Olympic flame for 2020 Games lit in Greece without spectators due to coronavirus

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 14:55, 12 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 12, ARMENPRESS. The Olympic flame for the 2020 Tokyo Games was lit in ancient Olympia, Greece on Thursday without a single spectator due to precautions over the novel coronavirus outbreak in Europe.

An actress dressed as an ancient Greek high priestess lit the flame using the rays of the sun reflected off a concave mirror, launching a week-long torch relay in Greece before the flame is handed to Tokyo organisers on March 19. Greek shooter, Rio Olympics champ Anna Korakaki is the first torch bearer.

Rockstar v Winston: System of a Down frontman calls on NZ to recognise genocide

NewsHub, New Zealand
March 13 2020
  • 12/03/2020
  • Jenna Lynch

The frontman of Grammy award-winning rock band System of a Down is calling on Foreign Minister Winston Peters to recognise the Armenian Genocide in WW1.

The American-Armenian's grandparents survived the slaughter of up to 1.5 million Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks within the old Ottoman Empire due to their religious beliefs.

"It's important for people to be aware about the genocide – the first genocide of the 2nd century," Serj Tankian told Newshub.

But New Zealand does not call it genocide.

"The United States just recognised it, most – or a lot of countries – have recognised it, including France, Italy, the European Union, the Vatican, [and] Russia," Tankian says.

Newshub asked Tankian if he would like Peters to use the word 'genocide' and he said: "I would."

There are fears it would damage the country's relationship with Turkey – one of the first countries the Government visited in the wake of the mosque attacks.

And thousands of Kiwis make the annual trip to Gallipoli to pay respects on ANZAC Day.

"There are dances around the word genocide because Turkey does not want nations to use that word," Tankian says.

He will be speaking at an event in Parliament on Thursday evening where politicians from across the House of Representatives were invited.

Newshub has been leaked a memo sent to MPs by Peters' office which says: "In deciding whether to take up the invitation, please note the New Zealand Government's position on this sensitive issue, which is to encourage Turkey and Armenia, as the parties directly concerned, to discuss the issue."

Tankian views that as a threat to MPs not to attend.

"Even the Republican Party of the United States hasn't gone that far," he says. "That's interesting. I think that's a shame… it's disappointing."

Newshub asked Peters if he told MPs not to go to an event and he replied: "That's your allegation. Of course I didn't."

It's not unusual for Foreign Minister's to remind MPs of New Zealand's position on difficult diplomatic issues like this.

But the Armenian community feels strongly their loss should be recognised – and now there is a very loud voice calling for New Zealand MPs to listen up. 

CIVILNET.Cases of Coronavirus in Armenia Reach 15, Georgian Border Closed

CIVILNET.AM

13:19

By Emilio Luciano Cricchio

The number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Armenia has risen to 15.

The number of cases has risen suddenly in the last few days, five cases were confirmed on Thursday, seven new cases were confirmed on Friday and two more have been confirmed on Saturday.

 All patients have been hospitalized and are in good condition, except one who has been diagnosed with pneumonia. 

The number of cases had hovered at just one for some time after a man who had traveled to the Iranian capital tested positive with the virus on March 1. 

During a live stream on Facebook, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that a woman who returned from Italy attended an engagement party in Echmiadzin and that she had infected her husband and cousin.

Pashinyan also said that health authorities had been trying to contact the woman and get her to come for check-up, but she insisted she was completely well, when in fact she had already developed symptoms including a fever. 

Pashinyan said that considering the circumstances, it was difficult for Armenian health authorities to act to contain the spread of the virus. 

Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan also announced that the Armenian-Georgian border will be closed from Saturday for ten days, after an agreement between Armenian and Georgian authorities. However, this new restriction will not apply to Armenian citizens seeking to return home.  

Moreover, after an emergency meeting of ministers, Pashinyan announced that all educational institutions in Armenia will also be closed next week.

 Pashinyan and his wife Anna Hakobyan have self-isolated in Sevan, due to Hakobyan’s recent meeting with the President of Brazil during her journey to Latin America. This comes after reports that the President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro had tested positive with COVID-19, although Bolsonaro has stated he tested negative. Pashinyan and his wife will also be tested for coronavirus on Saturday. 

Furthermore, 28 of the 31 people who had been isolated at the Golden Palace Hotel in Tsaghkadzor will be allowed to return home, with two of the remaining three patients testing positive. 

