Coronavirus cases worldwide up 5% in past week

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 10:22, 7 April, 2021

YEREVAN, APRIL 7, ARMENPRESS. More than 4 million novel coronavirus cases were registered worldwide in the past week, which is 5% more than during the previous seven-day period, the World Health Organization (WHO) said a weekly bulletin released in Geneva on Wednesday, reports TASS.

Mortality increased by 11%, as over 71,000 deaths were registered in the reported period, according to the global organization’s figures.

Between March 29 and April 4, the global organization has been informed about 4,038,292 new cases all over the world, and 71,355 deaths. As of April 4, a total of 130,459,184 cases and 2,842,325 COVID-related deaths were reported worldwide.

The most noticeable growth in cases was registered in Southeast Asia (up 36%), Western Pacific (up 25%), and Eastern Mediterranean (up 10%).

Mortality increased in Southeast Asia (up 46%), North and South America (up 15%), Eastern Mediterranean (up 7%), Western Pacific (up 5%), Europe (up 2%), but at the same time declined by 20% in Africa.

In the past seven days, over 1.6 million people contracted the infection in Europe, over 24,000 died. The number of cases in North and South America increased by over 1.3 million in the reported period, while fatalities grew by 37,000. In Southeast Asia, doctors registered over 592,000 new cases of novel coronavirus, over 4,000 patients died.

India accounts for the majority of cases registered between March 29 and April 4 (513,000 cases), followed by Brazil (also over 513,000 new cases), the United States (over 444,000), Turkey (over 265,000), France (over 244,000), Poland (over 187,000), Italy (over 137,000), Germany (over 112,000), Ukraine (over 101,000), Argentina (over 82,000), Iran (over 73,000) and Russia (over 61,000).

Armenpress: ”Media Defense” files case to ECHR over bombing of journalists in Artsakh by Azerbaijani forces

''Media Defense'' files case to ECHR over bombing of journalists in Artsakh by Azerbaijani forces

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 21:03,

YEREVAN, MARCH 26, ARMENPRESS. UK-based ''Media Defence'' human rights organization has today filed a case at the European Court of Human Rights on behalf of four Armenian citizens following the bombing of the town of Martuni by Azerbaijani forces during the recent armed conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. The applicants – three journalists who were injured and the brother of a journalist fixer who was killed – allege that as a result of this attack their rights under the European Convention on Human Rights were violated by Azerbaijan, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Freedom of Information Center.

The bombing took place on 1 October 2020 when the centre of Martuni was hit by around 40 missiles over a short period. Four people were killed, and a number of others were seriously injured. Later that day the Azerbaijani government, referring to the bombing, accused Armenia of endangering the lives of journalists and violating international law. In fact, attacks on journalists by Azerbaijani armed forces were a regular occurrence over the course of this conflict. Many journalists reported being harassed and threatened by Azerbaijani armed forces while trying to carry out their journalistic work.

The applicants’ case is that their right to life and right to freedom of _expression_ were violated by Azerbaijan when they bombed Martuni. These rights are protected by article 2 and article 10 of the Convention.

The applicants are represented by Pádraig Hughes and Carlos Gaio from Media Defence along with Armenian lawyer and president of the Freedom of Information Centre Shushan Doydoyan, who said:

"This case has a strategic meaning for the Armenian journalistic community. As a result of shelling by Azeri military forces at least six reporters were injured and one fixer was killed in Artsakh in October, 2020. Even though media professionals working in conflict zones have the status of civilians and are protected by international humanitarian law, this principle was not properly respected. Journalists are not military targets, their safety should be guaranteed because they are carrying out their professional duty in the war zone by risking their lives. I am proud to be a part of the legal team which developed this strategic litigation case to demand recognition of the violation of the affected reporters’ rights and compensation from the Azerbaijani Government”.

Media Defence Legal Director Pádraig Hughes said, “The importance of accurate and informed reporting during armed conflicts cannot be overstated, not least because reporting often has an impact on how warring parties behave. This attack prevented journalists from doing their job and was just one part of a number of attacks on the media by Azerbaijan during the conflict. The way in which the conflict was conducted has since been described as showing the ‘future of warfare’ and we hope the Court decides that that future must include proper protections for journalists so that the quality and independence of the information they are able to provide is not compromised.”




Turkish Press: Azerbaijani leader hosts Turkish parliament delegation

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
March 9 2021
Jeyhun Aliyev   | 09.03.2021

Azerbaijani leader hosts Turkish parliament delegation

ANKARA

The leader of Azerbaijan received a delegation of Turkish lawmakers in the capital of Baku on Tuesday, according to a statement by that country's presidential office.

Ilham Aliyev welcomed the "very important" delegation led by Akif Cagatay Kilic, the head of the Turkish parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee.

"Our inter-parliamentary relations are also developing very successfully. We are always together and support each other, both bilaterally and within international organizations," he said.

Aliyev said Turkey's solidarity, as well as its political and moral support to Azerbaijan during the recent Karabakh war, also known as the Patriotic war, pleased all of Azerbaijan, and that it was "natural" because the two "brotherly" countries are always next to each other.

Azerbaijan liberated several strategic cities and nearly 300 of its settlements and villages from Armenian occupation during the recent six-week Armenia-Azerbaijan war, which erupted on Sept. 27 and ended on Nov. 10 with a Russian-brokered truce.

Before the conflict, about 20% of Azerbaijan's territory was under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades.

"These days of war have shown once again how much our nations are connected, how much they love and respect each other," said Aliyev.

He said the conflict is over and now it is time "to look to the future" and think about cooperation in the region, especially transportation projects, and the opening of the Zangazur corridor — a long-shut corridor between Azerbaijan and its southwestern autonomous exclave of Nakhchivan, recently created in the Russian-brokered agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia — is "one of the most important" issues.

"I am confident that we will achieve this through joint efforts," he said.

Kilic thanked Aliyev for hosting the delegation and conveyed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's and Parliament Speaker Mustafa Sentop's greetings.

"We are very pleased with your great victory, and we wanted to visit you to show our unity and solidarity in this sense," he said.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s People Rebuild Amid Fragile Peace

Voice of America
March 11 2021
March 11, 2021 10:09 AM 
| Voice of America – English

The war in Nagorno-Karabakh between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2020 is still very present in the daily lives of its people as they work to rebuild – and heal – amid a peace that many see as fragile.  Jonathan Spier narrates this report by Pablo Gonzalez in Stepanakert.

Cambera:  Pablo Gonzalez, Courtesy 

Produced by: Rod James  

[Watch the video at the link below]

Armenia wants closer ties with United Arab Emirates

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 10:10,

YEREVAN, MARCH 12, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs Ara Aivazian had a meeting in the United Arab Emirates with Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

Aivazian reaffirmed Armenia’s intention to further deepen relations with the UAE as a link between Armenia and the Gulf’s Arab states for cooperation.

“Ministers Aivazian and Al Nahyan comprehensively touched upon a broad range of items on the bilateral agenda. Preserving the dynamics of political dialogue, including through consultations was highlighted,” the Armenian foreign ministry said.

As promising directions for commercial cooperation the sides pointed out IT, agriculture, food security, renewable energy and tourism. In this context, the sides underscored the continuity of the Armenian-Emirati intergovernmental commission’s work.

The ministers attached importance to the role of the Armenian community of the UAE in strengthening the Armenia-UAE relations which are based on mutual trust. Aivazian highly appreciated the UAE’s caring attitude for the Armenian community – a testament to UAE’s commitment for tolerance and cultural diversity.

The meeting focused on regional security and stability as well. “In this context, the Armenian FM stressed that the Middle East has an important place in Armenia’s comprehensive security environment, and the latest developments showed how interconnected the security of South Caucasus and Middle East are. The ministers concurred that conflicts don’t have a military solution and that any manifestation of extremism is a threat to regional peace and stability.”

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian PM sends invitation to Prosperous Armenia Party leader for meeting

News.am, Armenia
March 6 2021

Leader of the My Step faction of the National Assembly of Armenia Lilit Makunts today told reporters that Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan will obviously have a meeting with leader of Prosperous Armenia Party Gagik Tsarukyan and that, in any case, he has sent an invitation.

Makunts added that she doesn’t know how the developments will unfold.

Touching upon the Prime Minister’s meeting with leader of the opposition Bright Armenia Party Edmon Marukyan, Makunts said the following: “Marukyan said there will be a second round of negotiations, but I would recommend not going farther and waiting for the results of the second round.”

