COVID19 updates: China confirms just 2 new cases in past 24 hours

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 16:56, 6 May, 2020

YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS. The number of people infected with the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) around the world has surpassed 3 million 753 thousand 689, according to the data released by coronavirus research centers.

The death toll is over 259,000.

1 million 256 thousand 580 patients have recovered.

US is leading in the world in terms of the largest number of infected people (1 million 238 thousand 459 confirmed cases). 72,285 deaths were reported.

Then comes Spain which confirmed 253,682 cases so far. The total number of deaths in Spain is 25,857.

Spain is followed by Italy which reported a total of 213,013 cases. 29,315 patients have died.

UK overtook France, confirming 194,990 cases and 29,427 deaths. With the death toll the UK surpassed Italy.

The next is France with a total of 170,551 cases and 25,531 deaths.

Germany has confirmed 167,007 cases and 6,993 deaths.

Russia is the next, reporting 165,929 cases. The deaths reached 1,537.

Turkey has recorded 129,491 cases. The deaths comprise 3,520.

Brazil surpassed Iran and China with most confirmed cases (116,299). 7,966 people have died in Brazil.

Iran recorded 101,650 cases. 6,418 people have died in Iran from coronavirus.

China, where the COVID-19 outbreak started, confirmed a total of 82,883 cases. 2 new cases have been confirmed in the country in the past one day. The death toll here is 4,633. No death case has been registered in the past one day.

Georgia confirmed 610 cases of coronavirus and 9 deaths.

Among the Arab states Qatar overtook the United Arab Emirates (UAE) with the most confirmed cases – 17,972. The death toll has reached 12 in Qatar. The number of infected people in the UAE is 15,192. 146 death cases have been registered here. Egypt reported 7,201 confirmed cases and 452 deaths. In Kuwait the number of confirmed cases is 6,289 and that of the deaths is 42. Iraq confirmed 2,431 cases and 102 deaths. 750 cases have been reported in Lebanon, the deaths comprise 25. Syria’s confirmed cases reached 44. 3 death cases have been registered.

In late December 2019, Chinese authorities notified the World Health Organization (WHO) about an outbreak of a previously unknown pneumonia in the city of Wuhan, central China. WHO declared the outbreak of the novel coronavirus a global pandemic and named the virus COVID-19. 

According to the data of the World Health Organization, coronavirus cases have been confirmed in more than 210 countries and territories.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

President of Artsakh gives state awards to group of Defense Army servicemen

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 17:06, 6 May, 2020

STEPANAKERT, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS. President of the Republic of Artsakh Bako Sahakyan visited today the town of Mekhakavan where he handed over state awards to a group of servicemen of the Defense Army for the bravery shown during the defense of the homeland’s borders, the Artsakh Presidential Office told Armenpress.

President Sahakyan got acquainted with the living conditions of the servicemen, gave respective instructions for solving the existing problems.

President Bako Sahakyan was accompanied by Secretary of the Security Council Arshavir Gharamyan, Defense Minister Jalal Harutyunyan and other officials.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 06-05-20

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 17:37, 6 May, 2020

YEREVAN, 6 MAY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 6 May, USD exchange rate up by 1.97 drams to 481.97 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 5.13 drams to 519.80 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.12 drams to 6.48 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 0.25 drams to 596.49 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 312.90 drams to 26335.71 drams. Silver price down by 0.53 drams to 228.56 drams. Platinum price down by 13.53 drams to 11792.22 drams.

Asbarez: Armenia ‘Under Pressure’ from UK and US over Amulsar, says EU report

May 6, 2020

Gold mining facilities constructed by Lydian International company at Amulsar deposit on May 18, 2018. (Source: Azatutyun.am)

An internal EU report claims that the UK government has pressured the Armenian government in a two-year standoff between protesters, an international mining company and the authorities.

BY THOMAS ROWLEY
From Open Democracy
An internal report by the European Union Delegation to Armenia states that the UK and US have pressured the country over a controversial gold mining project.

