Lawyer comments on criminal case against former Armenian football chief

Panorama, Armenia

Amram Makinyan, the lawyer of former Armenian MP and President of the Football Federation of Armenia Ruben Hayrapetyan, has reacted to the May 21 statement of the Investigative Committee about the criminal case involving his client.

“For now, referring to only a part of the statement issued by the Investigative Committee yesterday, and answering the questions of many reporters at once, I have to once again disappoint those who label Ruben Hayrapetyan as guilty, announcing that your expectations have not been met again,” the lawyer said on Facebook.

“There is not even a single hint of factual evidence in the case that Ruben Hayrapetyan organized: 1. illegal deprivation of liberty of H. Sh. (Hayk Shahnazaryan) in Harsnaqar Restaurant and Hotel Complex; 2. or causing severe physical pain and severe mental suffering to Hayk Shahnazaryan.

It is not difficult to guess why the Investigative Committee issued a statement with such wording…

It’s one thing to say, while it’s another thing to substantiate,” Makinyan added. 

New president of Nagorno-Karabakh takes office

JAM News
22.05.2020
    JAMnews. Yerevan

The inauguration of Arayik Harutyunyan, who was elected president of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, took place on May 21 in the city of Shushi. The top leadership of Armenia was also present at the ceremony.

The ceremony was held in the city of Shushi, in the hall of the Cultural and Youth Center.

Harutyunyan promised ‘to ensure the sovereignty, territorial integrity and security of Nagorno-Karabakh.’

On March 31, both presidential and parliamentary elections were held in Nagorno-Karabakh. Then, according to the Central Election Commission, not one of the 14 presidential contenders won the necessary 50 percent or more votes for the final victory.

Two weeks later on April 14, the second round of elections took place, and Arayik Harutyunyan was elected after winning a majority of votes.

The new president will have significantly more powers than his predecessors. In 2017, a new constitution was adopted in Karabakh, according to which the republic switched from a semi-presidential form of government to a presidential one.

As for the parliamentary elections, 12 political forces participated in them. Of these, 1 block and 4 parties entered the new parliament.

Voters again gave the majority of votes to the bloc of former Prime Minister Arayik Harutyunyan.

The Free Homeland / United Civil Alliance bloc received 40.4 percent.

The Democratic Party, United Homeland, Justice, ARF Dashnaktsutyun will also be represented in parliament.

On May 21, a new chairman of parliament was also elected – an MP from the ruling faction Arthur Tovmasyan.

The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, inhabited by Armenians, exists as a de facto independent republic, not recognized by any state in the world, including Armenia.

In 1991-1994, a war was fought on the territory of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region of Azerbaijan and the surrounding areas.  It ended with the signing of a truce, but skirmishes periodically continue. After the military phase of the conflict, ethnic Azerbaijanis left Karabakh. Azerbaijan considers Karabakh and the territories around it occupied during the war occupied, and demands their return. Negotiations to resolve the conflict through international mediation have so far failed. The last outbreak of full-scale hostilities – the so-called “April war”, or “four-day war”, occurred in April 2016. As a result, dozens of people died on both sides.

City of Irvine declares April 24th Armenian Genocide remembrance day

News.am, Armenia

11:51, 22.05.2020
                  

The City of Irvine has declared April 24th, 2020 as Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day thanks to the efforts of Mayor Christina Shea, Irvine City Council, and ANCA Orange County Chapter, ANCA Western Union reported.

ANCA-OC has been in frequent communication with the city of Irvine addressing the needs of the Armenian-American community, including the importance of annual commemoration and condemnation of denial of this international crime against humanity. Mayor Christina Shea has always been available to listen and meet with the ANCA-OC Board and community members to address those needs and issues.

“The Armenian National Committee of America-Orange County chapter would like to thank the City of Irvine and Mayor Christina Shea for their work to honor and commemorate the Armenian Genocide,” remarked Armen Garabedian, Chair of the ANCA OC chapter. “On the 105th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, we welcome this proclamation as a testament to truth and an act to honor the victims and their families. We look forward to continuing to work with the City of Irvine and Mayor Christina Shea in addressing and advancing the Armenian American community’s cause for justice.”

