The siege on Nagorno-Karabakh tightens, increasing tension in the Caucasus

Spain – April 5 2023
ANDRÉS MOURENZA
Istanbul - APR 05, 2023 – 12:22 CEST

The siege on Nagorno-Karabakh continues to tighten. In the last week, Azerbaijani troops have crossed the separation line that was agreed two years ago to stop the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and these soldiers have taken a strategic summit. The goal is to control a road that, according to Azerbaijan, is used to supply weapons to this Armenian-held enclave located in territory internationally recognized as Azerbaijan.

Instead, according to local authorities, this mountain road had become the only way to bypass a blockade that Azerbaijan has been subjecting the territory to since December 12, when alleged environmental protesters, with the support of security forces, blocked off the Lachin corridor, a road that connects with the Republic of Armenia and is vital for the survival of the enclave. Experts fear that these moves, and the skirmishes over the past few weeks — three Karabakh police officers and two Azerbaijani soldiers were killed on March 5 — are a prelude to larger clashes.

Among the enclave’s population, these military movements awaken the worst ghosts of the past. In 1991, a few months before the collapse of the Soviet Union, Azerbaijani troops began to advance to stop the Karabakh movement seeking to incorporate the disputed territory into Armenia (which led to a three-year war with over 20,000 dead that the Armenians won). More recently, in 2020, a new war over Nagorno-Karabakh ended in victory for Azerbaijan after six weeks of combat and more than 7,000 deaths.

That conflict ended with the signing of a ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan mediated by Moscow, according to which a Russian contingent would be in charge of guaranteeing compliance with the agreement and free transit through the Lachin corridor. However, although Moscow has criticized recent military movements, the Russian military has become largely a silent witness to Azerbaijani actions.

Zaur Shiriyev, an analyst for the International Crisis Group in Azerbaijan, explains that “Russian peacekeeping forces have no technical mandate. Moscow has pressured Baku [the capital of Azerbaijan] to establish rules on the use of force, but it has refused. So the Russian military cannot act against Azerbaijan, they are only allowed to defend themselves if they are attacked.”

In Stepanakert, the capital of the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, people have become accustomed to eating rice, pasta and canned food, day after day. The arrival of spring has added a little more variety to their diet, since some wild herbs can be collected. But fruit, vegetables and greens are mostly unaffordable. “For a kilo of potatoes you have to pay 4,500 dram [€10.70], when last year they used to cost 1,000 or 1,500. Tomatoes also cost 4,500 dram. For meat, there is only pork and chicken, locally produced, but very expensive. The question is not even the price of products, it is their absence: the stores are still empty, and when something does show up, it sells out quickly,” explains Nona Poghosyan, a resident of Stepanakert.

In an enclave where 90% of food was being imported from the neighboring Republic of Armenia, the siege has been an unprecedented disaster. Before the blockade, some 400 tons of products were transported daily to Nagorno-Karabagh through the Lachin corridor. But now only a tenth of that amount is arriving, just what the trucks of the Russian peacekeepers and the Red Cross are allowed to transport. And the price problem has been aggravated because, according to testimonies collected by Novaya Gazeta, Russian soldiers are trying to take advantage of the situation by charging “several thousand dollars” for each truckload they bring in. A source from the de facto government of Nagorno-Karabakh confirmed to this newspaper that there have been “certain problems” of this type, but that they are trying to solve them “with the Russian commanders.”

[yellow] Territory under Armenian control and Russian supervision

[black] Lachin Corridor

To the scarcity of raw materials and food, energy must now be added. Nagorno-Karabakh authorities reported that Azerbaijan has cut the high-voltage power line that provided them with electricity and that, since January 9, they have depended on meager local production that implies six-hour-a-day supply cuts. The gas pipeline that communicates with Armenia also suffers from periodic interruptions. As a result, the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh have had to get used to candles and stoves that they feed with the firewood they cut down from their forests. Close to a fifth of the companies that were operating in the territory have had to shut their doors, and thousands of workers have become unemployed.

