New agreement to provide better terms for import of oil products from Kazakhstan to Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
July 2 2020

Georgia not going to open land borders yet due to COVID-19

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 14:53, 3 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 3, ARMENPRESS. Georgia has no plans yet to open its land borders because of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia told reporters today.

In early May the Georgian PM announced that Georgia will open for domestic tourism from June 15 and will also be ready to host foreign tourists from July 1. “We cannot make hasty steps now on opening the land borders. Movement of Georgian citizens and transportation of goods is absolutely not problematic today”, the PM said.

He said the Georgian side provides comfortable conditions for the international companies, carrier companies. At the same time the authorities control each truck and monitor the health condition of the drivers.

Georgia suspended air communication with all countries in late March due to the COVID-19 and shut down its land borders in mid-March. Georgia borders with Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey and Russia.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia in talks with Moderna for potential Covid-19 vaccine

Public Radio of Armenia
July 2 2020

MP Naira Zohrabyan tests negative for COVID-19

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 12:47,

YEREVAN, JUNE 25, ARMENPRESS. Lawmaker from the opposition Prosperous Armenia faction of the Parliament Naira Zohrabyan has tested negative for the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

“Dear compatriots, when my colleague Vahe Enfiajyan [Vice Speaker of Parliament] has tested positive for COVID-19, I, as a direct contact, immediately passed a test in Nairi medical center, immediately self-isolated and transferred the information to the Parliament’s secretariat and the Commandant’s Office. I have just received the result of my test, it is negative and I have not been infected with the coronavirus. Thus, I am returning to work”, the lawmaker said.

She wished health to all COVID-19 patients, including her colleagues in the Parliament.

3 coronavirus cases have been confirmed in the Armenian Parliament: one is the Vice Speaker of Parliament from the Prosperous Armenia faction Vahe Enfiajyan and the other 2 are MPs from the ruling My Step faction.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

‘’My Step” bloc’s MPs elaborate bill allowing to replace Constitutional Court President and Judges

''My Step'' bloc's MPs elaborate bill allowing to replace Constitutional Court President and Judges

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 18:18, 19 June, 2020

YEREVAN, JUNE 19, ARMENPRESS. More than 50 MPs representing ''My Step'' bloc have elaborated a bill allowing to replace the President and Judges of the Constitutional Court. ARMENPRESS reports the bill is not yet included in the agenda of parliamentary sessions but is published in the official website of the National Assembly.

If the bill is approved, the tenures of Constitutional Court Judges Alvina Gyulumyan, Feliks Tokhyan and Hrant Nazaryan will be suspended, while the present President of the Court Hrayr Tovmasyan will become Constitutional Court member.

According to the bill, the powers of Constitutional Court mebers or judges will be suspended if they had been in office for not less than 12 years before the entering into force the 7th chapter of the Constitution. In case a Court member of judge has not been in office for 12 years before the entering into force of the 7th Chapter of the Constitution, he or she will remain in office until the 12 year-term is completed.

Earlier it had been planned to hold a Constitutional referendum scheduled on April 5, which suggested to suspend the tenure of Constitutional Court President Hrayr Tovmasyan and 6 members of the Court. The referendum did not take place due to the state of emergency declared as a result of the coronavirus.

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan, Editing and Translating by Tigran Sirekanyan

Major businessmen, philanthropists expressed readiness to help post Kocharyan’s bail, office says

Panorama, Armenia

Several major businessmen and philanthropists, whose names will be disclosed to the public in the near future, have expressed readiness to help post the bail for the release of Armenia’s second President Robert Kocharyan, Viktor Soghomonyan, the head of the ex-president’s office, said in a statement on Friday.

The Yerevan Criminal Court of Appeals ordered on Thursday that Kocharyan be released from prison on bail pending the outcome his trial. The court set a 2 billion-dram bail (approx. $4.2 million) for the former president’s release, with the sum to be paid within two days.

Welcoming the court ruling to release Kocharyan after “around 500 days of unlawful arrest”, Soghomonyan at the same time questioned the “unprecedented” amount of the bail never set by any court in Armenia before.

