U.S., Armenia Explore New Defense Cooperation

November 30,  2020



Armenia’s Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutyunyan (right) in a meeting with U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy on Nov. 30

Opportunities to give new impetus to defense cooperation between Armenia and United States were explored during a meeting between the U.S. Ambassador to Armenia and the country’s new defense chief, Vagharsahak Harutyunyan on Monday.

Harutyunyan met with Ambassador Lynne Tracy and briefed her on the implementations of the November 9 agreement, which ended the military operations in Karabakh.

As a priority, Harutyunyan highlighted efforts on the return of prisoners of war, search for missing in action and the bodies of the dead, as well as the activities of the International Committee of Red Cross, the Russian defense ministry and the Russian peacekeeping mission in Artsakh.

The Armenian defense minister also stated that currently they are analyzing the military operations and assessing the shortcomings which can lead to structural, decision-making, strategic and legislative reforms.

The two leaders agreed that additional discussions can lead to new areas of cooperation between the U.S. and Armenia in defense and security matters.

Asbarez: Haypost Issues Stamp Honoring Diana A. Apcar

November 30,  2020



Haypost issued stamp Honoring Diana Abcar

Haypost, the postal services of Armenia, announced the release of a postage stamp dedicated to Diana A. Apcar (1859-1937) as part of its annual “Armenian history” series. The postage stamp (30.0 x 40.0 mm) with the nominal value of 120 drams depicts the Honorary Consul of the First Republic of Armenia (1918-1920) to Japan.

Born in Rangoon, Burma (present day Yangon, Myanmar) on 17 October 1859 to Armenian parents from New Julfa, Iran Diana Apcar was the youngest of seven children in the family. Apcar was raised in Calcutta and received her education in a local convent school. Diana Apcar became fluent in English, Armenian, and Hindi. He married Apcar Michael Apcar, a descendant of the prominent house of Apcar of New Julfa. In 1891, Diana and her husband moved to Japan, where she lived until her death on July 8, 1937. She was buried in the Foreigners Cemetery in Yokohama beside her husband and two sons. Her tombstone is engraved with the simple words befitting her life and faith. “Out of Earth‘s shadows unto Heaven’s Glorious Day. We Loved Her, but God Loved Her Best.”

On July 20, 1920, out of respect to her humanitarian efforts, Hamo Ohanjanian, then the Foreign Minister of the Republic, appointed Diana Apcar Honorary Consul to Japan. This made Diana Apcar the first Armenian woman diplomat and one the very first women to have ever been appointed in any diplomatic post in the twentieth century. After the fall of the First Republic of Armenia in the same year 1920, her post was abruptly terminated. However, for about two decades until her life she continued her humanitarian work helping survivors of the Armenian Genocide who had made it to the distant shores in the Far East find refuge in peaceful lands and start new life.

France Urges Turkey to Remove ‘Mercenaries’ From Karabakh

November 30,  2020



France’s State Minister Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne (left) with Armenia’s Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazyan in Yerevan on Nov. 28

YEREVAN (Azatutyun.am)—France expects Turkey to withdraw Syrian mercenaries recruited for Azerbaijan during the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh, a senior French official visiting Armenia said late on Saturday.

“French President Emmanuel Macron was the first to call things what they are and state that Turkey transported Syrian mercenaries from the Turkish city of Gaziantep to Nagorno-Karabakh,” Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, a secretary of state at the French Foreign Ministry, told a news conference in Yerevan held at the end of his two-day visit.

“France expects concrete actions from Turkey so that Turkey removes the mercenaries from the region,” he said. “Paris is going to discuss with its European partners sanctions against Turkey.”

France has been pressing the European Union to impose the sanctions because of Turkish actions in the eastern Mediterranean where Turkey and EU members Greece and Cyprus are locked in a dispute over natural gas rights. Relations between Ankara and Paris have been increasingly tense in recent months.

Macron accused Turkey of recruiting jihadist fighters from Syria for the Azerbaijani army shortly after the outbreak of large-scale hostilities in and around Karabakh on September 27.

Russia also expressed serious concern in the following weeks about the deployment of “terrorists and mercenaries” from Syria and Libya in the Karabakh conflict zone. Russian President Vladimir Putin and his foreign and defense ministers repeatedly raised the matter with their Turkish counterparts.

