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Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijan rejects Russia’s unfounded bio-lab accusations

By Vugar Khalilov

Recently, Azerbaijan’s State Security Service rejected accusations by Russian representatives at the United Nations, who blamed Azerbaijan for running biological research centers with alleged financial support from third countries.

The claim, repeated by the Russian Defense Ministry for several years, this time was made by Moscow at the UN and targeted not only Azerbaijan but also Ukraine, Georgia, and Armenia.

In response, Azerbaijan’s State Security Service (SSS) has unequivocally denied the presence of foreign biological laboratories in Azerbaijan.

“Recently, representatives of the Russian Federation have repeatedly expressed opinions, among others at international events, about the activities in Azerbaijan of centers allegedly conducting scientific research on biological weapons with the financial support of third countries,” the service said.

The SSS added that such unsubstantiated statements are causing some concern among the Azerbaijani public.

“In this regard, we note that such scientific centers have never functioned in Azerbaijan and there have been no studies that could harm the health of the population of the country or citizens of neighboring states. It is regrettable that such information, not confirmed by Azerbaijan, is voiced at international events, including the United Nations. Also, based on partnerships, we express our readiness to investigate specific cases, if they are provided by the opposite side,” the service added.

Unfounded, slanderous claims

Moscow has created its propaganda on US biological facilities in Ukraine after the commencement of the Russian-Ukrainian war. According to Russia’s Defense Ministry, there are some 30 US-owned biomedical labs in Ukraine.

Igor Kirillov, chief of the radiation, chemical, and biological defense forces of the Russian military, made a statement on the US military biological program in Ukraine, claiming that the US Department of Defense is carrying out military biological projects throughout the former Soviet Union.

According to unofficial sources, the US-owned laboratories have been active in Ukraine since 2010, in Georgia since 2011, and in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Armenia since 2016. Moscow has long been worried about the activities of Armenia-based bio-laboratories as well.

Surprisingly, when Russian media outlets discuss the issue, they claim that one of these laboratories is located in Azerbaijan.

A few years ago, Igor Kirillov claimed that there were allegedly Pentagon-controlled laboratories in Azerbaijan and that they were even “being rebuilt”.

“There are no laboratories in Azerbaijan under the control of another state. Therefore, there is no question of their reconstruction,” the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry denied the allegations immediately.

On January 22, the Rossiya-24 TV channel aired a program about microbiological laboratories created by the US Defense Department (the Pentagon) in a number of ex-Soviet nations.

The documentary “Andromeda strain” by investigative journalist Arkady Mamontov talks about US biological facilities in former Soviet states. Unfortunately, Mamontov, a well-known Russian investigative journalist, who has produced a number of compelling films, stated that similar laboratories existed in Azerbaijan but failed to offer any evidence.

The film also discusses Armenian laboratories.  According to the journalist, Armenia, which has a population of 3 million people, owns 12 such laboratories. Mamontov clearly expresses dissatisfaction with it in his film and does not even hesitate to use expressions insulting Armenians.

What is the reason behind such claims?

Azerbaijani experts consider these claims as unfounded, saying that Russia’s statements may in reality be to legitimize the war in Ukraine. They describe the allegations against Azerbaijan as not convincing since the country always pursued a balanced foreign policy in the region.

Ruslan Imamguliyev, a military analyst, sees certain dangers in Russia’s accusations against Azerbaijan.

“Indeed, such concerns appear to be a pretext. This can be seen in a variety of ways. Under such pretexts, the US campaign in Iraq began and culminated with Saddam Hussein’s execution. If Russia wants to take similar steps, we need to be careful. I don’t believe such laboratories exist in Azerbaijan, particularly in collaboration with the USA,” Imamguliyev said.

Analyst Qabil Huseynli told Musavat.com that the documentary was “deliberate disinformation” aimed at damaging relations between Baku and Moscow.

“Azerbaijan is not a colony of any superpower; it also does not pursue a policy of becoming a tool in the geopolitical struggle. There is no foreign army base or laboratory in our country, we are not a member of any military alliance. With this policy, Azerbaijan insures itself against open threats from superpowers,” Huseynli said.

According to Huseynli, the Armenian Diaspora in Russia is active in the media.

“But the journalist [Mamontov] made a serious mistake. If he had evidence, he would have published images or proof that confirm it. There is no biological laboratory of any state in Azerbaijan. From time to time, we have been accused of this, but no evidence has ever been indicated,” he added.

The Azerbaijani Minval news and analysis website termed Mamontov’s report as “video slander”.

“Mr. Mamontov does not present any proof of the ‘anti-Russian’ activities of ‘a biological laboratory’ in Azerbaijan. He did not even think it necessary to visit Azerbaijan and see it for himself. Apparently, he did not find those willing to play the role of ‘well-informed sources’,” Minval wrote.

“It does not even occur to him that cooperation with the USA in the sphere of biological research is indeed about fighting epidemics rather than about carrying out some malicious experiments or a ‘biological warfare’,” it added.

The website wondered why Russian TV targeted Azerbaijan, which “refrains from openly anti-Russian steps” and which has stated on many occasions that it would not let its territory to be used against its neighbors.

Minval suggested that the reason could be Baku’s independent foreign and energy policies. The website said that the “hatred microbes” in Mamontov’s report, which could spoil relations between Baku and Moscow, were a bigger threat to Russia than the alleged biological laboratories.

Another website, Caliber.az, also criticized the documentary for the failure to produce evidence proving the existence of “secret American biological laboratories” in Azerbaijan.

“Taking account of the nature of the Russian-Azerbaijani interstate relations (as well as personal warm relations between the leaders of the two countries), Azerbaijan will never allow the establishment of American biological laboratories on its territory, which could be assessed in Russia as an unfriendly move,” Caliber said.

According to MP Elman Nasirov of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party (NAP), the political palette in Russia is not uniform.

“The Russian-Azerbaijani relations are of a strategic partnership, relations between the leaders are at the highest level, and the atmosphere of political dialogue is at a high level. However, this does not mean that all parties in Russia have a similar approach to us. Pro-Armenian forces, the Armenian Diaspora, and the lobby in this country benefit from Russia’s information environment and spread lies against Azerbaijan. The issue you are talking about is the same kind,” Nasirov underlined.

Nasirov believes that it is only a slander against Azerbaijan, and in this way, the Russian authorities are trying to create elements of pressure on our country.

“This is absurd and not based on any proof. In addition, we do not need those biological laboratories,” Nasirov stressed.

According to the MP, it is undeniable that the Pentagon has a biological laboratory in Armenia and its activities are not secret.

 “The Armenian government has not denied this. The presence of the US laboratory was also highlighted in the conflict between Russia and Armenia. At the same time, it was discussed why the largest US embassy in the post-Soviet space is in Yerevan. That is why the Russian authorities have called for the closure of the laboratory in Armenia. The Pashinyan government did not take a firm stand on this issue but played a double game. On the one hand, it claims that the biological laboratory is not directed against Russia; on the other hand, it continues to cooperate with the United States. Therefore, the journalist’s documentary is partially true,” Nasirov said.

Armenia’s bio-laboratories

Mamontov’s documentary talks about laboratories near Gyumri and Lake Goycha and draws attention to the location of dangerous experiments near the residential area in Armenia. The author also drew attention to the low standard of living in Gyumri, where the US laboratory is located, where millions are allocated.

The end of the section on Armenia is also interesting. “These ordinary people seem to believe that Americans are working for them. But it never occurs to them that they are being used as rabbits for experiments,” he says.

To recap, in the fall of 2019, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan agreed to sign a memorandum of cooperation with Russian experts to allay suspicions related to the bio-labs. Although the details were agreed upon, at the last moment Armenia refused the document.

In January 2022, Russia and Armenia signed an agreement on the inspection of these laboratories. The document states that Russian specialists will inspect research centers.

Armenia was one of the first countries to show interest in the multibillion-dollar US Joint Biodiversity Participation Program in 2008. It is clear that the traditional interest of official Yerevan was the desire to attract the next foreign funding to the country.

In 2008, the United States began working with Armenia to locate biological laboratories in that country. This cooperation, which envisages the construction of a total of 12 biological laboratories, was presented to the public by the Armenian government as an important project for the biological security and provision of Armenia.

