Armenpress: Coronavirus: No suspicious cases among arriving passengers in Armenia so far, medics say

Coronavirus: No suspicious cases among arriving passengers in Armenia so far, medics say

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 12:26,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. No suspicious cases have been recorded at Armenian border checkpoints regarding symptoms associated with the novel coronavirus.

The Healthcare and Labor Inspection Agency, which is monitoring and screening all arrivals at the borders, said none of the arrivals so far had fever.

Healthcare and Labor Inspection Agency chief Hakob Avagyan personally visited the Zvartnots Airport and inspected the monitoring process.

Passengers arriving from China are given residential address registration cards in the airplanes upon arrival which are then forwarded to the medical staff at the border checkpoints.

The Healthcare and Labor Inspection Agency, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Healthcare Ministry and the Civil Aviation Committee are cooperating and following the information issued by international organizations, particularly the World Health Organization in order to prevent the import of the disease to the country.

Nearly 400 citizens of Armenia currently living in China have contacted the Armenian Embassy after being urged to do so by the Foreign Ministry. 7 of the Armenian nationals are living in Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak.  None of them has any health issues.

 Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

Reuters article on plans to cut operations are “speculation”, says HSBC Armenia

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 13:19,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. HSBC Armenia says the Reuters report on HSBC Group considering shrinking or selling its businesses in Armenia is “speculation”.

“We do not respond to speculations,” HSBC Armenia Department of Communications chief Diana Gaziyan told ARMENPRESS when asked to comment.

On January 29, Reuters reported citing sources familiar with the matter that HSBC is seeking to sell or shrink its business in some markets, including in Armenia, Greece and Oman. According to the report HSBC is also considering exiting from Turkey.

A day after the report, the Armenian Central Bank responded with a statement.

 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

France ratifies protocol on readmission agreement signed with Armenia

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 13:30,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. France has ratified the protocol on implementing the agreement between the European Union and the Republic of Armenia on the readmission of persons residing without authorization, the French migration service said.

“France has ratified the protocol signed between the French and Armenian governments in Paris on October 27, 2016 on implementing the “Agreement between the European Union and the Republic of Armenia on the readmission of persons residing without authorization” signed in Brussels on April 19, 2013”, the statement says.

Armenia’s Migration Service said the protocol defines the technical details, timeframes of the readmission process and the cooperation format. Armenia has ratified that protocol on September 14, 2017.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Coronavirus: 2020 World Athletics Indoor Championships postponed in China

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 13:57,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. The 2020 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Nanjing have been postponed because of the coronavirus outbreak in China.

The championships were to be held from 13-15 March but governing body World Athletics pushed them back 12 months, World Athletics said in a press release.

World Athletics sought advice from the World Health Organisation and turned down offers to host from other cities.

“The advice from our medical team, who are in contact with the World Health Organisation, is that the spread of the coronavirus both within China and outside the country is still at a concerning level and no one should be going ahead with any major gathering that can be postponed.

“We have considered the possibility of relocating the event to another country and would like to thank the cities that have volunteered to host the championships.

“However, given concerns still exist regarding the spread of the virus outside China, we have decided not to go with this option, as it may lead to further postponement at a later date.

“We have chosen not to cancel the championships as many of our athletes would like this event to take place so we will now work with our athletes, our partners and the Nanjing organising committee to secure a date in 2021 to stage this event,” the governing body said in a statement.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

CSTO highlights enhancing Armenia’s arsenal, strengthening 102nd Russian base for bloc’s security

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 14:23,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. The arming of the 102nd Russian Military Base in Armenia and the Armenian Armed Forces is one of the important directions of strengthening the security of Armenia and generally the CSTO, Joint Chief of Staff of the security bloc General Anatoly Sidorov said at a news conference when asked what measures the CSTO is planning to take in the region given the escalation of the American-Iranian relations.

