Armenia COVID-19: More positive tests bring active cases to 499

Save

Share

 13:33, 31 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. 50 new COVID-19 cases have been confirmed in Armenia in one day, bringing the total cumulative number to 532, healthcare ministry spokesperson Alina Nikoghosyan said on social media.

She said that 23 of the cases were quarantined, and 24 are direct contacts of earlier cases. The contacts of the remaining three cases are being traced, she said.

As of 13:00 GMT+4, March 31, the total cumulative number of the novel coronavirus infections in Armenia is 532. With 30 recoveries and 3 fatalities, the number of active cases is 499.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




World Bank allocates $3m to Armenia for equipment, supplies to fight COVID-19

Dev Discourse
April 3 2020
World Bank | Yerevan | Updated: 03-04-2020 18:11 IST | Created: 03-04-2020 18:11 IST            

In response to the rapid spread of the COVID-19 pandemic globally, and recently in Armenia, the World Bank is supporting the Government's response to protect its people amid the coronavirus outbreak. At the request of the Ministry of Health of Armenia, the World Bank has allocated $3 million to address the country's urgent needs for equipment and supplies needed for the intensive care of people with a confirmed COVID-19 diagnosis. These funds are supporting the procurement of 50 artificial pulmonary ventilation (APV) devices worth $1.35 million under the ongoing Disease Prevention and Control Project (DPCP).

This procurement became possible due to the application of the streamlined procedures of the World Bank in emergency situations. The technical expertise provided by the World Bank helped to carry out rapid market analysis to ensure value for money amid acute shortages in the global supply of medical equipment and increasing prices. As a result, Armenia's health system will be equipped with additional high-quality devices necessary for treating an increasing number of confirmed COVID-19 cases.

"In these dramatic times the Bank stands ready to support the country's response to help mitigate the impact of the pandemic," says Sylvie Bossoutrot, World Bank Country Manager for Armenia. "I would like to recognize the unprecedented dedication of health professionals in Armenia to protect the people. I would also like to strongly encourage each citizen of Armenia to strictly abide by the requirements of these emergency times and observe social distancing and isolation measures aimed at minimizing the impact of the pandemic."

Similar arrangements will be applied to purchase additional ventilators, as well as personal protective equipment to address immediate healthcare needs. In addition, the World Bank stands ready to reprogram parts of its active ongoing portfolio in Armenia to support the government's response to COVID-19 in various areas.

The World Bank's financial and technical support is closely coordinated with that of other international organizations and development finance institutions. In particular, the above equipment will be procured directly through United Nations agencies' supply channels in view of the current constraints for these types of medical emergency equipment in the global market.

The World Bank Group is rolling out a $14 billion fast-track package to strengthen the COVID-19 response in developing countries and shorten the time to recovery. The immediate response includes financing, policy advice and technical assistance to help countries cope with the health and economic impacts of the pandemic. The IFC is providing $8 billion in financing to help private companies affected by the pandemic and preserve jobs. IBRD and IDA are making an initial US$6 billion available for the health-response. As countries need broader support, the World Bank Group will deploy up to $160 billion over 15 months to protect the poor and vulnerable, support businesses, and bolster economic recovery.


Family of slain Armenian journalist Hrant Dink awaits justice 13 years on

AHVAL News

Thirteen years after Armenian Turkish journalist Hrant Dink was shot dead in broad daylight outside his office in Istanbul, the trial of 77 people accused of involvement in his murder, including police officers and intelligence agents, is still dragging on with no end in sight.

Dink had received many death threats for writing in the bilingual Armenian-Turkish newspaper, Agos, about the genocide Armenians living under the Ottoman Empire during World War One. Some 1.5 million were killed in massacres, or died from starvation and disease in forced marches into the Syrian desert.

Turkey denies a genocide took place and says many died in intercommunal fighting. On April 24 last year, the day the genocide is commemorated, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said: "The relocation of the Armenian gangs and their supporters who massacred the Muslim people, including women and children, in eastern Anatolia, was the most reasonable action that could be taken in such a period”.

Any suggestion of genocide is met with anger by many in Turkey, even more than 100 years later. Dink was prosecuted for his writing several times under Article 301 of the penal code, which makes it illegal to insult Turkey or Turkish government institutions, or to "denigrate Turkishness".

Teenage Turkish nationalist Ogün Samast shot Dink three times in the head on Jan. 19, 2007 and pictures later emerged of Samast posing next to smiling police officers. Samast was sentenced to 22 years in prison in 2011, but could be eligible for parole in 2021.

A 2017 indictment accused the officials now on trial of running a criminal network, destroying evidence, dereliction of duty and official misconduct, and other offences. Their case has been combined with the murder retrial.

A court handed prison sentences to nine suspects in relation to Dink’s murder in July last year. But out of dozens of defendants - including police, intelligence and gendarmerie officials – few remain in jail.

“The trial is continuing for 13 years and the end is nowhere in sight because there is no desire by the government to find out the truth and bring the real planners of the murder to justice, or, alternatively, there is direction by the government not to find the truth and bring the real planners of the murder to justice,” said Raffi Bedrosyan, an Armenian activist born in Istanbul and a columnist for the Armenian Weekly.

“This is why the judges and prosecutors of the case have been substituted at least 14 times so far. This is obviously a clear message to all Armenian journalists, human rights lawyers and activists to give up and not to interfere in this case,” said Bedrosyan, who has written extensively about Dink and is now based in Canada.

Agos columnist Ohannes Kılıçdağı said that he would have expected the case to have been closed long ago and the defendants allowed to walk free.

“That is what is considered normal in Turkey. If the trial process has taken so long, it is due to the courageous struggle for justice of Hrant Dink's friends, lawyers, and rights advocates,” he said.

The Dink family and their lawyers applied to the Constitutional Court in 2016 to appeal against a decision by the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor's Office not to prosecute more officials that the Dink family and their lawyers believe were involved in the murder. But in 2019, the court rejected the request for an additional investigation.

On the 12th anniversary of Dink’s murder last year, opposition member of parliament Garo Paylan, who is of Armenian origin, submitted a parliamentary motion that aimed to shed more light on the killing. But deputies from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and their far-right nationalist allies voted down the motion.

“This trial is related to the basic nature of the Turkish state and its values,” Kılıçdağı said. “In this trial, the state is defending its own character and identity. Not surrendering their own personnel is also part of this defence, so it took years for even the simplest legal steps to be taken.”

One of the accused, Şeref Ateş, a gendarmerie intelligence officer in Istanbul at the time of Dink’s murder, was killed in an armed attack on his vehicle in the northwestern city of Düzce on March 12. Police have detained three suspects for the killing, state-run Anadolu news agency said. Ateş was arrested as part of the Dink murder case in 2016 and spent more than a year in prison pending trial before being freed on bail.

“The recent murder of the intelligence officer is also undoubtedly dark,” Kılıçdağı said. “But if we consider the gang-like nature of the state, such an incident is not unexpected according to the logic of the state and the way it operates.”

The next hearing of the Dink murder trial is due to be held on May 12. The long, drawn-out case could work in two ways, Kılıçdağı said.

“First, undoubtedly, intimidation might discourage rights advocates from the very beginning, showing that they could be in a similar situation and case. But, on the other hand, the struggle of rights advocates in this trial demonstrates that although it is very challenging, if you persevere, you can shed light on at least part of the murder – or in President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s words right after Dink’s murder – on the dark corridors of the state,” he said.

“Thanks to this case, we have been able to see the dark, crooked relations within the state to some extent. And I think this is an achievement for rights defenders.”

13-year old domestic violence victim starts walking with the help of doctors

Save

Share

 19:18,

YEREVAN, MARCH 30, ARMENPRESS. The 13-year old girl who was subjected to domestic vilence weeks ago in Gyumri and was hospitalized in critical condition has strated to walk with the help of doctors, ARMENPRESS reports spokesperson of Surb Astvatsamayr medical center Gevorg Derdzyan wrote on his facebook page.

Gevorg Derdzyan added that she remain under the supervision of the doctors and continues receiving relevant treatment.

A 13-year-old girl from Gyumri was severely battered on March 5 and was transported to a Yerevan hospital in critical condition.  The girl underwent an emergency surgery in Gyumri before being taken to Yerevan.

The head of the hospital Nikolay Dallakyan said the girl has suffered multiple traumas, closed-head injury, cerebral edema, subarachnoid hemorrhage, fractures of multiple facial bones.

The victim was rushed to Yerevan from Gyumri at 01:30 March 6. She was on assisted ventilation and unconscious. Dallakyan said the girl is in a critical condition, but stable. He added that the brain trauma is very serious.

After the child was taken to a hospital in Gyumri on March 5, police officers were dispatched to the apartment where the incident had taken place. First responders found the child’s 43-year-old mother dead. Her body had traces of violence.

