Thursday, Yerevan Unfazed By Russia-West Tensions • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenia - Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharian speaks to journalists in Yerevan 16Nov2017. The latest upsurge in tensions between Russia and the West will not adversely affect Armenia’s relations with the European Union and the United States, a senior Armenian diplomat insisted on Thursday. Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharian said he specifically expects no fresh hurdles to the ratification of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) that was signed by Armenia and the EU last November. The 350-page agreement highlighted Yerevan’s desire to deepen ties with the EU while remaining part of Russian-led alliances of ex-Soviet states, notably the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). The EU’s foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, said earlier this month that those ties are now closer than ever before. “The EU finds very important the fact that Armenia is the first Eurasian Economic Union member state which opted for such profound cooperation with the EU while sticking to its obligations to other integration structures,” Kocharian told reporters. Kocharian claimed other some of the other EEU member states are now looking into the EU-Armenia dealings as a potential blueprint for their relations with the 28-nation bloc. He refused to name them. The mounting Russia-West tensions stem from the recent the poisoning in Britain of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal. The U.S., France and Germany have effectively joined Britain in blaming Russia for the military-grade nerve toxin attack. They have called it a clear breach of the Chemical Weapons Convention and international law. Moscow has denied any involvement in the poisoning. Kocharian also seemed optimistic that no EU member state will block or impede the CEPA’s implementation. “The fact that the EU signed the agreement means that all EU member states had fully agreed to it,” he said. The CEPA has to be ratified by Armenia’s parliament, the EU member states and the European Parliament in order to fully come into force. But some of its key provisions can be put into practice right after the Armenian ratification expected next month. No Political Prisoners In Armenia, Says Minister • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia - Justice Minister Davit Harutiunian holds a news conference in Yerevan, 20 February 2018. The Armenian authorities have not arrested or imprisoned anyone for political reasons, Justice Minister Davit Harutiunian said on Thursday. “I don’t agree that there are political prisoners in Armenia,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). Harutiunian dismissed a list of about a dozen imprisoned individuals drawn up my some human rights groups and other non-governmental organizations. “I am familiar with many such lists. I have also seen a list drawn up by an international organization which described Nairi Hunanian as a political prisoner,” he said, referring to the jailed leader of an armed group that assassinated Prime Minister Vazgen Sarkisian and seven other officials in the October 1999 attack on the Armenian parliament. “Everything depends on standards and unfortunately the fact is that this term [political prisoner] is very often used for political purposes,” added the minister who has held senior state posts for the last two decades. The individuals considered to be political prisoners by critics of the Armenian government are mostly members or supporters of fringe opposition groups. One of them, Zhirayr Sefilian, was sentenced this week to 10.5 years in prison on coup charges which he strongly denies. The lengthy prison sentence has been condemned by Armenian civic groups and mainstream opposition leaders such as Nikol Pashinian, a leader of the Yelk alliance. Another Yelk leader, Edmon Marukian, on Thursday commented more cautiously on the jail term handed to Sefilian. He said he will pass final judgment only after looking into the verdict handed down by a Yerevan district court. Marukian made clear at the same time that he believes that the verdict is “connected” with Sefilian’s political activities. The head of the European Union Delegation in Yerevan, Piotr Switalski, was asked by reporters last September about the existence of political prisoners in Armenia. “The European Union does not always necessarily share the views of non-governmental organizations,” Switalski said. “On such issues, we are mainly guided by decisions made by the European Court of Human Rights. As you know, there are no people in Armenia who are qualified by [the Strasbourg court] as political prisoners.” No One Charged In Armenian Wildfire • Anush Muradian Armenia - A wildfire in the Khosrov Forest State Reserve, 14Aug2017. After a five-month investigation, Armenian law-enforcement authorities have decided not to prosecute anyone in connection with a massive wildfire in a nature reserve southeast of Yerevan. The fire in the Khosrov Forest State Reserve erupted in August and raged for at least four days before being extinguished by Armenian emergency workers with the help of a Russian firefighting plane. It burned at least 360 of hectares of woodland. Armenia’s Investigative Committee initially charged one unnamed person under an article of the Criminal Code dealing with serious damage caused to a forest. A spokeswoman for the law-enforcement agency, Sona Truzian, said on Thursday that it has closed the criminal case for lack of any evidence of arson or human negligence. She said investigators concluded that last summer’s drought and unusually high air temperatures were the likely cause of the calamity. Environment Protection Minister Artsvik Minasian said he has no reason to call their findings into question. “I have confidence in the professionalism of our law-enforcement bodies,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). Armenia - Trees in the Khosrov Forest State Reserve burned by a wildfire, 14Aug2017. Minasian stated as recently as in October that the cause of the blaze was “definitely not natural.” His ministry announced at the time that it has asked for and received aerial photographs of the Khosrov reserve that were taken by U.S. surveillance satellites the day after the fire broke out on August 12. It said it has forwarded the images to the Investigative Committee. Hakob Sanasarian, a veteran environment protection activist, said he does not trust the committee’s conclusion and suspects a cover-up. Sanasarian also slammed the Environment Protection Ministry, saying that it was not equipped to contain the blaze and has failed to learn lessons. Minasian argued that the ministry lacks funds to hire more staff for this and other forests. He also said it has since acquired some types of new technical equipment and revised its contingency plans for wildfires. The Khosrov reserve occupies roughly 25,000 hectares of land. Around 9,000 hectares of it are forests originally planted during the reign of a 4th century Armenian king, Khosrov III. Press Review “Zhoghovurd” claims that Prime Minister Karen Karapetian “voiced indirect accusations against Serzh Sarkisian” in the Armenian parliament on Wednesday by reiterating his belief that the continuing uncertainty about his political future reflects negatively on economic activity in Armenia. Karapetian thus again accused Sarkisian and the ruling HHK of hampering investments in the Armenian economy, speculates the paper. “Haykakan Zhamanak” describes as “sensational” the release on Wednesday of transcripts of wiretapped phone calls that were made by radical opposition gunmen after they seized a police station in Yerevan’s Erebuni district in July 2016. They were publicized by prosecutors at the trial of the leading members of the armed group called Sasna Tsrer. “The conversations make it clear that the group which seized the police base had one objective: to remove Nikol Pashinian from the [surrounding] area and get the people rallying there closer to the base,” comments the paper. It suggests that the release of this important information may be aimed at preventing Pashinian’s Civil Contract party and smaller opposition groups supportive of the jailed gunmen from jointly trying to topple President Sarkisian. “These wiretaps demonstrate that Sasna Tsrer’s actions targeted not only the authorities but also politics as a whole,” writes “Zhamanak.” The paper too points to possible cooperation between Pashinian and the gunmen’s backers. “Of course, in Armenia’s modern history there have been quite a few cases where political forces that had traded accusations subsequently became allies, at least in the tactical sense,” it says. “But in this case we are witnessing a qualitatively different situation and circumstances because they are about accepting or not accepting politics in principle, rather than political-tactical differences.” “Hraparak” sees a clear division between opposition forces trying to stop Serzh Sarkisian from extending his rule. Some of them, including the jailed Sasna Tsrer leaders, stand for an “armed tough struggle” while the others, notably Pashinian’s party, favor solely peaceful methods of political struggle, editorializes the paper. It says that even peaceful protests will not make Pashinian and his allies immune to arrest. “The bad thing is that in our country virtually all avenues of political struggle lead to prisons,” it says. “Things like civilized struggle, peaceful regime change and bloodless ouster of a failed government do not materialize here.” (Tigran Avetisian) Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org