Hayastan All Armenian Fund transfers donations to Syrian-Armenians

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 15:17, 9 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. The Hayastan All Armenian Fund donated around 70,000 dollars to help mitigate the COVID-19-related healthcare and socio-economic situation of the Syrian-Armenians.

The fund’s director Haykak Arshamyan transferred the donation to the Armenian Embassy in Damascus on September 9.

“The donation is proportionally distributed – 30,000 dollars to the 502 teachers and 42 maintenance staff of Armenian educational institutions in Syria. At the same time a total of 40,000 dollars in assistance was provided to our compatriots who are being treated in hospitals in Syria,” the fund said.

The donation was made from the COVID-19 Armenia: Let’s Overcome the Pandemic Together fundraiser.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/09/2020

                                        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.
 

Deposits pace of growth slowed down but stable, says Armenian cenbank

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 13:29, 8 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. The pace of growth of deposits has somewhat slowed down due to the COVID-19 pandemic but there is no trend of decline at the moment and loans continue to grow, Armenian Central Bank President Martin Galstyan told a news conference.

He said that although financial organizations were also impacted by the consequences of the pandemic the normal process of rendering the financial services was not disrupted.

Galstyan says the financial organizations’ capital and liquidity level creates sufficient prerequisite to withstand the crisis.

The cenbank chief did however voice concern that if the healthcare situation is to last longer than expected and subsequently certain decrease of incomes is registered then it is possible that the pace of growth of loans will also slow down.

At the same time he assured that the liquid assets of banks are far greater than the cenbank’s requirements and in conditions of scarce financial sources banks will continue crediting the economy ,including the ensuring of the government’s anti-crisis measures.

Reporting by Anna Grigoryan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

The Army’s Son – book honoring the life and legacy of Captain Armenak Urfanyan published

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 13:11, 8 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. Artsakhi writer Vova Arzumanyan presented on September 8 The Army’s Son, a book dedicated to the memory of Captain Armenak Urfanyan, the 26-year-old Artsakh serviceman who was killed in action during fierce battles in 2016 when Azerbaijani military launched an offensive in what became known as the April Four Day War.

Speaking about the title of the book, Vova Arzumanyan – who is the Editor-in-Chief of the Artsakh-based Vardanank newspaper – said that the phrase is connected with what Urfanyan had once told his mother.

“Mom, I’m no longer your son, I am the army’s son,” Urfanyan told his mother once.

The book includes memoirs of Urfanyan’s mother, interviews with co-servicemen, as well as poems by Arzumanyan himself dedicated to the captain and the other heroes of the war.

Overnight April 1-2, Captain Urfanyan and his troops came under enemy fire in a heavily outnumbered ambush from Azerbaijan. During the fierce battle, the captain destroyed multiple attacking enemy fighters and one engineering-reconaissance armored vehicle. He was killed in action from tank fire.

He was awarded the posthumous Medal for Combat Service of Artsakh and the 1st Class Combat Cross Medal of Armenia.

In August 2020, President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan awarded the posthumous Hero of Artsakh title to Urfanyan.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

ECHR judgment in Makuchyan and Minasyan v. Azerbaijan and Hungary appealed to Grand Chamber

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 14:41, 8 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. The 2020 May 26 European Court of Human Rights judgment in the case of Makuchyan and Minasyan v. Azerbaijan and Hungary, concerning the presidential pardon of Azerbaijani convicted military officer Ramil Safarov who gruesomely murdered Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan in 2004 during a NATO training course in Hungary, has been appealed to the ECHR Grand Chamber by Makuchyan and Minasyan, their lawyer Siranush Sahakyan said in a statement.

The applicants to the ECHR are two Armenian nationals, Hayk Makuchyan and Samvel Minasyan, who is now deceased. Minasyan’s widow and their two children are pursuing the case in his stead. Gurgen Margaryan was the nephew of Samvel Minasyan.

Gurgen Margaryan was asleep in his room when Safarov attacked him with an axe.

After killing Margaryan, Safarov tried to break into the room of Hayk Makuchyan, another Armenian officer attending the training course.

“The ECHR had found that by pardoning the cruel murderer Azerbaijan violated Gurgen Margaryan and Hayk Makuchyan’s Article 2 (Right to Life) of the Convention and also recorded the Azerbaijani institutionalized policy of ethnic discrimination against Armenians. Nevertheless, the European court did not attribute Gurgen Margaryan’s murder and the attempted murder of Hayk Makuchyan per se to Azerbaijan, relying on the Hungarian court verdict’s conclusion claiming that Safarov committed these acts in a private status. The European Court had also freed Hungary of any responsibility. Given the legal significance of this case and the big public interest for it, we inform that the European court’s judgment has been appealed to the Grand Chamber prior to its initiation into force,” Sahakyan said.

During the trial in Hungary, Safarov admitted in court to having killed Margaryan because of his hatred towards Armenia and Armenians. He was sentenced to life in prison by the Hungarian court. However, in 2012 Hungary extradited him to Azerbaijan. He was released upon arrival, glorified on the state-level and pardoned by President Aliyev. On the same day, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan severed diplomatic relations with Hungary.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Yerevan to have 2008 March 1 memorial

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 16:07, 8 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. The Yerevan City Council approved the installation of a memorial in honor of the 2008 March 1 victims.

The memorial will be installed at the Children’s Park near the St. Gregory the Illuminator and Zakiyan intersection.

During the City Council session the councilors held a moment of silence in memory of the victims of the unrest. 

Earlier the government had allocated 2 million drams to the Yerevan City Hall for the designing works.

The design of artist Albert Vardanyan was awarded the project in an open tender.

March 1 colloquially refers to the 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan, when 10 people- including two police officers- died in clashes between protesters and security forces.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Gyumri to provide assistance to Lebanese-Armenians

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 16:41, 8 September, 2020

GYUMRI, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. Gyumri, Armenia’s second largest city, will provide 1 million AMD in aid to Lebanon’s Armenian community affected from the recent explosion in Beirut.

The respective decision was made by the City Council.

The money will be provided to the Hayastan All Armenian Fund as a donation which in its turn will direct these funds for that purpose.

“This is the case when we all unanimously support providing that assistance. Even 1 million AMD is not enough, but our budget now has this capacity, if we manage, we will further increase that money”, Gyumri Mayor Samvel Balasanyan said.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Inmate serving life sentence sets kettlebell Armenian record with 707 reps

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 16:43, 8 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. An Armenian convicted criminal serving a life sentence at the Nubarashen Correctional Facility has set a national record for the most kettlebell reps, the department of corrections said.

Inmate Tatul Mirzoyan, a regular attendant of the prison gym, lifted a 16kg kettlebell 707 times in 25 minutes using both arms interchangeably and was inducted into the Gyutsaznagirk – the Armenian equivalent of the Guinness book of records.

The record was set at the presence of the Gyutsaznagirk association on August 31.

The Deputy Warden of the Nubarashen prison Artak Manukyan handed over the official Gyutsaznagirk certificate to Tatul Mirzoyan.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

3rd President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan tests negative for COVID-19

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 16:48, 8 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. 3rd President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan has passed a novel coronavirus (COVID-19) test, and the result is negative, the former President’s Office said.

“In response to the questions of numerous media outlets, we would like to inform that 3rd President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan, who was diagnosed with acute respiratory infection accompanied by fever on September 2 after a medical examination, is recovering.

The coronavirus test result was negative”, the Office said in a statement.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Director of National Archive of Armenia dismissed

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 17:48, 8 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. Director of the National Archive of Armenia SNCO Amatuni Virabyan has been relieved from the position by the decree of Justice Minister Rustam Badasyan, the minister’s spokesperson Lusine Martirosyan said on Facebook.

“As I receive inquiries from media outlets about the grounds for Mr. Virabyan’s dismissal, I would like to inform that based on a number of appeals the Justice Ministry has started an examination aimed at checking the legal activity of the SNCO and submitted an inquiry to the State Revenue Committee for getting information about the tax inspections carried out in the National Archive. According to the information received, Director of the National Archive of Armenia SNCO Amatuni Virabyan conducting the accounting with such violations which caused tax decline as a result of which the tax liabilities were not made on time”, the spokesperson said.

Taking into account the aforementioned, the powers of Amatuni Virabyan as the Director of the National Archive of Armenia SNCO have been suspended.

Amatuni Virabyan has been serving as Director of the National Archive of Armenia since 2003.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan