Resistance Movement representatives stage protest outside office of EU Delegation to Armenia

NEWS.am
Armenia –

A group of members of the opposition Resistance Movement on Thursday protested in front of the office of the European Union (EU) Delegation to Armenia—and with the photos of police officers who used violence against demonstrators.

Lilit Beglaryan, a participant in the picket, stated: “We want to know whether the EU delegation is content with the use of police force these days, whether they consider the use of that force proportionate, and whether they care about the money that has been spent on many reforms in Armenia—including the police sector reforms.

“We have brought the photos that show the policemen who have used that force, who have used inexplicable brute force (…) against the citizens carrying out a peaceful protest. I’m sure that madam ambassador has seen those photos. But we have brought [them] one more time to remind her of what’s going on here. We want to know if she has anything to say or not about all this. We would like her to speak.”

Resistance movement to continue acts of disobedience: Saghatelyan presents plans for tomorrow

NEWS.am
Armenia –

The Resistance Movement will continue its acts of disobedience tomorrow demanding the resignation of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Ishkhan Saghatelyan, the representative of ARF Dashnaktsutyun’s Supreme Body and deputy speaker of the parliament from the opposition, invited the members of the Movement to France Square at 16:00.

“At 21:00 there will be a lecture by filmmaker Hovhannes Gasparyan, and at 22:00 there will be a discussion of regional issues,” he said.

Lavrov, Mirzoyan and Bayramov discuss preparation of treaty on normalization of relations

NEWS.am
Armenia –

The Ministers of Foreign Affairs of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan discussed preparations for an agreement on normalization of relations between Yerevan and Baku, the statement by the Russian Foreign Ministry reads.

“The foreign ministers discussed joint efforts to normalize Azerbaijani-Armenian relations. They confirmed their commitment to strict compliance with all the provisions of the statements of the leaders of of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia of 9 November, 2020, 11 January, 2021 and 26 November, 2021.

They noted the progress in implementing the trilateral agreements in key areas, including the unblocking of economic and transport links in the region through the Trilateral Working Group co-chaired by the Deputy Prime Ministers of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, as well as efforts to launch the delimitation and subsequent demarcation of the Azerbaijani-Armenian border with the consultative assistance of Russia at the request of the parties.

The preparation of an agreement on the normalization of relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia was discussed, which the Russian side is also ready to support in every possible way.

The ministers spoke in favor of continuing the dialogue between the public representatives of Azerbaijan and Armenia with the participation of Russia.

Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia to hold trilateral meeting

Foreign Brief
  • In Daily Brief
  • Cian Muenster

The Foreign Ministers of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan will meet today to attempt a mediation of Armenian-Azerbaijani tensions.

Today’s meeting comes amid renewed border clashes in the Nagorno Karabakh region. Notably absent from the meeting is a representative from Turkey—a country that traditionally backs Azerbaijan in its conflicts with Armenia. The absence of Turkey may be an attempt by Russia to sway Azerbaijan towards its sphere of influence and away from Turkey. A closer Azerbaijan-Russian relationship could help Russia compensate for a reduced ability to act in the region due to its ongoing war with Ukraine. Russia’s strategy is likely an attempt to counter European and Turkish attempts to further isolate Russia by swaying traditionally pro-Russian Armenia.

Still, Putin’s strategy is unlikely to succeed. Azerbaijan and its Turkish allies are instead more likely to exploit Russia’s distraction and force Armenia into an unfavorable agreement or instigate clashes in Nagorno Karabakh. Following the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh conflict, Azerbaijan gained control over the majority of the disputed areas giving it the advantage in peace talks. While Russia maintains a peacekeeping force in the region which deters direct aggression, expect Azerbaijan to continue to test Armenian and Russian resolve through provocations.

A mega-mansion owned by an Armenian politician facing criminal corruption charges hits the market for $63.5 million

Business Insider
  • The DOJ and FBI are trying to seize the former Armenian finance minister’s mega-mansion.
  • The Holmby Hills home is listed for $63.5 million while prosecutors work with realtors on the sale.
  • Gagik Khachatryan was criminally charged with bribery in Armenia, and faces charges in the US.

Los Angeles realtors are working with the Department of Justice and the FBI to try to sell a mega-mansion that belonged to an Armenian politician facing criminal corruption charges in his home country.

The 30,000-square-foot palace is located in the swanky Holmby Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles just a few doors down from Hugh Hefner’s Playboy mansion. The home, listed for $63.5 million, belonged to former Armenian finance minister Gagik Khachatryan. 

