Monday, Former Security Chief Coy About Pashinian’s ‘Deal Offer’ • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenia -- Former National Security Service Director Artur Vanetsian speaks to journalists, . Artur Vanetsian, the former head of Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS), on Monday declined to confirm or deny claims that he had offered former President Serzh Sarkisian’s fugitive son-in-law a far-reaching deal on behalf of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. Mikael Minasian, who had enjoyed considerable clout during Sarkisian’s decade-long rule, claimed on May 2 that Pashinian offered to guarantee his and his father’s immunity from prosecution if he pledges to pay cash and stop challenging the Armenian government. He said Vanetsian personally communicated Pashinian’s proposal to him during a February 2019 meeting held in Rome. Pashinian has refused to comment on Minasian’s allegations, saying that they are investigated by the Special Investigative Service (SIS). The law-enforcement agency summoned Vanetsian for questioning on May 7. The latter reportedly refused to give any testimony. The SIS tried to question Vanetsian again on Monday. The former NSS chief, who is now a bitter critic of Pashinian, gave no details of the interrogation when he spoke to journalists after emerging from the SIS headquarters. Asked whether what Minasian said is true, he said: “I neither refute it nor refuse to refute it. I don’t comment.” He argued that he is not allowed to breach “the secrecy of the investigation.” Vanetsian claimed late last year that he met with Minasian on the prime minister’s orders when he ran Armenia’s most powerful security service. He stood by that statement on Monday but again did not elaborate. “I can only say one thing: I acted solely within the bounds of my legal powers,” Vanetsian told RFE/RL’s Armenian as he made his way into the SIS building. Armenia -- Mikael Minasian. Minasian, who now lives abroad, made the allegations one week after it emerged that he was charged with illegal enrichment, false asset disclosure and money laundering earlier this year. He rejected the accusations as politically motivated. Pashinian has repeatedly accused Minasian of illegally making a huge fortune during Sarkisian’s rule. A newspaper controlled by the prime minister alleged in January that Minasian and Vanetsian have joined forces in a bid to topple him. Also, a spokeswoman for Pashinian claimed late last month that “according to the government’s information” Vanetsian abused his NSS position to buy Minasian’s minority stake in Armenia’s largest mining company. Vanetsian strongly denied that. Vanetsian resigned as NSS director last September after falling out with Pashinian for still unclear reasons. He officially announced his entry into politics in February, saying that he is setting up an opposition party for that purpose. In recent months, the former security chief has repeatedly accused Pashinian of incompetence and misrule and called for his resignation. Opposition Lawmakers Return To ‘Violent’ Parliament • Gayane Saribekian Armenia -- Pro-government and opposition deputies brawl on the parliament floor, Yerevan, May 8, 2020. The opposition Bright Armenia Party (LHK) ended on Monday a two-week boycott of sessions of the parliament despite accusing its pro-government majority of not renouncing violent responses to criticism. LHK lawmakers walked out of the National Assembly on May 8 following a brawl involving their leader Edmon Marukian and deputies from Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step bloc. One of those deputies, Sasun Mikaelian, punched Marukian while the latter spoke on the parliament floor in the presence of Pashinian and government ministers. Pashinian deplored the violence but blamed it on LHK “provocations.” Marukian’s party charged in response that he thereby “justified, legitimized and encouraged” violence against his political opponents. It also demanded Mikaelian’s resignation. The ruling bloc responded by saying that Mikaelian will resign from the parliament only if Marukian quits too. The brawl prompted a preliminary inquiry by Armenia’s Special Investigative Service (SIS). The law-enforcement body announced at the weekend that it cannot indict anyone because neither Marukian nor any other parliamentarian suffered multiple blows during the May 8 incident. Citing a “precedent-setting” ruling handed down by the Court of Cassation in 2012, the SIS said that a “single blow cannot be qualified as a beating.” Armenia -- Bright Armenia Party leader Edmon Marukian at a news conference in Yerevan, April 20, 2020. The LHK rejected this explanation on Monday. It said footage of the incident clearly shows that its leader was hit not only by Mikaelian but also two other My Step deputies. In a statement, the opposition party also insisted that the SIS has enough evidence to bring charges under another article of the Criminal Code that deals with “hooliganism.” Marukian said the authorities’ response to the LHK boycott suggests that a repeat of the May 8 violence may well be possible. “We have drawn conclusions and will return to work with those conclusions in mind and in the knowledge that at some point someone could hit us from behind. We have to be careful and look back and around us,” he told a news conference. “We are dealing with people who can hit us from behind, people who justify violence, people who do not tolerate dissent and label it as a provocation,” claimed the LHK leader. Alen Simonian, a deputy parliament speaker and senior My Step member, shrugged off these claims. “People have seen everything and know who Edmon Marukian is in the political sense,” said Simonian. “The authorities have condemned violence and never resorted to it, even when the public demanded it.” Arrests Spark Protests In Armenian Town • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia -- Kajaran Mayor Manvel Paramazian (L) leads a demonstration outside a police station in Kapan, Hundreds of residents of Karajan, a small town in southeastern Armenia, took to the streets on Sunday to protest against the arrest of four local men linked to its mayor. The mayor, Manvel Paramazian, led the daylong protests after condemning the “unfounded arrests” and claiming that they are part of his “political persecution” by law-enforcement authorities. Paramazian’s protesting supporters gathered outside a police station in Kapan, the nearby capital of the country’s Syunik province, where the arrested men were held on suspicion of violent assault. Angered by rumors about their ill-treatment in police custody, the crowd tried to stop the local police from transferring the suspects to Yerevan. Syunik Governor Hunan Poghosian addressed it, promising that the criminal investigation will objective. The protesters refused to disperse, however. Paramazian added to their fury after being allowed to enter the police station and see the detainees. He alleged that they were indeed tortured by policemen. Still, the protesters agreed to unblock the entrance to the police station at Paramazian’s urging at around midnight. The mayor said local officials assured him that the probe will be fair and that the men connected to him will not be subjected to violence. In a late-night statement, Armenia’s Investigative Committee clarified that the arrested men are suspected of kidnapping and beating up another Kajaran resident late last month. It said investigators also found large quantities of marijuana in a house belonging to one of the suspects. The statement indicated that Paramazian is also regarded as a suspect in the case. It said investigators are now trying to “verify” and “ascertain” the mayor’s possible involvement in the violence. Paramazian, who has run the industrial town since 2016, confirmed that the police searched his home last week. Meanwhile, prosecutors in Yerevan said on Monday that they have instructed another law-enforcement body, the Special Investigative Service, to investigate the torture allegations. Also, the national police chief, Aram Sargsian, ordered an internal inquiry for the same purpose. A lawyer representing one of the arrested men, Khoren Mirzoyan, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that his client did not claim to have been ill-treated by policemen when they spoke on Sunday. He also said that Mirzoyan denies any involvement in the alleged violence. Located about 370 kilometers southeast of Yerevan, Kajaran is home to Armenia’s largest mining enterprise. The Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine (ZCMC) employs more than 4,000 people. Many of them are Kajaran residents. According to the Investigative Committee, the four arrested men also work at ZCMC. Armenian PM Blames Businesses For Coronavirus Spike Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses the nation on Facebook, May 24, 2020. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian held businesses reopened by his government over the past month primarily responsible for the accelerating spread of coronavirus in Armenia which resulted in another daily high of COVID-19 cases and deaths on Sunday. The Armenian Ministry of Health said on Monday morning that as many as 452 people tested positive for coronavirus in the past day, bringing to 7,113 the total number of confirmed cases in the country of about 3 million. The latest daily number of new infections is sharply up from the previous record high of 374 cases recorded on Friday. With the ministry reporting 6 more deaths, the official death toll from the epidemic rose to 87. It does not include the deaths of 39 other people infected with the respiratory disease. The ministry claims that they died primarily as a result of other, pre-existing conditions. Six such fatalities were registered on Sunday. One of the victims is a 31-year-old woman who gave birth about a week ago, according to a ministry statement. Pashinian took to Facebook late on Sunday to discuss this “very dangerous situation” and present further actions planned by the Armenian authorities. “The main reason for the rise in the number of cases is industrial enterprises,” he said in a video address. “More than 75 percent and even 80 percent of [new] cases are registered in industrial enterprises and the services sector.” Armenia -- A busy cafe in downtown Yerevan, May 14, 2020 Pashinian accused those businesses of failing to observe social distancing and hygiene rules set by the government. He said the government will now enforce tougher penalties for such violations. “Those cafes, restaurants, bank branches, manufacturing enterprises or hairdresser salons which do not observe the safety rules will be harshly shut down,” he declared. Pashinian’s government ordered the closure of most nonessential businesses and seriously restricted people’s movements as part of a nationwide lockdown imposed in late March. But it began relaxing these restrictions already in mid-April. Although the daily numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases steadily increased in the following weeks, most sectors of the Armenian economy were reopened by May 4. The government went on to lift its ban on public transport and allow kindergartens, shopping malls, indoor restaurants and gyms to resume their work. Opposition figures and other critics say that the authorities ended the lockdown too soon and never enforced it properly in the first place. Pashinian effectively acknowledged on Sunday that the lifting of the lockdown has contributed to the spread of the virus. But he insisted that the measure was necessary for economic reasons. Accordingly, the prime minister gave no indications that he may restore lockdown restrictions. He made clear instead that the authorities will continue to put the emphasis on the “people’s consciousness.” He again urged them to practice social distancing and wear face masks in all enclosed spaces and shops in particular. Armenia -- People stroll in the center of Yerevan, May 22, 2020. Armenians have already been required for the last few weeks to wear masks and gloves when entering shops, banks and other businesses. There has been ample evidence of widespread non-compliance with this requirement, however. Health Minister Arsen Torosian repeatedly warned last week that the number of people dying from coronavirus could rise sharply soon. He is particularly worried about an impeding shortage of intensive care beds at the Armenian hospitals treating COVID-19 patients. In a Facebook post, Torosian said on Sunday evening that 154 of 186 such beds available in the country are already occupied. He also wrote: “We have 230 patients in a serious condition and 52 patients in a critical condition.” Faced with the soaring number of new cases, the health authorities on Friday stopped hospitalizing or isolating infected people showing mild symptoms of the virus or none at all. Such individuals are now supposed to self-isolate at home. 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.