Tuesday, Armenian Police General Named Provincial Governor • Marine Khachatrian • Sisak Gabrielian Armenia - Hunan Poghosian, the newly appointed governor of Syunik province, speaks to reporters in Yerevan, . In a surprise move, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government on Tuesday appointed a retired general, who was Armenia’s second most powerful police official during former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule, as a provincial governor. Lieutenant-General Hunan Poghosian was named to run the southeastern Syunik province five months after resigning as first deputy chief of the Armenian police following Pashinian-led mass protests that toppled Sarkisian’s government. He had held that position since 2010. Poghosian tendered his resignation immediately after Pashinian appointed one of his subordinates, Colonel Valeri Osipian, as new head of the national police service on May 10. He gave no clear reasons for his exit. Armenia - Opposition protesters clash with riot police in Yerevan, 16 April 2018. The new government’s decision to give the vacant post of Syunik governor to Poghosian therefore took many by surprise. Some Pashinian supporters criticized it, saying that the police general was closely linked to the former ruling regime accused of corruption and human rights abuses. Pashinian acknowledged that the appointment may seem “strange” seeing as Poghosian was “on the other side of the barricades” during his nationwide campaign of anti-government protests. He said it is part of his efforts to “consolidate” the nation after last spring’s dramatic upheavals. “I find it very important to ensure that as a result of the revolution nobody feels that their [professional] life in Armenia is finished,” Pashinian told a cabinet meeting in Yerevan. “Accordingly, we must not allow the emergence of a phenomenon which can tentatively be called political racism.” “There are times for building barricades and dismantling them, and I hope that we are getting close to the latter point,” he said. Armenia - General Hunan Poghosian, the first deputy chief of the Armenian police, speaks to reporters near a police building in Yerevan seized by anti-government gunmen, 18Jul2016. Poghosian, meanwhile, dismissed critics’ claims that he was a loyal “servant” of the former ruling regime. “Only slavish people can probably think so,” he told reporters. “I have always served the law and the people.” “I’m a supporter of New Armenia and I will do everything to help ensure that everything is alright in New Armenia,” added the 54-year-old. Poghosian’s latest appointment was made possible by Pashinian’s decision earlier this month to sack all government ministers and provincial governors affiliated with the Prosperous Armenia and Dashnaktsutyun parties. The premier accused his coalition partners parties of assisting Sarkisian’s Republicans in their efforts to scuttle his plans to force snap parliamentary elections in December. U.S. Plans ‘Strategic’ Talks With Armenia • Sargis Harutyunyan • Emil Danielyan Armenia - U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs George Kent speaks at a press conference in Yerevan, . The United States plans to hold early next year “strategic discussions” with Armenia on ways of strengthening bilateral relations, a senior U.S. State Department official said at the end of a visit to Yerevan on Tuesday. George Kent, the U.S deputy assistant secretary of state for the European and Eurasian affairs, met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian as well as Armenian parliamentarians, businesspeople and civil society members during the two-day trip. He reaffirmed Washington’s readiness to help the new Armenian government implement sweeping political and economic reforms promised by it. “The U.S. remains ready to be a supportive partner as Armenia moves forward in improving its quality of institutions,” Kent told a news conference. “I believe after the [Armenian parliamentary] elections we will hold the next round of U.S.-Armenia Task Force strategic discussions,” he said. “I expect those will take place in Washington in the new year, perhaps in February. And I think that will be an excellent moment or us to talk about how we can deepen our relationship.” Kent pointed out that the U.S. already provided Armenia with $14 million in additional aid following last spring’s “velvet revolution” that brought Pashinian to power. He said it can specifically support the Pashinian government’s anti-corruption efforts and “programs on ways of diversifying the Armenian economy.” “U.S. companies will be prepared to invest in Armenia if the investment climate is supportive of large-scale investment,” Kent went on. “So it was interesting for me to hear the experience of U.S. companies [doing business in Armenia,] whether they are in hydroelectric power or other areas.” “I think there is a lot of discussion now about a large mining investment that is under review, and as I told Armenian political leaders yesterday, it’s critical that contracts are upheld in order that Armenia can continue to attract investment that will create good jobs and allow Armenians to work with dignity here in Armenia, rather than going overseas,” he stressed. Armenia - Gold mining facilities constructed by Lydian International company at Amulsar deposit, 18 May 2018. The U.S. official clearly referred to the continuing disruption of operations at the Amulsar gold deposit in southeastern Armenia which was developed by the Anglo-American company Lydian International. All roads leading to Amulsar have been blocked since June 23 by dozens of people protesting against gold mining operations there which they say are fraught with serious risks to the environment. Lydian has dismissed these concerns, saying that it will use modern and safe technology. The company, which claims to have invested more than $300 million in Amulsar, has condemned the disruption of its operations as illegal. The Armenian government, meanwhile, remains reluctant to forcibly unblock the Amulsar roads. Pashinian said late last month that the government is now seeking more evidence that open-pit mining would not contaminate water in the area. The Amulsar project is strongly supported by the U.S. and British governments. The U.S. ambassador to Armenia, Richard Mills, has repeatedly warned that its possible scrapping would discourage further U.S. investments in the Armenian economy. “As a friend of Armenia, I fear that if this issue is not resolved soon it could put a large cloud over the attractiveness of Armenia as a place to do business,” Mills warned last week. He noted “the absence of evidence of significant violations of Armenian environmental laws” by Lydian. Belgium - U.S. President Donald Trump and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian talk during a NATO summit in Brussels, 11 July 2018. Pashinian briefed Kent on his government’s reform agenda when they met on Monday. He had earlier expressed readiness to “strengthen and expand” U.S.-Armenian relations. The Armenian premier briefly chatted with U.S. President Donald Trump at a NATO summit in Brussels in July. He hoped to hold his first talks with Trump on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York in late September. The talks did not take place, however. “I’m sure there will be a [Trump-Pashinian] meeting but I can’t tell you exactly where and when,” said Kent. He suggested that Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, will discuss the matter with Pashinian when he visits Yerevan later this month. Kent said that Armenia’s relations with neighboring Iran and renewed U.S. economic sanctions against Tehran will also be on the agenda of Bolton’s talks. Trump re-imposed the sanctions earlier this year after pulling out of a 2015 international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program. The move was criticized by the other world powers that signed it: France, Germany, Britain, Russia and China. Armenia too continues to support the 2015 deal and has made clear that it will press ahead with joint economic projects with Iran. The Islamic Republic is one of the landlocked country’s two commercial conduits to the outside world. “While we understand the challenges for Armenia in terms of regional trade, we remain very concerned about the behavior of elements of the Iranian military and state in regional instability, not regional stability,” Kent said in this regard. “So there are questions of legitimate trade but there are also questions of how the [Iranian] Revolutionary Guards and Quds force sponsor terrorism.” “So I think you can expect a frank and active exchange of perspectives during Ambassador Bolton’s visit about positive opportunities in the bilateral relationship and challenges to regional stability,” added the U.S. official. Security Chief Blames ‘Well-Known Armenian’ For Leaked Phone Calls • Sisak Gabrielian Armenia - Artur Vanetsian (L), director of the National Security Service (NSS), and Special Investigative Service chief Sasun Khachatrian at a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, 20 September 2018. Artur Vanetsian, the National Security Service (NSS) director, claimed on Tuesday that a “well-known” individual from Armenia commissioned the secret recording of his sensitive phone conversations with the head of another law-enforcement body. Vanetsian refused to name that person, saying that investigators lack the evidence to prosecute the latter. “It is very, very difficult to document and substantiate the involvement of that single orderer,” he told reporters. “Unfortunately, that cannot happen at this stage.” Vanetsian and Sasun Khachatrian, head of the Special Investigative Service (SIS), spoke by phone in July shortly before former President Robert Kocharian was arrested over his role in the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan. Their phone conversations were wiretapped and posted on the Internet by unknown individuals in September. In that audio, Vanetsian can be heard telling Khachatrian that he ordered a judge to sanction Kocharian’s controversial arrest. Vanetsian also urged the SIS not to arrest Yuri Khachaturov, the Armenian secretary general of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), warning of a negative reaction from Russia. He noted that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian wants investigators to “lock up” Khachaturov. Pashinian condemned the wiretapping and denied putting pressure on investigators. For his part, Kocharian, who was released from pre-trial custody in August, portrayed the audio as further proof that the criminal case against him is politically motivated. Vanetsian said on Tuesday that the audio was doctored to leave the impression that he put pressure on the judge. He insisted that in fact he never spoke to the judge and referred a senior SIS investigator instead. The NSS chief also said that it was possible to wiretap his phone calls with Khachatrian only because he made them from a foreign country.“Any mid-level specialist could have secretly recorded them,” he said. Vanetsian further claimed that the prominent Armenian commissioned the wiretapping with the aim of forcing him to resign. He said the same person has been paying some media outlets to discredit him. He refused to name them, saying only that “they charge 3 million or 4 million drams ($6,200-$8,300) per article.” Last month, law-enforcement officers searched the offices of an Armenian news website, Yerevan.Today, and confiscated some of its computer hard disks as part of a criminal investigation into the leaked phone calls. The website editor, Sevak Hakobian, strongly denied any involvement in the wiretapping. He also dismissed claims that Yerevan.Today is controlled or financed by Kocharian. 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