Health workers gift flowers to coronavirus contacts after 14-day quarantine in Armenian town

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 16:24, 2 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 2, ARMENPRESS. As a group of direct contacts of coronavirus cases were being released from a 14-day precautionary quarantine, the healthcare authorities in charge of the isolation facility in Aghavnadzor decided to surprise the group, namely the women, with flowers.

Healthcare manager Narek Vanesyan, who is in charge of the facility, said the group of citizens have tested negative and were being released. He posted a video online showing the health workers applauding and gifting flowers to those being discharged.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Asbarez: Citing Elections, Stepanakert Calls on International Community to Support Artsakh

April 2, 2020

Voters and poll workers were wearing protective gear during Tuesday’s elections in Artsakh

Citing Tuesday’s elections, official Stepanakert called on the international community to support Artsakh, given the republic’s adherence to and advancement of democratic principles. The Artsakh foreign ministry also said that the elections in Artsakh should serve as an _expression_ of people’s self-determination, which it said should be the basis for an eventual settlement of the Karabakh conflict.

“The consistent efforts of the authorities and people of Artsakh should be supported by the international community, since the strengthening of democracy, human rights and the rule of law is universal and therefore is the collective responsibility of the entire world community,” said an statement by Artsakh’s foreign ministry on Wednesday, aimed briefing the international community on the process of Tuesday’s election.

“The creation of artificial obstacles on this path is a violation of the provisions of fundamental international human rights instruments,” added the foreign ministry on Wednesday.

“The people of Artsakh have indeed earned the right to live free in dignity, to shape together a democratic and modern society. In this regard, these nationwide elections, which were held in an environment of free competition and civil solidarity, have been case in point,” said an announcement issued by the Artsakh Foreign Ministry on Thursday.

“The elections once again demonstrated that human rights, particularly the right to vote and to take part in a government, are inalienable and universal. The fundamental human rights instruments, in particular the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenants on Human Rights, clearly establish that in exercising human rights no distinction shall be made on the basis of the political, jurisdictional or international status of any territory and that all peoples can freely determine their political status by virtue of their right to self-determination and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development,” added the Artsakh foreign ministry.

“The right of the people of Artsakh to self-determination is the foundation for the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict,” emphasized official Stepanakert, adding that Tuesday’s elections fully reflect the principles laid out by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmen, who are mediating the Karabakh peace process.

The Artsakh foreign ministry also cited the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs statement on Artsakh elections, where they highlight the role the people of Artsakh will play in determining their future. In this context, the Artsakh foreign ministry said that the already elected officials, as well as the person who will be elected in the presidential runoff on April 14, “have a special responsibility and role in the Nagorno Karabakh peace process.” The statement also reiterated the long-standing position of both Yerevan and Stepanakert that Artsakh must become a party to the negotiations as a way to advance the effectiveness of the peace process and ensure progress.

“The elections in Artsakh are also important in terms of strengthening democracy, human rights and civil society in the region. It once again emphasizes that the conflict cannot serve as an insurmountable impediment for building democratic society,” said the Artsakh Foreign Ministry.

“On these days, we also pay tribute to the memory of the victims of the military aggression and atrocities committed by Azerbaijan against the people of Artsakh four years ago. In this context, it should be underlined that the democratic development of all countries in the region and accountability of authorities before their own peoples is a prerequisite for the regional security and peaceful resolution of the conflict,” the foreign ministry said.

CIVILNET.Understanding 20th Century Armenia: Gevorg Ter-Gabrielyan

CIVILNET.AM

19:34 

“Armenia 3.0. Understanding 20th Century Armenia”: this is the title of a book that is based on nine video lectures delivered by the Director of Eurasia Partnership Foundation (EPF), writer Gevorg Ter-Gabrielyan between December 2016 and March 2017. The book’s main idea is the introduction of the “post-Soviet” variable into the calculations about Armenia’s reform and development. The April Revolution of 2018 can be explained as a huge step away from and a rebellion against that variable. One can say that, with this Revolution, Armenia made a significant step towards ceasing to be a post-Soviet society. However, these “post-Soviet” diseases may come back. The virus may lay dormant for a while and then spring back to strike again. We have seen this pattern before in our society. Therefore, these chapters remain relevant, and we hope they will be worthwhile the attention of our readers.

