Armenpress: Our hope is that diplomacy will be able to silence the artillery – Pashinyan on the events in Ukraine

Our hope is that diplomacy will be able to silence the artillery – Pashinyan on the events in Ukraine

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 21:33, 2 March, 2022

YEREVAN, 2 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. Yerevan hopes that the Russian-Ukrainian talks will yield results, that diplomacy will be able to silence the artillery, ARMENPRESS reports PM Pashinyan said.

“We are deeply saddened by the unfolding events, which is now clear that will have global repercussions. Our hope is that the Russian-Ukrainian talks scheduled for today will take place, will have results, will diplomacy be able to silence the artillery”, Prime Minister Pashinyan said.

Earlier, the adviser to the Chief of Staff of the President of Ukraine Alexei Arestovich said that the second round of Russian-Ukrainian talks in Belarus will take place on the evening of March 2. The first meeting of the Russian-Ukrainian delegations took place on February 28 in the Gomel region of Belarus.

CivilNet: Could Armenia face an exodus from Russia and Ukraine?

CIVILNET.AM

02 Mar, 2022 10:03

  • Armenia sets up a hotline for Armenian nationals in Ukraine, says Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirozyan.
  • The indoor mask wearing mandate in Armenia has been lifted.
  • Armenia’s parliament holds a confirmation hearing for the sole presidential candidate, Minister of High-tech Industries Vahagn Khachatryan.

Credits: Ruptly

CivilNet: Head of Armenia’s Central Bank addresses impact of sanctions on Russia

CIVILNET.AM

28 Feb, 2022 10:02

  • Azerbaijani soldiers use loudspeakers in Karabakh’s Khramot village to tell Armenian residents to leave the area.
  • Footage appears online of a banner supporting Russia’s invasion of Ukraine hanging from Yerevan’s Kievyan bridge. The banner was removed within minutes.
  • Head of Armenia’s Central Bank says the impact of sanctions on Russia will be minimal.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/27/2022

                                        Sunday, February 27, 2022
EU Said To Waive Visas For Armenians Fleeing Ukraine
February 27, 2022
UKRAINE- Ukranian soldiers help a woman and children cross the border at Sighetu 
Marmatiei Customs point, in Baia Mare, Romania, February 26, 2022.
The European Union has waived its visa requirements for Armenian citizens 
fleeing the intensifying fighting in Ukraine, according to Armenia’s Foreign 
Ministry.
The ministry announced on Saturday that they do not need Schengen visas to enter 
Ukraine’s EU neighbors -- Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania -- from the 
embattled country invaded by Russia. The visa waiver is meant for those 
Armenians who want to return to Armenia, it said in a statement.
“Other options for evacuating them from Ukraine are also being considered,” said 
the statement. “At the same time, we inform that the Republic of Armenia is 
ready to receive our compatriots, their family members, as well as other 
refugees.”
The Foreign Ministry also released emergency phone numbers of Armenia’s embassy 
in Kyiv and consulates in the Ukrainian Black Sea city of Odessa and 
Rostov-on-Don in southern Russia.
A family exits the border after crossing over to flee violence in Ukraine, in 
Medyka, Poland, February 25, 2022.
The Armenian diplomatic missions in Ukraine continued to operate even after 
Russia launched the full-scale military attack on February 24. Nor did Yerevan 
urge Armenian citizens to leave the country.
All flights between Armenia and Ukraine were cancelled immediately after the 
start of the Russian invasion.
Ukraine is officially home to some 120,000 ethnic Armenians. According to 
leaders of the Armenian community there, their actual number is much larger and 
only half of them are Ukrainian citizens.
The United Nations estimated on Friday that at least 120,000 Ukrainians have so 
far fled into Poland and elsewhere. Long lines were seen at border crossings in 
western Ukraine as refugees arrived by trains, automobiles, buses, and by foot, 
fleeing Europe’s largest ground war since the end of World War II.
Putin Again Talks To Armenian, Azeri Leaders
February 27, 2022
Russia - Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian make statements to the press after 
talks in Sochi, November 26, 2021.
Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke with the leaders of Armenia and 
Azerbaijan by phone on Saturday evening as Russia continued its military assault 
on Ukraine.
Official Russian and Armenian sources did not mention the intensifying war in 
their statements on Putin’s call with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
The Kremlin said they continued to discuss “practical aspects” of implementing 
Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements brokered by Moscow during and after the 2020 war 
in Nagorno-Karabakh. Those include “issues of ensuring security and stability on 
the Armenian-Azerbaijani border,” it said without elaborating.
Pashinian’s press office reported, for its part, that the two leaders also 
discussed Russian-Armenian relations as well as unspecified “issues related to 
activities” of Russian-led alliances of former Soviet republics.
According to a separate statement released by the Kremlin, Putin talked to 
Aliyev “in continuation” of their meeting held in Moscow on February 22 two days 
before Russia launched a full-scale military attack on Ukraine.
At that meeting, they signed a joint declaration on “allied cooperation” between 
their nations. The declaration says, among other things, that Russia and 
Azerbaijan will avoid “any actions directed against each other” and could 
consider “providing each other with military assistance.”
ARMENIA -- Azerbaijani (L) and Armenian army posts at the Sotk gold mine on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border, June 18, 2021
Putin said after the talks that he and Aliyev also agreed to closely cooperate 
in implementing the Russian-brokered agreements on the opening of economic and 
transport links between Azerbaijan and Armenia and the demarcation of their long 
border. Moscow will keep helping Baku and Yerevan to settle their “border 
issues” and other “acute problems,” added the Russian leader.
The Russian ambassador to Armenia, Sergei Kopyrkin, likewise said on Saturday 
that Moscow will use its close ties with the two South Caucasus nations to 
prevent fresh fighting on the border.
“And of course, it is important for us that Armenia, the Armenian people feel 
safe,” Kopyrkin told the Armenpress news agency. “The guarantee for this is our 
allied relations and our countries’ policy to deepen and strengthen them.”
In their latest phone call, Aliyev and Putin also discussed the dramatic 
developments in Ukraine.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said earlier on Saturday that Aliyev and 
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan have offered to help organize talks 
between Russia and Ukraine. Although Zelenskiy welcomed the offer, hopes for an 
immediate move toward talks appeared dim.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/28/2022

