Category: 2020
Turkish plan to invade Greece at the height of the Syrian war in 2014 is revealed in leaked documents
- The plans are thought to focus on maintaining military capabilities in the area
- They were leaked when accidentally submitted as part of some court filings
- News of the leaked documents come amid rising tensions between the countries
- Greece and Turkey have been enemies for a long time with a history of wars
Turkey developed a plan to invade Greece during the height of the war in Syria, according to leaked documents. The documents also included plans to invade Armenia.
The plans that were drawn up were named after an 11th century Turkish military commander, according to Nordic Monitor, who have seen the documents.
The documents were reportedly part of a PowerPoint presentation that was set to be given by the Turkish General Staff – who preside over the Armed Forces in Turkey – for internal planning review.
Greece and Turkey are old enemies and have a long history of violence, fighting a number of wars against one-another, particularly in the early 1900s.
The plans are believed to have centred around maintaining offensive and deterrence capabilities on the western front, while moving troops during the war in Syria.
Anti-Greek rhetoric has been growing in Ankara as the Erdoğan reigeme looks to bolster its influence in the area, as fears of a military confrontation between the two NATO allies are escalating.
Titled ‘TSK Çakabey Harekât Planlama Direktifi’ – TSK (Turkish Armed Forces) Çakabey Operation Planning Directive – the presentation was dated June 13, 2014 at the height of the Syrian civil war that started in 2011 as part of the Arab Spring.
The Nordic Monitor reported that this suggests that the plan was likely an updated version and finalised after a review of an earlier draft, and that the plan could still be active.
The documents also included a plan to invade Armenia called ‘TSK Altay Harekât Planlama Direktifi,’ dated August 15 2000.
The Monitor reported that the documents were exchanged on a secure email system by top General Staff, and that they appear to have been leaked accidentally in a court case file that was submitted as part of probes into the failed military coup against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in July 2016.
Prosecutor Serdar Coşkun – said to be a Erdoğan loyalist – submitted the files as part of the investigation, and was required to hand over all emails from the General Staff from the two months preceding the coup attempted to prosecutors.
Upon realising their potential mistake, the General Staff reportedly panicked, asking the court to allow them to screen the documents before being presented. According to The Monitor, prosecutors ignored these concerns.
However, while the plans were named in the documents, further specific details were not included. This is likely due to their classified nature, and therefore not shared through the private network.
The plans are believed to have been contingencies around developments in Syria with the aim of maintaining offensive and deterrence capabilities on the western front, while moving troops, The Monitor reported.
More recently the two countries have fought over Cyprus in the 1970s and came close to military hostilities during the Aegean dispute in 1987 and 1996 which has strongly affected the relations between Greece and Turkey since.
They share a border in the east of Greece and the west of Turkey, but also the Aegean sea.
Turkey also shares a border with Armenia in the east, on the opposite side of the country to Greece. Armenia and Turkey also have a history of hostility, and official relations are non-existent.
The inspiration for the name comes from Çaka Bey, better known as Chaka Bey and Tzachas, who was originally a commander under the Byzantine Empire, before he rebelled and began conquering land.
He is a much revered figure in Turkey, and is even seen as the founder of the first modern Turkish navy.
Anti-Greek rhetoric has become more robust in Turkey under the Erdoğan regime, with some maintaining that Greek islands – including Crete, Rhodes and Lesbos – belong to Turkey, that has increased demands that Greece demilitarises these islands.
The history of conflict between Greece and Turkey can be traced back hundreds of years, but in the modern era it began when Greece won independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1821.
This led to years of tensions, and since Greece won its independence, four major wars have been fought between the two nations.
In 1897 there was the Greco-Turkish war, then the First Balkan War of 1912 to 1913 saw them clash again.
During the First World War between 1914 and 1918 the two also fought on opposing sides, and finally a second Greco-Turkish War, running from 1919 to 1922.
The pair enjoyed relatively friendly relations in the 1930s and 1940s following the Greco-Turkish population exchange of 1923.
In 1952, both countries joined NATO, but relations deteriorated again in the 1950s due to Cyprus, the 1955 Istanbul pogrom and the expulsion of Istanbul Greeks in the 1960s.
In 1974, Turkey invaded Cyprus and 1996 saw the Imia/Kardak military crisis lead to wider military confrontations during the Aegean dispute.
A period of relative calm came after 1999 after Greece changed its stance of Turkey joining the European Union, although the country is yet to achieve this.
Since the Erdoğan regime has come into power, tensions have once again begun to rise between the two nations.
Turkey drew up plans to invade Greece and Armenia – secret documents
Daily Beast: Armenian Cognac Might Be the Booze World’s Best Secret
Armenian Cognac Might Be the Booze World's Best Secret
Stalin and the Soviet Union brought Armenian brandy to the masses—and
with it, a complicated legacy that’s been hard to shake ever since.
Benjamin Kemper Updated Jun. 14, 2020 1:00PM ET / Published Jun. 13, 2020 5:09AM ET
When you take the number 201 bus into Yerevan from Zvartnots
International Airport, the first sign that you’re nearing the city is a
hilltop citadel looming on the horizon with soaring arches, wrap-around
stone walls, and landscaped lawns that slope gently down to the banks of
the Hrazdan River—Armenia’s House of Parliament, you might think, or the
prime minister's residence. But this grand, iconic building welcoming
visitors from near and far is, in fact, a brandy factory.
To most Westerners, Cognac and brandy conjure up images of French
châteaux and European aristocrats, but ask anyone raised in the Soviet
Union what country springs to mind when it comes to great brandy, and
the answer is likely to be Armenia. Even today, for many Eastern
Europeans and vast swaths of Central Asia, Armenian brandy remains the
gold standard. So why do most Americans know so little about it?
Armenia is legendary for its open-armed hospitality to foreigners—a
local proverb states that every guest is a gift from god. So as a travel
writer on the Caucasus beat, whenever I dined with Armenians, the bottle
of kanyak (“Cognac” to locals) almost always came out at the end of the
meal. Confession time: Until last summer, I turned my nose up at the
stuff. You see, traveling around ex-Eastern Bloc countries, you learn
quickly that European-esque commodities, from waxy Russian chocolate to
ersatz Georgian “Champagne,” are seldom any good. One hundred-proof
booze made in a Soviet-era factory? That sounded downright hazardous—a
surefire night-ruiner if not a Molotov cocktail to the innards.
But Ararat’s 10-year put me in my place. After a soul-satisfying meal at
Sherep restaurant in Yerevan of roasted Lake Sevan trout, sharp local
cheeses, and salads made from umpteen unrecognizable herbs, the waiter
presented the check with a glass of caramel-colored spirit. Oh no, I
thought, scanning the room for dry houseplants. I reluctantly took a
sip. First came the vanilla notes, then hints of ripe tropical fruit
followed by prunes and figs. Based on its complexity, I thought it must
be French or Spanish. The waiter caught me blankly staring at my glass
and sauntered over. “What is this?” I asked him. “Real Armenian kanyak,”
he cooed, “made from our native Armenian grapes. Best in the world.” I
found myself nodding in hypnotic agreement. Wobbling back out into the
thick summer air, I suddenly had a mission: to learn what made Armenian
brandy so distinctive—and why on earth such a stellar product wasn’t
more widely known.
That’s how I found myself with a snifter between my fingers the next
morning at the Yerevan Brandy Company (YBC), that hulking, fortress-like
building at the edge of town, where Ararat 10 and all Ararat brandies
are produced. I sipped while Zaruhi Saribekyan, the communications
director, took me around. Our first stop was a hanging map of Armenia,
which served as a helpful geography refresher: Armenia is situated
between Georgia, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Iran; at about 30,000 square
miles, it’s roughly the size of Maryland.
Like French Cognac, Saribekyan explained, Armenian brandy starts with
grapes—mostly endemic varieties with striking names like garan dmak,
kangun voskehat (literally “golden berry”). “Our grapes grow in these
regions,” she said, pointing to Ararat and Armavir on the Turkish
border. After pressing them, she continued, the fresh grape juice
ferments into a dry white wine, which is in turn distilled in
French-style stills just like those you’d see on a Cognac factory tour
in Charentes. The clear, high-octane liquid that dribbles out, eau de
vie, is poured into Caucasian oak (Quercus macranthera) casks, where it
mellows and matures for up to a decade, taking on a pleasing caramel
color and woodsy depth in the process. Each brandy is then concocted
according to blenders’ rigorous specifications, ensuring consistency
year after year.
Now that I understood the “what,” I wondered about the “why.” With a
bounty of other, long-established alcoholic traditions already existing
in the region (wine, beer, and vodka, to name a few), why did Armenia
choose to home in on kanyak?
To answer that question, we have to start at the end of the 19th
century. At the time Armenia was ruled by the Russian Empire, whose
aristocracy had been fawning over French Cognac ever since Hennessy hit
the Russian market in 1825. Packaged in ornate glass bottles, Cognac was
an instant status symbol.
Armenia got its first brandy factory in 1877 by way of an
entrepreneurial Armenian businessman named Nerses Tairan and his Russian
cousin Vasily Tairov, who had studied winemaking and distillation in
France. But it wasn’t until Russian liquor biz bigwig Nikolay Shustov
bought YBC 21 years later that Armenian brandy truly took off.
Shustov had cornered nearly half of the Russian booze market by the time
he arrived at YBC and saw great potential in Armenia as a
brandy-producing powerhouse, not only for the region but for the world:
It had sprawling oak forests, abundant spring water, sunny weather ideal
for ripening grapes, and winemaking knowhow gleaned from several
millennia of viticulture (a 2007 archaeological dig revealed that
Armenia might be the birthplace of wine). He founded Shustov and Sons on
the site where YBC operates today, and by 1912, Shustov brandy was so
prized that it was designated as official supplier of the court of Tsar
Nicolas II. The Russian writer Maxim Gorky famously wrote, “It’s easier
to climb up Mount Ararat than to climb out of the Ararat [brandy] cellars.”
In 1900, Shustov’s kanyak bagged the gold medal in a blind tasting at
Paris’s International Exhibition, shocking the judges by beating out all
of the prestigious French Cognac houses. The French were so taken by
this new, exotic Armenian brandy, in fact, that the government granted
Shustov permission to use the formal designation “Cognac” on his
labels—a short-lived indulgence that was struck down by decree in 1909.
Shustov also came up with a shrewd marketing scheme that was remarkably
ahead of its time. Allegedly, he would dispatch cohorts of well-heeled
Armenians to the Continent, where they’d dine in fine restaurants and
insist that they be served Ararat brandy. This, of course, was seldom
behind the bar, so restaurant owners would rush to order it. Shustov
effectively understood the principle of artificial demand before the
term was even coined.
Back on tour, Saribekyan led me down “Presidential Alley” (their term,
not mine, for the record!), a hall hung with photos of over 30
presidents who had visited over the years, toward a massive metal door
protected by a uniformed guard. “Now I will show you our paradise,” she
said, beaming. The door opened and we entered a cathedral-like room
filled with cabinet upon cabinet of rare brandy bottles—a century of
history in liquid form. The air smelled musty and oaky and sweet. This
was a spirits geek’s paradise.
My eyes drifted to a row of bottles with yellowing labels. On them, I
could make out “Dvin” in faded cyrillic lettering. “Dvin is the brandy
Stalin supposedly gave to Churchill at the Yalta Conference in 1945,
when Truman, Churchill, and Stalin met to mark the boundaries of postwar
Europe,” Saribekyan said. I’d heard this yarn before—some versions even
posit that Churchill had Stalin send him regular shipments of Armenian
brandy into his old age—but I haven’t been able to verify it. The most
reliable English-language book on Armenian food history, Armenian Food:
Fact, Fiction & Folklore, by Irina Petrosian and David Underwood, traces
the “Churchill-craze for Armenian Cognac” to an episode of the Soviet TV
show Thirteen Moments of Spring, in which a character states that
Churchill loved Armenian Cognac. “Since the program was extremely
popular,” Petrosian and Underwood write, “that phrase was instantly
accepted as a fact that didn’t need any supporting evidence.”
Biographies of Churchill don’t mention Armenian brandy either.
Saribekyan’s rebuttal? “Of course there’s no document that proves
Churchill drank Dvin at the conference—what was eaten and drunk at
official dinners was not protocolled or recorded at that time,” she
said, adding that an Armenian intelligence officer who was present
vouched that the Armenian brandy was indeed served to the British Bulldog.
Regardless of what was poured at Yalta, Stalin, through his
administration’s revolutionary reforms, was far and away the most
influential force in the commercialization of Armenian brandy in the
20th century. At least that’s the opinion of master of wine and author
of The Wines of Georgia, Lisa Granik. “In the 1930s, the regime decided
that it was befitting of the ‘new Soviet man’ to enjoy luxury products
previously reserved for the tsars, like Champagne, watches, perfume,
chocolate, caviar—and, of course, Cognac,” she said. Producing and
promoting such commodities on a mass scale aligned with the Soviets’
mission to sophisticate—and placate—a largely rural, illiterate
citizenry that, by the time Stalin came to power, had been ravaged by
years of poverty, war, and famine.
Armenia, like other Soviet nations, was eager to industrialize and
modernize, but beyond that, it wanted to cement itself as culturally
Western. Following the genocide of the Armenian people at the hands of
Ottoman Turks between 1914 and 1923, Armenians were understandably keen
to purge any remnants of their Islamic-influenced past (Eastern Armenia
was under Persian rule for more than 300 years). Kanyak, viewed as the
epitome of European refinement, was a way to prove their European-ness,
hence why its production was so widely embraced as part of Armenian
culture.
Just as Stalin chose his native Georgia to be the hub of Soviet
winemaking, so his regime selected Armenia as a center of brandy
production. After all, Yerevan had a number of factories already in
operation, and Armenian brandy’s reputation had been established. By the
1980s, a quarter of the brandy produced in the Soviet Union came from
Armenia, a staggering figure considering that the republic constituted a
mere .001 percent of the USSR’s landmass.
The Soviet middle and upper classes were quick to bring Armenian brandy
into their parlors, but at more than twice the price of vodka, the
spirit was never an everyman’s drink. As in Europe, brandy was perceived
as a special-occasion digestif, the type of tipple you’d serve guests
you wanted to impress. It never went out of fashion, and the industry
prospered—the palatial building I was standing in, constructed in 1953,
stood as an emblem of that golden age.
But when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, so did brandy production.
Across the region, people could hardly afford bread, let alone
digestifs. And because of longstanding trade embargoes with Western
Europe and the U.S., there was no international market for Armenian
brandy to keep the industry afloat. That lack of demand, paired with a
tanking economy and a bloody protracted war in the Nagorno-Karabakh
region, brought even the best Armenian brandy houses, YBC included, to
their knees.
Salvation for YBC—which remains the leading producer of Armenian brandy
today—would come with controversy. In 1994 the French liquor corporation
Pernod-Ricard acquired the ailing brand for $30 million ($52 million in
today’s money). This infuriated Armenians. Ararat brandy was a hallmark
of national identity and pride. How could such a symbol of Armenian
culture be blithely auctioned off to a foreign drinks giant?
But the deed was done, and nowadays most Armenians have come around to
Pernod-Ricard. Ararat brandy is as refined and prestigious today as it
always has been—improved, even, according to some critics.
But who is drinking it?
“Following the break from the Soviet Union, Armenian brandy companies
continued to sell to Russia and former Soviet countries because they
were the lowest-hanging fruit,” said Granik. “People there already knew
Armenian brandy and perceived it as great.” Indeed, if you step into any
upscale restaurant from Kyiv to St. Petersburg to Tashkent, you can all
but bank on Armenian brandy being on the drinks list.
European and American markets, however, remain elusive. “Remember, until
recently, most Americans weren’t too keen on brown spirits anyway,”
Granik said. “From the late 90s well through 2010, it was all about
clear spirits—tequila, vodka, and the like.” But given the current craze
for añejo tequilas, single-malt whiskies, and boutique rums, plus a
newfound interest in the cuisines of the Caucasus (amber wine!
khachapuri!), Armenian brandy seems ready for its break-out moment.
Saribekyan and I were now leaving “paradise,” and the tour was wrapping
up. Our final stop was a smelling station where gleaming metal domesare
lifted to classic brandy aromatics in their raw form, including
chocolate, oak chips, and dried apricots. A bowl of vanilla beans,
intoxicatingly sweet, transported me back to the glass of Ararat 10 that
I’d savored the night before. I took advantage of the quiet to ask
Saribekyan whether she was optimistic about Armenian brandy’s future,
whether she thought it was on its way to being trendy. “Trends are
complicated in this industry because a historical company like ours has
brandies ranging from three to 50 years old, each with its own target
customer,” she said. “But our market research shows that in the last
five years, many more young adults are drinking our brandies, both in
Armenia and abroad.” YBC currently exports to 41 countries including the
U.S.
An unlikely cheerleader for Armenian brandy is Serena Williams, who in
March took to Instagram stories to gush about Shakmat, the Armenian
brandy company founded in 2018 that her husband, Reddit cofounder Alexis
Ohanian, helped create. For his part, Ohanian is “looking forward to a
few much-too-long-Armenian-style toasts of brandy with close friends
once this [quarantine] is over,” according to an Instagram post from
April 8. Perhaps a younger, more agile brand like Shakmat will finally
put Armenian brandy on American bar shelves and pave the way for more
traditional brandy houses such as YBC, Noi, Kilikia, Proshyan, and others.
In classic Armenian fashion, Saribekyan didn’t just say goodbye; she
offered an open-ended invitation to return. The endless steps down to
the bustling city gave me a moment to think about how dramatically
Armenia had changed in the last century—evolving from a Soviet republic
to a war-torn fledgling state to an unstable oligarchy to (thanks to the
Velvet Revolution in 2018) a swiftly modernizing, Western-facing
democracy. Through it all, brandy production never ceased. That is
something worth raising a glass to.
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Police launch criminal case over rally organized by supporters of Prosperous Armenia party leader
00:12,
YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. The Police of Armenia launched a criminal case for deliberately organizing and holding a rally by a group of people with the violation of the law, the Police said in a statement.
“According to the decision of the government on declaring a state of emergency, rallies are banned across the Republic. On June 14, a group of people, ignoring the ban on holding a rally, organized and held a rally outside the building of the National Security Service of Armenia.
These people didn’t obey the legal demands of the Police to keep a social distance and stop the rally in order to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus, as a result 252 persons have been detained as of 22:00.
Criminal case has been launched over the incident”, the statement says.
On June 14 leader of the opposition Prosperous Armenia party Gagik Tsarukyan was taken to the National Security Service for questioning. He stayed there until 23:30. Tsarukyan’s supporters organized a rally outside the NSS demanding to stop the actions against the lawmaker.
Earlier the NSS issued a statement according to which a company, that is included Gagik Tsarukyan’s Multi Group Concern, has caused tens of billions of drams in damage to the state.
In another statement, the NSS said it revealed numerous cases on giving bribes to voters by the Prosperous Armenia party members, as well as candidates to vote in favor of the party during the April 2, 2017 parliamentary elections.
Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
Armenpress: Turning colorful bus into beehive: Resident of Armenia’s Goris town present his invention
Turning colorful bus into beehive: Resident of Armenia’s Goris town present his invention
10:32,
YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. Karlen Chagharyan, 72, a resident of Armenia’s Goris town, is engaged in beekeeping for more than 30 years. He continues the work of his father who also has been engaged in beekeeping for many years. Recently the Goris town resident decided to bring something new in his work, making the process more effective. He colored his own bus and turned it into a beehive.
“In fact, this idea is for making my work easier and raising its effectiveness. After turning the first bus into a beehive I understood how much it was effective. Previously, when I was placing the beehives in fields, some times later I had to transport them to another place which required money, etc. Now these problems do not exist anymore. I take the beehives which are located in the bus to another place very easily. In order to have a good honey, transporting beehives from time to time is very important”, he told Armenpress, adding that he already has the second bus which again turned into a beehive.
Karlen Chagharyan is one of the beekeepers in Goris having the most beehives. Currently he has 120 beehives, some of which are placed in the buses. He decided to increase the number of bus-beehives as he has seen the effectiveness of this idea. He has already acquired the third bus which is at the stage of turning into a beehive.
“The advantage of having a bus-beehive is obvious. The temperature in the bus is stable, it is isolated, equipped and conditions have been created. The work with bees has become easier, neither wind, air temperature nor rain affect it. In the past I had to spend 200-300,000 AMD, engage 15-20 workers to transport the beehives, but now I take them wherever I want without making additional spending”, he said.
Chagharyan said such an idea has never been implemented in Goris. He was the first to make that invention. He says he has set a task to have a high-quality honey and is satisfied with the consumption as he has concrete clients.
“In any case, the market, the sale of honey are very important for beekeepers. Today the market is small and also has honey not in so much high-quality, and our citizens usually do not differentiate what is good honey and what not”, he said, urging to buy high-quality honey, especially when the price difference is little.
Reporting by Anna Gziryan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
Armenpress: French doctors arrive in Armenia to help fighting COVID-19
French doctors arrive in Armenia to help fighting COVID-19
09:42,
YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. A group of French doctors arrived in Armenia via a special flight to help the healthcare system to battle the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), the Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs of Armenia said on Facebook.
“This is the first such kind of an initiative on engaging foreign doctors which became a reality by the cooperation between our Office, USAID and the ministry of healthcare. Most of the doctors, who overcame the virus in France, visit Armenia for the first time and they are sure that they will invest all their experience and knowledge in the responsible mission to save human lives”, the statement says.
The French doctors will work in the St. Gregory the Illuminator hospital, the Scientific Center for Traumatology and Orthopaedy and the infection department of the St. Mary medical center in coming days.
Recently Lithuania, Georgia and the World Health Organization (WHO) also expressed readiness to assist Armenia in fighting the COVID-19.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
ArmenpArmenia has a stable banking system: PM introduces new Central Bank President to staffress:
Armenia has a stable banking system: PM introduces new Central Bank President to staff
10:38,
YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan introduced today new President of the Central Bank of Armenia Martin Galstyan to the Bank’s staff.
Pashinyan thanked former CBA President Artur Javadyan for the works done during this period.
“I wish good luck to Martin Galstyan in his activity as CBA President. Mr. Galstyan is not a new person in the banking system and is working in the field for quite a long time. I closely communicated with the Central Bank in the past two years and can state that the Bank has a very a good team which is working on the stability of the banking system”, the PM said.
According to Pashinyan, the Central Bank is one of the most important achievements of the third Republic. He stated that the banking system in Armenia is stable and well-established.
“All these is seen from how the financial system demonstrated itself in several crisis situations or during political upheavals, including also during the peaceful, Velvet and people’s Revolution, as well as during the current coronavirus crisis. Of course, this change that is taking place is important in a sense that it ensures certain legacy for the activity of the Central Bank. On the other hand, it also symbolizes the further development course and necessity of reforms of changes without undermining the stability”, Pashinyan said.
He said in the current period one of the key challenges of the banking system is to raise the financial literacy among the citizens of Armenia. The PM highlighted the need for actions so that Armenians will be able to see and understand the nuances of the banking system.
“One of our greatest tasks, challenges must be to make the Central Bank more human-centered. We should do so that the context of relations between the banking system and the citizens becomes more constructive in order to avoid negative perceptions around this system. This is one of the most important preconditions for the stability and sustainable development of our economic system”, the Armenian PM added.
He said they have certain agreements with former CBA President Artur Javadyan in terms of future activities. Pashinyan said Mr. Javadyan will be engaged into the process of developing the economic policy, analyzing economic issues and engaging international economic specialists.
“We have concrete programs the implementation of which will be a great success for the development of economic mind of Armenia”, the PM noted.
In turn Artur Javadyan thanked the CBA staff and expressed confidence that the new President will ensure the continuation of the stable work.
“We have a professional team that will be capable to keep the financial stability, as well as to have a stable macroeconomic environment in the current situation caused by this coronavirus crisis”, Javadyan said.
New President of the Central Bank Martin Galstyan thanked for the appreciation.
“During these years a team has been really formed in the Central Bank which passed many experiments and has been capable of solving its tasks. I assure you that the work which has been done will be continuous, we will deepen the cooperation with our partners of the government for the benefit of our nation and society. We will make all efforts to ensure macro-stability in the country regardless of everything”, the new CBA President said.
Martin Galstyan was elected President of the Central Bank by the Parliament on April 17.
Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
COVID-19: Armenia records 397 new cases, 62 recoveries in one day
11:11,
YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. 397 new cases of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) have been registered in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 17,064, the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention said today.
62 more patients have recovered and were discharged from hospital. The total number of recoveries has reached 6,276.
16 people have died in one day, raising the death toll to 285.
The number of active cases stands at 10,409.
The number of people who had a coronavirus but died from other disease has increased by 3. The total number of these cases has reached 94.
So far, 83,600 people have passed COVID-19 testing.
Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
Parliamentary committee approves ratifying Armenia-Germany framework agreement
11:48,
YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian parliamentary standing committee on financial-credit and budgetary affairs approved the issue on ratifying the agreement on financial cooperation between Armenia and Germany.
Deputy finance minister of Armenia Armen Hayrapetyan reported that the agreement was signed on October 24, 2019. It’s a framework agreement including mainly grant contracts and just one loan agreement which will be provided to the Armenian-German fund within the frames of the Refinancing Line program.
After the ratification by the Parliament the agreement will enter into force.
Reporting by Anna Grigoryan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan