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    Categories: 2019

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/10/2019

                                        Friday, 

Moscow Marks Karabakh Truce Anniversary

        • Aza Babayan

RUSSIA -- A view of the Russian Foreign Ministry building in Moscow, April 6, 
2018

Armenia and Azerbaijan are committed to peacefully resolving the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Russia’s Foreign Ministry said on Friday in a 
statement on the 25th anniversary of a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement 
that stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

The agreement took effect on May 12, 1994 after being signed by the Armenian 
and Azerbaijani defense ministers and the commander of Karabakh’s 
Armenian-backed army. Hundreds of soldiers from both sides have been killed 
since then in ceasefire violations that have intensified in the last several 
years. But these periodic skirmishes along the “line of contact” around 
Karabakh and the Armenian-Azerbaijani border have not escalated into another 
all-out war so far.

“The May 12 agreement remains the basis for maintaining the ceasefire regime,” 
read the Russian Foreign Ministry statement.


Nagorno-Karabakh -- Karabakh Armenian fighters rest near a battlefield in May 
1992.
The statement said that more “time is required” for the conflicting parties to 
reach a mutually acceptable peace deal. “We see the readiness of the parties to 
continue joint efforts at achieving a lasting peace,” it added, pointing to a 
recent series of high-level Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations.

The ministry said Moscow will carry on with its “active assistance” to the 
negotiating process within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chaired by 
Russia, the United States and France.

Truce violations in the conflict zone have decreased significantly since 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
met for the first time in September. Pashinian and Aliyev held more 
face-to-face talks in the following months, most recently in Vienna on March 29.


RUSSIA -- (L-E) Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian, Russian Foreign 
Minister Sergei Lavrov and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov meet 
in Moscow, April 15, 2019

The foreign ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan as well as Russia met in Moscow on 
April 15. Azerbaijan’s Elmar Mammadyarov said afterwards that they discussed, 
among other things, a 2016 Russian plant to resolve the Karabakh conflict. 
Russia’s Sergey Lavrov effectively confirmed this.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry insisted, however, that “no negotiations on any 
plan are underway at present.”

The Russian peace plan has still not been made public. Lavrov said only that it 
is in tune with the basic principles of a Karabakh settlement which have 
repeatedly been laid out by the U.S., Russian and French mediators in recent 
years.

In a March 9 statement, the mediators reiterated that “any fair and lasting 
settlement” must involve “return of the territories surrounding 
Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijani control; an interim status for Nagorno-Karabakh 
providing guarantees for security and self-governance; a corridor linking 
Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh; future determination of the final legal status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh through a legally binding expression of will.”



EU ‘Considering’ Large-Scale Aid To Armenia

        • Harry Tamrazian

Armenia -- Piotr Switalski, head of the EU Delegation to Armenia, at a news 
conference in Yerevan, February 26, 2019.

The European Union is prepared in principle to finance “very costly” 
infrastructure projects proposed by the Armenian government, the head of the EU 
Delegation in Yerevan, Piotr Switalski, said on Friday.

Switalski confirmed that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian requested EU funding 
for the construction of highways, hydroelectric plants and other infrastructure 
in Armenia when he visited Brussels in early March.

“Some of these priority projects are very important for Armenia but very costly 
and very complicated, including the continuation of the North-South corridor, 
building a highway to the Iranian border, which, as you can imagine, amounts to 
hundreds of millions of euros,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “But we are 
very seriously considering how best to implement these projects.”

Speaking on March 7, two days after returning from Brussels, Pashinian said the 
EU is ready to allocate funding for his “mega projects” provided that they are 
co-financed by the Armenian government. To that end, he said, the government 
needs to significantly improve tax collection and/or obtain more foreign loans.

Pashinian added that he will discuss the matter with relevant government bodies 
and the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) in the coming weeks to see whether the 
country could manage a higher public debt. The Armenian debt passed the $7 
billion mark last year.

“As your prime minister said after his conversations in Brussels, it is 
impossible to expect the EU providing such big grants to cover all the costs,” 
said Switalski. “We have to find a possibility of cheap loans to be matched 
with grants and to find the best financing formula. But we are in a very 
constructive mood.”

The diplomat stressed that his staff is already “devoting a lot of time and 
energy to talks with Armenian counterparts” on the issue.


BELGIUM -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) and the President of the 
European Council Donald Tusk arrive for a joint statement to the media 
following their meeting in Brussels, March 5, 2019

European Council President Donald Tusk praised the Pashinian government’s 
ambitious reform agenda when he spoke to reporters after his March 5 talks with 
the Armenian premier. Tusk said the EU is ready to support it with “enhanced 
technical and financial assistance.”

Switalski was also full of praise for the current authorities in Yerevan that 
came to power in last year’s “velvet revolution. “I believe that during these 
12 months Armenia has changed,” he said. “There are undeniable gains and 
successes.”

In particular, the EU envoy pointed to the authorities’ efforts to root out 
corruption and strengthen the rule of law. “Armenians have become equal facing 
the law,” he said. “There is no impunity. There are no groups, no individuals 
who could feel that they are in a special status, protected from the workings 
of the legal mechanism.”



Parliamentary Opposition Sees No Cooperation With Kocharian

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Deputies from the Prosperous Armenia Party attend a parliament 
session in Yerevan, March 5, 2019.

The two opposition parties represented in Armenia’s parliament said on Friday 
that they have no plans to join forces with former President Robert Kocharian 
in challenging the current government.

Kocharian, who was arrested in December on coup charges, predicted the 
emergence of a new and “powerful” opposition force in the country in written 
comments to the Reuters news agency published on Wednesday. He said he will be 
personally involved in the emerging opposition but did not elaborate. Nor did 
the ex-president clarify who else could join it.

Gevorg Gorgisian, a leader of the opposition Bright Armenia Party (LHK), ruled 
out the possibility of any cooperation with Kocharian. “I also exclude that he 
will manage to form an opposition front that could become a serious factor in 
the Armenian political scene,” Gorgisian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.

“Kocharian no doubt has financial and other resources accumulated over time by 
various means, which in theory could have an impact,” he said. “But our society 
doesn’t have a short memory and shouldn’t be underestimated. Everyone remembers 
the country’s losses suffered during the Republican Party’s rule and the 
criminal-oligarchic system which we had to deal with on a daily basis.”

A senior representative of the other parliamentary opposition force, the 
Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), said it has received no cooperation proposals 
from Kocharian and has different priorities. Mikael Melkumian also stressed 
that the BHK supported last year’s “velvet revolution” which toppled Republican 
Party (HHK) leader Serzh Sarkisian’s government.

“It doesn’t mean that we agree with everything that’s happening now,” Melkumian 
said, citing government policies opposed by the BHK.

The BHK’s founding leader, businessman Gagik Tsarukian, became one of Armenia’s 
richest men and developed close ties with Kocharian during the latter’s 
1998-2008 rule. At least until 2015, Tsarukian’s party was regarded by some 
observers as a Kocharian’s support base.

Melkumian made clear that unlike Kocharian, the BHK sees no political motives 
behind the criminal charges brought against the ex-president.

Kocharian’s arrest and prosecution has been condemned by two other opposition 
parties not represented in the current parliament: the former ruling HHK and 
the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun). The HHK spokesman, 
Eduard Sharmazanov, renewed on Friday his party’s calls for Kocharian’s 
immediate release from jail.

Sharmazanov did not exclude the HHK’s cooperation with Kocharian. “The 
Republican Party is prepared to cooperate with all those political forces whose 
political agenda will match our agenda,” he said.

A Dashnaktsutyun leader, Ishkhan Saghatelian, sounded more ambiguous on this 
score. “We haven’t had discussions with anyone,” he said. “It makes no sense to 
talk now about what could happen later on.”



Press Review



“Aravot” disapproves of deputy parliament speaker Alen Simonian’s remark that 
Robert Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian should not be referred to as former 
presidents because “they had never been elected president.” The paper says that 
if one is to believe Simonian “Armenia did not have a president for 20 years 
and the individuals who signed international treaties, ratified laws and signed 
decrees were in fact not presidents.” “The history of the state is a continuous 
process,” it says. “There cannot be ‘white spots’ here.”

“Hraparak” comments on Thursday’s celebrations in Nagorno-Karabakh of the 27th 
anniversary of the capture of Shushi, saying that they amounted to a “show of 
national unity” as they were attended by current and former government leaders, 
party members and non-partisan individuals. “One thing is clear,” writes the 
paper. “The ideas of homeland and victory unite people and make them forget 
their disagreements and differences. There is a good reason why in times of 
adversity the nation closes the ranks and defends its land and right to live 
there. The Armenian people have repeatedly proved that.”

Lragir.am reports that the European Union and its partner states involved in 
the Eastern Partnership program will hold a summit in Brussels on May 24. Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev will also 
attend it. “Nikol Pashinian said yesterday that an official meeting [with 
Aliyev] is not planned but that he won’t mind talking and discussing the 
situation if there is an opportunity,” writes the publication. “One of the 
topics [of such a conversation] is renewed tensions on the borders, even though 
Pashinian does not consider that a destabilization.” It also hopes that 
Pashinian will continue to press the EU to avoid any pro-Azerbaijani references 
in the text of an upcoming agreement with Azerbaijan.

(Lilit Harutiunian)


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