However, it was hidden that the customer of the project was the US Department of Defense. The program was initially presented as a medical-biological program, and the project envisaged the development of the ability to detect and neutralize viruses in 25 countries in Eurasia and Africa.

After its construction, some of these laboratories in Armenia were able to play a kind of “field” role in the “cultivation” of viruses in the US military-biological laboratory and to export the “cultivated viruses” to the Lugar Military-Biological Center in Georgia.

Both laboratories in Armenia and the Lugar Biological Center in Georgia compile a general database on the nature, distribution, and mutation capabilities of specific dangerous pathogens in the South Caucasus region, as well as in the area stretching from Russia and Iran to Central Asia, which, of course, is used by the US Department of Defense.

Turkish press: US top diplomat, Azeri leader discuss ‘positive momentum’ in south Caucasus

Michael Hernandez   |11.05.2022


WASHINGTON

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Azerbaijani leader Ilham Aliyev discussed on Wednesday advances toward peace in the south Caucasus.

The officials “discussed recent positive momentum and future concrete steps on the path to peace in the South Caucasus, including border delimitation and demarcation, opening transport and communication links, and the release of the remaining Armenian detainees,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a statement.

“Secretary Blinken reiterated the United States stands ready to help by engaging bilaterally and with like-minded partners, including through our role as an OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair, to help the countries find a long-term comprehensive peace,” said Price.

“The Secretary also highlighted the importance of increased respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms and recognized the important role Azerbaijan continues to play in European energy security,” he added.

In January 2021, the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a pact to develop economic ties and infrastructure to benefit the entire region. It also included the establishment of a trilateral working group on Karabakh.

Turkish press: First mass in two decades held in church with no congregation

A religious ceremony was held in a 372-year-old Armenian church, that had no congregation for a long time, a first in two decades, in the southeastern province of Mardin’s Derik district.

The mass in Surp Kevork Armenian Church was officiated by the 85th Turkish Armenian Patriarch Sahak Maşalyan on May 9.

As the church has had no congregation for two decades, Armenian families from Istanbul, the capital Ankara, the western province of İzmir, the southern province of Hatay and the southeastern province of Diyarmakır came to Derik to attend the mass.

“For many reasons, the Armenians had to migrate and the church was abandoned,” said Maşalyan in his vote of thanks to local officials who kept the structure safe.

The church, built in 1650, was delivered to the state treasury in 1915. In 1957, the Armenian congregation in the region bought the church from the state and registered it in the name of a Turkish-Armenian citizen.

After his death, the successors could not take care of the church. Closing after the latest maintenance in 2004, the church was reopened some eight years ago by Zekeriya Sabuncu, a Turkish-Armenian who moved to Derik from Istanbul voluntarily to look after it.

However, the church had never witnessed any congregation or a mass in nearly two decades.

“I am so happy,” Sabuncu said. “There was no ceremony in the last two decades. This mass will be a very good memory for Derik.”

He guessed that the May 9’s mass would not be the last. “Our patriarch said that he will visit the church every year.”

Ekrem Erol, the local head of the Kale neighborhood where the church is located, is also expecting to see more Armenians in the region.

“We, locals of Derik, love them and see no differences. We are happy to host our Armenian guests and hope that they come every year,” Erol noted.



ANN/Armenian News – Calendar of Events – 05/12/2021

Armenian News Calendar of events

(All times local to events)


    What: “Armenian-Turkish Relations in the 21st Century”

    a Zoom lecture in Armenian presented by Dr. Khatchig Mouradian

    Genocide Scholar and Lecturer at Columbia University

    When: Thursday, May 19, 2022 at 7:00pm Pacific time

    Where: Zoom Lecture

    Organized by Crescenta Valley Meher & Satig Der Ohanessian Youth Center

    2633 Honolulu Ave. Montrose, CA 91020

    Misc: The lecture explores the trajectory of Turkish Armenian relations since the early 2000s.

    It offers an overview of diplomatic efforts, civil society projects, and scholarly

    initiatives, examining causes of past failures, and the possibility of a just and

    meaningful engagement.

    We invite the greater community to attend this free zoom presentation.

    Tel: 818-244-9639

    Zoom: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/82842301894?pwd=S0JjR1dPb0NjMmdBMlVzazVzTllOQT09



      Armenian News’s calendar of events is collected and updated mostly from

      announcements posted on this list, and submissions to Armenian [email protected].

