Armenia’s coronavirus cases rise to 921 as of April 9

Panorama, Armenia
April 9 2020
Health 11:39 09/04/2020 Armenia

Armenia has confirmed 40 new coronavirus infections, bringing the total number of cases to 921 in the country as of 11 a.m. Thursday, April 9, the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

So far, 138 people have recovered and 10 have died from COVID-19 in Armenia.

The results of 4,902 tests have come back negative.

Media Advocate urges Armenian MPs to reject freedom of information bill

Panorama, Armenia
April 9 2020

Society 12:00 09/04/2020 Armenia

Media Advocate initiative calls on Armenian lawmakers to reject a government-drafted bill on freedom of information.

Below is a statement released by Media Advocate on Thursday:

“A draft amendment to the Armenian Law on Freedom of Information has been submitted, which was developed by the Ministry of Environment. According to the version presented on e-draft, there should have been restrictions on information on special kinds of breeding sites, but as it turned out later, what was presented online and what was discussed later by the government are actually different bills, and the latter envisages stricter restrictions.

This measure has been criticized by Media Advocate initiative, a number of human rights and international organizations. Furthermore, this latest step, to present one thing, to adopt another, does not comply with the rules of freedom of information. In fact, the government is trying to covertly adopt a law restricting the freedom of information.

Shushan Doydoyan, head of the Freedom of Information Center, also touched upon this issue, criticizing the situation.

We urge the deputies of the National Assembly to vote against this bill, not to become the attachment of the government which develops covert laws and adopts secret laws.”

Turkish press: Erdoğan thanks Turkey’s minorities for supporting coronavirus fundraising campaign

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan shakes hands with Isak Helva, the chief rabbi of the Turkish Jewish community, on Jan. 31, 2020. (AA Photo)

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan thanked representatives of Turkey’s religious minorities for providing support to the nationwide fundraising campaign to help families affected by the coronavirus outbreak as people from all parts of society unite to relieve the negative affects of the pandemic.

The president called İsak Haleva, chief rabbi of the Turkish Jewish Community, Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomeos, Metropolitan Yusuf Çetin, head of the Syriac Church of Istanbul and Ankara, Armenian Orthodox Patriarch Sahak Maşalyan and Erol Kohen, the co-president of the Turkish Jewish Community to thank them for their contributions.

Haleva announced that he donated five months of his salary to the campaign, while Kohen donated TL 1.2 million ($177,000).

The patriarchate announced a TL 300,000 donation while the foundation which runs Syriac churches donated TL 100,000 for the “We are Self-Sufficient” campaign launched by the Turkish Presidency.

After Erdoğan’s announcement, people from all walks of life across the country rushed to contribute. At least TL 240 million was donated to the campaign, which began with Erdoğan himself donating seven months worth of his personal salary. Top public lenders Ziraat and Vakıfbank announced a donation of more than TL 11 million on Tuesday and Wednesday, while major telecom provider Türk Telekom contributed TL 40 million. Supreme Court President Mehmet Akarca also announced Wednesday that he had asked every judge and prosecutor to donate at least TL 1,000 for the campaign. Stock exchange Borsa İstanbul announced a contribution of TL 5 million.

Despite deaths, recoveries raise hopes

While the struggle against the novel coronavirus relentlessly continues in Turkey, the number of people who succumbed to the disease has risen to 812, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said in a tweet late Wednesday, with recoveries also on the rise.

The number of total cases also surged, reaching 38,226 from Tuesday’s toll of 34,109. Koca urged people to abide by the rules of self-isolation and emphasized the importance of staying home amid the pandemic.

However, the number of people who recovered from the disease raised hopes as it topped 1,846.

One of those recovered patients was 55-year-old chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patient Süleyman İpbüken, who was released from a hospital in southeastern Turkey after overcoming COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, on Thursday.

İpbüken was taken to the hospital on March 23 due to a high fever. His first coronavirus test came back negative, but he was kept under close observation as a possible case. His second test came back positive. Leaving the hospital, he thanked all the medical staff who helped him recover.

Respiratory problems including COPD can prove lethal for COVID-19 patients.

“I also have diabetes,” said İpbüken, who will continue to stay at home under quarantine, adding that he would like to be a convalescent plasma donor if possible.

On the other hand, daily coronavirus infections in Turkey – the world’s seventh worst-hit country by the number of active cases – have risen for the ninth consecutive day. Suggesting that curfew measures for people aged under 20 and 65 and over have yielded results, the minister had previously said new infections were now mostly seen in people between 20 and 65.

The minister also dismissed rumors of a high mortality rate for patients under the age of 60, noting that only 10% of cases under 60 – excluding those with preexisting conditions – died due to COVID-19. Koca also announced that a new mobile application has been developed to monitor infected patients and their mobility.

Coronavirus also hit Turks living abroad, especially in Europe. Diplomatic sources said on Wednesday that the novel coronavirus has so far killed 222 Turkish citizens living abroad. A total of 74 in France, 46 in Germany, 37 in the Netherlands, 19 in the U.K., 18 in Belgium, 10 in the U.S., 10 in Sweden, four in Austria, three in Switzerland, and one in Lebanon died from the virus.

Also, 360 Turkish citizens, who came from Qatar on April 7, were taken under a 14-day quarantine in student dormitories in central Aksaray province.

Turkey lifts quarantine on 6 virus-hit areas

Turkey has lifted quarantine measures on six areas in five provinces, while 156 others remain in isolation, the country’s Interior Ministry announced Wednesday.

As of 4 p.m. (1 p.m. GMT) Wednesday, two district centers, six towns, 92 villages, 47 neighborhoods and nine hamlets across 45 provinces were still under quarantine, the ministry said in a statement.

No fee for coronavirus treatment

For more convenient treatment for citizens, the Social Security Institution (SGK) included coronavirus treatment in “emergency situations” on Thursday. According to the amendment, hospitals will not be allowed to receive any payment for coronavirus diagnosis and treatment.

The definition of an emergency situation was redefined as covering “circumstances that require medical involvement in the first 24 hours following the sudden diseases, accidents, injuries and similar situations, or situations that are considered to be risky in case of transferring to another health care institution, or diagnosis and treatments for pandemic cases.”

“Therefore, the health services provided (for these situations) are considered as emergency health services,” the amendment said.

Worldwide, more than 1.3 million people have been infected with the virus and over 75,000 have died, according to Johns Hopkins University. The true numbers are almost certainly much higher, because of limited testing, different rules for counting the dead and deliberate underreporting by some governments.

For most people, the virus causes mild to moderate symptoms such as fever and cough. But for some, especially older adults and the infirm, it can cause pneumonia. Close to 300,000 people have recovered worldwide.

Armenpress: China sending huge quantity of medical supplies and equipment to Armenia

China sending huge quantity of medical supplies and equipment to Armenia

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 20:41, 8 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. The airplane carrying a large quantity of medical supplies and equipment from China will soon land in Armenia. Part of the medical supplies and equipment has been obtained by the state funds of Armenia and part has been donated by China and Armenian and Chinese benefactors. The special flight has been initiated by the Commandant’s Office of Armenia, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Facebook page of the Armenian Unified Information Center.

The medical supplies and equipment contain 120 ventilation devices, 2 oxygen supply stations, 60 thousand test kits, 60 thousand medical masks, 280 thousand protective masks, 20 thousand goggles and 100,000 protective clothing, as well as medicines.

It’s written ‘’Let our friendship be higher than Mount Ararat and longer than Yangtze River’’ on the boxes.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

CIVILNET.A longing for simple things

CIVILNET.AM

10:08 

Winters were proper back then.

On the day of the first snow, I had a simple tradition. I’d get up early to be the first to step through the dirt field that was covered with snow on my way to school. Every year on that day, I would enter the field that served as a make-shift soccer field during the dry months on one end, before I stepped out the other end through the make-shift hole in the mud barrier. Before I could lean down to clear the wall and exit the field, I would turn around and take a moment to watch the pattern of my footsteps on the satin-like, winter surface.

The imagery of winter and snow had meaning; it wasn’t just about the beauty of nature. Winter meant that I had already left behind the gloomy hump of the wet season. Fall, with its mélange of yellow, orange and crimson leaves was my least favorite season, not because it lacked color or mystery, but because it not only signaled the beginning of a long and arduous school year, but it also cruelly marked the end of the summer holidays. Perhaps, that’s why I have always preferred snow over rain. Winter was an important milestone to the promise of spring and the sunny and carefree days of summer. Winter also meant that the Armenian holidays were around the corner and a reunion of our extended family with grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins was fast approaching. The Christian holiday season in that part of the Islamic world was short in duration but dense in festive spirit and tradition at home and school.

