Artsakh MFA issues statement on 29th anniversary of Operation ‘Ring’

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 17:43,

YEREVAN, APRIL 30, ARMENPRESS. The ministry of foreign affairs of Artsakh issued a statement on the 29th anniversary of the Operation ‘Koltso’ on the deportation of the Armenian population of the borderline villages of Artsakh, the ministry told Armenpress.

The statement says:

“29 years ago, under the direct organization and coordination of the central authorities of the USSR and Azerbaijan, a large-scale operation ‘Koltso’ (‘Ring’) was carried out to deport the Armenian population of the borderline villages of Artsakh. This bloody operation ultimately transferred the Azerbaijan-Karabakh conflict to the military plane, initiating the subsequent full-scale aggression of Azerbaijan against the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh Republic).

On April 30, 1991, the massive shelling of Getashen and Martunashen villages of the Shahumyan region launched the operation ‘Koltso’, in the course of which tanks, combat helicopters, and artillery were employed for the first time against the civilians. Azerbaijani special police units (OMON), with the support of internal troops of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Soviet Army, broke into Armenian villages formally supposedly for "checking the passport regime", but in fact for killing, robbery, terror against the Armenian population, followed by deportation.

As a result of the military-police actions, dozens of Armenian villages of Northern Artsakh, as well as the Shahumyan, Hadrut and Shushi regions were destroyed, about ten thousand people were deported, over 100 people were killed, and hundreds of people were taken hostage. The fate of many of them remains unknown so far.

The Azerbaijani authorities considered the operation ‘Koltso’ as the beginning of the complete cleansing of Artsakh from the Armenian population. It became another manifestation of the policy of ethnic cleansing conducted by Azerbaijan in 1988-1991 in Sumgait, Baku and other settlements of the Azerbaijani SSR, as well as in the villages of Northern Artsakh.

The Armenian pogroms carried out by the Azerbaijani authorities in response to the demand of the people of Artsakh to exercise its inalienable right to self-determination and the subsequent military aggression against the Republic of Artsakh in 1991, which was repeated in April 2016, demonstrated that only the establishment and strengthening of an independent statehood can ensure the right of the people of Artsakh to live freely and safely in its homeland. The international community’s recognition of this reality and the international recognition of the Republic of Artsakh will become an additional deterrent against Azerbaijan’s desire to unleash a new war and will ensure peace and security in the entire region of the South Caucasus”.

Sports: Discovering young talents: Armenian goalkeeper from France

News.am, Armenia

By Samvel Sukiasyan

NEWS.am Sport presents the young Armenian football players who play abroad, but dream of playing for the Armenian national team.

Goalkeeper Khachatour Unussian, 14, plays for the U15 team of FC Kronenbourg in France.

"My son was born and raised in France, he has been playing football since he was 8 years old," her mother, Sophia Unussian, told NEWS.am Sport. "He is fluent in Armenian and studies at La Doctrine Chrétienne Christian School in Strasbourg.

"Khachatour was born in August 2005 and plays as a goalkeeper. He started his career in the youth team of the French club SC Schiltigheim, where he spent several years.

As part of SC Schiltigheim, my son became the U13 Ligue d'Alsace champion, and has played many times against the youth teams of top French clubs, including PSG and Lyon.

Khachatour trains at ProPulse Academy in parallel. He was recognized as the best goalkeeper of the Boulogne-sur-Mer tournament, took part in the Izmir Cup international tournament in Turkey, where his team also competed with Galatasaray.

This year, Khachatour moved to FC Kronenbourg where he plays for the U15 team. He will soon join the U16 team. Owing to his diligence and the professionalism and strictness of his coach, he can make further progress in the new club.

So far, the Football Federation of Armenia has not contacted us, but my son dreams of receiving an invitation from Armenia’s youth team, and in the future—from the national team.”

Pashinyan chairs session of governmental commission on preventing COVID-19 spread in Armenia

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 12:09,

YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS. The session of the governmental commission coordinating the works to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus in Armenia was held today in the government chaired by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.

