RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/20/2020

                                        Monday, 
Tobacco Firm Remains Armenia’s Top Taxpayer
Armenia -- Workers at a tobacco fermentation factory in the town of Masis.
An Armenian tobacco company remained the country’s number one corporate taxpayer 
in the first half of this year, the State Revenue Committee (SRC) said on Monday.
The government agency comprising the national tax and customs services reported 
that the company, Grand Tobacco, paid 26.3 billion drams ($54 million) in 
various taxes in January-June.
The national gas distribution company owned by Russia’s Gazprom giant was the 
second most important contributor to Armenia’s state budget, followed by the 
country’s largest mining company, the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine (ZCMC). 
The SRC collected 26 billion drams and 21.6 billion drams respectively from 
these companies.
Armenia’s 20 leading businesses also include other tobacco and mining firms, 
fuel importers, telecommunication operators, a supermarket chain, two banks and 
the Metsamor nuclear plant. The SRC detailed their fiscal payments in a 
quarterly report listing the country’s 1,000 largest corporate taxpayers. The 
latter paid a combined 492.7 billion drams (just over $1 billion) in taxes in 
the six-month period, according to the report.
The figure accounted for more than 72 percent of all taxes and other duties 
collected by the SRC. The Armenian government’s first-half tax revenue was down 
by 4.6 percent year on year, reflecting the coronavirus-driven recession in the 
country.
Armenia - A tobacco field.
Grand Tobacco and two other local tobacco firms are part of the Grand Holding 
group founded by Hrant Vartanian, a prominent businessman who died in 2014.The 
conglomerate, which also comprises the country’s largest chocolate and 
confectionery manufacturer, is now owned and run by Vartanian’s two sons. Much 
of the tobacco used by it is grown in Armenia.
The Armenian cigarette manufacturers have rapidly expanded since 2013 on the 
back of their soaring cigarette exports to the Middle East and Iraq in 
particular. According to government data, Armenian exports to Iraq stood at 
about $58 million in the first five months of this year. Cigarettes accounted 
for most of those exports.
Grand Tobacco became Armenia’ second largest taxpayer in 2018 and topped the tax 
rankings last year with 57 billion drams ($118 million) in total payments.
Armenian Government Vows To Expand Coronavirus Testing
        • Tatevik Lazarian
Russia -- A staff member of AltraVita fertility clinic takes a swab from an 
outdoor booth as a woman undergoes a test for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) 
in Moscow, June 11, 2020
Health authorities in Armenia pledged on Monday to sharply increase the number 
of coronavirus tests as part of their ongoing efforts to stop the spread of 
COVID-19.
The authorities have carried out an average of more than 2,000 tests a day for 
the past month.
“Efforts are underway to increase the number of tests to about 3,000-4,000,” 
said Alina Nikoghosian, the spokeswoman for the Armenian Ministry of Health. 
“That will lead to the detection of more coronavirus and pneumonia cases.”
According to the ministry, the total number of tests carried out in Armenia 
since the start of the coronavirus pandemic reached 147,108 on Sunday. Nearly 
35,000 infections were detected as a result.
Critics have for months urged the government to significantly expand coronavirus 
testing, saying that is vital for tackling the pandemic in the virtual absence 
of lockdown restrictions in the country of about 3 million.
The government has put the emphasis of getting Armenians to practice social 
distancing, wear mandatory face masks in public and follow other anti-epidemic 
rules. Government officials insisted last week that this strategy is working.
They argued that the daily number of COVID-19 cases has averaged between 500 and 
600 in the last few weeks after growing steadily since mid-April. Deputy Prime 
Minister Tigran Avinian said it is projected to shrink by more than half by 
early September.
Armenia -- A doctor wearing a face mask and protective gear gives a call as she 
stands next to an ambulance at the Grigor Lusavorich Medical Centre in Yerevan, 
June 1, 2020
Nikoghosian likewise spoke of a decreased number of infected people requiring 
hospitalization. The authorities therefore do not need to set up more hospital 
beds for COVID-19 patients, she said.
“Until recently we discharged 20-25 people a day and as many hospital beds were 
immediately occupied by new patients,” said Karen Poghosian, the deputy director 
of one of the Yerevan hospitals treating such patients. “But now 8 to 10 beds 
remain vacant. This suggests that the overall number of infected people who need 
hospitalization has fallen.”
“So we too see a downward trend,” Poghosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “We 
hope that it continues and we successfully complete our mission.”
So far there has been no noticeable drop in Armenia’s coronavirus mortality 
rate. The Ministry of Health reported on Monday morning that that 13 more people 
infected with the virus died in the past day. The ministry said COVID-19 was the 
primary cause of 9 of those deaths.
The official death toll thus rose to 650. The figure does not include the deaths 
of 209 other infected people which the ministry says were caused by other, 
pre-existing illnesses.
Armenia Says In Touch With Russian Military On Azeri Border Clashes
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia - Soldiers at a military base in Tavush province, October 30, 2018.
The Armenian and Russia militaries have communicated with each other in 
connection with deadly clashes that broke out on Armenia’s border with 
Azerbaijan on July 12, official Yerevan said on Monday.
The hostilities, which left at least 12 Azerbaijani and 4 Armenian soldiers 
dead, largely ground to a halt on July 16. The two conflicting sides have 
reported no serious ceasefire violations along the heavily fortified border 
since then. Each side continued on Monday to accuse the other of sporadically 
shooting small arms at various sections of the frontier, including the scene of 
last week’s fighting.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Anna Naghdalian, said the American, 
French and especially Russian co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group have been 
“actively involved” in efforts to restore the ceasefire in Armenia’s Tavush 
province bordering the Tovuz district in western Azerbaijan.
“The Armenian foreign minister [Zohrab Mnatsakanian] has been in constant 
contact with his Russian counterpart,” Naghdalian told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service. “There have also been contacts at the level of military officials of 
the two countries”
Naghdalian did not give details of the Russian-Armenian military contacts.
The Armenian and Azerbaijani militaries established a new direct channel of 
communication after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev agreed in 2018 to boost the ceasefire regime along the 
internationally recognized border between their countries and “the line of 
contact” around Karabakh. Truce violations there decreased significantly as a 
result.
Yerevan and Baku blame each other for the July 12 flare-up which marked the 
worst escalation of the conflict since 2016. They also accuse one another of 
dealing a severe blow to the Karabakh peace process mediated by the Minsk Group 
co-chairs.
Aliyev on Thursday again threatened to withdraw from peace talks with Armenia, 
saying that they have been “meaningless” so far. He said the U.S., Russian and 
French mediators should do more to make the talks “substantive” in addition to 
trying to prevent violence.
In a weekend interview with the Sky News Arabia TV channel, Mnatsakanian said 
that last week’s hostilities demonstrated that “there can be no military 
solution to the conflict” and that continued negotiations are the only viable 
option.
Russia Said To Reassure Azerbaijan Over Military ‘Check’
Russia -- Russian President Vladimir Putin and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu 
attend a military parade, which marks the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory 
over Nazi Germany in World War Two, in Moscow, June 24, 2020
Russia has reportedly assured Azerbaijan that a snap "combat readiness check" of 
Russian troops ordered by President Vladimir Putin is not connected with the 
latest hostilities on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoygu announced the start of the "check" on 
Friday, saying that it will test the readiness of Russian armed forces for the 
Caucasus-2020 military exercises scheduled for September. He said it involves 
150,000 personnel and hundreds of aircraft and naval vessels deployed in 
Russia’s southern and western military districts bordering Ukraine, Georgia and 
Azerbaijan.
The state-run Russian news agency RIA Novosti reported that Azerbaijani Defense 
Minister Zakir Hasanov telephoned Shoygu on Saturday to discuss this military 
event and other issues of mutual interest.
“The Russian defense minister emphasized that this event was planned and is not 
connected in any way with the current situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border,” it quoted an unnamed “military-diplomatic source” as saying.
The “check” began as Putin chaired a session of Russia’s Security Council that 
discussed deadly clashes between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces that broke out 
on July 12 and left at least 16 soldiers dead. According to the Kremlin, Putin 
and other top Russian officials expressed “deep concern” over the fighting and 
stressed the “urgent need” to stop it.
The United States, the European Union as well as Iran have also urged Baku and 
Yerevan to show restraint without holding either side responsible for the 
escalation.
Armenia -- Armenian and Russian troops hold a joint military exercise, April 12, 
2019.
By contrast, Turkey, Azerbaijan’s closest ally, has blamed the Armenian side and 
promised military aid to Baku, raising the prospect of a more direct Turkish 
involvement in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi 
Akar said on Thursday that the Armenians will “certainly pay for what they have 
done” to Azerbaijan.
As part of its military alliance with Russia, Armenia hosts about 5,000 Russian 
troops mostly stationed along the South Caucasus state’s closed border with 
Turkey. The Russian military base headquartered in the Armenian city of Gyumri 
is technically part of Russia’s Southern Military District.
Commenting on the “check” ordered by Putin, an Armenian military spokesman, 
Artsrun Hovannisian said: “Russia is a big country with a powerful military and 
it may often organize such activities. I cannot comment on their connection with 
political or other events.”
Hovannisian also told reporters that Russian troops stationed in Armenia as well 
as an Armenian army regiment will take part in Russia’s upcoming Caucasus-2020 
war games.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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CivilNet: Recent Survey Indicates High Levels of Public Satisfaction with Armenian Government’s Coronavirus Response

CIVILNET.AM

13:38

By Mark Dovich

Survey data collected last month by the International Republican Institute (IRI), a Washington-based think tank, indicate relatively high levels of public satisfaction with the Armenian government’s response to the pandemic, in line with other surveys showing a steady increase in public trust in state institutions over the past few years. The poll, funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development, involved a representative sample of more than 1,500 permanent residents of Armenia.

Overall, 71 percent of respondents reported being “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with the Armenian government’s response to the pandemic. An even higher percentage of respondents (81 percent) reported being “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with the government’s “efforts in communicating to the public health-related risks associated with the pandemic.” Finally, the majority of respondents (85 percent) also reported being “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with the efforts of the Commandant’s Office, which coordinates the government’s coronavirus response. 

Likewise, the majority of respondents reported holding “very” or “somewhat” favorable views of three public officials who have played key roles in combating the coronavirus outbreak in Armenia: Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan (84 percent), Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan (58 percent), and Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan (59 percent), who also heads the Commandant’s Office. 

Moreover, when asked in the IRI survey if their opinions of state institutions improved or worsened in light of the pandemic, the majority of respondents reported “better” opinions of three state bodies: the police (65 percent), the Ministry of Health (64 percent), and the prime minister’s office (58 percent).

Such high levels of public trust are particularly important when considering that 74 of respondents in the IRI survey agreed that “it is the shared responsibility of the government and the people to combat coronavirus” when prompted to give their opinion on state versus individual responsibility in responding to the pandemic.

However, the survey also indicates high levels of public concern about the coronavirus, with 85 percent of respondents saying they are “very” or “somewhat” concerned that they, their family, or someone they know will become infected—despite the fact that 62 percent of respondents reported not knowing anyone who has been diagnosed with the disease.

The percentage of respondents saying they are “very” or “somewhat” concerned about the effect of the pandemic on Armenia’s economy is even higher, at 90 percent. In fact, 68 percent of respondents reported that their household economic situation has worsened “somewhat” or “a lot” since the coronavirus outbreak, while a mere 2 percent of respondents said that their household economic situation has improved since that time.

Respondents were much more split when asked when they expect daily life to “return to the way it used to be” before the outbreak: 9 percent answered “immediately,” 29 percent answered “within six months,” 17 percent answered “within one year,” 19 percent answered “after more than one year,” and 26 percent answered “do not know.”  

The IRI survey also included a number of questions about the role the media plays in informing Armenians about the pandemic. Overall, the majority of respondents (61 percent) again expressed being “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with “the performance of Armenian mass media in general.” Similarly, 68 percent of respondents labeled Armenia’s “national media outlets” “very” or “somewhat” trustworthy. Concerningly, though, 66 percent also reported “encountering information in the media (social media included) regarding coronavirus that [they] believe is misleading or false” on at least a weekly basis.

As of July 20, Armenia had confirmed nearly 35,000 coronavirus cases, according to the World Health Organization.

Armenia Ombudsman receives 794 complaints regarding measures for neutralization of COVID-19’s economic consequences

News.am, Armenia
Armenia Ombudsman receives 794 complaints regarding measures for neutralization of COVID-19’s economic consequences Armenia Ombudsman receives 794 complaints regarding measures for neutralization of COVID-19’s economic consequences

12:46, 20.07.2020
                  

Armenian servicemen ask to delay demobilization until final victory

Public Radio of Armenia

UN chief urges ‘maximum restraint’ by Azerbaijan, Armenia after clashes

Ahram Online, Egypt
Reuters , Monday 20 Jul 2020

File Photo: United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres (Photo courtesy of UN official Twitter account)
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged Azerbaijan and Armenia on Monday to exercise maximum restraint after border clashes between the long-feuding former Soviet republics.

“The secretary-general is following with deep concern the current tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia. He calls for maximum restraint, as a full conflict between these two countries would be disastrous,” UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

The neighbors have long been in conflict over Azerbaijan’s breakaway, mainly ethnic Armenian region of Nagorno-Karabakh. But the latest flare-ups are around the Tavush region in northeastern Armenia, some 300 km (190 miles) from the enclave.

Russia, which has a military base in Armenia, has urged the two sides to cease fire and show restraint. The Kremlin has said Moscow is ready to act as a mediator.

International concern is heightened because of the threat to stability in a region serving as a corridor for pipelines taking oil and gas from the Caspian Sea to global markets.


Armenians in Washington DC protest against Azerbaijani aggression

Public Radio of Armenia

Armenia has no intention of attacking Azerbaijan’s oil facilities: report

AMN Al-Masdar News

BEIRUT, LEBANON (9:10 A.M.) – Armenia has no intention of attacking oil and gas infrastructure on Azerbaijani soil, despite the ongoing clashes on the border, Artsrun Hovhannisyan, the Armenian Defence Ministry’s spokesman, said on Sunday.

According to Hovhannisyan, claims that the Armenian armed forces are plotting to disrupt the international energy infrastructure passing through Azerbaijan are a “false thesis put forward by Baku”.

“Technically, the Armenian armed forces could have done this a long time ago, but we have not had and do not have such plans. We believe that the oil and gas communications passing through this region belong to international companies, and these companies should be confident that Armenia is a guarantor, not a consumer of security. Armenia can better ensure their security than anyone else in the region”, Hovhannisyan told reporters.

The armed confrontation escalated on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border on 12 July, notably far from from the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, where the two have waged war for decades. The clashes took place near the Movses village along the contact line between Armenia’s Tavush province and Azerbaijan’s Tovuz province. Yerevan and Baku blamed the initiation of the firing on each other.

Azerbaijan has so far reported 12 troops killed as a result of armed hostilities, while Armenia has reported four fatalities. According to Yerevan, another 10 servicemen and one civilian have sustained injuries.

Armenia must actively be engaged in anti-Turkish fight to make the security threats coming from that country more visible: expert

Aysor, Armenia

Turkey’s threats to Armenia are not something new, but the rhetoric has become more radical and aggressive, expert from Hayatsk think-tank Hasmik Vardanyan told Aysor.am.

“The unconditioned assistance voiced by Turkey to Azerbaijan after the tension on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, including in military operations, contains nothing new for Armenia. Ankara assisted Baku in 2016 too when it unleashed war against Artsakh,” she said, stressing that Turkey periodically states about readiness to assist Azerbaijan in any way of settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Referring to the information that Turkey collects rebels in Syria to send to Azerbaijan, the expert said it is quite possible scenario in case of wide-scale military actions on Armenian-Azerbaijani and Artsakh-Azerbaijani borders.

“It is not a secret for anyone that a part of mercenaries fighting in Syrian are under Turkey’s control and after staying without “work” in Syria during the recent period, Turkey is transporting them to other countries, in particular to Libya, to solve its geo-political issues on site. On the background of the neo-ottoman policy carried out by Turkey and the promises given to Azerbaijan, the possibility of appearance of mercenaries from Syria in Azerbaijan is rather high,” Vardanyan said.

She noted that the threats voiced from Turkey are not just theoretical and may become a reality at any moment. The expert stressed that the Armenian diplomacy must consistently work to make it clear for the international community that the security threats Armenia faces from Turkey are real.

“Armenia must be actively engaged in the campaign of the countries fighting against Turkey’s destabilizing actions. We have demonstrated such activeness in Greek and Cypriot anti-Turkish initiatives, but we need to cooperate with Egypt, United Arab Emirates,” she noted.

“Armenia’s active engagement in anti-Turkish fight of the regional countries will not only make the security challenges coming from Turkey more visible to the world but will promote the boosting of the cooperation of countries engaged in anti-Turkish fight and increasing Armenia’s role in the region,” the expert concluded.

Russia hopes for urgent settlement of Armenia-Azerbaijan border situation, Kremlin says

TASS, RUSSIA
The situation on the Azerbaijan-Armenia border escalated on July 12

MOSCOW, July 20. /TASS/. Russia hopes that the situation on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan will settle as soon as possible, and the emotional background around this conflict will return to normal, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov stated on Monday, commenting the information of the influence of this conflict on the Moscow’s commercial sphere.

“We hope that as soon as possible this situation will be settled, and thus, the emotional background will also return to the normal track,” the Kremlin representative said.

He noted that in Moscow and in Russia in general many Azerbaijanis and Armenians with Russian passports reside, “and all of them are law-abiding citizens of the Russian Federation, they all are the respected members of our community.” “Yet it is obvious that the escalation on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border cannot leave those citizens of ours indifferent, and, of course, they show their emotional reaction,” the spokesman noted.

He reiterated that Russia urged both sides to demonstrate restraint, to return immediately to the ceasefire regime and to halt all expressions of violence.

The situation on the Azerbaijan-Armenia border escalated on July 12. Azerbaijan reported of the attempt of the Armenian armed forces to attack the positions of Azerbaijan’s army using artillery, while Yerevan reported that the border situation has aggravated after a breakthrough attempt on the part of Azerbaijan.

On July 18, Armenian ambassador to Russia Vardan Toganyan told TASS that the embassy had been receiving complaints from Armenian fruit exporting companies and shipping agents about “administrative problems in the Food City trading center – the impossibility for large-load vehicles to enter the premises of the organization.” A day late the ambassador reported that the situation with the Moscow sales of the Armenian fruit has in general normalized.

Winners of Viktor Ambartsumian International Science Prize 2020 revealed

Panorama, Armenia
Society 10:12 20/07/2020Armenia

Viktor Ambartsumian International Science Prize 2020 is awarded to Alexander Szalay, Isabelle Baraffe and Adam Burrows, Byurakan Observatory reports.

Viktor Ambartsumian International Science Prize is one of the important awards in Astronomy/Astrophysics and related sciences. It is being awarded to outstanding scientists from any country and nationality having significant contribution in science. The prize is being awarded since 2010 once every two years. In 2010-2016 the prize totaled $500,000, which was set by the Republic of Armenia government. Since 2018 the prize totals $300,000. The prize includes laureate honorary diploma, medal with certifying document, $200,000 equivalent cash award and $100,000 equivalent for further development of Astronomy/Astrophysics as well as related fields of Physics and Mathematics in Armenia, for the next two years after the prize award. This money should be used as follows: $50,000 for research projects, $25,000 for Armenian scientists’ foreign fellowships, $15,000 for organizing scientific meetings and schools in Armenia, $7,200 for scholoarships of M.Sc. students studying at state universities, and $2,800 for astronomy outreach projects.

The International Steering Committee (ISC) consists of 9 outstanding scientists: Prof. Radik Martirosyan (President of the Armenian National Academy of Sciences, Armenia, ISC Chair), Prof. Xavier Barcons (Germany), Prof. Jocelyn Bell Burnell (UK), Prof. Anatol Cherepashchuk (Russia), Prof. Michel Mayor (Switzerland), Prof. Vahe Petrosian (USA), Prof. Brian Schmidt (Australia), Prof. Joseph Silk (UK) and Prof. Ewine Van Dishoeck.

April 18 was the deadline for nominations, and ISC received nominations from national academies of sciences, universities, and observatories for 8 outstanding scientists and groups from different countries. After a thorough study of the nominated works, as well as independent referees’ reports, the Committee had several discussions and finally it was decided to award the half of the Prize to Prof. Alexander Szalay, and the other half to share between Prof. Isabelle Baraffe and Prof. Adam Burrows.

Prof. Alexander Szalay (Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA), nominated by Prof. Adam Riess, Nobel Prize Winner, “for his pioneering work on demonstrating that the Dark Matter in the Universe might be a neutral, weakly interacting particle and for his contributions to data-driven, statistical cosmology”.

Prof. Isabelle Baraffe (University of Exeter, UK, and CRAL/ENS de Lyon, CNRS, France), nominated by University of Exeter, “for her fundamental contributions to the field of low mass stars, brown dwarfs and exoplanets, and for innovative ideas in the domains of asteroseismology and compact binaries”.

Prof. Adam Burrows (Department of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University, USA), nominated by Princeton University, “for his seminal and pioneering contributions to the theories of brown dwarfs and exoplanets and for his leadership role in educating a generation of scientists at the frontiers of brown dwarf and exoplanet research”.

The official award ceremony will take place on September 18, 2020.