Known by the DOJ as the “super minister” in Armenia because of his political power and responsibilities while in office, Khachatryan served as the Chairman of the State Revenue Committee of the Republic of Armenia between 2008 to 2014 and as the Minister of Finance between 2014 to 2016.

Federal prosecutors allege that Armenian businessman Sedrak Arustamyan paid Khachatryan over $20 million in bribes for special tax relief for his businesses and that the money was used to purchase the home in 2011. Armenian prosecutors discovered millions in unpaid taxes after Khachatryan left office in 2016.

According to the Los Angeles Times, the DOJ alleged in a court filing that Khachatryan purchased the house for $14.4 million using the illicit cash, and that he and his sons had formed entities and phony loans to “to receive, disguise and conceal illegal bribe payments.”

Khachatryan and his sons, who the DOJ allege partook in the bribery, were criminally charged with receiving bribes in Armenia in 2019, while charges against Arustamyan are pending. 

In the DOJ’s filing, prosecutors wrote that Khachatryan’s sons sought to raise their kids in Los Angeles at the home. After an investigation into the family came to light in Armenia in 2016, the sons fled the country.

With 11 bedrooms and 27 bathrooms, the mansion went on the market on April 7. Real estate brokerage Hilton & Hyland is trying to sell the house as federal prosecutors move to seize the property.

“I’ve been told by the FBI that I can continue to do showings,” realtor Richard Maslan told The Los Angeles Times. “If we receive an offer and both the seller and the Justice Department agree on a sale price, we can still sell it.”

“Baku wants Karabakh without Armenians” – Pashinyan on Azerbaijan’s policy




  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Pashinyan’s statements in the Netherlands

“Recently, Azerbaijan has made statements that give the impression that only Azerbaijan’s proposals will be discussed at the negotiating table. This, at th very least, does not correspond to the agreements reached by us [with the President of Azerbaijan] in Brussels”. This was stated by the Prime Minister of Armenia during his visit to the Netherlands.

After the completion of his meetings within the framework of the official visit, Nikol Pashinyan spoke at the Netherlands Institute of International Relations (Clingendael).

The Netherlands Institute of International Relations is a leading think tank and academy of international relations. Based in The Hague. Clingendael’s mission is research, education and public debate that “will inspire and equip societies, businesses and governments to create a safe, sustainable, prosperous and just world”.

Pashinyan made a number of statements about the normalization of relations with Azerbaijan, the reasons for the start of the second Karabakh war, as well as the “peace agenda” that he personally promotes.


  • What should be expected from Karabakh talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan?
  • “Peace agenda is not an agenda of defeat” – position of Armenian authorities on status of NK
  • Armenian-Turkish ‘normalisation’ efforts continue amid third round of Vienna talks

In his speech, Nikol Pashinyan discussed the reasons that led to the second Karabakh war. He said that in Armenia, many are of the opinion that “it was democracy that led to the 44-day war”. This refers to the democratic transformations that Pashinyan, as the leader of the Velvet Revolution of 2018, promised the people and tried to implement. According to him, after the war, many are wondering how democracy can ensure the security of the country.

Meanwhile, according to the prime minister, the war in Karabakh had nothing to do with democracy in Armenia:

“The situation is much more serious. It is my deep conviction that the war of 2020 has become another sign indicating the expected global geopolitical changes and changes in the world order as a whole.

Actually there were two reasons for the war. One was the change in the balance of global and regional forces that has taken place over the years, as well as the negotiating policy of Azerbaijan: “Give us what we want, otherwise we will get it by military means”. In this sense, it is obvious and unambiguous that the war in this context was inevitable.

Armenian political scientists comment on the ongoing anti-government protests in Armenia, explain what to expect in the near future and discuss whether the opposition will achieve Pashinyan’s resignation

The prime minister assessed the situation in the region as extremely tense. Pashinyan stressed that after the war, Azerbaijan is of the opinion that the Karabakh conflict has allegedly been resolved:

“This is not only a political statement, but, in fact, the pinnacle and culmination of Azerbaijan’s ideas – both past and present – regarding the settlement of the Karabakh issue. If we formulate this policy in one word, it will be as follows: Karabakh without Armenians. And there is no exaggeration in this. Everything is being done so that the Armenians consider their presence in Nagorno-Karabakh impossible”.

The prime minister gave several examples to support his words. Pashinyan, in particular, spoke about the recordings with calls to leave, which are played through the loudspeakers of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces near the Armenian villages in Nagorno-Karabakh. The prime minister also touched upon the explosion of the pipeline through which gas is supplied from Armenia to NK.

The accident occurred in the territory under the control of Azerbaijan, then a valve was installed here, and the gas was turned off despite unprecedentedly cold weather, which led to a critical humanitarian situation in NK.

The prime minister also dwelled on Azerbaijan’s attempts to erase the Armenian trace from historical and cultural monuments:

“Recently, the Ministry of Culture of Azerbaijan made a strange statement. They announced that a working group had been formed to, in their words, “remove false inscriptions from the walls of churches considered to be Armenian”. And a few months ago, the President of Azerbaijan, visiting the territory that came under the control of Azerbaijan, where the ancient Armenian church is located, literally stated the following: “The inscriptions are false and must be removed”.

By taking such steps, Azerbaijan, according to Pashinyan, seeks to show that the Armenians of Karabakh have recently found themselves in Nagorno-Karabakh, therefore “they do not have a legitimate right to live there”.

Meanwhile, according to the prime minister, the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is not a territorial issue, but that of people’s rights. And the message of the Armenian side to the international community is the need to protect the rights of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Pashinyan’s address in parliament on the implementation of the government’s program for 2021 consisted of an analysis of the country’s domestic and foreign policy and possible further steps

According to Pashinyan, it is not easy to promote a peace agenda after the war. But this obligation is entrusted to the current government by the people, who gave the authorities this mandate in the elections precisely after the defeat in the war. And the prime minister considers it the duty of the government to do everything to establish peace in the region, including in the context of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations:

“Many of our compatriots believe that by talking about a peaceful agenda, we are betraying our national identity, the interests of our country, the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, leaving them defenseless. However, we are convinced otherwise. We take this criticism, we analyze and try to understand it.

We even partially and generally understand it. But the main task of the politician and the political team, the government elected by the people, is to go the hard way, because easy ways do not lead to good results. And the result we expect is an era of peaceful development for our country and our region. That is why we need to open regional communications so that our railways and roads with Azerbaijan work”.


  • Protests in Armenia continue – what will happen next?
  • Protesters in Armenia up pressure for PM Pashinyan’s resignation. Video

Regarding the negotiations on a peace agreement with Azerbaijan, the Prime Minister reiterated his position: there is nothing unacceptable in Baku’s five-point proposal, but they do not cover the entire agenda of bilateral relations. Pashinyan said that the Armenian side supplemented the negotiation agenda with items on the rights and security of the residents of Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as the final status of this territory.

According to the prime minister, during a meeting on April 6 in Brussels, this issue was discussed with the President of Azerbaijan:

“Having returned from Brussels, I said that we had reached an agreement, in fact, the Azerbaijani side also stated this. But recently there have been statements from Azerbaijan that create an impression that only Azerbaijan’s proposals will be discussed at the negotiating table. This, at the very least, does not correspond to the agreements we reached in Brussels”.

Tomorrow, the second over the last 6 months meeting of Azerbaijani President, Armenian PM and European Council President will take place in Brussels. What do Yerevan and Baku expect from negotiations?

Pashinyan made a sensational statement that during the last meeting with the President of Azerbaijan in Brussels, he promised to release another group of Armenian prisoners, but this did not happen:

“Today, at least 38 Armenian prisoners remain in Azerbaijan. Attempts are constantly being made to make this process the subject of bidding on a variety of issues.

The prime minister recalled that the situation was the same when Baku wanted to receive maps of minefields from the Armenian side:

“We handed over to Azerbaijan all the maps we had, hoping that this humanitarian step would be followed by another humanitarian step”.

As a result of the 44-day war in 2020, thousands of families lost their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh. We gathered real stories of IDPs from Karabakh in Armenia

At the end of his speech, Pashinyan said that Armenia has experienced very difficult trials over the past two years, but he is convinced that the country is moving in the right direction – towards establishing peace in the region:

“We know that it will be very difficult, but we are ready to take on this political responsibility, because we feel, we see that we have the responsibility to make a decisive contribution to the establishment of global peace – in our country and in the region as a whole”.

At the same time, the prime minister expects that the international community and all of Armenia’s foreign partners, including the Netherlands, will support Yerevan’s efforts.

Armenpress: UN Security Council to discuss humanitarian situation in Ukraine on May 12

UN Security Council to discuss humanitarian situation in Ukraine on May 12

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 09:33,

YEREVAN, MAY 11, ARMENPRESS. The UN Security Council will hold a meeting on the humanitarian situation in Ukraine on May 12, a source within the Organization told TASS news agency.

“The meeting will take place in the first half of the day Thursday”, the source said. This information was confirmed by another source as well.

TASS reports citing CNN, the Security Council meeting was summoned on request of France and Mexico. It will be open and no vote on any issue is expected. The participants will listen to representatives of UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), CNN report says.

