Relatives of citizen infected with coronavirus in Artsakh are from Armenia, also infected

News.am, Armenia
April 7 2020

19:37, 07.04.2020
                  

The citizen infected with the coronavirus in the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh Republic) was born in 1957, his family members are also suspected of being infected with the coronavirus, and the residents of Mirik village of Kashatagh region have been self-isolated. This is what Minister of State of the Republic of Artsakh Grigory Martirosyan informed during an urgent press conference today.

According to him, the citizen had arrived from the city of Artashat of the Republic of Armenia on March 30. “The Ministry of Health of Artsakh immediately isolated the citizen at the medical institution in Kashatagh region as soon as there was a suspicion that the family members of that citizen who live in Artashat were infected with the coronavirus. This took place on April 2,” Grigory Martirosyan said, adding that the family members of the citizen living in Artashat have also tested positive for coronavirus.

The Minister of State also said the circle of people who had had contact with the citizen was known in advance. “There are 17 people, and they are also self-isolated,” he said, adding that the citizen infected with the coronavirus didn’t have symptoms.

Azerbaijani press: UK doesn’t recognize so-called “elections” in Nagorno-Karabakh

BAKU, Azerbaijan, April 1

Trend:

The UK does not recognize the so-called “elections” which took place in Nagorno-Karabakh on March 31, reads the statement issued by the British embassy in Azerbaijan, Trend reports.

“The UK reiterates its full support for the OSCE Minsk Group’s role in the peace process and encourages Azerbaijan and Armenia to accelerate efforts to build confidence and achieve a negotiated settlement,” reads the statement.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from Nagorno Karabakh and the surrounding districts.

Two more patients recover from novel coronavirus in Armenia

Save

Share

 12:19, 2 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 2, ARMENPRESS. 2 more patients in Armenia have tested negative for the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) and were discharged from hospital, Healthcare Minister Arsen Torosyan said during today’s Cabinet meeting.

The minister added that the total number of recovered people has reached 33.

Torosyan said so far 350 people ended their quarantine period.

In his turn Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan urged citizens not to treat coronavirus so calmly. “In the beginning we managed to stop the panic. It’s good that there is a common calmness in the country, but at the same time it’s dangerous from epidemic perspective”, the PM said, adding: “Dear compatriots, please do not react to this issue so calmly”.

According to the latest data, the number of people infected with the novel coronavirus in Armenia has reached 663. 4 death cases have been registered so far. 2490 people tested negative for the virus. The number of active cases is 626.

In late December 2019, Chinese authorities notified the World Health Organization (WHO) about an outbreak of a previously unknown pneumonia in the city of Wuhan, central China. WHO declared the outbreak of the novel coronavirus a global pandemic and named the virus COVID-19. 

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/30/2020

                                        Monday, 

Armenian Soldiers, Civilian Wounded Near Azeri Border


Armenia -- Soldiers pictured during a military exercise in Tavush, March 26, 
2019.

Two soldiers guarding Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan and a teenage resident of 
an Armenian border village were reportedly wounded on Monday evening in what 
Yerevan described as Azerbaijani ceasefire violations.

The Armenian Defense Ministry reported that the soldiers sustained light wounds 
as their unit repelled an Azerbaijani raid on its positions in the northern 
Tavush province bordering the Gazakh district in western Azerbaijan.

A ministry statement said Azerbaijani forces also shot at two Armenian villages 
located in the area: Baghanis and Voskevan. It said a boy in Voskevan was 
wounded as a result.

Tavush’s governor, Hayk Chobanian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that the boy 
was shot in the chest and rushed to hospital. His life is not at risk now, said 
Chobanian.

“In order to stabilize the situation in the border zone and to counter the 
brazen actions by Azerbaijani forces … taken amid the [coronavirus] pandemic the 
Armenian Armed Forces will resort to actions commensurate with the situation. 
Azerbaijan’s military-political leadership will be fully responsible for the 
consequences,” read the Defense Ministry statement.

