Police charges 357 citizens in one day with violating movement restriction and quarantine rules

Panorama, Armenia

The Police of Armenia continues implementing the Commandant’s directive on the restriction on public movement to prevent the spread of coronavirus, the press service at the Police reported.

As the source said, on March 31 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., 357 people in Armenia have  been pressed with administrative charges for violating quarantine rules and other restrictions of public movement  imposed to contain the coronavirus. The total number of citizens called for administrative liability has been 3806 since the directive of the Commandant’s Office. 1909 out of the total number were recorded in capital Yerevan.

In the meantime, on March 31, 227 cases for transporting more than two passengers were revealed in the republic. 69 drivers were pressed administrative charges for transporting more than two passengers.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/31/2020

                                        Tuesday, 
Yerevan Hopes For Russian Gas Price Cut
Armenia -- Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian at a news conference in Yerevan, 
.
Citing the economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic, the Armenian 
government has asked Russia’s Gazprom giant to consider cutting the price of its 
natural gas supplied to Armenia.
In a letter to Gazprom Chairman Alexei Miller published by the Armenpress news 
agency on Tuesday, Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian proposed that the two 
sides open negotiations on the matter.
Grigorian argued that international oil prices, which greatly determine the cost 
of natural gas, have fallen sharply over the past month. He also said that 
economic disruptions caused by coronavirus will significantly reduce energy 
consumption levels in Armenia unless they are offset by a gas price cut.
In these circumstances, Yerevan finds it “expedient to start new negotiations on 
changing the price of gas supplied to the Republic of Armenia,” Grigorian wrote. 
He said the talks should focus on the possibility of lowering that price or 
setting it in Russian rubles, rather than dollars, as has long been the case.
Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian likewise said that the collapse of the oil 
prices gives the Armenian side sufficient grounds to seek a price cut. “I think 
that we will hold such discussions with our Russian partners very soon,” Avinian 
told reporters.
Armenia imports more than 80 percent of its gas from Russia. The wholesale price 
of that gas is currently set at $165 per thousand cubic meters. Gazprom raised 
it from $150 per thousand cubic meters in January 2019.
Despite that price rise, the cost of Russian gas supplied to Armenian consumers 
remained unchanged. Officials in Yerevan indicated before the coronavirus crisis 
that Armenian utility regulators may allow Armenia’s Gazprom-owned to raise its 
retail tariffs this spring.
Natural gas generates around one-third of Armenia’s electricity. It is also used 
in pressurized and liquefied forms by most vehicles in the country.
Armenia Extends Coronavirus Lockdown
Armenia -- An empty street in downtown Yerevan, March 22, 2020.
Armenia’s government has decided to extend a nationwide lockdown by at least ten 
days because of a continuing increase in coronavirus cases in the county, Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Tuesday.
The government imposed one-week restrictions on people’s movements and ordered 
the closure of most businesses on March 24. Since then Armenians have only been 
allowed out to buy food, receive medical care or briefly exercise near their 
places of residence. The curfew does not apply to a limited number of public and 
private sector employees allowed to continue to go to work.
Despite these measures the virus has continued to spread. The Armenian Ministry 
of Health said on Tuesday morning that 50 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 have 
been registered in the past 24 hours, bringing their total number to 532.
“This statistics worries us,” Pashinian said when he announced the government’s 
decision to extend the lockdown.
The premier complained that some Armenians remain complacent about the epidemic 
and ignore stay-at-home orders issued by the authorities. “The situation is very 
risky and I want to call on all of us to take it very seriously,” he said in a 
live Facebook broadcast.
“Dear compatriots, stay at home and protect your and your loved ones’ health,” 
he added.
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian appeals to Armenians, .
“The restrictions will be tightened further,” Deputy Prime Minister Tigran 
Avinian told a news conference held afterwards. “We must also make the 
monitoring more effective. We are therefore going to beef up police forces 
[enforcing the lockdown] with various forces from other structures.”
Armenian health authorities have reported three coronavirus-related deaths so 
far. In Pashinian’s words, 30 infected persons are now in a “serious conditions” 
while 424 others are showing no symptoms of the respiratory disease.
On Monday the government asked the Armenian parliament to allow it to access 
personal data from people’s mobile phones for tracking their movements, phone 
calls and text messages. This is supposed to make it easier for the authorities 
to identify and isolate those who have been exposed to infected individuals.
The National Assembly tentatively approved, over strong opposition objections, a 
relevant government bill in the first readings on Monday. But it narrowly and 
unexpectedly failed to pass the bill in the second and final reading on Tuesday.
Lilit Makunts, the parliament majority leader, blamed that on the absence of two 
dozen fellow deputies from Pashinian’s My Step bloc. Some of them are monitoring 
elections in Nagorno-Karabakh while others are in coronavirus-related 
self-isolation, she said.
The two parliamentary opposition parties continued to categorically reject the 
proposed surveillance, saying that it constitutes a politically dangerous 
violation of citizens’ privacy and would not help to contain the epidemic.
Pashinian defended the measure, however, saying that is “not pleasant” for the 
government but necessary for slowing the further spread of coronavirus. He 
argued that the authorities now have trouble tracing the primary sources of some 
infections.
“We are now looking for ways to again submit that bill to the National 
Assembly,” he said.
The parliament met later in the day for a fresh emergency debate on the bill 
initiated by its pro-government majority. Opposition lawmakers boycotted the 
session in protest.
Presidential, Parliamentary Elections Held In Karabakh
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Nagorno-Karabakh -- A voter casts ballots at a polling station in Stepanakert, 
.
Residents of Nagorno-Karabakh went to the polls on Tuesday in presidential and 
parliamentary elections strongly condemned by Azerbaijan.
The presidential ballot was contested by 14 candidates. Only three of them were 
believed to stand a chance of succeeding Bako Sahakian, Karabakh’s outgoing 
president who has been in office since 2007. Those are Sahakian’s former prime 
minister and foreign minister, Arayik Harutiunian and Masis Mayilian, and 
retired army General Vitaly Balasanian.
None of them was openly endorsed by Sahakian or Armenia’s government during 
election campaign.
The parliamentary race was also tightly contested, with 12 parties and blocs 
vying for 33 seats in the local legislature. Most of their top leaders also ran 
for president.
The elections went ahead despite serious concerns about the spread of 
coronavirus in Karabakh. The authorities in Stepanakert, which have recorded no 
coronavirus cases so far, dismissed calls for their postponement made by several 
presidential candidates and prominent public figures in Armenia. They said that 
precautionary measures taken by them will minimize health risks.
Critics are especially worried about the arrival of hundreds of election 
observers from Armenia where the number coronavirus cases surpassed 500 on 
Tuesday morning. The authorities counter that the observers as well as Armenian 
journalists underwent COVID-19 tests just before travelling to Karabakh. All 
other people from Armenia were temporarily banned last week from entering 
Karabakh.
Nagorno-Karabakh -- A voter (L) and an election commission official at a polling 
station in Stepanakert, .
Many ordinary Karabakh Armenians also seemed unfazed by the coronavirus threat, 
flocking to polling stations disinfected throughout the day. Each voter was 
handed a face mask, gloves and a single-use pen while entering them. Election 
officials also wore protective masks and gloves.
With only one or two voters at a time allowed into most of the 281 polling sites 
across Karabakh, lines formed outside many of them already in the morning. 
According to the Central Election Commission, about half of the 
Armenian-populated territory’s 104,000 eligible voters cast ballots as of 2 p.m.
“Turnout is very high,” said Kajik Harutiunian, the chairman of a precinct 
election commission in Stepanakert.
“People started queuing up at 8 a.m.,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “In 
terms of the numbers, there have been no such elections before.”
Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijani rule in 1991 but has not been formally 
recognized as an independent state by any country since then. The international 
community continues to regard the territory as an integral part of Azerbaijan.
Baku has always condemned elections held in Karabakh as illegitimate. Its 
reaction to the latest polls was just as negative.
In a statement released on Tuesday, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry said they run 
counter to Azerbaijani and international law. “The illegal regime installed by 
Armenia in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan is the product of aggression, 
ethnic cleansing and racial discrimination, and it is led and controlled by 
Armenia,” said the statement.
U.S., Russian and French mediators co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group said, 
meanwhile, that they “have taken note of the so-called general elections” and 
“recognize the role of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh in deciding its 
future” as part of a future resolution of the Karabakh conflict.
Nagorno-Karabakh -- Bako Sahakian, the Karabakh president, meets with the U.S., 
Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Stepanakert, October 16, 
2019.
“The Co-Chairs note, however, that Nagorno-Karabakh is not recognized as an 
independent and sovereign state by any of the Co-Chair countries or any other 
country,” they said in a joint statement. “Accordingly, the Co-Chairs do not 
accept the results of these ‘elections’ as affecting the legal status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh and stress that the results in no way prejudge the final status 
of Nagorno-Karabakh or the outcome of the ongoing negotiations to bring a 
lasting and peaceful settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.”
The mediators, who regularly visit Stepanakert and meet with Karabakh’s leaders 
during their tours of the conflict zone, had issued similar statements on past 
Karabakh elections.
The European Union also reacted to the Karabakh elections, saying that it “does 
not recognize the constitutional and legal framework within which they are being 
held.” “This event cannot prejudice the determination of the future status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh or the outcome of the ongoing negotiation process,” said a 
spokesman for the EU foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell.
Predictably, Armenia defended the holding of the elections. It argued that OSCE 
member states had adopted in 1992 a document saying that “elected 
representatives of Nagorno-Karabakh” should also participate in 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks. “Elections must be held to have elected 
representatives,” read an Armenian Foreign Ministry statement.
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.
 

