaijani, Armenian and Russian leaders to end the second Karabakh war], passing through Azerbaijan’s Aghdam along the Asgaran-Aghdara route, which tried to smuggle at least five Kalashnikov guns, was detained by Azerbaijani soldiers, Trend reports.

The convoy consisting of one armored personnel carrier 82A and three Ural trucks was stopped and sent back.

Ammunition was found in the cargo compartment of one of the vehicles at 17:15 (GMT+4) on July 19 at the checkpoint of the Azerbaijani army.

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijan’s FM, Russian FM address transport, transit issues in S.Caucasus

Politics Materials 20 July 2022 21:00


BAKU, Azerbaijan, July 20. Phone talks between Minister of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan Jeyhun Bayramov and his Russian colleague Sergey Lavrov took place on July 20, the Azerbaijani ministry told Trend.

The ministers discussed relevant issues on the bilateral agenda and the current regional situation. They emphasized the importance of implementing the trilateral statements adopted by the Azerbaijani, Russian, and Armenian leaders.

Furthermore, the sides exchanged views on transport and transit issues in the South Caucasus, particularly noted the essence of expanding the North-South transport corridor's potential passing through Russia, Azerbaijan, and Iran.

The sides also discussed other issues of mutual interest.

Azerbaijani press: European Parliament’s rhetoric doesn’t correspond to EU’s strategic direction – opinion

Politics Materials 20 July 2022 21:00


BAKU, Azerbaijan, July 20. President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev has reasonably criticized the anti-Azerbaijani approach of some members of the European Parliament, while receiving a delegation led by the chair of the European Parliament’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, political analyst Jeyhun Ahmadli told Trend.

The rhetoric of the European Parliament does not correspond to the EU's strategic direction.

He outlined the high-level relations between Azerbaijan and the EU.

"The EU stands as a strategic partner of Azerbaijan both in economic and political issues. Both sides are making considerable efforts to further deepen bilateral ties. However, the European Parliament, which is one of the EU institutions, does not support the mentioned progressive process, but is trying to sabotage it. Some MEPs influenced by the Armenian lobby are trying to achieve the EU-wide recognition of slanderous and biased anti-Azerbaijani resolutions.The relevant process has been going on for years," Ahmadli said.

Among these resolutions was a biased document referring to the alleged destruction of Armenian cultural heritage by Azerbaijan after the second Karabakh war.

"President Ilham Aliyev stressed that since the war ended, there have been numerous visits by representatives of different embassies, politicians, parliament speakers of some European countries, and journalists to Azerbaijan's liberated territories. All of them witnessed the complete destruction of Azerbaijan's cultural heritage. Not the sole foreigner did see the destruction of any Armenian cultural heritage," he noted.

According to him, the critical statements made by President Ilham Aliyev on the European Parliament's pro-Armenian activities reflect the opinion of the entire Azerbaijani people.

"Because this institution actually tries to hide the occupation policy of Armenia. In many cases, the European Parliament is more aggressive towards Azerbaijan than the Armenian parliament," Ahmadli stated.

As he noted, the relevant rhetoric is extremely harmful and incompatible with the strategic line defined by the EU. Azerbaijan wants to deepen its relations with Europe, and MEPs acting under the influence of the Armenian lobby should know that it is impossible to isolate Europe from Azerbaijan and Azerbaijan from Europe.