Gyumri police said they’ve a 28-year-old suspect in custody.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

Armenpress: Moderna’s Noubar Afeyan hopes they will have result from trial of COVID-19 vaccine in spring

Moderna’s Noubar Afeyan hopes they will have result from trial of COVID-19 vaccine in spring

Save

Share

 17:03,

YEREVAN, MARCH 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenian-American entrepreneur, philanthropist and venture capitalist Noubar Afeyan, the co-founder and chairman of the US bio-tech company Moderna Therapeutics, hopes that they will get a result from the trial of a vaccine against the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in spring.

Speaking during an online conference titled “COVID-19: Challenging General Fear”, Afeyan introduced information to the panelists about the vaccine created by Moderna Therapeutics, stating that currently clinical testing is underway, and they hope that they will have a positive result from the trial in spring.

The American Moderna Therapeutics biotechnological company has created a vaccine against the novel coronavirus which has been undergoing clinical trial since March 17 in US, at the Kaiser Permanente healthcare research institution in Seattle, Washington.

Armenian Healthcare Minister Arsen Torosyan, Aurora Humanitarian Initiative Co-Founder Noubar Afeyan, and IDeA Foundation Co-founder, Aurora Humanitarian Initiative and UWC Dilijan International School Co-founder Ruben Vardanyan, Lord Ara Darzi, Director of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College, London and McKinsey & Company executive Andre Andonian and Dr. David Nabarro participated in an online conference today titled “COVID-19: Challenging General Fear”.

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. Cases of coronavirus have been reported in over 195 countries.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




RA Ambassador: The situation with coronavirus will seriously affect RA citizens who have left for Russia to work

Arminfo, Armenia

ArmInfo.The situation with coronavirus will seriously affect RA citizens who have left Russia to work . Ambassador of Armenia to Russia Vardan Toghanyan expressed  this opinion in an interview with the Lurer program of the Public  Television of Armenia, answering the question of how quarantine and  restrictions will affect the social status of Armenian citizens who  have left for Russia to earn money.

"This is an important issue that will have a serious impact on  Armenia in terms of economic consequences.  This problem is a set of  problems due to restrictions introduced in such areas as  construction, services, wholesale, shopping centers, which either  limited or almost non-work, or are on the verge of closure. The  number of RA citizens involved in work in these areas, both  seasonally living in Russia and on an ongoing basis, is actually  large. Naturally, now there is the problem of closure, temporary  suspension of these enterprises or facilities, return to Armenia. And  this is an objective problem: without income, these people will be  forced to return to their homeland. The problem will arise a bit  later, because the restrictions have only been introduced, and people  should take appropriate decisions, "Toganyan noted.  

To clarify how many RA citizens or Armenians are infected with  coronavirus in the Russian Federation, the Ambassador said that they  have information about only one Armenian citizen, who, after arriving from Krasnodar, was isolated in the infectious diseases hospital  in Sochi.

Knights of Vartan Inc. renovating KV#106 school

PRESS RELEASE

 "Knights of
Vartan" Communication Office

2 Arshagunyats Ave,

Yerevan, Armenia

Contact: Gohar Palyan,
Liaison

Tel: +374 94 20 64 68

Web: www.kofv.org

 

 

Knights of Vartan’s Nareg-Shavarshan
Lodge Renovating

                                   KV #106 School
in Yerevan

Yerevan
– Knights of Vartan Inc. Nareg-Shavarshan Lodge in Greater Detroit is
continuing to make improvements at the Knight of Vartan #106 School in Yerevan,
Armenia.  Since 2018, the Lodge will have
raised $61,500 for renovation projects at this school.

The Knights of
Vartan, in 1993, initiated the “Adopt  A
School Project (AASP)” to financially assist  public schools in the Republic of Armenia.  During the early years of Armenia’s
independence, the  new Republic did not
have the resources to adequately fund the needs of its public school system.
With inadequate teacher salaries, deteriorated conditions of school facilities
and a lack of school supplies, helping schools in Armenia was a worthwhile
endeavor for the organization.

It was at this time
the Knights of Vartan made significant improvements to School #106 in Nor Nork,
Yerevan. After a few years of cooperation the school was renamed Knights of
Vartan School #106 and Past Grand Commander (PGC) Everett Berberian and PGC Ara
Avakian traveled to Armenia on April 5, 1995 to attend the ceremony marking
this event.

For a few years the Knights
of Vartan (KV) implemented additional projects in the school, built in the
1960’s, through the Armenian Social Investment Fund (ASIF.)  Some of the major renovations after Armenia’s
independence at this time included installing a new central heating system,
replacing the roof and many of the windows and doors and what was supposed to
be renovation of the gymnasium.

However, the windows
installed in the 1960s remained in place in the gymnasium hence one could
easily see broken windows, warped wooden floors placed over the ground (dirt)
and peeling plaster on the walls due to excessive humidity from poor drainage
and air circulation.  

In 2016 the Knights
of Vartan Inc. celebrated the 100th Anniversary of its founding in
Yerevan. The Grand Commander that year, Steven Kradjian, reestablished a
relationship with the Knights of Vartan School #106 Principal, Mrs. Marine
Vardanyan, and invited her to attend the organization’s official event.

Coincidently she was
a graduate of the same school and her mother was one of the first teachers
there. This facility is not just a job for Mrs. Vardanyan but rather she
considers it her identity.  Because of her
exemplary administrative skills and intellectual insight, she has raised the
standard level of education which has resulted in the doubling of the number of
students attending the school. In addition, she formed a club to stage plays
and perform recitals and created a singing and dancing group.   Even with
scarce resources available, Mrs. Vardanyan was able to purchase new desks and replace
some of the windows and doors, but large amounts of money would be needed to
complete the required number of necessary improvements. 

The next project in
support of the Knights of Vartan School #106 was initiated by then Grand
Commander Dr. Gary Zamanigian while on one of the organization’s “Back to
Homeland” Mission Trips in 2017. Appalled by the deplorable condition of the
gymnasium, he was inspired and determined to make certain it would be renovated
in 2018. He said recently “I couldn’t believe my eyes when I actually saw the
condition of the gym; at that moment I felt nothing is going to stop me from
acquiring the necessary funds to refurbish the gym”. During one calendar year
$30,000 was raised by Nareg-Shavarshan Lodge members to complete the project.  Additionally, $2,600 was donated by Arshavir
Lodge in Worcester to purchase new gym equipment which was available for use when
the students returned to school in September 2019. The Paros Foundation was
contracted by the Detroit Lodge to implement the project and they did so in a
manner far beyond the expectation of all who were able to see the end result.

The renovation included replacing the old windows
throughout the 284 square meter gym, installing new vinyl gym flooring on
cement with proper drainage, installing new electrical wiring, 21 light switches
and plugs, repairing the heating system, restoring the plaster and painting the
walls and the ceiling, installing new ceramic tiles in the locker rooms, installation
of new netting over the windows to protect them from damage and installation of
new basketball backboards, rims and nets.

In September 2019, the Knights of Vartan “Back
to the Homeland” group, led by Grand Commander Steven Adams, attended the
ribbon cutting ceremony officially opening the fully renovated gymnasium. The
school’s younger children presented a beautiful program with dancing and
acrobatics and the play “Vartanank” was preformed by upper grade students.

In the past, Mrs. Vardanyan had created a list
of much needed renovations by priority. It included replacing the remaining old
windows and doors of classrooms, changing all the outdated electric wires from the
1960s and a total renovation of the auditorium with a gradual incline of the floors
for easy viewing.

Nareg-Shavarshan Lodge once again, with PGC Dr.
Gary Zamanigian as the initiator, pledged to raise the needed funds for the
final renovation. Gomidas Lodge in San Diego having been informed of the
project has already made a much appreciated monetary contribution proving that
in the Knights of Vartan “brothers help brothers”.

In the future additional improvements will be
made as needed and they will continue to be implemented by the excellent work
of the Paros Foundation.

The Knights of Vartan Inc. is a fraternal leadership
and service organization of Armenian men dedicated to safeguarding and
perpetuating the Armenian heritage and cultural traditions. Its membership
represents the spectrum of the leadership of the Armenian community. It was
founded in 1916 in Philadelphia and is based the United States with 23 local
chapters which support Armenian causes around the world.

For more information about the Knights and
Daughters of Vartan, visit .

Coronavirus prevention measures discussed at Cabinet meeting in Artsakh

Save

Share

 18:43, 19 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, ARMENPRESS. Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan chaired the Government’s meeting On March 19. As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of Artsakh President's Office, while discussing the questions on the agenda, the President gave appropriate assignments to the heads of concerned structures towards their proper realization.

The epidemiological situation in the republic and measures being carried out towards combating acute respiratory infections and the new coronavirus were analyzed during the meeting. The Head of the State once again underscored the necessity of consistent implementation of all preventive measures and constant monitoring of the epidemiological situation in the republic.

L.A. petroleum magnate convicted in sprawling biofuel tax scheme

Los Angeles Times
 
 
 
 
Lev Dermen, left, was convicted Monday of 10 felony counts after his former partner, Jacob Kingston, right, testified against him during a seven-week trial. (U.S. attorney for the District of Utah)
By MATTHEW ORMSETH STAFF WRITER
MARCH 16, 2020
 
Lev Aslan Dermen had beaten big cases before. A 1993 federal tax fraud charge ended in acquittal. Charged in 2003 with assaulting a Glendale policeman, the jury deadlocked in the first trial and acquitted in the second.
 