Ankara has denied sending members of Turkish-backed groups to fight in Karabakh on Azerbaijan’s side. Azerbaijan also denies the presence of such mercenaries in the Azerbaijani army ranks.

Multiple reports by Western media quoted members of Islamist rebel groups in areas of northern Syria under Turkish control as saying in late September and October that they are deploying to Azerbaijan in coordination with the Turkish government. Armenia has portrayed those reports as further proof of Turkey’s direct involvement in the war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10.

Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army claimed to have captured two Syrian fighters during the fighting. Both men are now prosecuted in Armenia on relevant charges.

Lemoyne discussed the issue at a meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazyan held earlier on Saturday. According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, they stressed “the importance of removing foreign armed terrorists brought to the region by Turkey.”

Lemoyne arrived in Yerevan with a delegation of French officials, aid workers and French-Armenian community activists on a board a plane that brought a second batch of French humanitarian assistance to Armenian victims of the Karabakh conflict. It mainly consisted of medical supplies for Armenian soldiers and civilians wounded during the war. The delegation headed by Lemoyne visited two Yerevan hospitals treating them.

Lemoyne said the French government plans to send more such aid to Armenia when he met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Saturday.

“We are grateful to friendly France for providing humanitarian assistance and correctly presenting the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh to the international community,” Pashinyan told the French official.

France is home to a sizable and influential ethnic Armenian community. It was instrumental in the passage by France’s Senate on November 18 of a resolution calling on the French government to recognize Karabakh as an independent republic.

Lemoyne expressed the Macron administration’s opposition to the resolution when he addressed the Senate during a debate. The French Foreign Ministry reiterated on November 19 that “France does not recognize the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.”

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/29/2020

                                        Sunday, November 29, 2020

France Tells Turkey To Remove ‘Mercenaries’ From Karabakh
November 29, 2020
        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia -- French Secretary of State Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne (L) and 
French-Armenian footballer Youri Djorkaeff at a meeting with Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, November 28, 2020.

France expects Turkey to withdraw Syrian mercenaries recruited for Azerbaijan 
during the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh, a senior French official visiting 
Armenia said late on Saturday.

“French President Emmanuel Macron was the first to call things what they are and 
state that Turkey transported Syrian mercenaries from the Turkish city of 
Gaziantep to Nagorno-Karabakh,” Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, a secretary of state at 
the French Foreign Ministry, told a news conference in Yerevan held at the end 
of his two-day visit.

“France expects concrete actions from Turkey so that Turkey removes the 
mercenaries from the region,” he said. “Paris is going to discuss with its 
European partners sanctions against Turkey.”

France has been pressing the European Union to impose the sanctions because of 
Turkish actions in the eastern Mediterranean where Turkey and EU members Greece 
and Cyprus are locked in a dispute over natural gas rights. Relations between 
Ankara and Paris have been increasingly tense in recent months.

Macron accused Turkey of recruiting jihadist fighters from Syria for the 
Azerbaijani army shortly after the outbreak of large-scale hostilities in and 
around Karabakh on September 27.

Russia also expressed serious concern in the following weeks about the 
deployment of “terrorists and mercenaries” from Syria and Libya in the Karabakh 
conflict zone. Russian President Vladimir Putin and his foreign and defense 
ministers repeatedly raised the matter with their Turkish counterparts.

Ankara has denied sending members of Turkish-backed groups to fight in Karabakh 
on Azerbaijan’s side. Azerbaijan also denies the presence of such mercenaries in 
the Azerbaijani army ranks.

Multiple reports by Western media quoted members of Islamist rebel groups in 
areas of northern Syria under Turkish control as saying in late September and 
October that they are deploying to Azerbaijan in coordination with the Turkish 
government. Armenia has portrayed those reports as further proof of Turkey’s 
direct involvement in the war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on 
November 10.

Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army claimed to have captured two Syrian fighters 
during the fighting. Both men are now prosecuted in Armenia on relevant charges.

Lemoyne discussed the issue at a meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Ara 
Ayvazian held earlier on Saturday. According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, 
they stressed “the importance of removing foreign armed terrorists brought to 
the region by Turkey.”


Armenia - A French delegation headed by Secretary of State Jean-Baptiste 
Lemoyne, delivers medical supplies to a hospital in Yerevan, November 28, 2020.

Lemoyne arrived in Yerevan with a delegation of French officials, aid workers 
and French-Armenian community activists on a board a plane that brought a second 
batch of French humanitarian assistance to Armenian victims of the Karabakh 
conflict. It mainly consisted of medical supplies for Armenian soldiers and 
civilians wounded during the war. The delegation headed by Lemoyne visited two 
Yerevan hospitals treating them.

Lemoyne said the French government plans to send more such aid to Armenia when 
he met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Saturday.

“We are grateful to friendly France for providing humanitarian assistance and 
correctly presenting the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh to the international 
community,” Pashinian told the French official.

France is home to a sizable and influential ethnic Armenian community. It was 
instrumental in the passage by France’s Senate on November 18 of a resolution 
calling on the French government to recognize Karabakh as an independent 
republic.

Lemoyne expressed the Macron administration’s opposition to the resolution when 
he addressed the Senate during a debate. The French Foreign Ministry reiterated 
on November 19 that “France does not recognize the self-proclaimed 
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.”


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.

 


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/30/2020

                                        Monday, 

Provincial Governor Resigns

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia -- The newly appointed governor of Syunik, Hunan Poghosyan, addresses a 
rally in the province, October 19, 2018.

Hunan Poghosian, the governor of Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province, 
tendered his resignation on Monday.

An aide to Poghosian, Armine Avagian, gave no reason for the move.

Avagian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that Poghosian will continue to perform 
his duties until the Armenian government appoints a new governor of the 
mountainous region bordering Iran and Azerbaijan.

Poghosian’s resignation was announced as the Armenian side essentially completed 
its withdrawal from districts around Nagorno-Karabakh in line with a 
Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the Karabakh war on November 10.

Syunik borders three of those districts: Lachin, Kubatli and Zangelan. Some 
Syunik border sections became new Armenian-Azerbaijani frontlines as Azerbaijani 
troops reached and advanced through those districts in October. They shelled 
several Syunik villages, killing and wounding several local residents.

Poghosian signaled his intention to resign in a statement issued on November 16. 
“But at the moment our priority is to strengthen our borders and make them 
impregnable,” he said.

Poghosian, 56, is a retired police general who was appointed as Syunik governor 
in October 2018 six months after the “Velvet Revolution” that brought Nikol 
Pashinian to power. He served as first deputy chief of the Armenian police until 
the Pashinian-led mass protests that toppled the country’s former government.



Armenian President Appeals To Putin

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Belarus - Presidents Armen Sarkissian (L) of Armenia and Vladimir Putin of 
Russia attend the opening ceremony of the European Games in Minsk, June 20, 2019.

President Armen Sarkissian asked his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin on 
Monday to help free Armenian soldiers and civilians remaining in Azerbaijani 
captivity after the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

A ceasefire agreement brokered by Putin on November 9 calls for the exchange of 
all Armenian and Azerbaijani prisoners of war (POWs) and civilian captives. The 
process has still not begun and it remains unclear clear when the warring sides 
will start implementing this provision.

Armenia’s human rights ombudsman, Arman Tatoyan, accused Baku last week of 
“artificially dragging out” the release of POWs as well as the search for the 
bodies of Armenian soldiers killed in action.

The Armenian presidential press office said Sarkissian has sent a letter to 
Putin saying that many in Armenia are very concerned about the fate of the POWs 
and civilian captives and that Putin can help to speed up their release.

Sarkissian sent the letter during what his office described as a private visit 
to Moscow. The largely ceremonial head of state met over the weekend with 
leaders of the Armenian community in Russia to discuss the aftermath of the war.

The Armenian military has not yet publicized the number of its soldiers who were 
taken prisoner during the war. The number of Azerbaijani POWs also remains 
unknown.

Yerevan-based human rights lawyers have identified about 50 Armenian POWs and 
detainees in lawsuits asking the European Court of Human Rights to order Baku to 
provide information about their health and prison conditions.

