Media Advocate: Negative articles on Arsen Torosyan prevail

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 13 2020

Negative media reports on Armenia’s Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan prevail, the Media Advocate initiative said in a statement on Thursday, presenting the results of its monitoring. The statement reads:

“From 1 to 10 August, 2020, the Media Advocate initiative followed online media reports on Armenian Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan’s personality and activities.

35 leading Armenian news agencies have been monitored․

In the specified period, 333 articles were declared, 176 of which were negative, 157 were neutral.

The negative articles published on Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan exceeded the number of neutral ones this time, no positive articles were declared.

The confrontation between the former head of the SCS (State Control Service) Davit Sanasaryan and Arsen Torosyan continues. According to Davit Sanasaryan, Arsen Torosyan must appear in the court as a witness. There will be surprising questions. He added: “If my powers had not been terminated, I would not have allowed the Commission for the Prevention of Corruption to study the case, because there is a specialized structure to deal with it, I would have instructed my employees to study and see how it turned out that he is a minister and makes a 170 million deal with a medical center run by his wife with a single purchase and without holding a tender. Let the relevant bodies find out, the prosecutor’s office also has something to do here.”

According to Marine Sukiasyan, who represents the Alternative Projects Group initiative, “Arsen Torosyan failed the fight against the epidemic, but he failed that case with others, that is, not alone. He failed the medical side of the disaster, but the deaths that exceeded 1000 have not stopped and this is not only a healthcare problem. Such a situation in a small country, where currently 40.000 patients are officially registered, can not go unnoticed. More than 1,000 deaths are not anonymous figures that are presented to the public every morning. Each of them is a personal, family tragedy.”

According to the press, Arsen Torosyan will be dismissed soon, the names of the candidates replacing Arsen Torosyan are even being discussed, they, by the way, according to various sources, are sponsored by the Prime Minister’s wife, Anna Hakobyan.

Tehmina Vardanyan, a member of Yerevan Council of Elders from the Luys fraction, thinks that Arsen Torosyan should resign: “It is clear that Arsen Torosyan’s great desire for the cult of his personal self exceeds the permissible limit, he does not stand anyone’s competence and professionalism. Do you know why? Complex, it is a pure complex. Of course, it is more difficult to work with a person with his own standpoint and qualities, on the same level, so that the advantages of the other person are not vivid. But not in this difficult situation. And, indeed, if there is anyone who has to resign, it is you, Mr. Torosyan. Respect us, respect the people and leave! For God’s sake, leave…”

Recently, the director of Nork Infectious Diseases Clinical Hospital, Mher Davidyants, resigned. It was mentioned in the press that Arsen Torosyan will appoint his close friend Hovhannes Madoyan as the director of Nork Infectious Diseases Clinical Hospital, who has certain ties with Soros and is the program consultant of the “Real World, Real People” NGO. The latter is a prominent Soros-related specialist who has been working in an NGO for more than 15 years, and is engaged in defending the interests of HIV-infected people.”

Azerbaijani president ‘concerned’ about recent Russian arms shipments to Armenia

AMN – Al Masdar News
Aug 13 2020

BEIRUT, LEBANON (8:30 P.M.) – Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev expressed his disapproval of Russian arms supplies to Armenia this week, while holding a telephone meeting with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin. on Wednesday.

According to the Tass News Agency, Aliyev expressed his country’s “concern about  military shipments from Russia to Armenia.”

The press office of the President of Azerbaijan stated: “Ilham Aliyev indicated that the volume of military shipments that were delivered immediately after the armed clashes on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border (in July) from Russia to Armenia using the airspace of Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Iran, exceeded 400 tons, and stressed that the main purpose of his phone call is to clarify this problem. ”

The press office said that Aliyev “drew the attention of the Russian {resident to the fact that the intensity of military shipments from Russia to Armenia after July 17 until now, after the end of the clashes on the Armenian-Azerbaijani borders, raises the concern of the Azerbaijani people and their serious questions.”

The press office indicated that during the conversation that took place on the initiative of the Azerbaijani side, the two parties also discussed issues of bilateral cooperation, and expressed their common desire to further strengthen the Azerbaijani-Russian partnership in all fields.

The Kremlin press office said on Wednesday, that the two leaders exchanged views during the conversation on regional issues in the context of the escalation of the situation on the Azerbaijani-Armenian borders in July.

The press office added that the Russian side stressed the importance of preventing any action that would escalate tension in the region.

Armenia and Azerbaijan were involved in a fierce battle along their border, beginning on July 12th; this culminated in 18 deaths, including 12 Azerbaijani soldiers.


Coronavirus-affected tourism sector to receive aid from the Armenian government

JAM News
Aug 13 2020

    JAMnews, Yerevan
 

Companies working in the tourism sector will receive financial support from the Armenian government passed by the cabinet on August 13, including small hotels, spa resorts, travel agencies, companies that provide services to tourists, including catering, that were left without an income due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The state will support organizations that have at least three employees and that were created no later than the end of March 2020. The programme is primarily aimed at companies that have not laid off employees.

Who can benefit from the assistance?

Economy Minister Tigran Khachatryan explained that state aid will be issued in the form of grants to pay salaries.

Moreover, companies that have tried to avoid layoffs will receive special assistance. For example, if during the last year an organization managed to retain more than 70% of its staff, it will be given a grant for every third employee, if they retained between 20% – 70% of staff, they will receive a grant for every fourth employee.

As for the timing, the program will run from July 2020 to March 2021. But if the financial position of the company stabilizes, then the support will stop – for example, if during a certain quarter the turnover of the organization exceeds 70% of the turnover of the same quarter of the last year.

Companies that received assistance in 2019 in the form of a VAT refund of more than 50 million drams (approximately $104,000) and still let go of 50% of their staff will not be eligible for aid.

Enterprises that hide their turnover and do not issue cash receipts will not be eligible either.

“If a company has violated the rules for using cash registers and this act has not been appealed, then from this month the company will cease to be a beneficiary of the programme,” the Minister of Economy said.

How much have anti-crisis programmes cost the state?

In total, the Armenian government has launched 24 anti-crisis programmes to overcome the consequences of the coronavirus.

They were intended to help businesses and the poor. As of August 12, 144.5 billion drams (about $300 million) have been allocated for these programmes, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at a government meeting:

“Of these, 26.2 billion drams (almost $55 million) has already been spent on social programs, 17.5 billion drams (over $36 million) on economic programmes, and another 19.9 billion drams (about $42 million) have been transferred through banks.”

Aliyev airs grievances to Putin over arms shipments to Armenia

EurasiaNet.org
Aug 13 2020
Joshua Kucera Aug 13, 2020

New documentary explores Gaza in photos of Armenian photographer Kegham Djeghalian

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 13 2020
 
 
 
 
 
A new Deutsche Welle documentary retraces the work of Armenian photographer Kegham Djeghalian, who captured life in Gaza, between Israel and Egypt, from the 1940s to the 1970s.
 
At his home in Gaza City, Marwan Tarazi keeps a little treasure wrapped in plastic bags and stored in boxes: photos and negatives from the 1940s to the 1970s. They portray a part of life in the Gaza Strip during that period and are part of the legacy of Armenian photographer Kegham Djeghalian, who opened one of the first photo studios in Gaza City in the 1940s, Deutsche Welle reports.
 
The black-and-white photos show a little-known side of Gaza. Some photos show the train station along the Gaza-Egypt railroad which has been long destroyed. Others are artistically lit studio portraits from the pre-selfie era, when a visit to a photographer was something special.
 
Kegham’s lens also captured political events: The Palestinian refugee crisis after the creation of the State of Israel in 1948 and the Egyptian rule in Gaza until 1967.
 
Kegham Djeghalian’s mother had to flee with him as a toddler when the Armenian Genocide took place after 1915. First, they were displaced to Syria. Later, when his mother died, he was sent as a teenager to stay with relatives in Jerusalem, which was under the British Mandate at that time.
 
Then in the early 1940s, Kegham Djeghalian went to Gaza and started to work as photographer.
 
“I don’t know why my father went to Gaza at that time,” DW quotes his daughter Anahid Boutin as saying. Born in Gaza, she lives in France today.
 
“Maybe my father thought this is the best place to find work,” she adds, as many Armenians went to the Middle East looking for work at the time.
 
Several prominent Armenian photographers became known for documenting events in Jerusalem and other places during the early part of 20th century.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Armenian church left neglected, looted in Turkey

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 13 2020

Armenian envoy briefs UN chief on inter-ethnic clashes incited by Azerbaijan

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 13 2020

Berlin hosts exhibition dedicated to Armenia and Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 13 2020
 
 
 

The Wolf & Galentz Gallery in Berlin, Germany, hosts an exhibition of photos dedicated to Armenia and Artsakh and paintings by Armenian artists, Artsakh’s Foreign Ministry informs.
 
The exhibition that opened on August 9 is co-organized by the European and Armenian Professionals Association NGO and Berlin-based Armenian artist Archi Galentz, with the support of the Foreign Ministry of the Republic of Artsakh.
 
The exhibition, which will run until August 30, 2020, presents the rich historical and cultural heritage of Armenia and Artsakh, as well as reflects on the consequences of the war unleashed by Azerbaijan against the Republic of Artsakh in 2016.
 
Representatives of the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia to Germany and the Armenian community of Berlin, as well as clergymen and artists were present at the opening of the exhibition.

EBRD Ends Investment In Controversial Armenia Gold Mine

OOSKA News
Aug 13 2020

YEREVAN

European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) investment in a controversial $400m gold mine in Armenia is to end, a new assessment by the bank’s complaint body states. The London-based development bank has funded exploration, drilling and feasibility studies and environmental and social mitigation measures by Lydian since 2009, and has been targeted with criticism by civil society groups over its support for the company.

Residents of Yekmalyan Street in Yerevan stage protest outside Armenia government building

News.am, Armenia
Aug 13 2020

13:23, 13.08.2020
                          

YEREVAN. – The residents of Yekmalyan Street in capital city Yerevan, and who have fallen victim to the eminent domain, on Thursday gathered again outside the main building of the government of Armenia, demanding a meeting and discussion of their problem with the relevant bodies.

The patience of the residents—who have been waiting for their new apartments for about 15 years—seems to have run out, and they announced that they will petition to embassies of various countries to request for accommodation.

These persons, who have lost their homes at the aforesaid street and have since lived on rent or in dilapidated houses for many years, are also disappointed by the incumbent authorities’ inaction toward resolving their issue.

The participants of Thursday’s protest added that their respective petitions to the Yerevan city also remain unanswered, and they are unable to meet with Mayor Hayk Marutyan.