Why is coronavirus recovery rate falling in Armenia?

Panorama, Armenia
June 2 2020

The coronavirus recovery rate keeps decreasing in Armenia, sparking concerns about the situation with the infection in the country.

3,145 people reportedly recovered from the disease on May 25, while the recoveries stand at 3,427 on June 2, i.e. 282 patients have overcome the virus in 8 days. Only 25 coronavirus recovered were recorded in the past 24 hours.

Panorama.am asked the Ministry of Health for comments on the issue.

Spokeswoman Alina Nikoghosyan reminded that the ministry has switched to a new policy since May 22 when coronavirus patients showing mild symptoms are no longer hospitalized or isolated. Such people now receive treatment at their homes.

“Their data is entered into the system and only 14 days later they are removed from the system, being declared cured," she said.

Accordingly, an increase in the number of recoveries can be expected on June 6, 14 days after May 22.

In Nikoghosyan’s words, the figures published by the ministry and the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention refer to those recovered and discharged from hospitals.

As reported earlier, the citizens receiving home treatment will not be tested for coronavirus again. 

Asbarez: IDC, ANCA, and HALC Statement on the Hagia Sophia

June 1, 2020

The Hagia Sophia

WASHINGTON—In Defense of Christians (IDC), the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) and the Hellenic American Leadership Council (HALC) called on UNESCO to respond to Turkey’s continued threat to violate Hagia Sophia’s status as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and convert the museum into a mosque.

Last week, the Erdogan regime targeted Hagia Sophia – or the Church of the Holy Wisdom – as part of its long-time campaign to convert it into a mosque. Built by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I, the Hagia Sophia served as the seat of the Ecumenical Patriarch. It was converted into a mosque when Constantinople fell to the Ottoman Empire. Turkey’s first president, Kemal Ataturk, secularized Hagia Sophia and opened it as a museum. In 1985, UNESCO designated the Hagia Sophia – as a component of the Historic Areas of Istanbul – a World Heritage site.

Hellenic American Leadership Council, Armenian National Committee of America and In Defense of Christians

According to Toufic Baaklini, President and Chairman of IDC, “The Hagia Sophia is one of the most historically Christian sites in the world. It should not be used as a political pawn. Turkey continues to deny the genocide it inflicted on its Christian minorities and it continues to further insult its Christian population by threatening to change the status of this historic Christian cathedral.”

“Erdogan’s move to change the status of Hagia Sophia – the signature Christian landmark in Constantinople – both reflects and reinforces Turkey’s century-long drive to erase the vast cultural and religious heritage of Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians and other now-exiled indigenous Christian nations across the territory of modern-day Turkey,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian.

“This is worse than a political stunt,” said HALC Executive Director Endy Zemenides. “Erdogan and his officials are dog-whistling and appealing to a minority that sees Christianity as an enemy. Hagia Sophia is part of all of our heritage, and UNESCO cannot let Turkey use it to divide, especially as Turkey is set to assume the presidency of another UN body this fall.”

IDC, ANCA, and HALC will be launching an advocacy initiative in defense of Hagia Sophia’s World Heritage Status.

823 businesses sanctioned for violating coronavirus safety guidelines

Save

Share

 12:08,

YEREVAN, MAY 27, ARMENPRESS. 823 businesses in Armenia have been sanctioned and shut down for 24-hours for non-compliance or violation of the national coronavirus safety guidelines, the governmental Inspection Agencies Coordination Office head Artur Asoyan said at the Cabinet meeting.

He said the inspections are carried out in the most potentially risky areas of activities such as manufacturing plants, banks or shopping areas.

87 public eateries were shut down for 24 hours during one week. Another 12 will be sanctioned today, he said.

According to Asoyan, the food safety inspection agency provided consultations to over 9500 public food sector businesses.

The health and labor inspection agency, in turn, sanctioned 290 businesses.

Asoyan said inspections are also carried out in kindergartens.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Artsakh president announces free university education from September

Panorama, Armenia

Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan sent a congratulatory address to the school graduates in connection with the "Last Bell" event. As the Information Department at the President’s Office reported, the message read in part:

“This year the pandemic has, unfortunately, undermined us holding the solemn event of the "Last Bell". I am confident that the disappointment caused by this situation will not prevent each of you from doing your best to achieve the set goals. Don't forget that every crisis is also an opportunity.

After graduating from the school, an important phase is getting started in your life when the knowledge level and skills will be the criteria of quality and productivity. Thus, whatever profession you would choose, you should become a leading specialist in your sphere.”

The president next said that as promised during the campaign, starting from the first of September, the higher education will be free. “But I want to emphasize once again that the state will set up strict requirements for the quality of education. Therefore, you should study well and continuously improve yourselves,” Harutyunyan added. 

