Tuesday, October 5, 2021 Lithuania Donates More Coronavirus Vaccines To Armenia • Marine Khachatrian A vial labeled "Moderna coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine" placed on displayed Moderna logo, March 24, 2021. Armenia received on Tuesday another batch of coronavirus vaccines donated to it by Lithuania. The 50,000 doses of the Spikevax jab manufactured by the U.S. company Moderna were delivered to Yerevan’s Zvartnots airport and handed over to the Armenian Ministry of Health. The ministry thanked the Lithuanian government in a statement that announcement the shipment. The Baltic state already provided 25,000 doses of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine to Armenia in early September. The Moderna shots donated by it are the first American vaccines that will be used in Armenia. Gayane Sahakian, the deputy director of the Armenian Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said they will be distributed to all policlinics and other vaccination centers across the country and made available the population by the end of this week. Armenians have until now been inoculated with vaccines developed by Russia, China as well as Oxford University and the Anglo-Swedish company Astra Zeneca. Health Minister Anahit Avanesian said in July that Armenia will receive this fall 50,000 doses of Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine and 300,000 doses of the Novavax jab. Shortly afterwards the Armenian government allocated funds for the purchase of 300,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine. None of those vaccines have been imported yet, however. “We will have Pfizer vaccines, but I don’t know when,” Sahakian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. According to the Ministry of Health, just over 517,000 vaccine shots were administered in the country of about 3 million as of October 4. Only about 165,000 of its residents were fully vaccinated. The government has taken administrative measures to try to accelerate the slow pace of its immunization campaign launched in April. A recent directive signed by Avanesian obligates virtually all public and private sector employees refusing vaccination to take coronavirus tests twice a month at their own expense. The requirement took effect on October 1. The daily number of officially confirmed coronavirus cases in Armenia has slowly but steadily increased since June. The Ministry of Health reported on Tuesday morning 891 new cases and 24 coronavirus-related deaths. Opposition Lawmaker Challenges Travel Ban • Marine Khachatrian Armenian - Armen Gevorgian, a former senior aide to ex-President Robert Kocharian, speaks to journalists in a court building in Yerevan, January 29, 2019. A senior opposition lawmaker standing trial on what he sees as politically motivated charges on Tuesday again asked a court in Yerevan to allow him to attend sessions of the Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) in Strasbourg. Armen Gevorgian is the sole full-fledged opposition member of the Armenian parliament’s delegation in the PACE. He is affiliated with the Hayastan alliance led by former President Robert Kocharian. Kocharian and Gevorgian face bribery charges, strongly denied by them, in an ongoing trial that began more than two years ago. They both were banned from leaving Armenia without the court’s permission. Anna Danibekian, the judge presiding over the trial, refused last month to let Gevorgian participate in the PACE’s autumn session held on September 27-30. Two other opposition lawmakers, who have the status of “substitutes” in the 8-member delegation in the Strasbourg-based assembly, boycotted the session out of solidarity with him. During the latest court hearing on the high-profile case, Gevorgian’s lawyer, Lusine Sahakian, petitioned Danibekian to lift the travel ban, saying that it is unjustified. The trial prosecutors objected to the request. The judge did not grant it while leaving open the possibility of allowing Gevorgian to travel abroad later on. She said she will consider such permissions on a case-by-case basis. Gevorgian, 48, is also the chairman of the Armenian parliament’s standing committee on “regional and Eurasian integration.” He was an influential aide to Kocharian when the latter ruled the country from 1998-2008. Gevorgian also served as deputy prime minister from 2008-2014 in the administration of then President Serzh Sarkisian. Earlier in September, Danibekian refused to allow Kocharian to visit Moscow at the invitation of Russia’s ruling party. Hayastan condemned her decision, saying that it was made under strong government pressure. The judge had repeatedly given Kocharian permission to travel to Moscow before the June 20 parliamentary elections in which the ex-president’s bloc finished second. Iran Offers To Help Armenia Build Bypass Roads • Naira Nalbandian An Azerbaijani checkpoint set up at on the main road conneting Armeia to Iran, September 14, 2021 Iran is ready to help Armenia build highways connecting the two neighboring states and bypassing Azerbaijani-controlled territory, a senior Iranian government official said during a visit to Yerevan on Tuesday. Deputy Minister of Roads and Urban Development Kheirollah Khademi said Armenian roads leading to the Iranian border are of strategic importance to his country. An official Iranian delegation headed by him arrived in Yerevan on Monday amid continuing disruptions in cargo traffic between Armenia and Iran resulting from an Azerbaijani roadblock set up on September 12 on the main highway connecting them. Khademi said the purpose of the trip is to discuss with Armenian officials the transport hurdles