Friday, Kocharian Not Responsible For March 2008 Deaths, Says Babayan • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenia -- Samvel Babayan, a retired army general, at a news conference in Yerevan, . Former President Robert Kocharian did not order security forces to shoot and kill opposition protesters in Yerevan in 2008, Samvel Babayan, Nagorno-Karabakh’s former top military commander, said on Friday. Babayan questioned the fairness and legality of Kocharian’s continuing pre-trial detention on charges stemming from a post-election crackdown on the Armenian opposition. He argued that nobody has been charged so far in the deaths of eight protesters and two police servicemen in vicious street clashes that broke out on March 1, 2008. The violence followed the forcible dispersal of nonstop opposition protests against official results of the February 2008 presidential election which gave victory to Serzh Sarkisian, Kocharian’s longtime ally and preferred successor. Both men are natives and former wartime leaders of Karabakh. “We need to know who ordered, who carried out those killings and how it all happened,” Babayan told a news conference. “Has anything been solved on that score? No.” “I am sure that the order was not issued by [Kocharian,]” insisted Babayan. He said that Kocharian was “in the process of handover” of power to Sarkisian and therefore could not have tried to cling to power at any cost. “The investigating team has officially stated that [Kocharian] has nothing to do with the killings,” he went on. “If he has nothing to do, why are you prosecuting him? For violating the constitutional, they say. I say, ‘OK, bring the case to court so we can see what it’s all about.’” Kocharian, who completed his second and final presidential term in April 2008, was arrested in December on charges of illegally using Armenian army units against supporters of Levon Ter-Petrosian, the main opposition candidate in the disputed presidential ballot. He denies the charges as politically motivated. Babayan, 53, was appointed as the commander of Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army shortly after Kocharian became the unrecognized republic’s leader in 1992. The two men are thought to have maintained a cordial rapport even after Babayan was arrested in 2000 for allegedly masterminding a botched attempt on the life of the next Karabakh president, Arkady Ghukasian. The once powerful general was released from prison in 2004. He challenged Sarkisian after the latter succeeded Kocharian as Armenia’s president. In March 2017, Babayan was arrested on charges of illegal arms acquisition and money laundering which he strongly denied. A court in Yerevan subsequently sentenced him to six years in prison. Armenia’s Court of Cassation overturned the guilty verdict in June 2018, releasing Babayan from prison. The decision came more than a month after Sarkisian was overthrown in a popular uprising led by Nikol Pashinian, the current Armenian prime minister. Babayan, who now wants to run in Karabakh’s next presidential election due in 2020, on Friday drew parallels between the criminal charges brought against him and Kocharian. “When they arrested me, they said I smuggled a rocket or a nuclear bomb from Georgia,” he said. “It turned out later that I didn’t smuggle anything from anywhere.” Parliament Rejects Import Tariff Sought By Tsarukian • Gayane Saribekian Armenia -- A cement plant in Ararat. The National Assembly approved on Friday a government bill which the opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) said is not far-reaching enough to protect domestic manufacturers of cement against cheap cement imports from neighboring Iran. The parliament’s pro-government majority refused to amend the bill amid mounting political tensions with BHK leader and businessman Gagik Tsarukian, whose assets include one of Armenia’s two cement plants. Earlier this year, the Armenian government moved to impose hefty taxes on imports of much cheaper Iranian cement which more than tripled last year, threatening continued operations of the Armenian plants. An Armenian parliament committee on economic issues watered down the relevant government bill on April 12 to ensure that the tariff does not apply to cement clinker, a nodular material developed before the final stage of cement production and easily turned into the construction material. Tsarukian’s Multi Group, which includes the Ararat Tsement plant, denounced the amendment, saying that it renders the bill meaningless. It said Ararat Tsement would be able to use cheap Iranian clinker and manufacture cement without the vast majority of its more than 1,000 workers. Hundreds of them received notices of termination later on April 12. The workers responded by going on strike on April 15. They ended the protest after Tsarukian cancelled the planned layoffs two days later. The tycoon cautioned at the same time that the clinker tariff sought by him is vital for the future of the plant located in Ararat, a small town 50 kilometers south of Yerevan. Armenia -- A cement plant in Hrazdan. BHK lawmakers echoed those warnings as the parliament debated the bill and ultimately passed it in the first reading on Friday. “We would lose our cement production capacities,” one of them, Mikael Melkumian, said. Minister for Economic Development Tigran Khachatrian and pro-government deputies insisted, however, that cement imports must not be blocked altogether because healthy competition between domestic and foreign manufactures will only benefit Armenia’s construction sector. Hayk Gevorgian, a senior lawmaker representing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, also attacked Tsarukian, saying that a company presumably linked to the BHK leader had privatized Ararat Tsement for just $200,000 in 2002. Gevorgian also implicitly accused the company of evading taxes until last year’s “velvet revolution” that brought down the country’s former government. Tsarukian angrily denied those claims in a rare speech delivered on the parliament floor. In separate comments to the press, he said that Pashinian’s bloc will bear responsibility for economic consequences of the bill. Armenia - Businessman Gagik Tsarukian (L) and protest leader Nikol Pashinian speak to reporters in Yerevan, 2 May 2018. Tensions between My Step and the BHK have risen since Tsarukian strongly criticized the government’s economic policies early this month. Senior representatives of the two political forces traded fresh accusations in the parliament on Thursday. Pashinian and Tsarukian met to discuss the cement dispute and other contentious issues later on Thursday. Tsarukian afterwards described the meeting as “very warm” but did not report any concrete agreements. The BHK backed the Pashinian-led “velvet revolution” as it gained momentum in April 2018. It joined Pashinian’s first cabinet formed in May. The premier fired his BHK-affiliated ministers in October, accusing Tsarukian’s party of secretly collaborating with the former ruling Republican Party. The BHK finished a distant second in the December 2018 parliamentary elections which Pashinian’s bloc won by a landslide. Senior Official Denies Corruption Charges • Arus Hakobian • Naira Nalbandian Armenia -- Davit Sanasarian, head of the State Oversight Service, attends a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, . A prominent Armenian government official on Friday laughed off corruption accusations leveled against him but urged supporters not to undermine the government when defending his innocence. “It would have made more sense to suspect me of assassinating [U.S. President John] Kennedy than of being involved in corruption,” Davit Sanasarian, the suspended head of the State Oversight Service (SOS), said in a Facebook post. The National Security Service (NSS) indicted Sanasarian on Thursday as part of an ongoing investigation into allegedly corrupt practices in government-funded supplies of medical equipment to hospitals. It arrested two senior SOS officials in late February, saying that they attempted to cash in on those supplies. According to the NSS, Sanasarian abused his powers to help his subordinates enrich themselves and a private company linked to them. Sanasarian, whose agency is tasked with combatting financial irregularities in the public sector, was quick to reject the charges as “fabricated.” Many of his supporters, among them Western-funded civic activists, defended him on social media, turning on the NSS and its influential director, Artur Vanetsian, in particular. Sanasarian urged them to exercise restraint. “The former regime’s propagandists, supposedly defending me, are trying to satisfy their penchant for weakening the [current] authorities,” he wrote. “At any rate, in this torrent of various kinds of reports, please stop for a while and remember that state interests are the main thing.” Sanasarian, 34, is a former opposition and civic activist who had for years accused Armenia’s former leaders of corruption. He actively participated in last year’s “velvet revolution,” which succeeded in large measure because of widespread popular frustration with graft. Speaking to reporters shortly before being formally charged, Sanasarian said he does not believe that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian ordered the NSS to prosecute him for political reasons. Armenia - Deputy parliament speaker Lena Nazarian talks to journalists, Yerevan, . Another Pashinian ally, deputy parliament speaker Lena Nazarian, ruled out on Friday any political motives behind the high-profile criminal case. “There is no way anyone can fabricate charges against any official,” she told reporters. Nazarian also stressed that no member of Pashinian’s political team is immune to prosecution. “In the fight against corruption, embezzlement and other abuses, we will not be dividing people into our allies and outsiders,” she said. Edmon Marukian, the leader of the opposition Bright Armenia Party (LHK), likewise suggested that the “surprise” charges brought against Sanasarian are unlikely to be politically motivated. “It may be [the result of NSS] sloppiness or I don’t know what,” he said. “But I don’t think it’s political persecution. We’ll see.” Press Review Lragir.am says that corruption charges brought against Davit Sanasarian, the head of the State Oversight Service (SOS), mark the most serious scandal that has erupted in Armenia since last year’s regime change. The publication suggests that the National Security Service (NSS) probably had “quite weighty grounds” to indict Sanasarian. It wonders whether NSS Director Artur Vanetsian discussed the high-profile case with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian before the indictment.In any case, it says, it is quite unusual for a serving high-ranking Armenian official to be prosecuted on corruption. It also says Pashinian can seize upon this case to show that he is really serious about combatting corruption in Armenia. “Hraparak” wonders whether the new authorities are getting “carried away” in their fight against corruption and “sacrificing sons of the revolution” “History is full of many such examples,” the paper says. “But there is also another truth,” it adds. “Human beings are greedy. As a rule, even the most ideological individuals succumb to temptations when dealing with lots of money. No one is born corrupt. One becomes corrupt over time. At first, they accept small gifts and take bribes in kind. Then come diners, trips, free services, jobs for friends and relatives. And in the end the time comes for big corrupt deals, multimillion-dollar kickbacks.” “Aravot” says that for Gagik Tsarukian and members of his Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) the previous Armenian parliaments were a much more comfortable place than the current one is. “The thing is that since 1995 the [former] parliaments attracted, apart from politicians, people whose only goal was to protect their business interests,” explains the paper. “For example … many members of the former parliament majority were also businesspeople. Whatever one thinks of it, the 88-strong majority in the current National Assembly came to the parliament to implement some ideas. Their and the Bright Armenia party’s function is political.” By contrast, it says, the main mission of BHK deputies is to further their leader’s business interests. (Lilit Harutiunian) Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org