China ready to assist Armenia with supply of medical uniforms and adaptive lung ventilation devices – Ambassador

Panorama, Armenia

China is ready to further assist Armenia by granting medical uniforms and adaptive lung ventilation devices worth 110.000 USD,  Ambassador of China to Armenia Tian Erlong said on Monday during a video call with Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Avet Adonts.

As the government press service reported, the deputy foreign minister highly appreciated the constant efforts of the Chinese side in sharing its best practices in the fight and prevention of the spread of the novel coronavirus and emphasized the importance of establishing the online awareness platform for fighting the pandemic by China. Adonts also pointed to the development of a manual on coronavirus prevention and treatment by the First Medical University Hospital in Zhejiang.

Ambassador Tian emphasized the readiness of the Chinese side to continue close cooperation with Armenia in resolving various issues in fight against the novel coronavirus, stressing the importance of international unity and solidarity in the fight against the pandemic.

Armenia halted coronavirus test analysis for a day

PanArmenian, Armenia
– 15:40 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – No analysis of coronavirus tests were performed in Armenia on Sunday, March 22 for the final disinfection of the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

According to Health Ministry spokeswoman Alina Nikoghosyan, the laboratory has been working again since Monday morning.

The Ministry’s statement comes amid confusion as to why no new coronavirus cases were reported in the country on Monday.

Nikoghosyan said more people were tested on Sunday but the results have not arrived yet.

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Armenia has reached 194 as of Sunday, March 22 evening.

The country declared a 30-day state of emergency on March 16 and banned citizens of 16 nations from entering the country.

So far, two patients have recovered from the coronavirus in Armenia.

Ex-Armenia PM appointed deputy chairman of Eurasian Development Bank board

News.am, Armenia

14:33, 23.03.2020
                  

Ex-Armenia PM appointed deputy chairman of Eurasian Development Bank

Ex-Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan has been appointed a deputy chairman of the board of director of the Eurasian Development Bank.

The Eurasian Development Bank is an international financial institution established to promote economic growth in its member states, extend trade and economic ties among them, and support integration in Eurasia through investment.

The Bank was founded by an international treaty – the Agreement Establishing the Eurasian Development Bank- signed by the authorized representatives of the Governments of the Russian Federation and the Republic of Kazakhstan on 12 January 2006 at the initiative of the Presidents of both countries.

The Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Tajikistan became full members of the Bank in 2009, the Republic of Belarus in 2010, and the Kyrgyz Republic in 2011.

U.S. ends funding for Karabakh demining

EurasiaNet,org
March 19 2020
Joshua Kucera Mar 19, 2020
A Halo Trust employee working in Karabakh (photo: Halo Trust)

The U.S. government has halted its funding for removing land mines in Nagorno-Karabakh, the largest American aid program in the contested territory.

The program has been strongly supported by Armenians and a longtime irritant to Azerbaijanis, but U.S. officials said the decision to defund the program was motivated by the virtual completion of the project and the need to direct resources to higher priorities rather than by any political considerations.

Still, Armenians and their supporters in the U.S. have rallied to try to convince Congress to restore the program, funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and carried out by the UK-based charity Halo Trust.

Halo is one of very few international organizations to be working in Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway territory of Azerbaijan controlled since the early 1990s by Armenian forces. The U.S. does not recognize the self-proclaimed independent government there.

U.S. officials made the decision to halt their support of the program in spring of 2019, which set off a months-long battle between the federal government and pro-Armenia members of Congress who fought to get the funding restored.

But the Trump administration has not been convinced. In a February 18 letter to several members of Congress obtained by Eurasianet, senior officials from USAID and the State Department noted that no civilians had been injured by landmines in Nagorno-Karabakh since 2017.

“With casualties at an all-time low and contaminated land in the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast sparse, there are a number of opportunities that our agencies see for U.S. assistance funding that could have a greater impact on the population of Nagorno-Karabakh, such as preparing the populations for peace,” wrote Mary Elizabeth Taylor, Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs, and Richard C. Parker, Assistant Administrator of USAID for Legislative and Public Affairs. “Forward-looking programs that support a peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and lay the groundwork for a more prosperous future offer the best hope for the populations of Nagorno-Karabakh in the long term.”

U.S. officials say the new funding will likely go towards programs in Armenia for promoting transparency and good governance, and in Azerbaijan for energy security and programs designed to wean the country off its dependence on oil and natural gas revenues.

“We see this [demining program] as a success … but at the same time we think we have reached a limit of what we can accomplish in supporting demining in traditional Nagorno-Karabakh,” a USAID official told Eurasianet, speaking on condition of anonymity. “And we’re looking forward to pivoting to other work in the region that could hopefully help resolve some of the regional conflicts.”

Halo’s work in the area is divided into two categories: those inside the Soviet-legacy borders of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, and those in the territories surrounding Karabakh proper that Armenian forces control as a security buffer. USAID funds only operations in the former, while operations in the latter are funded by private donations, primarily by Armenian diaspora groups.

Officials at Halo did not respond to an emailed request for comment about the cut in funding. But during Eurasianet’s November visit to the organization’s headquarters in Karabakh’s de facto capital of Stepanakert, Halo’s officers said they still had much more work to do.

In nearly two decades of operations, Halo has cleared more than 2,000 anti-tank mines and over 9,000 anti-personnel mines from the area, making 48 million square meters of territory again safe for humans.

In 2018, Halo reported that it expected to complete demining in Karabakh by 2020. But in 2019, it started a new survey, which uncovered several new minefields in the region of Martakert (within the Soviet-legacy Karabakh boundaries). “It will take at least another year to complete the traditional oblast. It’s a job [surveying] that requires patience and skill, sitting in a village for a couple of hours and talking to people,” Rob Syfret, Halo’s program manager in Karabakh, told Eurasianet. The entire survey, including the surrounding occupied territories, was scheduled to take three years.

“We’re going village-by-village to quantify how much has been done and how much is still to go,” added Oliver Gerard-Pearse, Halo’s operations manager. “For every humanitarian demining program, this is a key stage in their lifespan.”

U.S. officials, however, argue that it is impossible to declare with certainty that an area is completely mine-free, and point to the fact that the only mine fatalities since 2015 have been Halo employees themselves, suggesting that the remaining mined areas are so inaccessible that the resources spent on clearing them would be better used elsewhere.

“This was an interagency decision, taking into consideration all of our priorities and interests in the South Caucasus, including regional priorities, assistance priorities, our demining programs around the world, and our role as a Minsk Group co-chair in the peace process,” a State Department official told Eurasianet, speaking on condition of anonymity. The Minsk Group is the body, under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which is mediating the peace negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan since the two sides signed a ceasefire over Karabakh in 1994.

Armenian-American lobby groups and members of Congress representing significant blocs of Armenian-Americans have rallied to try to save the program.

Seventy-five members of the House of Representatives signed a letter dated March 13 calling on Congress to restore the demining money. It argued that there were “12 near-miss scenarios for civilians over the past year” from land mines in and around Karabakh.

The representatives also called on the U.S. to eliminate military aid to Azerbaijan “until its government ceases its attacks against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh” and singled out a new $100-million maritime security program for Azerbaijan.

“For decades, USAID has helped clear mines in Artsakh, saving lives, promoting development, and giving communities a sense of normalcy. Today, even though the work is not done, that aid is threatened,” Representative Jackie Speier, a Democrat from California, said on the floor of the House of Representatives on February 11, using the Armenian name for Nagorno-Karabakh. “Today, even though Armenia has transformed itself into a growing democracy, it is autocratic Azerbaijan that has received a massive, disproportionate increase in military aid from the United States. If the administration won’t help those who stand for peace and democracy, Congress must.”

“The demining program has […] allowed the Armenian population to grow into areas that were heavily mined that would not have been able to be populated otherwise,” Ani Tchaghlasian, an officer in the U.S. East Coast branch of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation said in February. “This is a major, major issue for us.”

Azerbaijan has long opposed the demining program, arguing that it perpetuates and encourages Armenian forces’ occupation of Azerbaijani territory. Most international organizations decline to operate in Karabakh because doing so usually results in being blacklisted by Azerbaijan; Halo is the most prominent organization to buck that sanction.

While there is no evidence that Azerbaijan has influenced the decision to defund the demining program, some Armenian advocates nevertheless sense Baku’s hand in the decision.

“This is a heartless, senseless cut by the Trump administration – attacking a life-saving American investment in Artsakh peace at the urging of the increasingly hostile Aliyev regime in Azerbaijan,” Aram Hamparian, the executive director of the Armenian National Committee of America, told Eurasianet. “Instead of cutting this humanitarian aid, the White House should be expanding assistance to Artsakh, a Christian land and democratic republic on the frontiers of freedom.”

The press office of Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not respond to a request for comment.

 

Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at Eurasianet, and author of The Bug Pit.

Azerbaijani press: Experts: No chance Armenia achieves military power of Azerbaijan

BAKU, Azerbaijan, March 19

Trend:

Yerevan is only following its own course, but it doesn’t have money for real [military] contracts, Russian political analyst Yevgeny Mikhailov told Trend.

He made the remark commenting on the statement of the Speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan made during the official visit of the Armenian delegation to Serbia.

The Armenian media disseminated information that one of the topics discussed during the meeting was the possible cooperation of Armenia with Serbia in military sector.

Mikhailov believes that there is no need to talk about any military-technical cooperation between Armenia and Serbia so far.

“Baku receives weapons from many countries, and Azerbaijan’s army is much better equipped than that of Armenia. Meanwhile, Serbia does not have the ability to develop the latest defense technology. Even if Serbia supplies Armenia with small arms, there won’t be any advantage of Armenia over Azerbaijan,” said the expert.

In turn, Ukrainian political analyst Oleg Khavich was skeptical about the hypothetical military cooperation between Belgrade and Yerevan.

“Serbia does not produce modern types of military weapons and equipment, receiving them mainly from Russia – like Armenia. Therefore, I believe that the only promising type of cooperation in this area is the possible participation of the Armenian military in joint Serbian-Russian exercises, which are regularly held in Serbia, as well as the possibility of using the Armenian army of Serbian military training grounds,” he told Trend.

Meanwhile, Georgy Engelhardt, a researcher at the Institute of Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, said that Baku has been actively developing its own presence in the Balkans, including Serbia for more than ten years, adding that it is no coincidence that a monument to the National Leader of Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev, is in the center of Belgrade (Tashmaydan Park).

Engelhardt also noted that the period of the coronavirus pandemic in itself does not favor any military-technical cooperation between any countries, as well as between Serbia and Armenia.

“Moreover, now the Serbian authorities are concerned, first of all, about obtaining medical and sanitary equipment. In my opinion, in March 2020 it’s impossible to take into account the pandemic for any government in Europe, in principle. For the Serbian government, which just the other day (March 15) introduced emergency situation in the country, this is definitely impossible,” the expert added.

Speaking about military-technical cooperation between Armenia and Serbia, the expert suggested that it can be talked about individual elements (radars for example), since Belgrade itself purchases weapons systems from large foreign manufacturers.

Armenpress: Doctors of Yerevan’s coronavirus hospital call on citizens to stay home

Doctors of Yerevan’s coronavirus hospital call on citizens to stay home

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 09:28, 19 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, ARMENPRESS. Doctors of the Nork Infectious Diseases Hospital of Yerevan, which is currently serving as coronavirus-only hospital, called on all citizens of Armenia to stay home to battle the COVID-19.

“We stay here for you, please stay home for us. Be healthy”, the doctors said in their call, which was posted on the hospital’s Facebook page.

On March 16 Armenia declared a 30-day state of emergency to fight against the spread of the novel coronavirus. The state of emergency is effective until April 14, at 17:00. As of now, the total number of COVID-19 cases in the country is 115, one patient has recovered.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Armenpress: Armenia nurse contracts novel coronavirus at hospital

Armenia nurse contracts novel coronavirus at hospital

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 11:29, 19 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, ARMENPRESS. A nurse working at an Armenian infectious diseases hospital has contracted the novel coronavirus, Healthcare Minister Arsen Torosyan said.

He said the nurse is one of the 115 confirmed cases as of Thursday morning.

“The nurse was immediately hospitalized; she is in a satisfactory state and doesn’t have pneumonia. I wish her speedy recovery,” said Torosyan on social media.

Arsen Torosyan said that healthcare workers are now the most at-risk group in terms of contracting the virus. The minister asked the general public to respect their work and stay home to prevent the spread of the virus.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan





Armenpress: China’s Wuhan reports zero increase in novel coronavirus infections

China’s Wuhan reports zero increase in novel coronavirus infections

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 12:36, 19 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, ARMENPRESS. No new infections of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) were reported on March 18 in China’s Wuhan, the epicenter of the epidemic, marking a notable first in the city’s months-long battle with the deadly virus, Xinhua news reports.

The Health Commission of Hubei Province, where Wuhan is the capital, said the virus’ death toll climbed by eight in the province, but the total confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Wuhan and Hubei remained at 50,005 and 67,800 on March 18.

A total of 795 people were discharged from hospital in Hubei Province after recovery. Currently there are 6,636 hospitalized patients, 1,809 of whom are in severe condition and 465 in critical condition.

A pneumonia outbreak caused by the COVID-19 virus (previously known as 2019-nCoV) was reported in China’s city of Wuhan, a large trade and industrial center with a population of 12 million, in late December. Cases of the new coronavirus have also been reported in 166 other countries.




Judge Anna Danibekyan to consider motion to change Armenia 2nd President’s pre-trial measure

News.am, Armenia
Judge Anna Danibekyan to consider motion to change Armenia 2nd President’s pre-trial measure Judge Anna Danibekyan to consider motion to change Armenia 2nd President’s pre-trial measure

20:03, 23.03.2020
                  

The application that second President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan’s attorney Hovhannes Khudoyan addressed to chairman of the Yerevan court of general jurisdiction Artur Mkrtchyan to inscribe consideration of the motion to change Robert Kocharyan’s arrest pre-trial measure with a letter of pledge, has been rejected. This is posted on Hovhannes Khudoyan’s Facebook page.

Former Prime Ministers of Armenia Vazgen Manukyan, Khosrov Harutyunyan and Karen Karapetyan, as well as former Prime Minister of the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh Republic) Anushavan Danielyan have made a proposal to change Robert Kocharyan’s pre-trial measure arrest with letter of pledge.

Earlier, the attorneys had posted the following note on Facebook page:

“Let us remind that the subsequent trial over the alleged overthrow of constitutional order, which was set for March 17, wasn’t held due to Judge Anna Danibekyan’s absence, and later, it was announced that Danibekyan had undergone a surgery.

On March 17, the attorneys were preparing to file a motion to release Robert Kocharyan with a letter of pledge.

Former Prime Ministers of Armenia Vazgen Manukyan, Khosrov Harutyunyan and Karen Karapetyan, as well as former Prime Minister of the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh Republic) Anushavan Danielyan have made a proposal to change Robert Kocharyan’s pre-trial measure arrest with letter of pledge.”

Citizen to Armenian PM’s wife: Why aren’t you wearing a face mask?

News.am, Armenia
Citizen to Armenian PM’s wife: Why aren’t you wearing a face mask? Citizen to Armenian PM’s wife: Why aren’t you wearing a face mask?

20:09, 23.03.2020
                  

While distributing booklets about protection from the coronavirus in Yerevan, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan’s wife, Anna Hakobyan urged a citizen to follow the rules for protection from the coronavirus, in response to which the citizen told her that she does follow the rules and asked why Anna Hakobyan wasn’t wearing a face mask.

In response, Anna Hakobyan said there would be a conversation about this.

Anna Hakobyan also entered a pharmacy and produce stores to distribute booklets.

She also gave a booklet to a store clerk who told her that there is no trade, and in response, Anna Hakobyan said in this situation, no matter how strange it sounds, it’s good that there are no customers.