Skip to main content

Armenian President holds farewell meeting with Ambassador of Brazil

Save

Share

 12:35, 26 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 26, ARMENPRESS. President Vahagn Khachaturyan received today Ambassador of Brazil Agemar de Mendonça Sanctos, who is completing his diplomatic mission in Armenia, the Presidential Office said.

President Khachaturyan thanked the Ambassador for the efforts made aimed at strengthening and developing the mutual partnership between the two countries.

The sides highly valued the Armenian-Brazilian bilateral relations, highlighting the role of the Armenian community in the strengthening of these ties.

The Ambassador said he leaves Armenia with the best impressions.

The President wished success to the foreign diplomat in his future activities.

Sanctions Hit Russian Investments in Armenia Hard

April 27 2022

Russia accounts for 40 per cent of financial outlay, and some companies are already suffering.

Stinging sanctions imposed against Russia in the wake of its invasion of Ukraine have had ramifications beyond the country’s border, affecting its investments abroad and the economies tightly intertwined with it.

The consequences have been particularly severe for Armenia, where a weak Russian economy affects the remittances that thousands of Armenian workers send home, trade volumes and foreign direct investments (FDI). In 2021, Russia accounted for about 40 per cent of all FDIs in the country, amounting to an estimated three billion US dollars.

Armenia is also part of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and the only member of the Moscow-led bloc with relevant trade agreements with the West, such as a comprehensive and enhanced partnership agreement with the EU.

Emmanuil Mkrtchyan, director of the rating agency AMRating, said that the impact of sanctions would be felt more in some sectors than others.

“Russian investments may increase in the [food] processing industry…to replace imports as large European manufacturers have refused to supply their goods to the Russian market,” Mkrtchyan told IWPR. “There are no restrictions [in Armenia] on the import of new technologies to organise such production, so we can expect that Russian investments in the field of processing agricultural products in Armenia will grow.”

Mkrtchyan was less optimistic on the financial sector, infrastructure and mining. Two large companies with Russian state capital, VTB-Armenia – a subsidiary of VTB Bank, Russia’s second largest financial institution – and Teghut Copper-Molybdenum mine have already been hit.  

VTB Bank was one of the Russian banks excluded from the SWIFT messaging system on March 2 and additional sanctions in early April blocked all transactions with it. The Teghut copper-molybdenum deposit, owned by VTB, suspended operations in early March.

As sanctions were enacted, customers of VTB’s Armenian subsidiary, which has 60 per cent of state capital, started to face difficulties.

The bank’s stability is vital for Aremnia’s financial system: it is one of the ten largest banks with a network of 73 branches across the country. Technically, it is a separate legal entity from its parent company in Russia, but the use of Visa and Mastercard and international money transfers has become arduous.

“I can’t use my bank cards to pay for goods and services even in Armenia, I can’t receive money transfers either,” Anahit Gevorkyan, a Yerevan resident in her 40s, told IWPR. According to Gevorkyan, customers were only able to take loans from the bank or deposit money into their bank account.

On February 28, Armenia’s central bank issued a statement emphasising that it regulated and controlled VTB-Armenia and that “[its] services and instruments…will be fully available to our customers, except for some restrictions related to money transfers”.

As a measure to tame panic, VTB-Armenia launched a new type of deposit account in the national dram currency with an annual interest ratee of 15 to 17 per cent, twice as high as the average interest rate of 8-8.5 per cent on deposits in other banks.

On March 30, it was reported that as part of a process of digital transformation and optimisation, VTB-Armenia CJSC (Closed Joint-Stock Company) had signed an agreement with Ardshinbank CJSC, one of Armenia’s leading banks, to sell about 11 per cent of its retail loan portfolio. VTB Armenia said in a statement that the transaction amounted to 24 billion Armenian drams (50 million dollars).

While the bank stated that the sale was a result of “changes in the strategy of the retail business and the optimisation of business processes,” experts believe that, due to the sanction regime, the bank wants to get rid of its dollar loans, which under the current circumstances can cause operational problems.

The lender is also looking for alternative means to partially circumvent the sanctions and make card payments available for its customers.

“Currently, VTB Bank [Armenia] is working on the launch of Mir and UnionPay payment cards,” said Ivan Telegin, CEO and chairman of the bank’s board of directors. In 2014, Russia developed these bank cards for residents of Crimea in the wake of the sanctions which were applied after Moscow annexed the peninsula.