Another Armenian soldier deployed in Tavush was wounded on Friday, according to 
the ministry.

Azerbaijan’s State Border Guard Service, whose troops protect the Tavush-Gazakh 
section of the frontier, denied opening fire on the Armenian villages and said 
it was the Armenian side that fired at an Azerbaijani border village from heavy 
machine-guns. It said its troops shot back in response, according to the Trend 
news agency.

Three Azerbaijani border guards were shot dead in the same area earlier this 
year. One of them was reportedly killed on March 5 one day before the Armenian 
military claimed to have thwarted a similar Azerbaijani incursion attempt. Baku 
denied the alleged attack and accused the Armenian side of violating the 
ceasefire.

Tensions along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border section have been on the rise in 
recent months despite an overall decrease in truce violations in the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone observed since October 2018.




Government To Hand Out Cash To Armenians Hit By Economic Shutdown

        • Nane Sahakian

Armenia -- An empty street cafe in Yerevan, March 15, 2020.

The Armenian government approved on Monday unprecedented cash payments to scores 
of people who have been hit hard by economic disruptions resulting from the 
coronavirus epidemic.

The one-off payments announced by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s cabinet will 
benefit tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of workers who have been 
temporarily out of work or laid off as well as owners of small businesses forced 
to halt their operations in recent weeks. The aid is meant to help them buy food 
and meet other basic needs during the nationwide lockdown imposed in Armenia 
last week.

Armenians who have lost their jobs since March 13 will receive 68,000 drams 
($137) each, while unemployed pregnant women whose husbands were fired in the 
same period will be paid 100,000 drams. Single and jobless pregnant women will 
also be eligible for this aid.

Government officials gave no estimates of the number of such citizens. They 
spoke instead of more than 100,000 people making up the third and largest 
category of aid recipients.

Among them are the employees of hotels, travel agencies, restaurants, clothing 
stores and other businesses that were closed after March 13. Depending on their 
monthly wages, they will get between 68,000 and 136,000 drams in compensation.

The government will pay similar sums to small-scale individual entrepreneurs 
also affected by the lockdown.


Armenia -- A cabinet meeting in Yerevan, .

Speaking during a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, Pashinian made clear that the 
government has no intention to compensate a large number of other Armenians who 
worked off the books and did not pay any taxes.

“This situation should tell us that all workers, all wages have to be registered 
[with tax authorities,]” said Pashinian. “We can’t deal with unregistered cases 
[of employment and self-employment] because it’s a black hole where nobody knows 
what’s going on.”

Opposition politicians have expressed serious concern about the plight of people 
involved in the informal sector of the Armenian economy. They have urged the 
government to take care of them as well.

Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian did not rule out the possibility of such 
assistance when he spoke at a news conference later on Monday. He stressed, 
though, that the government currently sees no effective mechanisms for extending 
the coronavirus relief package to the “unregistered jobs.”

The government approved last week a set of other measures designed to shore up 
the economy. In particular, it said creditworthy firms and individual 
entrepreneurs will receive grants worth $500 million (just over $1 million) if 
they pledge to use that money to pay their workers’ wages, buy equipment or raw 
materials or pay taxes. The scheme will not apply to Armenian banks, insurance 
companies and casinos.

The banks will receive instead government subsidies to provide cheap credit to 
small firms and farmers. The latter will be able to borrow up to 1 million drams 
each and avoid paying any interest for two years.

Pashinian also announced on March 27 that the banks have agreed to suspend loan 
repayments for some 100,000 individual or corporate borrowers.




Armenian Authorities Allowed To Use Phone Data To Fight Coronavirus

        • Gayane Saribekian
        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia -- Deputies wear face masks during a parliament session in Yerevan, 
.