The classroom window in my fourth grade was directly behind me. I used to sit in the front row that year. To be able to see the snow-covered branches of the tree through the window, I would have to turn my head 180 degrees to catch a glimpse of the tree reaching up to the third floor of our school building. The turn of my head alone would not suffice, however; I would also have to lean my body to the right or the left to avoid the heads of my classmates in the rows sitting behind me. Opportune times were rare, as the teacher kept a close eye on the students, especially the ones sitting on the first row. But it was inevitable that the teacher would have to turn to the blackboard and write something with the white chalk. That would by my moment. I’d turn around, lean, and catch a glimpse of winter and internalize the meaning that it carried.

Winter was the promise of a light at the end of the tunnel. The heavy snow on our downhill, dead-end street would pile and turn into a big mound. A permanent layer of ice would cover the street asphalt during the winter months, making it a perfect surface for kids and young adults to slide down with their home-made, carboard sleds. And the mound served as a natural barrier for the speeding sled riders to avoid ending up in the cross traffic on the main street. At times, my young mind could not envisage the melting of the snow mound and ice from our street. The hurdles standing between spring and winter seemed overwhelming.

That’s why the arrival of spring was even more spectacular.

The melt would start inconspicuously in the meek sunshine of late winter and would give me belief that change was actually possible. By the middle of March, the once-imperious snow mound would be reduced to a pile of muddy snow and with that transformation, a new meaning would be on the horizon. The arrival of spring coincided with the Persian New Year which gave the kids and young adults a couple of weeks off from the heavy burden of school. It also signaled the arrival of ice cream in neighborhood grocery stores, a treat that had been in hiding for the duration of the entire cold season. For my family, this was not as much a time to celebrate the holidays native to the land, but an opportunity to re-unite with with members of our extended family. Spring also meant one more hurdle had been conquered on the way to end of school year; the light at the end of the tunnel was now shining ever brighter.

By the time I returned from the spring break, what was visible through the window frame in my classroom had gone through a drastic transformation. I had left behind a foggy picture of the tree carrying the heavy snowfall on its aching branches, and what I encountered on my return was a vibrant tree with dark green colored leaves, swaying to the tune of a crisp spring. Once the teacher was busy scribbling on the blackboard, I would seize my chance to turn around and view what I could only describe as mesmerizing at the time. From there, it was a short hop to Easter, which like Christmas was short in duration but high in spirit. If I could only survive the year-end exams, I could embrace the warmth of summer again.

This was a time when every season carried a unique message with its unique hues and aromas. Colors, moods, temperature and precipitation worked hand-in-hand to tell a story to our senses. While the seasons seemed everchanging and transformative, life as I knew it, seemed everlasting, permanent. Change was more rhythmic than chaotic within a stable framework and created a fine balance between predictability and change.

Years later, a change in geography altered all that. In my new environment, the changes in seasons were more of a nuance. Gone were the snowy mound and the homemade carboard sleds of my neighborhood. The drastic contrast of seasonal color in the windows had disappeared. Yet, there was still some rhythm to the changing nuances and I could still recognize the seasons. The very hot and hot seasons were summer and spring respectively, while the rainy warm and the rainy cold seasons were supposed to be fall and winter. In the meantime, the holiday vacations got longer but the spirit of tradition and large family gatherings faded away. I did not want to take the present for granted, however, as I had done with the walk on the snow-covered field in my hometown. I could be excused for my lack of hindsight and sentimentality at young age, but I was older now, and appreciation of the simple pleasures of life was a must. I tried to find meaning in the barely changing seasons and learned to appreciate the green leaves of the tree across from my balcony. She was not as good of a chameleon as the one visible from my fourth-grade classroom window, but it also swayed gently to the tune of the season.

Just as I had become content with the predictability of the seasonal nuances and the balance in nature, chaos started to slowly creep into the environment. There was a time when the occasional unpredictability in the weather felt welcome. We’d always had the ‘Mad March,’ the ‘Indian Summer’ and the occasional warm rain in the summer. They were all oddities what we expected but weather patterns started to change unexpectedly. But the heat started to drag on to winter, rain showed up unannounced in the middle of summer and I was told, the snow mound no longer had a chance to build up in my old neighborhood.

And as I sat there on my balcony in that early spring morning with my coffee and cream, the leaves of the familiar tree brushed against one another. The crisp wind was the perfect compliment to my hot cup of coffee. They competed with one another for my attention; I was not playing favorites. I pulled the coffee mug into my hands to balance the coolness of the spring breeze. The adolescent cloud was sitting there in the baby blue roof of the world, doing nothing. But the novel fragility in weather patterns I had experienced in recent years gave me room for thought.

“Will there come a time when nature will lose its balance and people will yearn for such simple pleasures? Will we miss the quiet balance of a brisk, spring morning; the early walk in the unadulterated snow or the hike in the mountains?”

I never thought that day would arrive so soon and in this manner.
 

EU to provide €92million to Armenia to support immediate and short-term needs

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 21:14, 8 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. The EU will provide overall €92million to Armenia to support immediate and short-term needs. The funds will be directed towards supplying medical devices and equipment, training for medical and laboratory staff, support to SMEs and business community, as well as social and humanitarian assistance to those affected by the coronavirus outbreak, ARMENPRESS was informed from the office of the EU Delegation to Armenia.

“Further to our announcement last week on the support of the European Union to Armenia to fight against COVID-19 outbreak and after further restructuring of the existing programmes with the Armenian Government, we are proud to announce that the EU will provide overall €92million to Armenia to support immediate and short-term needs.

The funds will be directed towards supplying medical devices and equipment, training for medical and laboratory staff, support to SMEs and business community, as well as social and humanitarian assistance to those affected by the coronavirus outbreak. The EU’s response follows a Team Europe approach. It draws contributions from all EU institutions and combines the resources mobilised by EU Member States and financial institutions, in particular the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD). Working together, Team Europe can muster a critical mass that few others can match’’.

Armenia coronavirus cases reach 921 with 10 deaths

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 11:25, 9 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS. 28 coronavirus cases have been recorded in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total cumulative number of COVID-19 cases to 921, healthcare ministry spokesperson Alina Nikoghosyan said on social media. She also clarified that there was a technical error in the total cumulative number record and 12 cases were not recorded in the statistics.

An 80-year-old patient who had underlying health conditions has died from coronavirus complications, bringing the total number of deaths to 10, Nikoghosyan said.

24 patients recovered in the past day, bringing the number of recoveries to 138.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenia starts releasing multi-billion dram economic and social relief

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 11:39, 9 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government has so far distributed 3 billion 670 million drams in relief for businesses and socially vulnerable citizens amid the coronavirus crisis, PM Nikol Pashinyan said during the Cabinet meeting. On April 7 the number was 2 billion 353 million.

The PM said the released money is not even 10% of the planned relief which is gradually being distributed.

He said the entire package will be accessible to all eligible citizens and businesses in a few days.

Pashinyan said “the government has a clear strategy” on how to overcome the crisis and nevertheless they will hear out all recommendations and proposals which are being submitted.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenia launches massive coronavirus testing:frontline health workers,pneumonia patients prioritized

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 11:56, 9 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan says Armenia continues maintaining “cautious optimism” over the coronavirus crisis as the transmission curve appears to be flattening.

Speaking at the Cabinet meeting, he said that more people are expected to recover or be discharged from quarantine soon.

He said tomorrow on April 10 the Coronavirus Response Task Force will meet to discuss what restrictions will continue being enforced from Monday.

“But right now the biggest challenge is that from tomorrow we must create the capacity of carrying out 1000 tests a day,” he said, adding that healthcare authorities say the number might not reach 1000 in the initial phase. He said healthcare authorities will not conduct the tests randomly and it will be done for at-risk groups. “Randomly testing people will be a waste of time and resources”, he said.

Starting April 10, all healthcare workers involved in the coronavirus response, as well as all citizens having pneumonia and other viral diseases will be mandatory tested.

So far, Armenia has conducted 4902 tests.

 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Coronavirus cases surpass 10,000 in Russia: TASS

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 12:18, 9 April, 2020

YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS. The number of coronavirus patients in Russia rose by 1,459 in the past 24 hours, reaching 10,131, TASS reports citing the anti-coronavirus crisis center.

“A total of 10,131 coronavirus cases have so far been recorded in 81 Russian regions (up by 16.8%). As many as 118 people were discharged from hospitals in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of recoveries to 698. Thirteen coronavirus patients died in the past 24 hours, taking the death toll to 76”, the statement reads.

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 204 countries and territories.