Russia sends engineering equipment to Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia

Nov 22 2020

The IL-76 aircraft of the Military Transport Aviation of the Russian Aerospace Forces has transported a group of servicemen of the engineering troops of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, as well as engineering equipment to assist in the cleaning of public roads and social infrastructure in the areas of the peacekeeping operation, the Russian Ministry of Defense reports.

The plane delivered military engineers, a bulldozer and a heavy-duty off-road vehicle to the Zvartnots airport.

The engineering equipment will be used by Russian military personnel when cleaning roads and infrastructure in settlements.

Russian peacekeepers provide maximum assistance to local authorities in restoring peaceful life.

Engineering units of the peacekeeping forces help restore traffic, electricity, water and heat supply to social facilities and residential buildings.

Russian peacekeepers’ patrols ensured the safe delivery of food and essential items to remote settlements.

https://en.armradio.am/2020/11/22/russia-sends-engineering-equipment-to-artsakh/

Henrikh Mkhitaryan shares tribute to fallen soldiers

Public Radio of Armenia

Nov 22 2020

In social media posts, Armenia captain Henrikh Mkhitaryan paid tribute the soldiers fallen in the Artsakh war.

Henrikh Mkhitaryan wrote:

“Our braves never die.

Our grief is so deep that it can’t be spoken…today all over the world a Commemorating Service will honor our fallen heroes,” Mkhitaryan wrote.

44 days along in Artsakh, you have shown indescribable courage sacrificing your lives for the Holy mission of defending our Homeland, our People and our several millennia old historical lands.

You will live forever amongst us…

We pray also for our wounded brothers. Our absolute gratitude to all our soldiers. Thank you.

I wish my Nation strength and solidarity to overcome the sorrow of its beloved sons.

We must remain focused and aware, we must leverage our full potential and create a better world for our youth, a world of Peace where they can fulfill their dreams.”

Today all Armenian churches worldwide hold commemorative services in memory of the soldiers fallen in the war unleashed by Azerbaijan on September 27 backed by Turkey.



France, Russia and the US bear a special responsibility for Karabakh, French FM says

Public Radio of Armenia

Nov 22 2020

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian has emphasized the great responsibility that the Minsk Group countries bear in the settlement of the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“France, Russia and the United States have a special responsibility. Because they were the ones who were entrusted by the UN to monitor compliance with the commitments assumed by the parties to the conflict. As co-chairmen of the Minsk Group, we made a lot of efforts to achieve a ceasefire. Three times in one week initiatives were undertaken to achieve a cessation of hostilities, in particular, by my Russian colleague Sergei Lavrov and by the United States, Michael Pompeo, but at that moment it did not work, “Le Drian said on Sunday during an interview with the French news channel LSI.

“We bear the responsibility that the international community has entrusted to us. And Armenia itself wants us to keep this responsibility. All this requires us to adhere to a balanced position,” he said.

“Both the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaderships stressed the importance of preserving our role. But this does not prevent France from providing assistance to Armenia now – an airplane with humanitarian supplies arrives in Yerevan, another one will leave there next week,” the minister said. During the interview, he especially stressed that “Armenia is a friendly people for France.

“However, it should be admitted that there is uncertainty regarding the ceasefire reached – and we want the necessary clarifications to be made to us in this regard. They concern displaced persons, since there are many Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, and we strive to ensure that those Armenians, who were driven from their places of residence, return there,” the French minister said.

“It is also the issue of mercenaries – their withdrawal should be achieved, and all three countries – the co-chairs of the Minsk Group agree with the necessity of this,” he continued.

“There is also the issue of protecting religious and cultural heritage. In this regard, French President Emmanuel Macron took initiatives jointly with UNESCO, which I discussed on Saturday with my colleagues from Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Le Drian said.

“Only after the settlement of these problems can we move on to the issue of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. At the moment it is not possible to discuss this. And the Armenian leadership agrees with this,” Le Drian said.

The French Foreign Minister said that the topic of Nagorno-Karabakh was discussed by him during the recent visit of US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo to Paris.


25,000 People Have Already Returned to Nagorno-Karabakh in 5 Days, NKR President Says

Sputnik
Nov 22 2020
© Sputnik / Maxim Blinov
World

08:10 GMT 22.11.2020
https://sputniknews.com/world/202011221081240352-25000-people-have-already-returned-to-nagorno-karabakh-in-5-days-nkr-president-says/

YEREVAN (Sputnik) – As many as 25,000 refugees have already returned to their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh since the end of the recent hostilities, according to the region’s official statistics, the president of the unrecognized republic, Arayik Harutyunyan, said on Sunday.

