Monday, Armenia, China Sign Visa Waiver Deal Armenia -- Foreign Ministers Zohrab Mnatsakanian (R) of Armenia and Wang Yi of China sign a visa waiver agreement in Yerevan, . The foreign ministers of Armenia and China signed an agreement on visa-free travel between their countries after holding talks in Yerevan on Sunday. The agreement will allow Armenian and Chinese citizens to visit and stay in each other’s country visa-free for up to 90 days. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stressed the importance of the deal when he met with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi later in day. He said it will spur people-to-people and commercial contacts between the two nations. Pashinian also noted his May 14-15 visit to Beijing during which met with China’s President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang. “I am glad that as a result of our discussions we reached concrete agreements on developing mutually beneficial cooperation,” he said, according to his press office. “We are prepared for and intent on deepening mutually beneficial cooperation with Armenia,” Wang said for his part. Official Armenian statements on the talks suggest that Wang’s meetings with Pashinian and Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian focused on ways of boosting Chinese-Armenian economic ties. They specifically discussed Chinese involvement in infrastructure implemented in Armenia. China is already Armenia’s second largest trading partner. According to official Armenian statistics, Chinese-Armenian trade soared by over 29 percent in 2018, to $771 million. Regional security was also on the agenda of Wang’s talks in Yerevan, with Pashinian praising China’s “balanced” position on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Scrutiny Of Armenian Judge ‘May Be Political’ • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia - Smbat Gogian, chairman of the Supreme Qualification Committee, talks to journalists, Yerevan, . The doctoral dissertation of an Armenian judge, who freed former President Robert Kocharian from custody last August, may have come under scrutiny for political reasons, a senior government official said on Monday. The Court of Appeals judge, Aleksandr Azarian, overturned a lower court’s decision to allow investigators to arrest Kocharian on charges stemming from the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan. He ruled at the time that the Armenian constitution gives the ex-president immunity from prosecution. The higher Court of Cassation subsequently struck down Azarian’s ruling, paving the way for Kocharian’s renewed arrest in December. Kocharian was again freed on May 18 pending the outcome of his trial which began on May 13. The decision made by a district court judge presiding over the trial angered Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his political allies and supporters. Pashinian demanded on May 20 a mandatory “vetting” of all Armenian judges, saying that many of them remain linked to “the former corrupt system.” A few days after Kocharian’s latest release, Smbat Gogian, the head of Armenia’s Supreme Qualification Committee, a state body overseeing the granting of postgraduate degrees, claimed that Azarian plagiarized some parts of his doctoral thesis. The allegation, strongly denied by the senior judge, led an Armenian parliament committee on science and education to hold on Monday an extraordinary session on “possible legislative solutions for the fight against plagiarism.” Gogian also attended the meeting. Gogian stood by the plagiarism claim when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service. He said his agency arrived at such a conclusion after being alerted by an individual whom he refused to name. “By comparing files with each other, our [verification] system showed that [Azarian’s] dissertation has textual matches with two other dissertations,” added Gogian. One of those dissertations was written by Vazgen Rshtuni, the chairman of the Court of Appeals. Asked whether political motives are behind the scandal, the official said: “Maybe they are … But I insist that the Supreme Qualification Committee did not initiate it.” Azarian charged, meanwhile, that the plagiarism allegations as well as the parliamentary discussion organized by pro-government lawmakers are part of a coordinated smear campaign targeting him. “I think it’s clear to everyone that all bodies have been explicitly instructed to campaign against me,” the judge told News.am. Azarian also said that he and Rshtuni were supervised by the same legal scholar when they worked on their dissertations. This why, he claimed, the two texts may have the same passages. Ex-President’s Indicted Brother Again Allowed To Leave Armenia • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia -- Aleksandr Sarkisian is taken in for questioning by the National Security Service, Yerevan, July 4, 2018. Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) has again allowed an indicted brother of Armenia’s former President Serzh Sarkisian to temporarily leave the country. An NSS spokesman, Samson Galstian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Monday that Aleksandr Sarkisian needs to undergo medical treatment abroad. He would not say in which country Sarkisian will receive it and for how long. Sarkisian was already allowed by the NSS to travel to Europe in March. Investigators told him to return to Armenia in late April for further questioning. The NSS charged Sarkisian with fraud in February several months after freezing his $30 million Armenian bank account as part of a separate inquiry. It announced shortly afterwards that he has donated $19.6 million from that account to the Armenian military. It said the state will also receive the rest of the sum in payment of Sarkisian’s back taxes. The fraud charges stem from over a dozen drawings by the 20th century Armenian painter Martiros Saryan which were found in Aleksandr Sarkisian’s Yerevan villa in July. The NSS said his fugitive son Narek had fraudulently obtained them from Saryan’s descendants. Narek Sarkisian, 37, fled Armenia in June 2018 before being charged with illegal arms possession and drug trafficking. The Czech police detained him in Prague in December on an Armenian arrest warrant. Armenian prosecutors have since been seeking his extradition. Aleksandr Sarkisian’s second son, Levon, is currently standing trial on charges of attempted murder and illegal arms possession which he strongly denies. The 33-year-old was arrested in July and freed on bail in September. Sarkisian, 62, is thought to have made a big fortune in the past two decades. He held a seat in the Armenian parliament from 2003-2011. Armenian, Azeri FMs To Meet Again • Susan Badalian • Aza Babayan U.S. - Foreign Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov (R) of Azerbaijan and Zohrab Mnatsakanian (second from right) of Armenia pose for a photograph with the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs in New York, 26 September 2018. The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan will meet again soon for further talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said on Monday. The ministry spokeswoman, Anna Naghdalian, said Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian and U.S., Russian and French mediators discussed in Yerevan preparations his “upcoming” talks with his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov. The three mediators co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group visited the Armenian capital at the start of a fresh tour of the Karabakh conflict zone. They met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian later in the day. Naghdalian gave no date of Mnatsakanian’s planned talks with Mammadyarov. The top Armenian and Azerbaijani diplomats most recently met in Moscow on April 15 in the presence of Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. A joint statement released by the three ministers 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. Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev briefly spoke with each other when they visited Brussels on May 13. 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 on the frontlines. In an interview with the Russian daily “Kommersant” published on Monday, Mammadyarov sounded cautiously optimistic about further Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks. He said Baku last year give Armenia’s new leadership time to “familiarize itself with details of the negotiation process.” “That transitional phase ended, and negotiations resumed at the level of both the leaders of the two countries and the foreign ministers … The dialogue is going on in the existing format and under a particular agenda, which gives rise to certain optimism,” he said. Mammadyarov also stressed that confidence-building measures by the two sides must go hand in hand with “real steps in the negotiation process” and “elimination of severe consequences” of the conflict. That first and foremost means a “withdrawal of occupation forces from Azerbaijan’s territories,” he said. 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