Lavrov, Bayramov discuss Armenia-Azerbaijan normalization process

Panorama
Armenia –

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Wednesday held a phone call with his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov, the Russian Foreign Ministry reported.

The ministers noted the progressive development of bilateral cooperation as part of the declaration on allied cooperation between Russia and Azerbaijan signed on 22 February.

“There was a detailed exchange of views on a number of regional and international issues, including the process of normalizing relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

"The sides highlighted the need to continue relevant work in strict compliance with the provisions of the trilateral agreements of 9 November 2020, 11 January and 26 November 2021," the statement reads.

Armenian school students win four medals at International Chemistry Olympiad

Panorama
Armenia –

The Armenian schoolchildren’s team has won four medals, including one silver and three bronze, at the 54th International Chemistry Olympiad held in China on July 10-18.

A total of 326 contestants from 84 countries around the world gathered online for the event, the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports reported.

Leonid Asatryan, an 11th grader from Quantum College, earned a silver medal, while 12th-grade students Hayk Aghekyan (Heratsi High School), Sona Sagheyan (Quantum College) and Tigran Harutyunyan (Norashen Secondary School, Aragatsotn Province) won bronze medals.

The Armenian team was led by Andranik Davinyan (Yerevan State Medical University) and Armen Galstyan (Yerevan State University).

Armenian school students had won three bronze medals at the 53rd International Chemistry Olympiad held online.


Current authorities must be removed immediately, opposition leader reiterates

Panorama
Armenia –

ARF Armenia Chairman Ishkhan Saghatelyan, an MP from the opposition Hayastan alliance, met with a group of ARF intellectuals, scientists and famous public figures on Wednesday.

“The meeting focused on challenges facing Armenia and Artsakh. The attendees expressed their concerns and made suggestions,” Saghatelyan wrote on Facebook.

“Also, we talked about the further steps and plans of the resistance movement. All opinions and observations of the attendees were marked by the common line, “We must oust the current authorities immediately and embark on rebuilding the homeland,” the opposition leader said.

Turkish press: Türkiye says it did not carry out any attack against civilians in Iraq

Anadolu Agency stafft   |21.07.2022


ANKARA

Türkiye did not carry out any attack against civilians in northern Iraq's Duhok province, the country's foreign minister said on Thursday.

"According to information we received from the Turkish Armed Forces, we did not carry out any attack on civilians," Mevlut Cavusoglu said in a live interview with national broadcaster TRT Haber.

Cavusoglu's remarks came a day after an attack in Duhok’s Zakho district killed eight people.

In a statement released after Wednesday's attack, the Turkish Foreign Ministry called on Iraqi government officials not to make statements on the Duhok attack "under the influence of rhetoric and propaganda" of the PKK terrorist organization.

Turkish security sources also denied reports "in support of the terrorist organization PKK," which claimed the civilians lost their lives due to shelling by Turkish forces.

Cavusoglu pledged that Türkiye would “cooperate with the Iraqi authorities after the treacherous attack that we believe was carried out by terrorist groups.”

He added that Türkiye rejects both official and unofficial statements seeking to link it to the attack.

The PKK's propaganda in Iraq comes at a time when Türkiye is set to launch a new operation against the terror group’s offshoot the YPG/PKK in northern Syria, across the Turkish border, said Cavusoglu, urging Iraqi authorities must not fall into the trap of terrorist groups.

The PKK is listed as a terrorist organization by Türkiye, the European Union, and the US, and is responsible for the deaths of 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants. The YPG is the terrorist PKK’s Syrian branch.

Türkiye, said Cavusoglu, will continue its fight against terrorism in line with international law, only targeting terrorist groups.

"The whole world knows that Türkiye has never carried out an attack on civilians. We continue our fight against terrorism in accordance with international law," he added.

Denying allegations that protesters entered the Turkish Embassy in Baghdad after the attack, Cavusoglu said: "Entering our embassy is out of the question. Iraqi authorities have taken the necessary security measures everywhere. We thank them too. In front of some of our visa offices, a group of rabble-rousers burned our flag. Apart from that, there was a demonstration in front of our old embassy, and then they dispersed."

Finland, Sweden’s NATO bids

Cavusoglu said officials from Türkiye, Finland, and Sweden will meet in August to evaluate the progress made in fulfilling Ankara's counter-terrorism demands from the Nordic countries paving the way for NATO membership.

He said the meeting in August would be the first of a monitoring committee formed under a deal signed last month. He added that Türkiye would block their membership bids if Stockholm and Helsinki fail to keep their promises.

Sweden and Finland formally applied to join the transatlantic alliance in June, a decision spurred by Russia's war on Ukraine.

But Türkiye, a NATO member for 70 years, voiced objections to the membership bids, criticizing the countries for tolerating and even supporting terror groups.

A trilateral agreement signed among the countries in June stipulates that Finland and Sweden will not provide support to the YPG/PYD, the PKK's Syrian offshoot, nor to the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO), the group behind the 2016 defeated coup in Türkiye, and said Ankara extends full support to Finland and Sweden against threats to their national security.

‘Our hands won’t be tied’ on F-16s

On US legislation designed to restrict the circumstances of F-16 sales to Türkiye, Cavusoglu said: "Of course, we made an attempt to buy the F-16s from the US, but we cannot agree to a method that will tie our hands."

The US House of Representatives last week approved legislation that would create a new hurdle for US President Joe Biden’s plan to sell F-16 fighter jets to Türkiye.

The amendment prohibits the sale or transfer of F-16s and modernization kits to Ankara unless the president certifies the transfer is in the US' national interests, and guarantees to Congress that in the 120 days prior to the transfer, the Turkish government has not "violated the sovereignty of Greece, including through territorial overflights."

Congress must approve the sales for them to go forward.

"What do you mean by Greek airspace?" Cavusoglu asked, saying that there are Aegean islands which Greece unfairly claims as its own.

He called on the US to follow a balanced policy between Türkiye and Greece.

Ukrainian grain exports

Cavusoglu said the talks between Türkiye, Russia, Ukraine and the UN on facilitating Ukrainian grain exports are "going well so far."

"We’re making sincere efforts to reach an agreement, both on the cease-fire (in the Ukraine war) and the removal of obstacles to grain exports," he said, adding he is hopeful about reaching a deal.

Last week, Türkiye hosted officials from Russia, Ukraine and the UN in Istanbul to facilitate Ukrainian grain exports. Ankara said a general agreement was reached, and it hopes to put this into written one this week.

Normalization process with Armenia

On the ongoing normalization process with neighboring Armenia, Cavusoglu said Türkiye expects concrete steps.

"We want to see in practice how sincere Armenia is. So far there are messages, there are explanations. There's also pressure, it's true. The (Armenian) diaspora from the outside, fanatic groups from inside. But when we come to concrete steps, we haven't seen those concrete steps from Armenia yet," he said.

He added that Türkiye wants to see steps from the Armenian administration under Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

"The steps to be taken in the region are in everyone’s interests," he added.

Ankara and Yerevan last December appointed special representatives for talks on normalizing the ties, with the first meeting held in Moscow on Jan. 14. The parties have held four meetings so far.

As part of normalization efforts, this February Türkiye and Armenia resumed commercial flights after a two-year hiatus.

Turkish press: Azerbaijan gives Anadolu Agency award for coverage during Karabakh War

Ruslan Rehimov   |21.07.2022


BAKU, Azerbaijan

Anadolu Agency received an award Thursday by Azerbaijan for its coverage of the Karabakh War.

Azerbaijan gave the Ekinci Award, named after Azerbaijan's first Turkish newspaper, for Türkiye's leading news agency’s reports on the war and the reconstruction and revival process of the regions liberated from Armenian occupation.

The Azerbaijan National Press Day Award Ceremony was held in the country's capital of Baku with attendance by politicians, artists and the media.

Relations between the two former Soviet countries have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

New clashes erupted in September 2020 and the 44-day conflict saw Azerbaijan liberate several cities and more than 300 settlements and villages that were occupied by Armenia for almost 30 years.

A tripartite agreement was brokered by Russia to bring an end to the war in November 2020.