The Amulsar gold mine shot to the forefront of Armenian politics after the country underwent its “Velvet Revolution” in 2018, when public protests forced the ruling Republican Party out of power. In the aftermath local residents and environmental activists began a blockade of the unfinished $400m mining project, bringing them into conflict with British-American mining company Lydian International, the company’s international supporters and the Armenian government.

“It doesn’t matter to us who wants to exploit the mine. There will be no mining industry in Jermuk,” local activist Shirak Buniatyan recently told the newspaper Hraparak. “Those who try to open a mine here will waste their money.”

The internal EU report, dated October 2019, touches on the international dimension to the Amulsar standoff. As a result of the nearly two-year blockade, Lydian has been unable to access the Amulsar site and finish construction on the project, which is backed by resource investment funds, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), as well as the UK and US governments.

The report, obtained under Freedom of Information from the European External Action Service (EEAS), states that ‘Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has been under pressure from the different stakeholders, including US and UK governments’ over the Amulsar standoff.

‘The US and UK governments,’ the partially redacted report continues, ‘hope Lydian would not be discriminated [against] and a similar approach towards other mining companies operating in Armenia would be applied.’

“There will be no mining industry in Jermuk. Those who try to open a mine here will waste their money”

Lydian calls the mine blockade illegal, and accuses the Armenian government of ‘inaction’ over the situation. In March 2019, the company notified Armenia of a potential international arbitration dispute under British and Canadian bilateral investment treaties. For some observers, the impasse over Amulsar is deemed worrying for foreign investors in the country.

Campaigners, as well as a British MP, have criticized the role of the UK Foreign Office in supporting Lydian International in its dispute with the Armenian government.

“This report confirms the suspicions held by many that the UK is acting on behalf of a company seeking to open a dangerous gold mine,” said Jean Blaylock, campaign and policy manager at Global Justice Now. “And more, a company that is using ‘corporate courts’ to try and bully the Armenian government into shutting down public protests against the mine.”

An FCO spokesperson said: “We do not accept this characterization of the Embassy’s routine engagement with the Armenian Government on the Amulsar gold mine.”

Lydian, which is registered in Jersey and headquartered in Canada, states it has followed the highest international standards on environmental mitigation and protection – as required by the EBRD and the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation, which withdrew from the Amulsar project in 2017.

Anti-Amulsar protesters in Yerevan’s Republic Square

Opponents of the mine, which former British Ambassadors have called ‘potentially the largest British investment in Armenia’ and an ‘excellent example of UK-Armenia business cooperation’, claim their concerns over potential environmental damage are well-founded.

Internal correspondence from British Embassy Yerevan obtained by openDemocracy under Freedom of Information contains redacted emails relating to Embassy meetings with both Lydian International and the Armenian government regarding Amulsar in 2018, as well as redacted internal Foreign Office correspondence concerning the mine. A list of contacts between the Embassy and Lydian shows regular contact over a five-year period.

A 2018 register of British Embassy documents relating to Amulsar contains titles such as “Possible meeting with Armenian PM – urgent advice requested”, “Questions for the Ambassador”, “Meeting with Acting PM Pashinyan key points” and “Readout of meeting with Lydian”. Embassy documents relating to the Amulsar project also include redacted correspondence about a EU Heads of Mission meeting with prime minister Pashinyan in November 2018.

“There seems to be no good reason for UK diplomats to throw their weight behind a mining company with main offices variously in Colorado, Canada and Armenia, a company registration in a Channel Island tax haven, and a recent letterbox registration in a building in London where no one from the company actually works,” said Jean Blaylock from Global Justice Now. “It appears Lydian doesn’t even have a bank account in the UK.”

Official statements by the UK Foreign Office tend to downplay support of Lydian International, which was set to become one of Armenia’s biggest taxpayers prior to the start of the public campaign in 2018.

“British Embassy Yerevan officials regularly make representations to the Government of Armenia on a range of issues,” a Foreign Office minister commented in response to a parliamentary question earlier this year.