      To submit, send to Armenian [email protected], and please note the following

      important points:

      • Armenian News’s administrators have final say on what may be included in Groong’s calendar of events.
      • Posting time is on Thursdays, 06:00 Pacific time.
      • Calendar items are short, functional, and edited to fit a template.
      • There is no guarantee or promise that an item will be published on time.
      • Calendar information is believed to be from reliable sources. However, no responsibility is assumed by Armenian News Administrators for inaccuracies and up-to-date-ness.
      • No commercial events will be accepted. (Dinners, dances, forget it. This is not an ad-space.)

      • The Week in Review Podcasts
      • The Critical Corner
      • The Literary Armenian News
      • Review & Outlook
      • Probing the Photographic Record
      • Armenia House Museums
      • ..and much more

      © Copyright 2022, Armenian News Network / Armenian News, all rights reserved.

      Regards,
      Armenian News Network / Armenian News

      Los Angeles, CA     / USA

      In Armenia, reporters factcheck government officials and war reporting


      Germany – May 12 2022



      DW Akademie supports journalists in Armenia who factcheck the government’s domestic and foreign policies. The conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh and presidential politics have tested their skills.

      In 2020, an Armenian editor, photographer and camera crew with Hetq, an online publication based in Yerevan, headed to the country’s eastern border with Azerbaijan. The name in Armenian means ‘trace’ and that’s what the team was up to: verify if what their government was insisting about the conflict in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh was true.  

      Meanwhile in Yerevan, Hetq’s reporters sifted through the news their colleagues sent back from the front.  

      “We had firsthand information from our colleagues,” recalled Vahe Sarukhanyan, a factchecker with Hetq. But it wasn’t easy to get this information through, as there were two fronts in this so-called information war. Azerbaijan’s media were reporting one storyline, and the Armenian government another. Neither version really reflected what Sarukhanyan’s colleagues were reporting, which was that there were heavy casualties and losses on both sides, like in any war. 

      Nagorno-Karabakh’s border crisis dates to the early 20th century, with the dispute being both ethnic and territorial. In 1988, just before the breakup of the Soviet Union, tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan flared. Both countries claimed sovereignty over the enclave, which is mostly populated with Armenians but is located within Azerbaijan. Occasional ceasefires have followed, but sporadic fighting has continued since 2010, killing thousands. The conflict escalated again in September 2020. 

      “There were a lot of restrictions then because the government declared martial law,” Sarukhanyan explained. “It was a big challenge. But we looked at what was the propaganda versus what our colleagues were telling us, firsthand, was happening on the front.” 

      Today, Hetq is one of ten independent media outlets DW Akademie is working with in Armenia. Because journalistic factchecking is so critical to civil society, particularly in an age of chronic disinformation, DW Akademie started its projects in Armenia with funding from the European Union in October 2021. It has been providing grants and equipment, as well as support with media metrics and audience engagement analysis. 

      False and misleading information has been a problem in Armenia for a while. The COVID-19 pandemic and the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have made it harder for media professionals to dispel disinformation. DW Akademie’s commitment in the country aims at building trust between citizens and the media. 

      “Regional media are the ones who really have to counteract disinformation,” said Satenik Baghdasaryan, DW Akademie’s project manager in Armenia. She noted that the country’s mainstream media remain in the hands of the government and that factchecking those reports is particularly difficult because verification occurs only after the news has already reached so many readers and viewers.  

      “Especially since 2020 and the war and the pandemic,” she said, “hate speech and disinformation have really been reviving, along with a lot of manipulative online content. So, our idea was to join forces, to have a collaborative factchecking effort.” 

      Kristine Barsegyan, a projects manager with Investigative Journalists NGO, which is Hetq’s publisher, has worked in the factchecking arena for 22 years. She acknowledges that factchecking is both time-intensive and costly, but that with disinformation so rampant, all the more necessary. Moreover, the demand has grown. 

      “Our audience is not only in Armenia,” she said. “We have readers in the diaspora, in the United States, Russia and in Azerbaijan. We do often feel that it’s all on our shoulders, but we see this as our mission.” 

