Friday, High Court Chief Cites Legal Safeguards Against His Arrest Armenia -- Hrayr Tovmasian, Yerevan, October 2, 2012. Hrayr Tovmasian, the embattled chairman of Armenia’s Constitutional Court, has warned that authorities will violate the Armenian constitution if they arrest him without the consent of most other court judges. In an interview with the “168 Zham” newspaper published late on Thursday, Tovmasian also said that he will step down only if at least five of those judges demand his resignation. And he claimed that his continuing refusal to quit despite strong government pressure is strengthening judicial independence in Armenia. “I believe that the judicial authority must earn its independence and earning that independence is not that easy,” said Tovmasian. “Maybe these ‘pressures’ or events taking place around the Constitutional Court are the path through which the judicial authority is earning its independence … Nobody will deliver your independence to you on a silver plate.” The authorities have been trying to oust Tovmasian ever since Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stated in May that many Armenian judges remain linked to the “former corrupt system.” Pashinian accused Tovmasian in July of having “privatized” the Constitutional Court as part of a dubious deal struck with the country’s former leadership in early 2018. Early this month, the Armenian parliament urged Constitutional Court justices to replace their chairman. A parliamentary resolution drafted by the ruling My Step bloc accused Tovmasian of mishandling appeals lodged by the arrested former President Robert Kocharian and cited his past affiliation with the former ruling Republican Party (HHK). The court dismissed the resolution on October 14. Two days later, the Special Investigative Service (SIS) launched criminal proceedings against Tovmasian. The law-enforcement body on Tuesday effectively declared illegal his election as court chairman by the former, HHK-controlled parliament in March 2018. The SIS arrested a former senior parliament staffer as part of the coup investigation. It has stopped short of indicting Tovmasian so far. Armenia -- Speaker Ararat Mirzoyan casts a ballot in a parliament vote on a resolution demanding the dismissal of Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian, Yerevan, October 4, 2019. The Armenian constitution stipulated before being amended less than two years ago that a Constitutional Court judge cannot be arrested without the consent of at least five of the eight other members of the country’s highest court. Under constitutional amendments that took effect in April 2018, such permission is needed only in cases where the judge faces prosecution in connection with the performance of their duties. Tovmasian insisted that he is protected by the previous version of the constitution and enjoys “full immunity” from prosecution because of being appointed to the court before April 2018. “They can prosecute, arrest me only with the Constitutional Court’s consent,” he told 168Zham.am. Tovmasian also confirmed reports that he recently told fellow judges that he will resign as court chairman if at least five of them demand his exit. The SIS has yet to clarify whether it considers Tovmasian a potential suspect in the high-profile probe. HHK figures and other critics of the current government say that this and a separate investigation into Tovmasian conducted by the National Security Service (NSS) are politically motivated. They claim Pashinian is seeking to purge the Constitutional Court in order to tighten his hold on power. Tovmasian similarly charged on October 2 that the authorities want to gain control over the court. Pashinian and his political allies strongly deny this. The premier has repeatedly stated that his aim is to help establish a “truly independent” judiciary. The NSS raised eyebrows last week by interrogating Tovmasian’s 75-year-old father and two daughters. It too denied any political motives, saying it simply suspected that they had not submitted accurate asset declarations to a state body. The former Armenian branch of the Soviet KGB 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. Tovmasian said on Thursday that seeing his relatives summoned to the NSS for questioning was “not a pleasant thing.” “They now joke in our household that only the mom (Tovmasian’s wife) wasn’t summoned by the NSS because she is originally from Ijevan,” he said, referring to Pashinian’s hometown. Senior Police Official Fired For ‘Political Statement’ • Marine Khachatrian Armenia -- Hovannes Kocharian, deputy chief of the Amenian police, at a news conference in Yerevan. A deputy chief of the Armenian police has been sacked for publicly objecting to a bill that would allow political appointees to run the law-enforcement agency. Armenian law has until now required the heads of the police and the National Security Service (NSS) to be high-ranking career officers. Legal amendments drafted by the opposition Bright Armenia Party (LHK) and passed by the parliament in the first reading last month would remove this requirement. They stipulate that any Armenian national, who is aged 25 or older and has lived in the country for the last four years, could be appointed as police or NSS chief by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. Colonel Hovannes Kocharian, the deputy chief of the national police service, told reporters on Tuesday that the police oppose the proposed amendments because they are based on “political expediency.” “The view of the police does not correspond to that of the authors of this bill,” Kocharian told reporters. He dismissed the authors' arguments that the police will be more accountable to the parliament if they are run by outsiders. President Armen Sarkissian relieved Kocharian of his duties on Thursday in a decree requested by Pashinian. The prime minister’s spokesman, Vladimir Karapetian, said the police official was fired because of making a “political statement.” “The prime minister has stated on many occasions that the police and army servicemen must stay away from politics and must not make statements of political character,” Karapetian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. The National Assembly was widely expected to pass the LHK bill in the second reading earlier on Thursday. However, it failed to do so after last-minute objections voiced by Vladimir Vartanian, the pro-government chairman of the parliament committee on legal affairs. Vartanian said that the bill needs to undergo some changes before it can become a law. He did not elaborate on those changes. The police and NSS chiefs, Valeri Osipian and Artur Vanetsian, were forced by Pashinian to resign last month for still unclear reasons. Both agencies have been headed by interim heads since then. Pashinian has yet to decide who will run them on a permanent basis. Authorities Report Hefty Payout From Sarkisian Bodyguard • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (R) and his chief bodyguard Vachagan Ghazarian (L), Yerevan, April 14, 2012. The former chief bodyguard of ex-President Serzh Sarkisian and his wife prosecuted on corruption charges have paid the state almost 2.9 billion drams ($6 million) in compensation, investigators said on Friday. Vachagan Ghazarian, who headed Sarkisian’s security detail for over two decades, stands accused of illegal enrichment and false asset disclosure. The charges stem from his failure to declare to a state anti-corruption body more than $2.5 million in cash that was mostly held in his and his wife’s bank accounts. Ghazarian was obliged to do that in his capacity as deputy head of a security agency providing bodyguards to Armenia’s leaders. He held that position until May 2018. Ghazarian was first detained in June 2018 after police raided his apartment in Yerevan and found $1.1 million and 230,000 euros ($267,000) in cash there. The National Security Service (NSS) said he carried a further $120,000 and 436 million drams ($900,000) in a bag when he was caught outside a commercial bank in Yerevan. Armenia - Vachagan Ghazarian empties his bag filled with cash after being arrested by the National Security Service in Yerevan, 25 June 2018. Ghazarian, who has the rank of NSS general, was released from custody in July 2018 but arrested again last November. A Yerevan court granted him bail in December after he offered to transfer as much as $6 million to the state. The Special Investigative Service (SIS) said on Friday the once powerful officer and his wife have completed the payment. An SIS spokeswoman described the cash transfer as a recovery of financial “damage” inflicted on the state. It remains unclear when the SIS will complete investigation and whether Ghazarian will stand trial. Earlier this year, another law-enforcement body, the National Security Service (NSS), secured an even heftier payout, worth $30 million, from Serzh Sarkisian’s indicted brother Aleksandr. The money was held in Aleksandr Sarkisian’s Armenian bank account frozen by the NSS shortly after the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that topped the former president. Tsarukian’s Top Business Manager Denies Tax Fraud • Artak Khulian Armenia -- Sedrak Arustamian speaks to workers of a cement plant in Ararat, April 15, 2019. The top manager of companies belonging to Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian denied on Friday fraud and tax evasion charges levelled against him last month. The accusations do not relate to any of the several dozen firms making up Tsarukian’s Multi Group and stem from separate economic activities of the holding company’s chief executive, Sedrak Arustamian. The Investigative Committee claimed on September 18 that Arustamian helped Sinohydro Corporation, a Chinese construction company building a 56-kilometer highway in northwestern Armenia, evade 240 million drams ($503,000) in taxes. It said Sinohydro paid an Armenian firm owned by Arustamian and run by two other men 117 million drams in fictitious consulting frees as part of the scam. Both men were also indicted. One of them, Gurgen Sargsian, served as Armenia’s transport minister from 2008-2010. Sargsian was arrested earlier this week. Investigators also moved to arrest Arurstamian when they brought the charges against him. An Armenian district court decided to grant him bail, however. Prosecutors appealed against the decision. The Court of Appeals finished on Friday hearings on the legal challenge. It will announce on Monday whether Arustamian can be arrested pending investigation. “I did not commit any crimes and am confident that the court will make the right dcision,” the business executive told reporters. Asked whether he believes the charges are politically motivated, Arustamian said: “I have no connection whatsoever with politics.” Representatives of the BHK, which is the country’s largest parliamentary opposition force, have indicated that they see no political motives behind the case. Arustamian’s daughter Nora is one of the 26 parliament deputies representing Tsarukian’s party. Armenia - The Yerevan-Ararat highway is upgraded as part of the North-South transport project, 2Feb2014. The accusations against Tsarukian’s right-hand man are part of an ongoing extensive investigation into serious financial abuses allegedly committed during the implementation of a multimillion-dollar project to rebuild Armenia’s key highways. More than a dozen individuals have been indicted in the probe so far. Five of them are currently on the run. They include the executive director of the Spanish company Corsan Corviam Construccion which was contracted by the former Armenian government in 2012 to upgrade more than 90 kilometers of roads. The first two reconstructed highways connecting Yerevan to the towns of Ararat and Ashtarak were inaugurated in late 2015. Corsan never rebuilt the remaining 40-kilometer-long road covered by the $250 million contract. The Investigative Committee claimed earlier this month that Corsan’s Armenian subcontractors were chosen by former President Serzh Sarkisian’s brother Levon in return for hefty kickbacks. Levon Sarkisian, who fled Armenia last year, was charged with bribery and money laundering as a result. He denied the accusations through a lawyer. Press Review Lragir.am says Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian was right to say on Thursday that his standoff with the Armenian government is good for the court’s independence. “The Constitutional Court is really independent from and not subordinate to the authorities,” it writes. “This is the high court’s first such achievement in its history.” It is also true, the publication goes on, that the court is now independent because it was formed by the former authorities and, according to many supporters of the current government, remains dependent on them. “In this sense, the Constitutional Court needs to earn and prove its independence from the former regime as well,” it says. “Chorrord Ishkhanutyun” condemns as “very unfair and absurd” law-enforcement authorities’ decision to arrest a former deputy chief of the Armenian parliament staff, Arsen Babayan, as part of their investigation into Tovmasian. “Is he the one who prevents the authorities from resolving the crisis over the Constitutional Court?” asks the paper. “Probably not … Arsen Babayan is neither an oligarch nor former senior official. Nor has he earned millions [of dollars,] killed anymore or used troops against people.” It says that the alleged crime attributed Babayan is far less serious than what other former senior officials, who remain free, are accused of. “The path chosen by the authorities for solving the Constitutional Court issue does not look good,” concludes the paper. “Aravot” says that Armenian government ministers must do a better job of “benefiting the state” after having their monthly wages controversially doubled by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. The paper admits at the same time that it is not easy to objectively measure the effectiveness of their work. “There is also another problem,” it says. “If a minister gets 1.5 million drams [per month] while the head of a ministry division only 200,000 drams the latter will not necessarily be happy and that will reflect on their work.” (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