According to Kocharyan’s office, immediately after the verdict was issued, they received numerous phone calls from hundreds of individuals, including a number of major businessmen and philanthropists, who expressed their willingness to help pay the hefty sum as much as they can.

On behalf of Kocharyan and his family, Viktor Soghomonyan expressed gratitude to all those who have supported them.

"I am confident that what happened is only the first step towards restoring justice," he concluded.

Armenia detains dozens at opposition protest over raids

MSN News
 
 
 
 
Armenian police on Sunday detained dozens of opposition supporters protesting in Yerevan after the security service searched the home and office of an opposition leader over alleged economic crimes.
 
"More than 90 people were briefly detained" at the protest, Armenian police spokesman Ashot Aharonyan told AFP.
 
Mass gatherings are currently banned in Armenia due to a state of emergency imposed over the coronavirus pandemic.
 
The protest came as Armenia's national security service (NSS) said it had searched the house of oligarch and opposition politician Gagik Tsarukyan and offices of his Prosperous Armenia party as part of an investigation into "financial crimes."
 
Prosperous Armenia is the largest party in opposition to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in the ex-Soviet Caucasus country.
 
Hundreds of supporters of the opposition leader gathered outside the security service's headquarters, shouting: "Pashinyan, step down!"
 
Tsarukyan is suspected of running an "illegal gambling business that has deprived the state coffers of some $60 million" and he has been summoned for questioning, the security service said in a statement.
 
As an MP, Tsarukyan has immunity from prosecution.
 
On Sunday he told journalists the accusations against him were "politically motivated" and aimed at silencing his criticism of Prime Minister Pashinyan's handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
 
 

Armenia’s Pashinyan congratulates Putin and Mishustin on Russia Day

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 10:54, 12 June, 2020

YEREVAN, JUNE 12, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan sent congratulatory letters to Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin on the occasion of the Russia Day, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.

The letter addressed to Putin says:

“Dear Mr. President,

I cordially congratulate you on the state holiday – the Russia Day.

This day is inseparably connected with the political, socio-economic achievements of the Russian Federation, the strengthening of its role in the international arena.

The allied relations between Armenia and Russia continue steadily developing for the benefit of the peoples of our countries, the cooperation in all spheres of the Armenian-Russian partnership is strengthening and expanding.

The centuries-old history of friendship and trust, the firm brotherly ties between our peoples are a strong base for a constructive cooperation and mutual support not only at the bilateral level, but also within the frames of the international organizations and integration unions.

I sincerely hope that in the near future our countries will be able to overcome the temporary difficulties connected with the unprecedented global challenges and threats, and we will be able to resume the traditional close contacts.

On this festive day I wish you good health, happiness and further success, and to the brotherly Russian people – peace, welfare and prosperity”.

The letter sent to the Russian PM says: 

“Dear Mr. Prime Minister,

I sincerely congratulate you on the state holiday – the Russia Day.

This festive day reflects the millennia-old history of Russia’s statehood, the country’s rich spiritual and cultural heritage, the consistent creative work aimed at the country’s development and prosperity, as well as the strengthening of its role at the international arena.

The Armenian-Russian allied relations, which are based on the centuries-old friendship between our peoples, are reflected at the international platforms, and especially in the constructive and mutually beneficial strategic partnership within the frames of the Eurasian Economic Union.

The consistently strengthening mutual partnership between our countries in trade, economy, energy, military-political, cultural, humanitarian and other fields can be praised.

I hope the global pandemic situation will soon normalize which will allow us to completely restart the close ties aimed at implementing new ideas and initiatives.

I wish you good health, prosperity and further success in your state activity, and peace and prosperity to all citizens of Russia”.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian PM sacks army, police & security chiefs for setting bad example amid COVID crisis

Republic World
June 9 2020
Written By
Shubham Bose

Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on June 8 sacked the heads of the Armenian army, police and national security service for having set bad examples over coronavirus restrictions. According to reports, Pashinyan did not elaborate or go into specifics about what lead to the sacking of the heads. However, announcing the sackings on Facebook, he had expressed disappointment with their actions and said that while high-ranking officials have a responsibility to set an example by following anti-epidemic rules, but sometimes the opposite happens.

