Tuesday, Armenian, Azeri Leaders Talk Again • Rikard Jozwiak • Karlen Aslanian BELGIUM -- Participants pose for the photograph during the 10th EU-Eastern Partnership council meeting, in Brussels, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev have briefly discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict during their latest visits to Brussels. The two men attended a dinner which was hosted by European Council President Donald Tusk late on Monday for the leaders of six former Soviet republics involved in the European Union’s Eastern Partnership program. It was part of official celebrations of the tenth anniversary of the program. Pashinian revealed his conversation with Aliyev when he spoke to RFE/RL at the EU headquarters in the Belgian capital. “It was a little talk about the current situation,” Pashinian told RFE/RL. He gave no details. It was Pashinian’s and Aliyev’s fifth face-to-face contact in about eight months. Their first meeting held in Tajikistan in September was followed by a significant decrease in ceasefire violations in the Karabakh conflict zone. Pashinian said that there are “no plans yet” for another Armenian-Azerbaijani summit. “But I am sure that negotiations will continue,” he added. “And it is very important to bring back Nagorno-Karabakh to the negotiation table. It is impossible to resolve this conflict without Nagorno-Karabakh.” Brussels -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks to RFE/RL in Brussels, . Ever since he came to power one year ago, the Armenian premier has regularly called for Karabakh leaders’ direct involvement in Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks. He told RFE/RL that Azerbaijan’s refusal to negotiate with them is the main hurdle to a peaceful settlement. Speaking to Armenian reporters, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov reiterated Baku’s strong opposition to any change in the format of the negotiating process mediated by the United States, Russia and France. “I think the key issue is not [Karabakh’s] participation or non-participation,” Mammadyarov said. “We need to show a serious political approach. We need to sit down and complete what I call substantive negotiations … because everyone knows very well what document is on the table. Why should we deceive ourselves.” Mammadyarov insisted that a Karabakh peace is more important for Armenians than his country. “What have the Armenian people gained as a result of the 30-year war with Azerbaijan?” he said. Mammadyarov and his Armenian counterpart Zohrab Mnatsakanian also briefly spoke in Brussels on Monday. They previously met in Moscow on April 15 for talks mediated by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. A joint statement released by them said the warring sides reaffirmed their stated intention to strengthen the ceasefire regime around Karabakh and along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and to take other take confidence-building measures. Mammadyarov said that the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group are planning visit the region later this month to prepare for another meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers. He confirmed that the meeting would take place in Washington. China’s Xi Sees Closer Ties With Armenia China -- Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in Beijing, . Chinese President Xi Jinping reportedly reaffirmed China’s desire to deepen political, economic and cultural ties with Armenia when he met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in Beijing on Tuesday. “Xi Jinping expressed confidence that bilateral cooperation will develop soon in the areas of trade, industry, transport and culture,” Pashinian’s press office said in a statement on the talks. “The Chinese president added that his country will continue to support projects that will contribute to Armenia’s development and enhance the well-being of the Armenian people.” “We are united by the common goals of cooperation of civilizations,” the statement quoted Xi as saying. “We are well aware of momentous events in the history of Armenia. We believe that tragic events that befell the Armenian people must be prevented in the future.” “Our peoples represent ancient civilizations,” Pashinian said for his part. “Already in the 5th century Armenian manuscripts described ties between the two peoples.” “Constructive and productive relations with China are very important for us,” he added. Armenia - Senior Armenian and Chinese officials break ground on the site of a new Chinese embassy bulilding in Yerevan, 9Aug2017. Chinese-Armenian relations have been cordial ever since Armenia gained independence in 1991. Xi and former Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian reported “mutual understanding on issues relating to pivotal interests and concerns of the two countries” after holding talks in Beijing in 2015. China underscored its interest in the South Caucasus country in 2017 when it started building a new and much bigger building for its embassy in Yerevan. It will reportedly be the second largest Chinese diplomatic mission in the former Soviet Union. Chinese aid to Armenia has totaled at least $50 million since 2012. In addition, the Chinese government has spent over $12 million on building and equipping a school in Yerevan where hundreds of Armenian children study the Chinese language. Pashinian attended the inauguration of the Chinese-Armenian Friendship School in August last year. Speaking at the opening ceremony, he said that having many Chinese speakers is an “economic necessity” for Armenia. Armenia - The newly constructed Chinese-Armenian Friendship School in Yerevan, 22 August 2018. China is Armenia’s second largest trading partner. According to official Armenian statistics, Chinese-Armenian trade soared by over 29 percent in 2018, to $771 million. Exports of Chinese goods to Armenia accounted for 86 percent of that figure. Xi was reported to tell Pashinian that China is ready to participate in major infrastructure projects in Armenia such as the ongoing reconstruction of the country’s highways stretching from Iran to Georgia. A Chinese company is already carrying out highway upgrades in the northwestern Shirak region. Pashinian said Yerevan is interested in the implementation of “joint projects” as part of Beijing’s ambitious Belt and Road program to re-create the old Silk Road. According to the Armenian government statement, the two leaders also discussed international security issues and the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. As part of his working visit to Beijing, Pashinian will attend and address on Wednesday the Conference on Dialogue of Asian Civilizations organized by the Chinese government. Kocharian Again Rejects ‘Political’ Charges • Naira Bulghadarian • Gayane Saribekian Armenia - Supporters and critics of former President Robert Kocharian demosntrate outside a court building in, Yerevan,. Armenia’s imprisoned former President Robert Kocharian continued to deny on Tuesday corruption and coup charges brought against him as politically motivated on the second day of his trial. Kocharian claimed that a criminal investigation into the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan has been “directed” by the current government. “A deliberate, biased, premeditated investigation is conducted,” he told a district court in the Armenian capital. “Your honor, this is how the whole case has been handled. This is the essence of the case.” Kocharian, 64, spoke as he and his lawyers made a fresh attempt to have him freed from custody pending the outcome of what promises to be a lengthy trial. Prosecutors continued to oppose Kocharian’s release, however. One of them, Petros Petrosian, argued that he expressed a desire to leave the country after being set free in August. Also asking the presiding judge, Davit Grigorian, to free Kocharian were Nagorno-Karabakh’s President Robert Kocharian and his predecessor Arkadi Ghukasian. According to the lawyers, they are ready to not only post bail but also guarantee in writing that the ex-president would not obstruct justice if set free. Grigorian responded by saying that both Sahakian and Ghukasian must come to the court and personally offer such guarantees. He said that this is a legal requirement. Sahakian and Ghukasian already urged Kocharian’s release in a letter to Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian sent last week. Davtian’s office said he is no longer in a position to grant such requests because the case has already been sent to the court. The current and former Karabakh leaders cited Kocharian’s “huge contribution” to the Armenian victory in the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan. The latter ran Karabakh before becoming Armenia’s president in 1998. ARMENIA -- Armenian ex-president Robert Kocharian attends a hearing at a court in Yerevan, . Earlier in on Monday, Grigorian rejected the lawyers’ demand that another judge preside over the trial. They claimed that Grigorian is susceptible to pressure from the prosecution. The judge’s decision on whether or not Kocharian should remain under arrest will be followed by the main hearings in the trial of the ex-president as well as his former chief of staff Armen Gevorgian and retired Generals Seyran Ohanian and Yuri Khachaturov. They stand accused of overthrowing the constitutional order in the wake of a disputed presidential election held in February 2008. All four defendants deny the charges. Kocharian and Gevorgian have also been charged with bribery. They deny these accusations as well. As the high-profile trial entered its second day dozens of supporters and detractors of Kocharian rallied outside the court building, shouting insults at each other. Riot police kept the rival groups apart. The anti-Kocharian protesters included Vardges Gaspari, a prominent activist who was attacked inside the building on Monday after displaying a poster that branded the ex-president a “murderer.” One Kocharian supporter ripped up the poster while another hit Gaspari with a bottle. Several Kocharian supporters were briefly detained and questioned afterwards. Among them was the official owner of a pro-Kocharian TV channel. It was not clear whether the police will move to prosecute any of them. “I regret everything, I’m against violence, any violence,” Kocharian’s son Levon told RFE/RL’s Armenian service when asked to comment on the incident. He at the same time condemned Gaspari for trying to bring the “offensive” poster into the courtroom. Press Review “Haykakan Zhamanak” is worried about increasingly visible friction between the leaders of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. “It is hard to tell whether this process is being steered from abroad or whether [Armenia’s] former rulers are using the Karabakh factor to achieve a revanche,” writes the pro-government paper. “But the fact is that all this is not only dangerous but also illogical.” It says that since Armenia and Karabakh have a common defense, financial and economic systems “radical changes” taking place in Armenia should also spread to Karabakh. “Or else, a rift would be inevitable,” it warns. “That the current authorities in Artsakh mirror Armenia’s former ruling regime is not only not a secret but also an obvious truth,” writes “Zhamanak.” The only difference, the paper says, is that the Karabakh leadership has enjoyed “warms attitudes” by the people of Armenia. “However, the latest events leave the impression that some people or groups are trying waste or misappropriate that warm association,” it says. “Counterrevolution cannot enter or even look for a chance in Artsakh for the simple reason that it cannot occur in Armenia either. An undesirable event that cannot happen in Armenia also cannot happen in Artsakh.” “Zhoghovurd” quotes Pashinian as telling a Russian TV channel that he and his associates spent only around $200,000 on last year’s “velvet revolution” in Armenia. “We asked people [to donate cash,] we had an electronic wallet, and Armenians from around the world, mostly from Russia, sent us money,” he said. “With this statement the Armenian prime minister effectively put an end to manipulations that have been consistently carried out over the past year,” comments the paper. “During and after the velvet revolution the former authorities saved no efforts to tell the Russians that what happened in Armenia is a ‘color revolution’ and that the West is behind it. Right from the beginning, the revolution leader, Nikol Pashinian, made clear that this struggle has no geopolitical context. Furthermore, his one-year premiership has demonstrated that … Armenia’s friendship with Russia has deepened further.” (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