“The flow to Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh], the return of our compatriots is proceeding at a fairly fast pace. In just five days, 25,000 people returned, this is according to our registration center”, Harutyunyan said during a meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

According to the president of the unrecognised Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, refugees are still coming back. In particular, those who have places to live return at the first stage, the rest will return gradually so that there is an opportunity for accommodation and solving social problems. In addition, the response center in Yerevan will try to reimburse some costs of staying of Karabakh residents in Armenia and utility payments.

“There are, of course, problems related to roads and safety. We will discuss this,” Harutyunyan added.

Pashinyan, in turn, pointed to the need to focus efforts on restoring normal life in Karabakh, ensuring the return of refugees and creating the necessary conditions for them.

The Armenian government earlier said it would allocate around $600 to residents of Nagorno-Karabakh settlements that are now under the control of Azerbaijan. In order to be eligible to receive the funds, people should have lived in the above mentioned areas for at least three months prior to 27 September – the day when the recent hostilities broke out, the government specified.

Earlier this month, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a new ceasefire deal, brokered by Russian President Vladimir Putin, after weeks of hostilities in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Under the agreement, Azerbaijan retains control of the territories it captured during the six-week conflict, while Russia is deploying peacekeepers along the line of contact of the warring parties and in the Lachin Corridor connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia. Armenia also agreed to hand over all the Azeri-majority buffer territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh which have been under its de facto control since 1994.

Earlier this week, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that Moscow expected UN humanitarian bodies to join the effort of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to tackle humanitarian problems in Karabakh, to preserve the local humanitarian heritage.

ICRC president Peter Maurer told Sputnik earlier this week that the committee was working diligently to ensure aid deliveries to displaced groups and facilitate the exchange of prisoners and the bodies of the deceased in Nagorno-Karabakh following the Russian-brokered ceasefire.




The True Source of Troubles Behind the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict

The National Interest
Nov 21 2020

Recognizing of Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent state would be unreasonable and in clear breach of international law.

by Kamal Makili-Aliyev

With the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh in its most active phase since 1994, the questions about the legal status of this mountainous region located in the Caucasus are being discussed in the wider media more frequently. An unfortunate feature of such discussions is the fact that legal questions are usually discussed by specialists in fields other than international law. This results in quasi-legal or even unsubstantiated arguments that have no relevance to real legal science. 

One such argument that has recently surfaced is a false equation mark between situations in Kosovo and in Nagorno-Karabakh. It wrongly claims that Kosovo can serve as a precedent for the so-called “remedial secession” of Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan. The simple fact of the matter is that Kosovo, as a case, has no connections to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

This can be tested by a simple analysis of the international law position vis-à-vis Nagorno-Karabakh’s legal status. First, and foremostit is a recognized part of the territory of Azerbaijan. The international community confirmed this several times through the United Nations. The most vivid example is 2008 UN General Assembly resolution 62/243 “The Situation in the Occupied Territories of Azerbaijan.” Moreover, that fact was confirmed judicially by the European Court of Human Rights in the 2015 case Chiragov et. al. v. Armenia. The court confirmed two necessary preconditions for military occupation (effective control and boots on the ground in paragraphs 180 and 186) and, thus, confirmed that Armenia occupied Nagorno-Karabakh and adjacent seven regions of Azerbaijan.

Second, unlike Kosovo, Nagorno-Karabakh’s autonomy was tied to a separate sovereign stateAzerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic (AzSSR). AzSSR was in accordance with the Soviet Union’s Constitution of 1977 (Article 76) one of the sovereign member-states of the union. Nagorno-Karabakh, on the other hand, did not have a sovereign status. When the Soviet Union fell apart, its internal administrative borders became the international borders of the union’s former members, including Azerbaijan and Armenia. Moreover, none of the member-states or other entities of the Soviet Union had a chance to separate from the Soviet Union using its 1990 law that regulated secession. Soviet Union fell apart before the conditions of the law could be fulfilled by anyone. 