Armenia continues to reopen despite steady growth in new cases of COVID-19

OC Media
Armenia continues to reopen despite steady growth
in new cases of COVID-19
By OC Media
A worker disinfects a bus in Yerevan. Official photo.

Armenia has beat its own record for daily infections even as it continues to lift social-distancing restrictions. Authorities have said that maintaining the restrictions was economically unsustainable. 

On 18 May, public transport, kindergartens, indoor restaurants, and gyms were allowed to reopen, with strict additional hygiene and sanitary requirements in place. The same day, the country registered 351 new confirmed cases, the highest number recorded in a 24 hour period at that point.

Outdoor restaurants, beauty salons and other businesses were allowed to open several weeks prior, on 4 May. 

The State Commission on the State of Emergency announced that starting from 25 May, people must wear masks in all outdoor and indoor spaces or face fines of ֏10,000 ($21).

Armenia’s government has made it clear that the novel coronavirus will not be going away anytime soon, and that keeping the country’s economy in lockdown will have dire consequences. 

Despite the growing outbreak, the government believes the economy must reopen and has called on Armenian citizens to express social responsibility and continue to follow proper social distancing and hygiene measures despite the decrease in legal restrictions. 

The country will now be divided into 119 regions, each with its own monitoring groups consisting of police officers and personnel from the Ministry of Emergency Situations. These groups will ensure that residents, businesses, and other organisations are following all necessary social distancing and hygienic measures.

In an interview with Civilnet, Health Minister Arsen Torosyan said that Armenia has more than enough tests (over 50,000), and has been carrying out 10 tests for every one confirmed case. 

According to him, as of last week, Armenia’s infection rate was 1.4, each person infected with COVID-19 was infecting an average of 1.4 people.

Health Minister Torosyan has stressed in the past that Armenia is one of the few countries that has been, for now, been able to hospitalise all confirmed cases of COVID-19.

But this strategy is changing. On 19 May, the Ministry of Health announced that due to the growth in new cases the country is adopting a patient reclassification strategy which would entail sending patients who are asymptomatic as well as those with mild symptoms back home.  

Patients will stay in quarantine there under the supervision of state clinic doctors, this will allow rooms in medically repurposed hotels and hospitals to be opened up for those patients that require more urgent medical care.

Armenia currently has over 100 patients in critical condition and a death rate of 1.3%.  

Armenia registered its first case on 1 March, and as of 19 May has 5,041 confirmed cases, 2,164 recoveries, and 64 deaths.

A state of emergency was announced on 16 March and included the closure of schools and non-essential businesses alongside strict measures limiting freedom of movement. 

Health Minister Torosyan has said that the country’s initial anti-COVID-19 strategy was to test and trace the social contacts made by infected individuals. While the outbreak initially started as three major viral clusters, on 10 April, authorities confirmed that the virus’s spread had been so wide-ranging that it had gone beyond traceable ‘clusters’. 

By 10 May, the country's confirmed number of infections were doubling every two weeks. On 21 May, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced that if current trends continue, Armenia will have 10,000 cases by 29 May and 20,000 cases by 12 June.


30,000 USD Humanitarian Donation to the Armenian Community in Lebanon


PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Avenida de 
Berna 45-A, 1067-001 Lisboa, Portugal
Contact: Vera Ribeiro da Cunha
Telf: (+351) 21 782 3658
Web: gulbenkian.pt


Գալուստ Կիւլպէնկեան Հիմնարկութիւնը 30,000 ամերիկեան տոլարի մարդասիրական 
օգնութիւն կը յատկացնէ լիբանանահայ գաղութին 

Գալուստ Կիւլպէնկեան Հիմնարկութեան Հայկական Բաժանմունքը 30.000 ամերիկեան տոլար կը 
տրամադրէ ընկերային ծառայութիւններ մատուցող լիբանանահայ երեք 
կազմակերպութիւններու՝ քաջալերելու երկրին ծանր տնտեսական պայմաններուն եւ Քովիտ 
19-ին ստեղծած բժշկական տագնապը յաղթահարելու համար անոնց նախաձեռնած մարդասիրական 
աշխատանքները: 

Իւրաքանչիւրը 10.000 ամերիկեան տոլարի օժանդակութիւն ստացող երեք 
կազմակերպութիւններն են.-
-       Լիբանանահայ Օգնութեան Խաչ (ԼՕԽ)
-       Հայ Կրթական Բարեսիրական Կազմակերպութիւն (ՀԿԲՄ)
-       Հաուըրտ Գարակէօզեան Հաստատութիւն
Տրամադրուելիք նպաստները պիտի օգնեն այս կազմակերպութիւններուն շարունակել 
լիբանանահայ գաղութի կարիքաւորներուն սնունդի, դեղորայքի եւ բժշկական 
ծառայութիւններ մատուցելու իրենց նախաձեռնած աշխատանքները:

