Tuesday, Former Armenian Defense Chief’s Russian Citizenship Confirmed • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia - President Robert Kocharian (R) and Defense Minister Mikael Harutiunian, 15 November 2007. Russia has officially confirmed that a former Armenian defense minister wanted by Yerevan on coup charges is a Russian citizen, an Armenian law-enforcement agency said on Tuesday. The Special Investigative Service (SIS) issued an international arrest warrant for retired Colonel-General Mikael Harutiunian in July. The SIS charged Harutiunian with illegally using the armed forces against opposition supporters who demonstrated in Yerevan against alleged fraud in a 2008 presidential election. It said that amounted to an “overthrow of the constitutional order.” The SIS brought the same coup charges against former President Robert Kocharian and Yuri Khachaturov, the then secretary general of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). Both men strongly denied them. It emerged afterwards that Harutiunian now lives in Russia. Russian law-enforcement authorities notified the Armenian police in September that they will not arrest him. The Interfax news agency reported at the time that Harutiunian has been a Russian citizen since 2002. Russia’s constitution forbids the extradition of Russian nationals to foreign states. A spokeswoman for the SIS, Marina Ohanjanian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that it has received a formal confirmation of Harutiunian’s Russian citizenship from relevant Russian authorities. She said the SIS has responded by asking them to clarify when the ex-general received a Russian passport. The Armenian constitution did not allow dual citizenship until 2006. Harutiunian, 72, served as defense minister from 2007-2008. He was previously the chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff. Moscow was quick to denounce the prosecutions of Kocharian, Harutiunian and Khachaturov. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in July that they run counter to the new Armenian leadership’s earlier pledges not to “persecute its predecessors for political motives.” Eight protesters and two police servicemen died when Armenian security forces quelled the post-election protests on March 1-2, 2008. Kocharian declared a state of emergency on that night, ordering troops into Yerevan. The crackdown came just over a month before he handed over power to Serzh Sarkisian, his preferred successor. Kocharian has repeatedly defended the use of lethal force, saying that it prevented a violent seizure of power by Levon Ter-Petrosian, the main opposition presidential candidate. The SIS essentially backed Kocharian’s version of events until this spring’s dramatic change of Armenia’s government. The law-enforcement agency now says that Armenian army units were secretly told to move into the capital before the declaration of emergency rule in violation of the Armenian constitution. Armenian Police Corruption ‘Eliminated’ • Narine Ghalechian Armenia - The chief of the Armenian police, Valeri Osipian, speaks to journalists in Yerevan, December 20, 2018. Valeri Osipian, the chief of the Armenian police, on Monday claimed to have eliminated corruption in the police ranks since taking office after this spring’s “velvet revolution” in the country. Osipian made the statement as he answered questions from Facebook users at the RFE/RL studio in Yerevan. He was asked to comment on critics’ claims that he has been “weak” on crime and traffic rule violations. “I’m very weak,” Osipian replied with sarcasm. “But I have managed to eliminate corruption in the [police] system.” He also cited in that regard the recent arrests and prosecutions of prominent individuals connected to Armenia’s former leadership and claimed credit for the fact that there were virtually no reports of vote buying or violence in the December 9 parliamentary elections. Nikol Pashinian named Osipian to run the national police service on May 10 two days after being elected Armenia’s prime minister following weeks of anti-government protests led by him. Osipian was until then a deputy head of Yerevan’s police department responsible for public order and crowd control. Introducing Osipian to high-ranking police officials on May 11, Pashinian said one of his main tasks will be to crack down on police corruption which has long been endemic. Osipian replaced virtually deputy chiefs of the police in the following days. The police chief admitted on Monday there has been a major increase in the number of officially registered crimes in Armenia since then. But he blamed it on objective factors such as a general amnesty declared by the authorities in late October. The controversial amnesty led to the release of hundreds of convicts. According to the police, some of them have already been arrested for committing burglaries and other crimes. Osipian also repeated his recent claims that many crimes were underreported by the police under his predecessors. Besides, he said, victims of petty crimes are now less reluctant to report them because of greater public trust in the police. Syrian Armenians Also Protest Against Diaspora Ministry Closure • Naira Nalbandian Armenia - A demonstrator in Yerevan holds a poster objecting to government plans to close the Ministry of Diaspora, . A group of ethnic Armenian migrants from Syria joined on Tuesday employees of Armenia’s Ministry of Diaspora in protesting against its closure planned by the government. A government bill publicized this week calls for reducing the number of ministries in the country from 17 to 12 in line with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s pledges to streamline the state bureaucracy. The Ministry of Diaspora would be liquidated as a result. The ministry employing 90 or so people was set up in 2008 by then President Serzh Sarkisian. It is tasked with maintaining and strengthening the country’s cultural, educational and other ties with the worldwide Armenian Diaspora. Some ministry officials again marched to the prime minister’s office in Yerevan to demand that the government reconsider its plans. They were joined by Syrian Armenians who have taken refuge in their ancestral homeland after the outbreak of the bloody conflict in Syria. One of them, Aleksan Garatanayan, is the deputy chairman of a non-governmental organization representing such migrants. “We are not staging a political demonstration,” Garatanayan told reporters. “This is our sole means of gratitude to the ministry and its staff that have patiently helped us for the last seven years. For seven years we have approached the ministry on a daily basis.” “It’s wrong to scrap this ministry without taking into account the opinion of major Diaspora organizations,” said another Syrian Armenian man taking part in the demonstration. Thousands of Syrian Armenians have relocated to Armenia since 2012. The Armenian government’s modest financial assistance to them has been mostly channeled through the Ministry of Diaspora. Hovannes Aleksanian, the head of a ministry desk dealing the “repatriation” of ethnic Armenians from Syria and other countries, was also among the protesters. “We will need the Ministry of Diaspora as long as we have a Diaspora,” he said. “The repatriation desk has only two employees: myself and its leading specialist,” argued Aleksanian. “Hundreds of families come [to the ministry] and all that work is done by our small division.” “Our expenditures are so modest that they cannot serve as an argument [in favor of closing the ministry,]” he said, adding that the ministry’s annual budget is an equivalent of just $500,000. Ex-Ally Criticizes Pashinian’s ‘Excessive Powers’ • Naira Nalbandian Armenia - Bright Armenia party leader Edmon Marukian speaks at an election campaign rally in Masis, November 28, 2018. The leader of an Armenian parliamentary opposition party criticized Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Tuesday for not curtailing his sweeping executive powers inherited from the country’s former leaders. Edmon Marukian pointed to a government bill that would keep Armenia’s police, National Security Service (NSS) and tax and customs services accountable to the prime minister, rather than his cabinet or the parliament. These agencies were directly controlled by the presidents of the republic under the previous, presidential system of government. Former President Serzh Sarkisian made sure that they will be subordinate to the prime minister when he enacted controversial constitutional changes that turned Armenia into a parliamentary republic. Sarkisian planned to stay in power as prime minister after serving out his second presidential term in April this year. Pashinian, Marukian and other leaders of the now defunct Yelk alliance strongly criticized a corresponding bill which Sarkisian pushed through the parliament as recently as in March. They accused him of introducing a “super prime-ministerial” system of government with the aim of maintaining a tight grip on power. Armenia - Nikol Pashinian (L) and other deputies from the opposition Yelk alliance attend a parliament session in Yerevan, 3Oct2017. Pashinian did not alter that system after he swept to power in May on a wave of mass protests that toppled Sarkisian. Under a new bill on the government’s structure drafted by his office, the heads of the police, the NSS and the State Revenue Committee would continue to report to the prime minister and not be part of the ruling cabinet. Armenia’s newly elected parliament dominated by Pashinian’s supporters is expected to debate the bill at its first session next month. Marukian, whose Bright Armenia party will have 18 seats in the 132-member parliament, complained that Pashinian is now intent on retaining what he described as excessive executive powers. “The agencies that were placed beyond parliamentary oversight under [former President] Robert Kocharian remain beyond it,” Marukian told reporters. “Those are the police, the National Security Service and the State Revenue Committee …The country is not becoming a parliamentary republic, it remains super prime-ministerial, something which we criticized during Serzh Sarkisian’s rule.” “In the institutional sense, this is wrong, terribly wrong … There are no parliamentary republics in the world where the chiefs of security agencies operate outside parliamentary oversight,” he said. The government has yet to explain why it is not planning to limit the prime-ministerial powers. A spokesperson for outgoing First Deputy Prime Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Tuesday that it is ready to consider opposition proposals on the issue. Press Review “Zhoghovurd” reports that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian made two important statements at Monday’s yearend reception which he hosted for leading Armenian businesspeople. Pashinian made clear that no member of his entourage or any other senior government official will have business interests. He also reiterated that all companies operating in Armenia are now free from “any kind of corruptions obligations” to any official. The paper says that neither Robert Kocharian nor Serzh Sarkisian made such assurances while in power because they and their cronies had “clear economic interests.” “The country’s economy was for years divided among a handful of individuals,” it says. “Zhamanak” quotes Russia’s Trade and Industry Minister Denis Manturov as telling a Russian news agency that Moscow has stopped using the U.S. dollar in major foreign trade deals. The paper notes that Armenia has for years been proposing to Russia to set the price of Russian natural gas in rubles, as opposed to dollars. “This proposal was first made during Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian’s tenure,” it says. “[His successor] Hovik Abrahamian also made this proposal.” “Aravot” disapproves of angry street protests against the retired General Manvel Grigorian’s release from custody and former President Kocharian’s attempts to regain his freedom in a similar fashion. The paper says that participants of these protests do not seem to be advocates of the rule of law guaranteed by the Armenian constitution. “Any person, even the most terrible criminal, deserves humane treatment,” it says in an editorial. “In the 21st century this means that a person convicted of a crime is punished by being isolated from the society, rather than being forced to endure harsh prison conditions or deprived of medical treatment and legal counseling.” (Lilit Harutiunian) 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