Opposition MP slams ‘provocation’ by pro-government colleagues

Panorama
Armenia – March 31 2023

ARF Armenia chair Ishkhan Saghatelyan, an MP from the opposition Hayastan faction, took to Facebook on Friday to condemn the detention of his fellow MP Mher Sahakyan following a conflict with Vladimir Vardanyan, a senior MP from the ruling Civil Contract party.

A scuffle erupted between the lawmakers at a closed meeting of the parliament’s Standing Committee on State and Legal Affairs on Friday morning. Sahakyan was detained shortly after the incident.

Saghatelyan blamed his pro-government colleague for the conflict and accused the police of using excessive force to detain the opposition MP. He denounced the incident as a “provocation” by the ruling faction MPs.

“The provocation by the Civil Contract faction MPs is aimed at diverting the people’s attention from the Azerbaijani advance into Armenian territory,” the deputy stated.

EU4Environment invites a consultant to develop recommendations for deforestation- and illegal logging-free trade in Armenia, Georgia and Moldova

March 31 2023

EU4Environment is looking for a consultant to provide analytical and advisory support to governments and stakeholders on key topics related to sustainable forest management, no deforestation and legal trade in timber products in Armenia, Georgia and Moldova.

The Consultant will undertake regional awareness raising and knowledge sharing, advisory support for improving deforestation-free trade control systems, and identification of areas of innovation and technology to strengthen export and trade controls over timber/wood and other relevant commodities.

EU4Environment encourages an experienced Consultant with expertise in sustainable forest management and legal timber trade, and experience of work in the EU and the EU’s Eastern Partner countries to apply.

The deadline for applications is 17 April.

Find out more

Press release

April 17, 2023
Calls for proposals
https://euneighbourseast.eu/opportunities/eu4environment-invites-a-consultant-to-develop-recommendations-for-deforestation-and-illegal-logging-free-trade-in-armenia-georgia-and-moldova/

Greece, Armenia Work Out Military Cooperation Pact, Training Drills

The National Herald, Greece
March 31 2023
March 31, 2023
By The National Herald

ATHENS – After being defeated by Azerbaijan in the 2020 conflict over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region and surrounding territories, Armenia has signed a military cooperation agreement with Greece.

The agreement was signed by Levon Ayvazyan, the head of the Department for Defense Policy and International Cooperation under the Armenian Defense Ministry, and Vasilios Tsami, the Director of the International Relations Department of the Greek General Staff, according to Azer News.

The cooperation plan includes 21 events, with 15 planned to be held in Greece and 6 in Armenia. The program features joint drills and an exchange of experiences among special forces, air defense units, cyber unit training, and peacekeeping forces, the report stated.

A component of the agreement will involve cooperation between the intelligence communities of the two countries. Before the current easing of tensions, Greece was at times close to a conflict point with Turkey, which supplied Azerbaijan with drones that proved decisive against Armenia in battle.

Greece is one of Armenia’s major military partners. A similar document, the Tripartite Defense Cooperation Program for 2022-2023, was signed between Cyprus, Greece, and Armenia on August 31, 2021, the report noted.

During a conversation with the Greek Ambassador to Azerbaijan, President Ilham Aliyev expressed his concerns about Greece working with Armenia, stating that it “poses an existential threat to Azerbaijan because, by using these weapons, they kill our military servicemen and civilians.”

CSTO chief sees ongoing tensions between Armenia, Azerbaijan

 TASS 
Russia – March 31 2023
On Thursday, Azerbaijan’s top brass said that the republic’s forces had taken control of heights and areas in the Lachin District near the border with Armenia ahead of the commissioning of a new motor road that would connect Karabakh to Armenia

MOSCOW, March 31. /TASS/. Tensions stemming from years of disputes are ongoing between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Caucasus, General Secretary of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) Imangali Tasmagambetov said on Friday.

"Tensions that stem from the long years of disputes between Armenia and Azerbaijan remain in the Caucasus," the CSTO chief told an expanded meeting of the leaders of the organization’s Secretariat and United Staff.

On Thursday, Azerbaijan’s top brass said that the republic’s forces had taken control of heights and areas in the Lachin District near the border with Armenia ahead of the commissioning of a new motor road that would connect Karabakh to Armenia.

The situation around Nagorno-Karabakh escalated on September 27, 2020. On the night of November 9, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on the full cessation of hostilities. The sides stopped at their positions at that moment, a number of districts went under Baku’s control, and Russian peacekeepers were deployed at the contact line and at the so-called Lachin corridor.

Armenia Is A Loyal Russian Ally, Not The West’s Partner – [Ukrainian] OpEd

March 31 2023

By Taras Kuzio

Some Europeans, Americans, and Canadians do not want to accept the fact that Armenia is second only to Belarus in being a Russian satellite state. Instead, they treat Armenia as a budding and prospective candidate for European integration, ignoring the impossibility of Armenia being allowed by the Kremlin to do a ‘Brexit’ from Russian-led and controlled organisations in Eurasia.

This month the Economist published a breakdown of Russia’s friends describing them as a ‘motley – and shrinking – crew.’ The table of what the Economist called ‘Putin’s Pals’ was compiled using 11 different measures of support and potential for pressure in the military, diplomatic and energy and economic fields. Armenia came a close second to Belarus as ‘Putin’s Pals.’ 

Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan are what the Economist call the ‘B Team’ and the ‘the coalition of the failing.’ All five are members of the Russian-led CSTO (Collective Security Treaty) meaning they are bound by treaty to assist each other if attacked. Yet none of them has supported Russia’s war in Ukraine with troops and all – except Belarus – have abstained in UN votes condemning Russia’s invasion and annexation of Ukrainian territory. Belarus has allowed its territory to be used as an invasion staging area and for missile attacks against Ukraine but has resisted sending its troops into battle against Ukraine. Self-declared president Alexander Lukashenka is afraid his troops would surrender or defect to Belarusian battalions fighting against his regime as soon as the cross the border into Ukraine.

The Economist drew up ‘Putin’s Pals’ by investigating treaties Armenia has with Russia, if they have Russian troops on their soil and do they use Russian arms.  The answer to all three questions is yes for Armenia. Russia and Armenia have signed military agreements since the early 1990s when Soviet and then Russian troops assisted it in defeating Azerbaijan in the First Karabakh War and occupying twenty percent of its territory. Based on August 1992 and March 1995 treaties, Russia has two bases in Gyumri and at Yerevan airport. Armenian officers train at Russian military academies and most of Armenia’s military equipment is Russian.

Prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine there were rumoured to be plans to expand the number of Russian bases in Armenia. In February 2021, Armenian Defence Minister Vagharshak Harutyunyan raised the possibility of ‘redeploying some military formation of the [102nd] Russian base to the eastern part of Armenia.’ The possible location was the Vardenis region, southeast of Lake Sevan. This was an area with Azerbaijani forces based nearby in the Kalbajar district which was returned in accordance with the November 2020 ceasefire agreement.

Russian military bases in Armenia are de facto permanent. In August 2010, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev signed an agreement extending these Russian military bases for 49 years from 1995-2044. It is interesting that 2044 was also the date that pro-Russian President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych extended the base of the Black Sea Fleet in Sevastopol in the 2010 ‘Kharkiv Accords.’

Armenia is a founding member of Russia’s alternative to NATO, the CSTO, which it joined in 1992 in the year it won its victory in the First Karabakh War with Russian military assistance. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is unhappy with the CSTO for not intervening on Armenia’s side in the Second Karabakh War, ignoring the fact the war was fought on occupied Azerbaijani territory and Armenia’s territorial integrity was never threatened. Pashinyan is also unhappy with Russian peacekeeping forces because they have not intervened on Armenia’s side in border disputes, forgetting there would be no need for these forces and no military clashes if Yerevan agreed to sign a post-conflict peace treaty with Azerbaijan. Yerevan has been unwilling to sign a treaty because most Armenians refuse to accept the former Soviet republican boundary as an international border, a step that would include accepting Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan.

Unusually, and uniquely in the former USSR, Armenia’s borders are controlled by Russian border guard troops based on a treaty signed in September 1992. Russian border guard troops are based in Gyumri, Armavir, Artashat, Meghri and at Zvartnots airport. Russia’s border guard troops are under the control of the FSB, Russia’s Federal Security Service whose responsibility is internal Russian security but also stretches to cover the entire former USSR. In the USSR, the border guards came under the control of the KGB. R 

After the 2020 ceasefire, Russia expanded the presence of FSB border guard troops to five locations in Armenia, including two on the border with Nakhichevan (Yeraskh, Paruyr Sevak), two on the border with Iran (Meghri, Sghrt), and one in Tegh. The FSB expanded the number of FSB officers to the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. Russian border guard troops were also stationed in the villages of Vorotan and Shurnukh, on a 21 km section of the Goris-Kapan highway, in Kapan (near the newly built airport) and the Meghri region on the Armenian-Iranian border. 

In the latter phase of the Second Karabakh War, Russia transferred some military forces to two locations near Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan. The first was near the village of Tegh on the highway linking Armenia and Karabakh and the second was a reinforcement of existing Russian forces in Meghri. A second expansion was the creation of a Russian military outpost in Yeraskh, near the border with Azerbaijan’s Nakhichevan region, close to Tigranashen.

Again, unusually in the former USSR, Russian military police are deployed in and patrol Gyumri and Yerevan. Russia’s Alpha counter-terrorism special forces (spetsnaz) group, part of the FSB, are stationed at the military police headquarters in Yerevan. Aplha spetsnaz reinforcements have been flown into Armenia during crises, such as in October 1999 when five terrorists entered parliament and assassinated Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan, Parliament Speaker Karen Demirchyan and several other Armenian politicians.

In addition to Russia, Armenia has developed close political, diplomatic and military ties with Iran whose drones it has assisted in delivering to Russia that the Kremlin uses to attack critical infrastructure and innocent civilians. Iran regularly holds large military exercises on the border with Azerbaijan to pressure Baku over its relations with Armenia. In January, Iranian terrorists attacked the Azerbaijani embassy in Tehran leading to one fatality and two wounded. 

The Economist looked at diplomatic ties to determine if countries were ‘Putin’s friends.’ Armenia has very close diplomatic ties with Russia and Iran in what is a Moscow-Yerevan-Tehran axis.  After Russia’s 2014 invasion of Crimea, Armenia voted against UN resolutions denouncing the annexation. Armenian diplomats and politicians argued that ‘self-determination’ for Crimea should be the basis for the ‘self-determination’ of Karabakh (or what Armenian nationalists call Artsakh). This had no basis in international law because the UN definition of ‘self-determination’ only applies to states and not to parts of countries. If ‘self-determination’ was applied across the board, there would be chaos across the globe; indeed, many regions of the Russian Federation would claim the right to break away from Moscow.

Armenia has abstained on UN votes that condemned Russia’s 24 February 2022 invasion of Ukraine and Russia’s 30 September 2022 annexation of four Ukrainian regions. Georgia and Moldova voted in favour of UN resolutions condemning Russia’s invasion and annexation while most Eurasian states like Armenia chose to abstain. Of the 12 Eurasian states outside NATO and the EU, only Belarus supported Russia in these two votes at the UN.

Finally, the Economist investigated close energy and economic ties to Russia. Armenia’s energy structure, including gas pipelines are under Russian control. Russia supplies most of the gas used by Armenia. Russia raised gas prices to pressure Armenia to not sign an Association Agreement with the EU from which it withdrew in September 2013. Armenia’s two nuclear power plants were built in the USSR and are therefore reliant on Russia for fuel and repairs. If Armenia normalised relations with Turkey, which would lead to a reopening of their border, and signed a peace treaty with Azerbaijan, Armenia would be in a position – like Georgia – to benefit from gas pipelines flowing westwards from Azerbaijan. 

Armenia relies heavily on trade with Russia with whom it is in the Eurasian Economic Union’s (EEU) customs union. In 2013, President Sargsyan opted to withdraw from European integration and instead join Putin’s alternative, the EEU, two years later. Remittances sent back to Armenia by two million Armenians living and working in Russia are a vital injection of finances into the economy. Armenia exports to Russia make up nearly half of the country’s total export revenue. 

Numerous sources testify to a major increase in Armenian-Russian trade since early 2022. Most analysts believe this is not trade in real commodities but the re-export of goods through Armenia to Russia to bypass Western sanctions. While not supporting Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and annexation of Ukrainian lands at the UN, Armenia is nevertheless assisting Russia to bypass Western sanctions and receive Iranian drones.

Armenia is second only to Belarus in the top two of what the Economist describes as ‘Putin’s Pal’s.’  Western policymakers should drop their illusions as to this changing anytime soon because Armenia is too closely integrated with the Russian military and through diplomatic, trade, and energy ties. Brussels and Washington will not be seeing any Armenian ‘Brexit’s’ from Russia’s sphere of influence anytime soon.

Taras Kuzio is a professor of political science at the National University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy and author of the just published Fascism and Genocide. Russia’s War Against Ukrainians


CSTO Secretary General warns of “risk of destabilization” due to situation in Nagorno Karabakh

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 13:07, 31 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) Secretary General Imangali Tasmagambetov has warned of a “risk of destabilization” stemming from the tense situation in Nagorno Karabakh.

Speaking at a joint meeting of the CSTO Secretariat and Joint Staff, Tasmagambetov said that the situation in Nagorno Karabakh and Afghanistan remains tense and creates “risk of destabilization” in the CSTO countries.

 “The tension in the Caucasus region persists as a result of the many years of disputes between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Interfax news agency quoted the CSTO Secretary General as saying.

He warned of a serious risk of destabilization because of the risks relating to the situation in Nagorno Karabakh and the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

“The situation in the Central Asian region is also tense, the threat of infiltration of extremist ideology and terrorist groups into the territory of CSTO allies is growing. The difficult threats coming from the territory of Afghanistan are especially concerning,” he said, adding that the organization is working to perfect its mechanisms of withstanding challenges and threats.

CSTO “always ready” to send mission to Armenian-Azerbaijani border

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 13:38, 31 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. The CSTO is “always ready” to deploy a mission to the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, a senior official of the organization’s secretariat said Friday.

“Regarding the Caucasian region, the organization is always ready to send a CSTO mission to the Armenian-Azerbaijani border pursuant to the interests of ensuring Armenia’s security, as well as to provide other assistance,” TASS news agency quoted CSTO Secretariat representative Yuri Shuvalov as saying after a joint meeting of the CSTO Secretariat and Joint Staff. 

The assistance mechanisms are included in the CSTO Collective Security Council’s draft decision, which is pending, he added.

Detectives investigate bizarre fistfight between Members of Parliament

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 13:56, 31 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. The Investigative Committee of Armenia said Friday afternoon that it is investigating a report of an alleged fistfight between lawmakers in parliament. 

In a statement, Investigative Committee spokesperson Gor Abrahamyan said detectives are investigating the alleged incident.

“At this moment I can only say that one of the Members of Parliament has been taken to the police precinct, while another Member of Parliament has sought medical attention at a hospital,” he added.

Parliament Majority Leader Hayk Konjoryan earlier said that Mher Sahakyan, an opposition MP representing the Hayastan faction, assaulted MP Vladimir Vardanyan, the Chairman of the State-Legal Affairs Committee of Parliament representing the ruling Civil Contract, during a committee session. Konjoryan said Vardanyan suffered injuries, while Sahakyan left the scene. The ruling party faction leader described the incident as a “shameful hooliganism”.

Meanwhile, Hayastan faction leader Seyran Ohanyan told reporters that police officers escorted Sahakyan to a police precinct.

Ohanyan accused Vardanyan of provoking the fight.

He said that another scuffle began in his office afterwards when officers were about to escort Sahakyan to the precinct when Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan entered the room.

Ohanyan accused the police officers of “taking advantage” of Alen Simonyan’s presence and manhandling Mher Sahakyan. “This resulted in chaos in my office," Ohanyan added.

Whether or not Sahakyan is detained wasn't immediately clear.

United States tells citizens to leave Russia immediately

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 14:18, 31 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. Washington has called upon Americans who are traveling to or residing in Russia to leave the country “immediately” in the aftermath of the arrest of Wall Street Journal (WSJ) correspondent Evan Gershkovich.

“We are deeply concerned by the troubling reports that Evan Gershkovich, an American citizen, has been detained in Russia,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement. “Last night, White House and State Department Officials spoke with Mr. Gershkovich’s employer, the Wall Street Journal. The Administration has also been in contact with his family. Furthermore, the State Department has been in direct touch with the Russian government on this matter, including actively working to secure consular access to Mr. Gershkovich. The targeting of American citizens by the Russian government is unacceptable. We condemn the detention of Mr. Gershkovich in the strongest terms. We also condemn the Russian government’s continued targeting and repression of journalists and freedom of the press.I want to strongly reiterate that Americans should heed the U.S. government’s warning to not travel to Russia. U.S. citizens residing or traveling in Russia should depart immediately, as the State Department continues to advise.”

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington was “deeply concerned” about the development, adding that “in the strongest possible terms, we condemn the Kremlin’s continued attempts to intimidate, repress, and punish journalists and civil society voices.”

“We reiterate our strong warnings about the danger posed to US citizens inside the Russian Federation. US citizens residing or traveling in Russia should depart immediately,” the top diplomat said in a statement.

Gershkovich, a WSJ correspondent who covers news from Russia, Ukraine, and the former USSR, was detained in the city of Yekaterinburg on suspicion of espionage, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) announced earlier on March 30. RT cited Dmitry Peskov as saying the journalist was caught “red-handed” while trying to obtain Russian state secrets.

Azerbaijan confirms participation in Yerevan EWF European Weightlifting Championships 2023

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 14:54, 31 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijan has officially confirmed participation in the EWF European Weightlifting Championships 2023 due in Yerevan.

Azerbaijan will be represented by five athletes at the event.

Referee Arayik Alaverdyan told ARMENPRESS that the Azerbaijani authorities requested security assurances for their athletes.

The Deputy Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sports Karen Giloyan had earlier said that the security of all athletes will be ensured.

The EWF European Weightlifting Championships 2023 is scheduled to take place 15-23 April in Yerevan, Armenia.