Այս նուիրատուութիւնը համահունչ է լիբանանահայ կրթական ոլորտէն ներս Հիմնարկութեան 
նախաձեռնած աշխատանքներուն:  Հոսկէ մեկնելով, դեկտեմբեր 2019-ին եւ յունուար 
2020-ին, Հիմնարկութիւնը նիւթական օժանդակութիւն տրամադրած էր Լիբանանի մէջ գործող 
18 հայկական վարժարաններուն: Մարդասիրական այս օգնութիւնը կ'ամբողջացնէ Քովիտ-19-ին 
վերաբերող բժշկական սարքեր ապահովելու նպատակով Հայաստանին ղրկուած օժանդակութիւնը: 

Հայկական Բաժանմունքին կողմէ կատարուած այս նուիրատուութիւնը մաս կը կազմէ Գալուստ 
Կիւլպէնկեան Հիմնարկութեան Քովիտ-19-ին վերաբերող ընդարձակ ծրագիրներուն: Ան 
պսակաձեւ ժահրին ստեղծած տագնապը յաղթահարելու նպատակով Բաժանմունքին նախաձեռնած 
տարբեր ծրագիրներէն մէկն է: 

---

Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Makes a 30,000 USD Humanitarian Donation to the 
Armenian Community in Lebanon 

The Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation is 
providing 30,000 USD to three Armenian community-based social aid organisations 
in Lebanon to support their activities in light of the socio-economic and 
medical emergency in the country due to the Covid-19 crisis.

The three organisations which will receive assistance (10,000 USD each) are: the 
Armenian Relief Society of Lebanon (Lipanani Oknutian Khatch), the Armenian 
Educational Benevolent Union (Hay Grtagan Paresiragan Miutiun) and the Howard 
Karagheusian Commemorative Corporation. The funds will augment each 
organisation’s capacity to provide basic needs such as food, medicine and 
medical services to the most vulnerable sectors of the Armenian community. 

This donation is complementary to the Department’s engagement with the Armenian 
educational sector in Lebanon. In December 2019 and January 2020 support was 
sent to the 18 Armenian schools in the country, in line with the Foundation’s 
focus on education. It is also in addition to the assistance provided to Armenia 
in April for Covid-19 related medical supplies.

The donation made by the Armenian Communities Department is in line with the 
Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation’s wider emergency Covid-19 relief programme. It 
is one of the several initiatives the Department has undertaken in dealing with 
the Coronavirus crisis.

Iran coronavirus cases reach 114,533

Save

Share

 14:47,

YEREVAN, MAY 14, ARMENPRESS. According to the latest data, the number of people infected with the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in Iran has increased by 1,808, bringing the total number of cases to 114,533, the Armenian Embassy in Iran reported today.

71 more deaths have been registered in the past one day. The death toll has reached 6,854.

2,758 infected people are in serious condition.

1,111 more patients have recovered, raising the total number of recoveries to 90,539.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia among semi-consolidated authoritarian states in Freedom House Democracy Index

Arminfo, Armenia
May 6 2020

ArmInfo. The democracy index, according to the non-governmental organization Freedom House in Armenia, is 3 units. Moreover, Armenia is in the category of semi- consolidated authoritarian states. This is stated in a report entitled " Nations in Transit 2020: Dropping the Democratic Facade", which was published by Freedom House today.

Together with Armenia, Georgia (3.25 points), Moldova (3.11 points) and Ukraine (3.39 points) are among the transitional regimes.  Meanwhile, according to the Freedom House rating, the seven consolidated authoritarian regimes among countries in transition include Russia (1.39), Turkmenistan (1), Azerbaijan (1.14), Uzbekistan (1.14), Tajikistan (1.18), Kazakhstan ( 1.32) and Belarus (1.39).

The best thing about democracy and human rights among the 29 countries included in the ranking is in Estonia (6.09 units), which the authors of the report classify as consolidated democracies. The same category includes Lithuania (5.64 units), Latvia (5.79 units) and Slovenia (5.93 units).

A report on the development of democracy and civil liberties in the transition countries – European and Asian states of the former socialist bloc – notes that current trends are such that more and more leaders of world states have recently refused to even pretend to play according to the rules of democracy.

As the democratic consensus of the post-Cold War order has given way to great- power competition and the pursuit of self-interest, these politicians have stopped hiding behind a facade of nominal compliance. They are openly attacking democratic institutions and attempting to do away with any remaining checks on their power.

In the region stretching from Central Europe to Central Asia, this shift has accelerated assaults on judicial independence, threats against civil society and the media, the manipulation of electoral frameworks, and the hollowing out of parliaments, which no longer fulfill their role as centers of political debate and oversight of the executive. Antidemocratic leaders in the region continue to pay lip service to the skeletal, majoritarian element of democracy-claiming that they act according to the will of the people-but they do so only to justify their concentration of power and escalating violations of political rights and civil liberties.

<Despite their leaders' choices, citizens' yearning for democracy remains strong. Major transformations driven by public demands for better governance have been under way in Armenia and Ukraine, with the former earning the largest two-year improvement ever recorded in Nations in Transit. Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy will now face the difficult challenge of managing expectations, maintaining trust, and restructuring corrupt systems without contravening democratic norms.>

In the authoritarian half of the Nations in Transit region, incumbent rulers used their well-established control over state institutions to further fortify their own positions. Perhaps nothing demonstrated this instrumentalization better than the constitutional "reforms" announced by Russian president Vladimir Putin in early 2020, which will ultimately allow him to retain his post beyond the two-term maximum. The timing of the overhaul, very much by design, took everyone by surprise, signaling that Putin is firmly in command and remains one step ahead of friend and foe alike when it comes to succession and the survival of his regime. More importantly, the changes demonstrated a contempt for the rule of law and the basic principles of constitutional government." <In the rest of Eurasia and Central Asia, authoritarians have been similarly preoccupied with the future. Perhaps hoping to avoid scenarios like the Velvet Revolution in Armenia and the arrest of former president Almazbek Atambayev in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan's Nursultan Nazarbayev oversaw a half-hearted political transition, resigning in March 2019 only to take back much of his power from the designated successor, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, later in the year.  The presidents of Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan have been elevating their own relatives to positions of power and responsibility, preparing the ground for a dynastic transition.>

Artsakh hero: In Armenia, liberators of Shushi standing trial today

Panorama, Armenia
May 8 2020

Hero of Artsakh, General Vitaly Balasanyan issued a congratulatory message on the 28th anniversary of the liberation of Shushi. The message reads:

"Dear compatriots,

I congratulate the Armenian people on May 8 marking the 28th anniversary of the liberation of Shushi city-fortress.

During the Artsakh war we have carried out many victorious actions, while the liberation of Shushi stands out with its strategic significance and symbolism.

With this operation, the Armenian armed forces succeeded in ending the bombing of Stepanakert. Besides, the liberation of Shushi reaffirmed the right of Armenian Artsakh to live freely in a symbolic way.

I have to record that this day, which has become symbolic for all Armenians, is marred by a disgraceful trial, which again becomes symbolic. A trial as part of which Robert Kocharyan, a participant of the operation to liberate Shushi, the chairman of the Nagorno-Karabakh State Defense Committee during the war and the first and second president of Artsakh and Armenia, is being kept under arrest on groundless charges.

A trial faced by Seyran Ohanyan and Yuri Khachaturov, the generals who took part in the liberation war and greatly contributed to our army building.

The people who won the war will appear before the court on May 8. Those who risked their lives for the victory and freedom of the Armenian people.

The irony of the fate is that after the liberation of Shushi, the military elite was tried in Azerbaijan for handing over the city, while today the liberators of Shushi are standing trial in Armenia. This is a shame for all of us and we must do our best to clean this stigma from us.

I am sure that time and history will put things in the right place.

We will reject defeatism and will strive for new victories.”

Armenia to lift restrictions on movement of citizens starting from May 4

News.am, Armenia
May 1 2020

16:00, 01.05.2020

Under the new package of measures that will enter into force on May 4, restrictions on freedom of movement will be lifted, citizens won’t have to fill out a form before going out, but there will still be a ban on public transport, including intercity transport due to the high risk of the spread of the coronavirus. This is what Deputy Minister of Economy of Armenia Varos Simonyan told reporters today.

He added that almost all types of economic activities will be permitted, except for retail and wholesale trade at trade centers. “Public food outlets will operate and will serve customers outdoors. The operation of botanical gardens and reserves will also be allowed. In the sport sector, activities will only be permitted for professionals,” Varos Simonyan said.

According to him, there will be stricter oversight over conformity with the prescribed norms than in the past, especially in closed factories and offices. “Operation in all sectors of the processing industry will be permitted, including textile, furniture and shoes. However, in closed facilities, the administration needs to designate a person who will be responsible for observing all standards, including hygienic accessories, employees’ health condition, etc. In addition, employers need to ensure their employees’ safe movement and not let them leave the premises of the company during working hours,” he said.