Coronavirus: Armenia reports 322 new cases, 293 recoveries on May 22

Panorama, Armenia

Armenia has confirmed 322 new coronavirus infections, bringing the total number of cases to 5,928 in the country as of 11 a.m. Friday, May 22, the Ministry of Health reports.

293 more patients have recovered from the disease with the total number of recoveries now standing at 2,874.

The number of COVID-19 fatalities has increased by 4 to 74.

The latest victims were 52 (male), 81 (male), 61 (male), 82 (male) years old and had underlying chronic health conditions, the ministry said.

In addition, one case of death was recorded on Thursday when the patient had tested positive for COVID-19, but the cause of death was another disease. The total of such cases is 28.

The number of active cases is 2,952.

As many as 47,654 tests have been performed in the country since the disease outbreak.

The ministry once again urges you to:

• Stay at home

• Limit physical contact

• Take care of personal hygiene

• Wash hands for at least 20 seconds, especially before eating and after coming home

• Avoid public areas and transportation as much as possible

• Maintain at least 1-meter distance when speaking to someone

• Inform a doctor when experiencing flu-like symptoms instead of resorting to self-treatment

• Upon returning from a country where the coronavirus has a large spread, practice self-isolation for 14 days while being in touch with your polyclinic doctor

• Regularly check your temperature while informing your doctor of the results

• Don’t panic and follow your doctor’s advice

Source Panorama.am

Armenian human rights defender reacts to Azerbaijani ombudsperson’s distortion of his remarks

Panorama, Armenia

Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan had reacted to the Azerbaijani ombudsperson’s remarks. A statement issued by Tatoyan on Friday reads:

“The Human Rights Defender of Armenia, when presenting the 2019 Annual Report to the National Assembly of Armenia, stressed that human rights are universal categories and that rights of all persons, including children, women, people with disabilities living in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), should be protected, regardless of the political status of the territory or other political factors, whether it is a conflict or postconflict area. This is a well-known concept driven by a status neutral principle within International Human Rights Standards.

Additionally, in response to the question from a member of the Armenian parliament regarding whether the Human Rights Defender of Armenia anticipates cooperation with his Azerbaijani counterpart on human rights issues, Mr. Arman Tatoyan noted that he has not yet met the new Ombudsperson of the neighboring country, but he is ready to meet his counterpart, for example, within international meetings, should such an opportunity present. Thus, the Human Rights Defender of the Republic of Armenia expressed his readiness for the meeting. Moreover, the Defender emphasized that he believes it would be appropriate if the Human Rights Defender or civil society of Artsakh participate in human rights related international discussions or discussions on rights of Armenians living in Artsakh.

Immediately after parliamentary discussions, Commissioner for Human Rights of Azerbaijan (Ombudsperson) Sabina Aliyeva made an official statement, accompanied by inaccurate, political comments clearly atypical of a head of a human rights institution, quoting the official positions of her country’s political authorities, even considering the issue from the perspective of the OSCE Minsk Group’s activities dealing with the political solution of the conflict, also using expressions that generate aggression and hatred. Moreover, the statements of the Azerbaijani Commissioner for Human Rights were accompanied by public insults addressed to the Armenian Human Rights Defender, noting that the Armenian Human Rights Defender “turned legal issues into objects of political manipulation and organized a cheap show by primitive methods.”

Besides, the Azerbaijani Ombudsperson put forward a political precondition for meeting with the Armenian Human Rights Defender, stating that “the negotiations with the Human Rights Ombudsman of Armenia will be possible only after the elimination of occupation.”

The Armenian Human Rights Defender has to respond to these political and insulting statements of the Azerbaijani Ombudsperson, to prevent distortion of statements and position, as well as presentation of false information to international partners.

The Armenian Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan regrets that his Azerbaijani counterpart makes political statements. Nonetheless, we refrain from commenting on the statements, given that it is not appropriate for a human rights institution to do so. We regret that the Commissioner for Human Rights of Azerbaijan sets a political precondition for the cooperation between the two institutions, obviously following the political framework of the Azerbaijani authorities.

The Human Rights Defender of Armenia was hoping that the new Ombudsperson of Azerbaijan could adopt new approaches for cooperation that could be in accordance with international human rights principles and standards; however, by presenting an approach identical to the official political propaganda shows that nothing has changed in this regard.

Political neutrality of ombudspersons and national human rights institutions is one of the basic principles of their apolitical activity. This cooperation is to ensure the effective protection of human rights. Hence, there should be no political preconditions for cooperation between ombudsperson institutions in establishing and guaranteeing an agenda for human rights.

Human rights protection is of the universal nature. Hence, the guarantee and protection of the human rights of people living in Artsakh should not depend on the disaccord related to the political status of Artsakh.

Women, children, persons with disabilities, who live in Artsakh cannot be deprived of legal protection; that would contradict the international legal principles. Participation of the Human Rights Defender of Artsakh and the civil society in international human rights discussions and meetings has an irreplaceable role because political factors should have no impact on human rights.”

Armenia President: I have given the health minister advice and shared my knowledge

News.am, Armenia

16:13, 22.05.2020
                  

In an interview with Yerkir Media TV, President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian said the coronavirus will be with us for a long time and called on citizens to perform their duties, be disciplined, think about their responsibilities and their parents, relatives and those who are either ill or have health problems.

As far as the completed actions are concerned, the President said there will always be times when we can assess what the world, governments and each of us did and how it was done.

“I believe what is very important is for each of us to think about how we can help. In this sense, the Staff of the President of Armenia is trying to make its small contribution. I have been in touch with top officials, presidents, healthcare ministers or research centers dealing with these matters since the outbreak of the coronavirus in order to understand this novel coronavirus, how different countries are combating it and to learn from the mistakes. I have shared this information with Armenia’s relevant authorities, particularly the health minister and have given advice and shared my knowledge,” he said, adding that he has also asked the leaders of various countries for assistance and brought up the example of the United Arab Emirates as an example of a rapid and helpful response, stating that the leader of the UAE sent a plane full of cargo, including 500,000 gloves for multiple use.

Azerbaijani Press: Tensions Soar as Armenia’s Leadership Supports Illegal Separatist ‘Inauguration’

Caspian News, Azerbaijan

By Mushvig Mehdiyev

  •                                                         
  • Khankendi city of Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region occupied by Armenia / Alex Webb / National Geographic

  • Yerevan has once again fueled tensions with Baku by arranging a so-called “presidential inauguration” in the occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan.

    Following Armenian Foreign Ministry’s calling the fabricated oath of office a “democratic process,” officials at the Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan said that speaking about democracy in the territories of another country is a testament to the aggression shown by Yerevan.

    “The fact that the Armenian Foreign Ministry called the show around the so-called “inauguration” in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan a “democratic process” testifies not only the true nature of this aggressor state but also how far it is from the concept of democracy,” the ministry’s spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva said in a statement issued on Thursday.

    “The occupation of the internationally recognized territory of another state, the ethnic cleansing of the people living there, thus a gross violation of human rights is called aggression in the language of modern international law, not democracy,” the statement added.

    After winning two-phase illegal “presidential elections” to the unrecognized separatist regime in the occupied Azerbaijani lands in March and April, Arayik Harutunyan was allegedly sworn in on Thursday in Azerbaijan’s occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region’s Shusha city. By participating in the so-called “inauguration”, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, tried to justify the occupation of Azerbaijani lands, calling the move as “liberation” during his speech.

    Head of the Azerbaijani Community of the occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region, Tural Ganjaliyev accused Armenia’s leader of insulting the internally displaced persons (IDP) in Azerbaijan and inflicting a blow on the process for solving the conflict peacefully.

    “This is in stark contrast to the intention to “prepare the peoples for peace” announced at a meeting of the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in January 2019,” Ganjaliyev said.

    Around one million Azerbaijanis remain internally displaced decades after a war that broke out in the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan in the early 1990s. Anti-Azerbaijan sentiments in Armenia that broke out in the late 1980s escalated into a full-blown war launched by Armenia against Azerbaijan in 1991. The four-year bloody war resulted in the killing of 30,000 ethnic Azerbaijanis and the occupation of 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized territory.

    Despite four UN Security Council resolutions and repeated international calls for Armenia’s withdrawal from the Nagorno-Karabakh region, Yerevan has continued to occupy Azerbaijani lands and maintained a military presence there, hence fueling one of the world’s most dangerous and long-standing conflicts.

    While Baku condemned the so-called “inauguration” in the Nagorno-Karabakh region as an act of provocation, spokesperson to the Foreign Ministry of Armenia Anna Naghdalyan portrayed the recent developments in the occupied Azerbaijani territories as “democratic processes” and pledged that Yerevan will continue cooperating with the illegal “authorities” that represent the so-called “people” of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry’s Spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva responded to her Armenian counterpart with fact-based remarks, saying Armenians living in Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region are part of a community.

    “As regards the term “people”, to which the Armenian Foreign Ministry refers, firstly, the Armenians in the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan are not the people, but the Armenian community living in this region,” Abdullayeva said.

    “Secondly, in order to talk about the principle of self-determination of peoples, the Armenian Foreign Ministry must first find out what this principle means, read the Helsinki Final Act, and only then refer to this principle,” Abdullayeva added. “The fact that the aggressor country speaks about peace in its statements is the highest degree of hypocrisy. A country that wants peace will not pursue a policy of aggression, a country that seeks peace will not impede the negotiations process, and, finally, a supporter of peace will not be a serious threat to the peace itself.”

    Meanwhile, the European Union and the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), who mediates political negotiations for solving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, have earlier denounced the so-called “presidential elections” in the occupied Azerbaijani lands.

    “This event cannot prejudice the determination of the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh or the outcome of the ongoing negotiation process,” read the EU statement issued in March.

    The Time of Our Life Episode 4: Aris Janigian Reads "The Armenian and The Armenian"

    Valley Public Radio
     
     
     
    By David Aus & Mark Arax
     
    Author Aris Janigian reads William Saroyan on this episode of The Time of Our Life
    Courtesy Aris Janigian
     
    This week on The Time of Our Life, Fresno writer Aris Janigian reads William Saroyan’s Five Ripe Pears and The Armenian and The Armenian.  With host Mark Arax, Aris discusses Saroyan’s influence on his own work. The author of five novels, Aris Janigian is a writer, academic, and a wine grape packer and shipper. His latest novel is Waiting for Sophia at Shutters on the Beach.
    Listen to the program at 1, 2020 
    The Time of Our Life Episode 1: Mark Arax reads “The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse”

    This week on the debut episode of the special series “The Time of Our Life”, Mark Arax reads William Saroyan’s The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse, originally published in 1940 as part of My Name Is Aram, a collection of short stories by Saroyan. Arax also shares recollections of his interactions with Saroyan, who was a family friend.
    Listen to the program at

    RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/22/2020

                                            Friday, 
    Armenian Health Minister In Fresh Warning On Coronavirus Cases
            • Susan Badalian
    Armenia -- Health Minister Arsen Torosian (R) visits the intensive care unit of 
    Surp Grigor Lusavorich hospital, Yerevan, May 10, 2020.
    Armenian hospitals are increasingly struggling to cope with growing coronavirus 
    cases and may soon be unable to give life-saving treatment to all infected 
    people hospitalized in serious condition, Health Minister Arsen Torosian said on 
    Friday.
    Amid the continuing rapid spread of the virus in Armenia, Torosian again warned 
    of a possible shortage of intensive care beds at the hospitals treating COVID-19 
    patients. He said that at least 150 of just over 200 such beds currently 
    available in the country are already occupied by patients.
    “All of the 50 [vacant] beds might be occupied as early as today, whereas 
    [occupied beds] will be freed up very slowly because citizens kept in our 
    intensive care units … usually stay there for around 20 days,” he said during a 
    video conference with members of Armenia’s Public Council.
    Accordingly, Torosian acknowledged that doctors dealing with the COVID-19 
    epidemic may soon have to switch to a “deep sorting” of patients that show 
    severe symptoms of the disease.
    “The deep sorting is also done during wars, with mainly those patients who have 
    a chance to survive admitted for treatment,” he said. “It’s possible that at 
    this rate [of coronavirus infections] we will opt for that in the coming days. 
    But we are doing everything to avoid that, for example, by deploying new beds.”
    The minister’s latest stark warning came as the health authorities stopped 
    hospitalizing or isolating infected people showing mild symptoms of the virus or 
    none at all. Such individuals, who account for more than 70 percent of all 
    cases, will now have to self-isolate at home.
    Asymptomatic patients currently kept in hospitals or hotels turned into 
    temporary medical care centers will also be sent home.
    Torosian defended this measure, saying that the authorities simply have no other 
    choice. “There is no more room [for asymptomatic cases,]” he said. “That is why 
    we are sending people home.”
    Armenia -- A COVID-19 patient is brought to the Surp Grigor Lusavorich hospital 
    in Yerevan, April 8, 2020.
    The Armenian Ministry of Health reported in the morning that 322 new infections 
    and 4 more deaths were registered in the past 24 hours. The total number of 
    COVID-19 cases thus reached 5,928 while the official death toll from the disease 
    rose to 74.
    The latter figure does not include the deaths of 28 other people infected with 
    the virus. The ministry claims that those fatalities were primarily caused by 
    other, pre-existing diseases.
    Torosian warned on Thursday that the number of people dying from coronavirus 
    could rise sharply if the highly infectious disease continues to spread rapidly. 
    Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian likewise said that the “situation is not good.”
    Still, Pashinian made clear that the Armenian government will stick to its 
    “decentralized” strategy of fighting against the virus which puts the emphasis 
    on citizens’ “individual responsibility.”
    As part of a nationwide lockdown imposed in late March, the government seriously 
    restricted people’s movements and ordered the closure of most nonessential 
    businesses. But it began relaxing these restrictions already in mid-April.
    The daily numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the country have steadily 
    increased since then. Critics say that the authorities never properly enforced 
    the lockdown and lifted it too soon.
    “If there is a two-week total lockdown, not the one which we had [earlier this 
    spring,] then I can practically guarantee that we can completely stop 
    outbreaks,” Torosian declared on Friday. But he stopped short of publicly urging 
    the government to impose such a lockdown.
    Karabakh Inauguration Party Raises Eyebrows In Armenia
            • Robert Zargarian
    Nagorno-Karabakh -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other 
    dignitaries attend a state banquet in Shushi, .
    Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and key members of his administration caused an 
    uproar in Armenia after clearly failing to observe social distancing during a 
    state banquet in Nagorno-Karabakh on Thursday.
    The open-air dinner party was held in the town of Shushi following the 
    inauguration of Ara Harutiunian, Karabakh’s recently elected new president.
    Official photographs of the event showed Pashinian, Armenian parliament speaker 
    Ararat Mirzoyan, their wives and dozens of other dignitaries standing tightly 
    around tables loaded with various dishes and snacks. None of the guests wore 
    gloves, let alone masks.
    The photos were widely circulated on social media, prompting criticism from not 
    only opponents but also some supporters of the Armenian government. Some critics 
    accused Pashinian of recklessness and hypocrisy.
    The prime minister attended the inauguration events in Karabakh just hours after 
    expressing serious concern over the continuing rapid spread of coronavirus in 
    Armenia. “The situation is much more serious than we can imagine,” he warned at 
    a cabinet meeting in Yerevan.
    Pashinian again complained that many Armenians are still not complying with 
    social distancing and hygiene rules set by the health authorities. He ordered 
    the Armenian police to enforce those rules “more strictly.”
    Responding to the uproar, Pashinian’s spokeswoman, Mane Gevorgian, insisted that 
    the premier and his entourage took all necessary precautions against the virus 
    during their latest trip to Karabakh.
    “The banquet followed the inauguration ceremony of Artsakh’s new president 
    during which the prime minister, his wife, government members and deputies of 
    the National Assembly wore masks,” Gevorgian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on 
    Friday. “Many of them also wore gloves.”
    Deputy parliament speaker Alen Simonian argued, for his part, that the COVID-19 
    infection rate in Karabakh is much lower than in Armenia. “Fortunately, Karabakh 
    does not have the kind of strict restrictions that are in place in Armenia,” he 
    said.
    Simonian seemed to acknowledge at the same time that the organizers and 
    participants of the inauguration party should have been more careful. “We all 
    must draw conclusions and learn from our mistakes and shortcomings,” he said.
    Authorities in Karabakh have reported 33 coronavirus cases and no deaths 
    resulting from them so far. The Armenian-populated territory, which had broken 
    away from Azerbaijan in 1991, has around 150,000 residents.
    In Armenia, the Ministry of Health reported on Friday 322 new infections and 4 
    more deaths. The total number of COVID-19 cases thus reached 5,928.
    More Armenians Evacuated From Turkey
    Georgia -- Buses carrying Armenians returning to Armenia from Turkey, May 22, 
    2020.
    Armenia evacuated on Friday 168 more Armenian citizens from coronavirus-hit 
    Turkey in coordination with Turkish and Georgian authorities.
    They reportedly boarded four Armenian buses after being bused from Istanbul to 
    the Turkish-Georgian border late at night. They then proceeded to Armenia via 
    Georgia.
    Armenia’s government paid for the bus service and covered other expenses 
    incurred during the evacuation. The Armenian Embassy in Tbilisi said it provided 
    the evacuees with food and other essential items during their transit through 
    Georgia which was allowed by the Georgian government.
    All evacuees were due to be told to self-isolate for two weeks on their arrival 
    in Armenia.
    More than 70 other Armenians were evacuated from Turkey in early April. The 
    Armenian and Turkish foreign ministries arranged their return during a rare 
    direct contact.
    Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic relations. Successive Turkish 
    governments have also kept the border between the two neighboring states closed 
    because of the unresolved conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.
    Officials in Yerevan say that more than 60,000 Armenian nationals, most of them 
    migrant workers who lived in Russia and Europe, have returned to their country 
    since March 1 due to the coronavirus pandemic and resulting economic 
    consequences.
    According to the Armenian Embassy in Moscow, at least 5,000 Armenians currently 
    stuck in Russia also want to return home but are unable to do so because of the 
    coronavirus-related absence of regular flights between the two countries. Since 
    the beginning of April the embassy has helped to organize a dozen charter 
    flights to Yerevan from Moscow and other Russian cities to evacuate a smaller 
    number of other citizens.
    Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
    Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
    1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
     
    

    Torosyan explained the big difference between the number of coronavirus cases in Armenia and Georgia

    Arminfo, Armenia

    ArmInfo. RA Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan explained the big difference between the number of coronavirus cases in Armenia and Georgia.

    During the on-line discussions initiated by the Public Council on May  22, the Minister drew attention to the fact that to this day more  stringent and more organized restrictive measures are in force in  Georgia, which, meanwhile, also affect price inflation and exchange  rates. Meanwhile, as noted by Torosyan, there are differences between  Georgia and Armenia in the methodology used in the case of  coronavirus. , he said. Torosyan expressed hope that, in addition to  Georgia, other neighboring countries – Russia and Iran, will be able  to strengthen their anti-epidemiological systems, which is important  for Armenia, taking into account the flow of citizens entering its  territory from these countries.

    Speaking about the methodology for recording patients with  coronavirus used in Georgia, Torosyan voiced several questions.  Firstly, have PCR tests been used in all testing cases in Georgia, or  are we talking about quick tests, which are practically not used in  Armenia due to their low level of accuracy? Secondly, are citizens  with mild ARVI symptoms tested for coronavirus? Thirdly, are  coronavirus statistics included for people who have died from  pneumonia while having diagnosed COVID-19? The Minister recalled that  in Armenia, such cases of fatal outcomes are included in the  statistics, and separate statistics are also conducted for patients  with COVID-19 who have died from other diseases. As noted by  Torosyan, rarely which countries can compare with Armenia on the  principle of transparency of information on coronavirus.

    , the minister noted. He  also asked whether Georgia, as well as other countries, will be able  to maintain current performance in the conditions of tourist flow.

    Speaking about Armenia, Torosyan noted that it is impossible to live  in isolation for a long time, which means that tightening and easing  restrictions will be wave-like.  In total, 5928 cases of coronavirus  were confirmed in Armenia, 2874 people recovered, 74 died. Currently,  2952 patients are receiving actual treatment. In Georgia, 723 cases  of COVID-19 were detected, 495 were cured, 12 died, 209 patients are  undergoing treatment.