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    Categories: 2018

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/25/2018

                                        Tuesday, 

Police General Risks Criminal Charges

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - General Levon Yeranosian, the commander of Armenian interior troops, 
21 June 2014.

General Levon Yeranosian, the controversial former commander of Armenian 
interior troops, could be prosecuted over the use of force against 
anti-government protests in Yerevan last spring, it emerged on Tuesday.

A spokeswoman for the Special Investigative Service (SIS), Marina Ohanjanian, 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) that the law-enforcement agency 
has summoned Yeranosian for questioning. She gave no details.

Yeranosian’s lawyer, Tigran Safarian, said his client is suspected of ordering 
riot police to use excessive force against the protesters led by Nikol 
Pashinian on April 16 and April 22. He has signed a formal pledge not to leave 
Armenia pending investigation, said Safarian.

In the April 16 incident, Pashinian and hundreds of his supporters tried to get 
through a police cordon and approach the parliament building in Yerevan in a 
bid to prevent the country’s longtime leader, Serzh Sarkisian, from holding on 
to power. Security forces used stun grenades and batons to stop the crowd. 
Pashinian and several other individuals were injured in the clash.


Armenia - Opposition supporters clash with riot police near the parliament 
building in Yerevan, 16 April 2018.

Pashinian and his top associates were detained on April 22 as they led an 
anti-government demonstration elsewhere in Yerevan. The nationwide protests 
only intensified in the following hours, leading Sarkisian to resign on April 
23. His resignation was announced shortly before the release of the detained 
oppositionists.

Pashinian fired Yeranosian just days after being elected prime minister on May 
8. Armenian human rights groups and media had for years accused the general of 
serious human rights violations.




Democracy Key To Regional Peace, Says Pashinian

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

U.S. - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talks to his Armenian counterpart 
Nikol Pashinian at the Nelson Mandela Peace Summit in New York, 24 September 
2018.

Democratization is essential for peace and stability in the South Caucasus, 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said during the Nelson Mandela Peace 
Summit held at the UN headquarters in New York on Monday.

“I come from a region where unfortunately bloody conflicts, corrupt system of 
governance, animosity between people overshadow wisdom and the need for 
peaceful coexistence,” Pashinian told the summit attended by dozens of world 
leaders.

“Democracies are not supposed to wage wars against each other,” he said. “I 
hope that one day our region’s democratic development will rule out the risks 
of hostilities, wars and hatred. Armenia has firmly embarked on this path and 
strongly stands for regional peace, stability and reconciliation.”

Pashinian swept to power in May after weeks of massive anti-government protests 
organized by him. He has repeatedly described the protest movement as a “velvet 
revolution” that will turn Armenia into a democratic state.

Addressing the UN summit dedicated to Nelson Mandela, the 43-year-old former 
journalist described the late South African president as a role model who 
inspired his own political activities.

“Having been a political prisoner myself, I closely followed the political path 
and life story of this most famous political prisoner who would change his own 
country and indeed the aspirations of millions worldwide,” said Pashinian.

“Mandela’s walk, the long walk to freedom was with me during my imprisonment, 
and to a great extent influenced my conscience and motivated me to embark on my 
own ‘long walk to freedom’ through prison and persecution, through struggle 
against injustice across the towns and villages of my country,” he declared.

“In the true spirit of Mandela’s ideas, our movement became known to the world 
as Armenian non-violent velvet revolution of love and solidarity and now, 
months after my people’s success, I stand here at the high rostrum of this 
summit as the head of modern Armenian government to celebrate the legacy of 
this great person whose courage and determination served as an example for 
others around the globe,” added the Armenian premier.

Pashinian met with UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres earlier on Monday. In 
a live Facebook interview aired over the weekend, Guterres described the 
Pashinian-led movement as a “fantastic example” of democratic change effected 
by young people.




Press Review



“Zhoghovurd” says that the margin of victory of Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s My Step alliance in the September 23 municipal elections in Yerevan 
was unexpectedly huge. “Hardly anyone believed that it will get over 81 percent 
of the vote,” writes the paper. “By the same token, nobody believed early this 
year that Nikol Pashinian will succeed in carrying out a velvet revolution in 
Armenia by forcing Serzh Sarkisian to step down and ousting his HHK from power. 
My Step won as a result of absolutely free and fair elections. There were no 
incidents, no fraud, no vote bribes, no use of administrative resources in the 
September 23 elections and all election contenders accepted their official 
results.”

“The people thus voiced support for Pashinian’s government,” continues 
“Zhoghovurd.” “At the same time they gave him the carte blanche to dissolve the 
parliament and hold fresh elections of the National Assembly.” The paper says 
that the incoming Yerevan mayor, Hayk Marutian, should use this massive popular 
support with “great care.” “He must work very hard in order not to disappoint 
people.”

“Zhamanak” reports that former President Robert Kocharian has filed a libel 
suit against Pashinian. The paper says that it is not yet clear which statement 
made by Pashinian is considered slanderous by Pashinian. It notes that news of 
the libel suit was announced immediately after the municipal elections in 
Yerevan and Pashinian’s decision to start discussions with political forces on 
snap general elections.The paper says that Kocharian may be trying to cheer up 
the HHK and possibly other parliamentary parties opposed to the elections.

(Lilit Harutiunian)



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