Asbarez: Pasadena School Board Approves New Armenian Dual Immersion School

A screen capture of the Pasadena School Board meeting on March 26

Pasadena Unified School District Board on Thursday, in a vote of 4 to 3 gave a conditional approval for the establishment of a new Armenian Dual Language Immersion Program, which will operate from Blair High School and will enroll students for the 2020-2021 school year.

PasadenaNow.com reported that following nearly 90 minutes of discussion, PUSD members Dr. Elizabeth Pomeroy, Scott Phelps, Lawrence Torres, and Roy Boulghourjian voted in favor of the program, while members Kim Kenne, Michelle Bailey, and PUSD Board President Patrick Cahalan voted “no.”

The Armenian Dual Language Immersion Academy will be located on Pasadena’s East Blair campus, which is independent of the main Blair High School campus. Armenian language I, II, III, and IV, in both Western and Eastern Armenian, will be offered to students in 9 to 12, with additional Armenian history and culture courses also on the curriculum.

All students, regardless of their city of residency, may register for the Academy’s 2020 to 2021 school year. Students who live in different districts need to first request a release from their local school district. Once a release has been issued, they can then enroll at the Armenian Dual Language Academy, under PUSD.

The tentative dates for parents to apply for intra/inter district permits are Monday, April 6 to Friday, August 7.

The Armenian Dual Language Immersion Program is touted as the first public high school in Pasadena, as well as its surrounding cities–and the entire United States–to offer Armenian language, history, and culture courses to its students.

Asbarez: ANCA Welcomes First Round of U.S. Funding to Armenia’s Coronavirus Response

March 27, 2020

ANCA Chairman Raffi Hamparian, in a letter to U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy earlier this week, called for U.S. support for Armenia’s efforts to deal with the COVID-19 crisis.

WASHINGTON—The Armenian National Committee of America on Friday welcomed confirmation, shared with it by the State Department, that the global U.S. COVID-19 emergency aid package—which will provide $274 million in resources to 64 of the world’s most at-risk countries—will include $1.1 million for Armenia.

“We welcome this first round of additional U.S. healthcare resources for Armenia related to the COVID-19 pandemic,” said ANCA Chairman Raffi Hamparian. “The ANCA encourages the immediate reprogramming of funds already appropriated by Congress for Armenia to help meet this crisis. As we have been from the beginning of this global pandemic, we will remain engaged with Executive and Legislative branch leaders to support joint U.S.-Armenia efforts to contain COVID-19 and to care for those suffering from this virus.”

Earlier this week, ANCA Chairman Raffi Hamparian encouraged U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy “to ensure that needed U.S. foreign assistance resources are directed to help Armenia deal with this health emergency, in cooperation with Armenia’s Ministry of Health and in support of other public health stakeholders, such as the American University of Armenia’s Center for Health Services Research and social service organizations like the Armenian Relief Society.” Hamparian’s March 24th letter to Ambassador Tracy went on to note that “Funds appropriated by Congress can play a vital role at this crucial moment, as can U.S. technical assistance in public health reporting, data collection, and capacity building.”

The additional U.S. health assistance will help Armenia prepare laboratory systems, activate case finding and event-based surveillance, support technical experts for response and preparedness, and bolster risk communication.

Asbarez: Fix It. Fess Up.

March 27, 2020

Garen Yegparian

BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

A few months ago, Asbarez reported this tidbit of laughter, or more accurately, guffaw-inducing Ankara inanity.

It seems Turkey’s High Advisory Board is worried that the Armenian Genocide “issue” is hindering people’s “harmonious” life in that country. I’m somewhat befuddled by what’s harmonious about life in Turkey. Ignoring, denying, or covering-up of most of its history? Jailing journalists and otherwise muzzling the media? Persecuting Kurds, Alevis, and other minorities? Forcibly Turkifying not just Christian nations living within its borders but also the numerous Moslem nationalities? Repressing labor unions? Stomping on civil and human rights? Picking fights with its neighbors thus making its own citizens’ lives less secure?

Then we have a more specific attribution, to Fahrettin Altoon, evidently deemed Turkey’s #2 person, after the wanna-be-Sultan (that’s President Erdoğan for thise who have been asleep for the last two decades). This gent said of the Armenian Genocide that some people “use the issue in a bid to damage the harmony of the Turkish people.” Evidently, the topic was on the agenda of the High Advisory Board. In a perverse way, I suppose that’s a good thing. And if the members of this body had any wisdom among them, they’d see the best and easiest solution to the problem, fess up! Admit to Turkey’s culpability for the Genocide.

Let me spell it out for them: If there’s no denial, then Turks of good conscience would not be cast into the artificial role of harmony-busters. Everyone (except, inevitably, some die-hard Pan-Turkists) would be on the same page. Bingo! Disharmony=GONE!

But that may be what the fuss is all about. Given the existence of Article 301 of the Turkish penal code that outlaws “insulting the Turkish nation” (whatever THAT really means), this may be the beginning of a drive to shut people up regarding the Genocide. It’s not hard to imagine a forced/tortured/corrupt link being made between causing “disharmony” and “insulting the Turkish nation”.

But really, fellas (yes, they’re all men, check out the picture here) everything would be much simpler, your lives, Armenians’ lives, your government’s activities, and everyone else’s, too, if you would just man-up an accept responsibility so we can move on to more important issues, like reparations and the Armenian irredenta.

Please, help Turkey’s president’s august advisors see the light of day on this matter. Write them, enlighten the, have some fun with them on this one explaining how foolish, ludicrous, and ridiculous they appear when they go through these contortions to avoid telling the truth.

Chamlian Students Shine at L.A. County Science Fair

March 27, 2020

Chamlian Armenian School’s L.A. County Science Fair finalists

Chamlian Armenian School is Proud to Report their Success at the 2020 Los Angeles County Science Fair

LOS ANGELES—Throughout the course of the 2019 to 2020 academic school year, Chamlian students worked diligently to prepare their science projects to be submitted for consideration in the Annual Los Angeles County Science Fair. After months of planning, hard work, and experimentation, the young scientists were presented with an additional challenge: due to social distancing, the L.A. County Science Fair was transitioned onto a remote platform.

In a short amount of time, Chamlian students rose up to the challenge and efficiently transitioned their projects onto a digital platform, recording themselves with detailed explanations and presentations to accurately convey the scientific process they underwent throughout the course of their experimentation.

These dedicated students displayed their sheer commitment and success throughout the entire process as, in addition to their science fair projects, they balanced school-work, athletics, extracurricular activities, and, in the latter part of the year, a transition to our Distance Learning Program in the face of the current coronavirus crisis. These award-winning projects, alongside the students who completed them, represented Chamlian Armenian School at the annual L.A. County Science Fair and were acknowledged for their creativity, innovation, and excellence!

The following is a list of students whose dedication to their science projects earned them recognition by the Los Angeles County:

  • Ella Baghdassarian: First Place; Physics – Electricity & Magnetism
  • Lori Khemichian: First Place; Materials Science
  • Kaitlyn Baghdassarian: Second Place; Pharmacology
  • Nicole Hacopians: Honorable Mention; Chemistry – Applied
  • Celine Gharapetian: Honorable Mention; Product Science
  • Rafael Enfiadjian: Honorable Mention; Chemistry – Applied
  • Raffi Boghossian: Recognition; Environmental Management
  • David Khatchatourian & Daren Stepanians: Recognition; Ecology
  • Arek Boynerian: Recognition; Product Science
  • Nanar Shahinian: Recognition; Animal Biology
  • Daron Kasparian: Recognition; Environmental Management
  • Nicole Timour: Recognition; Behavior/Social Sciences – Human
  • Nyree Aghayan: Recognition; Materials Science

Special Awards:

  • Celine Gharapetian, recipient of The Office of Naval Research Naval Science Award
  • Raffi Boghossian, recipient of the U.S. Metric Association for the best use of The International System of Units in a Science Fair Project

We are very proud of our students for utilizing their complex reasoning, planning, and critical thinking skills as they applied their scientific knowledge to prepare their award winning projects. As young scientists and leaders, Chamlian students have proven that with commitment, dedication, and a thirst for knowledge, the realization of their goals is imminent.

“My deepest congratulations to our young scientists for their display of innovation, creativity, and academic excellence throughout the course of their years at Chamlian,” remarked Chamlian Armenian School Principal Dr. Talin Kargodorian. “You have earned this great honor; may this serve as only a stepping stone for inevitable continued success throughout your academic lives.”

“The Science Fair is only one of many invaluable experiences we provide for our students, both inside and outside the classroom. It is one of the many outlets where creativity and cross curricular learning take flight and important skills such as problem solving and critical thinking are encouraged. I would like to express my sincere appreciation and gratitude to Mrs. Lida Gevorkian, our Science Fair Coordinator and Science Department Chair, for her continued leadership and guidance of students throughout this entire process,” concluded Dr. Kargadorian.

Chamlian Armenian School continues to inspire the minds of future innovators and global leaders as they venture into the ever changing and expanding 21st century, equipped with the knowledge and hands on experience necessary to continue in their road to success. We once again congratulate all of our Science Fair participants and winners.

Soldiers wounded repelling Azerbaijani attack in stable condition

Public Radio of Armenia
 
 
 
The two soldiers wounded in Azerbaijani shooting are in stable condition and their lives are not in danger, Spokesperson for the Ministry of Defense Shushan Stepanyan informs.
 
“The servicemen are being transported to Yerevan. This is the approach of the military medical department,” she said in a twitter.
 
The soldiers and a teenager were wounded, as the Azerbaijani troops undertook an infiltration attempt and targeted villages in Armenia’s Noyemberyan region.
 
Doctors asses the child’s condition as serious but stable, the injury is not life-threatening.

Armenia MFA issues statement on military incident at Armenian-Azerbaijani border

News.am, Armenia

23:37, 30.03.2020
                  

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia has issued a statement on the military incident at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. The statement reads as follows:

“We strongly condemn the attempts of Azerbaijan to escalate the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, which resulted in the wounding of a 14 years old resident of Voskevan community of Tavush region. At the same time, two servicemen of the Armed Forces of Armenia have been wounded while preventing the infiltration attempt of the Azerbaijani side towards the Armenian positions in the same direction.

This unprovoked ceasefire violation has no justification, especially today, when all countries of the world mobilize their medical resources in the fight against COVID19. By such actions, Azerbaijan disregards the calls of the international community, particularly the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs and the UN Secretary General to strictly adhere to the ceasefire and refrain from provocative actions during this period. 

This military incident demonstrates that either the Azerbaijani side has no control over the actions of its military units on the border or deliberately escalates the situation thus bearing full responsibility for its consequences. 

We wish speedy recovery to our injured citizens.”

The Netherlands considers Armenia a safe country of origin

News.am, Armenia

21:11, 30.03.2020
                  

Upon the decision of the State Secretary for Justice and Security (Minister for Migration) at the Ministry of Justice and Security of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Armenia has been classified in the list of safe countries for travel, the Embassy of Armenia said in a statement.

“In a March 27 letter addressed to the House of Representatives, State Secretary for Justice and Security (Minister for Migration) at the Ministry of Justice and Security of the Netherlands Ankie Broekers-Knol informed that the changes that took place in Armenia after May 2018 have significantly contributed to the establishment of law and order in the country, the number of asylum seekers from Armenia has dropped drastically and, taking into consideration several other indicators, Armenia is now considered a safe country of origin,” the statement reads.

Azerbaijan bombards Armenia’s Koti

News.am, Armenia
Azerbaijan bombards Armenia’s Koti Azerbaijan bombards Armenia’s Koti

22:22, 30.03.2020
                  

Azerbaijan also bombarded Koti village of Armenia’s Tavush Province today, as resident of Koti Susanna Saratikyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am, adding that Azerbaijan bombarded the village for nearly 30 minutes.

As reported earlier, Azerbaijan also bombarded the Baghanis and Voskevan villages today, and a 14-year-old was wounded. At around 7 p.m., Azerbaijan made an attempt of sabotage penetration in the direction of the Armenian military posts in the Noyemberyan region of Tavush Province. Thanks to the operations of the Armenian border guard troops, the adversary was thrown back, and the information about the casualties is being specified. The Armenian side doesn’t have casualties, two servicemen were slightly injured as a result of the operations and are at the medical center in Noyemberyan.