                                        Monday, 
Opposition Bloc Proposes Different Probe Of Karabakh War
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenia - Deputies from the opposition Hayastan alliance attend a session of the 
National Assembly, Yerevan, January 17, 2022.
After deciding to boycott a parliamentary inquiry into the 2020 war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia’s leading opposition group has called on the National 
Assembly to set up another, non-partisan body for that purpose.
The ruling Civil Contract party’s parliamentary group initiated earlier this 
month the establishment of an ad hoc commission that will examine the causes of 
Armenia’s defeat in the war, assess the Armenian government’s and military’s 
actions and look into what had been done for national defense before the 
hostilities.
The parliamentary majority appointed seven of the eleven members of the 
commission. It offered the opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances to name 
the four other members.
Both alliances officially rejected the offer, saying that the commission will be 
controlled by pro-government lawmakers and therefore cannot be objective. The 
commission held its first meeting last week despite the opposition boycott.
A senior lawmaker from Hayastan, Artsvik Minasian, said on Monday that his bloc 
has drafted legislation paving the way for the creation of an alternative 
commission that would consist of nine members who are not lawmakers and not 
affiliated with any party.
Under the Hayastan bill, Civil Contract and the opposition minority in the 
National Assembly would each appoint four members of the proposed body. The 
remaining member would be handpicked by Armenia’s human rights ombudswoman, 
Kristine Grigorian.
“If we want an impartial inquiry and revelation [of the truth,] the model 
proposed by us is one of the best ones,” said Minasian. He claimed that its 
rejection by Civil Contract would be a further indication that the authorities 
are not interested in answering lingering questions about the disastrous war.
Armen Khachatrian, a senior pro-government lawmaker, dismissed the Hayastan 
initiative as “not serious and not appropriate.” He said that the commission set 
up by the ruling party is objective enough.
Virtually all opposition groups hold Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian responsible 
for the outcome of the six-week war that left at least 3,800 Armenian soldiers 
dead.
For his part, Pashinian has blamed former Presidents Robert Kocharian and Serzh 
Sarkisian, who lead Hayastan and Pativ Unem respectively, for the defeat. 
Kocharian ruled Armenia from 1998-2008, while Sarkisian, his successor, lost 
power more than two years before the outbreak of the fighting.
‘Many Armenians’ Keen To Leave Ukraine As Fighting Rages On
        • Naira Bulghadarian
UKRAINE - People walk as they flee from Ukraine to Hungary, after Russia 
launched a massive military operation against Ukraine, at a border crossing in 
Tiszabecs, February 27, 2022.
Many Armenians are desperate to flee Ukraine in the face of Russia’s continuing 
military assault, a leader of the local Armenian community said on Monday.
Norik Grigorian, the head of the Kyiv branch of the Union of Armenians of 
Ukraine, confirmed that getting out of the country is becoming increasingly 
difficult and dangerous. Neither he nor the Armenian Foreign Ministry could say 
how many Armenians have taken refuge in neighboring states or in Armenia.
The ministry announced on Saturday that Armenian nationals do not need Schengen 
visas to enter Ukraine’s European Union neighbors: Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and 
Romania. It also said Armenia is ready to receive them and is now exploring 
“other options for evacuating them.”
“We are advising everyone to stay put until things stabilize because traveling 
is now harder than staying,” Grigorian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service from Kyiv. 
“At the same time, we try to escort those people who decide to get out.”
“On the way to the [western Ukrainian] cities of Vinnitsa, Khmelnitsky and 
Ternopol we provide them with accommodation for one night so that they can keep 
moving towards the border in the morning, after the curfew,” he said.
UKRAINE - People sleep in the improvised bomb shelter in a sports center, which 
can accommodate up to 2000 people, in Mariupol, Ukraine, late Sunday, Feb. 27, 
2022
Estimates of the number of ethnic Armenians who lived in Ukraine before the 
Russian invasion vary from 100,000 to 400,000. Only half of them are said to 
hold Ukrainian passports.
Some Armenians live in the breakaway Donetsk and Luhansk regions run by 
pro-Russian regimes.
According to Father Narek, an Armenian priest based there, up to 100 local 
Armenian families have fled to neighboring Russia over the past week. “Their men 
came back because their departure is strictly prohibited [due to a general 
mobilization,]” he said by phone.
Many others, he said, also remain in the two self-proclaimed republics involved 
in the Russian offensive. “People stay in their homes. They run to bomb shelters 
when air raid sirens go off,” added the clergyman.
Armenian Public Debt Keeps Rising
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - The main government building in Yerevan, March 6, 2021.
Armenia’s public debt has increased by more than 15 percent over the past year 
to a new record high of almost $9.3 billion, official figures show.
It was equivalent to an estimated 63.4 percent of Gross Domestic Product, up 
from 59 percent in 2017 and just 18 percent in 2007.
The debt-to-GDP ratio began rising significantly two years ago amid a recession 
caused by the coronavirus pandemic and compounded by the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian economy shrunk by 7.6 percent in 2020, forcing 
the government to resort to additional external borrowing to make up for a major 
shortfall in its tax revenue.
The government and the Central Bank borrowed even more (about $1.26 billion) 
from mostly external sources last year, despite renewed economic growth and a 
major rise in tax revenue. The new loans included Armenia’s fourth Eurobond, 
worth $750 million, issued in January 2021.
Arshaluys Margarian, head of the Armenian Finance Ministry’s debt management 
division, downplayed the rising debt, saying that it reflects a global trend and 
does not put financial stability at risk.
“Our economy will remain deficit-driven for a long time,” Margarian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “How can the debt fall if the economy is to keep 
growing in physical terms?”
“The most important thing is the pace of economic growth,” he said. “If the 
economy grows faster than the debt, then let [the debt] grow, for God’s sake. 
That will only benefit the country.”
Finance Minister Tigran Khachatrian expressed confidence in September that the 
ongoing economic recovery will allow the government to cut the public debt to 
60.2 percent of GDP by the end of 2022. The International Monetary Fund forecast 
afterwards, however, that this is unlikely to happen before 2024.
This and other fiscal targets set by the government are now called into question 
by fallout from Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine. Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian warned on Friday that severe economic sanctions imposed on Moscow by 
the West could also hit Armenia and other ex-Soviet states dependent on trade 
with Russia.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Armenpress: Biden to discuss Ukraine situation with US allies on February 28

Biden to discuss Ukraine situation with US allies on February 28

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 09:35,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. US President Joe Biden will hold a call with US allies on Monday morning to discuss the situation in Ukraine and their coordinated response, CNN reports citing the White House. 

The call will take place at 20:15 Yerevan local time in a closed format.

The White House didn’t clarify who will take part in the talk.

Armenian FM to participate in UN Human Rights Council High-Level session in Geneva

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 09:37,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan will travel to Geneva to participate in the session of the High Level segment of the UN Human Rights Council, the Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson Vahan Hunanyan said in a statement.

“On February 28 to March 1, Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan will pay a working visit to Geneva to participate in the session of the High Level segment of the UN Human Rights Council. During the framework of the visit the opening of an exhibition dedicated to the 30th anniversary of Armenia’s membership in the UN will be held. Meetings of Minister Mirzoyan with a number of colleagues are scheduled,” Hunanyan said.

QaylTech: Armenian company to help people with disabilities walk again using VR

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 10:15,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. The first ever Armenian company specializing in building and producing innovative rehabilitation devices – QaylTech – is developing a new VR equipment designed for people with disabilities.

QaylTech’s upcoming Qaylaber device will be available for military veterans with disabilities.

The company showcased this innovation at the Dubai Expo 2020.

After the 2016 April War, a group of Armenian kinesiologists teamed up and started to voluntarily work with military servicemen who suffered disabilities. As a result of many years of work, the specialists realized that Armenia lacks the required quantity of rehabilitation devices and personally initiated production. This is how QaylTech was launched.

QaylTech founder Davit Arsenyan told ARMENPRESS that each device was created upon necessity. He said that people with disabilities who are unable to walk potentially develop more than 30 diseases and conditions – the prevention of which is incomparably more effective than treatment.

Together with his team, Arsenyan had numerous successful results at the hospital after the 2016 war, but then they faced a problem. When the time came for the patient to leave the hospital and go home, their inability to walk and subsequent sedentary lifestyle lead to health problems. In order to help the patients in preventing this, Arsenyan and his team created the devices. Even in seemingly hopeless cases the veterans are able to walk again thanks to the dedicated work of QaylTech.

“We had a patient, Hovo. During the war he was shot in the head by sniper fire. 45% of his brain was removed, including the brain’s language center. Everyone thought Hovo was never going to speak again,” Arsenyan said.

But one day, a remarkable event happened.

Arsenyan says he was walking down the hospital corridor to the patient’s room while quietly singing a song – Getashen – a patriotic song popular among the military. Singing a verse from the song, Arsenyan entered Hovo’s room, and to everyone’s awe Hovo continued the verse.  “We all froze for a moment. Then I found out that Getashen was the song of his company in the army. We researched and realized that this happened due to brain plasticity. The function of the damaged center is being assumed by the function of the neighboring healthy center. This led me to start working as founder of QaylTech,” Arsenyan said.

Arsenyan says they’ve worked with veterans having the most serious brain damage. Even when they would send test results to various hospitals around the world, they would say ‘the patient won’t survive, even if he does, he will be in a vegetative state’. But now, not only did the patients survive, but they are also walking and speaking.

 

 

In 2018 QaylTech made its first exoskeleton model and went on to perfect it in the next years. Because of the difficult and time-consuming nature of creating the exoskeleton, simultaneously they began to design and develop other equipment, namely the Qaylaber – a walk simulator device, a verticalizer, a tilt-bed, a standing-frame wheelchair, electric-powered wheelchair with the capacity of 30 km/h speed.

Now, QaylTech is developing the Walk Simulator Device called Qaylaber.

“The person who is unable to walk stands on the device and starts operating it with arms and legs. The device is equipped with sensors, again produced by QaylTech, which is connected to a virtual reality headset. Through the sensors and goggles the patients appears in virtual reality where they can walk, and do their everyday activities. For example, they can play football or skiing games with virtual reality,” Arsenyan explained.

With the Skiing VR game, QaylTech wants to hold world cyber-sport tournaments for people with disabilities. The people with disabilities from all over the world will be able to come together through ZOOM, Skype or Viber, see each other in virtual reality.

Both the device and the idea are unprecedented.

Moreover, the device will contribute to preventing the diseases which could be caused by sedentary lifestyle. QaylTech plans to provide the device to military veterans with disabilities.

The QaylTech devices are successfully used in hospitals and rehabilitation centers, and at the same time the experts are working to perfect the equipment.

“The cost of the VR-game devices could be rather high, but I am trying to find the means wherever I can,” he added.

QaylTech is cooperating with various charitable organizations in order to make the products accessible for veterans and others in need.

Arsenyan says it takes 4 to 5 years for a startup to start making income. Speaking of funding, Arsenyan noted the first investment they got; it was a 6 million dram investment from the Ministry of High-Tech Industry.

“Perhaps there will be some who will say that I am making money by using soldiers. I don’t like to speak about this topic, I will simply say that I haven’t taken and I will not take any money from any soldier. But on the other hand, people should realize that if this all wasn’t a business it would simply die. This is how our devices reach hospitals and rehabilitation centers, and we always invest the company’s profit in the development of technologies,” Arsenyan said.

The QaylTech founder added that they want to restore and develop the once-industrial potential of Armenia.

He further added that Armenia cannot be a market for their products, thus they want to access the international arena, and they already have the pre-requisites for this – internationally certified, high-quality equipment with competitive price.

Arsenyan said he wants to launch a crowd-funding next year.

Interview by Karine Terteryan

Photos by Gevorg Perkuperkyan




European Union closes airspace to Russia

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 10:24,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. The European Union has closed its airspace to Russia due to the situation in Ukraine, TASS reports citing a document published in the Official Journal of the European Union on February 28.

“It shall be prohibited for any aircraft operated by Russian air carriers, including as a marketing carrier in code-sharing or blocked-space arrangements, or for any Russian registered aircraft, or for any non-Russian-registered aircraft which is owned or chartered, or otherwise controlled by any Russian natural or legal person, entity or body, to land in, take off from or overfly the territory of the union”, the document reads.

However, “the competent authorities may authorize an aircraft to land in, take off from, or overfly, the territory of the union if the competent authorities have determined that such landing, take-off or overflight is required for humanitarian purposes or for any other purpose consistent with the objectives of this regulation”.

On February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a special military operation based on a request from the heads of the Donbass republics. The Russian leader stressed that Moscow had no plans to occupy Ukrainian territories and the goal was to demilitarize and denazify the country.

Everything ready to host Russia-Ukraine negotiations – Belarus Foreign Ministry

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 10:47,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. The Belarusian Foreign Ministry said that everything is ready to host Russia-Ukraine negotiations.

“In Belarus, everything is ready to host Russia-Ukraine negotiations. Waiting for delegations to arrive”, the Foreign Ministry said on Twitter.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Anatoly Glaz said the negotiations will start immediately after the arrival of the delegations.

RIA Novosti’s source within the diplomatic circles said that the Russian delegation members are already waiting for the Ukrainian side in the Gomel region of Belarus. “We are waiting for the start of negotiations. The Ukrainian delegation hasn’t arrived yet. The meeting must take place on Monday morning in Gomel region in coming hours”, it added.

A source close to the process told Sputnik Belarus that the Ukrainian delegation is already in the territory of Belarus.