      She points to Hetq’s successes, such as a 2020 series of investigations – for which Sarukhanyan contributed – on non-declared property belonging to dozens of high-ranking officials and their foreign business activities. The stories, researched for a few years, lead to several resignations and the return of illegal allocations to the state budget.  

      Another achievement, in 2021, resulted from investigating and factchecking the citizenship records of then-president Armen Sarkissian. Sarkissian, who is a British citizen, had not revealed that he also is a citizen of St. Kitts and Nevis via investments in the country. The lack of disclosure, and the factchecking of it, led to his resignation. 

      “I think public expectations and attitudes toward the media have changed with this kind of work,” said Baghdasaryan. “Whether it is fake news, or official information that is wrong, people have learned that official sources can’t necessarily be trusted. We work to get trusted information out there.” 

      https://www.dw.com/en/in-armenia-reporters-factcheck-government-officials-and-war-reporting/a-61757306 

      In wake of war defeat, Armenia seeks to loosen gun laws

      May 12 2022
      Arshaluis Mgdesyan May 12, 2022


      Armenians train to use rifles during the war with Azerbaijan in 2020. (photo: Winslow Martin)

      Armenia’s ruling party is seeking to significantly loosen the rules for civilians to obtain guns, proposing new legislation that they say will help the country better defend itself in the wake of the 2020 military defeat to Azerbaijan. But opponents of the bill worry that it could lead to an increase in gun-related crime in the country.

      The bill, introduced by members of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s ruling Civil Contract party on April 18, would reduce the requirements for first-time buyers of rifles, eliminate limits on purchases of ammunition, and extend the term of validity for weapons licenses. It also adds some new regulations, forcing new licensees to pass an exam and raising the age for legal gun ownership from 18 to 21. 

      “This is very important in terms of increasing our defense capability as a nation and state, given the threats to our security,” Vigel Gabrielyan, a Civil Contract member of parliament and sponsor of the bill, told Eurasianet. “We need to give people who want it the opportunity to master the skills of handling weapons, especially since the demand for this in Armenian society is only growing after the 2020 war.”

      Armenia’s military defeat in 2020, and the loss of much of the territory in and around Nagorno-Karabakh that it had controlled since the 1990s, has heightened Armenians’ fear for their security. Azerbaijani military positions have been set up closer to Armenian territory than they have been before, there have been several cross-border incursions, and Azerbaijan’s leadership continues to use threatening rhetoric against Armenians. 

      Abet Madoyan, who teaches data science at the American University of Armenia in Yerevan, bought his first gun, a Russian-made Vepr VPO-213 shotgun, after the 2020 war. He now is working to improve his skills, going to a shooting range periodically. “I want to be combat-ready,” he said.

      He supports liberalizing Armenia’s gun law.

      “Given the threat to the security of Armenia, the population must arm itself very quickly and master the skills of civil defense,” he told Eurasianet. “The state isn’t doing enough to improve the defense capability of the country and society as a whole. We tasted the fruits of this policy in the 2020 war, our society was completely unprepared for this.”

      Under current law, an Armenian can only acquire a license for a rifle after he or she has been licensed for five years to own a smoothbore weapon like a shotgun. The new legislation would require new licensees to pass a test (including both written and shooting elements) but then would allow ownership of a rifle immediately, without the five-year wait. The law also would allow citizens to own up to 10 firearms, an increase from the current five.

      Artsrun Hovhannisyan, a former Defense Ministry spokesperson who is now a staff expert at the parliament’s committee on defense and security, said the liberalization of the laws is overdue. 

      “This is a very important bill from the point of view of increasing our combat capability,” he told Eurasianet. “Only the fact that an Armenian citizen from the age of 21 can buy rifled weapons, take part in some kind of tactical exercises, similar to those that are held in the army, would already be a big plus.”

      The legislation has gotten the support of weapons dealers, as well. “We hope that sales will grow after the removal of the five-year barrier to the acquisition of rifled weapons, as demand is now growing,” said Samvel Margaryan, director of Aspar Arms, the largest gun dealer in Armenia. “Many people want to buy a rifle right away without having to own a hunting rifle for five years,” Margaryan told Eurasianet.

      But the law has alarmed some, including peace activists, who worry that it will increase gun-related crime in the country. 