Artak Beglarian, advisor to the Nagorno-Karabakh government, complains: “They are aggravating the blockade and its humanitarian consequences to force us to give up.” Beglarian assures that the authorities of the enclave are willing to discuss “rational solutions” to the conflict, but he also warns that, with each resigned acceptance by the Armenians, new demands from Azerbaijan will follow “because they feel impunity” due to the lack of international pressure. For example, a month ago, Minister of State Ruben Vardanian was forced to resign because it was one of the demands made by the government in Baku, which considered him to be a man from Moscow. But the situation did not change afterwards. “Since we are being falsely accused of importing weapons, we have proposed installing devices to scan all entering vehicles. They have not accepted that, either. What they are looking for is ethnic cleansing,” says Beglarian.

In late February, the International Court of Justice, a United Nations body, demanded that Azerbaijan immediately reopen the Lachin corridor until this court issues a final ruling on the case. But the government of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (in power since 2003) has ignored the ruling. “Until Baku manages to establish some control over the Lachin corridor and the demilitarization of the local Armenian forces is ensured, it seems that the crisis will continue,” argues Zaur Shiriyev. According to this analyst, as a result of the war in Ukraine, Azerbaijan has seen Russia’s weakness and is trying to take advantage of it to regain full control over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Araz Imanov, an advisor to the Azerbaijani government for the Nagorno-Karabakh region, wrote last week: “Everything that is within our internationally recognized borders can and should be controlled by us. [Establishing a] checkpoint [in the Lachin corridor] is only a matter of time, and the sooner it is established, the better.” However, for the Armenians, an Azerbaijani-controlled post is unacceptable. Beglarian, an advisor to the Karabakh government, replies: “Given their racist policy against the Armenians, it would be very dangerous for us. In addition, nothing similar is contemplated in the ceasefire agreement of 2020.″

Contacts between the two parties have not gone well, so the Russian and U.S. governments have put their diplomats to work and there have been telephone conversations between various capitals. However, the solution to the dispute seems far away. And this, according to the analyst Shiriyev, is causing “a high risk of a military escalation in the coming days or weeks.”

Georgian PM discusses cooperation with Armenian Infrastructure Minister

Agenda, Georgia
April 5 2023
Agenda.ge, 5 Apr 2023 – 16:58, Tbilisi,Georgia

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili on Wednesday discussed bilateral cooperation and prospects for closer partnership with Gnel Sanosyan, the Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure of Armenia. 

The Government Administration said the discussion in the PM’s office also highlighted “neighbourly” ties and bilateral cooperation in a number of fields. 

The PM hosted the Armenian official at the administration building of the Government of Georgia. Photo: Government press office.

The officials discussed ways to further strengthen partnership in the regional and infrastructure sectors, before commending the “dynamically developing” economic cooperation between the states and the “significant progress” in this direction. 


Sports: Lens announce partnership with Armenian club Sardarapat

April 5 2023

Lens have this afternoon unveiled a new partnership with Armenian outfit Sardarapat FC, with the Sang et Or to help the the third division club develop its youth academy, as well as setting up a men’s and women’s professional team.

The Ligue 1 side – who are currently second in Ligue 1 – organised a press conference this morning, with academy director Eric Assadourian, a former Armenian international himself, introducing the project alongside Sardarapat’s founder Sevan Karian. The former notably explained that the “mentality” and “philosophy” he sees in young Armenians correspond with those Lens look for.

Sardarapat, based in the western city of Armavir, had been in contact with Assadourian but also Lens owner Joseph Oughourlian, another French of Armenian descent. 

Lens will ostensibly be hoping to bear the fruits of the partnership by being first to any emerging local talents, with Assadourian explaining that the Caucasus region is emerging as a hotbed of talent, as evenidence by Georgia’s Khvicha Kvaratskhelia as well as Armenia’s own Henrikh Mkhitaryan.  

GFFN | Raphaël Jucobin

Glendale: Armenian Genocide Commemorative Events

City of Glendale, CA
April 5 2023
Post Date:04/05/2023 9:40 AM

Media Contact: 
Solene Manoukian
Community Relations Coordinator
[email protected]
(818) 548-3342 (direct)

Armenian Genocide Commemorative Events

Glendale, CA – On Monday, April 24, 2023, at 7:00pm, the City of Glendale will host its Annual Armenian Genocide Commemorative Event at the Alex Theatre. This year's theme, "The Armenian Experience Through the Lens," celebrates the 100th anniversary of Armenian cinema, as declared by the Armenian Ministry of Education, Science, Culture, and Sport.

This year's program will consist of curated segments to educate and inform attendees. The program will commence with a tribute to the ongoing atrocities in Artsakh, reflecting our commitment to raising awareness of humanitarian crises. Additionally, we are excited to feature a preview of Armenia's submission to the 2023 Oscars Best International Film category, Aurora's Sunrise. We are honored to welcome Joe Manganiello, a celebrated actor, producer, director, published author, and Emmy-winning voice actor, as our keynote speaker. During his speech, Joe will discuss intergenerational trauma, drawing from his familial history and the story of his maternal great-grandmother, Terviz "Rose" Darakijan, who survived the Armenian Genocide.

From Sunday, April 16 to Tuesday, April 25, we will observe the Week of Remembrance, featuring satellite events and screenings across the city to honor the memory of those who perished and recognize the resilience of those who survived. A comprehensive list of events is available below.

Week of Remembrance Events

  • Sunday, April 16: Glendale Arts + Armenian Film Society Present Celebrating 100 Years of Armenian Cinema: Feature Film Screening of Vigen Chaldranyan's Alter Ego; 7:00pm at AMC Americana at Brand 18
  • Monday, April 17: Slam Poetry Night; 7:00pm at Brand Library Recital Hall 
  • Wednesday, April 19: Armenian Film Society presents a Q&A with Inna Sahakyan, Director of Aurora’s Sunrise; 7:00pm at Glendale Central Library’s Auditorium
  • Thursday, April 20: Film screening of Songs of Solomon; 7:00pm at AMC Americana at Brand 18 (Tickets to be released soon) 
  • Monday, April 24: The Armenian Experience Through the Lens, Glendale’s Annual Armenian Genocide Commemorative Event; 6:00pm at The Alex Theatre
  • Tuesday, April 25: Film screening of The Other Side of Home; 7:30pm The Alex Theatre

Armenian Infrastructure Minister Gnel Sanosyan on official visit to Georgia

Georgia Online
April 5 2023

Tbilisi: The Minister of Regional Development and Infrastructure of Georgia Irakli Karseladze, along with his deputies, met with the Minister of Territorial Organization and Infrastructure of the Republic of Armenia, Gnel Sanosiani, who is on a working visit to Georgia.

BySatyam Dawar

Tbilisi: The Minister of Regional Development and Infrastructure of Georgia Irakli Karseladze, along with his deputies, met with the Minister of Territorial Organization and Infrastructure of the Republic of Armenia, Gnel Sanosyan, who is on a working visit to Georgia.

The Armenian Delegation, led by Gnel Sanosyan, is on a working visit to Georgia for several days. The delegation includes the Deputy Minister of Territorial Planning and Infrastructure of the Republic of Armenia, Executive Director of the Armenian Roads Department and the Head of the Administrative Unit of Ijevan.

At the meeting held at the Ministry of Regional Development and Infrastructure of Georgia, the parties talked about the importance of close and long-term cooperation between neighboring countries, reviewed the directions of work of the ministries of the two countries and emphasized the need to share experience in different spheres.

 Irakli Karseladze gave guests detailed information on important projects for development of regions of Georgia, institutional strengthening or development of various infrastructures.

 The talk was about road, water supply, solid waste management, educational or municipal infrastructures and urban renewal projects development progress. The parties spoke about the successful decentralization process in Georgia, the results of institutional, financial and independence measures of the regions, the reforms carried out to support mountainous settlements and other directions of the Ministry’s work.

  The meeting emphasized the importance of the development of the middle corridor and the international highways. The members of the Armenian delegation gave a high assessment to the importance and progress of ongoing reforms and projects in the country. 

Also, they recalled the successful examples of cooperation between the two countries in the form of a new motor bridge built at the neighboring border outpost and expressed their willingness to deepen future cooperation.

 After the meeting, in order to emphasize the importance of cooperation and further deepen it, a memorandum of understanding was signed between the Ministry of Regional Development and Infrastructure of Georgia and the Ministry of Territorial Arrangement and Infrastructure of the Republic of Armenia.

The Memorandum envisages cooperation between Georgia and the Republic of Armenia on road infrastructure development, road safety, road construction and rehabilitation.

The Armenian delegation will visit several major infrastructural projects in Georgia and will participate in the Georgian-Armenian Economic Forum organized by the Ministry of Economy


Russia Lashes Out At Armenia For Drawing Closer To The International Criminal Court

April 5 2023


On March 17, 2023, the International Criminal Court (ICC) announced that it had issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin for war crimes, accusing him of personal responsibility for the abductions of children from Ukraine.[1]

On March 24, the Armenian Constitutional Court ruled that the Rome Statute, on which the ICC is predicated, complies with the Armenian Constitution, paving the way for the country's ratification of the founding treaty of the ICC.[2] This decision caused indignation in Moscow as Yerevan appeared to be endorsing an organization that Moscow had denounced as a vestige of Western attempts to impose a self-serving rules-based order on everyone else. It did not impress Moscow that Armenia's possible ratification of the ICC treaty was not aimed at Russia and its leader but rather at Azerbaijan – a country Armenia had accused of war crimes perpetrated in the Nagorno Karabakh war.

An anonymous Russian foreign ministry source told both major Russian news agencies, TASS and RIA Novosti, that "Moscow considers completely unacceptable the plans by official Yerevan to join the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court given the background of the recent illegal and legally void ICC 'warrants' against the Russian leadership."

The source warned the Armenian side of "the extremely negative" consequences of its actions for bilateral relations.[3]

At her March 30 weekly briefing, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova, commented on the relations between Armenia and the ICC. She was less menacing than the anonymous source. "The topic is a subject of discussion during high-level contacts both in Moscow and in Yerevan. We do not consider it necessary to disclose details. We assume that the issue will be settled in a collegial and mutually acceptable manner."[4]

An article in the online conservative business daily Vzglyad accused the Armenian government of political myopia and claimed that Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan had taken this step as a deliberate affront to Moscow.

The article cited the criticism of the decision by the opposition Republican Party of Armenia (RPA). That party's executive committee blasted the decision to join the ICC since, according to RPA, the court in The Hague "is a highly politicized body, and it is no accident that even such powerful nations such as the U.S., China, and Russia, which are permanent member-states of the UN Security Council, have not signed or ratified the statute and do not intend to do so in the future."

"To believe that accession to this court's [statute] could be ever used in order to protect interests of Armenia is a sign of an obvious political myopia," declared the article in Vzglyad.  It also noted that the Republican party's leadership had traditionally maintained good relations with Russia.

Russia asserted that the Armenian Constitutional court was staffed with Pashinyan supporters. Konstantin Zatulin, the first deputy chairman of the State Duma committee on CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) Affairs, Eurasian Integration, and Relations with Compatriots, claimed that Pashinyan and his supporters had forced the court's previous chairman, Grair Tovmasyan, to step down. Therefore, Zatulin was convinced that Pashinyan himself was behind the "scandalous" Constitutional Court decision that provoked Moscow's anger.

According to Zatulin, since Pashinyan had secured the complete obedience of the Constitutional court by packing the court with his supporters, "It's hard to argue Armenian Constitutional court's independence. It became known that in summer 2020, its previous chairman was ostracized. Personal pressure focused on him and his family was orchestrated. It was all done to secure his stepping down from the court chairman's office. As a result, the Constitutional Court was transformed into the government's appendage."

Political analyst Marat Bashirov claimed that Yerevan had played one game too many with the Kremlin and scoffed at Yerevan's reassurances to Russia that were belied by statements by members  of Pashinyan's own party: "Government's deputies do not hesitate to say in interviews that Putin should be arrested if he comes to Armenia."

The article did cite some Armenian reassurances that the decision still had to pass parliament and this vote would be deferred indefinitely and that ratification did not mean that Putin faced arrest in Armenia. However, the article did not find these clarifications convincing.

The decision reflected a clear anti-Russian trend in Armenia, according to Vadim Trukhachev, Associate Professor at the Department of Foreign Regional Studies and Foreign Policy of the Russian State University for the Humanities. He stated that "In Yerevan, Russia is perceived as a foreign state, with which one should communicate only on the basis of pragmatic interests. And in this regard the 'divorce' of the countries becomes unavoidable."

Trukhachev claimed that Moscow had ways of punishing Armenia. "Naturally, Moscow won't turn a blind eye to such a decision. Russia could revise its migration policy towards the Caucasian republic, since quite a few citizens of that country still come to us for work. Another direction for our response could be the reduction of investment flows to Armenia," suggested Trukhachev.

For his part, Zatulin claimed that Pashinyan despite any protestations on his part was hostile to Russia. "I never believed in Pashinyan's pro-Russian stance. Before he came to power in 2018, he built his career on [verbal] attacks on Moscow, talking about how a Russian military base in Armenia was not necessary and that it was imprudent for the country [Armenia] to be a CSTO [Collective Security Treaty Organization] member… Now things that Pashinyan's entourage has been dreaming about for a long time and gradually tried to implement have been revealed," said Zatulin.

"Pashinyan's supporters have taken a clearly anti-Russian measure. By passing this Constitutional court decision, they hint that they may declare the Russian head of state 'persona non grata.'" The text asserted that Pashinyan was exploiting Russia's preoccupation with Ukraine to switch sides to the West for the sole purpose of retaining power.

A further indication of Pashinyan's unfaithfulness was his acceptance of U.S. President Joe Biden's invitation to attend the online "Summit for Democracy."[5]

Political scientist and columnist Georgy Bovt viewed the ICC issue as a red herring: "In this case the decision was prepared for a long time and was not taken at all in order to arrest Vladimir Putin. The other day, the Chairman of the National Assembly of Armenia Alen Simonyan said that he could not imagine a situation in which the President of Russia could be arrested if he visits any country, noting that the decision of the ICC is more of a political or historical nature. However, as far as we know, there have been no such statements at the level of the executive branch.

"Armenia, by the way, is far from being the only country 'friendly' to Russia that has ratified the Rome Statute. Of the CIS countries, it was joined by Moldova, with whom relations are already difficult, and also by Tajikistan. It has also been ratified by Venezuela, Serbia, and South Africa. The latter will host the next BRICS summit, to which Putin has already been officially invited. None of these countries were quick to issue an unequivocal statement that they would never execute a warrant for the arrest of the Russian leader, which would openly violate their obligations to the International Criminal Court. Although there were precedents. It's just that such things are usually discussed through closed diplomatic channels, through which appropriate guarantees are also given. Or not given."

According to Bovt, the problems in relations between Yerevan and Moscow lay elsewhere. "In the case of Armenia, the point is also that bilateral political relations are already beset by a number of problems. The main one is Yerevan's open dissatisfaction with the way Russian peacekeepers fulfill, or rather, do not fulfill, as they believe in Yerevan, their obligations in Nagorno-Karabakh. And earlier, according to the Armenian leadership, Moscow did not do enough to protect Armenia from Azerbaijan in the war in the fall of 2020, neglecting its obligations under the CSTO. Now Yerevan is openly dissatisfied with the fact that Russian peacekeepers are not taking any measures to unblock the Lachin corridor, which is the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with the outside world. For almost four months this road has been blocked by Azerbaijani environmental activists, who are clearly acting in concert with official Baku. As a result, there was a shortage of medicine in Nagorno-Karabakh, a rationing system was introduced, filling stations were closed, electricity and gas were periodically cut off.

"In turn, Yerevan has taken a number of steps in recent months that are designed to demonstrate dissatisfaction with how the CSTO mechanism works in general, in terms of protecting its member from Azerbaijan's actions. So, in November of last year, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan refused to sign the draft declaration of the CSTO Collective Security Council. Earlier, in September, the Armenian authorities refused to participate in the CSTO exercises in Kazakhstan. At the beginning of this year, the Armenian Defense Ministry informed the CSTO about the inexpediency of holding the organization's exercises in the country. Moreover, the Russian Ministry of Defense reported that a joint exercise of the CSTO peacekeeping contingents "Indestructible Brotherhood – 2023" is planned to be held on Armenian territory.

"And now it turns out that the 'brotherhood' no longer looks so indestructible. This gives rise to rumors about a possible withdrawal of Armenia from the CSTO, which does not look so unbelievable now. Especially if Yerevan receives guaranty of its security not from Russia, but from the E.U. and the U.S."[6]

Russia hinted at retaliatory measures that could hurt Armenia. On March 31, 2023, the Federal Service for Veterinary and Phytosanitary Supervision (Rosselkhoznadzor) reported on its website on negotiations between the veterinary services of the Russian Federation and Armenia, "during which the results of the inspection of milk processing enterprises in Armenia conducted from March 20 to 24, 2023, were discussed."

"During the meeting, the question was raised about the impossibility of the Armenian veterinary service to guarantee the safety of dairy products for Russian recipients. Considering the results of the negotiations and the unsatisfactory results of the inspection (the department announced them on March 28), Rosselkhoznadzor requested the Armenian veterinary service to suspend certification of dairy products to Russia from all enterprises in the country starting on April 5, 2023. The possibility of resuming supplies will be discussed further, based on the results of the work carried out by the Armenian side to eliminate the identified violations."[7]

Moscow has used the issue of sanitary and product safety authorities before when it wanted to apply pressure. For example, during the low point in relations with Turkey, import of Turkish tomatoes were banned.[8]

The Armenian opposition deputy and the former minister of agriculture Artur Khachatryan took the hint: "The decision to publicize the problem rather than solve it in a work-like fashion already attests to the existence of contradictions that are unrelated to the Russian and Armenian supervisory authorities. Most likely, we are talking about contradictions at a higher political level."

Armenia was vulnerable to such pressures. Armenian economist Armen Ktoyan told the Russian daily Kommersant: "Armenian producers will be dealt a double blow. Firstly, the ban on the import of dairy products weakens the positions of Armenian producers in the Russian market. It will be difficult to come back and occupy a [market] niche again. Secondly, it is impossible to immediately reorient exports to other markets. The potential market is the EU, but there are a lot of regulations that need to be met, and no work has been done in this direction."

Ktoyan expressed concern that if political contradictions continue to increase, Russia could extend the ban to other products: "We understand and know that the Rosselkhoznadzor makes certain decisions that are  also based on the political situation."[9]

Armenia scrambled to contain the situation. The Armenian Parliament's Deputy Speaker Hakob Arshakyan proposed to the Russian Federation to sign an agreement that would serve as a firewall against ICC decisions. Arshakyan said that Yerevan had heard Moscow's concerns about the impact of Armenia's ratification of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court would have on bilateral relations. Armenia's action did not center on Russia but were related solely with the actions of Azerbaijan.

"As recently as today, we signed an agreement with another country, according to which the Rome Statute will not affect our bilateral relations. Such a settlement can be concluded with Russia as well. But this is just one of the options. There are other options. One thing is clear: we have heard the concerns expressed by the Russian Federation, and I think that we will be able to ensure that [ratifying the Rome Statute]  does not damage the strategic relations between Armenia and Russia."[10]

Commenting on the topic of Vladimir Putin's possible arrest if he visits Armenia after the ratification of the Rome Statute, Mr. Arshakyan replied: "Naturally, the ruling party and team have no such intention or desire."[11]

The Director of the Caucasus Institute Alexander Iskandaryan believes that options exist that could allow Yerevan and Moscow to clear the issue of the ICC. In any case, the arrest of the president of a nuclear power was an impossibility. "In political reality, it is impossible to imagine this. Therefore, Yerevan can either simply postpone the ratification of the Rome Statute, or the parties can find some legal loophole and use it." Iskandaryan also warned Moscow that the longer the issue festered, the more it could be exploited by others. "Another thing is that any such tempest in a teacup leaves its sediment in Armenian-Russian relations, and third parties are trying to take advantage of it."[12]

 


[1] Apnews.com, March 18, 2023.

[2] Lemonde.fr, March 29, 2023.

[3] Tass.ru, March 27, 2023

[4] Kommersant.ru, April 3, 2023.

[5] Vz.ru, March 29, 2023.

[6] Bfm.ru, March 28, 2023.

[7] Kommersant.ru, April 3, 2023.

[8] Trtworld,com, August 18, 2017,

[9] Kommersant.ru, April 3, 2023.

[10] Kommersant.ru, April 2, 2023.

[11] Kommersant.ru, April 3, 2023.

[12] Kommersant.ru, April 3, 2023.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 04-04-23

Save

Share

 17:15, 4 April 2023

YEREVAN, 4 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 4 April, USD exchange rate down by 0.33 drams to 388.15 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.42 drams to 423.74 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.08 drams to 4.89 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 4.87 drams to 485.23 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 23.92 drams to 24750.22 drams. Silver price up by 0.25 drams to 298.57 drams. Platinum price stood at 16414.1 drams.

PM Pashinyan receives the Deputy Prime Minister of Russia

Save

Share

 19:24, 4 April 2023

YEREVAN, APRIL 4, ARMENPRESS. Today Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan received Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Alexey Overchuk. Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Mher Grigoryan also participated in the meeting, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister.

In his speech, Prime Minister Pashinyan noted.

"Dear Alexey Logvinovich,

I welcome you and I am very happy for our meeting.

I must note with satisfaction that we have a high intensity of contacts between the representatives of the Republic of Armenia and the Russian Federation, but despite this, there is a need for more dynamic contacts, because our agenda is so full that it is not always possible to cover all issues.

I am sure that today we will discuss a wide range of issues: economic and political issues, issues related to the regional and international situation. It is always a pleasure for me to meet you and have the opportunity to discuss all these issues. Welcome":

The Deputy Prime Minister of Russia said,

"Dear Nikol Vovaevich,

Thank you very much: I am also very pleased to meet with you and discuss the issues of our bilateral agenda. First of all, I would like to mention the strategic nature of the relations between the Russian Federation and the Republic of Armenia. Of course, these are relations that have been built to their current form over the past 30 years, but in fact have a centuries-old history and have more than once faced various challenges, including economic crises, changes in the global trade and economic system.

Despite this, we continue to strengthen our cooperation in the economic sphere, and last year we had very good indicators of mutual trade turnover growth. Investments from Russia to Armenia are also in good progress. We are really happy with the success recorded by the economy of Armenia as a part of the large economy of the Eurasian Economic Union and the advantages that the Union provides are certainly visible."

The interlocutors discussed issues related to the Armenian-Russian cooperation agenda. Trade and economic relations and other topics of mutual interest were discussed.