Friday, Authorities Accused Of Foul Play Before Referendum • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia -- Gevorg Gorgisian of the opposition Bright Armenia Party at a news conference in Yerevan, May 13, 2019. An opposition leader accused the Armenian authorities on Friday of using their administrative resources to try to win the upcoming referendum on their drive to replace most members of the country’s Constitutional Court. “We are already receiving reports from various provinces that their governors are summoning village mayors and forcing them to ensure that a ‘Yes’ vote wins in their villages,” claimed Gevorg Gorgisian, a leading member of the opposition Bright Armenia Party (LHK). Gorgisian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that the local community chiefs are told to “do everything” for that purpose. He refused, however, to name the “three or four provinces” whose governors are allegedly engaged in such foul play. A senior representative of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step bloc dismissed the allegations, while challenging Gorgisian to substantiate them. “Such a thing is not possible,” said Vahagn Hovakimian. “Let them show which governor or village mayor [is using administrative resources,]” added Hovakimian. Armenia’s provincial and local community administrations are overseen by Minister for Local Government Suren Papikian. He is also the manager of My Step’s campaign for a “Yes” vote in the referendum scheduled for April 5. Papikian insisted on Wednesday that the ruling political team will not use its government levers to secure around 650,000 votes needed for the adoption of constitutional amendments drafted by it. “Let nobody, be it a city or village mayor, do the authorities such a disservice,” he told a news conference. “We don’t need that.” “I hope that after making that appeal Mr. Papikian is not issuing other, confidential instructions to governors,” Gorgisian said in this regard. Armenia’s former authorities routinely pressured public sector employees and exploited their administrative resources otherwise to win elections and referendums marred by fraud allegations. EU Envoy Hopeful About Visa Liberalization Talks With Armenia • Anush Mkrtchian Armenia -- European Union Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin speaks at a conference on judicial reform in Yerevan, September 27, 2019. A senior European Union diplomat has expressed hope that the EU will start “soon” formal negotiations with Armenia on lifting its visa requirements for Armenian citizens. EU leaders pledged to launch a “visa liberalization dialogue” with Yerevan at their Eastern Partnership summit with Armenia and five other former Soviet republics held in Brussels more than two years ago. The pledge followed the signing of a Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between the EU and Armenia. Both the current and former Armenian governments have since pressed the 27-nation bloc to set a date for the start of the dialogue. Andrea Wiktorin, the head of the EU Delegation in Armenia, said late on Thursday that the European Commission acknowledges the Armenian authorities’ implementation of a 2013 agreement on “readmission” of Armenian illegal migrants seeking asylum in Europe. “The Commission sees a possibility of starting such a dialogue,” she told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “But this is a decision that has to be made by all EU member states. We hope that we will soon reach the point where the member states agree to start the dialogue.” Wiktorin cautioned at the same time that “several” European countries still have concerns about the large number of Armenian asylum seekers on their soil. “The challenge is to convince these EU member states,” she said. Citing the “example of other countries,” the diplomat also said that visa liberalization dialogue could take “years” of preparation. Tens of thousands of Armenians have emigrated to Europe for mainly economic reasons since the early 1990s. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stated in September that the number of such migrants has fallen considerably since the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that brought him to power. Pashinian cited official EU statistics showing that there were 1,815 first-time Armenian asylum applicants in the EU in the first half of 2019, down from 2,475 in the same period of 2018. The number of Armenia asylum seeks stood at 3,250 in the first half of 2017. Tsarukian’s Party Avoids Cooperation With Referendum ‘No’ Campaign • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia -- Gagik Tsarukian and other deputies from his Prosperous Armenia Party attend a parliament session in Yerevan, July 9, 2019. Businessman Gagik Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) appears to have refused to cooperate lawyers campaigning for a “no” vote in the upcoming referendum on a government proposal to oust most Constitutional Court judges. The 61 lawyers critical of the Armenian government have been registered by the Central Election Commission as the sole “No” side in the referendum campaign. The official status allows them to have free airtime on state television and appoint two of the seven members of each precinct-level election commission that will be formed for the April 5 vote. They thus need to recruit over 4,000 people ready to join those commissions, a difficult task for the mostly Yerevan-based lawyers. Last week, the No campaign appealed to the BHK and three other major opposition parties to help fill its quotas with their members and supporters. The Bright Armenia (LHK), Republican and Dashnaktsutyun parties replied that their licensed members are free to take up the commission seats despite their calls for a boycott of what they describe as an unconstitutional referendum. Ruben Melikian, a “No” campaign coordinator, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Friday that the BHK has turned down its proposal. A senior BHK representative, Arman Abovian, explained that Tsarukian’s party will not “officially” dispatch its members to the precinct commissions. But he would not say whether they can join the commissions in an unofficial capacity. The BHK, which has the second largest group in the Armenian parliament, has been more cautious than the three other parties in opposing the controversial constitutional changes which Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s political team has put on the referendum. This stance has fuelled speculation that Tsarukian does not want to antagonize Pashinian for fear of a government crackdown on his businesses. Aides to the tycoon deny that. Armenian AIDS Clinic Staff Quit In Protest • Susan Badalian Armenia -- Protesting employees of the Republican Center for the Prevention of AIDS talk to reporters outside the main government building in Yerevan, February 27, 2020. The work of Armenia’s sole medical center specializing in the treatment of HIV and AIDS was disrupted on Friday as 80 percent of its employees resigned in protest against the government’s decision to merge it with another clinic. The Armenian Ministry of Health, which initiated the decision earlier this year, says that the Republican Center for the Prevention of AIDS must be incorporated into a Yerevan hospital which treats other infectious diseases, including the flu and similar viruses. Health Minister Arsen Torosian insisted earlier in February that Armenia no longer needs a specialized HIV/AIDS clinic and that it now makes more sense to have all infectious diseases treated by a single medical institution. “The fight against AIDS must be integrated into the overall healthcare system,” he said. The affected HIV/AIDS medics strongly disagree, saying the dissolution of their center, which has detected up to 450 cases of HIV annually in Armenia, would break up what they describe as a well-functioning system of preventing, tracking and treating the immunodeficiency disease. “In three, four or five years from now we will have … an uncontrolled epidemic,” Arshak Papoyan, who heads one of the center’s divisions, claimed on Friday. The government’s decision also sparked protests by many of the HIV-positive Armenians who receive free antiretroviral drugs and counseling at the center. Earlier this week, about 150 of them signed a joint letter to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian urging him to reverse it. The HIV/AIDS patients are particularly worried about Torosian’s intention to “decentralize” services provided by the Republican Center. That includes transferring the distribution of antiretroviral drugs from the center to regular policlinics across the country. According to Torosian, this will destigmatize HIV and AIDS and get people suffering from it out of social “isolation.” HIV carriers counter that any breach of the confidentiality guaranteed by the center would only worsen discrimination encountered by them and the stigma associated with their disease. “None of us will go to a policlinic or the Nork hospital [in Yerevan,]” one of them told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. On Wednesday, Torosian fired the center’s longtime director, Samvel Grigorian, for his refusal to help implement the controversial merger. Just hours later, Grigorian’s deputy, Aram Hakobian, was briefly detained by police for allegedly refusing to hand the clinic’s official seal to Artur Berberian, its acting director appointed by the minister. It emerged on Friday at least 86 of the 108 people working at the center have tendered their resignations in response to the government’s failure to meet their demand. “The conditions that have been created by various Ministry of Health officials make our continued work impossible,” Hakobian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “It’s not about an individual, it’s about preserving a system,” said another senior HIV/AIDS medic, Janetta Petrosian. Berberian deplored the mass resignations of the center’s staff. He warned that their “inactivity” could be deemed a criminal offense. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.