The report does not disclose the nature of official UK or US pressure on Armenia over the Amulsar gold mine, the largest foreign investment in the country. The EEAS noted that the ‘full public release of the whole document would reveal assessments concerning aspects and impact of this project by the EU Delegation in Yerevan intended for internal use only’.

‘Unimpeded access to the public of the internal note would also give valuable information to adverse actors to jeopardize the success of possible future EU diplomatic moves,’ the EEAS stated in its accompanying letter.

An FCO spokesperson said: “It is the role of diplomatic missions to talk to host governments on a wide range of issues, including on behalf of businesses. In this case, the British Embassy in Yerevan has discussed the mine with the Government of Armenia, to better understand their approach to the situation.”

Lydian stated via email that ‘considering the current situation around the project, we do not give any comments.’.

Hayk Aloyan, head of Lydian Armenia, meets British ambassador Judith Farnworth in June 2018 at the Queen’s birthday party event at the UK Embassy in Yerevan (Photo from UK Embassy Yerevan / Facebook)

The EU Delegation report remarks that Armenian prime minister Pashinyan is ‘having to weigh environmental considerations against the economic benefits of the [Amulsar] project’ in a mining industry which has a ‘notoriously poor’ environmental protection record. With the mine finished, Lydian says it was set to employ 750 people, create an additional 3,000 jobs via local companies, and contribute $488 million to the Armenian state budget over a ten-year period.The report notes the tense situation in which the company’s foreign backers, including the UK government, have found themselves in Armenia. The Amulsar standoff is ‘heavily politicised’, the report states, ‘with opponents (but also some supporters) of the revolutionary Armenian authorities uniting around this issue, albeit pursuing different goals.’

In response to a government-ordered environmental audit of the Amulsar project in August 2019, representatives of Armenian civil society called on the British and US Embassies, as well as Sweden, to withdraw support for the Amulsar mine, calling the audit ‘staggering in its implications’.

‘We request that you as Ambassadors of western democracies stand by high environmental standards for people in Armenia and with human rights values,’ the open letter stated, noting that the UK, US and Swedish governments ‘have invested significantly in democracy building in Armenia’.

‘Perhaps it would be more fair to put [this] into a context of being in the United States or Great Britain or Sweden. Would any license to operate an open pit mine, in your backyard, ever be granted on the basis of incomplete, inaccurate and fraudulent ESIA [Environmental and social impact assessment]? We know the answer to this is “no” and ask that this standard be applied to the citizens and residents of Armenia.’

Prime minister Pashinyan initially ordered inspections in Armenia’s mining industry after taking the post in 2018, saying that he would have opposed the Amulsar project if he had been in power during the approval process.

“The Prime Minister is in a very difficult situation”

Following the publication of a government-ordered independent audit of the project in August 2019, Pashinyan, an opposition politician who led mass protests against Armenia’s former regime, began calling on protesters to end the mine blockade. He stated that there was no legal basis to oppose Amulsar, and that the mine should reopen.

Lydian International states that there was no basis for the government-ordered independent audit in Armenian law, and that the company has succeeded in ‘meeting or exceeding rigorous and leading global standards of environmental stewardship and sustainability’.

“The Prime Minister is in a very difficult situation, I believe,” said Sona Ayvazyan, executive director of Transparency International Armenia.

“He has his own values, such as democracy and care for the environment, his promises that the voices of Armenian citizens matter and that they are the masters of their own lives, that his government is different from the previous corrupt regime, etc. But Pashinyan faces strong public pressure and boosted expectations of people who supported the 2018 revolution, and meanwhile his actions are not in line with his values and promises.

“Apparently, he has been under significant pressure from the international community and, more specifically, the UK and US Embassies, risking to affect future foreign investments in the country. Obviously, it has been very hard for the Prime Minister to make a decision in this situation.”

A US State Department spokesperson said: “We hope the Armenian Government and Lydian International will continue to work together to discuss all possible options for a mutually agreeable, impartial, and expeditious resolution regarding Amulsar.

“We wish to see an orderly resolution of this issue in accordance with the law. The predictable, transparent, and uniform application of the law to all investors assures stakeholders and provides confidence to existing and potential investors.”

The Armenian Foreign Ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

In December 2019, Lydian filed for a court-protected restructuring process in Canada. Court filings for the company, which was delisted from the Toronto Stock Exchange in January this year, state that it is currently ‘advancing discussions with a potential purchaser’ for the mine, and continuing dialogue with the Armenian government ‘to see whether an agreement can be reached regarding access to the Amulsar Project.’

Asbarez: Glendale Homenetmen Ararat Chapter Donates Lunches to Frontline Medical Workers

May 6, 2020

Glendale Memorial Doctors and Administrators

GLENDALE—The Glendale Homenetmen Ararat Chapter provided lunch for local healthcare workers on frontlines of the Coronavirus pandemic. The Ararat Chapter delivered food for doctors, nurses, and healthcare professionals in the ICU departments at Glendale Memorial, Glendale Adventist and Verdugo Hills hospitals.

The chapter also donated $5,000 to Covid-19 Armenian Community Task Force, which has been leading efforts in supplying basic necessities to those in need in our community. Additionally, they have offered the city of Glendale full use of their facilities during and for this coronavirus epidemic.

Nurses and doctors at Glendale Adventist Hospital

“Homenetmen Glendale Ararat Chapter believes we can always find ways to take action or help others in times of need.

We recognize the financial, emotional and psychological impacts of Covid-19 pandemic and are ready to do whatever we can to assist the City of Glendale, Armenian Community Task Force, local hospitals, first responders and other community organizations who are in the frontlines to keep us all safe and healthy” stated Chairman Serge Grakasian.

Glendale Ararat Homenetmen Executive Board

The Covid-19 Armenian Community Task Force was launched by the  ARF – Western US Central Committee, along with representatives from the Armenian Cultural Foundation, Armenian National Committee of America – Western US, Armenian Relief Society of Western USA, Armenian Youth Federation of Western US, Armenian Youth Federation Juniors, ARF Shant Student Association, Homenetmen (Armenian General Athletic Union and Scouts of Western US, Hamazkayin Armenian Cultural & Educational Society, the Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church and the Board of Regents of the Prelacy Armenian Schools. These community organizations have a long and proud history of always serving our nation and community when crisis strikes and will continue to do all they can meeting our communities needs.

Asbarez: HALO Trust Mobilizes to Counter Covid-19 In Artakh

May 6, 2020

Nagorno Karabakh remains one of the most isolated regions in the world, receiving little assistance or outside aid. Last month, the first cases of COVID-19 were confirmed and if the outbreak spreads, the results could be devastating.

For twenty years, The HALO Trust has been clearing landmines in Karabakh that threaten people’s lives and livelihoods. Currently, they are one of two international organizations working in the region. As a part of the charity’s greater effort to respond to the emergency need caused by COVID-19, HALO is helping protect people in Karabakh from the pandemic.

In mid-April, they quickly mobilized a COVID-19 response and distributed hygiene supplies to Kichan village. Later that month, they also conducted distributions in Nor Ghazanchi and several villages in the Lachin region whose residents would have little means of obtaining the supplies they need to stay safe from a potential COVID-19 outbreak.

HALO is also assisting with a national health emergency, having donated protective face masks to local hospitals. They have also begun outfitting their vehicles to serve as ambulances that can safely transport COVID-19 patients from remote areas to hospital. With over 30 four-wheel-drive vehicles, HALO is best equipped to safely reach villages tucked in Karabakh’s mountainous terrain.

Robert Syfret, Program Manager for HALO in Nagorno Karabakh, explains why HALO decided to mobilize towards a COVID-19 response. He said: “With little aid or outside help, a COVID-19 outbreak would be devastating for Nagorno Karabakh. We recognize the responsibility that comes with being one of the few international humanitarian organizations working in Karabakh during this global pandemic. We have the manpower, the ambulances and the scale to make a difference and protect families in Nagorno Karabakh from the threat of COVID-19.”

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/06/2020

                                        Wednesday, May 6, 2020
Yerevan Wants Russia’s Gazprom To Change Pricing Policy
RUSSIA – Flags wave outside of the Russian Gazprom company's headquarters in 
Moscow, January 21, 2020
Gazprom should stop trying to make Russian natural gas more expensive for 
consumers in Armenia, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Wednesday, pointing 
to the coronavirus-related collapse in global energy prices.
Armenia’s Gazprom-owned gas distribution network asked public utility regulators 
a month ago to allow it to raise by an average of 11 percent the prices of gas 
supplied by it to Armenian households and corporate consumers. The Gazprom 
Armenia network argued that they have remained unchanged despite a 10 percent 
rise in Gazprom’s wholesale price for Armenia which took effect in January 2019
The move followed the Armenian government’s calls for Gazprom to cut the 
wholesale tariff. The government hopes that such a reduction would widen Gazprom 
Armenia’s profit margins and at least keep internal Armenian prices unchanged.
Speaking during the government’s question-and-answer session in the parliament, 
Pashinian said he understands Gazprom’s desire to help its Armenian subsidiary 
make “decent profits” and use them for vital repairs and maintenance of the gas 
distribution network.
“But we believe that the company of our strategic partner country should display 
a different approach given this global crisis and the collapse of the energy 
market, and we will try to talk to our partners,” he said, answering a question 
from a pro-government parliamentarian.
Pashinian discussed the issue with Russian President Vladimir Putin in an April 
6 phone call.
Two weeks later, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov dismissed complaints 
that European Union member states are now paying less for Russian gas than 
Armenia and Belarus because of the collapse in international oil prices. He 
argued that that unlike EU consumers, the two ex-Soviet states allied to Russia 
buy Russian gas at fixed prices that had been set well below international 
market-based levels.
Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian countered that Russian gas has 
never been as cheap for Armenia as was claimed by Lavrov. He said that Yerevan 
asked Gazprom for a deeper discount primarily because the Russians want to raise 
the gas price.
Grigorian also dismissed Lavrov’s criticism of ongoing criminal investigations 
into major Russian companies operating in Armenia and the state-owned Russia 
Railways network in particular.
Arrest Warrant Issued For Sarkisian’s Son-In-Law
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia -- Former Armenian Ambassador to the Vatican Mikael Minasian.
A court in Yerevan approved on Wednesday an arrest warrant against Mikael 
Minasian, former President Serzh Sarkisian’s fugitive son-in-law prosecuted on 
corruption charges which he rejects as politically motivated.
Armenia’s State Revenue Committee (SRC) brought the accusations of illegal 
enrichment, false asset disclosure and money laundering in March and revealed 
them one month later. It also moved to arrest Minasian late last month.
One of Minasian’s lawyers, Mihran Poghosian, denounced the court for allowing 
investigators to hold him in detention for at least two months. Poghosian noted 
that the judge in the case is the one who issued last year an arrest warrant for 
his client’s father, Ara Minasian. The latter is facing corruption charges in a 
separate inquiry conducted by another law-enforcement body.
A bitter critic of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Mikael Minasian apparently 
left Armenia shortly after he was dismissed as the country’s ambassador to the 
Vatican in late 2018. He declined to reveal his current whereabouts in two video 
messages posted on Facebook in recent days.
In one of the messages circulated late on Tuesday, Minasian said that he is not 
returning to Armenia because he believes that investigators and judges dealing 
with his case are acting on illegal orders issued by Pashinian. The prime 
minister has repeatedly accused him of illegally making a huge fortune during 
Sarkisian’s rule.
Minasian also claimed late last week that Pashinian had offered to guarantee his 
and his father’s immunity from prosecution if he pledges to pay cash and stop 
challenging the Armenian government. He said that the offer was personally 
communicated to him in February 2019 by Artur Vanetsian, the then director of 
Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS), at a meeting held in Rome. He said he 
rejected the offer.
Pashinian has still not commented on Minasian’s allegations. Law-enforcement 
authorities have pledged to look into them.
“I would suggest that Mikael Minasian frequently release such videos,” said 
Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian. “I’m sure that we too get some information 
from those videos.”
Another senior official, deputy parliament speaker Alen Simonian, said Minasian 
thus effectively admitted having “liabilities towards the Republic of Armenia.”
Minasian, 42, enjoyed considerable political and economic influence in the 
country when it was ruled by his father-in-law from 2008-2018. He is also 
thought to have developed extensive business interests in various sectors of the 
Armenian economy.
Amram Makinian, another defense lawyer, said on April 22 that the money 
laundering charge brought against Minasian stems from large sums of cash which 
he transferred from one of his bank accounts to another in 2017-2018. “The 
investigating body has noted that documents at his disposal prove the legal 
origin of the money and that money resulted from the sale of his stake in a 
property,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
Makinian also insisted that the other accusations are based on a “technical 
error” committed by the employee of a private firm which drew up and filed 
Minasian’s income declarations. He said that SRC investigators are refusing to 
summon that person for questioning.
Pashinian Sees Prolonged ‘Coronavirus Crisis’
        • Anush Mkrtchian
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is about to deliver a speech in 
parliament, May 6, 2020.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian told Armenians on Wednesday to brace themselves 
for months of economic hardship resulting from the coronavirus pandemic.
“The crisis is only just beginning and we note that we will have a coronavirus 
crisis for at least one year, until May 2021,” he said, speaking in the Armenian 
parliament.
Pashinian insisted at the same time that his government has managed to keep 
economic disruptions caused by the pandemic “manageable.” He again touted 
wide-ranging measures taken by it since the first cases of the virus were 
registered in Armenia in early March.
The stimulus measures have included cash handouts to various categories of the 
vulnerable population as well as loan subsidies and grants to businesses and 
farmers. Also, Armenian banks suspended in late March loan repayments for 
hundreds of thousands of individual borrowers and businesses
Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian put the total amount of the government 
assistance allocated so far at 62 billion drams ($130 million). He said it has 
benefited 360,000 individuals and 24,000 businesses.
Opposition lawmakers questioned, however, the effectiveness of the government’s 
aid program and cited delays in their implementation during a parliament session 
on Tuesday. Some of them claimed to have received complaints about inaccuracies 
in the lists of people eligible for the aid.
One deputy, former Labor Minister Mane Tandilian, also complained that 
restaurants and cafes in Armenia have to pay local taxes despite the fact that 
they have not operated for nearly two months due to the coronavirus lockdown.
Viktor Yengibarian, a lawmaker representing Pashinian’s My Step bloc, defended 
the government efforts to ease the socioeconomic hardship. “I’ve been receiving 
phone calls from our compatriots living western European countries,” he said. 
“They are really envious of the situation that exists in Armenia in terms of the 
spread of the virus and in the economic sense.”
Coronavirus Cases In Armenia Continue To Soar
        • Susan Badalian
Armenia -- Customers at a cafe in Yerevan, May 4, 2020.
Health Minister Arsen Torosian acknowledged on Wednesday that Armenia’s 
coronavirus outbreak is deteriorating after the daily number of confirmed 
infections in the country reached a new record high following the virtual 
lifting of a nationwide lockdown.
The Armenian Ministry of Health reported in the morning that 163 people tested 
positive for coronavirus in the past day, raising the total number of cases to 
2,782. It said that the death toll from the COVID-19 epidemic remains unchanged 
at 40.
The ministry has also reported the deaths of seven other individuals infected 
with the virus. It says that they died from other, pre-existing diseases.
“The situation is increasingly becoming more difficult as evidenced by the 
numbers,” Torosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
“Unfortunately, we are on a rising trajectory at the moment,” he said. “We are 
still coping in terms of [hospital] capacity.”
Torosian warned last week that the health authorities will soon be no longer 
able to hospitalize or isolate all infected people.
The authorities set up last month 1,500 hospital beds for COVID-19 patients. 
According to the Ministry of Health, some 1,600 patients were treated by medics 
in hospitals or hotels across the country as of Tuesday.
Torosian said that due to the rising numbers the Armenian government may again 
extend a coronavirus-related state of emergency which is due to end on May 14. 
But he did not comment on the possibility of restoring lockdown restrictions 
that had been imposed in late March.
Those restrictions, including a ban on most types of business activity, were 
largely lifted by May 4. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on May 3 that 
Armenians must now share with the government “responsibility” for tackling the 
epidemic and minimizing its consequences. Pashinian urged them to abide by 
social distancing and hygiene rules set by the authorities.
Torosian likewise said that the further spread of the potentially lethal disease 
“depends on each of us, not just me or the government.” “We have to learn to 
live [with coronavirus,]” he said. “For example, to wear face masks in closed 
spaces and keep a safe distance from each other.”
Some critics of the government have condemned these statements, saying that the 
authorities are trying to dodge responsibility for their lax enforcement of 
stay-at-home orders and failure to contain the epidemic.
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.
 

Sports: Discovering young talents: Armenian winger from Sweden’s AIK (PHOTOS)

News.am, Armenia
May 5 2020

By Samvel Sukiasyan
NEWS.am Sport continues presenting the young Armenian football players who play abroad, but dream of playing for the Armenian national team one day.

Armenian winger Hovig Doulajian, 16, plays for the U17 team of Sweden’s AIK.

“I was born in Sweden, started playing football at the age of about four,” the footballer told NEWS.am Sport. “My first club was Märsta IK, where I played until I was 13 years old. Then I tried out for AIK and was admitted to the academy of one of the best clubs in Sweden. I have been playing in the youth teams of AIK for three years already. I am currently playing in the U17 Junior Premier League of Sweden.
My main goal is to sign a professional contract with AIK and join the main team.

Representatives of the Football Federation of Armenia contacted me. We have agreed that I will be invited to Armenia’s U17 national team in the near future. It will be a great honor for me. I don’t speak Armenian well, but I understand almost everything.

My mother, Maral, was born in Sweden, and my father, Apraham Doulajian, is from Syria. He moved to Stockholm in 1999. My father was also a professional footballer.”

Armenia’s minister of environment sacked

Panorama, Armenia
May 5 2020

By the decree of Armenian President Armen Sarkissian, Erik Grigoryan has been dismissed as the minister of environment.

The decree was signed  at the suggestion of Prime Minister according to Article 131 of the RA Constitution and respective legislation of the RA Government structure and activity. 

Armenpress: Artsakh’s Army retaliation was painful for official Baku – Defense Ministry

Artsakh’s Army retaliation was painful for official Baku – Defense Ministry

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 20:07, 4 May, 2020

YEREVAN, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS. The retaliation of the Defense Army of Artsakh to the recent cease-fire violations of Azerbaijani army in the contact line seemed to be quite painful for the military-political leadership of official Baku, ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the defense ministry of Artsakh.

”The retaliation of the Artsakh Army to the ceasefire violations of the recent weeks by the Azerbaijani side in different sections of the contact line seemed to be rather painful for the military-political leadership of official Baku.

In all probability this is the reason why the leadership of the armed forces of Azerbaijan and particularly the defense minister visits different sections of the front line during the last few days, trying to somehow encourage their demoralized and disabled soldiers.

The defense minister of Azerbaijan paid a similar visit to the north-eastern and eastern sections of the contact line on May 4, which was detected by relevant services of the Defense Army of Artsakh.

The Command Staff of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Artsakh, remaining faithful to the commitments to preserve ceasefire during the pandemic in line with the call of the UN Secretary-General, informs that any movement of the adversary at the front line, including at the top level, is monitored by the relevant bodies of the Defense Army, while the border-guards are ready to take necessary measures at any time based on the situation of the given period”, reads the statement.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan