Thursday, Major Mining Project In Armenia Not Risky, Says Environmental Audit • Artak Khulian Armenia - Gold mining facilities constructed by Lydian International company at Amulsar deposit, 18 May 2018. A multimillion-dollar gold mining project launched in Armenia by an Anglo-American company but disrupted a year ago does not pose serious environmental risks, according to an independent study commissioned by the Armenian government. The company, Lydian International, started building a massive gold mine at the Amulsar deposit in the southeastern Vayots Dzor province in August 2016 after a lengthy licensing process. All roads leading to Amulsar have been blocked since June 2018 by several dozen people protesting against gold mining operations there which they say would contaminate air, soil and water resources in the mountainous area. Lydian, which claims to have already invested $400 million in the project, has dismissed these concerns, saying that it will use modern and safe technology. The company has repeatedly demanded an end to what it considers an illegal blockage. It openly threatened international legal action against the Armenian government in March. Around that time, the government hired a Lebanese environmental consultancy, ELARD, to conduct an environmental assessment of what would be one of the biggest foreign investment projects ever implemented in Armenia. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other officials have since indicated that Lydian’s renewed operations depend on the findings of that audit. ELARD was specifically tasked with looking into the project’s potential impact on Jermuk, a famous spa resort located around 20 kilometers from Amulsar, and the more remote Lake Sevan. The Investigative Committee on Wednesday publicized a 200-page report submitted to it by ELARD. The head of the law-enforcement agency, Hayk Grigorian, presented its key findings at a cabinet meeting held in Yerevan on Thursday. Grigorian stressed, in particular, that the audit found that underground water at Amulsar has no physical “connections” with mineral water sources in Jermuk or rivers and canals flowing into Sevan. The ecologically vital lake might only be contaminated with “insignificant” quantities of toxic waste from Amulsar in case of a powerful earthquake, he said. Gold mining poses greater environmental risks for other rivers flowing through Vayots Dzor, Grigorian went on. But they can be minimized if Lydian takes “mitigating measures” recommended by ELARD, he said, citing the study. The official added that the company is ready to take virtually all of those steps. Grigorian further made clear that based on the audit the Investigative Committee has no grounds to indict anyone in its criminal inquiry into a government agency that gave the green light to the mining project in April 2016. The probe was launched in July 2018. Speaking at the cabinet meeting, Pashinian said that the government will closely examine the ELARD report. He did not specify whether it will order law-enforcement authorities to forcibly restore Lydian’s access to the would-be mining site. Armenia -- Protesters block a road leading to the Amulsar mine, July 2, 2018. As Pashinian chaired the meeting about two dozen environmental activists rallied outside his office to warn the government against enabling Lydian to resume its operations. They insisted that mining at Amulsar would inflict severe damage on the country’s ecosystem. The protesters demanded an urgent meeting with Pashinian. An aide to the prime minister told them that he will receive them later this month. Meanwhile, Lydian cautiously welcomed the audit’s basic conclusions in a statement released on Wednesday. “We are relieved that the Audit Report has been made public, as the Government of Armenia has repeatedly conditioned Lydian’s ability to advance the Amulsar Project on its results,” the company’s interim chairman and chief executive, Edward Sellers, was quoted by the statement as saying. “We look forward to reading the full text of the Audit Report and are confident it will confirm Lydian’s prudential approach to environmental stewardship,” added Sellers. The Amulsar project has been supported by the U.S. and British embassies in Yerevan. U.S. diplomats have warned that continued disruption of Lydian’s operations could scare away other American investors interested in Armenia. Lydian is registered in a British tax haven, headquartered in the U.S. state of Colorado and listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Its shareholders include U.S., Canadian and European investment funds as well as the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The company planned to produce 210,000 ounces of gold, worth over $315 million at current international prices, annually at Amulsar. It also pledged to create about 800 permanent jobs and pay about $50 million in annual taxes. Pashinian Sacks Top Aides Armenia- Arsen Gasparian, chief adviser to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, speaks to RFE/RL in Yerevan, March 6, 2019. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian dismissed his two chief advisers and another aide on Thursday. Pashinian’s executive orders posted on an Armenian government website gave no reasons for the sacking of the advisers, Arsen Gasparian Aram Gharibian. Gasparian is a former diplomat who lived in Russia after resigning from the Armenian Foreign Ministry in the late 1990s. He joined Pashinian’s newly formed staff in July last year. Gharibian has held the government position since June 2018. His dismissal will take effect on September 2. Also fired was an assistant to Pashinian, Mher Sahakian. A relevant order signed by the prime minister said Sahakian is relieved of his duties at his own request. Pashinian already fired his chief of protocol and two other senior members of his staff in April. One of them, Margarit Azarian, headed the human resources department in the prime minister’s office. Azarian is the mother of Artur Vanetsian, the influential director of Armenia’s National Security Service. A spokesman for Pashinian said at the time that the three officials were fired because of their “inadequate execution of the prime minister’s orders.” Azarian claimed, however, that she herself decided to quit. Minister Defends Resignation Incentives For High Court Judges • Gayane Saribekian Armenia -- Justice Minister Rustam Badasian speaks to journalists, Yerevan, . Justice Minister Rustam Badasian on Thursday defended a controversial government bill that offers members of Armenia’s Constitutional Court financial incentives to resign. Under a bill drafted by the Armenian Justice Ministry, Constitutional Court judges will continue to receive their salaries and other benefits if they tender resignations by October 31. One of those judges, Alvina Gyulumian, rejected the lucrative offer as unethical on Tuesday. She suggested that her colleagues will also decline it. The bill has also been criticized by some legal experts and the government’s political opponents. They say that it amounts to a legal “bribe.” Badasian insisted, however, that his ministry has simply devised a legal mechanism for voluntary “early retirement” of judges adopted in many other countries. “It’s a common practice for transitional periods and that’s what our bill envisages,” he told reporters. “We are awaiting constructive proposals.” “Any solution contains certain political elements,” said Badasian. “But it doesn’t mean it’s a partisan decision. It’s a political decision which cannot and does not transcend the boundaries of a rule-of-law state.” The bill was publicized late last week following Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s harsh criticism of the Constitutional Court’s chairman, Hrayr Tovmasian. In a July 19 interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian service, Pashinian implicitly demanded the resignation of Tovmasian and other judges appointed under the country’s previous governments. Tovmasian rebutted the verbal attack, warning Pashinian’s government against trying to force him and his colleagues to quit. The idea of financially encouraging resignations from the Constitutional Court was first floated in June by Vahe Grigorian, the court’s newest judge elected by Armenia’s government-controlled parliament. Grigorian suggested it after challenging the legitimacy of seven fellow judges installed before amendments to the Armenian constitution took effect in April 2018. The court’s eight other members, including Tovmasian, dismissed Grigorian’s claims. Ara Ghazarian, a lawyer and expert on international law, also denied on Thursday the existence of a “constitutional crisis” in the country. Still, he said the “early retirement” tentatively offered by the government is not a bad idea in principle. “I don’t think it’s a bribe,” Ghazarian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “In essence, it’s a deal. The practice of a deal exists in jurisprudence.” “The question is what this would be done for,” he said. “If the idea is to get Constitutional Court judges to quit because [the government thinks] there is a crisis in the court, I don’t see such a crisis.” The government, Ghazarian went on, would be wrong to try to get rid of some judges for purely political reasons. “If that is the aim of the deal I believe it does not reflect an objective necessity,” he said. “Political expediency is not an objective necessity.” Press Review Lragir.am comments on fresh skirmishes on Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan which left one Armenian soldier wounded. “All this happened when Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolay Patrushev was in Armenia,” writes the pro-Western publication. It says that during their meetings with Patrushev Armenian officials again expressed concern over Russian arms sales to Azerbaijan. “Aravot” reports that an international economic forum will be held in Yerevan on September 30 during a summit of the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). The conference will focus on ways of utilizing “the transit potential of the Eurasian continent.” “It is expected that the conference will discuss pressing issues related to transport and logistics in the continent, prospects for the development by regional states of new and large-scale infrastructure projects and the implementation of projects that are already being implemented,” writes the paper. It says that with this conference Pashinian hopes to make the EEU summit more “lively.” He has invited the president of Iran and the prime minister of Singapore to the summit for the same purpose, according to the paper. “One should now wait and see how Russia reacts to official Yerevan’s efforts,” it says. “Hraparak” predicts a “heated autumn” for members of Armenia’s parliament which is now in summer recess. In particular, the says, the National Assembly has to debate and pass several dozen bills envisaged by Armenia’s Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement with the European Union. One of those bills calls for major structural changes within the Armenian police. (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