*Writing by Gozde Bayar

Turkish press: Turkey does not need permission for counterterrorism ops in Syria: FM

A man carries a Turkish national flag as Turkey-backed Syrian fighters gather along the frontlines opposite YPG forces near the town of Dadat north of Manbij in Syria's northern Aleppo province, on July 5, 2022. (AFP)

Turkey does not need anyone's permission to conduct military operations against terrorist groups in Syria, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said Thursday.

"We exchanged ideas, but we never asked and we never ask permission for our military operations," Çavuşoğlu said two days after a summit in Tehran at which both Russia and Iran urged against Turkey's proposed new military operation in northern Syria.

He emphasized that Turkey has disagreements with Iran and Russia on the issue of Syria, and that the two countries' support for the Syrian regime is unacceptable to Turkey.

"It is clear that these two countries are against our operations today as they were in the past. Of course, the statements of these countries are obvious, what we say is important, what our president says is important. We have not received permission from anyone in the past," he said.

"We paused our operation against the YPG/PKK in the east of the Euphrates, both within the framework of America's commitments, Russia's commitments and the agreements we reached. Both of these countries have made a commitment to clear the YPG/PKK terrorists from this region. Since this has not happened so far, these terrorists have started to increase the attacks against our own lands from there, as well as continuing the attacks against the Syrians, the opposition, our soldiers, and our police. What would the U.S. do in such a situation now? What would Russia do?"

"In such a case, the threat will continue as long as these terrorists are here. We can't keep our hands tied, after all, we have not received permission from anyone in the operations we have carried out so far," he added.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said Wednesday that Turkey's plan for a new military operation in northern Syria will be on the table as long as the PKK terrorist group's Syrian branch YPG continues to pose a security threat to his country.

Erdoğan also called on the United States to pull troops from east of the Euphrates River, accusing the NATO ally, once again, of training and helping the YPG terrorists.

Erdoğan made the comments late Tuesday on his return from a visit to Tehran, where he met with Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The conflict in Syria was among the topics they discussed, and Erdoğan sought support for a new Turkish operation against the U.S.-backed YPG terrorists.

In May, Erdoğan announced plans for a new military operation in Syria to drive away the YPG that Ankara says is an extension of the banned PKK. The plans include resuming Turkish efforts to create a 30-kilometer (20-mile) safe zone along the border with Syria and enabling the voluntary return of Syrian refugees from Turkey.

Turkey has launched three major cross-border operations into Syria since 2016 and already controls some territories in the north.

“A new operation will continue to be on our agenda as long as our national security concerns are not resolved,” Erdoğan said. “We want Russia and Iran to be on our side in our fight against terrorist organizations.”

He continued: “America is feeding terrorist organizations there. As soon as America withdraws or doesn't feed these terrorist organizations, our task will become easier."

Turkey has long been infuriated by U.S. support for the YPG terrorists, who form the backbone of U.S.-led forces in the fight against the Daesh terrorist group.

During the meeting in Tehran, Erdoğan said Turkey was determined to “drive out the centers of evil” that target Turkey’s security, adding that the regions of Tal Rifaat and Manbij – where Turkey has said it plans to send troops – had turned into a “terror bed.”

The three presidents released a joint statement that appeared to refer to Turkey's concerns. The statement said they “rejected all attempts to create new realities on the ground under the pretext of combating terrorism, including illegitimate self-rule initiatives."

But Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, at a meeting with Erdoğan earlier, warned Turkey against an operation.

“Any sort of military attack in northern Syria will definitely harm Turkey, Syria and the entire region, and will benefit terrorists,” Iran’s top leader said, stressing the need to “bring the issue to an end through talks.”

Iran and Russia have backed Bashar Assad’s regime, while Turkey has supported armed opposition factions.

Çavuşoğlu also said officials from Turkey, Finland, and Sweden will meet in August to evaluate the progress made in fulfilling Ankara's counter-terrorism demands from the Nordic countries paving the way for NATO membership.

He said the meeting in August would be the first of a monitoring committee formed under a deal signed last month. He added that Turkey would block their membership bids if Stockholm and Helsinki fail to keep their promises.

Sweden and Finland formally applied to join the transatlantic alliance in June, a decision spurred by Russia's war on Ukraine.

But Turkey, a NATO member for 70 years, voiced objections to the membership bids, criticizing the countries for tolerating and even supporting terror groups.

A trilateral agreement signed among the countries in June stipulates that Finland and Sweden will not provide support to the YPG nor to the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ), the group behind the 2016 defeated coup in Turkey, and said Ankara extends full support to Finland and Sweden against threats to their national security.

On the ongoing normalization process with neighboring Armenia, Çavuşoğlu said Turkey expects concrete steps.

"We want to see in practice how sincere Armenia is. So far there are messages, and there are explanations. There's also pressure, it's true. The (Armenian) diaspora from the outside, fanatic groups from the inside. But when we come to concrete steps, we haven't seen those concrete steps from Armenia yet," he said.

He added that Turkey wants to see steps from the Armenian administration under Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.

"The steps to be taken in the region are in everyone's interests," he added.

Ankara and Yerevan last December appointed special representatives for talks on normalizing the ties, with the first meeting held in Moscow on Jan. 14. The parties have held four meetings so far.

As part of normalization efforts, this February Turkey and Armenia resumed commercial flights after a two-year hiatus.

Turkish press: Armenian orphanage to be rebuilt in October

An Armenian orphanage, publicly known as “Kamp Armen,” in Istanbul’s Tuzla district, which was demolished on April 8 to prepare for the construction of a new building, have been chosen to be rebuilt in October.

A dormitory where 100 young people could stay, cultural center, foyer, library, auditorium and multi-purpose halls will be built on the land belonging to the Gedikpaşa Armenian Protestant Church and School Foundation.

Zaven Khanjian, the head of the Armenian Missionary Association of America, his wife Sona Khanjian and students from the Gedikpaşa Armenian Protestant Church and School Foundation visited the area.

“This land has always been a source of fertility to us. I want it to be a beautiful place which will serve the youth and integrate them into society after educating them in a cultural and social sense,” said Zaven Khanjian.

The project has been prepared as a social facility suitable for the information age, said Gedikpaşa Church Pastor Krikor Ağabaloğlu, adding that the reconstruction of Kamp Armen brought Armenian communities together.

The orphanage was built in 1962 by the Gedikpaşa Armenian Protestant Church, as a former building on the site could not host the increasing number of Armenian students arriving from various parts of Anatolia.

During the summer of 1962 and afterwards, Armenian orphans, between the ages of eight and 12, worked on the construction of the buildings at the camp.

Known as the orphanage where Hrank Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist who was murdered in 2007, and his wife, Rakel Dink, met, studied and grew up, the orphanage was expropriated by authorities in 1987 on the basis of a 1936 bill preventing minority foundations from acquiring property.

“We have turned that flat barren land into a place that is getting greener and more colorful. We went to live a camp life, we built camps and returned to our boarding school that summer,” Dink had written in a column in 1996, describing the days when they built the camp in the 1960s.

As the legal process and the lawsuits took years, in 2007 Dink was gunned down in broad daylight in front of his office in Istanbul before seeing the court verdict regarding the orphanage.

Although the Turkish government signed a decree in 2011 to return property taken away from minority foundations in the past, the orphanage was left out of its scope.

The building changed hands several times before being bought by Fatih Ulusoy, who had decided to demolish it to make room for new buildings in 2015.

The controversial plan was later shelved as Ulusoy donated it to the Gedikpaşa Armenian Protestant Church and School Foundation after a group of activists protested the demolition in front of construction vehicles, drawing public attention to the orphanage.

The protesters, who had held a vigil for 19 days, said on May 27, 2015, that they will resume camping in the area until the day the license for the buildings is given to the foundation.

Armenpress: Pakistan boat accident death toll reaches 28 – DAWN

Pakistan boat accident death toll reaches 28 – DAWN

Save

Share

 09:45,

YEREVAN, JULY 21, ARMENPRESS. Pakistani rescue divers recovered two more bodies from two points in the River Indus — between Rahim Yar Khan and Guddu barrage — on Wednesday, bringing the total death toll from the boat accident to at least 28, DAWN newspaper reports.

A wooden boat carrying a marriage party from the Hussain Bux Solangi village capsized near Machhko due to overloading two days earlier. 

Search operations for around two dozen missing persons are still ongoing.