      There is a strong “criminal subculture” in Armenia that could exacerbate problems of gun trafficking if weapons become easier to acquire, said Edgar Khachatryan, head of the NGO Peace Dialogue. “If we haven’t defeated this criminal subculture, then there is a danger in civilian life: easier access to weapons will lead to an increase in crimes,” Khachatryan told Eurasianet.

      But Gabrielyan, the bill’s sponsor, said those worries are unfounded. 

      “If we make weapons available to ordinary citizens, a potential criminal will think twice before attacking someone, since an armed person can effectively defend himself,” he said. 

      While that logic has been refuted in the United States, where studies have shown that higher levels of gun ownership lead to greater gun violence, Gabrielyan said that he expects the results to be different in Armenia. 

      “In fact, we have studied good practices globally, primarily the experience of the Baltic states, and it indicates the opposite: The number of crimes with legally acquired weapons tends to zero. People commit crimes with illegally acquired weapons,” he said. 

      While the new legislation does not have any provisions about reducing illegal weapons trafficking, the drafters are working on it, Gabrielyan said. They have consulted with police and will monitor the situation following the adoption of the bill, and could either amend the law or introduce separate regulations, he said.

      The new law also legalizes the use of a gun if one is attacked at home. Some doubt the ability of Armenia’s justice system to fairly adjudicate those sorts of cases, however. 

      “Where and when can weapons be used, in which cases will it be considered self-defense, and in which not?” asked human rights advocate Nina Karapetyants in an interview with Eurasianet. “This is a very complex mechanism, and knowing the flaws in our law enforcement system and courts, I very much doubt these mechanisms will work. I’m afraid one person might be put behind bars for using weapons and another person, who may be a friend [of law enforcement officials], will be released.”

      Gabrielyan acknowledged that the new legislation may need refinement on these issues. “We agree that the legislative regulation in the case of self-defense is not clear, they need to be further developed,” he said.

      Another key provision of the bill: It would “provide residents of particular settlements with combat weapons,” and that the government would determine the specific list of settlements. That would seem to apply to areas along the border with Azerbaijan, where the security concerns are felt most intently.

      In April, the government rejected a bill from the opposition that would have issued weapons to residents of border areas, arguing that it was not necessary given the existence of their bill. “The draft law we proposed deals with not only border settlements, but the whole spectrum,” Gabrielyan said.

      Given its backing from the ruling party, which holds a large majority in parliament and which does little without the government’s initiative, this bill has a much greater chance of passing. The law, formally called “On the regulation of the circulation of weapons,” will have to be debated in the parliament’s committee on defense and national security, and also receive approval from the government. It would go into effect three months after passage.

       

      Arshaluis Mgdesyan is a journalist based in Yerevan.

      Russia and Armenia to lift all Covid restrictions from May 16 – Deputy PM Overchuk

      Interfax
      May 12 2022

      YEREVAN. May 12 (Interfax) – All coronavirus restrictions between Armenia and Russia will be lifted starting in mid-May, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk said.

      “The operational headquarters has made the decision, and from May 16 all coronavirus restrictions will be lifted and both road transport and air transport will become possible. All issues which dragged out contact between our countries are today being eliminated,” Overchuk told Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Yerevan on Thursday, the Armenian government’s press service said.

      The meeting also focused on aspects of Russian-Armenian cooperation.

       

      Japan contributes in Armenia to advance implementation of climate pledges

      May 12 2022

      UNDP Yerevan
      The Government of Japan generously contributed US$900,000 to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Armenia to advance the implementation of the country’s national climate pledges.

      Implemented in partnership with the Government of Armenia, particularly the Ministries of Environment, Emergency Situations, and Territorial Administration and Infrastructure, the new Japan-funded project will strengthen the country’s climate resilience and help it scale up its adaptation measures, with a focus on vulnerable groups of the population including farmers and women led enterprises.

      More specifically, it will help Armenia improve climate information and knowledge for reducing loss and damage and plan the implementation of evidence-based adaptation actions.

      One of the planned interventions under the project will support the Hydrometeorology and Monitoring Center, operating under the Ministry of Environment, to strengthen its weather forecast and hydrometeorological monitoring service capabilities as well as its climate risk reduction actions at all levels. This support will ensure that the country will be better equipped in the face of emerging climate challenges.

