Author: Kevo Kalantarian
Turkish Press: 1 more Azerbaijani soldier martyred by Armenian army
ANKARA
One more Azerbaijani soldier was martyred by Armenian troops in border clashes which escalated since Sunday, the country's Defense Ministry announced on Thursday.
Starting from 05:45 a.m. local time (0145GMT) on Thursday, the ministry said in a statement, active military operations are being conducted in the direction of the Tovuz region of the Azerbaijan-Armenia border.
It said Azerbaijani troops neutralized about 20 Armenian soldiers and destroyed one armored vehicle, one radio-electronic combat vehicle, battle posts and “strongholds of the enemy.”
“Our units are undertaking retaliatory actions to suppress the combat activity of the enemy,” it added.
As many as 12 Azerbaijani soldiers, including a major general and a colonel, have been martyred, while four others injured in a border clash since Sunday.
Despite international calls for restraint, Armenian troops opened fire on civilian settlements in the villages of Agdam and Dondar Kuscu. A 76-year-old Azerbaijani citizen lost his life in the attacks by Armenia, which Baku has accused of hiding losses.
The clashes started as Armenian forces violated an ongoing cease-fire and targeted positions of Azerbaijan's army in the northwestern Tovuz district on Sunday.
Azerbaijan has blamed Armenia for the "provocative" actions, with Turkey throwing its weight behind Baku and warning Yerevan that it would not hesitate to stand against any kind of attack on its eastern neighbor.
Armenia to produce 50,000 Kalashnikov rifles annually
Turkey’s last Armenian village opens cultural museum
Descendants of genocide survivors who returned home to Turkey’s last Armenian village have opened a museum to celebrate and preserve their culture, the Guardian reported on Saturday.
Vakıflı, a village in the southern Turkish province of Hatay bordering Syria, is home to just 100 people, but every summer thousands of visitors arrive in search of a connection to their Armenian past.
Lora Baytar, a journalist and art historian, told the Guardian that she decided a few years ago to create a dedicated exhibition space to celebrate the local Armenian culture.
“Visitors to Vakıflı just come for the day, they take a picture of the church, and they leave again,” she told the Guardian. “I wanted to give people the opportunity to really understand and preserve our heritage.”
After five years of work, Vakıflıköy Museum has just opened its doors.
The Turkish government still refuses to recognise the events of 1915, in which up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed, as a genocide, in spite of the overwhelming historical evidence to suggest otherwise.
Vakıflı’s community is descended from Armenians who successfully resisted the Ottoman army’s attacks. The area’s 4,200 residents retreated to the nearby Mount Musa, and held out for 53 days before being rescued and evacuated by allied warships to Egypt. Many returned again after the end of World War One.
Baytar applied for funding for the museum in 2015, with the help of the Hrant Dink Foundation, but was unsuccessful. However, a second attempt in 2018, with support from the Hatay Archaeology Museum and the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul, gained a government grant.
Vakıflı’s residents have recorded oral history interviews and donated objects including clothes, jewellery and photographs to create what Baytar calls a “story-driven” experience for visitors to the museum.
The COVID-19 coronavirus has delayed the official opening until the end of the year, or possible eve until next summer, but Baytar is still keen to welcome visitors in the meantime.
“Vakıflıköy Museum shows the visitor how villagers speak, our beliefs, how we celebrate holidays, what we eat, how we succeed in agriculture and architecture, marriage traditions, music, photos, human and migration stories,” Baytar told the Guardian.
Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 10-07-20
17:49,
YEREVAN, 10 JULY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 10 July, USD exchange rate up by 0.13 drams to 486.73 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 1.60 drams to 549.62 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.03 drams to 6.84 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 1.92 drams to 613.77 drams.
The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.
Gold price up by 23.22 drams to 28357.07 drams. Silver price up by 5.55 drams to 294.74 drams. Platinum price up by 191.31 drams to 13395.31 drams.
Armenia’s health system able to cope with coronavirus pandemic for now
Kim Kardashian calls for support to small businesses in Armenia affected by COVID-19
11:09, 7 July, 2020
YEREVAN, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. American-Armenian reality TV superstar Kim Kardashian West calls on to join the fundraising of the Armenia Support Fund to help small businesses in Armenia affected by the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).
“Armenia Support Fund has launched a fundraising effort to help small businesses in Armenia struggling as a result of COVID-19. Access to financial aid is not always available and many small, family-owned businesses have reported having to cut production up to 90% in addition to having to let staff go. Consider donating to Armenia Support Fun to help provide grants to these struggling businesses”, Kim Kardashian said in a Facebook post, using hashtag.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1020805.html?fbclid=IwAR2eLeBgnjTlLHhjeivRe4kmqu7YTLtkNcIDkmZJtsVILAAWrmXcysSKdRI
CivilNet: Two Years After Velvet Revolution, Armenia Sees Increased Public Trust in Institutions
By Mark Dovich
“Significant increase in public trust in state institutions” is what the latest data from the Caucasus Barometer shows, more than two years after the 2018 Velvet Revolution ushered in dramatic changes to the country’s domestic political landscape. The annual household survey—and the largest coordinated data collection effort in the South Caucasus—was last conducted in Armenia from February 21 to March 15, 2020 by the Caucasus Research Resource Centers think tank network.
When asked about each of the 15 state institutions included in the survey, as well as two major international organizations, the EU and the UN, respondents expressed significant increase in public trust in each institution. According to the 2020 survey, any given institution experienced an average increase in public trust of nearly 16 percentage points since the previous wave of the survey, which was conducted from October 13 to October 27, 2017.
Five institutions saw increases in public trust of more than 15 percentage points between 2017 and 2020: local government (increase in trust by 18 points), the police (22 points), the president (60 points), executive government (50 points), and the National Assembly (27 points).
As a result of such dramatic increases, there are now seven institutions in Armenia that enjoy the trust of the majority of the general public: the educational system (with 51 percent of respondents expressing trust), the army (88 percent), executive government (71 percent), the president (78 percent), the police (51 percent), local government (51 percent), and religious institutions (80 percent). In contrast, only the army and religious institutions registered majorities of public trust in 2017, with 77 percent and 74 percent, respectively.
At the same time, the survey makes it clear that the Armenian public remains distrustful of key institutions, with the plurality of respondents still expressing distrust in the banking system (40 percent), the court system (48 percent), and political parties (45 percent).
Nonetheless, the survey shows that, overall, significant progress has been made since the 2018 Velvet Revolution in overcoming deep historical distrust in state institutions among the Armenian general public that predates the country’s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. Social science research has consistently found that public trust “is a necessary element for a society to prosper,” with high levels of public trust contributing to democratic stability, economic development, and social integration. Though Armenia’s post-Velvet Revolution government still has a long way to go in enacting policies that meet citizens’ sky-high expectations for reform, the survey makes it clear that real, significant, systemic change has occurred since 2018.
The army and religious institutions have long been the most trusted state institutions in Armenia.
Since 2017, levels of public trust in the president and executive government have increased most sharply among all the institutions included in the survey.
Improvement in public trust in institutions from 2017 to 2020.
Music: Make the Covid-19 Go: Little Singers of Armenia present new video
580 COVID-19 new cases reported in Armenia
11:05, 4 July, 2020
YEREVAN, JULY 4, ARMENPRESS. The total number of coronavirus cases has reached 27,900 in Armenia, 15,935 of which have recovered, ARMENPRESS was informed from the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
580 new cases have been reported and 451 have recovered.
8 patients died bringing the total number of deaths to 477. Another patient with coronavirus died of other reasons, bringing the number of similar cases to 157.
State of emergency has been prolonged until July 13 in Armenia.
Reported by Anna Grigoryan, Editing and Translating by Tigran Sirekanyan