Tert.am: Armenia National Security Service chief appoints wedding’s best man to position

News.am, Armenia
July 8 2020
Tert.am: Armenia National Security Service chief appoints wedding’s best man to position Tert.am: Armenia National Security Service chief appoints wedding’s best man to position

18:49, 08.07.2020
                  

Argishti Kyaramyan appointed the best man at his wedding to a position ten days after he was appointed Director of the National Security Service of Armenia.

According to Tert.am newspaper, Artur Nahapetyan, who was Kyaramyan’s best man at his wedding, has been appointed to the position of Head of the Investigation Department of the National Security Service.

According to the source, this isn’t the only problematic appointment that Kyaramyan has made that has sparked complaints from employees of the Service.

Nahapetyan was appointed Head of the Social Sector Supervision Department when Kyaramyan was head of the State Supervision Service. Before that, Nahapetyan was an investigator of the Investigative Committee and a prosecutor in Armenia’s Shirak Province, as well as head of the First Division of the Inquest Department of the State Revenue Committee.

Yeghishe Kirakosyan: Armenia Government sends answers to ECHR’s questions, decision expected this week

News.am, Armenia
July 8 2020
Yeghishe Kirakosyan: Armenia Government sends answers to ECHR’s questions, decision expected this week Yeghishe Kirakosyan: Armenia Government sends answers to ECHR’s questions, decision expected this week

18:15, 08.07.2020
                  

Greek Parliament ratifies the Armenia-EU Agreement

Public Radio of Armenia
July 8 2020

White House policy on Armenian Genocide ‘unchanged’

Public Radio of Armenia
July 8 2020

Sports: Huge match-fixing scheme uncovered in Armenian soccer

EurasiaNet.org
July 8 2020
Ani Mejlumyan Jul 8, 2020

Armenian assault rifle factory begins production

JANES
July 8 2020

by Charles Forrester

The assembly of Kalashnikov AK-103 assault rifles under licence in Armenia has commenced at the Neutron GAM facility, the country’s government has revealed.

A tour by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Minister of Defence David Tonoyan and Minister of High-Tech Industry Hakob Arshakyan on 7 July revealed a number of aims for the factory, as well as other defence industrial projects for the Caucasian country.

The new facility will be able to produce up to 50,000 rifles per year, according to a press release by Pashinyan’s office.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan inspects an assault rifle during a visit to Armenia’s Kalashnikov assault rifle factory. (Press Office of the Government of Armenia)

Neutron’s ammunition production lines are also being moved from the company’s current facility in the capital Yerevan to the neighbouring province of Kotayk. Following refurbishment, the facility will be able to produce 7.62 × 39 mm, 7.62 × 54 mm, 12.7 mm, and 9 × 18 mm and 9 × 19 mm ammunition. The modernisation of equipment for the 7.62 × 39 mm, 7.62 × 54 mm, and 12.7 mm production lines is being performed through a USD24 million contract with Russia’s Spetsmashingeneering.

Armenia: Japan provides US$3.7m grant for medical equipment

Laing Buisson News
July 8 2020

The Japanese government has provided a US$3.7m grant to help the Armenian government buy Japanese medical equipment.

This project intends to assist Armenia in its fight against the Covid-19 epidemic, by strengthening its mid- to long-term healthcare and medical systems. The Japanese embassy in Yerevan said that the latest generation of MRI system and other items will considerably upgrade the current level of medical service in the country, alleviating various health-related issues and saving peoples’ lives.

“On behalf of the Japanese government, I would like to highlight the utmost importance and timeliness of this project, particularly in view of the current situation of COVID-19 pandemic in Armenia and the world,” said ambassador Jun Yamada.

“I sincerely hope that the new equipment from Japan will contribute to significantly upgrading capacity of healthcare and medical institutions in the country, thus saving more lives and enhancing the living standard of the Armenian people,” he added.

Armenia reports 535 new coronavirus cases in past day

TASS, Russia
July 8 2020
The country’s prime minister announced on Monday that the government would extend the emergency regime in effect since March by another month from July 14, unless the situation changed for the better

YEREVAN, July 8. /TASS/. Coronavirus cases in Armenia grew by 535 in the past twenty-four hours compared to 349 a day earlier, the republic’s Health Ministry reported on Wednesday.

“In the past twenty-four hours, 535 new coronavirus cases were identified and 520 patients recovered from the illness. To date, 17,427 patients have recovered while the total number of the infected stands at 29,820,” the ministry said in a statement.

Eighteen patients died at Armenian hospitals in the past twenty-four hours, bringing fatalities to 521 since the start of the pandemic in the republic. Yerevan hospitals conducted over 2,000 coronavirus tests in the past twenty-four hours, the latest data indicate.

The Armenian population equals 2.9 million people, which means that the coronavirus infection has been identified among about 1% of the republic’s residents since the start of the pandemic in the country. Over this time, more than 127,000 coronavirus tests have been conducted in Armenia and over 23% of them have been positive.

The situation with the coronavirus outbreak remains tense in Armenia. The authorities are emphasizing that the basic problem is that Armenian citizens do not fully realize that they are massively breaching anti-epidemic requirements.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan numerously urged citizens to comply with anti-epidemic requirements and personally went out into the streets several times to give out face masks to passers-by. Pashinyan announced on Monday that the government would extend the emergency regime in effect since March by another month from July 14, if the situation did not change for the better.

In late December 2019, Chinese officials notified the World Health Organization (WHO) about the outbreak of a previously unknown pneumonia in the city of Wuhan, in central China. Since then, cases of the novel coronavirus — named COVID-19 by the WHO — have been reported in every corner of the globe.

On March 11, 2020, the WHO declared the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic. According to the latest statistics, over 11,965,660 people have been infected worldwide and more than 546,980 deaths have been reported. In addition, so far, over 6,913,790 individuals have recovered from the illness across the globe.



Op-ed: how Armenian relations with the Kremlin affect domestic political processes

JAM News
July 8 2020
 
 
 
 
Armine Martirosyan, Yerevan
 
 
The Armenian opposition claims the authorities are purposefully causing a deterioration in Armenian-Russian allied relations, assessing the attempts of the Armenian government which came to power after the “velvet” revolution of 2018 to strengthen the sovereignty of the country, build its own foreign policy and withstand external pressure as “anti-Russian”.
 
 What is happening in the domestic political life of Armenia? How do Armenian-Russian relations figure in the issue? Below, political observer Hakob Badalyan weighs in.
 
The struggle for Russian patronage
 
The post-revolutionary stage of the domestic political life of Armenia has moved into a stage of political struggle. Forces that, one way or another, were involved in the revolutionary process on the basis of their own interests, have begun an active struggle before the next parliamentary elections, although they are planned for 2023.
 
In parallel, the process of reformatting Armenian-Russian relations is taking place and these two processes are quite closely interconnected.
 
Armenia has always been in the zone of influence of Russian interests, and, by and large, domestic political life in the country has always been a kind of shadow process of Armenian-Russian relations.
 
The entire internal political struggle in Armenia, resistance or competition, must be viewed through the prism of the struggle between Armenian sovereignty and Russian superpower interest.
 
The Russian elite could never and cannot imagine an Armenia which is building an independent foreign policy. And in Armenia, I must admit, there have always been forces that, tirelessly, demonstrated their loyalty to Russia.
 
This approach is inherent in apolitical elites and societies that do not have state thinking and traditions.  That is, people do not strive for the possibility of becoming an independent entity, but seek a strong center that will provide them with dominant positions in domestic political field (money, power).
 
Russian imperialism and the Armenian “I”
 
 Times are changing, and today we are witnessing a reformatting of Armenian-Russian relations.
 
After the “velvet” revolution, the Armenian authorities began to promote the principle of mutual recognition of the sovereignty of both states and non-interference in the internal affairs of each country.
 
At the same time, there are forces that are trying to present this process as manipulation of the Armenian-Russian relations.
 
They speculate on various issues, in particular, anti-corruption processes, which affected, inter alia, the interests of Russian companies operating in Armenia. The refusal of the new government to engage in the corruption that existed before the revolution are represented by the opponents of Nikol Pashinyan as an attempt to have Russian companies withdraw from Armenia on the order of the West.
 
The processes pertaining to the Constitutional Court have also proved fertile ground for manipulation. The government seeks to replace the members of the court, claiming they are illegitimate and loyal to the old guard. Russian elites, political and economic circles who do not want changes in the format of Armenian-Russian relations use the topic of the resignation of members of the Constitutional Court, appointed under the previous government, as an instrument of pressure on Armenia.
 
 
 
The Armenian authorities have repeatedly stated that relations with Russia should be based on mutually beneficial common interests, and this is not to everyone’s liking.  Representatives of the Russian elite use the vassal status of Armenia for financial and political purposes. They enjoy the support of some forces in Armenia, which now and then put forward a thesis about the ‘anti-Russianness’ of the current government.
 
Recently, leader of the Prosperous Armenia party and one of the richest people in Armenia Gagik Tsarukyan announced the aggravation of ‘anti-Russian relations’ and emphasized that anti-state and anti-Armenian forces are responsible, and that he would do everything to prevent the growth of anti-Russian sentiments.
 
Protect your own interests
 
A similar game had already been started once, when during the era of Serzh Sargsyan’s presidency, Armenia moved towards European integration, and Armenia was actively led  away from this path. As a result, Armenia refused to sign the Association Agreement with the European Union and joined the Eurasian Economic Union, operating under the leadership of Russia.
 
But today in Armenia there is a legitimate government, which has great public support, and in conditions when the old world order is falling apart and a new one is forming, it should advance its own interests. In this new situation, it is not known what will happen to Russia in 5 or 10 years, whether it will have the same opportunities in the region, whether it can provide some kind of protective barriers for Armenia.
 
 Armenia should build its foreign policy in such a way as not to be dependent on the support of Russia alone, even more so given Russia is still committed to the Russian-Turkish treaties signed in the last century, on the basis of which the Armenian lands were divided, and also given that Russia has sold billions of dollars of weapons to Azerbaijan, which led to the April war in 2016.
 
We have no guarantees that tomorrow Russia will not bargain with Turkey at our expense, so reformatting Armenian-Russian relations based on common interests is a vital issue.
 
Armenia needs a strategic partnership with Russia just as much as Russia needs a strategic partnership with Armenia. The prospect of equal relations has no alternative for both sides
 
 
 
 
 
 

More than 1% of Armenia have COVID-19

Vestnik Kavkaza
July 8 2020
8 Jul in 12:20

Coronavirus cases in Armenia grew by 535 in the past twenty-four hours compared to 349 a day earlier, the republic’s Health Ministry reported on Wednesday.

“In the past twenty-four hours, 535 new coronavirus cases were identified and 520 patients recovered from the illness. To date, 17,427 patients have recovered while the total number of the infected stands at 29,820,” the ministry said in a statement.

Eighteen patients died at Armenian hospitals in the past twenty-four hours, bringing fatalities to 521 since the start of the pandemic in the republic. Yerevan hospitals conducted over 2,000 COVID-19 tests in the past twenty-four hours, the latest data indicate.

The Armenian population equals 2.9 million people, which means that the coronavirus infection has been identified among about 1% of the republic’s residents since the start of the pandemic in the country. Over this time, more than 127,000 coronavirus tests have been conducted in Armenia and over 23% of them have been positive, TASS reported.

The situation with the coronavirus outbreak remains tense in Armenia. The authorities are emphasizing that the basic problem is that Armenian citizens do not fully realize that they are massively breaching anti-epidemic requirements.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan numerously urged citizens to comply with anti-epidemic requirements and personally went out into the streets several times to give out face masks to passers-by. Pashinyan announced on Monday that the government would extend the emergency regime in effect since March by another month from July 14, if the situation did not change for the better.