On Monday afternoon, in the federal courthouse in Salt Lake City, the petroleum magnate listened to the verdict at the close of his seven-week trial for fraud and money laundering, and it was a word he’d never heard uttered before by a jury: Guilty, 10 times.
 
The verdict — guilty on 10 felony counts — was not just a courtroom defeat for Dermen, one that will likely result in a significant prison sentence. It brought to an end the impression, earned after a string of acquittals and fizzled investigations, that Dermen was untouchable. Until Monday, he had never been convicted of a felony.
 
His attorney, Mark Geragos, called the verdict “a travesty” and criticized the court’s decision to allow the jury to continue deliberating in spite of the coronavirus pandemic. Geragos noted the 12 jurors returned their verdict just minutes after President Trump warned the country against meeting in groups of 10 people or more.
  
“With respect, the defense believes this is a complete travesty and a prima facie due process and constitutional violation,” Geragos said. Crowded in “a potentially life-threatening environment,” the jury considered the complicated case for less than eight hours before reaching a verdict that “was not deliberated fully and fairly,” he said.
 
Geragos asked U.S. District Judge Jill N. Parish to declare a mistrial, writing in a motion that Dermen deserves to have his guilt or innocence determined by “jurors free from concerns of life, disease, and death.”
 
Throughout the seven-week trial, prosecutors brought evidence of a brazen scheme to loot a half-billion dollars in subsidies from the U.S. Treasury. Dermen, they alleged, conspired with Jacob Kingston, the leader of a polygamist sect in Utah and chief executive of Washakie Renewable Energy, a company that claimed to convert cooking oil and similar materials into biofuel but in fact made hardly any renewable energy at all.
 
Kingston, who pleaded guilty to several dozen felonies and testified against Dermen, has admitted playing a shell game with the federal government, shuttling batches of fuel between companies and falsifying paperwork to claim the $1-per-gallon subsidy earmarked for biofuel producers. He pleaded guilty in exchange for a sentence not to exceed 30 years in prison.
 
Once Kingston met Dermen in 2012, prosecutors said, the fraud accelerated.
 
Dermen, born Levon Termendzhyan, left Armenia at 14 for Los Angeles and built an empire of gas stations, truck stops and energy companies in Southern California. He lived in a West L.A. mansion, drove a Bugatti, surrounded himself with bodyguards and beat case after case, beginning with a 1993 federal charge of taking part in a diesel tax scheme that ended in acquittal.
 
In 2003, Dermen was charged with assaulting a Glendale detective who had been tailing his cousin. He was acquitted after two trials.
 
In 2017, Los Angeles Police Department detectives and federal agents raided his homes and businesses, seeking evidence of money laundering, tax evasion and grand theft, among other suspected crimes, according to a copy of the search warrant. They hauled away Dermen’s business records, luxury cars, watches, Hermes bags and millions of dollars in cash — all of which were returned after county prosecutors declined to file charges.
 
Dermen seemed immune to law enforcement, prosecutors said, and he cashed in on this impression by offering Kingston the protection of an “umbrella” — a supposed network of law enforcement officials who would allow Dermen and his conspirators to operate with impunity. With Dermen’s assurance he was protected, Kingston testified, he began filing claims for ever-larger sums of subsidies.
 
Prosecutors did not allege that Dermen’s “umbrella” actually existed — only that Kingston and his family believed it did, and transferred to Dermen tens of millions of dollars to pay it off.
 
Dermen did, however, surround himself with law enforcement figures. Among his associates were Felix Cisneros, a former agent with Homeland Security Investigations, and John Saro Balian, a former narcotics detective with the Glendale Police Department.
 
Cisneros was convicted in 2018 of helping Dermen’s business partner, Santiago Garcia Gutierrez, travel illegally between the United States and Mexico, where he was negotiating a deal on Dermen’s behalf with Pemex, the Mexican state oil company. Cisneros served a year in federal prison.
 
Dermen and Balian were close associates for a decade before falling out in 2016. A Mexican Mafia associate told an LAPD detective that Balian offered him and another gang member $100,000 to “scare” someone, which led to a drive-by shooting that riddled an SUV carrying Dermen’s son with bullets.
 
Balian was not charged in the incident and has denied involvement in the attack. He pleaded guilty in 2018 to three felonies, none of them related to his association with Dermen, and served 21 months in federal custody. He was released in November.