New cooperation bridge: Armenian community of Serbia to organize conference bringing together different figures

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 09:45,

YEREVAN, MAY 11, ARMENPRESS. At the initiative of the Armenian community of Serbia, a conference will be held in autumn this year, gathering Armenian and Serbian figures from sport, culture, science and tourism sectors.

President of the Armenian National Community of Serbia Biljana Obradović-Shakhrimanyan, who was in Armenia recently, told Armenpress that the Armenian community is seeking to hold a number of events, by gathering specialists of Armenia and Serbia.

“For many years no works have been done to intensify the Armenia-Serbia relations at a public level. Moreover, there was no community as such. But now, thanks to my and my friends’ efforts actions have been taken to form that community and hold events. This conference is one of the programs of the community, which aims at creating a cooperation platform”, she said.

Biljana Obradović-Shakhrimanyan said that the initiative has been discussed in Serbia’s respective agencies and was approved. One of the goals of the visit to Armenia together with the Serbian partners was this, to introduce the initiative to the Armenian agencies and officials. It was approved here as well, both in the Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs and the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport.

“We want the conference to be attended not only by cultural, scientific, sport figures, but also officials of the two countries. It’s very important for us to make the opening of the conference in Armenia. When officials visit from Armenia, it also strengthens the positions of our Armenian community. Such visits give another emphasis to these events and open a new opportunity”, Biljana Obradović-Shakhrimanyan said, expressing confidence that Armenian and Serbian figures will cooperate, carry out exchange of experience, implement joint programs, etc.

She is convinced that the Armenian community could play a big role in forming, intensifying and strengthening cooperation between Armenia and Serbia.

“The Armenian community as such has not operated for 20 years. In 2019 I decided to carry out a coordinated work, collect data, create a platform for communication and joint work, and give a chance to recognize each other. For 10 years I have been engaged in collecting information about Armenians in Serbia. It’s a very difficult process, requires a daily work, but I never gave up and continued my work. According to my latest data, nearly 5000 Armenians live in Serbia. They are both the generations of the Genocide survivors and those who came from Armenia recently. I can state that Armenians are engaged in almost all sectors – education, science, politics, culture, business community”, she said, adding that she does everything to raise awareness on Armenia in Serbia.

Borba cultural journal will contribute to this process. Its editor-in-chief Elena Stojanovic was also in Armenia these days. She is going to share her impressions, materials on Armenia in the journal.

“When I was visiting Armenia, I didn’t want to read much on the internet, I wanted to get acquainted on the spot. I am impressed with Armenia, with the architecture of churches, culture. I specifically want to highlight the warmth shown by the local people. I can surely state that we feel ourselves home here. We don’t feel that we are in a foreign country. We are going to dedicate 4-6 page of the next volume of our magazine to Armenia with pleasure”, she said.

Darko Obradovic, Program Manager of the Center for Strategic Analysis of Serbia, also shared his impressions from Armenia. He said they are interested in cooperating with Armenian specialists in science field.

“We have a great cooperation experience with international partners. The purpose of the visit to Armenia is to find partners who are interested in cooperation in science sector. We could respond to current challenges through joint work. The upcoming conference is a very important initiative in terms of finding partners, which is going to gather representatives from different areas. When scientists, cultural figures, different specialists start talking, I am sure that officials will also follow them”, Darko Obradovic said.

He is convinced that the peoples of Armenia and Serbia have many commonalities and a rich experience, and there are big opportunities for joint work.

 

Interview by Anna Gziryan




Pashinyan to meet Netherlands PM, parliamentarians and business community on second day of official visit

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 09:59,

THE HAGUE, MAY 11, ARMENPRESS. On the second day of his official visit to the Netherlands, the Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan will have a meeting with the Prime Minister of the Netherlands Mark Rutte in The Hague.

On May 11 the Armenian PM will also have a meeting with representatives of the business community of the Netherlands. Pashinyan will then visit the Peace Palace where the inauguration of an Armenian cross-stone (khachkar) will take place at the Peace Palace garden.

PM Pashinyan will deliver a lecture titled “Armenia and the Netherlands: Centuries of Friendship – 30 Years of Partnership” at the Dutch Institute of International Relations.

The Armenian PM will also have meetings with the President of the Senate of the Netherlands Jan Anthonie Bruijn and the Speaker of the House of Representatives Vera Bergkamp.

Nikol Pashinyan will meet with members of the foreign relations committees of both Houses of parliament.

Pashinyan’s visit to the Netherlands is the first official visit of an Armenian leader to the Netherlands. This year also marks the 30th anniversary of establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and the Netherlands.