Deputy Prime Minister, the State of Emergency Commandant, Tigran Avinyan introduced the ongoing actions within the frames of the policy to prevent the spread of COVID-19, as well as the future steps.

In particular, the session touched upon the issues relating to the organization of works in economic, social, educational, cultural and other spheres of public life.

The participants of the session exchanged views on the manageability of the problem, the possibilities to mitigate restrictions on free movement and economic activitiy, control mechanisms, etc.

The Commandant will soon make respective decisions based on the results of today’s session.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia plans to organize 4th Global Forum Against the Crime of Genocide

Armenia plans to organize 4th Global Forum Against the Crime of Genocide 

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 18:10,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. Armenia plans to hold the 4th Global Forum Against the Crime of Genocide this year, ARMENPRESS reports Foreign Minister of Armenia Zohrab Mnatsakanyan said in a press conference on April 21.

''We plan to hold the 4th Global Forum Against the Crime of Genocide this year. This is already a permanent platform for consolidating the expertise potential of the international community and working and developing the tool kits that foster the implementation of preventive measures of genocides at national and international levels'', Mnatsakanyan said.

On April 24 the Armenian Genocide Memorial will be closed for all visitors aimed at preventing the spread of the novel coronavirus in the country. Other events are planned to take place to pay homage to the memory of the victims of the genocide.

State of emergency has been prolonged until May 14. Strict limitations on people's movement has been imposed.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/20/2020

                                        Monday, 

Armenian Town Sealed Off Over Coronavirus Outbreak

        • Satenik Kaghzvantsian

Armenia -- A police checkpoint outside Maralik, .

Authorities sealed off a small town and an adjacent village in Armenia’s 
northwestern Shirak province on Sunday after 18 employees of a local hospital 
tested positive for coronavirus.

Two local residents died from COVID-19, a respiratory disease caused by the 
virus, after the Armenian police set up roadblocks around the town of Maralik 
and the village of Dzorakap in the morning.

The head of the provincial administration’s healthcare department, Leyli 
Aslanian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Monday that one of them, a 
90-year-old man, was the father of an infected nurse working at the Maralik 
hospital.

Aslanian said that the old man was diagnosed with coronavirus just hours before 
his death. His family declined offers to hospitalize him even though he had a 
fever for almost a week, she said.

The Maralik hospital was temporarily shut down on Saturday after the 18 
coronavirus cases were confirmed among its 61-member staff. Shirak’s governor, 
Tigran Petrosian, said the infected medical personnel were taken to a hospital 
in the provincial capital Gyumri while their colleages were placed under 
quarantine. The authorities also ordered more than 40 relatives and friends of 
the infected medics to self-isolate, he said.

Local officials did not disclose the suspected source of the infections. Another 
Maralik resident died from coronavirus early this month. The 68-year-old man was 
reportedly taken to the local medical center before being hospitalized in Gyumri.

The latest fatalties brought Armenia’s death toll from COVID-19 to 22. The 
Armenian Ministry of Health reported on Monday morning that the total number of 
coronavirus cases in the country rose by 48 to 1,339 in the past day.

Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian, who oversees the enforcement of a 
coronavirus-related state of emergency in Armenia, announced his decision to 
lock down Maralik and Dzorakap on Saturday evening.

Avinian ordered the police to ensure that people can enter or leave the two 
adjacent communities only in cases of extreme necessity or for the purpose of 
agricultural work until April 25. The ban also does not cover trucks supplying 
food, fuel and medicine to the town of 5,000 residents located about 100 
kilometers northwest of Yerevan.

All roads leading to Maralik were blocked by police checkpoints on Monday. “We 
only let through people with special permissions,” a policeman manning one of 
those checkpoints told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.




Armenian President Concerned About Hardship Caused By Coronavirus

        • Harry Tamrazian

Armenia -- President Armen Sarkissian meets with children from socially 
vulnerable families, Gyumri, December 7, 2019.

President Armen Sarkissian has said that he feels the pain of scores of poor 
Armenians who have lost their jobs and other sources of income due to the 
coronavirus pandemic.

In a weekend interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian service, Sarkissian stressed the 
need to find the right “balance” between easing their hardship through renewed 
business activity and tackling the deadly virus.

“My thoughts are constantly with such families because they lack reserves, so to 
speak, to get by for one, two or three months [without work,]” he said. “They 
obviously need assistance and that assistance must come not only from the state.

“Of course, the state and business need to cooperate very closely, and I can see 
that the government is taking some steps in the financial, social and business 
sectors. To the best of my ability, I certainly give my advice when necessary, 
but it’s a quite difficult problem.”

“It’s not an Armenian problem, it’s a global problem, and it’s hard to find the 
right balance between public health and public well-being,” added Sarkissian.

The Armenian government ordered a nationwide lockdown last month in an effort to 
contain the spread of coronavirus. Since then it has also approved a series of 
measures designed to cushion the severe economic impact of the lockdown.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian listed those measures in a televised address to 
the nation aired on Friday. In particular, he touted some 7 billion drams ($14.4 
million) in one-off cash handouts planned or already paid by the government to 
about 100,000 socially vulnerable citizens. They include employees of private 
firms forced to suspend their operations, microbusiness owners, self-employed 
and unregistered workers as well as some pregnant women.

“The most endangered stratum in our country is those people who had no permanent 
jobs and were dependent on day labor; those families that have always had very 
modest incomes,” said Sarkissian. “Just imagine what a difficult time those 
families … are having now.”

The head of state, who has largely ceremonial powers, also said that despite the 
unfolding economic crisis Armenians should already think about “how we will be 
living after coronavirus.”

“In the case of Armenia, we can, for example start from the simplest thing: 
public health … Right now air in our city [Yerevan] is two or three times 
cleaner than it was before coronavirus. So why don’t we think about always 
having clean air?” he said.

Sarkissian suggested in that regard that the municipal authorities plant trees 
on more than 100 hectares of presently unused land adjacent to the 
Tsitsernakabert memorial to the victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman 
Turkey. The public park could have 1.5 million trees matching the estimated 
number of genocide victims, he said.

“I have written to the government, the prime minister and the [Yerevan] mayor 
proposing that we discuss this issue,” the president said. He added that he will 
personally start raising private funds for the would-be park if they back the 
idea.




Pashinian Vows ‘Purge’ Of Armenian State Officials


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks during his government's 
question-and-answer session in parliament, Yerevan, April 15, 2020.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has pledged to purge Armenia’s government, 
judiciary and security apparatus of “remnants” of the country’s former 
leadership, accusing them of trying to discredit him and scuttle his 
far-reaching initiatives.

In a video message streamed live on Facebook on Sunday night, Pashinian charged 
that many Armenian media outlets are also sympathetic to the former regime and 
keen to undercut him.

“It’s probably about time that real purges within the government took place,” he 
declared before hitting out at former President Serzh Sarkisian and his 
political allies.

“They still have lots of their people in the government and the law-enforcement 
system,” he said. “They do because we said that there will be no vendettas and 
gave everyone a chance. But now the time for using that chance is up.”

“The state governance system must be cleansed of Serzh’s remnants … Nobody can 
blame us for doing that because they had that chance and haven’t used it,” added 
Pashinian. He did not name anyone.

The remarks followed a scandal that marred Pashinian’s live address to the 
nation broadcast on Friday evening by Armenian Public Television. Several other, 
private TV broadcasters, some of which are controlled by Pashinian’s political 
foes, were allowed retransmit it.

It emerged afterwards for at least 15 minutes preceding the broadcast, Public 
Television also filmed Pashinian’s preparation for the address which focused on 
the Armenian government’s response to the coronavirus epidemic. The sensitive 
footage was leaked to some of his detractors who circulated it on social media 
to mock the prime minister.

On Sunday morning, Pashinian’s spokeswoman, Mane Gevorgian, accused Public 
Television of negligence and a lack of professionalism, saying that it should 
have alerted the premier that he is being recorded. Gevorgian also lambasted the 
state-funded broadcaster for giving the other TV channels access to not only the 
speech but also what preceded it.

The Public Television management denied any wrongdoing. It insisted that prior 
to the broadcast one of its employees informed the prime minister’s aides about 
the filming.


Armenia -- Margarita Grigorian, executive director of Armenian Public Television.

Nevertheless, Public Television’s executive director, Margarita Grigorian, 
resigned on Monday, saying that she takes responsibility for the incident. In a 
statement, Grigorian also implicitly accused other broadcasters of violating 
ethical standards of journalism and leaking the footage. She described that as a 
“stab in the back.”

In his late-night Facebook message, Pashinian downplayed the incident while 
attacking “swaggering scumbags” who he said are taking advantage of his 
administration’s tolerance of political dissent. He stressed that during the 
2018 “Velvet Revolution” in Armenia he prevented their “lynching” by angry 
crowds that toppled Sarkisian.

“People were demanding that … we take the scumbags, who are swaggering now, out 
of their homes and swat them in the streets,” he said. “But we said no, this is 
not our work style.”

Pashinian went on to allege that Armenia’s former regime is stepping up its 
smear campaign against him because of what he described as major progress made 
in ongoing corruption investigations conducted by law-enforcement bodies. He 
said they are also worried about the Armenian parliament’s passage of government 
bills on judicial reform and confiscation of assets deemed to have been acquired 
illegally.

The 44-year-old former journalist also blasted the Armenian media, saying that 
that up until the 2018 revolution “99 percent of media outlets and 70 percent of 
journalists received money from the [former] authorities.” “They are not getting 
that money now and the entire media field is furious with that,” he claimed.


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.

 


Armen Sarkissian holds informal meeting with President-elect of Artsakh

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 16:10,

YEREVAN, APRIL 16, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian had an informal meeting with the newly-elected President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

President Sarkissian once again congratulated Mr. Harutyunyan on election as President of Artsakh. He wished success to the President-elect and expressed confidence that Harutyunyan will continue serving his strength and energy for ensuring the security and development of Artsakh.

The meeting participants also touched upon the programs directed for the development of Artsakh.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Armenian FM highlights importance of elections held in Artsakh

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 17:40,

YEREVAN, APRIL 15, ARMENPRESS. Armenian foreign minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan says the recent general elections held in Artsakh are very important in terms of human rights, regional security and the peace process.

“The elections held in Artsakh, in the context of human rights, were an exercise of rights of the Artsakh people to manage the public life. With these elections the people of Artsakh gave their mandate to the newly-elected authorities to continue ensuring the security of the Artsakh people and represent them in the peace process. In this sense the elections were very important in terms of human rights, regional security and the peace process”, the FM said during the Q&A session in the Parliament.

The minister highlighted that the Armenian authorities have been and remain the guarantor of the people of Artsakh and will continue bringing constructive engagement to the peace process.

The voting in the second round of the presidential election was held in Artsakh on April 14. According to the preliminary results, Arayik Harutyunyan was elected President of Artsakh with 88% of votes. The other candidate, current foreign minister Masis Mayilyan received 12% of votes.

Reported by Norayr Shoghikyan

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Iranian scientists develop antibody test for COVID-19 – report

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 16:43,

YEREVAN, APRIL 13, ARMENPRESS. Iranian scientists at the Tehran Medical University Healthcare Faculty’s Department of Pathobiology have developed an antibody test for the novel coronavirus -  a test that shows whether or not someone has had the coronavirus and has recovered from it.

The current tests only show if the patient has the virus presently.

Lecturer of the Department of Immunology Dr. Zarnan has said that the tests will provide “total accuracy”, according to an official translation of a media article provided by the Cultural Center of the Iranian Embassy in Armenia.

He said the antibody tests will be highly important in the coronavirus pandemic and will be very significant for people who may have had COVID-19 but it went asymptomatic. “People who had the disease in the past and recovered without complications have acquired immunity and are completely safe for other members of the public and can return to their normal life and work without any movement restrictions,” he argued.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Karabakh MFA: Today marks 28th anniversary of massacre of Armenians in Maragha

News.am, Armenia

13:59, 10.04.2020
                  

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) of the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) on Friday issued a statement on the 28th anniversary of the massacre of Armenians in Maragha. The statement reads as follows:

Today marks the 28th anniversary of the massacre of civilians of the Armenian settlement of Maragha, Martakert region of the Republic of Artsakh, committed by the armed forces of Azerbaijan. The massacre in Maragha is an unprecedented war crime committed by the Republic of Azerbaijan, on the basis of hatred against Armenians aimed at the annihilation of the Armenian population.

On April 10, 1992, after several hours of shelling, the Azerbaijani armed units invaded Maragha. Prior to this, a significant part of the population was evacuated, but the people who remained in the village, were subjected to inhuman torture and massacre by the Azerbaijani servicemen. The self-defense forces of Artsakh managed to liberate Maragha, but two weeks later, the Azerbaijani troops attacked the settlement again and committed new crimes against the civilians who had returned to bury their relatives.

Maragha was captured by the Azerbaijani armed forces and to this day is under the occupation of Azerbaijan. According to various data, including the reports of the human rights organizations Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, as a result of the war crimes committed by the Azerbaijani armed forces in Maragha over 50 civilians, including 30 women, were brutally killed. About 50 more people, including 29 women and 9 children, were taken captive, and the fate of 19 civilians is still unknown.

As testified by Member and former Vice Speaker of the House of Lords of Great Britain, human rights activist Baroness Caroline Cox, who visited the village with representatives of the organization Christian Solidarity Worldwide immediately after the tragedy, the bodies of the brutally murdered residents of Maragha were dismembered, mutilated, and burned. Lady Cox called Maragha “contemporary Golgotha many times over”.

The massacre of Armenians of Maragha became another manifestation of the consistent policy of ethnic cleansing carried out by the Azerbaijani authorities against the Armenian people, first in Sumgait, Baku and other settlements of Azerbaijan in 1988-1990, and later in Northern Artsakh. The fact that commander of the Azerbaijani armed units Taghiyev Shahin Taliboglu, who had committed the massacre in Maragha, was awarded the title of national hero of Azerbaijan testifies that the responsibility for this crime lies entirely with the Azerbaijani authorities. The impunity of the crimes committed by Azerbaijan against Armenians and the lack of an adequate political and legal assessment by the international community created favorable conditions for rooting an atmosphere of hatred towards Armenians and all Armenian at the state level in Azerbaijan. 24 years later, in April 2016, during the aggression unleashed against Artsakh, Azerbaijan attempted to use the same methods to carry out new genocidal acts in Artsakh that were prevented by the decisive actions of the Defense Army of the Republic of Artsakh.

The massacres of civilians in Maragha are a crime against humanity with s no statute of limitations, and they must be condemned by the international community, and their organizers and executors must be justly punished.

Today we bow our heads in commemoration of the victims of the massacre in Maragha and assure that the authorities of the Republic of Artsakh will take all measures to guarantee the inalienable right of the people of Artsakh to live freely and safely in its homeland.

Georgia coronavirus cases reach 227: RIA Novosti

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 11:10,

YEREVAN, APRIL 10, ARMENPRESS. Number of people infected with the new coronavirus in Georgia has reached 227. 57 new cases have been confirmed in the past 24 hours, RIA Novosti reports citing the government-led website of disease monitoring.

There are children, a pregnant woman, doctors and others among the infected.

According to the Georgian health ministry, the peak of the infection is expected in the second half of April.

Georgia declared a state of emergency on March 21 to battle the spread of COVID-19. The state of emergency is effective until April 21.