Wednesday, Prosecutor Demands Lengthy Jail Terms For Sasna Tsrer Members • Artak Khulian At the trial of Sasna Tsrer members,Yerevan, . A prosecutor in a high-profile trial in Armenia has demanded lengthy prison terms for members of an armed group that seized a police base in capital Yerevan in 2016 and made political demands. A majority of more than two dozen members of Sasna Tsrer, a fringe opposition group involving a number of prominent Karabakh war veterans, were set free pending the outcome of their ongoing trial after the change of government in Armenia in 2018. Many of them were released under personal guarantees of parliament members. After seizing the police compound in Yerevan’s Erebuni district in July 2016 the gunmen led by retired army colonel Varuzhan Avetisian demanded that then President Serzh Sarkisian free jailed nationalist politician Zhirayr Sefilian and step down. They laid down their weapons after a two-week standoff with security forces which left three police officers dead and was accompanied by hostage-taking. In his closing arguments in court on Wednesday prosecuting attorney Artur Chakhoyan requested that Avetisian and another leader of the group, Pavel Manukian, be sentenced to 8 years and 9 months, and 9 years, respectively. The prosecutor demanded life imprisonment and 21 years in jail for Sasna Tsrer members Smbat Barseghian and Armen Bilian, respectively, accusing them of committing the murders of police officers. He sought between eight and a half and nine years in prison for other members of the group on trial. During the trial Sasna Tsrer members have defied the case for the prosecution, claiming that they exercised their right to uprising against what they viewed as an oppressive regime. A political party formed around the Sasna Tsrer movement and led by Avetisian took part in Armenia’s early parliamentary elections in December 2018. The party failed to clear the 5-percent threshold to enter the legislature by polling less than 2 percent of the vote. Protesters In Armenia Demand Opportunity To Go To Russia • Robert Zargarian Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian talking to protesters outside the government offices in Yerevan, . A group of Armenian citizens on Wednesday gathered near the government offices in Yerevan to demand an opportunity to leave the country and specifically go to Russia. Some Armenian citizens who live and work on a permanent basis in Russia had come to Armenia before the introduction of the coronavirus-related state of emergency in March and had to stay in the country due to the subsequent closure of international borders. Five months on, many of them, including those who also hold Russian passports, say they cannot travel back to Russia either to rejoin their families or return to work there. The protest comes on a day when the Armenian government has announced imminent removal of certain travel restrictions for foreigners to enter Armenia by air. In presenting to parliament the decision to extend the state of emergency for another month, Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian said, however, that land border crossings with both Georgia and Iran will remain closed for now. Avinian also made it clear that there are no restrictions for Armenian citizens to leave the country by air and that it was within the competence of the receiving country to remove any existing prohibitions. At the same time, the official confirmed that the Armenian government was in talks with counterparts in Moscow regarding the possibility of Armenian citizens traveling to Russia. Answering the question of opposition Bright Armenia faction leader Edmon Marukian on the fate of thousands of Armenians who travel to Russia as migrant workers, Avinian said: “As you know, the Russian Federation has publicly expressed its readiness for a mutual opening of borders. Now individual negotiations are being conducted. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is working in this direction. In other words, work is being conducted with the Russian Federation at this point over a mutual opening of borders and also over subsequent regulations.” Some participants of today’s protest said they wanted to travel to Russia in their own cars. But even for citizens holding Russian passports this looks problematic given that they have to go through Georgia, a country with a much better coronavirus epidemiological situation than Armenia’s. “We went to the [Russian] embassy, we went to the National Assembly... We have been raising this issue for three or four weeks now,” one protester complained. Some Armenians who mainly live in Russia spent several nights in their cars at the Bagratashen border checkpoint in northern Armenia only to be turned away by border officials. “Many of us are Russian citizens. We all want to return home. We want to be given a corridor to go to Russia,” the protester said. Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian came down to listen to the protesters. He explained to them that borders are opened and closed not only in Armenia, but in other countries as well. “At this moment Armenia has a system in place for other citizens to cross the border, and other countries have theirs. If our neighbors keep the border closed, that is their policy.” Mnatsakanian said that it is the Russian authorities that should answer the questions raised by the protesters in Armenia. One man claimed that they were being held hostage in Armenia. “There is no such [harsh] state of emergency,” he contended. The minister countered: “Do you understand that there has been a pandemic? Do you follow the numbers? Do you see that the risks are very high?” Since the start of the epidemic in March over 40,000 coronavirus cases have been identified in Armenia, making the infection rate in the South Caucasus country with a population of about 3 million one of the highest in the world. During this period 806 people in Armenia have died from COVID-19, the death of another 234 patients infected with the virus, according to the health authorities, was primarily caused by other, pre-existing diseases. Armenia Extends Coronavirus State Of Emergency People wearing face masks in downtown Yerevan at the height of the coronavirus epidemic in June 2020 Citing the need to maintain the current positive trend in its fight against the novel coronavirus, the Armenian government has decided to extend the pandemic-related state of emergency by another month. At the same time, the Armenian authorities have removed certain prohibitions and restrictions introduced in March, including the ban on political assembly. At a special government meeting on Wednesday, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said that he hoped that the fifth extension of the state-of-emergency rule will be the last, urging citizens to continue to follow anti-epidemic rules set by the authorities. “Going through hell today and having had 806 deaths caused by the novel coronavirus and 234 deaths among coronavirus patients due to their other pre-existing diseases, we have a chance to get to a totally new situation in the fall, in fact to a situation of overcoming [the epidemic] regardless of what will be happening in the rest of the world,” Pashinian said. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian The Armenian prime minister underscored that wearing face masks in all public spaces, which has been mandatory in Armenia since June, will continue to be the cornerstone of his government’s anti-epidemic strategy. “If we show exceptional discipline in wearing face masks we can consider that we – I mean all of us, all our citizens – have practically solved the coronavirus problem. If not, we will get back to the July situation,” Pashinian warned, referring to the apparent peak of the epidemic in the first part of last month when more than 700 new coronavirus cases and about 15 deaths were reported in Armenia on a daily basis. Since the start of the epidemic in March over 40,000 coronavirus cases have been identified in the South Caucasus country with a population of about 3 million. According to Armenia’s Ministry of Health, more than 33,000 people with the coronavirus have overcome the respiratory infection. The monthly extensions of the state of emergency have increasingly been criticized by Armenian opposition groups in recent months. Some of them claimed that Pashinian was exploiting the coronavirus crisis to ward off anti-government street protests. In its current decision the Pashinian government has removed restrictions on political rallies and public protests across the country, making them conditional on coronavirus safety rules that require all participants to wear face masks and maintain the social distance of at least 1.5 meters. In presenting the government decision on the fifth extension of the state of emergency Justice Minister Rustam Badasian also said that Armenia will remove the ban on the entry to the country for foreigners by air, but will require that they either self-isolate for 14 days or produce a negative test taken in Armenia before being allowed to move freely. Badasian said that people will also be allowed to hold and participate in family occasions and other entertainment events in both open and closed spaces, but with no more than 40 participants and maintaining all coronavirus safety rules set by the government. Also, the minister said, restrictions will be removed from transportation of goods through customs. Pashinian stressed that all bans and restrictions introduced by his government, including on political assembly, were based on the epidemiological situation and their removal is also conditional on that. “If, God forbid, as a result of removing these restrictions we will see numbers climbing again, we will be forced to re-introduce them,” the prime minister warned. The decision to extend the state of emergency until September 11 was discussed in the National Assembly later on Wednesday. The parliament where Prime Minister Pashinian’s My Step alliance has a commanding majority overcame the challenge submitted by the opposition Bright Armenia faction against the extension of the state of emergency by a vote of 68 to 22. 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.