New app digitizing work of tour guides and making life easier for tourists being developed in Armenia

Save

Share

 10:01,

YEREVAN, JULY 21, ARMENPRESS. In line with developing tourism sector and IT industry, Armenia is also creating a new app that will enable to digitize the work of tour guides and will allow tourists to easily find the place they want to visit.

In an interview to Armenpress, Memopin startup co-founder Karen Vardazaryan said that domestic tourism, as well as IT industry, are actively developing in Armenia, and the new app involving both could further increase the development opportunities.

He said that the idea arose when he and his friend noticed during a travel that they spend a lot of time for understanding where to go and how. They have started generating and implementing different ideas, and as a result the idea of the startup was born.

“I dreamed of visiting London, the home of rock, mostly for the Pink Floyd rock band. I wanted to go to Amsterdam and Milan for football. The most painful thing is that a person visits there and starts using Google map, in other words, he/she sees standard, non-personal offers. Thus, we started thinking of having a map where you can save any place you want, see how you get to your destination from the nearest hotel, even have an opportunity to save all the places you plan to visit before arriving at the place you want”, he said.

Memopin startup has broad opportunities, with three main functions:

  • a platform where “storytellers”, tour guides can practically help independent tourism via blog posts, audio or video options
  • it allows hotels, guest houses and restaurants to appear on the platform
  • the app could be useful for tourists who are looking for activities, a hotel, a guest house, a restaurant, a museum, etc, in a specific place

Karen Vardazaryan attaches importance to the digitization of the tour guides’ knowledge, experience and useful advice. If a tour guide can serve 10 tourists daily, with digitization of knowledge, he/she could provide them or sell it to 100s of tourists. The platform allows to be branded, get a separate page and a logo.

The co-founder of Memopin said they are working with different bloggers who use their services, and they are automatically advertised at the YouTube channel or other platforms of that particular blogger.

“If a blogger does not have our platform, he /she will use the Google map and will earn some money from that restaurants. But if a blogger uses our app, it’s highly likely that the followers will be more interested in that restaurants, and the blogger will earn much more money. We will ensure the connection between business and a “storyteller”. We must be paid 7-10$ for this service”, he said.

At Memopin, different hotels, restaurants, guest houses and cafes can create their marketing strategy. The platform enables to present yourself and the nearby entertainment places. This service costs 10-15$ per month.

“Very often people visit a hotel, try to understand what interesting museums or restaurants there are in the territory. And they mostly get the answers from the receptionists of the hotel. But in the 21st century people must not have this problem. And with our app we are trying to give the answers of all the questions that a tourist may have. The map doesn’t require money for this service”, Karen Vardazaryan said.

Currently, they were working on the 6 versions of Memopin, it will soon be available for Android and iOS. Memopin is the main sponsor of Extraordinary Travel Festival. It will take place in October. Karen Vardazaryan said that people will have a chance to get acquainted with the opportunities of the app during this event.

He said that the Tourism Committee approved their idea. Vardazaryan added that their product has great opportunities to enter a global market.

 

Interview by Karine Terteryan




Pashinyan invites Belgian PM to visit Armenia

Save

Share

 10:27,

YEREVAN, JULY 21, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory message to Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Belgium Alexander De Croo on the occasion of the Belgian National Day, the Armenian PM’s Office said.

The message reads as follows,

“Your Excellency,

I warmly congratulate you and the friendly people of Belgium on the occasion of the National Day of the Kingdom of Belgium.

I attach great importance to the continuous development and strengthening of interstate relations based on traditional friendship between the peoples of Armenia and Belgium.

In March this year, the Republic of Armenia and the Kingdom of Belgium celebrated the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations, which is another occasion to evaluate our commitments based on a common system of values and principles, to further develop our cooperation in the future, to contribute to the establishment of peace and sustainable development in the European family and around the world.

I am sure that through joint efforts, the mutually beneficial cooperation between Armenia and Belgium will continue to develop and expand in bilateral and multilateral formats, including within the framework of the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement.

Taking this opportunity, I cordially invite you to visit Armenia at any time convenient for you.

I wish you good health and all the best, and further prosperity and progress to your country.

Please accept, Your Excellency, the assurance of my highest consideration”.