From Chapter 2. Uprooting and Rooting

In the first chapter, which discussed the Soviet times during the 20th century, I said that ‘there were good things and bad things there.’ That is a very simplistic categorization, which I usually try to avoid because it is stereotyping. Everything that happened then is interwoven. But I am going to use this approach and draw a picture, gradually giving a certain vision of the sociology of 20th-century Armenia, or rather its social theory. What should the major keywords be, around which we should try to understand this 20th-century history? An important one was mentioned in the previous chapter: donos, which is Russian for ‘fabricated allegations.’ Another one is ‘street authorities.’ This is all very much interconnected. Now I am starting to draw this picture which is my own mythology, although I think that you all here will agree with it. It is quite a well-known picture, at least in scientific circles in Russia and other post-Soviet states, or among the scholars who study the Soviet Union and its aftermath.

We start from the Genocide. A certain version of recent Armenian history starts at this point; it marks a ‘rebirth.’ What is important in the context of our topic is that many people escaped from Western Armenia, from the places where they were subjected to Genocide, and came to Eastern Armenia. There are various figures so it’s difficult for me to give an exact number, but one of the largest figures I have heard is 700,000 people, with 300,000 orphans among them.

Other important events also took place during this period. First, Armenia achieved statehood in 1918 and then was Sovietized in 1920. One can’t label these events as purely ‘good’ or purely ‘bad,’ but the Genocide and the First Republic show two different dynamics, which were taking place simultaneously at this moment of survival.

The film Myasnikyan is a very interesting film, though very much within the Soviet discourse. It was made in 1976. It demonstrates what I am trying to say. The main feature, sociologically speaking, at the beginning of the Soviet period was an atomized society: orphans, people who have suffered huge psychological stress, ‘post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).’ This feature can also be characterized as uprooting.

People who had been uprooted came to Armenia. They started their lives anew. But when you are talking about Sovietization, of course, the characteristic term is the opposite: it is rooting (коренизация). Among other things, whether or not we are grateful to the Russian or Bolshevik power, Sovietization also meant building the society, the community, the ‘pseudo-state,’ the republic from whatever we could. We are now continuing the work started by the Second Republic. The Bolshevik leaders committed some horrid acts against their Dashnak counterparts, who relinquished power. Later, they wrote donoses, rooting the culture of purges. But they were also building, building, and building. If this post-Genocide stream of refugees is the uprooted people who arrived here, the Soviet power and construction that followed was a tendency to root people, both those who were here beforehand and those who arrived anew, to this territory.

Quite soon after that, in the mid-1920s, we witnessed the arrival of Stalinism. This is a very unclear term because we don’t know when Stalinism actually arrived. It arrived gradually. But the Bolshevik power was not, of course, ‘nice’ even before Stalinism. Violence and the expectation of disastrous rule were present since 1917, when the October Revolution took place, and even earlier, during war, displacement, uprooting, and Genocide. This power was always bad, whether Tzarist, ‘Temporary Government,’ or Bolshevik, but its horror somehow crystallized during the Stalinist times. From 1925-26, it started to become a very inhumane system.

We also had some seemingly good news, which also eventually acquired a tragic edge in some cases: repatriation. We have had several waves of repatriation. Very early in the 1920s, people like Tamanyan, Avetik Isahakyan, Martiros Saryan and Spendiarov arrived. It started immediately after independence, still during the Dashnaktsutyun rule. The Soviet power continued this policy. They called for intelligentsia and specialists to come to the newly established Soviet Armenian Republic.

Afterwards, we had the next large wave of repatriation. In 1944, with the Second World War still raging, preparation for repatriation and its propaganda had already started among the Armenian communities. This wave continued until at least 1949. A significant portion of people who came during that time were then exiled to Siberia. Tigran Paskevichyan created a series of films and a website on the destiny of these repatriates.