      H.E. Masanori Fukushima, the Ambassador of Japan to Armenia, Hakob Simidyan, the Republic of Armenia’s Minister of Environment, and Natia Natsvlishvili, UNDP’s Resident Representative in Armenia, launched the new partnership today, reiterating their commitment to support Armenia to achieve its commitments under the Paris Agreement as well as its social and economic development goals.

      “The increasing frequency and intensity of hydro-meteorological hazards inflicts enormous losses and damages especially upon agriculture and infrastructure. In this regard, we are confident that the improved technical, technological, and professional capabilities developed within the program will significantly contribute to overcoming of these challenges” said Hakob Simidyan, Armenia’s Minister of Environment.

      Speaking on the strategic goals of the new partnership, H.E. Masanori Fukushima, Ambassador of Japan to Armenia, noted that “In the modern world, when the terrible danger of climate change and global warming hangs over all of us, we need to take timely and effective measures to avoid disaster. I sincerely hope that this assistance will prove to be in time and relevant to reduce the risks of climate change and to achieve the reduction of emissions set to significantly decrease by 2030.”

      UNDP has been supporting countries around the world, including Armenia, to update their Nationally Determined Contributions and increase their climate ambition, through the Climate Promise initiative. As the initiative is moving on to its second phase, UNDP is now helping countries deliver on their ambitious pledges, with Japan as the newest partner.

      “The new initiative builds on the results of UNDP’s successful track record of working with the government and other stakeholders in areas of climate, environment and disaster risk reduction, contributing to national priorities in line with the country’s commitments under the Paris Agreement,” highlighted Natia Natsvlishvili, UNDP’s Resident Representative in Armenia.

      At COP26, UNDP launched the next phase of the Climate Promise – From Pledge to Impact – scaling up its support to turn NDC targets into concrete action in at least 100 countries. Japan becomes the largest supporter of this phase of the pioneering and groundbreaking initiative and joins the longstanding funding partners Germany, Sweden, EU, Spain, Italy, as well as the new funding partners UK, Belgium, Iceland, and Portugal to accelerate these efforts.

      Community Consultations: strengthening local democracy in Armenia

      May 10 2022

      (ANGLAIS SEULEMENT)

      YEREVAN, ARMENIA 10 MAY 2022

      How to consolidate democratic development, decentralisation and good governance in Armenia by simplifying the legal framework for local self-government? This was the key question discussed by local stakeholders at a public consultation meeting in Yerevan, Armenia yesterday.

      Proposals that address issues such as the electoral system for head of community councils; the legal and administrative framework regulating inter-municipal cooperation; mechanisms for cooperation, consultation and dialogue between central and local authorities; and terminological inconsistencies across the legislation were presented in the context of possible constitutional reforms of the local self-government system.

      Following an in-depth study of the provisions on local finances in the local government legal framework in Armenia, amendments that seek to address findings of the monitoring report of the Congress of Local and Regional authorities of the Council of Europe were also discussed. The proposals are designed to bring the provisions of the Constitution related to “Community Funding” and the “Community budget, local taxes, duties, and charges” in line with Article 9 of the European Charter of Local Self-Government.

      The discussion was the 7th in a series of Community Consultation Initiatives organised under the Democratic Development, Decentralisation and Good Governance in Armenia project implemented by the Centre of Expertise for Good Governance in the context of the Council of Europe Action Plan for Armenia and funded by the Austrian Development Agency.


      Vadim Kozyrkov: We want make Armenia home for Grid Dynamics

      Armenia – May 12 2022
      Grid Dynamics opens a new engineering office in Yerevan – over a hundred engineers are being onboarded.

      Itel.am spoke with Senior Vice President of Engineering in Grid Dynamics Vadim Kozyrkov about the company’s plans and vision in Armenia.

      Vadim Kozyrkov joined Grid Dynamics in 2014. He has over 20 years of technology and program management expertise. His experience spans a wide range of projects – from custom-built applications to large ERP implementations for automotive and aerospace customers in the USA and South Africa.

