Armenia reports 1675 daily coronavirus cases

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 11:04, 10 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS. 1675 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 324,039, the ministry of healthcare reports.

10,052 COVID-19 tests were conducted on November 9.

1277 patients have recovered in one day. The total number of recoveries has reached 286,334.

The death toll has risen to 6831(69 death cases have been registered in the past one day).

The number of active cases is 29,521.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

French, Russian FMs to discuss joint efforts within OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship

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 11:16, 10 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS. French Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Yves Le Drian and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will hold a meeting in Paris on November 12 on the sidelines of the international conference on Libya, the French foreign ministry reports.

The meeting will also be attended by the defense ministers of France and Russia.

The sides will discuss the joint efforts being made within the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship, as well as the political and military aspects of regional and international crises.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Artsakh parliamentary factions issue statement, call on OSCE Minsk Group to condemn Azerbaijan’s actions

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 11:43, 10 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS. The factions of the Parliament of Artsakh have issued a statement on the 1st anniversary of the signing of the statement which resulted in the ceasefire.

“A year has passed since the adoption of the trilateral statement of 2020 November 9, however Azerbaijan’s anti-Armenian policy against the people of Artsakh continues until today, ignoring the Russian peacekeeping mission.

In order to create panic and achieve the exodus of Armenians from Artsakh, the Azerbaijani side has recently started targeting the settlements and civilians.

Encouraged by impunity, Azerbaijan, making an armed infiltration on November 8 this year, again conducted terrorism against civilians who were carrying out water-supply works near Shushi of the Shushi-Berdzor section which is under the control of the Russian peacekeepers. As a result, 22-year-old man was killed, 3 others were hospitalized with gunshot wounds.

Such behavior proves that Artsakh-Armenians’ right to live safely and worthily in the homeland is possible only in case of the international recognition of the Republic of Artsakh.

We strongly condemn such criminal acts and demand proper investigation and taking of adequate actions.

We call on the OSCE Minsk Group to condemn Azerbaijan’s this kind of behavior, and on the Russian peacekeeping troops, the Armed Forces of Artsakh and other law enforcement agencies to take tough measures to prevent these regular terrorist actions against the civilian population”, the statement says.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

U.S. Department of State Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs condemns killing of Armenian civilian by Azeri military

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 11:48, 10 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS. The U.S. Department of State Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs condemned the November 8 killing of an Armenian civilian near Shushi by the Azerbaijani military.

“We condemn the violence that caused the death of an Armenian civilian,” the U.S. Department of State Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs tweeted. “We urge Armenia and Azerbaijan to intensify their engagement including through the Minsk Group Co-Chairs to resolve all outstanding issues related to or resulting from the N-K conflict.”

4 Armenian civilians – plumbers repairing a water supply pipe outside Shushi – were attacked by an Azerbaijani military serviceman on November 8. One of the plumbers, 23-year-old Martik Yeremyan, was killed while the three others were wounded.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Health officials identify foodborne pathogens behind mass poisoning at Tashir Pizza

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 13:25, 10 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Healthcare and the Food Safety Inspection Agency released lab results of samples taken from the food, employees and patrons of Tashir Pizza, the restaurant where a mass food poisoning left nearly 180 people sickened and hospitalized.

14 out of 40 samples taken from surfaces at the restaurants were contaminated with Escherichia coli.

2 out of 24 bacteriological samples taken from employees tested positive for Salmonella enteritidis, while 9 out of 26 nasal swab samples tested positive for Staphylococcus.  

3 out of 16 samples taken from food showed contamination with Staphylococcus aureus (chicken meat), and Salmonella enteritidis (Caesar salad, sauce, marinated mushrooms, sausage, cooked mushroom, cheese etc.)

Salmonella enteritidis was discovered in multiple samples taken from feces of hospitalized patrons of the restaurants.

Moreover, cooked chicken meat and lettuce were contaminated with Escherichia coli, salmonella and Staphyloccocus aureus.

Ground beef was contaminated Listeria monocytogenes.

Food Safety Inspectorate agents are now conducting tests at the companies who supply Tashir Pizza with mayonnaise (Hayr Yev Vordi Avagyanner LLC) and chicken meat (Kurnikov LLC of Saratov).

Tashir Pizza shut down all its restaurants until further notice when the outbreak occurred last week.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia to have commissioners for Diaspora affairs abroad on voluntary basis

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 14:12, 10 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is going to appoint commissioners for Diaspora affairs on voluntary basis abroad, in a status of an advisor.

The parliamentary standing committee on state-legal affairs approved the draft on making an amendment to the Law on Public Service during today’s session.

The necessity of adopting the draft is connected with the creation of the institute of the Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs. “The commissioners will be appointed by the decision of the Prime Minister of Armenia at the proposal of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs, they will have a status of an advisor abroad, will not be paid and will not have a working regime. They will provide professional consulting on the Armenia-Diaspora cooperation directions and will assist the works being carried out by the High Commissioner in the field of cooperation with the Diaspora”, High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan said at the session.

There is no need for additional financial allocations from the state budget for the adoption of the draft. The commissioners will be appointed in a country where they will be in that moment, they will not be sent from Armenia, they will be people familiar with the local community.

The standing committee will propose the Parliament’s Council to include the draft into the agenda of plenary sessions.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

The second Nagorno-Karabakh war ended one year ago today

AEI – American Enterprise Institute
Nov 10 2021
Op-Ed

Today marks the first anniversary of the victory of Azerbaijan, Turkey, and mercenary Syrian Jihadis in the 44-day Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. The war was a disaster for both Armenia and the Armenian-populated, internationally unrecognized state of Artsakh which lost half its territory.

For Azerbaijan, the war did what decades of Minsk Group diplomacy did not: Change the status quo in order to return territories the Armenian military and local Nagorno-Karabakh had seized during the first Nagorno-Karabakh War, between 1988 and 1994. For decades of Azerbaijani rulers, this was the only just solution. Not only had Armenia occupied seven Azerbaijani districts between the Armenian border and Nagorno-Karabakh, but the United Nations, Russia, the United States, and the rest of the international community also recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as Azerbaijani territory.

To hear the declarations of Azerbaijani leader Ilham Aliyev, Karabakh has been the most important issue facing Azerbaijan. Azerbaijanis mark November 8 as “Victory Day” in the “Patriotic War,” a name that has upset Russians who complain online that the Azerbaijani name purposely erodes the sanctity of the Russia’s commemoration of the “Great Patriotic War,” as they often refer to World War II. Aliyev opened a theme park reminiscent of the monuments built by Saddam Hussein. Azerbaijani online trolls and those seeking Aliyev’s favor also embrace the narrative that Karabakh is an integral part of Azerbaijan culturally and geographically. Too often, such statements become exclusionary in nature marked by the denial of the centuries-long Armenian attachment to the territory.

That Armenian cultural attachment to Nagorno-Karabakh is without question, despite efforts by Azeri and Turkish militants to erase vestiges of the Armenian presence in territories they control, in Nagorno-Karabakh and other regions throughout the South Caucasus. Certainly, there is blame to go around; Armenians did little to preserve Azerbaijani cites evacuated during the most recent period of Armenian control. But, there is a huge difference between neglect and deliberate destruction as seen in the destruction of the Armenian cemetery in Julfa, in the Azerbaijani enclave of Nakhchivan, or in Armenian churches in Shushi.

In the year since the Azerbaijani conquests, Aliyev has contracted construction companies affiliated with Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to build highways and other infrastructure in Azerbaijani-controlled portions of Nagorno-Karabakh and, especially, the mountaintop fortress city of Shushi/Shusha (the former being the Armenian name and the latter its  Azerbaijani name). These construction contracts have essentially been large payoffs to Erdoğan personally for his military role. Azerbaijani and state-controlled Turkish media and Aliyev’s paid online army, meanwhile, have highlighted homecomings for Azeris who the first Nagorno-Karabakh war had displaced.

The question remains open, however, whether Aliyev’s bombast aside, Azeris are as aligned to Aliyev’s territorial ambitions or as attached to Karabakh as their dictator insists. Aliyev family rule has impoverished Azerbaijan. According to World Bank data, Azerbaijan’s per capita income is slightly less than that of neighboring Armenia and Georgia. Because Azerbaijan’s ruling family are billionaires several times over, they actually skew the data. In reality, the average Azeri is far poorer than their Armenian and Georgian counterparts. Many Azeris, including those who had been displaced from Karabakh and who, theoretically, should have the greatest desire to return settled over the decades in and around Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital and the center of its economy. Even with Turkey and Azerbaijan’s post-war infrastructure investment in Karbakhi towns, few Azeris seem inclined to return. This, in turn, has led the Aliyev regime to threaten to cut off their benefits in order to compel their return.

Herein lies the irony: While Aliyev invokes his conquest of Nagorno-Karabakh as a great victory, the Azeris who come from the region and in whose names Aliyev has acted are far more ambivalent. In effect, they vote with their feet. Aliyev may claim broad popular affirmation, but for Azeris with some roots in Karbakh, patriotism is subordinate to the reality of Aliyev’s corruption and economic mismanagement.

Efforts to erase Armenian heritage are cynical, and Azerbaijan’s claims and attacks on precedent erode its legal case: First, when Azerbaijan reasserted its 1991 independence, it based its claims on its pre-Soviet statehood prior to Josef Stalin’s gifting to Azerbaijan of Nagorno-Karabakh. Secondly, Aliyev’s recent claims to the Zangezur corridor because of pre-Soviet Azeri presence affirm Armenia’s arguments for the justice of its control over Nagorno-Karabakh.

The biggest item undermining Azerbaijan’s ultimate claims to sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh, however, might be that despite acting in their names, Azeris tracing their roots to the region seem less doctrinaire than the dictator who has for decades used the Karabakh issue to distract from his own economic mismanagement.

 

November 8 Townhall with Ambassador Tracy

U.S. Embassy in Armenia
Nov 11 2021
Home News & Events | 

Dear U.S. Citizen Community,

For those of you who couldn’t join the Ambassador’s town hall yesterday, we are including the key points from the meeting and a link to watch the recording.

Key points:

  • In the embassy, we continue to offer services on a limited basis. The American Citizen Services section continues to assist Americans to renew passports, document their American citizen children born in Armenia, provide notary services, and assist with special citizen services.
  • Our visas section continues to increase services but has not resumed regular visa services. For non-immigrant visas we are prioritizing students, people with humanitarian emergencies, and urgent business travel.  These people may request expedited appointments through our scheduling system if an appointment is not available before their expected travel dates.
  • On November 8, marked the beginning of the new travel requirements for non-U.S. citizen, non-U.S. immigrants travelling to the United States. These requirements are part of President Biden’s new international air travel policy that is stringent, consistent across the globe, and guided by public health.  Under this travel policy foreign national air travelers to the United States will be required to be fully vaccinated and to provide proof of vaccination status prior to boarding an airplane to fly to the United States, with only limited exceptions.
  • The CDC has identified Armenia as a country with limited vaccines. This means that Armenians with valid visas [excluding B-1 (business) or B-2 (tourism) visas] are excepted from the vaccine requirement and may travel.  Nonvaccinated non-immigrant travelers will be required to attest that they are excepted from the requirement to present Proof of Being Fully Vaccinated Against COVID-19.  Based on the category of the exception, the nonvaccinated traveler may further be required to attest that:
    • The traveler will be tested with a COVID-19 viral test 3–5 days after arrival in the United States, unless they have documentation of having recovered from COVID-19 in the past 90 days;
    • The traveler will self-quarantine for a full 7 days, even if the test result to the post-arrival viral test is negative, unless they have documentation of having recovered from COVID-19 in the past 90 days; and
    • The traveler will self-isolate if the result of the post-arrival test is positive or if they develop COVID-19 symptoms.

***The CDC will regularly review this status and it may change at any time.  Foreign nationals should check the CDC website before traveling to ensure they meet all current qualifications.***

  • All travelers, including fully vaccinated air travelers, will continue to be required to show documentation of a pre-departure negative viral test from a sample taken within three days of travel to the United States before boarding. That includes all travelers – U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents (LPRs), and foreign nationals. To further strengthen protections, unvaccinated travelers – whether U.S. citizens, LPRs, or the small number of excepted unvaccinated foreign nationals – will now need to show documentation of a negative viral test from a sample taken within one day of travel to the United States.
  • If you have questions about the new travel requirements or which vaccines are accepted for travel to the U.S., please visit the CDC website.

Link to watch the live recording:  https://youtu.be/lYnNNnbr75s.

Sincerely,

U.S. Embassy Yerevan
(+374-10) 49-45-85 (business hours)
(+374-10) 464-700 (after hours)
1 American Avenue
Yerevan 0082, Republic of Armenia
https://am.usembassy.gov/

For Travel Alerts and information about Armenia: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/international-travel/International-Travel-Country-Information-Pages/Armenia.html

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Vaccinated people travelling to Sweden from Armenia are exempted from the entry ban and test requirement

Market Screener
Nov 11 2021
11/11/2021 | 07:17am EST

The Govern­ment today adopted amend­ments to the tempo­rary ban on entry into Sweden. The amend­ments primarily mean that additio­nal people who can present a vaccine certificate issued in Armenia are exempted from the entry ban and test require­ment.

The temporary entry ban came into force on 19 March and initially applied for 30 days. It has sub­sequently been extended following recommen­dations by the European Commission and the Council of the European Union. The latest decision to extend the ban on entry into Sweden from countries out­side the EU/EEA means that the entry ban now applies until 31 January 2022.

The entry ban means that a foreign citizen departing from a state other than an EEA State or Switzer­land travelling to Sweden will be denied entry into Sweden and turned away. There are a number of exemp­tions from the ban, but travellers are normally required to present a negative COVID-19 test result even if they are covered by one of the exemp­tions.

The Govern­ment’s decision today means that people travelling to Sweden who can present a vaccina­tion certifi­cate issued in Armenia are exempt from the entry ban and test require­ment. According to a European Com­mission decision, vaccina­tion certificates issued in Armenia are equiva­lent to the EU Digital COVID certifi­cate, which means that such certifi­cates can be checked and verified in the same manner and using the same techni­cal systems as the EU certificate.

The amendments will enter into force on 15 November 2021.

For more infor­mation on how the ordinance on a temporary ban on entry into Sweden is to be inter­preted and which exemp­tions apply, please visit the website of the Police Authority. See the adjacent links.

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People leaving Armenia in record numbers

Vestnik Kavkaza
Nov 11 2021
 11 Nov in 14:50

In the three quarters of 2021, 103,000 more Armenians left the country than entered it, according to official data. Armenia’s population is 2.963 million people, so this is an extremely alarming figure, because  that amounts to about 3.5% of the country’s entire population . In other words, every 29th resident of Armenia has left the country since the beginning of the year.

Why does emigration from the country reach such a catastrophic scale?

First, it should be noted that some of 103 thousand people are separatists and illegal settlers who fled to Armenia from Karabakh and Zangezur last year during and after the Patriotic War of Azerbaijan. Despite the fact that they had Armenian passports, there was no place for them in Armenia, because the republic doesn’t have enough work and money even for local residents, so they were forced to leave. At the same time, they are displayed in the statistics as Armenian citizens who emigrated, without specifying that before that they lived in the occupied Azerbaijani territories.

Second, after the Karabakh war, Armenia simply did not have any means of subsistence. War is an expensive business, especially for small and poor states. The republic spent too much money to maintain the occupation of the Azerbaijani territories, as a result, the government has nothing to invest in revitalizing the national economy. So, along with the Karabakh Armenians, residents of Armenia also leave the republic.

Third, it is important to pay attention to the fact that the Armenian authorities do not abandon plans for a military revenge, pumping up the Russian peacekeepers’  zone of responsibility with weapons and building there new military positions. Yerevan is looking for sponsors to rearm Armenian troops (since they don’t have money for this). Armenia remains both unattractive for foreign investment and dangerous for living. People have not forgotten how they were forced to go to the war last year, and they do not want it to happen again. They emigrate not only because of money, but also because of war.

There is a fourth reason, according to the opposition politician, representative of the Prosperous Armenia party Naira Zohrabyan. The ex-parliamentarian told Vestnik Kavkaza that many were forced to leave due to the results of early elections to the National Assembly.