“The strengthening of the 102nd Russian military base stationed in Armenia and the arming of the Armenian troops isn’t done randomly,” Sidorov said.

Sidorov noted that the CSTO charter and strategy, nevertheless, mentions the strenghening of national troops and formations as the primary source of raising the organizations potential.

“Another factor of strengthening is the training of the organization’s troops in the Caucasian region itself. This year we have planned a number of operational events that will take place in the region,” Sidorov said.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenia appoints customs attaché at Upper Lars border checkpoint

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 13:47,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. Aram Tananyan has been appointed Armenia’s customs attaché at Upper Lars checkpoint on Russia-Georgia border.

The respective decision was adopted today at the Armenian government’s regular session.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said the customs attaché will work near the Upper Lars border checkpoint, not in Moscow.

State Revenue Committee Chairman Davit Ananyan said Aram Tananyan has been serving as adviser to the SRC Chairman since 2018, has worked in the public administration system for many years, in particular holding positions in the National Security Council, the Rescue Service and the Ministry of Emergency Situations.

After the Cabinet meeting Aram Tananyan told reporters that his powers are not defined yet, but added that the SRC has adopted a 5-year development strategy. “You have seen what changes have taken place in our system within the past 1.5 year. Our system aims at ensuring the whole turnover of the country. And on this background we are currently moving to the north because one of our main transportation routes passes through Lars which connects us with the EAEU territory”, he said.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




https://www.gulftoday.ae/news/2020/01/31/armenia-suspends-visa-free-rule-for-chinese-citizens

Gulf Today, UAE
Jan 31 2020
 
 
Armenia suspends visa-free rule for Chinese citizens
 
 
Armenia to pause its visa-free travel rule for Chinese citizens from Feb. 1, the visa-free regime will continue after March. 31.
 
This decision is due to the coronavirus outbreak, Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan wrote on social media on Friday.
 
Coronavirus is a virus that has a semblance with the SARS pathogen. 213 people have passed away from being infected by it. The virus came from a market in central Wuhan, China.
 
According to China’s National Health Commission, nearly 10,000 have been infected by the virus, as at Friday.
 
The outbreak has led to the World Health Organization declaring an international emergency.
 

Armenian President to Jerusalem Post: Failure to Recognize Genocide will Backfire

Jerusalem Post
Jan 31 2020
 
 
ARMENIAN PRESIDENT TO ‘POST’: FAILURE TO RECOGNIZE GENOCIDE WILL BACKFIRE
 
By MAAYAN JAFFE-HOFFMAN
 
 
Israel will not win the battle against antisemitism until it recognizes the Armenian Genocide, President Armen Sarkissian told The Jerusalem Post.
Sarkissian, who was in Israel over the past week for the Fifth World Holocaust Forum, which marked the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, said that most of the Armenian population does not understand the logic behind Israel’s refusal to officially recognize the mass killing of more than 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children by the Ottoman government between 1915 and 1917.
The Armenian Genocide is recognized by more than 30 countries, including the United States as of October 2019, but Israel has resisted formally naming the genocide for what it is.
“A lot of Armenians ask, ‘Why on earth would Israel, a country whose people have seen their own huge tragedy, not recognize the Armenian Genocide?’” Sarkissian said. “There is no logical answer. I cannot say that Israel has relations with Turkey and that is why – I cannot say that.”
But he acknowledged that Israel-Turkey relations, which were formalized in March 1949, are likely the catalyst for Israeli silence.
The Turkish government for more than a century has denied that there was ever any plan to systematically wipe out the Armenian population. Although, here and there, Turkish officials – including President Recep Tayyip Erdogan – have offered condolences to the Armenians, none has ever labeled the tragedy a genocide, and most call it a lie or say that the Ottoman Turks simply took “necessary measures” to counter Armenian separatism at the time.
“Israel has relations with Turkey,” Sarkissian said. “Today, those relations are good, tomorrow they are bad, and then the other way around. But the truth will remain the truth.”
He said that recognizing human tragedy is a matter of morality more than anything else, and he can only hope that one day Israel will recognize the genocide and that “human values, moral values and the importance of history will prevail. Recognition will not be connected with this or that interest of the State of Israel or something else that is important only in the moment.”
But he also believes that Israel’s failure to commiserate with Armenia over their comparable tragedies – the Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide – is harming Israel and the Jewish people’s efforts to combat an ever-expanding epidemic of antisemitism.
“All of the reasons why this happened have not disappeared,” Sarkissian told the Post, referring to both the Holocaust and the genocide. “Antisemitism is alive. Extreme nationalism is alive everywhere in the world…. It can all come back.”
He said that human tendency is to forget the lessons of history for the convenience of the present.
Sarkissian believes that Turkey has not recognized the genocide because it would be “inconvenient: millions of people lost their lives; a culture was destroyed; and Turkey is probably afraid of claims – material and moral claims.
“Maybe they are afraid because for years they didn’t tell the truth to their children and grandchildren in their schools,” he continued.
“It does not matter to me personally whether this country or that country will or will not recognize [the genocide]. It will not change my life or the lives of the millions of Armenians who lost their homes and are scattered all over the world in the Armenian diaspora. But it is going to backfire.”
He said that a country’s recognition of the genocide or not will decide if that country is able to build for itself a tolerant society. A country that does not recognize the genocide, he said, is a country that will ultimately lack tolerance for other people’s religion, nationality, faith and culture.
“The biggest disease of humanity today is not a virus in Hong Kong,” Sarkissian said. “It is not AIDS or cancer. With new technologies we are learning more and more how to fight cancer and defeat viruses. But technology will not teach us how to cure the disease of inhumanity.
“No medicine can be taken with water to help you become more human, more tolerant – this is much more problematic,” he explained.
And he said that only in the moment that Israel recognizes the genocide will it truly be able to move into its rightful role as the worldwide leader in the fight against antisemitism and extremism.
“It will make Israel’s case much stronger when it partners with Armenia, Rwanda, Cambodia,” Sarkissian stressed. “Then, we can come together and say, ‘This is enough.’ If we don’t do that and everyone plays the game on their own, we are going to lose the battle.”
Sarkissian said that he attended the World Holocaust Forum because he does not think “it would have been right for any Armenian to connect the remembrance of the Holocaust tragedy” with whether the Israeli parliament recognizes the Armenian Genocide or not.
“There is no way that, as president of Armenia, I would ever consider not being here,” he said.
BUT HIS own country is in other ways as guilty as the Jewish state.
Armenia has held Israel to a double standard on its territorial conflict with the Palestinians, voting against and condemning Israeli presence in Judea and Samaria at the United Nations, while defending Armenia’s own occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh.
The United Nations Security Council in 1993 adopted four resolutions (822, 853, 874 and 884) that affirm Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and demand Armenian withdraw from the area. Furthermore, the US State Department describes on its website that Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership “is not recognized internationally or by the United States,” thereby acknowledging Armenian forces’ occupation of one-fifth of Azerbaijan’s territory during the 1988-1994 Armenia-Azerbaijan war.
At the time, Armenia expelled more than 800,000 Azerbaijani civilians and has since barred them from returning to their homes. At least 100,000 Azerbaijanis remain in refugee camps today under desperate living conditions.
There is striking parallelism between Israel’s fight for territory in the West Bank, often called the “biblical heartland,” because of the Jews’ thousands-of-years history there, and Armenia’s grasp on Nagorno-Karabakh. Most historians believe that Armenians had been living in the region as early as the second or even fourth century BCE.
When asked about this contradiction and why Armenia does not vote with tolerance toward Israel at the United Nations, Sarkissian said, “The Armenian state has to think of protecting Armenian life, and the Jewish state has to think about protecting Jewish life. Both Armenians and Jews are human, and yet politics decides many things.”
“Armenia is a landlocked country; it has only four neighbors: Turkey – and you know our relations with them; Azerbaijan – and you know our relations,” he continued.
“Armenia has only two ways of communicating with the world: One is Georgia, and the other is Iran. I’ll stop there. Don’t take me into the jungle of politics.”
Until the countries come to terms on these differences, Sarkissian said, he hopes that they will identify other areas in which they share common ground.
The president used his time in the country after the Holocaust forum to meet with top Israeli universities and with the Israel Innovation Authority, for example, and noted there are plans to collaborate on new projects in the artificial intelligence arena.
He also said he hopes to increase tourism between the two countries.
“Once we have Israeli citizens traveling to Armenia and learning about its history and culture, our beautiful land and fantastic food, and once more Armenians come to Israel and spend the holidays here, the better the world will be,” he concluded.
 
 
 

PACE calls on Armenia to speed up judicial reforms

Arminfo, Armenia
Jan 31 2020

ArmInfo. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe expressed satisfaction with the organization of parliamentary elections in Armenia in accordance with  international standards. This is stated in the PACE resolution  adopted on January 30.

The resolution was adopted based on a report by Sir Roger Gale. This  report provides an overview of PACE monitoring activities from  January to December 2019. It assesses the progress of countries being  monitored or in the process of post-monitoring dialogue.

Delegates welcomed Armenia’s efforts to combat corruption and the  initiative to reform the judiciary to ensure greater independence.

At the same time, the Assembly expressed its concern about the  problems that the judiciary is facing in ensuring their independence  and impartiality.

The Assembly also noted that intolerance towards the LGBT community  and other minorities is manifested in Armenian society, as well as  obstacles that some community groups pose to the Council of Europe  Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and  Domestic Violence, which is still awaiting ratification. (Istanbul  Convention).

The Assembly calls on the Armenian authorities to accelerate reforms  in the judicial system for its independence and effectiveness.  Moreover, PACE members called on the authorities to refrain from any  actions that may be perceived as exerting pressure or interfering  with the work of the judicial system.  There was also a call to  continue to strengthen the rights of women, as well as the rights of  the LGBT community and other minorities.

Welcome To The World’s Next Tech Hub: Armenia

Forbes
Jan 31 2020
 
 
 
 
Wade Shepard
Asia
 
 
As Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey join together and engage in major infrastructure projects, such as the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway, to revive their historic role as a land bridge between east and west, Armenia has been conspicuously left by the wayside. However, Armenia has taken a different path. Rather than diving head first into the promises of the New Silk Road or industrialization, they’re wagering their chips on a completely different table: technology.
 
Armenia is a landlocked country in the bowels of the Caucasus with scant natural resources. It doesn’t have any ports. It isn’t on the road to anywhere. You can’t even enter or exit Armenia from the east or west, where hostile relations with both Azerbaijan and Turkey have resulted in long closed borders. All the country has is human capital, which it’s doubling-down on as high-tech research and development has become a national priority—a do or die objective to connect and do business with the outside world and break the blockade that’s building up around it.
 
While Armenia has been making strides towards developing its high-tech sector for many years, it wasn’t until the Armenian Revolution of 2018 that momentum really started to build. Suddenly, the little, insignificant country hidden deep in the centerfold of the world map was full of hope and looking forward to a future that seemed unusually bright.
 
 
“The Armenian nation has never really been able to live for itself. It’s always had someone dominating it or ruling it or manipulating it,” explained the half-Armenian Reddit cofounder, Alexis Ohanian, as we sat together in Yerevan. “This could mark the start of the first time when this country and especially the young people—the ones who are the most hungry, the most driven, the most optimistic—to actually have a chance to determine for themselves the fate of the country and where it heads, and that is a part of the Armenian experiment that has not really ever happened.”
 
A new outlook was established, and the power of technology was one of its driving forces: IT, software development and high-tech startups would form the backbone of the newly reemergent nation.