Tuesday, Major Ally Rebukes, Warns Pashinian Armenia - Aram Sarkisian speaks at the founding congress of the Yelk alliance in Yerevan, 21 January 2017. The leader of a party represented in Armenia’s current government has deplored Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s harsh attacks on alleged “counterrevolutionary” elements in the country, saying that he is alienating political groups that helped him come to power. Aram Sarkisian warned that they could no longer back Pashinian’s plans to force snap parliamentary elections in the coming months. Pashinian launched the verbal attacks following the start of campaigning for the September 23 municipal elections in Yerevan which his Civil Contract party hopes to win by a landslide. Speaking at a campaign rally last week, he claimed that “political forces portraying themselves as guardians of the revolution” are secretly collaborating with the former ruling Republican Party (HHK) in a bid to get more votes in the polls. Pashinian, who led last spring a protest movement that brought down Armenia’s previous HHK-controlled government, did not name those forces. Observers believe that he referred to at least some of the other parties that are represented in his cabinet. Those are Gagik Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia (BHK), Dashnaktsutyun as well as the Republic and Bright Armenia parties. The latter make up, together with Civil Contract, the Yelk alliance that finished third in the last parliamentary elections held in April 2017. Republic and Bright Armenia refused to back Pashinian when he launched the anti-government mass protests in April. Despite the rift, Pashinian gave his Yelk partners two ministerial posts in his cabinet formed in May. Still, the three parties subsequently failed to agree on a single mayoral candidate in Yerevan. Bright Armenia and Republic fielded their own candidate, Justice Minister Artak Zeynalian, who is now challenging Civil Contract’s Hayk Marutian. Armenia - Leaders of the opposition Yelk alliance hold an anti-government rally in Yerevan, 19Jan2018. The Republic leader, Aram Sarkisian, described as “nonsensical” suggestions that his party is secretly collaborating with the HHK when he campaigned for Zeynalian late on Monday. He also emphasized the fact that parliament deputies from Republic, Bright Armenia, the BHK and Dashnaktsutyun helped Pashinian become prime minister on May 8. “How can you say such things about the team that has worked with you?” he said, appealing to the premier. “If you want to form a government only with those who marched with you, to reckon only with them and to build [a new] Armenia only with them, I have nothing to say to you,” Sarkisian went on. “But you must think about how you will be going about holding pre-term [parliamentary] elections. “The two parties listed by me and the four other members of our [Yelk] parliamentary faction have stood with you and said that they support fresh elections. I can now see these people wondering whether they should keep up that support.” “These people, who helped you once, may not help you this time around,” warned the veteran politician. Sarkisian said that ordinary Armenians also do not like what he sees as Pashinian’s divisive and inflammatory rhetoric.“I am deeply convinced that our people … are sick and tired of fighting against each other,” he said. Armenian Ex-Presidents Invited To Government Events • Sisak Gabrielian Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and his predecessor Robert Kocharian visit Gyumri, 7 December 2008. The government said on Tuesday that it will invite the three former presidents of Armenia to attend this week’s official celebrations of the country’s Independence Day. The September 21 events will mark the 27th anniversary of a referendum in which the vast majority of Armenians voted for secession from the disintegrating Soviet Union. They include an official reception that will be held at the former presidential palace in Yerevan where Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and most of his staff currently work. “All three presidents will be invited to the Independence Day events,” said Eduard Aghajanian, the chief of Pashinian’s staff. Pashinian swept to power in May after weeks of nationwide mass protests that forced Armenia’s longtime leader, Serzh Sarkisian, to resign. Sarkisian served as president of the republic for the past ten years. He tried unsuccessfully to extend his rule by becoming prime minister following the country’s transition to a parliamentary system of government. Sarkisian’s predecessor, Robert Kocharian, was controversially arrested in July on coup charges stemming from a 2008 post-election crackdown on opposition protesters in Yerevan. An Armenian appeals court freed him from custody more than two weeks later. Kocharian denies the charges as politically motivated. Immediately after his release he announced his return to active politics. Pashinian has repeatedly defended Kocharian’s prosecution, while denying issuing any pressure on law-enforcement bodies investigating the 2008 violence. In a September 11 speech, he branded the ex-president a “criminal” and “traitor.” The 43-year-old premier has also had an uneasy relationship with Armenia’s first president, Levon Ter-Petrosian. He played a prominent role in Ter-Petrosian’s opposition movement that was targeted by Kocharian in 2008. Pashinian subsequently spent about two years in prison on charges stemming from that crackdown. Pashinian fell out with Ter-Petrosian after being released from prison in 2011. The two men met in July for the first time in years. 11 Charged With Vote Buying In Yerevan • Anush Muradian Armenia - Mayor Taron Markarian votes in municipal elections in Yerevan, 14May2017. Eleven persons, including a senior local government official, have been charged with buying votes for the Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) in last year’s municipal elections in Yerevan, it emerged on Tuesday. The criminal case stems from irregularities that were reported by the opposition Yelk alliance on eve of the May 2017 elections won by the HHK and its top candidate, Yerevan’s incumbent Mayor Taron Markarian. Yelk representatives found scandalous documents in a trash bin outside an HHK campaign office in the city’s Arabkir district. Most of them purportedly detailed vote buying operations by government loyalists, including sums of money and guidelines on how to buy votes. Armenia’s Special Investigative Service (SIS) claimed to have conducted an inquiry. It closed the criminal case in August 2017, citing a lack of evidence. The SIS launched a fresh probe shortly after one of Yelk’s leaders, Nikol Pashinian, swept to power in a wave of mass protests that brought down Armenia’s HHK-led government in May. According to a senior official from the law-enforcement agency, Davit Kostandian, SIS investigators have found compelling evidence of vote buying in favor of the HHK. Kostandian said that the illegal operation was led by Hrayr Antonian, the head of a department at Yerevan’s municipal administration, and Stepan Sahakian, the executive director of a supermarket chain owned by an HHK-linked businessman. The SIS official claimed that Arabkir residents were paid 10,000 drams ($21) each for pledging to vote for the HHK and Mayor Markarian. He did not specify how many votes were bought in this fashion, saying only that Antonian and Sahakian claim to have spent 48 million drams and 15 million drams respectively on vote bribes. Neither man could be reached for comment on Tuesday. Kostandian said they and the nine other suspects have pleaded guilty to the accusations. Markarian, who resigned as Yerevan mayor under government pressure in July, has not yet been questioned by the SIS, added the official. Another document found by Yelk in 2017 contained the names of police officers who pledged to earn the HHK a particular number of votes. The document was allegedly faxed from a telephone number belonging to the Armenian police. Kostandian said that all of those policemen have been questioned by SIS investigators. But he declined to elaborate. Vote buying was widespread in just about every major election held in Armenia in the last two decades. The HHK, which is headed by former President Serzh Sarkisian, was accused by its opponents and media of heavily relying on the practice in the last parliamentary polls held in April 2017.Observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said that they were marred by “many credible reports” of vote buying. The new Pashinian-led government has pledged to prevent vote buying in the snap mayoral elections that will be held in the Armenian capital on Sunday. Earlier this month it pushed through the parliament legal amendments that significantly toughened punishment for the illegal practice. Press Review “Zhamanak” seeks to rationalize mounting political tensions in Armenia resulting from the ongoing mayoral race in Yerevan. “Political struggle is quite brutal in practically all countries,” writes the paper. “And paradoxically, that brutal and tough character often reflects the fact that a particular election is really competitive. That is to say that nothing is predetermined in advance.” “Haykakan Zhamanak” dismisses critics’ allegations that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is increasingly showing authoritarian tendencies and needs to be held in check by strong opposition. The pro-Pashinian paper acknowledges that these claims are now also backed by individuals and groups who “honestly” want the current government to be accountable. “The executive branch, namely Pashinian’s team, has no influence on the judicial system,” it says. “In fact, the judicial system is engaged in an overt sabotage against the prime minister’s team and pursues concrete goals: to discredit the ongoing fight against corruption and abuses.” The paper argues that the Armenian parliament is also not controlled by Pashinian. “Hraparak” expresses concern over Monday’s police raid against an Armenian media outlet that circulated leaked phone calls between the heads of the National Security Service (NSS) and the Special Investigative Service (SIS). The paper argues that other news organizations also publicized the scandalous recordings last week. It suggests that the Yerevan.today publication was raided because of its alleged ties to former President Robert Kocharian. The authorities, it says, may have tried to bully the publication or keep up public support for their declared anti-corruption efforts. Interviewed by “168 Zham,” a Russian political commentator, Stanislav Tarasov, sees a renewed risk of a major escalation of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. “Armenia’s recently elected Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has made differing and at times contradictory statements and moves on the conflict’s resolution,” says Tarasov. “At the start of his tenure Pashinian said that Nagorno-Karabakh is a party to the conflict and must be involved in the negotiation process. But further processes followed the previous logic.” He suggests that Pashinian is still undecided about his national security strategy. (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