Stalin wanted to start a war in Turkey because he was winning World War II against Nazi Germany, and he assumed that he would be able to reabsorb the old Armenian territories in Turkey, Kars, Ardahan, Artvin, and the ‘six vilayets,’ and perhaps more, and then he would need to repopulate these territories. That’s why they started to prepare the repatriation of Armenians. Of course, propagandizing the Soviet Union in the countries where Armenian communities resided was another reason for conducting this campaign. It was important to demonstrate that the Soviet Union is a place where people want to come and live.

Stalin’s plan didn’t materialize because the Allied leaders, Roosevelt and Churchill, probably told him ‘No, you are not going to do that.’ Eventually Stalin didn’t attack Turkey.

However, since preparations had already been made, the repatriates started to arrive. They had a very mythologized understanding of where they were coming to. During the next stage, many of them were soon sent to Siberia.

They were bringing a different culture with them that deviated from the Stalinist culture, which had been established in Soviet Armenia. They were freer, they had relatives abroad, and they would complain in letters to the relatives, as well as loudly in public, that the propaganda which brought them to the USSR was a lie.

Deportations to Siberia in the 1940s continued the trend of the purges that happened in the 1920-30s, the extra-judicial killings which took away such big names as Yeghishe Charents, Aksel Bakunts, Vahan Totovents, and others. An immense number of Armenians took part in the Second World War and were killed or maimed. Despite all this, the repatriation waves still represented a part of the rooting process. Armenians from all over the world were coming here, starting to participate in life here and trying to rebuild a societal fabric in their own homeland.

Of course, Stalinism and the Gulag are inseparable, and those of you who haven’t read The Gulag Archipelago by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, that’s the first thing, probably, to read about the Soviet Union. Because then you will understand that this rhizome, or ‘archipelago,’ as a slavery economy, as a ‘second economy’ or ‘black economy,’ was the reason for the existence of the Soviet Union.

The real Soviet Union, behind the façade, was based on the work of slaves who were persecuted and were working in the camps—not only in Siberia but all over the Soviet Union. If you go to this or that prison here in Armenia, if it was constructed by the Soviets, you can be certain that it used to be a part of the Gulag system. The camps are dismantled but the prisons are not, obviously. In them, the Gulag and blatnoy culture are still alive and well.

So first, we had an ‘archipelago,’ and now we have a ‘rhizome’ and we want to instead establish a ‘network.’

The Gulag was a very important element in Soviet Armenian history. The good news, however, was what we call in Armenian kaghakashinutyun: the process of city and town building, the process of construction. All over Armenia, roads, bridges, towns, cities, buildings, and factories were built. Despite all these negative and tragic influences, a lot was constructed, of varying quality. It’s also a matter of taste. People who are inclined to nostalgia for the Soviet Union refer to this construction only in positive terms. Indeed, a lot was constructed: Tamanyan’s Yerevan, Mark Grigoryan’s Yerevan as its next stage. Some of the buildings of the 1970s are considered great developments and get prizes in architectural contests for their design. Many of these buildings are very often in a dilapidated condition now in Armenia, many others have been destroyed after independence. But let me come back to where I was. The ’square culture,’ construction started, kaghakashinutyun started, city construction started. Tamanyan brought in the square culture, the culture of open spaces for (supposedly) free citizens of the Socialist republic: the Opera Square, which is Freedom Square today; Lenin Square, which is today’s Republic Square, the main square in Yerevan. Many cities were designed with public squares. What is a square? It is public. It is publicly rooted. It is a forum and a tribune. It provides opportunities to gather there and discuss things. In recent years, among the people who are working on these issues, among sociologists and architects, several very interesting small-scale broadcasts or studies have been made on the role of public spaces (including parks) for constituting the new independent Armenian nation. Society discusses their removal, the struggle to keep them, how they have changed, and their modern-day functions.

Let’s imagine Armenia after the Genocide: a mountain packed with uprooted people, refugees and orphans. Then let’s imagine Armenia in the 1950s: cities and industries. Of course, the mountains were still there, but cities and public spaces multiplied. Although it was still prohibited to have public movements. We are still talking about Stalinist and post-Stalinist times. The public movement doesn’t boil over until 1965, and this is a crucial year for modern Armenian history. (…)
 

Armenian government plans to place coronavirus patients with mild symptoms in hotels

Panorama, Armenia

The Armenian government has decided to place COVID-19 patients who have mild symptoms in hotels after consultations with Commandant Tigran Avinyan and Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at a cabinet meeting on Thursday.

“Hospitals now house patients who are receiving no treatment. These are mild cases, who have tested positive for coronavirus but require no treatment, and their stay in hospitals is unjustified,” the premier said, adding they make up the majority of coronavirus patients in hospitals.

Pashinyan stressed the need to negotiate with hotels, adding it is a mutually beneficial proposal since hotels are empty now due to the coronavirus outbreak. Meanwhile, the PM did not rule out the possibility that some businessmen may oppose the deal, fearing that it may affect the competitiveness of their brands in the future.

In this respect, the PM recalled that hotels are obliged to routinely disinfect their rooms, arguing there may be cases in which people with various other diseases have lived or are living in hotel rooms.

“Nothing bad will happen after people with coronavirus live there, especially if the rooms are disinfected afterwards,” the PM said.

Arsen Torosyan said for his part they will issue relative instructions in this regard. He backed the PM’s proposal, citing the case of Israel, where 1,000 coronavirus patients are in hotels.

“I don’t think the competitiveness of any brand will suffer given the current situation in the tourism sector not only in Armenia, but also around the world,” the minister said. 

Spokesperson of Armenia PM’s wife: Anna Hakobyan constantly disinfects her hands

News.am, Armenia
Spokesperson of Armenia PM’s wife: Anna Hakobyan constantly disinfects her hands Spokesperson of Armenia PM’s wife: Anna Hakobyan constantly disinfects her hands

20:33, 23.03.2020
                  

Anna Hakobyan, the wife of Prime Minister of Armenia, always disinfects her hands. This is what Anna Hakobyan’s spokesperson Hasmik Harutyunyan wrote on her Facebook page.

She particularly wrote the following:

“Dear friends,

Citing the Ministry of Healthcare of Armenia, I would like to inform that wearing a face mask is not allowed outside, especially when a person isn’t coughing or doesn’t have a fever.

As far as gloves are concerned, we have alcogel, and the wife of the Prime Minister of Armenia constantly disinfects her hands.

Thank you for the concern. Be healthy.”

Today, Anna Hakobyan was distributing booklets about protection from the coronavirus to citizens. One of the citizens scolded Hakobyan and asked her why she wasn’t wearing a face mask, to which Hakobyan said there would be a conversation about that later.

Armenia shuts down entertainment venues due to coronavirus

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 18:38,

YEREVAN, MARCH 21, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan, the superintendent of the state of emergency which is in force until April 14th due to the coronavirus, has ordered the shutdown of shopping centers, nightclubs, discos, casinos, bookmakers and movie theaters. The order is effective until April 14th. It does not cover restaurants.

Food and liquor stores will remain open.

The order is effective from March 22, 00:01.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

Thousands of volunteers in Armenia helping doctors combat coronavirus

JAM News
20.03.2020
    JAMNEWS

Thousands of citizens have heeded the Armenian government’s call for volunteers to step forward and assist in coronavirus containment and treatment efforts.

As of March 20, 136 cases of coronavirus have been reported in Armenia. Since March 16, a state of emergency has been declared to stop the spread of the virus.

Within 24 hours of the call, the ministry received more than two thousand resumes from people who were ready to become volunteers.

“Dear compatriots, the Ministry of Health thanks you all for the promptly responding to our call for volunteers. At the moment, we have collected a sufficient number of resumes and are temporarily not accepting new applications,”  wrote Alina Nikoghosyan, spokeswoman for the ministry, on her Facebook page.

People are helping however they can. Some are delivering food and medicine by car, volunteer nurses and medical university students provide more professional support, and psychologists have also joined the cause.

There has been a shortage of masks since March 2, just one day after the first case was reported in Armenia. People complained on social networks that there were no masks available in pharmacies.

Gegham Gevorgyan, Chairman of the State Commission for the Protection of Economic Competition, announced that they are simply not being produced in Armenia.

After that, people started posting and sharing posts about people who are sewing medical masks for their families and passing them out to people on the street for free. This happened primarily in the city of Etchmiadzin, which was declared the epicenter of the spread of coronavirus.

