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    Categories: 2019

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/26/2019

                                        Tuesday, March 01, 2019

Minister Insists On Yerevan University Rector’s Resignation

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Education Minister Arayik Harutiunian (C) speaks at a cabinet meeting 
in Yerevan, .

Education Minister Arayik Harutiunian reiterated on Tuesday his demands for the 
resignation of the long-serving rector of Armenia’s largest and oldest 
university who is facing growing pressure from the government.

Harutiunian claimed that Yerevan State University (YSU) has experienced 
“regress” under Aram Simonian, the man who has run it for the last 13 years.

“I see very serious problems with [Simonian’s] tenure,” he told reporters. 
“Just look at the current state of YSU and see where YSU is headed.”

The minister spoke the day after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian publicly 
demanded the resignation of unnamed university rectors who he said are linked 
to Armenia’s former leadership. Pashinian said they placed the universities 
under the strong influence of the former President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican 
Party (HHK) and tried to prevent students from joining street protests that 
brought him to power last May.

Harutiunian did not deny that Pashinian’s demands were primarily addressed to 
Simonian, who remains affiliated with the HHK. He expressed confidence that 
YSU’s Board of Trustees will continue to “discuss” government efforts to oust 
the rector.

The board narrowly failed to sack Simonian when it met on February 28. Only 
half of its members are appointed by the government.

Simonian, meanwhile, again refused to comment on Pashinian’s latest remarks, 
saying that the prime minister did not name names. “I have been rector for 13 
years and various speculations have revolved around me during all this time,” 
he told journalists. “I can’t comment on every speculation.”

Simonian also declined to say whether he thinks Pashinian’s statement amounted 
to a breach of YSU’s autonomy guaranteed by Armenian law.

In a statement issued earlier this month, YSU’s Scientific Council accused 
Harutiunian and Davit Sanasarian, the head of the State Oversight Service 
(SOS), of interfering in the university’s internal affairs.

The SOS, which is subordinate to the prime minister, implicated the YSU 
administration in serious financial irregularities in December. The Armenian 
police likewise alleged last month that Simonian has embezzled YSU funds and 
engaged in other corrupt practices over the past decade.

Simonian, who has still not been formally charged with any crime, denies the 
allegations as politically motivated. He has said that he will not resign 
before serving out his current term in office in 2020.




Armenian Army Chief Touts Arms Acquisitions


Armenia - Lieutenant-General Artak Davtian, the chief of the Armenian army's 
General Staff, December 12, 2018.

Armenia has made major progress in modernizing and strengthening its armed 
forces in recent years, the country’s top army general said on Tuesday.

Lieutenant-General Artak Davtian, the chief of the army’s General Staff, touted 
ongoing efforts to provide the Armenian military with new weapons as he 
addressed the army’s top brass in Yerevan. They have produced “tangible 
results,” he said, according to the Armenian Defense Ministry.

A statement released by the ministry gave no details of the arms acquisitions 
cited by Davtian.

Russia, which has a military base in Armenia, has long been the principal 
source of those supplies, with Yerevan receiving Russian-made weapons at 
discounted prices or even for free.

Armenia and Russia reportedly signed fresh defense contracts late last month. 
They have not yet publicized financial details of the contracts or the types of 
military hardware covered by them.

Earlier in February, the Armenian military confirmed the signing of a 
Russian-Armenian contract calling for the delivery of four Sukhoi Su-30SM 
fighter jets to the Armenian Air Force. Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan said 
afterwards that Yerevan will seek to buy more such aircraft after receiving 
their first batch by “the beginning of next year.”

Moscow lent the Armenian government $200 million for Russian arms acquisitions 
in 2015. The weapons provided to the Armenian military under that deal 
included, among other things, multiple-launch rocket systems, anti-tank 
rockets, and shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles.

Yerevan secured another Russian loan, worth $100 million, for further arms 
purchases in 2017. The two sides have reportedly been discussing the 
possibility of a third Russian credit.




Kocharian Again Claims Immunity From Prosecution

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian gives an interview to Yerkir Media 
TV, Yerevan, 16Oug,2018

Former President Robert Kocharian continued to challenge his arrest in court on 
Tuesday, insisting through his lawyers that Armenia’s constitution gives him 
immunity from prosecution on charges stemming from the 2008 post-election 
violence in Yerevan.

An article of the constitution stipulates: “During the term of his or her 
powers and thereafter, the President of the Republic may not be prosecuted and 
subjected to liability for actions deriving from his or her status.”

Kocharian’s lawyers cited this clause as a district court in Yerevan began 
considering their demand to free their client and throw out the coup charges 
that were brought against him in July. One of the lawyers, Hovannes Khudoyan, 
said investigators have still not explained why they believe the clause does 
not apply to do the high-profile criminal case.

Khudoyan argued that Armenia’s Court of Appeals upheld the ex-president’s 
immunity from prosecution when it ordered his release from pre-trial custody in 
August.

Acting on prosecutors’ appeal, the higher Court of Cassation overturned that 
ruling in November, however, ordering the Court of Appeals to examine the case 
anew. The latter allowed law-enforcement authorities to press charges against 
Kocharian and again arrest him on December 7.

One of the prosecutors, Vahe Tolmazian, cited the Court of Cassation’s decision 
when he objected to Kocharian’s demands. Tolmazian also presented a large 
number of written documents in support of his objections, leading the court of 
first instance to adjourn the hearings.

Kocharian as well as three retired army generals stand accused of overthrowing 
the constitutional order in the wake of a disputed presidential election held 
in February 2008, less than two months before he completed his second and final 
presidential term. Armenia’s Special Investigative Service says that they 
illegally used the armed forces against opposition supporters who demonstrated 
in Yerevan against alleged electoral fraud.

Eight protesters and two police servicemen were killed in street clashes that 
broke out late on March 1, 2008. Kocharian declared a state of emergency in the 
Armenian capital on that night.

All four men deny the charges. Kocharian, who was also charged with bribery 
last month, has accused the current authorities and Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian in particular of waging a political “vendetta” against him. 
Pashinian, who was one of the main opposition speakers during the 
February-March 2008 protests, has dismissed the ex-president’s claims.




Press Review



“Zhoghovurd” comments on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s upcoming meeting in 
Vienna with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev which it expects to be 
“important.” The paper says that Pashinian’s previous talks with Aliyev helped 
to significantly strengthen the ceasefire regime in the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict zone. “So the official name and nature of their meetings do not really 
matter,” it says. “What matters is understandings reached at those meetings and 
compliance with them.”

As “Zhamanak” points out, the agreement to hold a fresh Armenian-Azerbaijani 
summit was announced by the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE 
Minsk Group on March 1 following their visit to Yerevan and Baku. The paper 
notes that Pashinian has since urged the mediators to clarify the essence of 
their Basic Principles of the conflict’s resolution. “Also, Yerevan has made 
clear that peace negotiations will be full-fledged only if Stepanakert also 
participates in them,” it says, adding that Baku categorically rejects this 
approach.

“Haykakan Zhamanak” says that the main line of attack against the current 
Armenian government voiced by representatives of the former ruling regime is 
that it resorts to publicity stunts instead of delivering on Pashinian’s 
repeated pledges to make things much better in the country. The pro-government 
paper dismisses their claims that “the authorities do not know what to do” and 
says that the latter are following a clear roadmap for positive change: 
eradication of corruption and large-scale tax evasion, drastic increase in 
state revenue, creation of an independent judiciary, level playing field for 
all businesses and a favorable investment climate, and downsizing of the state 
bureaucracy. These, it says, are the kind of changes which had for years been 
advocated by political opponents of the former regime.

(Lilit Harutiunian)


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