The lender’s challenges, however, stretch beyond its retail operations. In a statement released on March 30 as part of the justification for the mine’s closure, VTB Bank in Russia stated that it owned the Teghut copper-molybdenum deposit, which suspended its activities in early March. In 2021, the mine contributed 30 million dollars to the state coffers, making it Armenia’s tenth largest taxpayer. The company cited technical reasons for the suspension, but did not deny the difficulties it faced in delivering products to European buyers due to the war in Ukraine and resulting sanctions.

“Employees were notified that operations were suspended and they were sent on leave. We will be paid two-thirds of our salary,” one of the company’s workers told IWPR on condition of anonymity.

Meanwhile, the management said that mining had been temporarily suspended due to necessary repair works on the tailings dam.

“The company had planned to halt mining and ore processing in May-June 2022, but due to the new political and economic situation in the world, the supply chain of products to consumers has been disrupted, so some adjustments were needed,” Vladimir Nalivaiko, the mine’s general director, told Heqt online newspaper.  

VTB Bank has controlled the mine since September 2018, when it took over from former owners the Armenian Vallex group in lieu of overdue loans amounting to about 380 million dollars. In summer 2019, the lender resumed the exploitation of the Teghut deposit, Armenia’s second largest copper mine, which had been suspended by the previous owner due to financial difficulties and the poor condition of the tailings dam.

VTB Bank has denied claims that the dam was cracked, meaning that it could release tailing content with serious environmental consequences.

However, government officials have indirectly confirmed that the mine halted its operation due to international sanctions against Russia.

“The Teghut deposit is currently under the management of VTB Armenia…Works are ongoing to resolve the issues the company is facing. [We] expect soon the visit of representatives of VTB Russia and this issue will be discussed with them. The buyer of Teghut is the Swiss company VTB Trading, which is currently under sanctions,” Armenia’s minister of economy Vahan Kerobyan told IWPR.

The sanctions may also affect the South Caucasus Railway (SCR), a subsidiary of the Russian state company Russian Railways, which has been operating the Armenian lines since 2008.

In August 2021, the company promised the government investment worth 80 million dollars in upgrading the infrastructure until 2024. Ruben Grdzelyan, SCR’s press officer, told IWPR that despite the sanctions, “the company continues to carry out its planned investments”.

Experts remain sceptical, as sanctions continue to curb the import of key components to maintain and repair infrastructure, including that of the SCR system.

“The process of unblocking transport communications with Turkey and Azerbaijan is underway,” economist Suren Parsyan told IWPR. “If implemented, components can also be imported from China and India, since they are also beneficiaries of projects linking these countries with Europe via the north-south transport route.”


Grey Wolves vandalize Armenian genocide memorial in Brussels

Turkish Minute
April 27 2022

  

269

 

0

Members of the Grey Wolves, the far-right Ülkücü movement that enjoys a well-organized structure in Turkey and has thousands of followers in some European countries, have vandalized a memorial dedicated to the victims of the Armenian Genocide in Brussels’ Henri Michaux Square, the Artı Gerçek news website reported on Tuesday.

The Grey Wolves are seen as the paramilitary wing of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), an ally of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), and their ideology is mainly based on Turkish nationalism. Therefore, Kurds, Armenians and other minorities in Turkey have occasionally been their targets.

According to Artı Gerçek, the Armenian Genocide Memorial Khachkar was spray-painted on Tuesday with crescent moons — the symbol of the MHP — and profanity targeting Garo Paylan, an Armenian lawmaker from the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).

Paylan also faced an unprecedented level of backlash due to a motion he submitted last week asking the legislature to recognize the massacre of Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Empire as genocide and the removal of the names of the perpetrators of the genocide from public venues.

The motion was rejected by Parliament Speaker Mustafa Şentop on the grounds that it contravened the parliamentary bylaws.

Most of the criticism Paylan received came from AKP politicians, with party spokesperson Ömer Çelik describing the motion as an “immoral proposal.”

The attack took place two days after local Armenians gathered near the monument in Henri Michaux Square on April 24 to commemorate the 107th anniversary of the 1915-16 killings of more than a million Armenians, which Turkey categorically denies as constituting a genocide.

The mayor of Brussels, Christos Doulkeridis, who dispatched a team to clean up the monument, said: “I will never be able to tolerate this kind of behavior. The police have launched a case, and repairs will be made immediately.”

Artı Gerçek also quoted Belgian parliamentarian Michel De Maegd as saying that the Grey Wolves’ “despicable act” was “neither less nor more than a call of hate” for him.