Third, the right of peoples to self-determination, which was widely (but falsely) claimed for the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh, was proven by competent international law specialists to be inapplicable to minorities and not a right to secession. The Armenian minority in Nagorno-Karabakh does not constitute separate “people” from peoples of Azerbaijan or Armenia. They are ethnically Armenian and formally citizens of Azerbaijan. Not a population of a theoretical overseas colony to be decolonized by the right to self-determination. That is why this right is in no way applicable to Nagorno-Karabakh.  
Fourth, there is no “right to remedial secession” in international law. The International Court of Justice basically said as much in its Advisory Opinion on Kosovo’s declaration of independence. The concept of remedial secession is actually a political concept, one that is not very closely connected to international law. Moreover, trying to connect the concept of remedial secession to Nagorno-Karabakh is simply cynical, as it was an Azerbaijani population that was persecuted and forcefully removed from Nagorno-Karabakh, not the Armenian minority.  

The issue of Nagorno-Karabakh being a part of Azerbaijan affects even the political positions of key regional states and extra-regional players. All of the permanent members of the UN Security Council (China, France, Russia, the United States and the UK) recognize that recent fighting was within the sovereign borders of Azerbaijan and that Armenia was not a victim of aggression. Even Russia, which has military bases in Armenia, and which owns most of Armenia’s critical infrastructure, and has clear interests in the well-being of its strategic partner, has confirmed that the fighting had nothing to do with the sovereign territory of Armenia and, thus, cannot trigger collective defense obligations

All of the above makes calls for the recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent state unreasonable. It would be in clear breach of international law and against the position of the international community. The United States should consider that any such move against international legal order will threaten the system of international security that the United States has been building together with others since 1945. 

Dr. Kamal Makili-Aliyev is a senior lecturer in international law and human rights in Malmö University in Sweden. He is an affiliated researcher of Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law and author of the Contested Territories and International Law (Routledge, 2020) dedicated to the legal issues in the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict. 

Pastor at St. Gregory Armenian Church tests positive for coronavirus

KMPH —  Fox 26, CA
Nov 22 2020
 
 
 
by Marie EdingerSunday, November 22nd 2020
 
FOWLER, Calif. (FOX26) — A Pastor at the St. Gregory Armenian Church of Fowler has contracted the coronavirus.
 
Pastor Rev. Fr. Gomidas Zohrabian says he received his positive test Friday.
 
In a statement Saturday, the pastor says he likely contracted the virus after being exposed in Los Angeles.
 
To keep everyone safe and make sure they quarantine properly due to possible exposure, St. Gregory Church will be closed for the next week. Sunday services and weekly services are both cancelled.
 
 
 

France demands international deployment to implement Armenia-Azerbaijan peace accord

News Cast
Nov 20 2020

Paris: – It was decided in the peace accord, signed between Armenia and Azerbaijan, with Russian initiative, that Russian peacekeeping force will be deployed there. But now, Turkey also is making moves to deploy its soldiers and France has become aggressive against this. French President Emmanuel macros has made a strong demand that the Minsk group, who had mediated in the previous Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, must participate in the implantation of the peace accord.   

War flared up between Armenia and Azerbaijan, in September, in the Nagorno Karabakh region. The war has ended after a long 40 days and the intervention of Russian President Vladimir Putin proved vital in ending the war. As per the peace accord signed with the Russian initiative, Azerbaijan will retain the parts won by it. At the same time, it was noted that the Russian military would remain deployed in the region connecting Armenia with Nagorno Karabakh. The military and security agencies of Azerbaijan will be present in the regions awarded to Azerbaijan, into the peace agreement. But now, reports are being received that Turkey has started moves to have its military deployed in the region. The Turkish parliament has passed a bill to that effect. Claims are also being made that Turkey is talking to Russia over the issue. The possible Turkish deployment in Nagorno Karabakh has become a cause of concern for France and it is believed that the demand for an international squad has emerged from the same concern.  

French President Macron has raised the issue of the refugees who left Nagorno Karabakh during the period of the war. Macron said that repatriation and settlement of these refugees is an important issue. The French President demanded the presence of the international squad saying that therefore, the participation of the Minsk Group will be important for proper implementation of the peace accord. The Minsk Group has French representation along with the United States and Russia. Turkey had strongly opposed the Minsk Group and had fired salvos of criticism against it. Taking the same thing into account, the French President seems to have proposed participation of the Minsk Group.  

In the last few years, France has vehemently opposed the aggressive Turkish policies and at times has even resorted to action. The two countries are consistently at loggerheads over the issues of Syria, Libya, immigrants in Europe, tensions in the Mediterranean Sea and terrorism and the tension between the two countries is said to be scaling dangerous levels.   


Armenian Americans marvel at an elder’s generosity as they grieve over an ancestral home

Los Angeles Times, CA
Nov 22 2020

Persimmons were drying in the kitchen and a bowl of cracked walnuts sat on the table on this November day. Clara Margossian, 102, wore her favorite scarf tied around her head, knotted beneath her chin. The one she saves for company.

In the house she had built on old fig orchard land 40 years ago, she asked her caretakers, Nunufar Khalatian and Margo Ellison, to fetch a box of the See’s candy kept on hand for all occasions. But then she noticed the women, both Armenian immigrants, checking their phones, trying to hide tears.

“What happened?” Margossian asked, going suddenly still. “Is it the war?”

Six weeks earlier, as fighting escalated between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave of antiquity and beauty in the Caucasus Mountains, Khalatian and Ellison had been too shocked to hide their emotions. They cried. They discussed how much money they were going to send to the Armenia Fund, a Los Angeles-based humanitarian relief organization. Khalatian sent $1,000. Ellison came up with $700. For both it was a sacrifice.

Margossian said she wanted to help too. No one in her family had ever been known for giving away money. But Margossian, the last of her clan and with no living relatives, told the church deacon in charge of her affairs to arrange a $1-million donation.

Quickly it spread throughout the diaspora that such a gift came to Armenia from a Fresno woman more than a century old — a daughter of the Armenian genocide of 1915.

Malia Urdahl, 4, sits with 102-year-old Clara Margossian in her Fresno home. Malia is the granddaughter of Nunufar Khalatian, one of Margossian’s caretakers.
(Nunufar Khalatian)

Ellison’s cousin in Armenia, home from the front lines, a bullet in his knee, called to ask if she knew who the woman could be.

She told him it was her Clara, the woman she worked for. She held up her tablet so he could speak to Margossian over video. He tearfully thanked her for helping a homeland she had never seen. He said that the money brought a special hope coming from a survivor of Armenia’s greatest tragedy.

Knarik Clara Margossian’s life spans the sweeps of history that define the Armenian experience. She was born in the shadow of the genocide and now, in old age, nightly watched YouTube updates of a war over lands her family fled.

Her mother was pregnant with Clara’s older brother when an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed and expelled by Ottoman Turk soldiers and police. Turkey continues to deny it was genocide.

Margossian’s older brother was born April 25, the day after the date recognized each year as the anniversary of the massacre. Her parents’ Turkish neighbors hid them. When the order went out that any Turkish families protecting Armenians would be killed, her parents began walking to Russia with a 3-day-old baby. Clara and her younger sister were born in Russia. One by one, their surviving relatives joined them.

The family of watchmakers prospered but remained cloistered and wary of outsiders. Neither Clara nor her siblings ever married. In the 1940s, like many Armenian families before them, they moved to Fresno, the first center of the Armenian diaspora in California. A family friend told them that if they set aside a little money each month for investing, they would be rich in their old age. Margossian still includes that man’s memory in her prayers.

The Armenian connection is written on the landscape of the Central Valley. The winter-gold grapevines on the outskirts of town, trays of raisins recently harvested, were first planted by Armenian settlers in the late 1800s. Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church is still the jewel of downtown, even now, flanked by a flashy car dealership. Across the street, Valley Lahvosh bakery makes Armenian cracker bread shaped like hearts.

Many of the city’s family names end in “i-a-n,” the ancient suffix meaning “son of”. It is the setting of “The Human Comedy” by native son William Saroyan. His novel of ordinary people on the home front during World War II is considered an American antiwar classic.

Fresno became a de facto home front to the 2020 Azerbaijani-Armenian war. At the Armenian school, the eyes of a mother dropping her children off were red and swollen from crying all night. Almost every day there was a “Pastries for Peace” or a kebab sale to raise money for Armenia. As in larger cities, people protested on street corners, fruitlessly demanding the United States intercede. In a country grappling with a momentous election, pandemic and civil unrest, their voices gained little traction.

When Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan backed oil-rich Azerbaijan with advanced weapons, Armenians in Fresno and elsewhere quaked, fearing the end goal was destroying Armenia itself.

In the evenings, Margossian usually liked to watch her favorite show, “Poldark,” a PBS saga tracing generations of a family through wars. But now she watched real-time Armenian war coverage. They always reported that Armenia was winning, despite the odds and even though Khalatian and Ellison received messages from home telling of terrible losses.

On Nov. 9, the reality was announced. Armenia’s forces were broken and facing certain defeat. The Armenian government accepted a Russia-brokered peace deal returning much of Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijan. Russian soldiers will patrol the area and enforce new borders.

The day Margossian noticed her caregivers crying was when they first saw photos of the Azerbaijani flag flying over Shusha, the hilltop city Armenians call Shushi, and which both Armenians and Azeris treasure.

Khalatian didn’t directly answer when Margossian asked: “Is it the war?”

“Clara-jan,” she said, adding an endearment often used by Armenians. “Your money will help people who need medicine and places to live, even more now.”

Margossian seemed to understand what that meant. Her eyes filled with tears.

“I want to give a message to the Armenian people,” said Margossian, who is deeply religious. “Tell them to keep faith in God and each other.”

Grief spread through the community as Armenians realized the region they call Artsakh, home to their oldest churches and monasteries, was lost. Ellison got word that family members, two young brothers on her father’s side, had been killed 25 minutes before the truce was announced.

Varoujan Der Simonian, director of the Armenian Museum of Fresno, grew up in Lebanon and has lived in Fresno for 41 years. He asked himself why the loss of this blood-soaked land devastated him and others even more generations removed from Armenia.

“I realized it’s because it’s inside me. It’s part of me,” he said.

In the courtyard of the church downtown, he knelt in front of the eternity circle, an Armenian symbol of infinity that is also carved in countless crosses throughout Nagorno-Karabakh, a place he’s visited many times on agricultural missions.

“I had trouble coming here today,” he said, looking at the symbol’s looping, unbroken lines. “This circle holds the love and creativity of the Armenian people. We will endure and continue to contribute to humanity.”

During the Soviet era, Turkish Azerbaijan and Armenia lived peacefully side by side. But Josef Stalin tried to erase religious and cultural identities by making Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian cultural touchstone, part of Azerbaijan.

When the Soviet Union broke up, both countries became independent. Nagorno-Karabakh, with its large Armenian population, tried to break away from Azerbaijan. Armenia invaded the disputed territory it considers a homeland but is internationally recognized as Azerbaijan, and drove 600,000 ethnic Turks from their homes.

The war ended in 1994, with 20,000 dead and Azerbaijanis vowing to someday reclaim what they consider their land. The Armenian commander in that war was Monte Melkonian, an Armenian American who grew up playing Little League baseball in the Central Valley.

According to Russian President Vladimir Putin, 5,000 were killed in this war. Many of the dead were civilians. Refugees are flooding into Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, even as a pandemic continues to kill. The power in a volatile region has tilted to Turkey and Russia.

Varoujan Der Simonian stands at the Grave of the Unknown Martyr in Ararat Cemetery in Fresno. The grave symbolizes the lives lost in the Armenian genocide whose names are not remembered and bodies went unburied. 

(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

At Margossian’s house, she watched on video as people in Armenia rioted over their country’s surrender and Armenians fled Nagorno-Karabakh, some of them burning their houses behind them.

Margossian asked if people were glad the war had ended. Khalatian reached for Margossian’s hand and gave it a comforting squeeze.

“I think the people whose children will make it home alive, on both sides,” she said, “are happy that it’s over.”

Post War: Links to News Articles between Nov. 19 – 22

To Armenian News Readers:
 
In order to minimize the number of individual posts on Armenian News Website,
the links to some repetitive items from different sources are listed
below.
 
Thank you
 
———–
 
What the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict Revealed About Future Warfighting
[needs subscription]
 
 
Armenia Fired Iskander Missiles in Azeri War, Ex-Army Chief Says Sara Khojoyan
 
 
Azerbaijan takes over first district laid out in Nagorno-Karabakh peace deal
 
 
Karabakh conflict about to become a bygone, Azerbaijan’s president says
 
 
Nagorno-Karabakh: Azerbaijan troops begin retaking land from Armenia
 
 
Azerbaijani president ready to establish normal relations with Armenia’s ‘sensible forces’
 
 
Azerbaijan Regains Region Lost for Decades as Armenia Pulls Back
 
 
Nagorno-Karabakh: Azeri army enters first territory ceded by Armenia
 
 
Armenian defence minister tenders resignation: Report
 
 
Azerbaijan enters Nagorno-Karabakh district after peace deal
 
 
Azerbaijani leader says forces have taken control of region ceded by Armenia
 
 
Russia reinforces border guards in Armenia after Nagorno-Karabakh peace deal
 
 
Russia to deploy additional forces on Armenian-Azerbaijani border
 https://en.armradio.am/2020/11/20/russia-to-deploy-forces-on-azerbaijan-azerbaijani-border/
 
 
Azerbaijan’s President hails handover of region ceded by Armenia in ceasefire deal
 
 
Azerbaijani Troops Enter Disputed Territory Handed Over By Armenia
 
 
Armenia’s Defense Minister resigns
 
 
Azerbaijani army enters territory ceded by Armenian forces
 
 
Vagharshak Harutyunyan appointed as Armenia’s new defence minister
 
 
Uprooted by war Armenians face bleak winter in schools and sanatoriums
 
 
Armenian flee Nagorno Karabakh after six week war with Azerbaijan (listen to program)
 
 
Armenia appoints new defense minister after Nagorno-Karabakh cease-fire
 
 
Vagharshak Harutyunyan appointed as Armenia’s new defence minister
 
 
Nagorno-Karabakh: Azerbaijan troops begin retaking land from Armenia
 
 
 Armenia’s defence minister resigns
 https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/7022357/armenias-defence-minister-resigns/?cs=14232
 
 
Azerbaijani Troops Enter Disputed Territory Handed Over By Armenia
 
 
Watch: Armenian residents pack belongings to leave Aghdam district before Azerbaijan takes over
 
 
Azerbaijani leader: Cease-fire may improve Armenia relations
 
 
 Armenian PM urges stronger military links with Russia
 https://www.gulf-times.com/story/678577/Armenia-PM-urges-stronger-military-links-with-Russ
 
 
Turkish Post:  ‘Hiroshima of Caucasus’ freed from Armenian forces
 
 
Anger, Fear and Sorrow Consume Armenians Leaving Land Returned to Azerbaijan – WSJ
 
 
Turkish Military to work with Russia on Karabakh for 1 Year: Ankara
 
 
Azerbaijan: Armenians turned Aghdam into ruined city
 
 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian Attends Memorial For N-Karabakh Dead
 
 
Around 6 lakh displaced Azerbaijanis seek to return after country regains control of Nagorno-Karabakh
 
 
More Russian Aid Sent To Nagorno-Karabakh
 
 
 Azerbaijani who fled war look to return home, if it exists
 https://apnews.com/article/international-news-baku-azerbaijan-armenia-83f195ae4b570a9aedece719a8b39ac8
 
 
Delicate truce: Armenia and Azerbaijan by Gwynn Dyer
 
 
Armenians fear a sacking of the monasteries with Nagorno‑Karabakh retreat | World | The Sunday Times (thetimes.co.uk)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Russia donates one more mobile lab to Armenia

       

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 15:07,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 21, ARMENPRESS. The Russian Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Wellbeing (Rospotrebnadzor) has donated a mobile lab to Armenia’s healthcare ministry. The mobile lab is designed for conducting classical biological and PCR tests to detect specific dangerous infections.

During the inauguration ceremony of the lab at Yerevan’s National Center for Disease Control and Prevention Armenian Healthcare Minister Arsen Torosyan stated that it’s difficult to mention the numerous invaluable support provided by the Russian colleagues. “That support is valuable especially these days when our country is facing a difficult situation: the fight is on two directions – the pandemic and the problems caused by the military operations in Nagorno Karabakh”, Torosyan said.

He stated that Russia has provided and continues providing support to Armenia in the treatment of both infectious and non-infectious diseases. From the first days of the fight against the COVID-19 Russia is providing an invaluable support to Armenia’s healthcare system. “Today we are receiving another important support from our Russian colleagues. One more mobile lab has been donated to us which will help us a lot to fight against infectious diseases and prevent their spread”, he said and thanked the Russian side.

Rospotrebnadzor executive Anna Popova stated that the relations with the Armenian partners have a long history. She added that in the past 5 years they are implementing 6 joint Russian-Armenian projects.

This new mobile lab joins the already existing 5 ones. “It will provide an additional opportunity for diagnosing, preventing the non-ordinary disease which we all are dealing with”, Popova said.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan