Armenian PM tells Putin he won’t be able to attend Victory Parade in Moscow over pandemic

TASS, Russia
Nikol Pashinyan said he hoped that he would soon be able to meet with the Russian leader and discuss the issues of the two countries’ allied relations

YEREVAN, June 19. /TASS/. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told Russian President Vladimir Putin he would be unable to attend the Victory Parade in Moscow over the tense coronavirus situation in the republic, according to Pashinyan’s letter published by his press office on Friday.

“Mr. President, I am telling you with regret that I won’t be able to attend the events devoted to the 75th anniversary of the Victory in the Great Patriotic War,” the letter reads.

Lithuanian medics and experts arrive in Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
 
 
 
 

The European Union and Sweden have joined efforts with Lithuania to support Armenia to mitigate the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences.

The Lithuanian medical team comprising medical workers and experts has already arrived in Armenia. The medical team has also brought medical equipment and supplies.

The team will work alongside their Armenian colleagues to fight the virus for 14 days.

EU Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin, Lithuanian Ambassador Inga Stanytė-Toločkienė, Swedish Charge d’ Affairs a.i. Birger Karlson together with RA Deputy Foreign Minister Avet Adonts and First Deputy Minister of Health Anahit Avanesyan went to the airport to personally greet the arriving team and wish them good luck in their invaluable mission.

Lithuania sent medical personnel and medical aid to Armenia

Lithuania has sent medical staff and medical aid to Armenia. the mission will last 14 days

Gepostet von Government of RA am Freitag, 19. Juni 2020


Armenia MOD Spokesperson: Defense Ministry not officially notified about criminal case yet

News.am, Armenia

17:46, 19.06.2020
                  

CoE: Armenia: receipt of the 5th cycle State Report

Council of Europe

Armenia: receipt of the 5th cycle State Report 
              

Armenia submitted its Fifth State Report on 15 June 2020 pursuant to Article 25, paragraph 2, of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities.The report is available in English with its annexes 1-2, 3 and 4 as well as in Armenian with its annexes 1-2, 3 and 4.

It is now up to the Advisory Committee to consider it and adopt an opinion intended for the Committee of Ministers.

Armenia Investigative Committee: No criminal case instituted against defense minister

News.am, Armenia

23:15, 19.06.2020
                  

Hugo Boss opens new store in Armenia

Retail & Leisure International, UK

The new store is located on North Avenue, which is the luxury retail destination. The new store covers 120sq m and features the complete range of collections for men and women, including apparel, footwear and accessories.



NATO opens probe on France-Turkey naval incident in Mediterranean

Panorama, Armenia

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg has said the military alliance will investigate French accusations that Turkey’s navy failed to respond to an allied call for inspection this month in the Mediterranean, Al Jazeera reported.

Florence Parly, France’s armed forces minister, brought up the incident on Thursday during a meeting of NATO defense chiefs at a time when the two allies have traded barbs over the crisis in Libya, accusing each other of supporting opposing sides in the country’s war.

Paris has repeatedly accused Ankara of violating a United Nations arms embargo. Turkey rejects the French accusations and has denied that the incident as described by France ever occurred.

Parly said that on June 10 Turkish warships flashed their radar lights three times at the French warship Courbet in the eastern Mediterranean. She said the Courbet was on a NATO mission to check whether a Turkish vessel, the Cirkin, was smuggling arms to Libya after it turned off its transponder, failed to identify itself and did not give its final destination.
She added that Turkish sailors had also put on bullet-proof vests and stood behind their light weapons during the incident.

Turkish military officials on Thursday rejected the French accusations as baseless.

Poland sends protective gear to Georgia and Armenia – MFA

The First News

Polish military planes carrying protective gear for hospitals, doctors and nurses, has set off from Poland for Georgia and Armenia, while another plane with similar equipment is expected to reach Azerbaijan in coming days, the Foreign Ministry said on Friday.

Deputy Foreign Minister Paweł Jabłoński said that the transport is a gesture of solidarity with our partners, the Eastern Partnership countries.

According to Jan Dziedziczak from the PM’s office, the aid operation was co-organised by the Material Reserves Agency, the Polish Health and Defence Ministries and the Solidarity Fund.

The Foreign Ministry said that as part of the assistance, Poland provided medical masks, helmets and disinfectant to Armenia valued at PLN 106,000 (EUR 23,781). Georgia will be supported with protective helmets and disinfectants worth over PLN 183,000 (EUR 41,056), the ministry said.

The aid for Georgia is implemented by Poland under the auspices of NATO’s Euro-Atlantic Disaster Response Coordination Centre (EADRCC), the ministry said.

Turkish Presidential Board Denies Armenian Genocide

Persecution.org – International Christian Concern

06/19/2020 Turkey (International Christian Concern) – On Tuesday, the High Advisory Board of the Turkish Presidency held a closed-door meeting to develop a response to so-called “groundless and anti-Turkey allegations” regarding the 1915 genocide against Christians.

President Erdogan and his communications director called the genocide a distorted historical event. The board accused the Armenian community of exploiting Ottoman pain and of slander for speaking about the genocide. This genocide is internationally recognized as a historically proven fact; one which Turkey has never apologized for. Instead Turkey has perpetuated and maintained those policies which led to the genocide.

Failure to acknowledge the genocide and Turkey’s intense efforts to deny it have led to significant persecution for the Christian communities who remain in Turkey. These issues cannot be understood without the historical context of the genocide, and the government actively discourages Christians from explaining this perspective. Turkey’s propaganda efforts regarding the genocide often includes language which justifies the mass murder of Christians, thus encouraging social hostilities towards Christians that have at times been expressed through deadly violence.

Turkey purports to safeguard religious freedom. But until the genocide is recognized, healing cannot occur within Turkish society.

Armenia President: I believe presidential institution must be out of political debates

News.am, Armenia

17:05, 19.06.2020