“Everything must be done to find and punish the culprits. I’m going to turn to the government for that. Intolerance and hatred have no place in our society,” he added.

In 2020 France officially banned the Grey Wolves after a center dedicated to the memory of those who died in the mass killings of Armenians during World War I was defaced with graffiti, including the name of the Grey Wolves.

Earlier last year, the European Parliament called on the European Union and its member states to examine the possibility of adding the Grey Wolves to the EU terrorist list.

In its 2019-2020 report prepared by Turkey rapporteur Nacho Sanchez Amor, the EP voiced concerns about the group, saying it was expanding to worrying levels not only in Turkey but also in EU countries.

As many as 1.5 million Armenians are estimated to have been killed from 1915 to 1917 during the waning days of the Ottoman Empire, which suspected the Christian minority of conspiring with adversary Russia in World War I.

Armenian populations were rounded up and deported into the desert of Syria on death marches in which many were shot, poisoned or fell victim to disease, according to accounts at the time by foreign diplomats.

Turkey, which emerged as a secular republic from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire, acknowledges that 300,000 Armenians may have died but strongly denies it was genocide.

Armenian genocide monument in Brussels vandalized by ultranationalist Grey Wolves

April 27 2022


An Armenian genocide monument in Brussels was vandalized on Tuesday by the Turkish ultranationalist Grey Wolves.

Armenian journalist Aris Nalci shared photographs of the monument, sprayed with red paint, on Twitter. The group spray-painted three crescents, the symbol of the right-wing Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), on the monument. They also wrote “F**k [Garo] Paylan,” an Armenian lawmaker from the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).

Paylan has faced an unprecedented level of backlash due to a motion he submitted on Friday asking the legislature to declare the mass killings of Armenians over a century ago a genocide.

Turkey categorically rejects the 1915-16 killings of more than a million Armenians as genocide.

In his motion Paylan asked parliament to recognize the massacre of Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Empire as genocide and the removal of the names of the perpetrators of the genocide from public venues.

The motion was rejected by Parliament Speaker Mustafa Şentop on the grounds that it contravened parliamentary bylaws.

Conservative politicians and the Turkish right wing also expressed outrage over Paylan’s motion.

The Grey Wolves are  linked to the far-right MHP, an ally of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). Earlier last year, the European Parliament called on the European Union and its member states to examine the possibility of adding the Grey Wolves to the EU terrorist list.

In its 2019-2020 report drafted by Turkey rapporteur Nacho Sanchez Amor, the EP voiced concerns about the group, saying it was expanding to worrying levels not only in Turkey but also in EU countries.

Take a second to support Stockholm Center for Freedom on Patreon!

CivilNet: A pregnant woman is killed in possible collision with Armenian prime minister’s motorcade

CIVILNET.AM

27 Apr, 2022 10:04

A 28 year old pregnant woman was reportedly run over and killed by a police car which was part of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s motorcade.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan meets Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi.

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken condemns Azerbaijan’s unilateral actions which he stated were provoking further tensions in the region.


Armenian American Museum Launches Young Professionals Committee

Press Contact:

Shant Sahakian, Executive Director

Armenian American Museum and Cultural Center of California

(818) 644-2214

[email protected]

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

ARMENIAN AMERICAN MUSEUM LAUNCHES YOUNG PROFESSIONALS COMMITTEE

 

Glendale, CA (April 27, 2022) – The Armenian American Museum and Cultural Center of California has launched a new Young Professionals Committee to promote the mission of the museum, connect young professionals throughout the community, and empower the next generation of leaders.

 

“We are excited to announce that the Armenian American Museum has officially formed the new Young Professionals Committee,” stated Executive Chairman Berdj Karapetian. “We are building a legacy through the museum project, and it is going to be our children and young people who are going to carry that legacy forward to future generations.”

 

The Young Professionals Committee plans to organize and host a series of events including social events that will provide young professionals with networking opportunities and educational events that will provide young professionals the opportunity to provide feedback and help shape the museum’s public programming plans. The Young Professionals Committee will also be creating sub-committees and workgroups that will create a wide range of volunteer opportunities for young people.

 

“It is truly an honor to serve on the Armenian American Museum Young Professionals Committee,” stated Young Professionals Committee Chair Aleen Ohanian. “We are so excited for the future of the cultural and educational center and what it means for our youth and the next generation.”

 

The inaugural members of the Young Professionals Committee includes Eric Davidian, Sarine Hajiar, Maria Kevorkian, Lana Minassian, Sera Najarian, Ani Nalbandian, Deanna Nazarian, Aleen Ohanian, Arman Ohanian, Natalie Orphali, Katia Orphali, and Orzhen Rushanyan.

 

The inaugural members were announced at the sold out Legacy Gala at the JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE on March 27, 2022.

 

For more information, visit https://www.ArmenianAmericanMuseum.org/YP.

 

###

Kindly,

Arsine Sina Torosyan
Communications Director
Armenian American Museum and Cultural Center of California
116 North Artsakh Avenue, Suite 205, Glendale, CA 91206
Office: (818) 351-3554, Ext. 706
Direct: (818) 644-2215
www.ArmenianAmericanMuseum.org
Confidentiality Notice: This communication and any documents, files, or previous e-mail messages attached to it constitute an electronic communication within the scope of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, 18 ISCA 2510. This communication may contain non-public, confidential, or legally privileged information intended for the sole use of the designated recipient(s). The unlawful interception, use, or disclosure of such information is strictly prohibited under 18 USCA 2511 and any applicable laws.




Armenian American Museum Young Professionals Committee.jpg

JPEG image

Azerbaijani press: France confirms OSCE Minsk Group no longer exists

By Ayya Lmahamad

With Azerbaijan’s victory in the Second Karabakh War and the liberation of its territories from the Armenian occupation, the OSCE Minsk Group became absolutely useless.

In the early 1990s, Armenia occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijani territories and the OSCE Minsk Group was established to resolve the conflict in 1992. However, the organization was not able to do anything to implement the four UN resolutions, which implied the withdrawal of occupying forces from Azerbaijan’s territories.

Azerbaijan has repeatedly declared the futility of the OSCE, which for 30 years has been engaged only in issuing some statements and allegedly expressing concern but doing everything to keep the conflict as frozen as possible.

Immediately after the end of the Second Karabakh War, Azerbaijan declared the end of the Karabakh conflict and expressed its readiness to establish lasting peace in the region. Already then it was obvious that the OSCE Minsk Group has completely failed as the conflict was over. For some time after that, Armenia tried to delay the process. After the Brussels meeting held in April, it became clear that Armenia is ready for peace with Azerbaijan. It is worth recalling that as a result of the meeting, the foreign ministries of both countries were instructed to work on the preparation of a peace agreement between the two countries, as well as to begin the process of delimitation and demarcation of the borders. This means that the OSCE Minsk Group is no longer needed.

President Aliyev regularly stressed this fact and now it has also been confirmed by one of the co-chair countries, France.

On April 26, the French Foreign Ministry website published a statement that Brice Roquefeuil, who holds the position of co-chairman of the group, will visit Baku for an official visit. However, the website indicated his position as France’s ambassador for the EU’s Eastern Partnership. Thus, the French Foreign Ministry also confirmed the worthlessness of the OSCE.

Moreover, the statement says that France welcomes the recent phone conversation between the Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers, as well as their decision to convene a bilateral commission on border issues and to start negotiations on a peace treaty. The statement stresses that France will continue to give its full support to this process.

The OSCE Minsk Group had almost 30 years to resolve the Karabakh conflict, however, the organization has failed in its mission.

It is worth recalling here the recent statement by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov who said that there is no such institution as the Minsk Group.

“The U.S. and France have suspended their participation in the OSCE Minsk Group. Russia must halt its activities in light of this. As a result of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, the Minks Group has suspended its operations. There is no such institution,” he said.

Speaking about the Minsk Group, President Ilham Aliyev has also noted that under the current circumstances, this organization and its co-chairs are virtually non-functional. He said that the OSCE can now play a role as a credible international organization.

And the statement by OSCE Chairman-in-Office Zbigniew Rau during his visit to Azerbaijan that he had accepted the new reality in the South Caucasus was in fact the last step in the end for the Minsk Group.

Thus, the promising rise of the OSCE Minsk Group to resolve the conflict in the South Caucasus ended in a long and painful decline. In contrast to the 30 years of useless activity of the OSCE Minsk Group, the new format created under the mediation of Charles Michel has already produced real results in just two meetings within four months.

Azerbaijani press: FM: Conditions to start Azerbaijan-Armenia border commission work in place

By Sabina Mammadli

There are conditions for the Azerbaijan-Armenia joint border commission to begin work on border delimitation and demarcation in the near future, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov has said.

Bayramov made the remarks at a joint briefing with his Georgian counterpart Ilia Darchiashvili in Baku, on April 27.

