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Armenia named 7th safest country in the world

 12:52,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is the 7th safest country in the world, according to NUMBEO.

The analytical platform’s Crime Rate and Safety Index by Country report has ranked Armenia 7th out of 146 countries, while the city of Yerevan is 15th out of 329 cities.

Armenia and its capital city Yerevan are the safest countries among all CIS countries and cities, according to NUMBEO.

On January 11, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan spoke about the figures during a with police officials.

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Speaker Simonyan, Czechia Chamber of Deputies President discuss Azerbaijan normalization

 13:00,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Speaker of Parliament of Armenia Alen Simonyan has met with visiting President of the Chamber of Deputies of Czechia Markéta Pekarová Adamová.

Speaking at a joint press conference after the meeting on Wednesday, Simonyan said they discussed the processes taking place in the South Caucasus.

“We also discussed the development of relations between our countries, the trade turnover, as well as cooperation in various international platforms. At a one-on-one meeting with Ms. Adamova we discussed regional issues and the normalization with our neighbor Azerbaijan. As you know, our guest will then travel to our neighboring country from here. We had discussions about that too. I’d like to once again say that I am happy to welcome my colleague here,” Simonyan said.

Czechia expresses support to Armenia on its ‘path towards Europe’

 13:40,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Czechia supports Armenia on its ‘path towards Europe’, the visiting President of the Chamber of Deputies of Czechia Markéta Pekarová Adamová said in Yerevan on Wednesday.

“It’s a great honor to be here today, thank you for the reception,” Adamová said at a joint press conference with Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan. “We had a productive bilateral meeting with President of the National Assembly Alen Simonyan. Czechia has been cooperating with Armenia for a very long time and we definitely support your path towards Europe, we have supported Armenia in this direction, including as part of the Eastern Partnership program. We cooperate bilaterally, the parliaments can cooperate in various areas. I have already invited Mr. Simonyan to visit Prague. I will be very happy to host him and his delegation there,” Adamová said.

The President of the Chamber of Deputies said that Armenia and Czechia are working to develop economic relations. “On this occasion, a part of my delegation are entrepreneurs, especially IT representatives, and one of the members of the delegation is from the Czech ministry of trade, which means that we still have the opportunity to improve our bilateral economic relations, and we are working in that direction,” she said, adding that cooperation includes culture and education. “On this occasion I am happy that I will be opening an exhibition in the Armenian History Museum which will present our cultural heritage. I hope it will be a good opportunity to invite Armenian tourists to our beautiful country,” the President of the Chamber of Deputies of Czechia Markéta Pekarová Adamová said.

President of Chamber of Deputies of Czechia visits Armenian Genocide memorial in Yerevan

 13:10,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. President of the Chamber of Deputies of Czechia Markéta Pekarová Adamová and members of her delegation visited the Tsitsernakaberd Armenian Genocide Memorial on Wednesday after arriving in Armenia on an official visit.

The Czech delegation was accompanied by Deputy Speaker of Parliament of Armenia Ruben Rubinyan and MP, head of the Armenia-Czechia Parliamentary Friendship Group Artur Hovhannisyan.

The Czech parliamentarians placed a wreath at the memorial and flowers at the Eternal Flame commemorating the victims of the Armenian Genocide. They then visited the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute.

Adamová is on a visit in Armenia at the invitation of Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan.

Czechia Chamber of Deputies President vows to help bring Azerbaijan back to negotiations with Armenia

 14:26,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. President of the Chamber of Deputies of Czechia Markéta Pekarová Adamová has said she will use all available levers to make Azerbaijan resume the peace talks with Armenia.

Adamová made the comments in Armenia.

She is expected to travel to Azerbaijan.

“We must never give up and we must encourage them to take part in the talks,” she said when asked how the international community can return Azerbaijan to the negotiations table. “This is very important. During my visit to Baku, I will definitely raise these issues, on why they are not willing to find solutions that would be respected also by Armenian representatives. This is what we should do. We will certainly use all opportunities to be able to exert such pressure on all representatives of Azerbaijan in order for them to continue participating in the negotiations,” President of the Chamber of Deputies of Czechia Markéta Pekarová Adamová said.

Armenia calls on international community to apply pressure as Azerbaijan keeps stalling peace talks

 13:33,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is doing everything to establish lasting peace in the region, but Azerbaijan fails to do the same, Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan has said.

Simonyan made the remarks at a joint press conference with President of the Chamber of Deputies of Czechia Markéta Pekarová Adamová when asked how Czechia can support the Armenia-Azerbaijan talks.

“I think that not only Czechia, but all our international partners should exert maximum pressures to bring peace to the region, because Armenia has numerously said that it is ready and is doing everything to establish lasting peace in the region, but we see that our neighboring country doesn’t stand out much in this sense. And the international community must unambiguously react to all the steps that are aimed at undermining the establishment of peace,” Simonyan said.

Citing Azerbaijan’s refusal to take part in talks under various mediations, Speaker Alen Simonyan warned that Azerbaijan could be deliberately stalling the talks.

“In case of the presence of political will, I don’t see any reason that could obstruct the signing of the peace treaty based on all the principles that were agreed upon in Prague. We don’t understand how someone can come to an agreement, make a statement, which was issued by the European Council President Charles Michel, and to date not have a peace treaty based on those fundamental principles,” Simonyan said.

The Speaker said that Armenia will continue its efforts in the direction of establishing peace and strengthening democracy.

“There’s no second opinion that Armenia is a democratic country, and we are the leading democracy in the region and we will continue making steps in that direction. We need support from our partners to further deepen that direction. We think we will succeed in our steps aimed at both peace and the development of democracy,” he said.

Azeri constitution should be amended reciprocally, says Armenian Speaker of Parliament

 14:16,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan believes that the Armenian Constitution contains clauses that should be revised given all geopolitical changes and developments.

“We must understand in which direction Armenia is moving and what goals it is pursuing, and what’s the meaning of the existence of the Republic of Armenia,” Simonyan said at a press conference when asked whether the authorities consider removing the mention of the Declaration of Independence from the Constitution because it in turn mentions Nagorno-Karabakh. “Is that existence for us to restore the historic [Armenia Major], or is it about September 21, when we gained independence, or is it about the citizen of the Republic of Armenia who must be safe and have a prosperous life,” Simonyan added. The Speaker said that answers must be given to these questions, and that the answers aren’t unequivocal within the public. “Armenia can’t be something amorphous. No one can argue with us about this. The citizens of Armenia cannot not understand or know where their homeland begins and ends. Indeed, the Armenian highlands is my homeland, but I have a state called the Republic of Armenia. We gained independence in 1991 with concrete borders, and this must be clear and reflected in all documents,” Simonyan said.

Asked whether amending the Constitution is Azerbaijan’s demand and has something to do with the peace talks, Simonyan said, “I am urging you, and I insist, that from now on, in all the cases when you will ask such a question to Armenian officials, know that the same issue is raised by Armenia. The Azerbaijani Constitution, the Azerbaijani legal acts also contain provisions that should be reciprocally changed. I say again, any negotiations carried out by Armenia are done [reciprocally] in a mirrored way. Meaning, if there is a remark or offer to make the future peace stronger, this relates both to Azerbaijan and to Armenia.”

Armenia’s Fly Arna suspends flights

Flight Global
Jan 29 2024

Armenian national carrier Fly Arna has suspended flights citing ”operational revisions”.

In a brief statement on the airline’s website, the company says its flights “are currently on hold” whilst it undergoes operational revisions. “The carrier is actively working on resuming its services and looks forward to welcoming passengers back onboard soon,” Fly Arna adds. 

It gives no timeframe for the potential resumption of flights.

Fly Arna, a venture between Middle Eastern budget airline Air Arabia and the Armenian National Interests Fund (ANIF), launched flights in July 2022.

Since launching flights from Yerevan to Hurghada in Egypt, the Airbus A320 operator has since added routes to Baghdad, Kuwait, Sharm el Sheik, Tbilisi and the Russian cities of Moscow, Novosibirsk, Sochi and St Petersburg.

In early December suggestions the airline had suspended operations prompted ANIF to issue a statement saying the airline was continuing operations and that it was confident that the company ”will continue to be the advocate and pioneer of the implementation of all standards of modern aviation in Armenia”.

Canada revokes ban on military exports to Turkey, Armenian community condemns move

Al-Arabiya, UAE
Jan 30 2024

AFP - Canada announced Monday it would no longer bar certain arms exports to Turkey, a move that comes approximately a week after Ankara ratified Sweden’s NATO membership.

Permits for military items and certain types of weapons destined for Turkey “will now be reviewed on a case-by-case basis,” the Canadian government said in a notice to exporters.

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It declared that the denial policy on exports was “no longer in place.”

Canada officially blocked military arms exports to Turkey in April 2021 after a probe found Canadian drone technology exported to Turkey had been used by Azerbaijan in clashes with Armenia.

The export ban affected some 30 permits, and applied to a wide variety of military goods and technologies including components for the production of aircraft, software and technical data for flight simulators, satellite equipment and firearm components.

Canada will now require that Turkish importers provide assurances about the weapons’ use as well as a government statement “clearly indicating whether the items will be re-exported or transferred to a non-NATO country.”

Canada additionally “has broad authority to suspend or cancel permits,” the notice said.

The move comes less than a week after Turkey’s parliament ratified Sweden’s membership in the NATO defense alliance, following initial objections and more than a year of delays.

After Ankara’s ratification, the US government approved a $23 billion deal to sell F-16 warplanes to Turkey.

However, the Armenian National Committee of Canada on Monday condemned the move in a statement.

“This decision has raised alarming concerns within the Armenian-Canadian community, as it compromises Canada’s commitment to human rights, international security, and justice,” it said.

Serbian media blame Armenian ‘betrayal’ of Russia for the fall of Nagorno-Karabakh

Jan 30 2024

This analysis by Igor Mirosavljević was originally published by the International and Security Affairs Centre (ISAC), part of the regional initiative Western Balkans Anti-Disinformation Hub. An edited version is republished by Global Voices as part of a partnership agreement.

The re-escalation of the conflict in the Nagorno-Karabakh region in September 2023, which ended with the surrender of Nagorno-Karabakh forces and the establishment of total control over the territory by Azerbaijan, focused increased public attention on the geopolitical dynamics in the South Caucasus region in the media in the Serbian language. Serbian pro-government tabloids pushed the narrative that the sole responsibility for Armenia losing control over the region and the subsequent mass exodus of ethnic Armenians living in Karabakh was the doing of the Armenian pro-Western authorities, their rhetoric and foreign policy moves.

Despite being dubbed as one of the most famous examples of frozen conflict, the dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh has been one of the longest-lasting conflicts in the entire post-Soviet space. Throughout this period, Russia maintained its dominant presence in the region, and played the mediator role in the negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan regarding Nagorno-Karabakh. In addition, Armenia was the only post-Soviet state in which Russian influence was persistent and whose security architecture was directly, almost entirely, tied to Russia.

Nevertheless, during the recent tragic events, the Armenian authorities, led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, and a large part of public opinion strongly condemned Russia, with undisguised dissatisfaction and disappointment with the inaction of Russian peacekeeping troops — the contingent on the ground. However, the pro-government and pro-Russian media in Serbia systematically promoted a different narrative.

The most influential Serbian pro-government tabloid, Informer, carried a series of news headlines such as “Drama in Russia! Armenia is preparing a terrible attack on Moscow?! Pashinyan can cause a total disaster with one decision” and “Where was Pashinyan’s army?! He trains with the Americans!” focusing, in particular, on the alleged turn in Armenia’s foreign policy towards the West and the rapprochement with the USA, which also influenced Russia’s different, “reciprocal” approach in the context of the conflict in Karabakh. The tabloid quoted the former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev and one of the Kremlin’s leading propagandists, Vladimir Solovyov, who pointed out that the Armenian authorities turned to the West, which did not provide aid to Armenia or Nagorno-Karabakh, and are now subsequently trying to blame Russia for their defeat.

Screenshots of Serbian language articles ‘Getting closer to the West didn't pay off: Can Azerbaijan and Armenia avoid a new war?’ (RT), ‘Unprecedented betrayal! Big drama in Armenia, merciless showdown with Russia has begun,’ and ‘Why Putin abandoned Armenia?’ ‘Where was Pashinyan’s army?! He trains with the Americans!‘ (Informer). Fair use.

Other media, such as the Republika portal, the online edition of the daily Srpski Telegraf, also focused their “attention” in their reporting on the “betrayal” of Russia by the pro-Western Armenian authorities, accentuating that since Armenia’s moves have angered Moscow, it has no reason to react militarily in the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. They noted that “the American army is conducting exercises in Armenia; Armenia’s leadership betrayed Russia a long time ago, and Armenia’s main friends are now Russia’s enemies, France, the EU and the USA (…) the third Karabakh war will not last long.”

Russian media based in Serbia also continued to interpret the events in Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as the subsequent anti-government and anti-Russian protests that rocked Armenia, in a similar manner. The Balkan portal of the Russian state media Russia Today pointed out that “the attempt to get closer to the West did not pay off in the end” and that “the situation does not look good either for Armenians or for their Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.” RT repeated that the authorities of Armenia were “making their country hostages of the geopolitical games of the West (…) the alleged mistakes of the Russian Federation and the CSTO unconvincingly justify their steps.” They concluded that “due to the inconsistent attitude of the Armenian leadership, which runs after the West and turns its back on trilateral agreements with Russia and Azerbaijan, precious time has been lost during which progress could be made in the peace negotiations.”

The pro-Russian portals Webtribune and Srbin.info have also frequently “promoted” this narrative. In the text entitled “Armenia’s attack on Russia: Expert revealed the main reason for the betrayal” on Webtribune, it is pointed out that “Pashinyan will say and do whatever he wants at the behest of the West (…) the main thing is to solve the problem of pushing Russia out of the South Caucasus.” Srbin.info published the statement of Russian MFA spokesperson Maria Zakharova, in which she stated that it was not Russia that betrayed Armenia but Brussels, which “neither intended to contribute to the ceasefire nor the provision of humanitarian aid.”

Another of the related narratives present in this period was that Russia, although for a long time the guarantor of security, was not able to intervene more actively when Armenia itself changed the reality on the ground and recognized Azerbaijan’s sovereignty over Karabakh. The Serbian edition of Russian Sputnik emphasized that Pashinyan and the official Yerevan government themselves recognized that Nagorno-Karabakh belongs to Azerbaijan in May 2023, expressing their readiness to recognize the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan [under certain conditions], adding that the latest criticism of the Armenian authorities is in the shadow of that event.

Portal Alo quoted Russian President Vladimir Putin as saying that “it was only a matter of time when and how Baku would establish constitutional order in Karabakh after Yerevan recognized Baku’s sovereignty.” The text adds that it was not the decision of Russia but exclusively of the Armenian authorities. RT published a statement from the Kremlin reminding that Russia was under no obligation to protect Nagorno-Karabakh and that such claims are baseless, given the changed status of this area. Portal Informer quoted the editor-in-chief of the Serbian edition of RT, who claimed that the Armenian government refused Russia’s help, “recognized the disputed part of Nagorno-Karabakh, and now complains about it.”

The portal Novi Standard, in a suggestively titled article “Armenian lesson for the Serbs,” emphasized that “Pashinyan and his closest allies accuse Russia of their treachery and incompetence.” The claim that “in a word, when solving the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, Russia had no reason to confront Azerbaijan after Pashinyan’s complete turn to the collective West,” illustratively summarizes the key narratives spread in the Serbian media.

In reality, Russia’s influence as the most important geopolitical actor in the South Caucasus area is weakened, and this potentially opens up space for other major and regional powers, primarily the USA and Turkey, as well as the  EU, which is involved in nearby countries like Georgia and had attempted to negotiate a peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Even though it's the only foreign power with military forces on the ground, Moscow failed to effectively control the situation in the region, nor to resolve the conflict and stop hostilities. As the Center for Strategic and International Studies writes, Russia’s limited ability to mediate between Armenia and Azerbaijan and prevent the escalation of the conflict in Karabakh is conditioned by Moscow’s complete focus on its war in Ukraine. 

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace noted that since the fall of 2022, Russia's unwillingness to intervene or materialize military aid to Yerevan resulted in a decision by Pashinyan to diversify security partnerships. Only then did Armenia begin changing its security policy with cautious attempts to approach Western countries. This analysis indicated that Moscow’s justifications in the context of its own inertness and political mistakes, including its inability to prevent a humanitarian disaster in Karabakh at the end of September 2023, are unconvincing. The outcome of the conflict was also bad for Russia. “The failure of Russia’s peacekeeping efforts has jeopardized its long-term presence in the South Caucasus,” noted the article.

https://globalvoices.org/2024/01/30/serbian-media-blame-armenian-betrayal-of-russia-for-the-fall-of-nagorno-karabakh/