With flights also suspended to Italy until early April, Armenia’s Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan announced that a charter flight from Rome to Yerevan will be organized for March 15 to evacuate Armenian citizens from Italy.

It also remains unclear whether the April 5 constitutional referendum and the general elections in Nagorno-Karabakh on March 31 will be suspended.

228 Iranian drivers placed under medical control in Armenia amid coronavirus fears

Panorama, Armenia

To date, a total of 211 coronavirus tests have been performed in Armenia with only one positive result, the Ministry of Health said in a statement.

The border checkpoints continue to be under toughened control, the ministry said. Currently, passengers arriving from Iran, Italy, China, Japan and South Korea are staying for 14 days under medical supervision regardless of their citizenship (France, Germany and Spain will be added to the list).

According to a government decision restricting Iran-Armenia border crossings, all trucks coming from the Meghri checkpoint have been escorted by police and regularly monitored by the ministry’s specialists.

According to the Health Ministry, a total of 857 drivers, including 228 Iranians, have been placed under medical control throughout Armenia, including at the State Revenue Committee's customs warehouses before their return home, while Armenian drivers have been placed under supervision according to their places of residence.

World Health Organization regional experts have arrived in Yerevan to carry out an assessment of hospital preparedness and laboratory research in the fight against the novel coronavirus.

The National Center for Disease Control and Prevention has established an "Operational Call Center" at the following phone number: 060 83 83 00, which operates around the clock.

The death toll due to the deadly disease in China mounted to 3,123 on Monday. A total of 80,904 confirmed cases of the virus were reported in the country, China’s National Health Commission (NHC) reported. 

How Armenia’s dealing with coronavirus

JAM News
March 2 2020

While doctors phone lines might be ringing off the hooks, so far there has only been one recorded case of coronavirus in Armenia

Armenia has just one case of coronavirus, and is taking a number of measures to ensure the number of infections remains low.

The first and only case arrived in Armenia from Tehran on February 28. The 29-year-old Armenian citizen and all who contacted him have been quarantined. The individual’s health is satisfactory, does not have a fever and is not receiving treatment.

However, since his arrival in the country, classes in all educational institutions have been cancelled and a temporary visa regime was introduced with neighboring Iran.

The border with Georgia remains open; this is the only land road connecting Armenia with the outside world.

 “Given that there is an outbreak of coronavirus in the region, we decided to extend and tighten restrictions on the Armenian-Iranian border.  We will begin the process of temporarily restoring the visa regime with Iran.  It will come into force within five days,” the Prime Minister of Armenia stated on March 2.

Since February 23, after the emergence of information about the first cases in Iran, Armenia closed the border with Iran for two weeks to prevent the penetration of the virus, however it was specifically stipulated that there would be no restrictions on the return of the citizens of Iran and Armenia to their homeland.

Charter flights have been organized for Armenian nationals in Iran; the Armenian Embassy in Tehran says over 360 people have returned from Iran to Armenia over the past few days.

There are no new cases of coronavirus infection in the country.

However, nine test answers are expected.  Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan promised to inform the residents of the country if a new infection is recorded.

“We hope that no new diseases will be confirmed, but if, God forbid, this happens, there is no need to panic.  This is a curable disease,” said Torosyan.

Those arriving in Armenia in recent days from countries where the virus has already spread (for example, Italy) are being monitored by doctors for a period of two weeks post arrival; they are called daily and asked to report their condition. Those who report feelings of malaise are examined at home.

Facebook users complain it is either impossible to find medical masks in pharmacies, or that prices have been jacked up five to six times from 50 drams for a mask (about 10 cents) to 200-300 dram (50-60 cents).

Some pharmacies have increased the price of rubbing alcohol.

The Armenian State Commission for the Protection of Economic Competition is already working to ensure that prices do not increase unjustifiably. Checks were carried out in about 90 pharmacies.  The chairman of the commission Gegham Gevorgyan announced this on March 2:

“Just if they buy a new batch of goods at a higher price, then they will be forced to sell them more expensive. It is impossible to buy masks at 150 drams each, and sell them as before for 30. But so far, pharmacy chains are not trying to seize the opportunity and sell old stocks at new prices.”

 There has not yet been a rise in food prices in large grocery chains, despite the fact that some residents in a panic rushed to shopping at supermarkets.

