Wednesday, September 9, 2020
Armenian Central Bank Touts Deferred Loan Repayments
Armenia -- Martin Galstian speaks in the parliament, Yerevan, April 16, 2020.
During the coronavirus crisis Armenian commercial banks have suspended the
repayment of hundreds of thousands of loans worth a combined 1.3 trillion drams
($2.7 billion), according to the country’s Central Bank.
The Central Bank governor, Martin Galstian, told reporters on Tuesday that the
deferments benefited about 550,000 individual borrowers and 17,000 firms. As a
result, the commercial banks temporarily lost an estimated 100 billion drams in
revenue, he said, according to the Armenpress news agency.
The banks began deferring loan repayments in March as the Armenian government
imposed strict restrictions on people’s movements and ordered the closure of
most firms to tackle the spread of the coronavirus. The lockdown plunged the
Armenian economy into recession, leaving many people without jobs and income.
The government lifted the ban on virtually all types of business activity by the
beginning of May. Most banks resumed loan repayments at around the same time.
The government and the Central Bank have since faced opposition calls for
imposing a prolonged freeze on all loan repayments. Prime Minister Nikol
Pashinian and other government officials have opposed this, saying that the
banks should deal with defaulting clients on a case-by-case basis.
Galstian also argued against such a freeze still advocated by some opposition
figures, saying that additional financial losses could deal a serious blow to
the Armenian banking sector.
“Can banks constantly and continuously make expenditures without expecting any
revenue in return? In our view, that would be a bit reckless,” he said.
Galstian also pointed out that since March the banks have extended a total of 80
billion drams ($165 million) in loans subsidized by the government as part of
its efforts to mitigate grave socioeconomic consequences of the coronavirus
pandemic.
The government’s stimulus package, worth about 150 billion drams, has also
included cash handouts to various categories of the vulnerable population as
well as grants to some struggling businesses and farmers.
Tsarukian’s Party Sees More ‘Fabricated’ Criminal Cases
• Nane Sahakian
Armenia -- Deputies from the opposition Prosperous Armenia Party attend a
parliament session, Yerevan, September 4, 2020.
The opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) claimed on Wednesday that the
Armenian authorities want to prosecute more of its senior members after bringing
criminal charges against BHK leader Gagik Tsarukian.
Citing information from unnamed government insiders, Naira Zohrabian, a senior
BHK parliamentarian, said the authorities are busy “fabricating” criminal cases
against her and her colleagues and may try to lift their parliamentary immunity
from prosecution soon.
“He who ordered all this knows me very well and is well aware that it’s
impossible to intimidate me in any way,” Zohrabian wrote on Facebook, apparently
referring to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
BHK spokeswoman Iveta Tonoyan also cited such “insider information” when she
spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “A constant wiretapping of our phones and
collection of various compromising material against us have become the norm,
which makes me feel really sorry because I thought that such practices will not
be possible in the new Armenia,” she claimed.
Tonoyan said that many members of Armenia’s leading parliamentary opposition
party have already been indicted in various criminal cases opened after
Tsarukian was charged with vote buying in June. She stressed that this will not
stop the BHK from continuing to campaign for the government’s resignation.
Tsarukian strongly denies the accusations, saying that they were leveled in
retaliation for his strong criticism of Pashinian’s government voiced earlier in
June. The BHK leader, who is also one of Armenia’s wealthiest businessmen, stood
by that criticism in a speech delivered late last month.
The National Security Service (NSS), which is conducting the criminal
investigation into Tsarukian, declined to clarify on Wednesday whether it has
also indicted other senior BHK figures.
Maria Karapetian, a parliament deputy from Pashinian’s My Step bloc, flatly
denied any political persecution of the BHK leadership. “I can rule out any
political motives for the administration of criminal justice in Armenia,” she
said.
Karapetian also dismissed Zohrabian’s claims that the pro-government majority in
the Armenian parliament wants to sack her as chairwoman of a parliament
committee on human rights issues.
Armenian Teachers Tested For COVID-19 Ahead Of School Reopening
• Artak Khulian
Armenia -- Schoolteachers wait outside a policlinic in Yerevan to get tested for
COVID-19, September 9, 2020
Teachers in Armenia queued up at policlinics on Wednesday to undergo mandatory
coronavirus tests ahead of the reopening of the country’s schools scheduled for
September 15.
The Armenian government shut down all schools and universities in March because
of the coronavirus pandemic. Virtually all of them switched to online classes
that continued until the end of the last academic year in June.
The government decided last month to reopen all educational institutions amid a
falling number of coronavirus cases recorded in the country. Under the safety
protocols issued by it, there can be no more than 20 students in a classroom at
a time and all of them will have to wear face masks during classes.
For their part, the school administrations will have to provide the students
with hand sanitizers and regularly disinfect classrooms. They must also ensure
all teachers get tested for COVID-19 by September 15.
There were chaotic scenes on Wednesday at Yerevan’s Policlinic No. 8 where
teachers from two schools were scheduled to have coronavirus tests. Not all of
them observed physical distancing as they waited in a long line formed in a
crowded policlinic courtyard. Many decried the lack of space there, saying that
they risk getting infected with COVID-19.
“We are jeopardizing not only ourselves but also our students,” one angry
teacher told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “If you consider this barn a medical
institution then I don’t know what to say.”
“I’m not concerned, I’m angry because all this testing could have been organized
inside schools in proper a manner without this fuss,” said another.
Other teachers were too scared to enter the building and waited their turn
outside it. “I have a small child and an elderly person at home and am now
afraid of entering the building in these conditions,” explained one of them.
“They are not preventing but actually contributing to the spread of the disease.”
“Maybe we summoned too many teachers at a time and are having such a problem
because of that,” acknowledged the policlinic director, Armine Harutiunian.
The Ministry of Health reported in the morning that a record-high 3,518
coronavirus tests have been carried out across Armenia in the past day. The
daily number of such tests has averaged roughly 2,000 during the pandemic.
A ministry spokeswoman confirmed that the sharp increase is the result of the
mass testing among schoolteachers.
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.
Author: Kalashian Nyrie
Armenian PM congratulates Uruguay’s President on Independence Day
12:11,
YEREVAN, AUGUST 25, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan has sent a congratulatory letter to President of Uruguay Luis Lacalle Pou on the Independence Day, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.
“I warmly congratulate you and the good people of Uruguay on the national day – the Independence Day, wishing peace and prosperity.
The Armenian-Uruguayan traditional warm and friendly relations have a firm base thanks to which sincere dialogue and productive cooperation have been formed between our states.
I am full of hope that we will record new achievements in the friendly relations between our countries for the benefit of the welfare of our peoples”.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
100 Years From Home: Armenian Genocide documentary to air on PBS SoCal on Sept. 1
Hundreds of Azerbaijani Jews Demonstrate Against Armenia’s Aggression
On Monday in Tel Aviv-Jaffa, between 500 and 600 Azerbaijani Jews marched along the Old City of Jaffa and then demonstrated outside of the Armenian Cultural Center and the Armenian Church. They were angry about the fact that in a recent border skirmish, Armenian mortar fire killed a 76-year-old Azerbaijani citizen and 12 Azerbaijani servicemen, after there was intense hostilities for several days in the Tovuz region of Azerbaijan.
Rabbi Shmuel Siman Tov, who addressed the demonstration, declared that Armenia killed his in-law and his brother, and he accused Armenia of engaging in illegal conquests, in reference to Armenia’s occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region in violation of four UN Security Council Resolutions and seven other Azeri districts: “We demand that the Armenian Armed Forces will withdraw from the historic Azerbaijani lands of Nagorno-Karabakh and 7 adjacent Azerbaijani regions. Azerbaijan and Israel stand together. Am Israel Chai! Am Azerbaijan Chai.”
Israeli political analyst Arye Gut, who organized the demonstration, also spoke out against the occupation of Karabakh: “On behalf of the Azerbaijani-Jewish diaspora of Israel, I responsibly declare that our demonstration in support of Azerbaijan and the Azerbaijani soldiers is absolutely peaceful, and we, as Israelis, immigrants from Azerbaijan, have the right, within the framework of Israeli legislation, to hold demonstrations where we think it is necessary. We have no intentions to commit any provocations either against the Armenian cultural center, nor against the Armenian church. We are immigrants from Azerbaijan, citizens of Israel – tolerant of all peoples and religions.”
“We only demand that Armenia comply with the UN Security Council resolutions and liberate Nagorno-Karabakh and 7 adjacent regions of Azerbaijan, which are the historical and internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan, and have one million Azerbaijani refugees return to their ancestral land,” Gut reiterated.
“Armenia is striving by all means possible to spoil relations between Israel and Azerbaijan,” he added. “They can’t do it. Azerbaijan is a real strategic partner of Israel in the world. Azerbaijan is an example of multiculturalism and tolerance. Today, there is a 25,000-strong Jewish community in Azerbaijan. And in contrast, Armenia has almost no Jews. There are 50 ethnic Jews in Armenia.”
“How can we, Israelis, react to the monument erected four years ago in Yerevan to commemorate Nzhadeh, an anti-Semite and apparent Nazi accomplice,” Gut asked rhetorically. “The prolongation of his memory is a reprehensible insult to the memory of the victims of the Holocaust. For me personally, someone whose grandfather lost all members of his family to the Nazi atrocities in the Ukraine, this is irredeemable emotionally painful. It is no longer a hushed secret, and the ideology of fascism, the glorification of Armenian fascists and Nazis who worked closely with Nazi Germany, are being promoted at the state level in Armenia. What is even more outrageous is that the fascist ideology called Nzhadehism is included in Armenia’s educational institutions curriculum and generations are brought up on these values. The Jewish people will never forget the acts of cruelty committed by the 20,000 Armenian legionnaires led by Nzhdeh during World War II. Historic documents confirm this fact. The purpose of the Armenian Legion led by Nzhdeh was to raid the homes and destroy the lives of Jews, as well as others objectionable to the Germany Army. It was thanks to the Armenian Legion that the towns of Simferopol, Yevpatoria, Alushta, Kerch and Feodosia, as well as other areas of Western Crimea, were completedly expunged of Jews. Garagen Nzhdeh is a national hero and has a memorial in the middle of Yerevan. He was a fascist but because he was Armenian, he is a national hero. It does not work like that.”
The head of the Azerbaijani House in Israel Shirin Nehamia Michaeli thanked the compatriots who supported the march: “On the ancient land of Azerbaijan, Judaism, Islam and Christianity coexisted. This land continues to show an incredible desire for religious tolerance today. Azerbaijanis have lived for centuries and feel like brothers. They are linked by a common destiny and common history.”
“And we declare with full responsibility to the whole world and, most importantly, to the Armenian occupiers that the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is both our tragedy and pain, since truth and justice are on Azerbaijan’s side,” she proclaimed. “In this terrible war against the occupiers, Jews and Azerbaijanis have always fought together – we lived, rejoiced and fought together. We, immigrants from Azerbaijan, are proud of the fact that in this war against the Armenian invaders, one of the first national heroes of an independent Azerbaijan was our brother Albert Agarunov, who became a symbol of courage and brotherhood for the Azerbaijani and Jewish peoples.”
Firidun, who attended the demonstration, claimed that he joined this protest because Armenia is illegally occupying Azerbaijani land: “We want our land back, so the refugees can return home. Due to the occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh, one million Azerbaijani citizens are refugees. This leaves many people without a home. But what is worse than that is that they try to take more land. From the Black Sea to the Caspian Sea, they want it all.” Baruck Idano concurred with Firidun, stressing that Armenia has made a huge mess and that Karabakh is Azerbaijani land.
Mari Rjanorosky, another demonstrator, added; “On February 25-6, 1992, the Armenian Armed Forces committed an act of genocide against the population of the Azerbaijani town of Khojaly. A startling 613 people were killed, 487 people were crippled, and 1,275 old men, women and children were captured and subjected to torture and humiliation. The civilians who managed to escape were brutally murdered in the forest by the Armenian military. The Khojaly civilian population was massacred because they were Azerbaijanis. This barbaric cruelty towards innocent children, women and old people has no explanation. This is not the tragedy of one generation, but also one of the worst crimes in the history of mankind, for they murdered them in one night in cold blood. Yet sadly, as recent events demonstrate, the issue still exists. 20% of Azerbaijan is under occupation. We want for the international community to do something and to seek justice for Azerbaijan.”
Throughout the demonstration, the protesters chanted, “Stop the Armenian aggression against Karabakh,” “stop the Armenian occupation,” “Karabakh is a historical part of Azerbaijan,” “Karabakh, Karabakh is Azerbaijan,” “It is our Karabakh,” and “Israel respects Azerbaijan.” They also held up signs that proclaimed, “Nazi anti-Semitic General Garagin Nzhdeh is an embarrassment that desecrates the memory of Holocaust victims,” “Stop Armenian aggression: remember the children of Khojaly,” “Stop Armenian terrorism against Azerbaijan,” “The State of Israel respects entirely the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan,” “I am from Azerbaijan and 20% of my country is occupied by Armenia,” and “Justice for Khojaly.” Israeli and Azerbaijani flags were waved by everyone in the crowd, while a few participants also waved Turkish flags.
In a war of music, the Azerbaijani Jewish community blasted nationalist music in Azeri Turkish, so that they will make more noise than a small group of Armenian counterdemonstrators. The counterdemonstrators barricaded themselves on the balcony inside the Armenian Cultural Center, while waving Armenian flags and blaring Armenian music. However, their music and messages were so drowned out by the Azerbaijani Jewish community’s loud music in Azeri Turkish accompanied by vibrant chants and them screaming “boo” that in the end, they left the balcony and went inside the cultural center out of frustration. As they left, someone in the crowd threatened even larger demonstrations in the future, if the Armenians there do not pass on their message of discontent to Yerevan.
In an exclusive interview, Gut noted that it is critical to emphasize that these acts of violence that occurred recently along the Azerbaijani-Armenian border took place about 300 kilometers away from the Nagorno-Karabakh region and “adjacent to 7 regions of Azerbaijan which are occupied by Armenia. While the previous Armenian regimes tried to refrain from provocations at the countries’ mutual border, Armenia’s current regime went in a completely different direction.”
“Why did official Yerevan decide to launch a military adventure on the state border, rather than in occupied Nagorno Karabakh region,” Gut pondered. “There are several factors that can explain the transfer of the theater of operations from the contact lines in Karabakh to the state border. First one, a year ago, the government of Azerbaijan decided to transfer the supervision of the state border with Armenia from the Defense Ministry to the State Border Services. This decision caused hysterical panic in Armenia, where they would like the border to remain in the status of a war zone, which would enable the Armenian armed forces to quietly advance positions into Azerbaijani territories.”
“Second one, from the first days of coming into power, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan began making excessive demands from its strategic ally, Russia, and the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO),” he noted. “With its military recklessness, Armenia pursues the objective of drawing the military-political organizations, to which it is a party, into the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, in order to evade the responsibility of the occupation and aggression against Azerbaijan. Armenia’s aggression against Azerbaijan for nearly 30 years and occasional provocations perpetrated along the border also contravene the legal documents of the military-political organizations with which Armenia is a member. However, Armenia clearly stated that military operations in Karabakh are Azerbaijan’s internal affairs and do not fall under the allies’ obligations. Neither Russia nor the CSTO supported Armenia’s action and did not condemn Azerbaijan. They called on the parties to restrain themselves and for a cessation of hostilities. Armenia’s provocation, perpetrated along the border with Azerbaijan, is yet more evidence that official Yerevan is disinterested in a negotiated settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.”
“By acting so, Armenia’s leadership aims to escalate the situation, against the backdrop of the socio-economic problems deteriorated further by the widespread nature of COVID-19 in Armenia,” Gut declared. “Aside from the COVID-19 pandemic, Armenia has many domestic economic problems such as power failures, a deep economic crisis, a 30 percent unemployment rate and a 50 percent poverty rate. In other words, by provoking military hostilities on the border with Azerbaijan, the current Armenian Prime Minister tried to preserve his power, diverting the attention of his people away from internal problems, some of which were much intensified by the coronavirus pandemic.”
For these reasons, Gut declared the Azerbaijani Jewish community decided to protest in Tel Aviv en masse, despite the dangers posed by the coronavirus pandemic: “We are Jews from Azerbaijan, and we protest against the Armenian provocations and in support of Azerbaijan. That is different from the US and other parts of the globe, where Armenian protesters confronted mainly Azerbaijani Muslim demonstrators. If there were no police, they would have attacked us, like they did in Los Angeles and other places. I invited the police so that they could not do a provocation. I wanted a peaceful demonstration. A war of music, culture and our demands against Armenia, not a war of soldiers.”
By all accounts, it appears that Azerbaijan won the war of music, as many cars that passed by honked their horns in solidarity with Azerbaijan. The demonstration ended with the crowd playing both the Israeli and Azerbaijani national anthems.
CivilNet: Statement by Diaspora Commissioner on Non-Armenian Immigration Sparks Controversy
By Mark Dovich
In an August 8 interview with CivilNet, Armenia’s High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs, Zareh Sinanyan, went on the record stating that Armenia should be ready to accept not only Lebanese Armenians, but also Christian Arabs and Assyrians living in Lebanon, following the devastating explosion in Beirut on August 4.
Sinanyan’s statement quickly spread on Armenian-language social media platforms, provoking a firestorm of controversy. Many comments were highly critical of the idea, with some nationalist-oriented groups going so far as to decry the proposal as a “betrayal” of national values.
As one observer noted, “the immigration of non-Armenians to Armenia is a very sensitive issue for most Armenians,” whose memory of the Armenian Genocide makes them highly “protective” of their “diminished homeland.”
Widespread anxiety about Armenia’s ongoing depopulation compounds such concerns. Armenia has grappled with several serious demographic issues, including mass emigration, falling fertility rates, and a rise in sex-selective abortions, since declaring independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. According to Armenia’s National Statistical Committee, the country’s permanent population in 2019 was 2.965 million, down by more than half a million from a peak of 3.633 million in 1992. The United Nations Population Fund projects that, should current trends hold, Armenia’s population will fall further, to 2.816 million, by 2050.
In August 2019, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan vowed to raise Armenia’s population to at least 5 million by 2050, though he did not provide any specific policies to address the numerous demographic problems facing the country, casting doubts on the feasibility of the plan.
Sinanyan headed an Armenian government delegation in Lebanon, meeting with Lebanese-Armenian community leaders and assessing the situation on the ground. In an interview with Radio Liberty in Beirut, Sinanyan reiterated his commitment to accepting Armenians from Lebanon who wish to relocate permanently to Armenia, saying that “the homeland is waiting for all Armenians with open doors.” He also underlined his gratitude “to Lebanon for the humane treatment of the Armenian people after the Genocide.”
The Armenian government has also sent three humanitarian aid flights to Lebanon, containing over a dozen tons of food and medical supplies, intended for the country’s Armenian community.
Though there has been an Armenian presence in what is now Lebanon for centuries, a major influx of ethnic Armenians into the area occurred in the aftermath of the 1915 Armenian Genocide. The Minority Rights Group International nonprofit estimates that there are roughly 270,000 people of Armenian descent living in Lebanon today, or about four percent of the country’s total population.
Many Lebanese Armenians live in the Beirut neighborhood of Bourj Hammoud, which has emerged as a thriving and vibrant center of Armenian culture in the diaspora. Bourj Hammoud was heavily damaged in the August 4 explosion at the port of Beirut, which left over 200 people dead and devastated much of the city.
Armenia has a long-standing open door policy toward ethnic Armenian refugees and immigrants, even predating independence from the Soviet Union. For instance, in a bid to rebuild the country following World War II, the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic welcomed more than 100,000 Armenians from the diaspora between the years of 1946 and 1949.
More recently, Armenia has accommodated the arrival of over 22,000 Syrian-Armenian refugees fleeing the ongoing Syrian Civil War. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees considers Armenia to be one of Europe’s largest host countries for Syrian asylum seekers per capita, with five refugees per every 1,000 inhabitants.
Nonetheless, the number of non-Armenians who have relocated permanently to Armenia is extremely small. Armenia is, by far, the most ethnically homogenous country in the region, with over 98 percent of the population identifying as ethnic Armenians.
Polling earlier this year by the Caucasus Research Resource Centers think tank network suggests that Armenians hold mixed feelings toward doing business with and marrying Arabs. While 57 percent of Armenian respondents said they “approve doing business with an Arab,” a mere 13 percent said they approved Armenian “women marrying an Arab.” By contrast, for ethnic Russians, by far the most positively-viewed ethnic group according to the survey, 85 percent of Armenians approved of business relations, and 45 percent approved of Armenian-Russian mixed marriages. Attitudes toward Assyrians were not measured in the study.
BBC HARDtalk’s Stephen Sackur to Pashinyan: People’s’ hopes seem to have been dashed
“It’s more than two years now since you swept into power with very high hopes for the so called ‘velvet revolution’. When I look at Armenia today it seems many Armenians feel that those hopes have been dashed. What has gone wrong?” BBC HARDtalk presenter Stephen Sackur asked Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan at the beginning of an interview on Friday.
The premier, however, did not agree with the presenter’s claim. “All citizens of Armenia live in a democratic country. And in 2019 we had the biggest economic growth in Europe, and we had big economic success, our country made tremendous progress in all international ratings in terms of democracy, freedom of speech, independent judiciary, anti-corruption policy,” the PM said.
“The pandemic situation interrupted our flight, but we will continue,” Pashinyan added.
Touching upon the Armenian government’s handling of the Covid-19 pandemic, Sackur stated it has been a real failure.
“I think it’s too early to have conclusion,” the premier responded, adding conclusions should be drawn after the pandemic is defeated worldwide.
Sackur, however, recalled that Armenia’s coronavirus death rate is approximately six times higher that neighboring Georgia’s and significantly higher than Azerbaijan’s, which suggests the Armenian government failed to control the pandemic.
“We are in the process of overcoming this pandemic, and as I said it’s too early to make conclusions on that,” Pashinyan said.
The presenter observed that people judge the Armenian leader on his specific actions, referring to Pashinyan’s participation in a dinner to celebrate the inauguration of the Artsakh president in late May, where he was seen amongst many people not wearing a face mask or practicing social distancing.
“And only a few weeks later in early and mid-June your country was in the midst of a terrible crisis with more than 600 cases of Covid-19 per day. You castigated your own people saying, ‘people simply disobey the rules on face masks’, but you have done it yourself,” he stressed.
In response, the PM said on that day they acted according to the rules that existed in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Stephen Sackur next quoted the Republican Party of Armenia as saying in a statement that the premier has made many mistakes in the coronavirus response and should resign.
“Armenia is democratic country and opposition is free to express themselves. I am very glad that now opposition in Armenia is acting much easily than before the revolution,” Pashinyan replied.
The presenter also reflected on the developments around the Constitutional Court of Armenia, noting that the removal of its three judges are connected with second President Robert Kocharyan’s case.
Aurora donates $200,000 to support citizens of Beirut, launches fundraiser for Armenian community
Dilijan Medical Center’s coronavirus unit decommissioned as active cases drop in Armenia
15:37, 4 August, 2020
YEREVAN, AUGUST 4, ARMENPRESS. The special COVID-19 department at the Dilijan Medical Center in the eponymous Armenian town is no longer needed as the outbreak is weakening and numbers of active cases are dropping, the hospital said in a statement.
The special ward which was set up to treat exclusively coronavirus patients in this hospital is deactivated since August 1, after the last COVID-19 patient was discharged.
“We are happy to inform that due to the weakening of the coronavirus outbreak in Armenia the Dilijan Medical Center is returning to its normal working regime. We are proud to have had our small contribution in this tense and selfless battle against this virus in the country and we carried out our duty with honor. We want to deeply thank all the people who were involved in these heroic works, the doctors, nurses, all health workers, laboratory experts, the food delivery employees and organizers. The COVID-19 department at the Dilijan Medical Center has been shut down since August 1. The entire building has been disinfected and is functioning normally as it did before the outbreak and is ready to receive other patients,” the hospital said.
The number of active cases of COVID-19 in Armenia stands at 7930 as of August 4.
Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
Newspaper: Armenia PM rebukes commissioner for diaspora affairs
Armenian Defense Minister, Ambassador of Iran refer to joint military exercises of Azerbaijan, Turkey
Armenian Defense Minister, Ambassador of Iran refer to joint military excercises of Azerbaijan, Turk
20:56,
YEREVAN, JULY 29, ARMENPRESS. Defense Minister of Armenia Davit Tonoyan received on July 29 newly appointed Ambassador of Iran to Armenia Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri. Military attaché of the Iranian embassy to Armenia Mehdi Vejdani was also present at the meeting.
As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MoD Armenia, the Armenian Defense Minister congratulated the Iranian Ambassador on the assumption of the post. Davit Tonoyan presented the recent days’ situation on Armenia-Azerbaijan border and Artsakh-Azerbaijan contact line. The sides referred to the fact of using by Azerbaijan great number of UAVs in the north-eastern part of Armenia and the effectiveness of struggling against them.
Considering the regional security issues, the interlocutors exchanged views on the nature of the Turkish-Azerbaijani joint military exercises, their possible impact on regional stability were assessed.
During the meeting the sides discussed the current process and prospects of the Armenian-Iranian cooperation, exchanged views on regional security and international developments.
Editing and Translating by Tigran Sirekanyan