RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/08/2020

                                        Friday, May 8, 2020

Former Armenian PMs Urge Kocharian’s Release

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia -- Former Prime Ministers Vazgen Manukian (L), Khosrov Harutiunian (C) 
and Karen Karapetian attend the trial of former President Robert Kocharian, 
Yerevan, May 8, 2020.

Three former Armenian prime ministers petitioned a Yerevan court to release 
former President Robert Kocharian from custody when his trial resumed after a 
two-month pause on Friday.

The trial of Kocharian and three other former officials prosecuted on coup 
charges denied by them was suspended in March after the presiding judge, Anna 
Danibekian, unexpectedly took sick leave. Danibekian officially returned to work 
on April 17 but did not rush to restart court hearings.

Former Prime Ministers Vazgen Manukian, Khosrov Harutiunian and Karen Karapetian 
attended the latest hearing to guarantee in writing that Kocharian will 
demonstrate “proper behavior” and not go into hiding or obstruct justice if set 
free. A former Karabakh prime minister, Anushavan Danielian, also signed such a 
statement and handed it to Danibekian.

Manukian had served as Armenia’s first post-Communist prime minister from 
1990-1991. He was succeeded by Harutiunian in 1992. For his part, Karapetian 
held the post from 2016-2018, during former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule. 
None of the three men agreed to talk to reporters after leaving the courtroom.

Meanwhile, Kocharian’s lawyers submitted two separate petitions demanding his 
release on health grounds or on bail. They said late last month that he risks 
being infected with coronavirus in a Yerevan prison.

The ex-president, who ruled Armenia from 2008-2018, was hospitalized a few days 
later. Nevertheless, he attended the latest court session.


Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian is brought to a courtroom in 
Yerevan, May 8, 2020.

Kocharian likewise claimed to be at risk of contracting the virus when he spoke 
in the courtroom. “Now I’m alone in my prison cell … but there is obviously 
contact with [prison] personnel,” he told the judge. “It’s impossible to avoid 
it. Given the prison conditions it’s impossible to maintain a safe physical 
distance.”

The trial prosecutors continued to oppose Kocharian’s release. One of them, 
Petros Petrosian, said that the ex-president could flee prosecution or obstruct 
justice.

Danibekian said she will rule on the petitions on May 13. The judge had 
repeatedly refused to free Kocharian pending the outcome of the trial since 
taking over the high-profile case last August.

The three other defendants -- Kocharian’s former chief of staff Armen Gevorgian 
and retired army Generals Seyran Ohanian and Yuri Khachaturov -- have not been 
held in detention. The charges leveled against them and Kocharian mostly stem 
from the 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan.

The 65-year-old ex-president also stands accused of bribe-taking. He rejects all 
accusations as politically motivated.




Lawmakers Brawl In Armenian Parliament

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia -- Pro-government and opposition deputies brawl on the parliament floor, 
Yerevan, May 8, 2020.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and a major opposition party traded bitter 
accusations after lawmakers representing them brawled on the Armenian parliament 
floor on Friday.

The brawl erupted in the presence of Pashinian and his ministers as Edmon 
Marukian, the leader of the Bright Armenia Party (LHK), lambasted pro-government 
deputies for their angry reactions to opposition criticism of the government.

Marukian was heckled by some of those deputies affiliated with Pashinian’s My 
Step bloc and shouted back at them during his speech. One of them, Sasun 
Mikaelian, then punched him before other lawmakers from My Step and the LHK 
joined in the resulting fistfight or shoved and chased each other in the chamber.

The session of the National Assembly resumed several minutes later after speaker 
Ararat Mirzoyan managed to stop the fight with the help of other deputies and 
Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian.

“I will speak up no matter how much you hit me,” Marukian declared when he again 
took the floor.

“Who was it that sneaked up and struck me in the back?” he asked, sparking 
another shouting match with Mikaelian and other My Step deputies.

The session again descended into chaos, with Mirzoyan deciding to interrupt it. 
It resumed later in the day. Marukian again addressed the parliament before he 
and other LHK deputies walked out of the chamber in protest


Armenia -- Deputies from the opposition Bright Armenia Party attend a parliament 
session in Yerevan, January 20, 2020.

“The incident must have consequences, political consequences,” said the 
opposition leader. “What happened is not so much our problem as the revolution 
leader’s problem. We will now leave this auditorium and, depending on political 
evaluations and consequences, we will draw conclusions … and decide how we will 
be working in this parliament in the future.”

Speaking in the parliament shortly after the walkout, Pashinian deplored the 
violence but effectively blamed it on the LHK. He said that his political allies 
should not have succumbed to what he described as a LHK “provocation” aimed at 
discrediting the government.

“The incident, which is condemnable, happened over there,” Pashinian said, 
pointing to an area between the parliament rostrum and the first row of seats. 
“Why was the person giving the speech standing there? Why did [Marukian] walk 
off the rostrum and swiftly move towards Sasun Mikaelian? For engaging in a 
political dialogue?”

Pashinian said he told Marukian at a meeting Thursday that he has “grounds to 
suspect that you and your activities are an integral part of a plan to use 
psychological, moral and ultimately physical violence” against members of his 
political team. The prime minister went on brand Marukian’s party as 
“parliamentary servants” of former Presidents Serzh Sarkisian and Robert 
Kocharian.

A close Pashinian associate, deputy speaker Alen Simonian, likewise accused the 
LHK of deliberately provoking a violent response from Mikaelian. He dismissed 
calls for Mikaelian to resign from the parliament.

Simonian and Marukian traded serious insults on the parliament floor last week. 
The opposition leader was enraged by Simonian’s sexist comments about a female 
LHK parliamentarian. The vice-speaker apologized to the lawmaker, Ani Samsonian, 
afterwards.


Armenia - The opposition Yelk alliance led by Aram Sarkisian (L), Edmon Marukian 
(C) and Nikol Pashinian holds a demonstration in Yerevan, 30Mar2017.

Pashinian and Marukian are former political allies who used to co-head the Yelk 
bloc that was in opposition to Armenia’s former leadership. The bloc fell apart 
after Marukian and his party refused to join mass protests launched by Pashinian 
in April 2018 against then Sarkisian’s attempt to extend his decade-long rule.

The LHK is one of the two opposition parties represented in the current Armenian 
parliament. It holds 17 seats in the 132-member parliament.




Armenian Authorities ‘Still Able’ To Isolate All COVID-19 Carriers

        • Susan Badalian
        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia -- A medical worker clad in protecive gear and an ambulance parked at 
the entrance to Surp Grigor Lusavorich hospital, Yerevan, April 8, 2020.

Armenian health authorities are still able to hospitalize or isolate all people 
testing positive for coronavirus as it continues to spread in the country, the 
Ministry of Health said on Friday.

The ministry reported 145 new infections which raised the total number of 
confirmed coronavirus cases to 3,029. It said that one more person, a 
48-year-old woman, has died from the virus, bringing the official death toll to 
43.

The ministry has also reported the deaths of 10 other individuals infected with 
the virus. It says that they died from other, pre-existing diseases.

Health Minister Arsen Torosian warned last week that the health authorities will 
soon be no longer able to hospitalize or isolate all infected people.

Armenia has a total of 1,550 hospital beds set aside for COVID-19 patients. The 
number of active cases reached 1,758 on Friday morning, according to Alina 
Nikoghosian, a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Health.

Nikoghosian said that many of these patients are monitored or treated by doctors 
at hotels isolated from the outside world. “We are talking about people showing 
no symptoms at all,” she explained.

Despite the rising number of infections, the Armenian government essentially 
ended on Monday a nationwide lockdown imposed by it in late March. It 
specifically lifted a temporary ban on virtually all types of business activity.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has said that the onus now is also on ordinary 
Armenians to stop the spread of the virus. Some critics have accused his 
government of trying to dodge responsibility for its lax enforcement of 
stay-at-home orders and failure to contain the epidemic.

Arman Badalian, an epidemiologist, warned that the lifting of lockdown 
restrictions could speed up the spread of the virus. “A rapid spread of 
infections would lead to the collapse of the healthcare system as was the case 
in Italy, Spain and other countries,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.


Armenia -- Epidemiologist Arman Badalian, May 7, 2020.

Badalian said the government should strictly enforce its social distancing and 
hygiene rules instead of relying on people’s health consciousness. Many business 
owners, their employees and other citizens are not taking “elementary” 
precautions against the virus, he said.

Random interviews on the streets of Yerevan suggest that many Armenians are 
still not taking the virus seriously.

“I don’t wear a mask and I don’t believe the virus exists,” said one woman 
flanked by her mother and teenage son. “God is on my side.”

“I don’t believe in coronavirus,” said a young man. He argued that he does not 
know of anyone infected with it.

There was also widespread evidence of shops and supermarkets not requiring 
customers to wear face masks and gloves contrary to a government order. In one 
supermarket located in Yerevan’s southern Shengavit district very few shoppers 
wore them on Thursday.

The supermarket administration refused to explain why it is not enforcing the 
requirement. It only pointed to supermarket workers wearing masks and gloves.

A smaller food store located in the area notified people of the requirement but 
still let in some unprotected customers. Its manager, Davit Khosrovian, said 
many elderly people claim to have trouble breathing through masks. “It’s hard to 
tell whether they really have such problems,” he said.


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.

 


Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS