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    Categories: 2018

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/29/2018

                                        Wednesday, 

Armenia’s Former Top Judge Wounded In Gun Attack

        • Narine Ghalechian

Armenia - Arman Mkrtumian, chairman of the Court of Cassation, at a news 
conference in Yerevan, 3 April 2009.

Arman Mkrtumian, the former powerful head of Armenia’s highest criminal court, 
was shot and lightly wounded late on Tuesday in a reported armed attack on his 
house carried out by gunmen.

Police said Mkrtumian’s 30-year-old son fired a gas pistol at the three masked 
attackers armed with assault rifles when they burst into the villa located in 
Dzoraghbyur, a village just outside Yerevan. One of the gunmen was wounded and 
caught by the Mkrtumians while the two others fled the scene, firing random 
gunshots in the process, according to a police statement.

The police also released a short video showing the alleged attacker who was 
identified as Hovannes Ryzhenko, a 45-year-old resident of Gyumri. The man had 
blood on his face and a bandage wrapped around his head.

“The neutralized person was detained,” Sona Truzian, a spokeswoman for 
Armenia’s Investigative Committee, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Wednesday. 
She said law-enforcement authorities are taking “all necessary measures” to 
track down the other attackers.

The authorities did not immediately suggest any motives behind the gun attack. 
The Investigative Committee opened a criminal inquiry under an article of the 
Armenian Criminal Code dealing with “banditry.”

Mkrtumian received medical treatment at Yerevan’s Erebuni hospital shortly 
after incident. A hospital official said he refused hospitalization despite 
sustaining a gunshot wound. The retired judge made no public statements on the 
attack.

Mkrtumian, 57, headed Armenia’s Court of Cassation for ten years. He resigned 
in early June more than one month after mass protests brought down the 
country’s previous government headed by Serzh Sarkisian.

Throughout his tenure Mkrtumian was accused by lawyers of severely limiting the 
independence of lower courts. In June 2013, for example, about 200 lawyers went 
on a two-day strike to protest against what they called arbitrary decisions 
routinely made by the Court of Cassation.




Yerevan Hopes For Lower Russian Gas Price

        • Tatev Danielian

Armenia - Gazprom Chairman Alexei Miller speaks at a ceremony in Yerevan, 
16Apr2015.

The Armenian government will ask Russia’s Gazprom giant to cut the price of its 
natural gas supplied to Armenia during upcoming negotiations, Energy Minister 
Artur Grigorian said on Wednesday.

Armenia currently pays $150 per thousand cubic meters of Russian gas imported 
via Georgia. By comparison, the Russian gas price for Europe stands at around 
$230 per thousand cubic meters.

The Armenian side and Gazprom were expected to review the tariff late last 
year. But visiting Yerevan in October 2017, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry 
Medvedev said the “special price” will remain unchanged until the end of 2018. 
Alexei Miller, the Gazprom chairman, accompanied Medvedev on the trip.

Grigorian said that Armenian officials and Gazprom executives will start 
negotiations on a new gas deal in November. “We will do everything to get a gas 
price that’s lower than the existing one,” he told a news conference.

The minister did not specify the extent of the price reduction that will be 
sought by Yerevan.

Armenia’s Gazprom-owned gas distribution network cut its retail fees for 
households and corporate consumers in November 2016, more than two months after 
Karen Karapetian was appointed as the country’s prime minister. Karapetian 
managed the network from 2001-2010 and held senior executive positions in 
Gazprom subsidiaries in Russia from 2011-2016.

He was replaced as prime minister by Serzh Sarkisian in April this year just a 
few weeks before mass protests brought down Armenia’s former government. The 
protest leader, Nikol Pashinian, took over as prime minister in early May.

So far the Russian government and Gazprom have given no indications that they 
are ready sell gas to Armenia at a deeper discount. Some analysts have 
suggested that with Karapetian no longer in government the Russians could 
actually raise the existing price.

Gazprom accounts for over 80 percent of Armenia’s annual gas imports. The South 
Caucasus country also buys gas from neighboring Iran. Officials in Yerevan have 
for years insisted that Russian gas is cheaper than Iranian gas.

Grigorian revealed that Yerevan is now discussing with Tehran the possibility 
of a lower Iranian gas price for Armenia. “I think that very soon we will have 
the final gas price declared by the Iranian side, which will certainly be 
compared with the price of Russian gas,” he said.




Press Review



“Robert Kocharian says that he is returning to active politics in order to 
defend his honor and dignity,” “Zhamanak” writes in a commentary on the former 
Armenian president’s interview with a Russian TV channel aired on Tuesday. The 
paper says Kocharian essentially blamed Serzh Sarkisian for the recent 
revolution in Armenia, saying that his successor should not have tried to cling 
to power.

“Hayots Ashkhar” says Kocharian’s political comeback has been one of the most 
important political developments of this summer. “This is only the beginning,” 
the paper says in reference of the former president’s recent moves and 
statements.

“Zhoghovurd” notes the readiness of Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia 
(HHK) to cooperate with Kocharian. The paper finds it natural, saying that 
Kocharian’s and Sarkisian’s interests “again converge now.” “They are now 
united by the criminal investigation into the March 1 [2008 violence,]” it 
says. “Driven by their self-defense instincts, they now have to join forces and 
fight together.” The paper says that the HHK and its spokesman Eduard 
Sharmazanov in particular criticized Kocharian in the not so distant past. 
“During Serzh Sarkisian’s presidency Kocharian voiced criticism of the 
authorities from time to time and Sharmazanov was the first to counter it, 
often using crude language.”

“Even under the former authorities there were people who warned that enslaving 
the judicial system is a dangerous path that lays the foundation of a vicious 
tradition of courts serving some people today and others tomorrow,” 
editorializes “Hraparak.” The paper says Kocharian and Sarkisian are now paying 
the consequences of their tight grip on the judiciary. “[Kocharian] hopes now 
that the judicial system is not that devastated and crushed and will dare to go 
against the will of the new authorities and rule in his favor,” it says.

(Tigran Avetisian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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