One of them is Misha Davtyan. His mother is sewing masks and he is sterilizing them and handing them out at medical centers.

“We have already distributed 3000 masks, and they served their purpose. It makes me happy and encourages me to continue doing this work,” says Misha.

Masks are also being sewn by the family of Echmiadtzin resident Armen Abrahamyan.

“This is the fifth day since we started sewing masks. All of them are sterilized in a hospital setting. On the first day, we sewed 56 masks, and now we have 3500. We have provided masks to the hospital in Echmiadzin, a polyclinic, a maternity hospital, and police stations. We distribute the rest to ordinary citizens,” says Armen.

The initiative was then picked up in other cities. In particular, in Alaverdi, ten volunteer activists began to sew masks. They say that they asked doctors what materials are best to use. They wear gloves while sewing them, and then sterilize them and distribute them to passers-by on the streets.

It is possible to control the speed at which coronavirus spreads: Interview with Japan’s Ambassador to Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
March 2 2020

Interview with Japan’s Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Armenia Jun Yamada about the novel coronavirus and the Japanese experience of tackling the spread of the virus.

– How Japan is fighting against coronavirus, is there any practice that can be shared with Armenia.

– We have already requested elementary schools, junior high schools and senior high schools as well as schools for special needs education to close temporarily from Monday, March 2, 2020, until spring break. The government will do everything possible to support local government efforts including making the same arrangements at after-school care programs as during spring break. We intend to establish a new grant scheme to squarely address the reduction in income resulting from parents taking leaves of absence from work, for both permanent and non-permanent workers. We will also swiftly compile within roughly the next 10 days a second emergency policy package that utilizes this fiscal year’s contingency funds, which amount to more than 270 billion yen.

We will advance the use of remote work in every aspect of society, making full use of teleworking and other forms of IT, and all at once push forward with changes that go ahead of the times.

– How is the diagnosis made in Japan․ There was an information that a test was developed in Japan to diagnose COVID-19 within 30 minutes.

– It is possible to control the speed at which the outbreak spreads. We will be at a critical moment over the coming one to two weeks regarding whether the outbreak spreads rapidly or is controlled.
We are working to develop new simple test equipment that will make it possible to reduce the time needed to detect the virus, currently two to three hours, to around fifteen minutes. We have been working to develop the reagent and improve its accuracy, and we intend to start using this kit within March. Though nationwide we have the ability to conduct more than 4,000 screenings daily, we must implement all possible measures over the coming two weeks to prevent the outbreak further spreading.While there are more than 2,000 beds designated for infectious diseases nationwide, we intend to ensure a capacity of over 5,000 beds.
Among those who have tested positive in Japan, including cruise ship passengers, more than 140 have already recovered and been discharged from hospitals.

– What kind of advice does the government give to the population, that can also be useful for Armenians?

– Basically, the advice is the same for all countries. Throughout the world, preventing “group infection” is of extreme importance. In order to avoid the risk of large-scale infections, we should call for responses such as cancelling, postponing, or downsizing national-scale sports or cultural events where many people gather.

Armenia’s Pashinyan Meets Georgian Leaders in Tbilisi

Civil Georgia
March 3 2020

13-year-old Gyumri child in critical condition after severe battery

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 15:05, 6 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 6, ARMENPRESS. A 13-year-old girl from Gyumri who was severely battered on March 5 remains in critical condition after being transported to a Yerevan hospital.  The girl underwent an emergency surgery in Gyumri before being taken to Yerevan.

The head of the Holy Mother of God Medical Center Nikolay Dallakyan said the girl has suffered multiple traumas, closed-head injury, cerebral edema, subarachnoid hemorrhage, fractures of multiple facial bones.

The victim was rushed to Yerevan from Gyumri at 01:30 March 6. She was on assisted ventilation and unconscious, and remains so.  Dallakyan said the girl is in a critical condition, but stable. He added that the brain trauma is very serious.

After the child was taken to a hospital in Gyumri on March 5, police officers were dispatched to the apartment where the incident had taken place. First responders found the child’s 43-year-old mother dead. Her body had traces of violence.

Gyumri police said they’ve a 28-year-old suspect in custody.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan