Tuesday, Tsarukian Critical Of Criminal Cases Against High Court Chief • Astghik Bedevian Armenia -- Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian attends a parliament session in Yerevan, . Gagik Tsarukian, the leader of the main opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), questioned on Tuesday criminal proceedings launched against Hrayr Tovmasian, the Constitutional Court chairman increasingly at loggerheads with the country’s leadership. Tsarukian challenged law-enforcement authorities to present evidence of abuses allegedly committed by Tovmasian. He condemned them for interrogating the latter’s daughters. “Let them present proof that he had committed some crimes,” Tsarukian told reporters. “We all would support punishing him [in that case.] We are not in favor of crimes.” “But as an Armenian, as a family man, seeing a 16-year-old or 18-year-old girl summoned for interrogation over some abuses is unacceptable to me,” he said. “With their actions, they [investigators] are embarrassing the prime minister. If these people want to show something, then they are not fit for their jobs.” Tovmasian’s daughters as well as father were questioned by the National Security Service (NSS). The NSS said it suspected that they had not submitted accurate asset declarations to a state body. It said it is also investigating a possible misuse of government funds allocated by the Armenian Justice Ministry at a time when it was headed by Tovmasian. Another law-enforcement body, the Special Investigative Committee (SIS), is probing a possible “usurpation of power” by Tovmasian. Both inquiries were announced two days after the Constitutional Court rejected the Armenian parliament’s demands to replace its chairman installed by the country’s former leadership. The BHK refused to back a corresponding parliamentary resolution drafted by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step bloc. Tsarukian said on October 2 that the bloc has come up with “very weak” arguments in support of its bid to oust Tovmasian. “Let them bring out evidence of [Tovmasian’s] illegitimacy and we will say he is not legitimate,” the BHK leader said on Tuesday. He said that so far he has seen only “empty talk.” While criticizing the authorities, Tsarukian stopped short of explicitly backing the former ruling HHK party’s claims that the criminal cases against Tovmasian are politically motivated. Pashinian dismissed those claims through a spokesman on Monday. The parliamentary leader of his bloc, Lilit Makunts, likewise insisted that Tovmasian is not subjected to “political persecution.” “I hope that law-enforcement bodies are acting within the bounds of powers and functions which they are supposed to have, and I hope that they engage [people] in the investigations on the basis of legal facts and corroborations,” said Makunts. Armenian Parliament Attack Ringleader Asks For Parole • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia - A screenshot of TV footage of gunmen opening fire in the Armenian parliament on 27 October, 1999. The jailed man who led a deadly attack on the Armenian parliament in 1999 has asked authorities to release him on parole, it emerged on Tuesday. A spokeswoman for Armenia’s Penitentiary Service said Nairi Hunanian, who is serving a life sentence, is eligible for parole because of having spent 20 years in prison. The official, Nona Navikian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that Hunanian’s application is already being considered by a relevant state body. It will respond to him within an 80-day period, said Navikian. An obscure former journalist, Hunanian led an armed group that burst into the National Assembly and sprayed it with bullets on October 27, 1999. Then Prime Minister Vazgen Sarkisian, parliament speaker Karen Demirchian and six other officials were killed in the shooting spree that thrust Armenia’s government into turmoil. Hunanian, who will turn 54 in December, accused the government of corruption and misrule and called for regime change as he held dozens of parliament deputies and government officials hostage following the killings. He and the four other gunmen, including his brother Karen and uncle Vram Galstian, surrendered to police after overnight negotiations with then President Robert Kocharian. Several other men were also arrested in the following days. The gunmen were subsequently tried and sentenced to life in prison. Throughout the marathon trial Hunanian insisted that he himself had decided to seize the parliament and try to topple the government without anybody's orders. But many in Armenia still believe that the ringleader and his accomplices had powerful sponsors outside the parliament building. Pashinian Under Fire Over ‘Secret’ Pay Rise • Naira Nalbandian Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian holds a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, June 27, 2019. Opposition leaders denounced Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Tuesday for what appears to be a confidential decision to effectively double the salaries of Armenian government ministers and their deputies. Citing information provided by various ministries, the Hetq.am investigative publication reported on Monday since June the ministers have been paid 1.5 million drams ($3,200) each per month, which is twice the amount of their salaries set by an Armenian law. It said that deputy ministers have likewise seen their monthly wages double to just over 1 million drams. The online publication quoted an Armenian government spokesman as saying that the sharp pay rises were “carried out under a secret procedure.” It said that Pashinian issued the “secret directive” in July. Pashinian’s press secretary, Vladimir Karapetian, did not deny the veracity of the report when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Tuesday. But he declined to comment further. The salaries of Armenia’s high-ranking state officials were most recently officially raised in 2013 through amendments to the law in question. Pashinian, then an opposition parliamentarian, strongly opposed the measure. “The ruling elite has decided to raise its wages … against the background of poverty, emigration and hopelessness,” he complained at the time. The leaders of the two opposition parties represented in the Armenian parliament seized upon the Hetq.am revelation to accuse Pashinian’s government of lack of transparency. They also questioned the legality of the lavish pay rise. “I condemn it for the fact that it was done secretly,” said Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian. “What did the people do the [2018] revolution for? The people are ready for everything but they want to be informed.” “Public funds belonging to the people cannot be spent through secret procedures unless we are talking about spending on defense and national security,” agreed Edmon Marukian of the Bright Armenia Party (LHK). Artur Sakunts, a prominent civic activist, also voiced concern at the revelation. “This is incompatible with democratic and accountable governance,” he said, adding that the government should apologize to the public and explain the salary hike. Meanwhile, parliamentary leaders of the ruling My Step bloc sought to deflect questions about Pashinian’s controversial decision, saying that it is up to the government to explain it. But they also stressed that paying the ministers and other senior officials decent salaries will contribute to good governance in Armenia. “The wages of employees of state bodies must be raised because often times the private sector offers better [financial] conditions to specialists needed by the state … and the state loses in this competition,” said My Step’s Alen Simonian. Marukian acknowledged that higher salaries lower “corruption risks” in the public sector. The opposition leader added, however, that the government should either increase them by amending the law on high-ranking officials’ wages or pay those officials bonuses in a transparent manner. Pashinian’s government has paid hefty bonuses to tax officials as well as the employees of other government agencies. Their disclosure by Armenian media caused opposition uproar late last year. The head of the State Revenue Committee, Davit Ananian, admitted in January that he alone received 14 million drams ($29,000) in bonuses during his eight-month tenure. Pashinian essentially defended those payments, arguing that they also benefited ordinary public sector employees. He also complained that the government has trouble attracting skilled professionals working for private firms and earning higher wages. Appointment Of Armenian Constitutional Court Head Declared Illegal Armenia -- Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian reads out a court verdict on an appeal filed by former President Robert Kocharian, September 4, 2019. Law-enforcement authorities challenged on Tuesday the legality of Hrayr Tovmasian’s appointment in March 2018 as chairman of Armenia’s Constitutional Court after bringing coup charges against a former senior official. The Special Investigative Service (SIS) said that the former Armenian parliament elected Tovmasian court chairman as a result of a “usurpation of power” by a “group of officials.” It claimed that they broke laws to install him just before the entry into force in April 2018 of sweeping constitutional amendments. The amendments introduced a six-year term in office for the head of Armenia’s highest court. Tovmasian was picked to run the court under the previous constitution which allows him to hold the post until the age of 70. He was elected shortly after the resignation of the court’s previous, long-serving chairman, Gagik Harutiunian. In a statement, the SIS claimed that the then deputy chief of the parliament staff, Arsen Babayan, illegally backdated Harutiunian’s letter of resignation in order to make sure that all legal deadlines for Tovmasian’s swift election are met. It said that Babayan, who was arrested on Monday, has been charged with forgery and seizure of power. The former official strongly denies the accusations, according to his lawyers. The statement also said that the SIS investigators suspect former parliament speaker Ara Babloyan of involvement in the alleged coup. Babloyan was interrogated by them earlier in the day. The SIS stopped short of indicting Tovmasian, who has been under growing government pressure to step down. It launched the coup probe on October 17 two days after seven of the eight other members of the Constitutional Court rejected the government-controlled parliament’s demands to replace their chairman. Former President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), with which Tovmasian was affiliated until February 2018, says the investigation is part of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s continuing efforts to force the high court chairman to resign. Pashinian and his political allies deny any political motives behind it. Pashinian charged in July that Tovmasian “privatized” the Constitutional Court with the help of the HHK. He implicitly demanded changes in the court’s composition. Tovmasian claimed on October 2 that the current authorities are seeking to oust him in order to gain control over the court and be able to make unconstitutional decisions. He said he will not bow to the pressure. Press Review “Government fans say that everything in Armenia has changed for the better, grumblers are sure that nothing has changed, while the government’s opponents say things have changed for the worse,” writes “Aravot.” “All three groups are wrong. In Armenia two things have changed for the better: the government was formed as a result of legitimate elections and it is not corrupt. These two standards are so important that one can speak of a phenomenal achievement for Armenia. What could have changed faster but has not changed is hypocrisy and the ruling team’s obligation to justify everything.” “Haykakan Zhamanak” dismisses claims about the “political persecution” of former government officials and other critics of the current regime. The pro-government paper says that law-enforcement authorities are simply trying to solve crimes committed in the past. It deplores “terrible psychological pressure exerted on the law-enforcement system” by Armenia’s former rulers. “This is an overt attempt to paralyze and wreck the state law-enforcement system,” it says. “Zhamanak” comments on the recent sacking of Grigori Hayrapetov, who headed a National Security Service (NSS) division in charge of the personal security of the country’s top leaders and their family members. It followed the dismissal of NSS Director Artur Vanetsian and police chief Valeri Osipian. The paper is worried that these sackings could demoralize lower-ranking law-enforcement officers and thus undermine the work of the state security apparatus. It says they deepened a perceived lack of “predictability” within that system. (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