“There is no need for this.  We have the required volumes of main products.  There will be enough sugar for another year, the same applies to flour.  We simply urge the citizens of Armenia not to make large-scale purchases,” said the chairman of the commission for the protection of economic competition.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Social Welfare has urged employers to be understanding of late arrivals of employees who have children to work, and encourages employers to allow parents to work part time.



Brawl erupts in Turkish parliament over military action in Syria

Panorama, Armenia
March 5 2020
Politics 12:39 05/03/2020Region

A brawl broke out in Turkey's parliament on Wednesday during tense discussions over Turkey's military involvement in northwest Syria, Euronews reported. 

Video images showed dozens of legislators from President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's party and from the main opposition party pushing each other.

In the footage, some are seen throwing punches while others try to pull the legislators apart.

The clash on Wednesday started when Engin Ozkoc of the opposition Republican People's Party took the rostrum. During a news conference shortly before, Ozkoc called Erdogan "dishonourable, ignoble, low and treacherous".

He also accused the president of sending the children of Turkey's people to fight while Erdogan's own offspring allegedly avoided long-term military service.

During a speech to members of his party, Erdogan himself had accused the opposition earlier of being "dishonourable, ignoble, low and treacherous" for questioning Turkey's military involvement in Syria's northwest Idlib province.

Turkologist links Turkey to recent tension on Armenia-Azerbaijan border

News.am, Armenia
March 6 2020

22:38, 06.03.2020
                  

Turkey has been trying to get involved in the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict for years. This is what Dean of the Faculty of Oriental Studies at Yerevan State University, Turkologist Ruben Melkonyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

“Ankara tries to take advantage of any tension in the region to advance in regard to the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and the latest development of the events related to Idlib was one of those occasions,” he stated.

The analyst clarified that this is important from the perspective of the allied support that Turkey provides to Azerbaijan and from the perspective of advancing Turkey’s conventional destructive policy in the region.

As far as the tension on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan is concerned, since Turkey and Azerbaijan are destructive states, the recent tension was predictable, and we can see Turkey’s ‘hand’ here,” Melkonyan added.

Music: PostClassical Ensemble fetes Armenian music and history at National Cathedral

Washington Classical Review
March 5 2020

Thu Mar 05, 2020 at 2:09 pm

Narek Hakhnazarian performed Vache Sharafyan’s Cello Concerto No. 2 with the
PostClassical Ensemble Wednesday night at Washington National
Cathedral.

Armenia, the first country to declare Christianity its state religion, has a
long and glorious cultural history. PostClassical Ensemble’s latest cultural
festival, “The Color of Pomegranates,” is honoring that tradition with a series
of events, which reached a pinnacle Wednesday night with a spectacular
multimedia performance filling the nave of Washington National Cathedral. The
Armenian ambassador, who spoke before the event, welcomed members of the U.S.
Congress and other dignitaries to the event, which marked the 100th anniversary
of U.S.-Armenian diplomatic relations.

The evening opened with the most authentic performance, an improvised duet
featuring two duduk players, Jivan Gasparyan and his grandson, Jivan Gasparyan,
Jr. The Armenian duduk, a double-reed folk instrument made of apricot wood,
sounds like a cross between an organ pipe, a soft brass instrument like a
cornetto, and the human voice. The two expert players overlapped one another in
the traditional duo format, covering each other’s breaths and one supporting the
other with a drone or answering accompaniment, to mesmerizing effect.

Armenian composer Vache Sharafyan provided the evening’s two main courses:
the world premiere of An Armenian Odyssey, a new work for chamber
orchestra and vocal trio, and his Cello Concerto No. 2. The two halves were
joined here as accompaniment to a striking cinematic performance by Kevork
Mourad. This American artist, born in Syria of Armenian heritage, stood toward
the back of the orchestra, and the movement of his hands drawing was shown on
large video screens as he created narrative scenes.

Sharafyan, a collaborator for two decades with Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Project,
works generally in the light, folk-crossover style associated with that
group. Armenian Odyssey continued in that vein. The work traces the
life of the troubadour Sayat-Nova, with prominent solo parts for the Zulal Trio,
a group of women who specialize in singing Armenian folk songs in
collegiate a cappella-style arrangements. Amplified so as to be heard
in the cathedral’s vast, echoing acoustic, Teni Apelian, Anais Tekerian, and
Veraz Markarian keened in close harmony, evoking Armenian folk song in their
solo passages.

The strings shadowed them, in a mostly tonal harmonic palette clustered with
folkloric dissonances and cantillation. Prominent solo parts in the orchestra
included the rich English horn of Fatma Daglar, imitating the duduk, and
gleaming, moody trumpet of Chris Gekker. Violinist Netanel Draiblate led a
Hollywood string romance with his blues-tinged solo.

Although the music was mostly slow and atmospheric, the final section marked
the Muslim invasion that ended the poet’s life, after he had become a priest and
retreated to a monastery. Near the end the three singers took up ocarinas for
ethereal, wind-like solos that gave the sense of time passing. The piece segued
seamlessly into another duduk solo, played by Gasparyan the younger, which
covered the entrance of musicians for the second piece.

Cellist Narek Hakhnazarian had to be amplified as well for his solo part in
Cello Concerto No. 2 from 2013, during which he played on a spotlit platform
behind the orchestra. Its three movements were adapted to the theme of the
second part of the evening, “Diaspora and Rebirth.” The faster middle movement,
with driving music and Hakhnazarian’s sharp-edged running notes, accompanied the
depiction of the Armenian Genocide, the very existence of which the United
States government officially recognized only this past December.

Hakhnazarian excelled in the slower outer movements, music intended now to
match the drawings evoking the Armenian diaspora and the Velvet Revolution in
2018. (The latter was a series of widespread peaceful protests there that forced
a change in government.) Especially in the cadenza, a series of longing upward
lines, the cellist’s graceful articulation and laser-precise intonation seduced
the ear. The concerto had a sort of co-soloist in the clarinet, played here with
soulful passion by Garrick Zoeter, echoed at times by Edna Huang on bass
clarinet.

Not only the video but animated and colored lighting, projected onto the
vault and great piers of the cathedral, contributed to the sense of being
surrounded by this atmospheric work. The conclusion of the concerto, alluding to
a repeating Bach-style harmonic pattern without being a direct quotation,
offered a hopeful glimpse into the future of a country and people that have
confronted overwhelming sadness in their long history.

Other events in the “Color of Pomegranates” Armenian cultural
festival continue through March 14.


https://washingtonclassicalreview.com/2020/03/05/postclassical-ensemble-fetes-armenian-music-and-history-at-national-cathedral/

Armenia Government Grants Water Permit To Gold Mine Project Beset By Local Protests

Ooska News
March 1 2020

YEREVAN, Armenia

The ministry of the environment of Armenia has granted a water permit to the Amulsar gold project, according to a press release from operators Lydian International. Local communities and environmental activists have prevented access to the mine for 20 months. Lydian plans to use cyanide in mining operations with potential health impacts and environmental risks. Increased amounts of dust and muddy tap water in local villages, as well as unusual fish deaths have been reported since construction began in 2017.

The company had twice previously applied to withdraw up to 40 litres/second (l/s) from the Arpa River. This volume would have allowed completion of the mine and support for long term operations but these applications were denied in 2019.

The approved withdrawal of 11 l/s from the Darb River is estimated to be sufficient to complete construction. In addition, the company is appealing a decision that denied 40 l/s from the Darb River.

The mine is located in a remote mountainous region and has been in development since 2016, with nearly $500 Million USD invested to date. The company contends that the project has met all legal and environmental requirements of the government. Further, the project has been rigorously reviewed by an independent advisory panel, that has confirmed the company has complied with Armenia’s laws and regulations.

The company, claiming to have met all governmental requirements is now requesting “immediate action” from the government to shut down the protests. There is a promise of job creation and tax revenues. The company delisted from the Toronto Stock Exchange in February to protect itself from creditors. Lydian said last year the blockade had forced it to cut more than 1,000 jobs and caused losses of more than $60 million.

Edward Sellers, Interim President & CEO of Lydian International, said: “We recognize that the Government of Armenia has granted Lydian Armenia a water use permit that would allow the Company to recommence construction. However, the Company is still deprived of access to its property by illegal blockades and has been unable to raise financing to complete construction of the Amulsar Project as a result.”

“We call on the Government of Armenia to take immediate action to address the continuing illegality around the Amulsar Project. The restoration of the rule of law will serve the interests of thousands of Armenian citizens, including community members, employees, contractors and suppliers, as well as thousands of investors who invested in Armenia in good faith and with the hope that their legal rights would be protected.”

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan called on protesters last month to end their 20-month blockade of the gold mine, saying the protest was not in the national interest.

Rep. Pallone calls for increased aid to Armenia and Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 29 2020