As per reports, on June 7 the army’s Chief of the General Staff, Artak Davtyan, had held a party to celebrate his son’s wedding. The gathering hosted by Davtyan comes at a time when mass gatherings are banned in Armenia. The announcement reportedly came after the party was reported by a local newspaper. The media house also posted a video online where cars can be seen parked outside the entrance to Davtyan’s house and the sound of music can ve heard in the background.

The chief of police, Arman Sargsyan, or National Security Service chief, Eduard Martirosyan, who were also sacked along with Davtyan were not mentioned in the reports and thus the extent of their violation remains unknown. According to reports, Davtyan has maintained his innocence and claimed that he has not broken any rules, while Arman Sargsyan and Eduard Martirosyan have not yet commented on their dismissals.

Armenia has reported 13,325 positive coronavirus cases and currently has a death toll of 211. As per reports, the county has banned mass gatherings and masks in public places have been made mandatory.

Prime Minister tests positive

Nikol Pashinyan, Prime Minister of Armenia reportedly said on June 1 that has tested positive for novel coronavirus while speaking during a Facebook live video. Pashinyan reportedly said that he didn't show any symptoms and decided to get tested as he was planning to visit the military units. He also added that his entire family got infected of COVID-19.

The Prime Minister added that he would be working from home and believes that he most probably caught the virus from a waiter who brought him a glass of water at a meeting without wearing gloves. On June 8 the Prime Minister also revealed that he and his whole family had fortunately recovered from COVID-19.

CIVILNET.Revealed: US-funded website spreading COVID misinformation in Armenia

CIVILNET.AM

13:16 

The article was originally published on Opendemocracy.net

US taxpayer money has funded a controversial health news website in Armenia that is spreading “incredibly dangerous” COVID-19 misinformation, openDemocracy can reveal. 

Public health experts in the US and Armenia denounced this content – which includes claims that vaccines currently being developed are actually “biological weapons”.

The website, Medmedia.am, was launched in 2019 – amid a mushrooming of new ultra-conservative groups following Armenia’s 2018 ‘velvet revolution’ – by an NGO led by a locally well-known doctor with anti-LGBT views and far-right connections. 

Medmedia.am was established with money from the Democracy Commission Small Grants programme, awarded to the NGO by the US embassy in Armenia last year. These grants, intended to “promote democracy”, are worth up to $50,000 a year.

In May, the site’s most-read page called on Armenians to “refuse all potential [COVID-19] vaccination programmes”. It has had 131,000 views and 28,000 social media likes (big numbers in a country with a population of less than 3 million).

The second most popular piece claimed, incorrectly, that a morgue offered 100,000 AMD ($205) to a dead patient’s relatives to sign a document saying the death was caused by COVID-19. Other recent pieces have described COVID-19 as a “fake pandemic”.

Paul Offit, a US doctor, immunology expert and co-inventor of a vaccine against rotavirus (a leading cause of severe diarrhoea in children under five years old), told openDemocracy: “I think that this misinformation is incredibly dangerous.”

Gayane Sahakyan, National Immunisation Project Leader at the Ministry of Health in Armenia, warned that “such misinformation could worsen COVID-19 infections.” 

Those pushing false claims during the crisis “are trying to sow havoc,” she said, “and cut the demand for the vaccine long before it is even developed.” 

On 28 May, Armenia had had just over 8,200 coronavirus cases to date – but this number has almost quadrupled from around 2,200 at the start of May. Infections are rising, and on 25 May the country reported a single-day record of 452 new cases.

Officials fear that conspiracy theories could impede the country’s COVID-19 response – and its recovery. Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan said that “if the anti-vax campaign continues at the same pace, Armenia will criminalise it.”

Sahakyan added that the country already saw a drop in childhood vaccination rates in 2019 as anti-vax theories spread before the onset of coronavirus. 

A disclaimer at the bottom of the Medmedia.am website says that it has been “funded through a Department of State Public Affairs Section grant” but that its articles “do not necessarily reflect” the views of the US government.

The US embassy in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital, confirmed that Medmedia.am was “created” last year under a grant it gave to a local NGO. But it would not confirm the exact value of this grant or comment on the misinformation published on the website.

Medmedia.am publishes short news articles, videos and interviews on a range of topics including nutrition and dental health. But there is no masthead page listing its editors and reporters; few of its articles have bylines; and no other funders are disclosed. 

Its most popular pieces are opinion articles – most of which are republished Facebook posts (which is not uncommon in Armenian media).

Over the last month, Medmedia.am has republished dozens of these posts including incorrect or unverified information about COVID-19 or vaccines, which have been laid out on article pages with photographs, headlines and “Med Media” in the byline. 

At the bottom of these pages are links to the original Facebook posts, which show that many were written by the same people – and that they’ve received far more attention via Medmedia.am than they would have done on Facebook alone. 

The above-mentioned most popular piece had only 129 likes on the social media platform before Medmedia.am reposted it (giving it 131,000 views on the website).

Claire Wardle, misinformation expert and director of First Draft News, a US non-profit, said: “There is no excuse for a professional ‘news site’ to be pushing these kinds of theories […] People are more likely to believe it and then share with others as they would believe it had been checked out by an ‘official source’.”

Wardle said that the US government seems to be “supporting information initiatives globally, without the capacity to undertake adequate oversight”.

“This example should be a wake-up call, that dangerous conspiracies and rumours are being pushed by multiple actors, and there is a need to remain vigilant.” 

The NGO that received the US embassy grant, and launched Medmedia.am, is called the Armenian Association of Young Doctors. It was founded by a young urologist, Gevorg Grigoryan.

Last year, he claimed, incorrectly, that the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine (which, among other things, protects women from cervical cancer) is intended for gay people – and that its side effects are riskier than cancer rates.

On social media, he has also previously said that “gays should be burnt and in a public place” and that he will “always be one of those who fight against homosexuality”.

Grigoryan is connected to local far-right activists too. Recently, he launched a new NGO whose co-founders include a member of the far-right movement VETO that was established last year following the 2018 ‘velvet revolution’. 

In 2019, Grigoryan also founded the Armenian National Health Council, which has also campaigned against the HPV vaccine and appealed to citizens to oppose its “spread”.

This council has benefited from foreign funding as well. It was set up with money from a European Union-funded project that said it aimed to unite Armenian civil society organisations and enhance their influence over the public policy process. 

The EU delegation to Armenia told openDemocracy that almost €10,000 in EU funds from this project were ‘sub-granted’ by another NGO to the Armenian Association of Young Doctors, the group that set up Medmedia.am and also received US money.

It said that this association, along with 14 other local groups, then established the Armenian National Health Council, which “was not directly supported by the EU” and whose position on vaccines was “developed well after the end of the EU-funded grant”.

“Through its funding the EU does not take responsibility for the opinions expressed by its grantees,” the delegation said, adding that it “strictly follows” World Health Organization recommendations during COVID-19 and that it is working to curb disinformation too. 

The US embassy in Yerevan said that its grant to the Armenian Association of Young Doctors was for a project to increase transparency, accountability and civil society monitoring of healthcare in Armenia, to “reduce corruption risks” in the sector. 

It said that the Medmedia.am website “created as one of many components of the project, posts primarily official news, in addition to a variety of opinion pieces and interviews”. 

It added that these opinions do not reflect the views of the US government, and that the embassy “conducts periodic monitoring of all grants to ensure that projects proceed as intended and in accordance with US policies and priorities”.

Grigoryan also confirmed to openDemocracy that the Medmedia.am website “was created within the framework of a grant programme funded by the US Embassy”. 

He did not respond to questions about his previous anti-LGBT statements and far-right connections. About Medmedia.am, he said: “The content of the materials posted on our website may not coincide with the opinion of the editorial board, but as a media outlet, we are obliged to cover both the opinion of the civil society (regardless of the content and the coincidence of opinions) and the opinion of the authorised body.”

Grigoryan added – in contrast to the message in some of Medmedia.am’s most popular articles: “Our website is also ready to cooperate with and implement a programme aimed at increasing the coverage of vaccinations in our country.”