No new cases of COVID-19 in Artsakh over last 24 hours

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 11:18, 14 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 14, ARMENPRESS. The health ministry of Artsakh says there haven’t been new cases of COVID-19 in the country over the past day.

The number of active cases stands at 14.

The total cumulative number of confirmed cases in Artsakh is 251, with 236 recoveries as of August 14.  

Artsakh hasn’t had coronavirus-related deaths so far. However, 1 person infected with the virus had died, but the death was determined to be caused by another pre-existing illness. 

Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian CDC reports 276 new COVID-19 cases

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 11:08, 14 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 14, ARMENPRESS. 276 coronavirus cases were confirmed in the last 24 hours, the Armenian Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported. 267 patients recovered, bringing the total number of recoveries to 34164.

5 patients died from coronavirus complications over the past day, raising the total death toll to 814. The total death toll doesn’t include the deaths of 239 other people infected with the virus, who died from other pre-existing illnesses, according to health authorities.

The cumulative total number of confirmed cases stands at 41299.

As of August 14, the number of active cases stands at 6082.

A total of 181962 were conducted in the last 24 hours, of which 1465 in the last 24 hours.

Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia to continue “economic flight” – PM

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 11:20, 14 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 14, ARMENPRESS. In an interview with BBC HARDtalk’s Stephen Sackur, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan expressed certainty that Armenia will continue its economic growth which was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“In 2019 we had biggest economic growth in Europe, and we had big economic success, and our country made tremendous progress in all international ratings in terms of democracy, freedom of speech, independent judiciary, anti corruption policy, and international magazines two years in a row recognized Armenia as country of the year, not only in terms of democracy but in terms of economy as well. Yes, Of course the pandemic situation interrupted our economic flight but we will continue.

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia is in process of overcoming pandemic, says Prime Minister

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 11:53, 14 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 14, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan says it’s still too early to draw conclusions and make assessments on his government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and whether or not the authorities’ actions were sufficient.

“I think it is too early to have conclusions because unfortunately the pandemic is an evolving situation all over the world,” Pashinyan told BBC HARDtalk’s Stephen Sakur in an interview when asked about the Armenian response to the pandemic. 

He said that the Armenian government’s strategy on tackling the pandemic was designed appropriately for the country.

“Let’s make conclusion when globally the pandemic would be [defeated]”, he said.

Pashinyan said that Armenia is currently in the process of overcoming the pandemic.

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Self-determination of peoples is our fundamental value, says Italy’s Five Star Movement lawmaker

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 12:42, 14 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 14, ARMENPRESS. During August 6 hearings at the Italian Senate’s Foreign Relations committee regarding the recent escalation at the Armenia-Azerbaijan border, Senator Alberto Airola from the Five Star Movement – part of the ruling coalition – addressed the people’s self-determination.

“I would like to say that people’s self-determination is one of our Five Star Movement’s fundamental values, and I will tell you that we, as Italians, also need peace and not just gas and petroleum,” Airola said at the end of the Q&A.

The Armenian Ambassador to Italy Tsovinar Hambardzumyan participated in the hearings at the invitation of the Italian side.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Sports: Every goal and assist from Henrikh Mkhitaryan for Roma

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 16 2020

Blessing of grapes at St. James Armenian Cathedral in Jerusalem

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 16 2020


<img width=”960″ height=”720″ src=””https://en.armradio.am/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/xJerusalem-Grapes.jpg.pagespeed.ic.ZDVVJJSgHo.jpg” class=”attachment-full size-full wp-post-image” alt=”” srcset=”https://en.armradio.am/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/xJerusalem-Grapes.jpg.pagespeed.ic.ZDVVJJSgHo.jpg 960w, 300w, 768w” sizes=”(max-width: 960px) 100vw, 960px” data-pagespeed-url-hash=”298774989″/>

On , blessing of grapes took place at St. James Cathedral after the Divine Liturgy which was presided by His Beatitude Abp. Nourhan Manougian, the Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem.

This year the grapes were gifted by Avakian sisters, in memory of their sister Dr. Georgette Avakian.

Today, the Armenian Church celebrates the Feast of the Assumption of St. Mary, the Holy Mother of God. In the Calendar of the Armenian Church, this feast is the fourth of five major feasts that are commemorated, and is the oldest one dedicated to St. Mary.

Range Rover: The Armenian viper caper: Part II

Pique News Magazine, Canada
Aug 15 2020
 
 
 
RANGE ROVER: The Armenian viper caper: Part II
 
By: Leslie Anthony
 
Aram No. 1’s American Bulldog, Jingo, who occupies exactly one quarter of a car. Photo by Leslie Anthony
 
In the Armenian capital of Yerevan to report on efforts to save the critically endangered Armenian viper, I’d joined my former doctoral supervisor Dr. Bob, Russian scientist Kolya, and our Armenian host Aram, in whose fetid apartment we camped between field expeditions.
 
After 10 days in-country, bleary-eyed breakfast again consisted of leftover food and vodka from the night before, and strong, Turkish-style coffee (Aram insisted it was Armenian-style and the Turks stole the idea) whose thick, sugary residue seemed potentially lethal. As usual, Bob downed three before he could function.
 
Aram worked at the Department of Protected Area Management in the Agency for Bioresources Management of the Ministry of Nature Protection (not joking), partnering on endangered species issues with World Wildlife Fund (WWF). Such was his official mantle; his vocation was herpetology—the study of reptiles and amphibians—which he’d pursued under that science’s Russian doyen, Ilya Darevsky.
 
Following in his footsteps, as if madness were a family business, son Levon was also a herpetologist, heading a national campaign to save the threatened, almost-cute Darevsky’s viper. This diminutive, cold-tolerant creature was found along Armenia’s border with Georgia on a single misty ridge representing no more than a dirty sock in the vast, geologic laundry pile of the Caucasus, an area of exceptional biodiversity where Europe and Central Asia collided.
 
Although Darevsky’s viper was an interesting—if not integral—part of this biological crossroads, none of the country’s snakes inspired more fascination than its flagship serpent: the Armenian viper.
 
Of the many animals named for the prolific 18th-century German zoologist Gustav Radde, Montevipera raddei was the most striking, with prominently horn-rimmed eyes and off-setting rows of rust-orange spots along its brown-black body. Such comeliness, unfortunately, saw the reptile targeted by an exploding international pet trade, contributing to a decline already turbocharged by habitat loss.
 
Although one imagined the ornate pattern to be conspicuous, we’d soon discover that in the orange-lichen-spattered rubble of its high-altitude home, the creature virtually disappeared.
 
Next day found us flashing south beneath 5,500-metre Mount Ararat, geography funneling us into the axial of Armenia’s reluctant intersection with Turkey, Iran, and Azerbaijan. As usual, we’d been hours late leaving. At first, the two 4WD vehicles we’d commandeered seemed perfect for Bob, Kolya, Aram, Levon, myself and our mountain of luggage. Aram would pilot his own, but we soon learned another driver—also named Aram—would command the second, an officious white jeep constellated in WWF livery.
 
Tall, red-faced, chain-smoking and garbed in a smart grey tracksuit, soft-spoken Aram No. 2 looked to be moonlighting from the Russian mafia. The assessment wasn’t far off; for years he’d piloted sealed trucks between Yerevan and Moscow, paid in cash, never knowing what contraband he transported. Creeping road piracy had ruined that bonanza, so now he’d resorted to chauffeuring indigent scientists. Given the deadly cargo we’d soon be schlepping, it was arguable which gig was more dangerous.
 
We also apparently needed a snake-wrangling field hand named Alek. He showed up in military fatigues with a jarhead haircut and a look that suggested he’d be happy to snap someone’s neck if requested. He turned out to be more of a gentle giant, however, as did Jingo, Aram No. 1’s bone-white, 65-kilo American Bulldog, who usurped the final seat and any chance of elbow room.
 
With a head the size of a watermelon, furrowed forehead, slobbering jowls and an enormous tight, pink scrotum bulging horizontally behind him, Jingo was the ugliest dog I’d ever seen. It didn’t stop there. His left eye was both skewed and bi-coloured, its top crescent the same soft brown as his right, while most of the orb glowed icy blue, a perfect bilateral schizophrenia: sad, doe-eyed puppy on the right; leering, satanic murderer on the left. Far outweighing his slight owner, Jingo inspired disbelief in all who glimpsed him; even gas-station attendants stared dumbfounded.
 
“Surreal,” offered Bob as we crept out of town, a rolling Dali painting.
 
Yerevan slid by like an unfinished basement, a stark, depressing, post-communist visage of disintegrating Soviet crap. The new regime was building atop the old master’s mess, creating pockets of corruption-fuelled opulence amidst the general mediocrity of quotidian construction, the interstices liberally piled with twisted iron, concrete, ageless garbage, and a choke of invasive plants.
 
A plague of rodents rustled through it all, and, as a result, snakes driven from their habitat by housing construction were following this food source into the city. One man even caught a deadly Levantine viper in his fourth-floor apartment. The Agency for Extreme Situations (I am not making this up…) had recorded a spike in emergency calls involving snakes. From 1995 to 1999, the annual average had been 30, with almost no cases in Yerevan. In 2004, however, 67 Armenians suffered snakebite and three died. According to the Department for Acute Intoxication (…I swear), Yerevan’s medical centre dealt with 23 of those, and had already seen 12 more by early 2005.
 
The convoy pulled into a petrol station. Both No. 1 and No. 2 rolled down their windows, respective cigarettes bobbing. An attendant interrupted his card game to slouch over, smoke curling from his hand, and bargain over gas. Money changed hands, the tanks filled amid constant argument. Cigarettes burned. Trapped in the back seat of a two-door, Bob and I contemplated the possibility of incineration.
 
“Surreal,” he said again, quite unnecessarily.
 
Find The Armenian viper caper: Part 1 here. tuned for Part 3.
 
Leslie Anthony is a Whistler-based author, editor, biologist and bon vivant who has never met a mountain he didn’t like.
 
 
 

Book Review: “Silent Angel,” by Antonia Arslan – A Story from the Armenian Massacre

Ricochet
Aug 16 2020
Book: “Silent Angel,” by Antonia Arslan
A Story from the Armenian Massacre

Social support programs being developed for Lebanese-Armenians willing to settle in homeland

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 15 2020