- Former President Robert Kocharyan held a press conference on the border crisis in Syunik.
- Armenian Soldier dies as a result of Azerbaijani fire in Gegharkunik.
- Georgia will open its land borders with Armenia on June 1.
- Yerevan will acquire 211 new buses within the next six months.
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Russia and Canada in war of words over Armenia embassy
The Russian embassy in Yerevan has condemned a Canadian Foreign Ministry statement that described the move to open a Canadian embassy in Yerevan as a way to “push back on Russian influence.” Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan met with the Spanish parliamentary speaker Meritxell Batet in Madrid. Azerbaijani forces opened fire in the direction of Khachik village in Armenia’s Vayots Dzor region, according to the Armenian Defense Ministry, which reported no casualties.
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Appointment of first woman prosecutor general refocuses attention on women’s
By Mark Dovich Last Wednesday’s appointment of Anna Vardapetyan, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s assistant, to be Armenia’s first woman prosecutor general has refocused attention on the low levels of representation for women in the country’s government, particularly in high-ranking positions. At present, there is only one woman in the cabinet, Health Minister Anahit Avanesyan, and just 37 out of 107 lawmakers are women. Armenia currently has no women governors, and it remains rare for women to be elected to political positions at the local level. The country has never had a woman president or prime minister. “I was not only […]
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Questions raised over close Pashinyan aide’s business dealings
Opposition deputy Artur Ghazinyan has resigned from his seat in Armenia’s parliament, in the latest in a string of opposition resignations. CivilNet investigations uncover murky business dealings regarding former Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan.
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Supporting Armenian democracy and the Armenian people։ An interview with
Damon Wilson is the President and CEO of the National Endowment for Democracy, a Washington-based non-profit that provides grants to grow and strengthen democratic institutions around the world. Mr. Wilson sat down with CivilNet to discuss NED’s work in Armenia and the region, the Armenian government’s reform agenda, and ongoing normalization efforts with Azerbaijan and Turkey.
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Aghavno and Berdzor Armenians may be relocated to two nearby
Armenia’s parliament voted 66-0 at a special session to remove two prominent opposition deputies, Ishkhan Saghatelyan and Vahe Hakobyan, from their leadership positions for excessive absenteeism. The residents of Aghavno and Berdzor may be relocated to the nearby villages of Hin Shen and Mets Shen, says Artsakh’s Human Rights Defender Gegham Stepanyan. This comes after Armenia and Artsakh’s leadership confirmed that the Berdzor subregion will be handed to Azerbaijan in accordance with the November 9, 2020 statement.
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Armenia, Turkey to partially open border in major breakthrough
By Mark Dovich Armenia and Turkey agreed at a meeting in Vienna Friday to open their land border to citizens of third countries “at the earliest date possible,” Armenia’s Foreign Ministry has announced, in the biggest breakthrough in normalization efforts between the two neighboring countries in many years. They also “agreed on commencing direct air cargo trade…at the earliest possible date” and “reemphasized their agreement to continue the normalization process without preconditions,” according to the read-out. Little other detail was made immediately available. Efforts to normalize the extremely fraught relations between Armenia and Turkey took on a new life late […]
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The intersection of science and defense
Areg Danagoulian is an associate professor of Nuclear Science and Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States. Professor Danagoulian sat down with CivilNet to discuss the intersection of science, education, and national security. He also talked about the Metsamor nuclear power plant and the recent launch of Armenia’s first space satellite.
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Jhangiryan resigns from top judicial body amid recording scandal
By Mark Dovich Gagik Jhangiryan, the acting head of Armenia’s Supreme Judicial Council, has resigned “due to health problems,” a judiciary spokesperson announced Friday. No other information was made immediately available. Council members this week declined to bring disciplinary charges against Jhangiryan for alleged wrongdoing revealed in a recording released two weeks ago that has caused a major scandal in Armenia. A week earlier, Ruben Vardazaryan, the former head of the council, was formally dismissed from his position, just days after he released the recording, which appears to show Jhangiryan, at the time a council member, threatening him with criminal […]