      Grid Dynamics (Nasdaq: GDYN) is a digital-native technology services provider that accelerates growth and bolsters competitive advantage for Fortune 1000 companies. It provides digital transformation consulting and implementation services in omnichannel customer experience, big data analytics, search, artificial intelligence, cloud migration, and application modernization. Founded in 2006, the company is headquartered in Silicon Valley with offices across the US, Mexico, UK, Netherlands, Switzerland, and Central and Eastern Europe.

      When and how did you first become acquainted with the tech ecosystem in Armenia? Why Armenia?  

      At the end of the year 2021 we started penetration into Armenia. We are constantly expanding and working in new markets to acquire the best talents.

      We don’t go to countries that have cheap labor, we go to countries that have good labor. In Armenia even though it is a small country you have dozens of good universities. I think even the number of universities like 25-27 is very large for a country that has a population of 2,5 million. if you have that many good universities you have to have good specialists.

      You have a very alife and extensive sort of technology life: meetups, conferences, webinars happening. You are very active in this area and I believe your government pays right attention to the technology industry to develop.

      Image by: Grid Dynamics

      It is not just coming here because of war. We noticed Armenia before it started. We decided to come and invest in Armenia before that. Tragedy happens, but we came here already in January, met people, made plans, found office space, and registered in Armenia.

      What trends do you see here?

      As a rather small country, I don’t think you will bet on heavy industry, you will bet on intellectuals, something that will rely less on physical capital, more on a human capital. The combination of a good history and strong Armenian diaspora in all over the world, universities, conferences, and a lot of IT. Also what is interesting for us is that you are equally fine with both Russian and English. In our company we have quite a lot of East European engineers and that means Russian is a language that a lot of guys use, but we are an American company, so English is our first language of communication. You have friendly people, you have a good climate, easy communication, you can fly to Russia, to Europe, to everywhere.

      What plans does Grid Dynamics have in Armenia? Tell us about your vision in this country.

      Armenia is an interesting place, we really want to come and invest and make it home for us. We have presentations in many countries from the United States to India, Ukraine, Poland, Serbia, all over the world. We want to show the market what advantages Grid Dynamics has, we are not just staffing agency.

      Image by: Grid Dynamics

      Our business model is actually to find a team to work with clients, deliver the projects. I’m in charge of delivery, so I want to talk about deliveries. We have excellent sales, CTO office, and we have strong R&D. It means we actually want to bring here our processes, to hire not only engineers, but also management. We’ll train tech managers the way we operate, so they can run projects for our top clients, such as Apple, Google, Nike and all these clients will be presented here. So there will be teams working for them.    

      Representatives of IT companies admit that the most important problem of the industry is the lack of qualified personnel. Can Grid Dynamics participate in solving this problem?

      Yes it is hard. We will have internship programs, we will work with the universities and bring their students here and train them, give them specialization training. We have a six months program where we select young, ambitious people and work with them. We will send them to the production team so they can start to work with our real clients. By graduating they will have theoretical and practical experience. And they basically will be ready to become part of a team. We are very successful doing this globally and we will succeed here also by investing in the future.

      Image by: Grid Dynamics

      Also will accept just a person, an engineer that has an engineering background and wants to join us. In Poland we have a person, who worked for NASA, he did something that still flies in International Station, but he decided to go to IT and came to us, went through a program and now he is our engineer and he is actually a very good engineer.

      How many people from your team came here?

      I can’t tell the exact number, but more than a hundred and I will be very surprised if we will not have a few hundred people in the next few months.

      What qualifications and values are mandatory for the specialists who want to work for Grid Dynamics?

      First they have to be good at what they do, but the second part is culture. We are looking for the people that want to come and make a career. There are two types of people. Some can go from one employee to another getting 200 dollars more.

      Image by: Grid Dynamics

      And there are people that want to make a career, they want to really become a part of the team. We want those people that will stay for years. Also very important are bright eyes, that the person wants to change something.

      Your advice to beginners, young guys to succeed?

      I am an old person. My advice will be as a grandfather. They should not think overnight, they should build their plans 5 years ahead. A lot of them jump from one place to another, because somebody will give them 200 dollars more. It is a mistake, they need to become a professional before they can afford to jump. They need to get experience and understanding what really is to be in the profession. Select a company where they can do a career.

      Nune Grogoryan talked to Vadim Kozyrkov