and the ongoing reconstruction of an alternative road which also passes through Armenia’s Syunik province bordering Iran and Azerbaijan. “We are negotiating with the Armenian side so that cargo and passenger traffic through that road gets on track as soon as possible,” he told the YouTube channel Armenia-Iran Friendship. “We are ready to assist Armenia in the construction of the new road,” he said. “Iran is ready to share its technical and engineering capacity with Armenia.” The Islamic Republic, Khademi went on, can also provide similar support for the Armenian government’s plans to build or refurbish other Syunik roads leading to the Iranian border. “Armenia is also building the North-South highway which starts from the Iranian borders and stretches to the Georgian border … We are ready to cooperate with Armenia on that as well. Iran has extensive experience in road construction, and our contractors are ready to share their experience with Armenia,” he said. Armenia -- A road in the Syunik province, September 3, 2018. The official Iranian IRNA news agency reported that Khademi’s delegation will explore in Armenia Iran’s possible involvement in the bypass road construction. It said the Syunik roads also connect the Islamic Republic with Russia and Europe. The delegation flew to Yerevan as the Armenian and Iranian foreign ministers met in Tehran for talks that focused on transport issues. Echoing statements by other Armenian officials, Foreign Minister Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan assured his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amir-Abdollahian that work on the alternative Syunik road will be completed before the end of this year. Azerbaijan gained control over a 21-kilometer section of the existing main Armenia-Iran highway last December following an Armenian troop withdrawal from border areas along Syunik. Azerbaijani officers deployed there began taxing on September 12 Iranian trucks delivering goods to and from Armenia. Many truck drivers have refused to pay the “road tax” reportedly worth $130 per trip. Tensions between Tehran and Baku have risen since then, with the Iranian military starting large-scale exercises along the Islamic Republic’s border with Azerbaijan last week. Iranian officials have accused Baku of harboring Middle Eastern “terrorists” as well as Israeli security personnel in the area. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev denied the accusations on Monday. Earlier on Monday, a senior Iranian parliamentarian reportedly accused Aliyev of trying to “cut Iran’s access to Armenia” with the help of Turkey and Israel. Iran already offered to help Armenia upgrade its strategic highways in Syunik months before the latest crisis. The two governments set up this summer a joint working group tasked with looking into Iranian companies’ possible participation in the multimillion-dollar transport projects planned by Yerevan. Armenian Opposition Demands Parliament Debate On Azeri Roadblock • Anush Mkrtchian Armenia - Anna Grigorian, a Syunik-based deputy from the opposition Hayastan bloc, speaks at a session of the National Assembly, Yerevan, October 5, 2021. Opposition lawmakers continued to push on Tuesday for an urgent session of the Armenian parliament on serious disruptions in Armenia’s trade with neighboring Iran resulting from a roadblock set up by Azerbaijan last month. The opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem blocs demanded such a discussion immediately after Azerbaijani authorities began levying hefty duties from Iranian vehicles passing through an Azerbaijani-controlled section of the main highway connecting Armenia and Iran. Parliament speaker Alen Simonian accepted the demand, saying that Armenia’s defense minister, National Security Service (NSS) and other officials will soon brief the National Assembly on Yerevan’s response to Baku’s actions. The discussion has still not taken place, however. Representatives of the two parliamentary opposition forces reminded the pro-government majority of Simonian’s promise as the parliament was about to discuss other matters on Tuesday morning. They said transport links with Iran are vital for Armenia’s national security. Deputy speaker Ruben Rubinian, who presided over the session, countered that Simonian is currently visiting Russia and urged the opposition to wait until he returns to Armenia. Opposition deputies again condemned Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government for handing over a 21-kilometer section of the highway passing through Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province to Azerbaijan shortly after a Russian-brokered ceasefire stopped the war in Nagorno-Karabakh last November. Pashinian said at the time that the road section is located on the Azerbaijani side of Armenia’s Soviet-era border with Azerbaijan, a claim disputed by his political opponents. He has also claimed that Armenia’s former leaders challenging him now themselves recognized that border with a law enacted in 2010. The Azerbaijani roadblock and its resulting negative impact on cargo traffic between Armenia and Iran was high on the agenda of talks held by the foreign ministers of the two states in Tehran on Monday. Armenia’s Ararat Mirzoyan briefed his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amir-Abdollahian on the ongoing reconstruction of an alternative road in Syunik that will allow Iranian trucks to bypass the Azerbaijani checkpoint. He said it will be completed soon. Amir-Abdollahian seemed satisfied with these assurances when he spoke at a joint news briefing held after the talks. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.