Asked if she thinks the My Step faction might form a coalition with Bright Armenia Party in a certain stage, Makunts said it wouldn’t be right to talk about coalitions in this stage and that it’s necessary to move forward step-by-step and reach an agreement over the holding of snap elections.

Earlier, Pashinyan had informed that he would have meetings with opposition parliamentary forces to consider the holding of snap parliamentary elections. Pashinyan has already met with Marukyan.

International Azerbaijani-language media outlets start reacting to Armenian ombudsman’s statements

Panorama, Armenia
March 3 2021
Law 11:07 03/03/2021Armenia

International Azerbaijani-language media outlets have begun to react to the statements of Armenia’s Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Arman Tatoyan that the border process in Syunik Province violates the rights of residents. These statements refer to the assertions of impermissibility of the presence of the Azerbaijani armed forces, signs and flags in Syunik, Tatoyan said in a Facebook post on Tuesday.

“The BBC Azerbaijani Service, in response to the Armenian Ombudsman’s statement, has reported that the Azerbaijani authorities have not responded to that "accusation". By so opining, an attempt is made to characterize the Ombudsman’s statements that the rights of the border residents of Syunik region were violated or endangered due to the border-related process as unsubstantiated or baseless,” he said, sharing the link of the report.

“The Human Rights Defender of the Republic of Armenia once again firmly states that the process related to the borders with Azerbaijan in Syunik and Gegharkunik Provinces of Armenia is not based on the rule of law and contradicts the principles of international law.

“The main logic remains the same: the border demarcation process can not disrupt the normal living conditions of border residents, nor can it violate their rights. The issue here is not only human rights to houses and land, but also to water resources, livelihoods, and so on.

“All possible damages or injuries that a person or a person engaged in business can suffer must also be calculated. All of this should also be the subject of international negotiations and discussions.

“There can be no conditions for a person that justify the disruption of one’s normal life in his/her own permanent residence simply because a person’s rights have not been taken into account due to some border process,” Tatoyan said. 

Putin May Have Triggered an Attempted Coup in Armenia After PM Insulted His Missiles

Yahoo! News
Feb 26 2021

Anna Nemtsova
Fri, , 12:57 AM

MOSCOW—Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has announced that his nation’s military had attempted a coup on Thursday, the latest development in a country still recovering from last year’s lost war with Azerbaijan.

Now, politicians and political analysts are speaking of Russia’s hand in the attempted coup, pointing to President Vladimir Putin’s strained relationship with Pashinyan. On Tuesday, Pushinyan had insulted Moscow by complaining about Russian missiles, an indirect criticism of the Kremlin’s strategy of waiting to intervene until Armenia was weakened in the conflict, despite its official status as a military ally.

“They didn’t explode, or maybe 10 percent of them exploded,” Pashinyan said of the missiles Tuesday. The military generals—already angry over Pashinyan’s firing of military generals in an effort to modernize the force—objected, setting off the conflict.

According to political analyst Artur Paronyan, Russia’s General Staff Chief Valery Gerasimov had made a call to his Armenian counterpart, General Onik Gasparyan, earlier in the day. “Moscow clearly signaled to General Gasparyan to get rid of our prime minister,” Paronyan told The Daily Beast.

Led by Gasparyan, dozens of generals signed a statement calling for Pashinyan’s removal over his alleged inability “to make adequate decisions in this crisis.” It marked the first direct intervention by the military in Armenia’s domestic politics since 2008, when 10 demonstrators were killed after the military clamped down on a protest in Yerevan’s Freedom Square.

Armenia has healed from that tragedy, and has since changed course. Over the past decade, the country has developed a vibrant civil society, confronting some of its most acute social issues. But the threat of a war with Azerbaijan over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh has been in the air for decades. Generations grew up preparing for the next war, and in September, the fighting began. It went on for six weeks, and Armenia was turned upside down.

After the war, thousands of bitter protesters crowded Yerevan’s center, blaming the government for the defeat and demanding Pashinyan’s resignation. A Russian-brokered ceasefire saved Armenia from defeat in Nagorno-Karabakh, but it also left Armenia desperately dependent on Russia for security.

The opposition called for Pashinyan’s ouster, and was joined by the army on Wednesday. Many men in crowds of protesters wore military uniforms and said they would not leave Freedom Square until Pashinyan was gone. On Thursday, Gasparyan published his statement formally calling for the prime minister’s resignation and criticizing him for “discrediting” the military.

In an exclusive interview with The Daily Beast, Pashinyan’s key rival, former Minister of Defense Vazgen Manukyan, claimed he had powerful support from the Armenian military. “We blame Pashinyan for the total diplomatic failure in peace negotiations with Baku and for our defeat in the war against Azerbaijan’s aggression.” He added that he was “in touch with all the commanders,” and that he knows that “some operations [led by Pashinyan] were more than dubious.”

“Everything that my army managed to win from 1992 to 1993, he lost. We plan to put Pashinyan on trial and investigate why we have lost territories and 5,000 lives,” he said. Manukyan also stressed his support for peaceful demonstrations only, as a civil war would devastate an already vulnerable Armenia.

Many of Manukyan’s supporters are openly championing Russian support for the coup. “The war showed us that neither the United States nor France were here to save us. Moscow negotiated peace for us. Even now, Russian peacekeepers are on guard in the conflict zone,” a pro-Manukyan analyst, Stepan Danielyan, told The Daily Beast.

Armenian leaders have had a hard time earning the trust of a disillusioned public. The public demanded justice for years after the massacre in Freedom Square, blaming the president at the time, Robert Kocharyan, for ordering the shootings. A velvet revolution swept Nikol Pashinyan, once a political prisoner, to power in 2018. The same year, a court ordered former President Kocharyan arrested on charges related to the shooting incident.

“Putin considers Pashinyan a traitor and an enemy who failed in his promises many times,” Sergei Markov, a Kremlin analyst, told The Daily Beast.

Markov explained how the conflict between Putin and Pashinyan goes beyond the missile insults. According to media reports, Putin had unsuccessfully lobbied for the release of his friend, former president Kocharyan, after his 2019 arrest.

“Putin called Kocharyan on his birthday a few months ago to demonstrate what he thought of that arrest,” says Markov. “Now the Kremlin would like to see [Pashinyan] drink the entire glass of shame so everybody would see what happens to an American puppet.”

Correction: Former Armenian Minister of Defense Vazgen Manukyan told The Daily Beast that he had powerful support from the Armenian military in his conflict with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, a key political rival. A previous version of this report inaccurately stated that Manukyan said he had support from Russia’s military, due to a reporting error.

Turkish Press: Armenian president rejects army chief’s dismissal

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Feb 27 2021
Dmitri Chirciu   
YERIVAN, Armenia

Armenian President Armen Sargsyan on Saturday rejected a prime ministerial order to sack the army’s chief of General Staff.

“The sole purpose of the President is to protect the country from threats against the constitutional order and security, to ensure stability in the country and the functioning of the armed forces," a presidency statement said.

Sargsyan refused to sign the order and returned the draft decree with objections.

Earlier this week, Onik Gasparyan, the chief of General Staff of the Armenian army, along with other senior commanders released a statement calling for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to step down.

Pashinyan blasted the military's call as a coup attempt, and urged his supporters to take to the streets to resist.

He later announced the dismissal of the chief of General Staff on Facebook.

The unrest follows the end of a military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan last fall widely seen as a victory for the latter.

Relations between the former Soviet republics have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

During the six week-conflict, which ended with a Russian-brokered truce, Azerbaijan liberated several strategic cities and nearly 300 of its settlements and villages from Armenian occupation.

Before this, about 20% of Azerbaijan's territory had been under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades.

Armenia to explore genocides of Armenians in Azerbaijan, Artsakh and Nakhchivan at academic level

News.am, Armenia
Feb 21 2021

During a conversation with Armenian News-NEWS.am, Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Harutyun Marutyan said the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport of Armenia has given consent to opening a special section of the Museum-Institute that will comprise three scientific workers who will explore issues related to the genocides of Armenians in Azerbaijan, Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) and Nakhchivan.

Marutyan added that it’s high time to explore the issue at the academic level and present the existing facts to the international community. He also said the Museum-Institute will declare a tender soon and that fluency in English and in some cases knowledge of Azerbaijani will be a prerequisite for future participants.

“The Museum-Institute would like to be actively involved in conducting studies. We need to understand how the atrocities were committed and how they were perceived. We see that Azerbaijan is actively advancing the so-called “Albanian theory” once again, and this can be viewed as one of the types of cultural genocide. The studies need to be conducted in English, published in reputable periodicals and be available for foreigners,” Marutyan added.