Tuesday, Armenian Soldier Killed At Border With Azerbaijan An Armenian serviceman was killed at the border with Azerbaijan on Tuesday, Armenia’s Ministry of Defense reported. It said that the incident occurred in the afternoon at the southwestern border with Azerbaijan’s Nakhijevan exclave and that 26-year-old contract soldier Zohrab Simonian was fatally wounded in the chest after a shot fired from Azerbaijani military positions. The incident comes days after Armenia and Azerbaijan traded accusations over fresh border fighting that left at least one Azerbaijani soldier killed and one Armenian soldier injured. On March 6, the Armenian military claimed to have thwarted an Azerbaijani commando raid on one of its positions along the northeastern section of Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan. According to the Defense Ministry in Yerevan, an Azerbaijani “sabotage” unit attacked the outpost but was repelled by Armenian soldiers deployed there, “suffering losses” as a result. Azerbaijan’s State Border Guard Service, whose troops protect that section of the border, denied the attempted incursion. It said that Armenian troops opened “intensive” fire on some of its positions from heavy machine-guns and sniper rifles earlier that day. Armenia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement later on Tuesday, describing the latest ceasefire violation as “yet another attempt of Azerbaijan to intentionally escalate the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani state border.” “Regular attempts by Azerbaijan to escalate the situation on the state border with Armenia, to expand the geography of escalation and refrain from applying the existing mechanisms of de-escalation attest to the deliberate nature of Azerbaijan’s attempts to undermine regional security and peace,” it said. “Such actions of Azerbaijan demonstrate that the establishment of international risk reduction mechanisms is an important priority of the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, and the implementation of agreements reached in that regard is a necessary condition for the advancement of the peace process.” Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh for years. A war in the early 1990s in which some 30,000 people were killed left ethnic Armenians in control of the region. Diplomatic efforts to settle the conflict have brought little progress. Armenian, Russian PMs Discuss ‘Global Economy’ Processes Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) and Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin, Kazakhstan, Jan. 31, 2020 Processes taking place in the global economy have become a subject of discussion during a telephone conversation between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his Russian counterpart Mikhail Mishustin. The conversation was reported by Pashinian during a constitutional referendum campaign rally in the southern town of Kapan on Tuesday. “I’ve had a telephone conversation with Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Mikhail Mishustin. We discussed the processes taking place in the global market and economy, and our plans,” the Armenian prime minister said, without elaborating. Pashinian took a vacation today to start a series of rallies ahead of the April 5 referendum in which his political team seeks the termination of powers of seven of the nine judges of the Constitutional Court, including the body’s chairman Hrayr Tovmasian. His remarks at the rally in the provincial town came amid growing concerns among Armenians about the economic situation in Russia fueled by plummeting oil prices. The Russian ruble continued to depreciate on Tuesday reaching a four-year low against the U.S. dollar amid a nearly 30-percent plunge in international oil prices –the largest decline since 1991. Russia is one of the key trade and economic partners of Armenia. According to Armenia’s Statistics Committee, the Russian market accounted for nearly 28 percent of Armenia’s exports (worth over $730 million in absolute terms) in 2019. Armenian Economy Ministry spokeswoman Anna Ohanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service (Azatutyun.am) on Monday that the Armenian government was conducting “a comprehensive analysis” of the global and regional economic trends influenced by the falling oil prices and the tumbling Russian ruble in order to send “correct signals” to local manufacturers and exporters. She said that changes taking place in Russia cannot but have an effect on the Armenian economy, which is a member of the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union, a post-Soviet trade bloc also including Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. “The Russian Federation is one of our main trading partners. The Eurasian Economic Union, and Russia in particular, are a market for a considerable amount of our exports. Naturally, changes taking place there cannot but have an effect on our economy. Other things being equal, a depreciating ruble may have an impact on the competitiveness of Armenian manufacturers as compared to other main producers,” Ohanian said. Pashinian Starts Rallies In Provinces Ahead Of Referendum • Artak Khulian • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses a campaign rally in Meghri, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian took a vacation on Tuesday to get actively engaged in political campaigning ahead of next month’s constitutional referendum in which citizens will be asked to approve the termination of powers of several High Court judges. Pashinian and his political team believe Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian and six other judges elected before the 2015 constitution was fully enforced in April 2018 must be removed from office and new judges must be elected to replace them in order to maintain the spirit of the constitution. To this end, the pro-government My Step faction in parliament initiated the constitutional amendment in February amid objections from opposition groups, including the extra-parliamentary former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) that alleged that Pashinian is simply seeking to gain control over the Constitutional Court and thus tighten his hold on power. The HHK and other opposition parties have abstained from taking part in the ‘No’ campaign ahead of the April 5 referendum, considering the holding of the referendum itself unconstitutional. Tovmasian and other judges to be affected by the change have also accused the government of putting pressure on the judiciary in an attempt to jeopardize its independence. In his speech at today’s rally in Meghri Pashinian described the Constitutional Court as “the only remaining institution in Armenia that is not in compliance with the current constitution.” “The Constitutional Court today does not represent the people. I urge you to go to polling stations on April 5 and confirm that you are sending home this old Constitutional Court, which had patronized all electoral frauds in Armenia in the past,” Pashinian said. Pashinian earlier claimed that Tovmasian, who co-authored the 2015 constitution, had struck a deal with the then government to be elected chairman of the Constitutional Court only days before the new constitution was to be fully enforced. Running the court under the previous constitution allows Tovmasian, who is now 49, to hold the post until he is 65, that is until 2035. By contrast, had Tovmasian been elected after April 9, 2018, he would be confined to just one six-year tenure. In his speech in Meghri Pashinian said: “Under the new constitution the election of the Constitutional Court’s chairman should be held once every six years and the same person cannot be elected for more than one term. But according to their interpretation, the next election should be held in 2035. It would be the same if we as a bloc that was elected to parliament for five years concocted some law that would allow us not to hold the next elections until 2035 because of some ‘legal practice’ or something like that.” Speaking at a rally in the town of Kapan, Syunik’s provincial center, Pashinian emphasized that the vote of Armenian citizens in the upcoming referendum will be a sovereign decision.“There is no force in the world that can challenge the decision of Armenia’s sovereign citizen,” stressed the prime minister, comparing the upcoming ballot with the 1991 referendum in which an overwhelming majority of Armenians voted in favor of gaining independence from the Soviet Union. Pashinian visited several other towns in Armenia’s southern Syunik province and held rallies there today. He is expected to proceed with the campaign and hold more public rallies in other provinces of the country in the coming days. The ‘No’ campaign in the current referendum is represented by a group of lawyers who have said they will not engage in public campaigning, but will limit their campaign to Facebook posts about alleged violations and reports to the Central Election Commission. Former deputy Justice Minister Ruben Melikian, who represents the ‘No’ campaign, complained on Tuesday about what he described as yet another case of the prime minister using his administrative resource to promote his political campaign. He, in particular, pointed to the fact that Pashinian went to Syunik on board a helicopter that is assigned to the prime minister by law. “Using the helicopter citizen Nikol Pashinian got an advantage in his campaign over the opposite side,” Melikian claimed. Earlier, the representative of the ‘No’ campaign also criticized Pashinian and other members of his political team for allegedly campaigning in their official capacity. The officials shrugged off the criticism. Teenage Victim Of Domestic Violence Regains Consciousness In Armenian Hospital • Susan Badalian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (R) and Health Minister Arsen Torosian (L) visit 13-year-old Nazeli Khachatrian in hospital, Yerevan, March 8, 2020 A teenage girl from Gyumri who was severely beaten up by a man who had also beaten her mother to death has regained consciousness, according to a hospital official in Yerevan. Nazeli Khachatrian, 13, has been treated for multiple traumas, including a brain injury, in an intensive care unit of Yerevan’s Surb Astvatsamayr Medical Center since last week. The girl allegedly tried to intervene to stop the beating of her mother by her cohabitant on March 5. Her 43-year-old mother succumbed to her injuries later that day. Police arrested a 28-year-old man in Gyumri. He was later charged with manslaughter and “premeditated infliction of severe harm to other persons’ health.” The man faces up to 10 years in prison under the charges. The case has shocked the Armenian public, renewing the debate in the country about the need to make domestic violence a more specific crime in the penal code. A group of civil activists held a march in Gyumri on Monday raising their concerns about cases of domestic violence and what they described as indifference that exists in society towards the problem. World Vision’s child protection program manager Aida Muradian believes it is necessary that domestic violence be separated from beatings in the criminal code. “We are dealing with the case of domestic violence, but this is not reflected in the indictment. Why is it so important?.. Because the victim of domestic violence is subjected to violence by a member of her own family. As a rule, the victim of domestic violence is in a certain dependence on the perpetrator -- be it emotional, economic or some other form of dependence. This means that these are significant circumstances that affect the case, and they cannot simply be ignored,” she said. On March 8, International Women’s Day, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian together with Health Minister Arsen Torosian visited 13-year-old Nazeli in the hospital’s intensive care unit when she was still switched to an artificial ventilation apparatus. “Many of us took with pain the news about this girl and her killed mother, but let’s admit that this girl and her mother have also become victims of the opinion that violence in general and violence against women in particular can have some justification,” Pashinian wrote in a Facebook post later that day. Gevork Derdzian, of Yerevan’s Surb Astvatsamayr Medical Center, cautioned on Monday that despite regaining consciousness and having said a few words, “the condition of the girl still remains heavy, as she has multiple injuries.” Nazeli, according to the hospital spokesman, is under doctors’ strict supervision. The teenager, whose father died two years ago, has now become an orphan. Her other close relatives have refused to adopt her, but according to child custody workers in Gyumri, there are people who are ready to take care of the girl. Armenians Urged To Return From Italy Over Coronavirus Italy - A man wearing a protective mask passes by the Coliseum in Rome on March 7, 2020 Armenian citizens who are currently in Italy have been urged to “urgently suspend their trips and return to Armenia” because of the spread of the new coronavirus (COVID-19) in this part of Europe. In a statement issued on Tuesday Armenia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also urged Armenian citizens to strictly refrain from visiting Italy “given the measures being taken by the Italian authorities aimed at preventing the spread of COVID-19.” Authorities in Yerevan also called upon citizens who are currently in Italy to remain in constant contact with Armenia’s embassy in Rome. Later on Tuesday the Irish budget airline Ryanair, which entered Armenia’s civil aviation market earlier this year, announced suspension of all flights from Yerevan to Italy and back until April 8. Italy appears to have become the hotbed in Europe for COVID-19, a new coronavirus infection that broke out in China late last year, affecting more than 100,000 people and killing over 4,000 people globally since then. The whole of Italy, a country of some 60 million people, has been placed under quarantine, as the Italian authorities have stepped up efforts to tackle the coronavirus outbreak that has affected more than 9,000 people and left 463 dead in the country. Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced late on Monday that he was extending restrictions on travel, which had been in place in the north, throughout the country. Earlier, authorities in Armenia also urged citizens to temporarily avoid visiting Iran, China, South Korea, Japan and EU countries (particularly Italy, Germany, France and Spain) over coronavirus risks, except in urgent cases. Armenia reported its first and yet only coronavirus case on March 1. A 29-year-old citizen of Armenia who had been evacuated from coronavirus-hit Iran along with scores of others had tested positive and was hospitalized. Thirty-one other citizens who may have had close contact with the infected person had also been placed under a two-week quarantine in a disused hotel in Armenia’s resort town of Tsaghkadzor. No new coronavirus cases have been reported in Armenia since then as the country tightened control at its border with Iran and re-introduced entry visas for Iranian citizens. Armenia’s universities and schools resume classes on March 9 one week after being closed by the government following the confirmation of the first coronavirus case. 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.