X
    Categories: 2020

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/09/2020

                                        Thursday, April 1, 2020

Tsarukian’s Top Business Manager Faces More Charges
Ապրիլ 09, 2020
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia -- Sedrak Arustamian speaks to workers of a cement plant in Ararat, 
April 15, 2019.
Կիսվել
        • 1
Կարդալ մեկնաբանությունները
 Տպել
A law-enforcement agency has brought more criminal charges against the top 
manager of companies belonging to Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik 
Tsarukian.

The Investigative Committee said on Wednesday that Sedrak Arustamian, the chief 
executive of Tsarukian’s Multi Group, is prosecuted for his refusal to stop the 
“illegal” construction of a luxury hotel in downtown Yerevan which the holding 
company began in early 2018.

Yerevan’s current municipal administration froze the construction shortly after 
taking office in October 2018. It said Multi Group never received a building 
permission for the high-rise. Tsarukian denied that.

Arustamian’s lawyer, Hovik Sukiasian, insisted on Thursday that both the current 
and previous Yerevan mayors did issue construction permits to Multi Group. 
Sukiasian also said that Multi Group is now locked in a court battle with the 
municipality and the Investigative Committee should not have indicted his client 
before a final court ruling in the case.

Arustamian was already charged with fraud and tax evasion in September 2019. 
Those accusations do not relate to any of the several dozen firms making up 
Multi Group and stem from Arustamian’s separate economic activities.

The Investigative Committee claimed that Tsarukian’s right-hand man helped a 
Chinese construction company building a 56-kilometer highway in northwestern 
Armenia evade 240 million drams ($503,000) in taxes. It said the company also 
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.

Arustamian denied those charges as well. He avoided arrest after Armenian courts 
granted him bail over investigators’ objections. The Investigative Committee 
decided not to seek his arrest this time around.

Tsarukian is one of the country’s wealthiest men. His opposition party controls 
the second largest number of seats in the Armenian parliament.



Armenia Evacuating Nationals From Turkey

        • Tatevik Sargsian

Turkey A worker sprays disinfectant outside Ortakoy Mosque, to prevent, the 
spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Istanbul.

Armenia’s government is evacuating at least 70 Armenian citizens from 
coronavirus-hit Turkey in coordination with Turkish and Georgian authorities, 
the Foreign Ministry in Yerevan said on Thursday.

Three buses carrying them left Istanbul on Wednesday morning and were due to 
reach Armenia via Georgia early on Friday.

“The transportation was agreed with relevant Turkish and Georgian authorities 
whose assistance is appreciated,” the Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Anna 
Naghdalian, said in written comments to the Armenpress news agency.

Naghdalian said that just like Armenians returning from other countries, all of 
the evacuees will be placed in a two-week quarantine on their arrival in Armenia.

One of them, Gagik Musheghian, confirmed that the Armenian government paid for 
the bus service.

“The Armenian authorities have helped us a lot,” Musheghian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian service by phone. “They’ve paid our bus fares, they’ve covered all our 
expenses.”

“The buses will pass through a transit corridor in Georgia and enter Armenia 
through the Bagratashen crossing,” he said.

It was not clear whether more Armenians living and working in Turkey will be 
repatriated in the coming days. According to Naghdalian, about 100 of them have 
so far contacted Armenia’s Foreign Ministry for the purpose of their possible 
evacuation.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip reportedly expressed readiness to assist in the 
repatriation of Armenian citizens when he spoke to the spiritual leader of 
Turkey’s ethnic Armenian community, Patriarch Sahak Mashalian, on Wednesday.

According to the Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul, Erdogan also said that 
Ankara is ready to provide Yerevan with medicines that could be used for 
treating coronavirus.

Commenting on the reported offer, Naghdalian said: “As a third party, we will 
refrain from commenting on unofficial information. In any case, such information 
is not on our agenda.”

The Turkish authorities have reported more than 38,000 coronavirus cases and 812 
deaths resulting from them so far.

Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic relations. Successive Turkish 
governments have kept the border between the two neighboring states closed 
because of the unresolved conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.



World Bank Warns Of Recession In Armenia

        • Emil Danielyan

Armenia -- A deserted sidewalk in the center of Yerevan, April 7, 2020.

The World Bank has warned of the growing risk of a recession in Armenia while 
saying that the Armenian economy could still grow modestly this year despite the 
coronavirus pandemic.

“Under the baseline scenario, envisaging the start of a gradual recovery [of 
economic activity] in mid-summer of 2020, the real GDP growth rate in 2020 is 
expected to moderate to 1.7 percent,” the bank said in its Europe and Central 
Asia Economic Update released on Thursday.

“At the same time, a prolonged [coronavirus] outbreak scenario would result in 
stagnant GDP or even an economic contraction,” it warned. “The probability 
weight on that happening is rising due to worsening health, economic, and 
financial outcomes across the world.”

The Armenian economy grew by 7.6 percent last year and continued to expand 
robustly in the first two months of this year. However, the situation changed 
dramatically last month as the Armenian government put the country under 
lockdown to fight against the spread of coronavirus.

The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) forecast last week a 0.7 percent GDP growth 
rate for 2020. Economy Minister Tigran Khachatrian agreed with that projection.

The World Bank noted that the pandemic has already shut down the Armenian 
tourism sector, caused a major drop in international prices of copper, one of 
the court’s main exports, and will increasingly cut multimillion-dollar 
remittances from Armenians working abroad and Russia in particular.

“Efforts to contain the spread will dampen demand further,” reads its report. “A 
dollarized economy and undiversified exports add to the challenges of managing 
the shock. However, a relatively healthy banking sector, a precautionary [loan] 
arrangement with the IMF, as well as some fiscal buffers partly mitigate the 
risks.”

A wide-ranging stimulus package approved by the Armenian government late last 
month calls for one-off cash payments to a large part of the population, 
financial assistance to businesses and loan subsidies for farmers. In 
particular, many creditworthy firms and individual entrepreneurs are due to 
receive grants worth $500 million ($1 million).


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian holds a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, 
April 9, 2020.

The government on Thursday decided to extend the cash handouts to the owners of 
microbusinesses with annual revenue of up to 24 million drams. They will be 
eligible for up to 136,000 drams in compensation.

“The government has a clear strategy of how to overcome the crisis,” Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian insisted during a cabinet meeting in Yerevan.

The government has already spent 3.7 billion drams on coronavirus relief, he 
said, adding that the sum makes up less than 10 percent of emergency spending 
planned by it.

Pashinian went on to praise Armenian banks for honoring their pledge to suspend 
loan repayments for some 290,000 individual borrowers and 5,300 businesses. He 
also noted that the Armenian national currency, the dram, has rallied against 
the U.S. dollar in recent days after losing more than 4 percent of its value in 
March.

The World Bank report warns that falling remittance inflows from Russia may lead 
to “stronger depreciation pressures” on the dram in the months ahead.

The bank offered a far more positive outlook for the next few years. “GDP growth 
is forecast to recover over the medium term, to around 4.5 percent in 2021-22, 
supported by stabilizing external conditions and catch-up of delayed 
activities,” it said.

The Ministry of Health reported on Thursday morning that the number of 
coronavirus cases in Armenia rose by 28 to 921 in the past 24 hours. The latest 
official figures suggest that the virus, which has killed 10 people so far, 
continued to spread considerably more slowly than it did in the second half of 
March.

Pashinian again stated that the government is “cautiously optimistic” about 
containing the COVID-19 epidemic. He said a government task force will meet on 
Friday to decide whether to extend or ease the nationwide lockdown imposed on 
March 24.



EU To Boost Coronavirus Aid To Armenia


Belgium -- European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen holds a news 
conference detailing EU efforts to limit economic impact of the coronavirus 
outbreak, Brussels, April 2, 2020.

The European Union has pledged to nearly double its promised financial 
assistance to Armenia aimed at helping the country tackle the coronavirus 
epidemic and its severe socioeconomic consequences.

The EU said last week that its aid package will be worth 51 million euros ($55 
million).

The EU Delegation in Yerevan announced late on Wednesday that the 27-nation bloc 
has decided to increase the assistance to 92 million euros after “further 
restructuring” of ongoing projects in Armenia financed by it.

“The funds will be directed towards supplying medical devices and equipment, 
training for medical and laboratory staff, support to [small and medium-sized 
enterprises] and business community, as well as social and humanitarian 
assistance to those affected by the coronavirus outbreak,” it said in a 
statement.

The statement added that they will be part of the EU’s 20 billion-euro aid 
program for “partner countries” around the world hit hard by the disease.

The Delegation specified on its Facebook on April 2 that the EU will spend 30 
million euros on supporting Armenian businesses by improving their “access to 
cheap loans, working capital and guarantees.” It also promised to deliver 
“humanitarian aid packages” to over 3,000 poor families living in three Armenian 
provinces.

The EU announcements mark the largest coronavirus-related aid allocation secured 
by Yerevan so far.


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.

 


Hagop Kamalian: