Thursday, August 27, 2020 Government To Relocate Armenian Village For Irrigation Dam August 27, 2020 • Satenik Kaghzvantsian Armenia -- The Akhurian river in Shirak province, August 27, 2020 Armenia’s government gave on Thursday the green light for the relocation of an entire village as part of a $71 million project to build a new reservoir and irrigation system in northwestern Shirak province. The construction of the Kaps reservoir on the Akhurian river had begun in Soviet times but stopped after the catastrophic 1988 earthquake that devastated many local communities and the provincial capital Gyumri in particular. Armenia’s former government decided to revive and complete the project. Germany’s state-run development bank KfW agreed to lend it 50 million euros ($59 million) for that purpose in 2014. The government pledged to provide the remaining 10 million euros needed for building the irrigation facilities. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s cabinet has also been committed to the project designed to improve supplies of irrigation water to farmers in Shirak. It approved on Thursday a plan to relocate Jradzor, a village 22 kilometers north of Gyumri which would be fully or partly submerged by the Kaps reservoir. Jradzor’s 350 or so residents are to be resettled in a new village that will be built from scratch several hundred meters away. The plan commits the government to providing all of them with new and free housing. This will cost the state an estimated 4.9 billion drams ($10 million), according to Vache Terterian, a deputy minister for local government. The Jradzor mayor, Gevorg Hovakian, and several other local residents interviewed by RFE/RL’s Armenian service said they look forward to the relocation. The impoverished village was severely damaged by the 1988 earthquake and never completely rebuilt. Terterian told Pashinian and cabinet members that work on the new village will likely start next year and be completed by 2024. He gave no time frames for the construction of the reservoir itself. Pashinian stressed the strategic significance of these and other irrigation dams planned or already built in Armenia. “Approximately 7 billion cubic meters of water originates in the territory of Armenia every year,” he said. “But we can now manage only a fraction of these resources: around 10-15 percent. We must be able to achieve much more serious strategic objectives in this area.” Health Minister Defends Vacation Plans August 27, 2020 • Naira Nalbandian Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) and Health Minister Arsen Torosian at a coronavirus-related news briefing, Yerevan, May 28, 2020. Health Minister Arsen Torosian on Thursday dismissed rumors about his impending dismissal and defended his decision to go on vacation despite the continuing coronavirus crisis in Armenia. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian allowed him on Tuesday to take a three-week vacation, effective from August 31, amid media reports saying that Torosian tendered his resignation after a tense meeting with the premier. A spokeswoman for Torosian was quick to deny the claims. The 38-year-old minister likewise insisted that he did not step down and was not lambasted by Pashinian over the coronavirus situation in the country. “I don’t even remember when I last met with the prime minister [tete-a-tete,]” he told reporters. “It was so long ago.” He also denied that a body coordinating the Armenian government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic has demanded a detailed financial report from the Ministry of Health to investigate a possible misuse of government funds allocated for treatment of COVID-19 patients. Torosian was conspicuously absent on Thursday from a weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan chaired by Pashinian. He attended instead a meeting organized by a standing committee of the Armenian parliament. Asked after the meeting about opposition criticism of his upcoming vacation, Torosian said: “Nobody has a right to exploit the expediency of my vacation. I will stay in Armenia, remain reachable and probably go to work on some days.” Armenia -- A healthcare worker in protective gear tends to a COVID-19 patient at the Surp Grigor Lusavorich Medical Center, Yerevan, June 5, 2020. Torosian again defended the health authorities’ handling of the coronavirus crisis, which has been denounced by opposition groups and other critics of Pashinian’s government. “The percentage of Armenia’s citizens who have been infected with and, unfortunately, died from the coronavirus shows that the public health system has done more than it could considering the financial resources and attention given to healthcare over the past decade,” he said. Armenia has had one of the highest infection rates in the wider region, with 43,270 coronavirus cases and at least 864 deaths recorded as of Thursday morning. Even so, the daily number of new confirmed cases has shrunk by more than half since mid-July despite the virtual absence of lockdown restrictions in the country of about 3 million. Pashinian and other Armenian officials say that the government’s emphasis on making people wear face masks in all public spaces and practice social distancing is bearing fruit. Torosian did not exclude that Armenia could soon face a second wave of COVID-19 infections as a result of a colder weather, easing of sanitary restrictions on business activity and the government’s recent decision to reopen schools and universities in September. He said Armenians should therefore continue to follow anti-epidemic rules set by the authorities. Armenian Government Moves To Lift Coronavirus State Of Emergency August 27, 2020 • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenia -- People wear faces masks on a street in Yerevan, August 11, 2020. The Armenian government signaled on Thursday plans to lift a state of emergency which it declared more than five months ago to fight against the coronavirus pandemic. The government approved a bill that would allow it keep in place safety and hygiene rules and even impose, if necessary, nationwide or local lockdowns without again extending emergency rule, which is due to expire on September 11. Under the bill involving amendments to several Armenian laws, authorities will also be able to seal off local communities hit by serious coronavirus outbreaks, quarantine infected people and continue requiring all citizens to wear masks in public spaces. Speaking at a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, Justice Minister Rustam Badasian confirmed that the government will not again extend the state of emergency if the bill is passed by the Armenian parliament by September 11. Badasian insisted that the new legal regime will involve fewer restrictions on people’s freedom of movements and civil rights. In particular, he said, the authorities will stop accessing personal data from mobile phones to identify individuals who have had physical contact with COVID-19 patients and completely banning any type of business activity. The government already lifted earlier this month a coronavirus-related ban on rallies strongly criticized by the Armenian opposition. But it set strict physical distancing requirements for organizers and participants of public gatherings. The government approved the bill even though Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian strongly criticized its authors, the Armenian ministries of justice and health, for not consulting with the Ministry of Defense beforehand. He also deplored the fact that the bill was sent to the office of the state human rights ombudsman only two days before the latest cabinet meeting. Armenia has had one of the highest infection rates in the wider region, with 43,270 coronavirus cases and at least 864 deaths recorded to date. The daily number of new confirmed cases has shrunk by more than half since mid-July despite the virtual absence of lockdown restrictions in the country of about 3 million. Citing the downward trend, the government decided recently to reopen all schools and universities in September. The Ministry of Education went on to put in place detailed safety protocols for all educational institutions. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.