Hundreds of other Armenian and Karabakh soldiers remain unaccounted for. 
Relatives of some of these servicemen met in Stepanakert on Monday with Ara 
Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, and General Rustam Muradov, the commander 
of Russian peacekeeping forces deployed to Karabakh in line with the truce 
accord.

“Every effort is now made at the highest state level to establish the 
whereabouts of all our missing compatriots as soon as possible,” Harutiunian 
said at the meeting. In his words, more than 600 corpses have already been 
recovered from former Karabakh battlefields.



Former Armenian Presidents Hit Back At Pashinian


Armenia -- Former Presidents Levon Ter-Petrosian (L) and Robert Kocharian.

Former Presidents Levon Ter-Petrosian and Robert Kocharian accused Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian on Monday of blatantly lying about their offers to 
negotiate with Russia and try to stop the war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Pashinian hit out at them in a series of Facebook posts that defended his 
handling of the war which resulted in sweeping territorial gains made by 
Azerbaijan.

Amid continuing opposition calls for his resignation, the embattled premier 
claimed on Sunday that Ter-Petrosian, Kocharian and another former president, 
Serzh Sarkisian, objected on October 19 to key terms of a ceasefire agreement 
which Moscow thought would stop the hostilities.

In another statement posted on Monday morning, he questioned the sincerity and 
seriousness of Kocharian’s and Ter-Petrosian’s stated readiness to fly to 
Moscow, as Armenia’s “special envoys,” for urgent talks with Russian leaders.

Pashinian said they wanted him to arrange a meeting with Russia’s President 
Vladimir Putin or Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. He said he suggested that they 
talk instead to former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and try to organize 
unofficial “courtesy meetings” with Putin, Lavrov or other senior Russian 
officials.

Pashinian added that the two ex-presidents did not travel to Moscow even after 
he helped Kocharian secure a court order allowing the latter to leave Armenia. 
Kocharian has been standing trial on coup charges rejected by him as politically 
motivated.


Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian greets supporters during his trial, 
Yerevan, February 25, 2020.

Victor Soghomonian, the head of Kocharian’s office, swiftly denied Pashinian’s 
claims. “Lies and distortions are inseparable from Nikol,” he said.

Ter-Petrosian issued an even more scathing denial through his spokesman, Arman 
Musinian.

“President Ter-Petrosian finds it meaningless to comment on the 
nation-destroying scourge’s mental torments,” Musinian wrote on his Facebook 
page. “Let him blurt out whatever he wants. There is no way he can make excuses.”

“The Armenian people will never forgive him,” Musinian added, alluding to the 
outcome of the six-week war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 
10.

The ceasefire agreement locked in the Azerbaijani territorial gains and led to 
Armenian withdrawal from three more districts around Karabakh.

Levon Zurabian, Ter-Petrosian’s right-hand man, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service 
on November 20 that Pashinian did not give the ex-president a “mandate” to 
negotiate in Moscow a better peace deal in October.


Armenia - Opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian at his election campaign 
headquarters in Yerevan, 2Apr2017.

Echoing statements by other opposition leaders, Zurabian also blamed Pashinian 
for the military defeat. “This primarily resulted from the fact that Nikol 
Pashinian has an insatiable and morbid vanity and is absolutely ignorant about 
international relations, geopolitics and military affairs,” he charged.

Ter-Petrosian and Kocharian reportedly met October 20 for the first time in over 
two decades. They were joined by Sarkisian and two former Karabakh presidents. 
The meeting was noteworthy given the long history of mutual antagonism between 
Ter-Petrosian on one side and Kocharian and Sarkisian on the other.

Ter-Petrosian, who had served as Armenia’s first president from 1991-1998, ran 
in a disputed 2008 presidential election in an unsuccessful bid to prevent the 
handover of power from Kocharian to Sarkisian.

Pashinian played a major role in Ter-Petrosian’s 2008 opposition movement and 
spent nearly two years in prison as a result. He subsequently fell out with the 
ex-president and set up his own party.



Pashinian Confirms Rejecting Earlier Karabakh Truce Agreement


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Bursts of explosions are seen during fighting between 
Armenian and Azerbaijan's forces near Shushi (Susa) outside Stepanakert, 
November 5, 2020

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has confirmed Russian President Vladimir Putin’s 
assertion that he could have stopped the war in Nagorno-Karabakh three weeks 
before the Armenian-Armenian ceasefire brokered by Moscow on November 9.

In November 17 televised remarks, Putin said that the Armenian side would have 
suffered fewer territorial losses and, in particular, retained control of the 
strategic Karabakh town of Shushi (Shusha) had Pashinian agreed to Azerbaijan’s 
terms of a ceasefire on October 20.

Shushi was captured by Azerbaijani forces two or three days before the 
subsequent truce agreement halted the war on November 10. Azerbaijan agreed to 
stop its military operations in return for an Armenian pledge to withdraw from 
three districts around Karabakh.

Baku regained control over four other districts, which had been occupied by 
Karabakh Armenian forces in the early 1990s, during the latest war. Its troops 
also captured Karabakh’s southern Hadrut district.

Speaking to the Rossiya-24 TV channel, Putin said: “On October 19–20, I had a 
series of telephone conversations with [Azerbaijani] President Aliyev and Prime 
Minister Pashinian. At that time, the armed forces of Azerbaijan regained 
control over an insignificant part of Nagorno-Karabakh, namely, its southern 
section.

“On the whole, I managed to convince President Aliyev that it was possible to 
end hostilities, but the return of [Azerbaijani] refugees, including to Shusha, 
was a mandatory condition on his part. Unexpectedly for me, the position of our 
Armenian partners was that they perceived this as something unacceptable.”

“At that point, the prime minister told me that his country could not agree to 
this, and that it will keep fighting,” added Putin.


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Azerbaijani soldiers patrol at a checkpoint on a road 
outside the town of Shushi (Susa), November 26, 2020.
Pashinian essentially confirmed this on Sunday evening. In a lengthy Facebook 
post, he insisted that Yerevan’s acceptance of the earlier deal negotiated by 
Putin and the resulting return of refugees to Shushi would have also restored 
Azerbaijani control of the town overlooking the Karabakh capital Stepanakert.

“The problem was that in that case more than 90 percent of Shushi’s population 
would be Azerbaijanis who would control the road to Stepanakert … Thus the 
agreement did not materialize,” he wrote.

Pashinian claimed that Putin found his arguments “logical.” Putin’s November 17 
comments suggest the opposite.

“Prime Minister Pashinian told me openly that he viewed [the return of 
Azerbaijanis to Shushi] as a threat to the interests of Armenia and 
Nagorno-Karabakh,” the Russian president told Rossiya-24. “I do not quite 
understand the essence of this hypothetical threat. I mean, it was about the 
return of civilians to their homes, while the Armenian side was to have retained 
control over this section of Nagorno-Karabakh, including Shusha.”

Pashinian sought to justify his rejection of the October 20 ceasefire terms as 
he continued to defend his handling of the six-week war strongly condemned by 
the Armenian opposition and a growing number of other domestic critics. They 
hold him responsible for Azerbaijan’s military victory and demand the Armenian 
government’s resignation and the conduct of snap parliamentary elections.

The critics have seized upon Putin’s revelation and portrayed it as further 
proof of Pashinian’s incompetence and disastrous decision-making. They say that 
the prime minister would have not only kept more territory under Armenian 
control but also saved the lives of hundreds and possibly thousands of Armenian 
soldiers had he agreed to the proposed ceasefire on October 20.


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.

 


Armenpress: Pashinyan says LTP and Kocharyan opted out from visiting Moscow during war despite facilitation

Pashinyan says LTP and Kocharyan opted out from visiting Moscow during war despite facilitation

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 09:26,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has revealed details regarding the willingness of former presidents Levon Ter-Petrosyan and Robert Kocharyan to visit Moscow during the war in Artsakh.

“On October 20, the second and third presidents of Artsakh Arkadi Ghukasyan and Bako Sahakyan proposed to organize a meeting between the incumbent and former leaders of Armenia and Artsakh, which would be a manifestation of national unity during the days of the war. After some discussions I agreed. We agreed that whenever they would signal that the former presidents are ready, I would organize the meeting. During our next meeting, Arkadi Ghukasyan and Bako Sahakyan said that a nuance had added to their idea: Levon Ter-Petrosyan and Robert Kocharyan want to travel to Moscow to have high-level meetings there and that our meeting should be organized after their return and would become somewhat of an information combination, more informed discussion of the situation. I said that I am not against the idea, I said I would even provide the government aircraft, let them go and have meetings and come back. However, after my consent the former presidents of Artsakh raised another issue, they said it is necessary for me to mediate for President of Russia Vladimir Putin to receive Levon Ter-Petrosyan and Robert Kocharyan as special envoys.

I responded with the following: I am in permanent contact with the Russian president. There are days when I speak five to six times with him. Now, If he were to ask me ‘what do you have to say that you are unable to tell me directly and you want to say it through envoys’, what do I have to reply? The same question appeared in case of FM Sergey Lavrov, when the former presidents of Artsakh wanted our foreign minister to mediate for him to receive our special envoys. Our FM is in permanent contact with the Russian FM, their meeting was scheduled in Moscow. What was he supposed to answer if Lavrov was to ask him the same question?

I proposed another option: quickly organize a protocol visit of Ter-Petrosyan and Kocharyan to Moscow – as former presidents, where they would be the guests of former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who is also the Vice President of the Russian Security Council, and during the visit attempt to organize courtesy meetings with the Russian President, foreign minister and other high-ranking officials.

Arkadi Ghukasyan and Bako Sahakyan went off, vowing to discuss this option with Ter-Petrosyan and Kocharyan. It turned out that the former presidents aren’t much interested in my option. To my surprise, Bako Sahakyan claimed that Ter-Petrosyan and Kocharyan had an agreement to meet with Sergey Lavrov. In that case, what’d they want from me? If they have an agreement, let them go and meet. It turned out, the problem was Kocharyan’s passport which was seized by the court. I told them to file a motion to court, I would ask the prosecution not to object the return of the passport. That’s exactly what happened: the court returned Kocharyan’s passport, but Ter-Petrosyan and Kocharyan didn’t go to Moscow after all,” Pashinyan said in a statement on social media.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan




Russian military opens field hospital in Stepanakert

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 09:51,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The Russian military has installed a field hospital in Stepanakert, the Russian Defense Ministry reported.

A special medical unit departed to Stepanakert via Yerevan over the weekend, it said.

The convoy was escorted by the Russian peacekeepers.

The field hospital is located in the territory of the Stepanakert City airport.

The medics will provide medical service to the on-duty Russian peacekeepers, as well as necessary medical aid to the population of Nagorno Karabakh.

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan




COVID-19 Armenia: 356 new cases in last 24 hours

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 11:08,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The cumulative total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Armenia has reached 135124, with 356 new cases recorded in the last 24 hours, the CDC reported. Only 1098 tests were conducted on Sunday.

1078 people recovered, raising the number of recoveries to 108442.

22 people died from COVID-19 complications, bringing the death toll to 2164. This number doesn’t include the deaths of 542 other individuals (4 in the last 24 hours) infected with the virus, who died because of other pre-existing illnesses, according to authorities.

As of November 30, 11:00, the number of active cases stood at 23976.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan




More than 55,000 residents of Artsakh already back home – government says

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 11:21,

STEPANAKERT, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. More than 55,000 residents of Artsakh who had evacuated due to the war have returned to their homes as of November 30, the Minister of Territorial Administration and Development of Artsakh Zhirayr Mirzoyan told ARMENPRESS.

Earlier today the Russian military said that more than 23,000 people have returned to Artsakh. Asked to clarify, Mirzoyan said these 23000 are the residents whom the peacekeepers have recorded and this number is included in the 55,000. He said the 23000 residents were escorted by the Russian peacekeepers through the Goris-Berdzor-Stepanakert road.

“Many others had returned on their own before the Vardenis-Karvajar road was shut down. Russian peacekeepers weren’t deployed here at that time. Therefore those returning weren’t registered,” Mirzoyan said.

Speaking about the accommodation of the returning refugees, Mirzoyan said that all hotels and other buildings in Stepanakert are currently full. He said the government is renting village homes and providing them to residents who were forced to move from territories that have come under Azeri control.

Meanwhile, reconstruction in the heavily bombed Stepanakert City continues.

Reporting by Van Novikov; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan