Skip to main content

Armenian hospitals instructed to be vigilant over patients displaying symptoms characteristic to monkeypox

Save

Share

 16:53,

YEREVAN, MAY 23, ARMENPRESS. As more cases of the rare monkeypox virus have been reported worldwide, Armenian health officials have ordered hospitals to be on high alert regarding patients who would display any symptoms characteristic to the disease.

As of the latest data, no suspected cases of the monkeypox virus were reported in Armenia.

Lusine Paronyan, the Head of the Department of Epidemiology of Zoonotic Diseases at the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention said at a press conference that scientists believe the monkeypox virus doesn’t have the potential to cause a pandemic.

The NCDC is working with hospitals across the country to rapidly discover any possible case.

Meanwhile, the NCDC is also working with the Food Safety Inspection Agency, who is carrying out monitoring at border crossing points to ban the import of exotic rodents and monkeys.

European and American health authorities have identified a number of monkeypox cases in recent days, mostly in young men. It’s a surprising outbreak of a disease that rarely appears outside Africa, according to AP.

Health officials around the world are keeping watch for more cases because, for the first time, the disease appears to be spreading among people who didn’t travel to Africa. 

The incubation period (interval from infection to onset of symptoms) of monkeypox is usually from 6 to 13 days but can range from 5 to 21 days. Monkeypox is usually a self-limited disease with the symptoms lasting from 2 to 4 weeks. Severe cases occur more commonly among children and are related to the extent of virus exposure, patient health status and nature of complications

Monkeypox is a viral zoonosis (a virus transmitted to humans from animals) with symptoms very similar to those seen in the past in smallpox patients, although it is clinically less severe, according to .

Armenia’s five challenges to recovery

Cyprus –


 

 

13 MINS READ

After three decades of independence following the collapse of the Soviet Union, tiny Armenia faces a plethora of challenges, not least because of hostile intentions from its neighbours.

With limited natural resources to enhance the country’s image and help rebuild an economy hampered by wars, Yerevan is turning to diplomacy to strengthen relations and build new partnerships, especially with traditional allies Greece and Cyprus.

“There are five challenges, and they are very obvious,” said Tigran Mkrtchyan, the country’s new ambassador in Athens.

“First and foremost is the just and fair solution to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

“Following the loss of the war [in 2020], the Azeris on the other side are trying to exploit the situation, and the situation in Ukraine, to gain as much as possible in their negotiations.

“This has two dimensions on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border delimitation discussions and, most importantly, the future status of Nagorno Karabakh itself.

“When talking about the return to negotiations, within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs (which includes Russia, USA, and France), there is now understandably friction with respect to the Ukraine conflict – on the one hand, you have France and the United States, on the other you have Russia.

“We hope very much that this internationally mandated format will resume its work in finding a solution to the conflict of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“So, returning to negotiations within this framework to find a just solution to the conflict is the biggest challenge,” he told the Financial Mirror in an interview.

“Second, of course, the normalisation of Armenia-Turkey relations is an independent process, and this has been clearly signalled to Ankara.

“The Turkish side has gotten involved in these negotiations on this assumption that we are proceeding to normalise relations along the borders without any preconditions.”

Mkrtchyan said the third biggest challenge is “to keep up building relations with our close partners, with the EU and the West, with the US, allies such as France and Greece, and Cyprus. And deepen those relations.

“There are five challenges, and they are very obvious,” said Tigran Mkrtchyan, the country’s new ambassador in Athens.

“First and foremost is the just and fair solution to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

“Following the loss of the war [in 2020], the Azeris on the other side are trying to exploit the situation, and the situation in Ukraine, to gain as much as possible in their negotiations.

“This has two dimensions on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border delimitation discussions and, most importantly, the future status of Nagorno Karabakh itself.

“When talking about the return to negotiations, within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs (which includes Russia, USA, and France), there is now understandably friction with respect to the Ukraine conflict – on the one hand, you have France and the United States, on the other you have Russia.

“We hope very much that this internationally mandated format will resume its work in finding a solution to the conflict of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“So, returning to negotiations within this framework to find a just solution to the conflict is the biggest challenge,” he told the Financial Mirror in an interview.

“Second, of course, the normalisation of Armenia-Turkey relations is an independent process, and this has been clearly signalled to Ankara.

“The Turkish side has gotten involved in these negotiations on this assumption that we are proceeding to normalise relations along the borders without any preconditions.”

Mkrtchyan said the third biggest challenge is “to keep up building relations with our close partners, with the EU and the West, with the US, allies such as France and Greece, and Cyprus. And deepen those relations.

“Then, we have the human resources and scientific know-how and development over decades, even from Soviet times, when Armenia was considered the Silicon Valley of the USSR.

“This know-how is still there, and it’s been developed further. We are registering a lot of successes in various sectors, and foremost in IT.”

And third is that Armenians are a ‘global nation’ with a diaspora bigger than in the Republic.

“Over these three decades (of independence), we have been looking for ways to find the key to exemplary cooperation with our diaspora. We still have a long way to go.

“Clearly, I do not want to compare us with the strong and highly institutionalised ties that Israel and Greece enjoy with their respective diasporas, but the resource is there.

“Based on these three factors, I think Armenia has a chance of success, of regeneration from the catastrophic war we witnessed in 2020.”

Surrounded by hostile Turkey and Azerbaijan, and with Iran to its south, landlocked Armenia has had centuries-old ties with its northern Caucasus neighbour, often regarded as brotherly to sometimes rivalry.

“Apart from a common history, Georgia and Armenia share common values and beliefs.

“We also share common approaches to our democratic future. And this is a great resource on which both governments are relying, indicative of the trust between the elites.

“Definitely, the Armenian community in Georgia is playing a major role in any rapprochement between the two Orthodox Christian nations.

“We have also been together as part of the Eastern Partnership Cooperation of the European Union; there’s a lot we share and a lot in common.

“Economically, the routes running from the south to the north, from the south to Europe, take into account that Armenia can be an alternative trade route, and this route runs through Georgia.

“Therefore, Georgia has a crucial role in the development of Armenia’s economy, as well.

“We have to understand this geo-economic role.

“Relations with Georgia have been deepening over the last few years; I hope there won’t be any hurdles towards the furtherance of our brotherhood, as we prefer to refer to our relations as ‘brotherly’.”

Ambassador Mkrtchyan said Tbilisi was the intellectual centre of the Caucuses at the beginning of the 20th century. It was where the first Republic of Armenia was declared in 1918, while the first government of Armenia was established and was functioning for some time from Tbilisi.

“Tbilisi, for us, after Yerevan, is the second most important city.”

But the 44-day war over Nagorno Karabakh has left an open wound throughout the Armenian nation, particularly with the high number of casualties and the prisoners that Azerbaijan captured and refused to hand over some of them.

“According to Azerbaijan, these people are not prisoners of war.

“This interpretation is not accepted by the West. It is not accepted by anybody, and they should be returned as soon as possible,” Mkrtchyan said.

“While we speak, the US State Department made a statement, where Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, during a phone call with President Aliev, reminded about the necessity of returning the detainees.

“The statement referred to ‘recent positive developments and future concrete steps towards the path of peace in the south Caucuses, including the border demarcation, opening transport and communication links and the release of the remaining Armenian detainees’.”

“This is one of the most important issues on our agenda.

“Perhaps, the Armenian government is not talking openly about this every day because sometimes publicising our intentions may not necessarily have the same result or effect.

“Diplomacy doesn’t necessarily mean secrecy.

“Because the means of public communications are sometimes used to achieve a certain result, so too, diplomacy has both these elements of work, the aspect of secrecy and sometimes also working publicly.”

Mkrtchyan said that being an Armenian ambassador is challenging, and it requires triple or quadruple efforts than other usual ambassadorial work.

“The work needs to be strategised into short term, medium- and long-term results. And taking into consideration the resources and potential of the Armenian diaspora.

“I’ve been lucky in my previous capacity in the Baltics and now in Greece and Cyprus, where we have a healthy relationship with the diaspora groups.

“I am not taking it for granted and will continue to exert a lot of effort to maintain healthy and fruitful cooperation with our diaspora representatives.”

To assist, the ambassador said that Armenia has resorted to establishing Honorary Consulates, one in Thessaloniki and one in Limassol.

“We also did this in my previous posting.

“We opened an Honorary Consulate in Kaunas, Lithuania, and I started the process of appointing an Honorary Consul in Riga, Latvia, as well.

“It’s extremely helpful because it’s like having an office in a major city.

“But the main aim is supporting the embassy in promoting economic diplomacy.

“We don’t have that many economic attachés yet, just in a handful of capitals. We need a bigger economic presence in all capitals.”

Regarding the warm relations with Athens, Mkrtchyan said the opening of the natural gas Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) from Azerbaijan has not been to the detriment of Greece’s ties with Yerevan.

“TAP cannot replace the amount of gas Russia provides to Europe. It doesn’t have that physical capacity; it’s one of the alternatives.

“Firstly, there is over-exaggeration about TAP’s capacity and Azeri gas resources capacity.

“Secondly, it’s a multinational project; it’s owned by several companies and is going to run through several countries, including Turkey.

“Greece is not becoming and cannot become dependent on Azerbaijani natural gas.

“And third, the fact that you’re buying a certain amount and not the biggest amount of energy resources from any country does not decapacitate you to talk about abuse of human rights, democracy conditions, in that country, or to continue to support one of your historically closest friends – Armenia.

“We need to understand these things.

“When we see the Azeri propaganda game, that ‘we are giving you TAP, therefore we are your friends, and you should not criticise us’, this logic is extremely simplistic, and it’s not going to work.

“I don’t think that such cooperation in terms of TAP will be at the cost of Greece-Armenia cooperation and friendship.

“Moreover, we are upgrading the relations between Greece and Armenia, and hopefully, we will have results in the near future.”


Armenpress: Nikol Pashinyan sends letter of condolences on the death of the UAE President

Nikol Pashinyan sends letter of condolences on the death of the UAE President

Save

Share

 19:14,

YEREVAN, MAY 11, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan sent a letter of condolences to Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces of the United Arab Emirates, on the death of UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime MInister

The letter of condolences reads as follows, “I was with deep sorrow that I learned the news of the death of the President of the United Arab Emirates Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, with his skillful and far-sighted leadership, has made a truly invaluable contribution to the development and strengthening of the country.

Sharing the grief of this great loss, on behalf of the people of the Republic of Armenia,and on my personal behalf, I offer my deepest condolences to Your Excellency, the relatives of the deceased, the friendly people of the United Arab Emirates, wishing you endurance and strength of spirit in this difficult time.”

Laguna Beach doctor receives national award for humanitarian work in Armenia

Dr. Roger Ohanesian, a 47-year resident of Laguna Beach, was recently honored for 30 years of humanitarian work in Armenia to eliminate preventable blindness by the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery.

In 1992, the Orange County-based ophthalmologist made his first trip to Armenia, his ancestral homeland. Countless residents were injured in a deadly earthquake, including many with eye injuries who needed treatment quickly.

Soon after this trip, Ohanesian founded the nonprofit Armenian Eye Care Project. On April 24, he received the coveted Chang-Crandall Humanitarian Award in Washington, D.C.

“You have no idea when you start something what it’s going to turn out to be,” Ohanesian said in a statement. “It has truly, though, for me, been the honor of a lifetime.”

Over 100 physicians have voluntarily visited Armenia to train local physicians and work on complicated cases with coordination by the Armenian Eye Care Project. Armenian ophthalmologists received advanced education and training through U.S. fellowships. The nonprofit has also created a mobile eye hospital.

“For 30 years, Roger has dedicated his life to helping people rise above blindness half a world away. He’s been passionate, he’s been persistent, and he’s been extremely efficient in gathering resources and recruiting like-minded volunteers through his contagious enthusiasm and folksy charm,” said Dr. John Hovanesian, a fellow Orange County ophthalmologist.

The ASCRS Foundation’s Chang-Crandall Humanitarian Award is endowed by a $50,000 gift from Dr. David Chang and Victoria Chang, which Ohanesian has gifted to the Armenian EyeCare Project.

Meeting of Armenian, Russian, Azerbaijani FMs launched in Dushanbe

Save

Share

 17:06,

YEREVAN, MAY 12, ARMENPRESS. The meeting of Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov kicked off in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, the Armenian foreign ministry said.

Earlier today the Armenian and Russian FMs held a private meeting.

The Armenian FM visited Dushanbe to participate in the sitting of the CIS Council of Foreign Ministers.

Minister Mirzoyan will also hold meetings with CIS partners.

Azerbaijani press: Armenian opposition takes to streets as Baku, Ankara aim to bring peace to wider region

By Fuad Muxtar-Aqbabali

Azerbaijan’s top presidential aide Hikmat Hajiyev and Armenian Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan have met in Brussels for the second time to weigh the pros and cons ahead of the expected launch of the activities on drafting a peace deal and the border delimitation process.

EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus Toivo Klaar again hosted the meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian officials in a bid to demonstrate the EU’s determination to press ahead with the plan the leaders hammered out at the April 6 meeting in Brussels.

In the meantime, Klaar fell short of divulging topics the two men had discussed and if any agreements were accomplished. Before visiting the May 2 meeting with Azerbaijan’s top presidential aide, Armen Grigoryan said on 29 April that the Brussels meeting would focus on a future peace deal, the unblocking of regional communications, and the border delimitation.

As part of Baku and Ankara’s joint efforts to bring Yerevan to the regional cooperation track, on May 3, the special envoys of Armenia and Turkey, Ruben Rubinyan and Serdar Kilic held their third meeting in Vienna.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry said Rubinyan and Kilic had held a “sincere and effective exchange of specific views and mulled steps that can be taken for tangible progress” towards the normalization of relations.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, for his part, added earlier that the envoys would discuss “various steps”, including the prospect of re-determining borders and establishing a “joint commission”.

Armenian opposition efforts to derail peace process

For all that the April 6 Brussels meeting agreed to unveil the compositions of the two commissions by late April, Armenia has not done so and the ongoing protests in Yerevan are designed to derail the whole process, experts believe.

At the April 29 international conference on “South Caucasus: Development and Cooperation”, President Ilham Aliyev reaffirmed Baku’s readiness to turn a new page in South Caucasus interstate relations.

“We have got a positive response from Armenia just recently, and their government has accepted five basic principles, which Azerbaijan put forward, the principles which should be a foundation for a peace agreement with Armenia”, the Azerbaijani president told the international think tank forum.

The lasting and durable peace in the region is pivotal for the two arch-enemies to start from scratch.

“If a peace agreement is signed and those basic principles are known, then, the peace in the Caucasus will be long-lasting and sustainable. This is what we want, and I think that what we demonstrate and what we announce is a clear example of our will to contribute to the peace in the Caucasus,” the president added.

What is behind opposition protests in Armenia?

The Armenian opposition protests have been ongoing since May 1 and are set to go ahead in a bid to compel the prime minister to quit and prevent him from normalizing the relations with two powerful neighbors – Turkey and Azerbaijan.

On May 4, the protesters are planning to block streets in Yerevan and then picket the parliament building, where Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is expected to attend a Q&A session.

Addressing the protest on May 3 in Yerevan, opposition MP and deputy speaker Ishkhan Saghatelyan, who is one of the leaders of the street protests, called on the opposition supporters to gather outside parliament on May 4 to demand Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation.

He also urged protesters to follow the suit and replicate the 2018 version of Pashinyan’s protest that ousted then prime minister Serzh Sargsyan. It should be noted that the political alliance I Have Honor led by Sargsyan also joined the protests. 

The Armenian opposition’s civil disobedience campaign is aimed at toppling Pashinyan and the protests are orchestrated by the resistance movement made up of major opposition alliances Armenia and I Have the Honor led by former presidents Robert Kocharyan and Serzh Sargsyan, both from Azerbaijan’s separatist Karabakh region.

Following the ongoing protests in Armenia, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan responded to accusations by the opposition that he had derailed the negotiations on the Karabakh settlement.

In response, the prime minister accused ex-President Serzh Sargsyan of derailing the negotiations with Azerbaijan.

“The third president said that one should not pin hopes on a peaceful settlement of the Karabakh conflict,” the prime minister recalled.

As for the accusations that he could have stopped the war, Pashinyan recalled that on September 27, 2020, when the hostilities started, he voiced the condition under which the war would be stopped was the fact that Nagorno-Karabakh remained part of Azerbaijan.

For his part, Armenian Parliament Speaker Alen Simonyan, an associate of the prime minister, lambasted the street protests that paralyzed the normal functioning of the public traffic, blaming the opposition for the lack of any proposals.

The opposition accuses the prime minister of plotting concessions to Azerbaijan over Karabakh. Protests are blocking streets in Yerevan and the provinces, and over 400 protesters were reportedly detained on May 2-3.

To recap, Simonyan ruled out any political crisis in the country.

“The opposition has not formulated clearly what they want to say, and in fact, they have nothing to propose to the people of Armenia. If they have any political messages, it should be done in parliament,” Simonyan believes.

Pashinyan came under fire from the opposition after his remarks that Yerevan had to reduce its expectations around Karabakh’s future status. His comments triggered fears that his government is preparing to compromise on the de facto independence of the part of the region under the preliminary control of the Russian peacekeepers to conclude a long-awaited peace treaty with Azerbaijan.

Opposition leader denies plotting to seize parliament building

Save

Share

 17:19, 4 May, 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS. Opposition demonstrators began marching in the direction of the parliament building after one of their leaders, Vice Speaker Ishkhan Saghatelyan from the Hayastan faction delivered a speech in the France Square in downtown Yerevan.

Saghatelyan referred to his earlier speech on April 5, where he had published the principles that any government should be guided by.  He said that deviating from these principles would mean a loss of Artsakh and that any government that would deviate from these principles must resign.

Saghatelyan then demanded PM Pashinyan to step down.

He also denied the intelligence agency’s statement that accused them of plotting to seize the parliament building. “We are not going to seize any building, we won’t do any provocations,” he said.




Armenia’s Gyumri and Norway’s Kragero become Sister Cities

Save

Share

 16:32,

GYUMRI, APRIL 25, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian city of Gyumri and Norway’s town of Kragerø became Sister Cities.

Kragero Mayor Grunde Knudsen was on an official visit to Gyumri on April 25 and the memorandum declaring Gyumri and Kragero Sister Cities was signed at the Gyumri City Hall by Gyumri First Vice Mayor Artur Papikyan and Knudsen.

The decision was developed earlier in 2018 by then-mayor of Gyumri Samvel Balasanyan and then-mayor of Kragero Jone Blikra.

“As Sister Cities, the first cooperation will be in the areas of culture and education, but we are planning business cooperation in the future as well. Rather good cooperation is expected,” Knudsen told ARMENPRESS.

He said that one Armenian family resides in Kragero now.

“This is my first visit to Armenia, I hope that after next year’s election I’ll have the chance to visit Armenia again, a country that surprised me with its rich historical and cultural heritage. I really received very positive energy from Armenia, I am touched by the attitude of people, you are very open and warm people. I am happy and proud that we signed the memorandum between the two cities, for the benefit of development of the two cities,” he said.

In turn, the Gyumri Vice Mayor said he is hopeful that a productive cooperation will take place.

Asbarez: Glendale Armenian Community Shows Appreciation For Past and Present Mayors

Glendale Mayor Ardashess “Ardy” Kassakhian is welcomed to the stage

Following a long tradition of expressing gratitude each year to the outgoing Mayor of the City of Glendale and support for the incoming Mayor, the city’s Armenian community hosted a meet and greet event at St. Mary’s Church Hall on Wednesday, attended by over 120 individuals and elected officials who enjoyed the evening mingling with good food and good company.

Former Mayor Ara Najarian Outgoing Mayor Paula Devine Former Mayor Vrej Aghajanian

For the past two years, the social distancing mandates imposed by the pandemic prevented this annual gathering from occurring, but in light of the recent relaxation of such mandates and the election this month of Mayor Ardashes “Ardy” Kassakhian, a son of the Armenian community, a successful event was held.

Mayor Ardy Kassakhian with former Consul General Ambassador Armen Baibourtian and his wife, Yvette Glendale City Councilmember Dan Brotman Ronnie Gharibian with Glendale Police Chief Carl Povilaitis

During the program, Master of Ceremonies Ronnie Gharibian invited Very Reverend Father Zareh Sarkissian, the newly appointed Dean of St. Mary’s Church, to bless the event and its participants. In his remarks, Fr. Sarkissian conveyed his welcoming message emphasizing that he is looking forward to working with city officials and getting to know the local community.

Gharibian proceeded to acknowledge the service of former Mayors, Vrej Aghajanian and Ara Najarian, who helped navigate the City through the Covid crisis, gifting each of them with an Armenian alphabet pendant as a token of the community’s appreciation.

To thank the most recent outgoing mayor, Paula Divine, Gharibian invited Christine Hovnanian, a long-time community activist representing the Armenian Relief Society, for her introductory remarks. Hovnanian expressed gratitude to former Mayor Devine for her leadership and support for the Armenian community and gifted her with the Armenian alphabet pendant as a token of the community’s appreciation. Councilmember Devine gave moving remarks, proclaiming that she feels she is Armenian in her heart and reaffirming her love and support for Armenia and Armenians.

Gharibian further thanked all city officials who were present, including Glendale City Manager Roubik Golanian, Glendale Police Chief Carl Povilaitis, City commissioners and department heads, as well as special guests, former Armenian Consul General Ambassador and Mrs. Armen Baibourtian, newly appointed President of the Glendale School Board Nayiri Nahabedian, Glendale Community College Board of Trustees President Dr. Armine Hacopian, La Crescenta Town Council President Harry Leon, Glendale-based business and sponsor of the evening Golden State Bank, and many more.

In addition, representatives from numerous Armenian community organizations including the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, the Armenian Cultural Foundation, Homenetmen, Armenian Relief Society, Hamazkayin, ANCA Western Region, St. Mary’s Armenian Church Board of Trustees and Glendale Youth Center, as well as the Editor of the Asbarez Newspaper, Ara Khachatourian and ARTN TV President Robert Oglakhchyan.

Glendale Civil Service Commissioner Garo Ghazarian was then invited to introduce newly-elected Mayor Kassakhian, providing a detailed background of his biography and successful path toward assuming his new position, wishing him well for the next year in office and expressing the community’s commitment toward progress and prosperity for all residents of Glendale.

Mayor Kassakhian took the podium to a rousing round of applause and addressed the crowd both in English and Armenian, pledging to innovate many new projects and ideas for the success of the City of Glendale in the coming year and continuing his support of the Armenian community and its priorities.

Gharibian reminded everyone of the upcoming April 24th Armenian Genocide 107th remembrance and emphasized that the Genocide is not only 107 years old, but rather only days, weeks and months old as the onslaught against the Armenian People continues today in Artsakh and requires action by every Armenian who is concerned with the threats being faced by Armenia and Artsakh today.