Friday, Armenian President Calls For ‘Unity’ Armenia -- President Armen Sarkissian (C) visits the village of Odzun in Lori province, July 20, 2019. President Armen Sarkissian on Friday urged Armenia’s leading political actors to exercise restraint in their heated debates on judicial reforms planned by the government and other major issues. “I am hopeful that the ongoing and future developments will not only promote the efficiency of the judicial reforms but also the improvement of all areas of the state and public administration, mutual understanding and broader cooperation between the public and the authorities,” he said in a written address to the nation. “We need to realize that not only the goal is important but also the means to achieve it,” read the carefully worded statement. “Let’s make disagreements and problems the topic of our discussions but never the individuals.” “In order to move forward, often it is expedient to take a little break, to muse once again over the task ahead,” added Sarkisian, who has largely ceremonial powers. “Let’s realize that today we need unity, stability, ability to see the future, a vision as well as concrete programs.” The head of state appeared to allude to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s deepening dispute with Armenia’s Constitutional Court and its chairman, Hrayr Tovmasian, in particular. Pashinian launched a scathing attack on Tovmasian in an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian service last week. He accused Tovmasian of cutting political deals with former President Serzh Sarkisian to “privatize” the country’s highest court through constitutional amendments that took effect in April 2018. “The Constitutional Court must get out of this status of a privatized booth,” the premier said, implicitly demanding changes in the court’s composition. In that regard, he did not exclude that his administration will initiate constitutional changes in order to “resolve the situation around the Constitutional Court.” Tovmasian, who previously served as a senior lawmaker representing Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK), rejected the harsh criticism as offensive and baseless. He warned the Armenian government against trying to force him and other members of the court to resign. Pashinian also signaled support for Vahe Grigorian, the Constitutional Court’s newest judge elected by the Armenian parliament in June. Citing the amended constitution, Grigorian has challenged the legitimacy of Tovmasian and six other members of the court appointed before the “Velvet Revolution” of April-May 2018. Grigorian’s stance has been backed by some of Pashinian’s political allies but strongly condemned by opposition politicians, notably senior HHK figures. The latter have also accused President Sarkissian of turning a blind eye to what they see as illegal government pressure on courts. In his statement, Sarkissian said he is “following closely numerous pronounced statements, opinions, viewpoints, appeals to act, and appeals regarding these appeals.” But he argued that the constitution bars him from “becoming part of the ongoing dispute.” Row Between Armenian, Karabakh Leaders ‘Settled’ • Sargis Harutyunyan Nagorno-Karabakh -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (C), Karabakh President Bako Sahakian (R) and Archbishop Pargev Martirosian leave a newly built church in Stepanakert, May 9, 2019. The leaders of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh have normalized their relations following a recent public spat, a senior official in Yerevan insisted on Friday. “The relationship between Yerevan and Stepanakert is in a very good state at the moment,” said Armen Grigorian, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council. “There were some problems but those problems are now a thing of the past.” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian charged in May that unnamed “forces representing the former corrupt system” are intent on provoking a war with Azerbaijan, losing “some territories” and blaming that defeat on Armenia’s current government. He effectively pointed the finger at Karabakh’s leadership. In early June, Pashinian accused the authorities in Stepanakert of spreading false claims about significant territorial concessions to Azerbaijan planned by his government. Bako Sahakian, the Karabakh president, was quick to deny that. The secretary of Sahakian’s national security council, Vitaly Balasanian, was relieved of his duties a few days later. Balasanian had publicly scoffed at Pashinian’s confidence-building understandings reached with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev late last year. The remarks sparked a war of words between Balasanian and Pashinian’s press secretary, Vladimir Karapetian. The Armenian premier was also irked by a written petition by Sahakian and his predecessor Arkadi Ghukasian which facilitated the release from prison on May 18 of Robert Kocharian, Armenia’s Karabakh-born former president facing coup and corruption charges. Kocharian was arrested again on June 25. Grigorian, who visited Stepanakert last week, declined to comment on the “problems” between Yerevan and Stepanakert. “The problems have been talked about in public and discussed during meetings,” he told reporters. Grigorian also would not be drawn on the “treasonous” conspiracy alleged by Pashinian. “Security bodies are dealing with that,” he said vaguely. Armenian Government Evacuates Tourists Stranded In Egypt • Susan Badalian EGYPT -- Tourists enjoy their time off at the pool of a hotel in Red Sea resort of Hurghada, January 9 2016. Armenia’s government urgently hired a passenger jet on Friday to evacuate more than 100 Armenian tourists stranded in an Egyptian Red Sea resort because of a Yerevan-based travel agency. The tourists were due to return to Armenia from the Hurghada resort on Wednesday. However, their flight organized by the A & R Tour agency was cancelled. According to the Armenian Embassy in Egypt, A & R Tour failed to make a payment to a Greek airline which was due to carry out the flight. Flights from Yerevan to another popular Egyptian resort, Sharm el-Sheikh, arranged by the same agency were also cancelled this week. The government decided to pay the Greek airline Ogrange2Fly 47 million drams (about $100,000) to bring the 130 or so stranded holidaymakers back to Armenia. An Ogrange2Fly plane carrying them landed at Yerevan’s Zvartnots airport on Friday evening. The payment also covers a second Hurghada-Yerevan flight which will be carried out on Monday. According to a spokesman for Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian it will bring home more than 100 other A & R Tour customers whose holidays end next week. Scores of other Armenians, who have bought tour packages from the agency and were due to travel to Egypt this week, remained in limbo. Some of them again visited its Yerevan office to demand information or reimbursement for their expenses. The office was closed, however. One customer, Lianna Hovannisian, said she managed to talk to A & R Tour’s director, Ani Aleksanian, by phone in the morning. “I asked her to give my money back … She said their accountant will contact me. That hasn’t happened yet,” Hovannisian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. Aleksanian’s lawyer, Arsen Mkrtchian, said she has filed a report to law-enforcement authorities alleging that the flight disruptions resulted from an obstruction of her agency’s activities. Mkrtchian did not elaborate on those claims. The Armenian police said, meanwhile, that they have launched a preliminary investigation. Press Review “Zhoghovurd” comments on the decision by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) to order Armenia to pay $1.8 million to Yuri Vartanian, a Yerevan resident whose house and land were confiscated in 2005 as part of controversial redevelopment projects overseen by then President Robert Kocharian. The paper says the ruling is “exceptional” not least because the sum exceeds the total amount of all other compensations paid by the Armenian authorities in line with similar ECHR judgments. “And secondly, the ECHR verdict names a concrete judge: Arman Mkrtumian, the former chairman of the Court of Cassation,” it says. “Ask the second president [Kocharian] and his courtiers about what they think of the construction of [Yerevan’s] Northern Avenue,” “Aravot” writes on the same subject. “They will speak of that process with pride: jobs, a construction boom, full refrigerators and so on. None of them will say that as a consequence of the construction of that avenue, dozens of residents of central Yerevan were left homeless. None of them will feel responsible for the fact that the ECHR has ordered the government to pay 1.6 million euros to a citizen who had been dispossessed as a result of their actions.” “Haykakan Zhamanak” says that the key actors in political processes taking place in Armenia are not politicians but mass media. The paper says another specificity of the Armenian political scene is that parties are first and foremost trying to undercut their rivals, rather than boost their own approval ratings, through media outlets controlled by them. It says that in many countries the parties also give voters concrete promises and come up with programs of fulfilling them. It says the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia does not do this because it realizes that it stands no chance of winning over most Armenians with a constructive agenda. (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