Ignoring strong opposition objections, Armenia’s parliament on Monday allowed 
authorities to access personal data from people’s mobile phones for the purpose 
of stopping the spread of coronavirus in the country.

Under a government bill passed the National Assembly in the first reading, state 
bodies enforcing the coronavirus-related state of emergency will be able to 
track movements, phone calls and text messages of Armenians infected with the 
virus.

Presenting the bill to lawmakers, Justice Minister Rustam Badasian said this 
will make it easier for them to identify and isolate those who have been exposed 
to infected individuals. He stressed that the authorities will not have access 
to the content of phone calls.

The two parliamentary opposition parties rejected this explanation, saying that 
the extraordinary powers sought by the government constitute a politically 
dangerous violation of citizens’ privacy and will not help to contain the 
epidemic.


Armenia -- Justice Minister Rustam Badasian speaks in the National Assembly, 
Yerevan, .

“This is a regression of democracy,” claimed Naira Zohrabian of the Prosperous 
Armenia Party (BHK). “Mr. Minister, withdraw this bill. What you want to do is 
meaningless.”

“We are against ceding our liberties,” declared Edmon Marukian, the leader of 
the Bright Armenia Party.

“This will have a zero impact in terms of stopping the spread of the epidemic,” 
Marukian said during a heated parliament debate. He argued that many Armenians 
use online voice and text message systems to communicate with each other.

Parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan and other senior pro-government deputies also 
questioned the wisdom of the bill.

“People who have been in contact with virus carriers may have been infected in 
shops or on the street,” said Narek Zeynalian, the chairman of the parliament 
committee on healthcare. “Phone calls are not the only indicators of 
people-to-people contact.”

Nevertheless, the parliament approved the bill by 57 votes to 24, with one 
abstention. Lilit Makunts, the parliamentary leader of the ruling My Step bloc, 
said the bill will likely be amended before being passed in the final reading. 
Makunts said that she and her colleagues will seek explicit guarantees that all 
phone data collected by the health authorities will be destroyed after the 
epidemic.


Armenia -- Health Minister Arsen Torosian at a news conference in Yerevan, March 
26, 2020.

As the parliament began debating the controversial measure the authorities 
reported that the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Armenia rose by 58 to 
482 in the past day. According to Health Minister Arsen Torosian, all but two of 
the new cases resulted from physical contact with known COVID-19 patients.

Torosian also said that 162 other citizens tested negative for the virus on 
Monday, bringing to over 2,216 the total number of such outcomes. A total of 
around 250 Armenians have been released from quarantine to date, he said during 
a cabinet meeting in Yerevan.

The Armenian authorities have reported three coronavirus-related so far.

In Torosian’s words, another patient remains in critical condition but is 
showing signs of improvement and could be disconnected from a lung ventilation 
device in the coming days. No other infected and hospitalized persons are now 
connected to ventilators, added the minister.




Armenia To Benefit From U.S. COVID-19 Aid Package


Armenia - The U.S. Embassy in Yerevan.

The United States has pledged to provide Armenia with more than $1 million in 
aid designed to combat the coronavirus epidemic.

The funding will be part of a $274 million emergency aid package announced by 
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo late last week. Pompeo said it will help “64 
of the world’s most at-risk countries” to better deal with the spread of 
coronavirus.

The assistance will be provided through international aid agencies, notably the 
World Health Organization.

“We are pleased that $1.1 million has been authorized for Armenia,” the U.S. 
Embassy in Yerevan announced at the weekend.

The embassy told RFE/RL’s Armenian service afterwards that the assistance has 
already been transferred to relevant international organizations. It is aimed at 
strengthening Armenian health authorities’ capacity monitor infections and 
detect the virus.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), a Washington-based lobby 
group, welcomed the allocation. In a statement, ANCA Chairman Raffi Hamparian 
reiterated at the same time that some of the annual U.S. aid to Armenia 
allocated by Congress should also be channeled into the fight against 
coronavirus.

Armenia has already received limited amounts of coronavirus-related medical 
supplies from several other countries, including China. The Chinese aid reported 
by the Armenian government has included coronavirus test kits, protective 
medical uniforms and ventilators.


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.

 


UN WFP to provide Armenia with large number of artificial respiratory devices

Save

Share

 18:41,

YEREVAN, MARCH 25, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian received on March 25 Jelena Milosevic, WFP Representative and Country Director in Armenia.

The interlocutors documented that an effective cooperation has been established between Armenia and the UN World Food Program.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the President’s Office, conditioned by the situation resulted by global spread of novel coronavirus, the interlocutors attached great priority to food safety issues.

Noting that the WFP is known as an international organization very responsive to emergency situations, President Sarkissian suggested that in addition to food issues, providing Armenia with necessary medical devices should be observed. Jelena Milosevic noted that they have applied to international donors and in the near future a great number of artificial respiratory devices will be provided to Armenia.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

U.S. plans to provide $16 million assistance to Armenia in 2021

Aysor, Armenia

The United States foreign assistance to Armenia is expected to amount to $16 million in 2021, the Armenian Center for American Studies said in a Facebook post.

This is the highest volume of aid provided to the post-revolutionary Armenia through the Foreign Assistance program, but the financial assistance provided to the country before the 2018 revolution was greater, the center said.

The center also presented the infographic of the volume of planned and provided aid to Armenia within the Foreign Assistance program from 2011 to 2021.

CIVILNET.Pashinyan Kicks off Lively “Yes” Campaign as Armenia Prepares for Constitutional Referendum

CIVILNET.AM

17:57

By Mark Dovich

On March 10, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced he would take a break from his official duties to hold rallies across the country ahead of the constitutional referendum slated for April 5. The same day, Pashinyan, who is supporting the “yes” campaign in favor of the referendum’s passage, began his tour in Armenia’s southernmost region, Syunik.

In his rallies, Pashinyan has repeatedly excoriated the country’s Constitutional Court, a majority of whose judges would be dismissed if the referendum passes. In one speech, for instance, Pashinyan claimed that the Constitutional Court “does not represent the people” and labeled it “the only remaining institution in Armenia that is not in compliance with the current constitution”. In another speech, Pashinyan urged high voter turnout, going so far as to say that “there is no force in the world that can challenge the decision of Armenia’s sovereign citizens”.

However, Pashinyan’s campaign has already encountered its fair share of difficulties. Most recently, a video went viral on Armenian social networks that showed Pashinyan scolding a man in the village of Kurtan in northern Armenia for approaching him with a request to help him improve his family’s living conditions. In the video, Pashinyan advised the man, named Mekhak Arakelyan, to find work himself and said that the government is not obligated to help with such issues. Unbeknownst to Pashinyan at the time, Arakelyan is unable to work due to serious health problems. Though Pashinyan later issued an apology, the video continued to generate much discussion online.

In a second faux pas for the “yes” campaign, another incident was caught on video, during which a young woman on the Yerevan metro ripped up a booklet supporting the “yes” campaign and threw it at Pashinyan. Though Pashinyan’s reaction was much more balanced—he replied “we respect your opinion, that is what democracy is for”—the video’s widespread circulation online has, nonetheless, distracted from Pashinyan’s get-out-the-vote message.

Pashinyan later addressed the incident by sharing the video himself on his Facebook page in an attempt to spin it in a positive light for the “yes” campaign. In his commentary, Pashinyan connected the young woman’s open and direct criticism of him with Armenia’s increasing political openness and democratization, noting that the young woman “will continue to live her normal life and freely express her point of view…because she lives and will live in a free and happy Armenia”.

Meanwhile, the “no” campaign has been critical of Pashinyan’s conduct, particularly his use of state resources at his rallies. For instance, Ruben Melikyan, a former deputy Minister of Justice and the leader of the “no campaign”, chided Pashinyan for traveling to Syunik region to begin his rallies onboard a helicopter that belongs to the prime minister’s office, even though Pashinyan is campaigning as a private citizen, not in an official capacity.

Aside from holding campaign rallies, Pashinyan also posted a “Declaration on the Referendum” on his Facebook page, laying out six points justifying his support of the referendum. The text broadly addresses two topics. First, it claims that elections prior to the 2018 Velvet Revolution did not express the free will of the people and that, moving forward, the electoral system must ensure free _expression_ of the people’s will. Second, it criticizes the corrupt system that developed before 2018, in which political and economic interests became intertwined, and under which the judiciary regularly put the interests of the elite above state and national interests.

Armenia’s Ongoing Constitutional Court Dispute

The constitutional referendum scheduled for next month was called as a result of a bill passed by Armenia’s National Assembly on February 6. The referendum proposes to eliminate a grandfather clause in the country’s constitution allowing Constitutional Court judges appointed before April 2018, when a 12-year term limit was implemented, to serve beyond that limit. If approved, the referendum would result in the removal of seven of the Constitutional Court’s nine judges, including chairman Hrayr Tovmasyan.

For several months now, Tovmasyan has been engaged in a bitter feud with the current administration led by Pashinyan. The dispute centers around widespread perceptions that Tovmasyan is politically biased in favor of the authorities who dominated the country prior to 2018. The National Assembly’s decision to call the referendum represented a significant escalation in tensions between the current government and the court head.

The “yes” campaign is being supported by the ruling My Step alliance. In contrast, the “no” campaign is not being supported by any political parties, but rather by a group of more than 60 lawyers and others led by Ruben Melikyan.

In accordance with amendment procedures in Armenia, the referendum will pass only if the total number of votes in favor represents more than both 25 percent of the country’s eligible voters and 50 percent of the voters who choose to participate in the referendum. That figure is roughly 650,000 people.

Yerevan’s Matenadaran publishes book on memoirs of 14th-century Armenian manuscripts

Panorama, Armenia
March 9 2020

Yerevan’s Matenadaran, officially called the Mesrop Mashtots Institute of Ancient Manuscripts, has published a book on memoirs of 14th-century Armenian manuscripts.

The book, compiled by L. Khachikyan, A. Matevosyan and A. Ghazarosyan, features memoirs of Armenian manuscripts dating from 1326- 1350, some of which were published by Levon Khachikyan in his book entitled "Memoirs of Armenian Manuscripts of the 14th century" (1950), while other materials were added by Artashes Matevosyan. 

The book was completed and published by Candidate of Historical Sciences Arpenik Ghazaryan, the Matenadaran said in a Facebook post.

The editor of the book is Doctor of Historical Sciences Karen Matevosyan.

The book is an important source for historical, philological and generally archeological studies.

Armenia Justice Minister responds to MPs criticizing amendments to Judicial Code

News.am, Armenia
March 4 2020

15:45, 04.03.2020
                  

In his closing speech during a discussion on the draft law on making amendments to the Constitutional Law “Judicial Code” and the attached draft laws in parliament today, Minister of Justice of Armenia Rustam Badasyan stated that the draft laws will provide the opportunity to fight against corruption in the judiciary effectively and not undermine the independence of the judiciary at the same time.

Touching upon the observation of head of Bright Armenia faction Edmon Marukyan and the faction’s MP Taron Simonyan that this draft law will lead to the creation of a judiciary dependent on the government, the minister asked the MPs to state which body the judiciary will be dependent on when judges comprise the Ethics and Disciplinary Committee, the Supreme Judicial Council and other bodies.

Badasyan addressed the opposition MPs and independent MP Arman Babajanyan and stated the following: “During the first-second readings, bring a version that will solve the problems facing the judiciary better, and the ruling party will definitely accept it, but under the condition that it doesn’t contradict the Constitution,” Badasyan said.