The minister noted that the main goal of Azerbaijan is to ensure peace in the South Caucasus region.

“I informed my Georgian colleague about this in detail. Azerbaijan provided detailed information on the principles of the peace agreement. I had two telephone conversations with the Armenian foreign minister. There is an agreement on the parameters of the joint commission on demarcation and delimitation of the border. There are also conditions for the start of work of this commission in near future,” Bayramov stated.

According to him, following the principles of international law, Armenia can take its place in regional cooperation.

During the briefing, the minister stated that Azerbaijan-Georgia cooperation in the South Caucasus is an example and can be used as a successful model for neighboring countries.

Expressing high appreciation for the first official visit of Darchiashvili to Azerbaijan after his appointment as Georgian foreign minister, Bayramov noted strong friendly relations between the countries.

He said that Azerbaijan assesses the Georgian foreign minister’s visit to Baku as a clear example of a strategic partnership between the two countries.

“Azerbaijan and Georgia are conducting a policy of good neighborliness and cooperation, and their relations are developing in many areas. Both countries support each other’s territorial integrity,” he stressed.

Further, Bayramov pointed out that a total of 113 agreements have been signed between Georgia and Azerbaijan to date.

He noted that the signing of 19 more documents is currently being considered by the two countries.

“In the near future, we are likely to witness the signing of these documents,” he added.

For his part, the Georgian minister that Azerbaijani-Georgian strategic relations will continue to develop in the interests of the two countries’ peoples.

“Economic and trade projects are being successfully implemented between our countries. Such joint projects as the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline and the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway have been implemented. These projects increase the attractiveness of our countries. Trade and economic relations between Azerbaijan and Georgia are at the highest level,” Darchiashvili said.

Azerbaijan and Georgia are collaborating in a variety of economic fields. Azerbaijan and Georgia signed a number of cooperation agreements in 2021 as part of a meeting of the joint intergovernmental commission on economic cooperation.

Simultaneously, as part of the trilateral business forum held in Baku in December 2021, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey signed five memorandums and agreements on cooperation.

In 2021, the two countries’ trade turnover totaled $763.6 million, with exports accounting for $661 million and imports accounting for $102.6 million.

Azerbaijani press: Representatives of Azerbaijan’s Albanian-Udi Christian Religious Community visit Hadrut [PHOTO]

By Trend

Representatives of Albanian-Udi Christian religious community of Azerbaijan visited village of Hadrut in Azerbaijan’s Karabakh in connection with Easter holiday, Trend’s Karabakh bureau reports.

The trip was organized by Azerbaijani State Committee for Work with Religious Organizations.

The representatives of the community restored gravestones destroyed by the Armenians during the occupation in front of temple in the village of Hadrut.

They also read prayers and lit candles in the temple.

Follow us on Twitter @AzerNewsAz  




Turkish press: MHP leader slams HDP MP over Armenian bill proposalMHP leader slams HDP MP over Armenian bill proposal

Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) chair Devlet Bahçeli has criticized Garo Paylan, a lawmaker from the ranks of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), for submitting a bill to the Turkish parliament for the recognition of the 1915 events as genocide.

“Unfortunately, there is an agent of the [Armenian] diaspora under the roof of the Turkish parliament. Proposing a bill over Armenian genocide claims is an insult to our ancestors and treason,” Bahçeli told his lawmakers at a weekly address on April 26.

Bahçeli’s reaction came after Paylan submitted a bill on the recognition of the Armenian genocide to the parliament speaker’s office on April 22. Parliament Speaker Mustafa Şentop returned Paylan’s bill on the grounds that it was contrary to the provisions of the rules of procedure.

“The fact that such a disgraced, instigator person is a member of the Turkish parliament is a shame for all of us. It’s crystal clear by whom this rotten lawmaker is encouraged and with whom he is in solidarity,” Bahçeli stated.

The Turkish parliament is not a place for those who think Turkey should recognize the Armenian genocide, the MHP leader said while also criticizing the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) for not strongly condemning the HDP lawmaker.

Bahçeli also slammed U.S. President Joe Biden for describing the events of 1915 as genocide for the second time since he came to power in 2021. “This is null and void, unlawful and deserves to be condemned. It’s a disaster for politicians to distort the history and put themselves into the position of judges,” he said.

He recalled that the Ottoman Empire had to impose forced migration of Ottoman Armenians in 2015 after scores of Armenian gangs supported by foreign forces started to storm central and eastern Anatolians to kill Muslim Turks in Anatolia.