RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/12/2020

                                        Thursday, 


Anti-Government Protests Continue In Yerevan Amid Fury Over Karabakh Deal


ARMENIA -- People protest during a rally against the country's agreement to end 
fighting with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. Yerevan, 

Armenian opposition groups are continuing their protests to demand the 
resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian over the terms he agreed to in a 
Russian-brokered accord with Azerbaijan that ended more than six weeks of 
fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Several thousand protesters marched through the streets of Yerevan on November 
12, shouting anti-Pashinian slogans such as “Traitor, go away!”

They also went to the National Security Service building where over a dozen 
leaders of the protest are kept mainly on charges of organizing mass disorders.

The protesters described these leaders, including Prosperous Armenia Party 
chairman Gagik Tsarukian, Homeland Party leader Artur Vanetsian, Dashnaktsutun’s 
Ishkhan Saghatelian and others, as political prisoners and called for their 
release.

Human rights activist Avetik Ishkhanian compared the situation to Stalin-era 
purges. He challenged one of the grounds for detentions – martial law, under 
which political gatherings are banned in the country. “What martial law are you 
talking about after surrender?” he said.

Protesters then gathered again in Liberty Square in the evening to stage a rally 
at which speakers, including members of Prosperous Armenia and Dashnaktsutyun, 
again demanded Pashinian’s resignation. They said protests will be continued on 
Friday.

Separately, supporters of the opposition group Sasna Tsrer held a rally in 
central Yerevan but canceled a planned march in the city after police told them 
to disband, citing martial law.

A number of demonstrators who refused to leave the area were detained by 
security forces.



Moscow ‘Confident’ Yerevan Will Abide By Karabakh Deal

        • Aza Babayan

A service member of the Russian peacekeeping troops walks near a tank near the 
border with Armenia, following the signing of a deal to end the military 
conflict between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces

Russia is confident that Armenia will fulfill its commitments under a 
Moscow-brokered deal signed with Azerbaijan on November 10 to end six-week 
hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on 
Wednesday.

“Yesterday, President Vladimir Putin had a contact with Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian. This morning, I had a contact with [Armenian] Foreign Minister 
Zohrab Mnatsakanian. I am convinced that the Armenian government fully 
understands its responsibility and understands that it has signed this document 
for the highest interests of its nation,” Lavrov said, adding: “I am confident 
that the integrity of this agreement will be preserved and implemented. In any 
case, I see that there are many political forces in Armenia that understand what 
is happening and make right conclusions.”

Speaking in Moscow today, Lavrov noted that Moscow sees protests that the deal 
has sparked in Armenia and “even understands that there are people among those 
who took to the streets who are really in pain.” At the same time, he stressed 
that the country’s authorities should have explained to the people in time that 
it was impossible to keep seven districts [around Nagorno-Karabakh] indefinitely 
and that they were to be returned.


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (archive photo)
Lavrov also spoke today about the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, saying that it is 
necessary to discuss all issues related to the status, taking into account the 
rights of all people – those who live there and those who lived there and must 
return.

Soon after the document was signed Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev declared 
that it contains no issue of the region’s status.

Under the terms of the agreement, by December Armenian forces will gradually 
withdraw from three districts held since the 1994 ceasefire agreement, while 
Azerbaijan will keep the territory in Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas 
captured during the conflict.

Armenians will also forfeit the Lachin region, where a crucial road connects 
Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. The agreement calls for a 5-kilometer wide area in 
the so-called Lachin Corridor to remain open and be protected by around 2,000 
Russian peacekeepers.

The agreement also calls for Russian border services to monitor a new transport 
corridor through Armenia connecting Azerbaijan to its western exclave of 
Nakhijevan, which is surrounded by Armenia, Iran, and Turkey.

The Russian foreign minister also announced today that representatives of the 
United States and France – the two other co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group along 
with Russia – are expected to arrive in Moscow in the coming days to discuss 
steps to implement the signed document.

Lavrov had a telephone conversation with his French counterpart Jean-Yves Le 
Drian on Wednesday during which he reportedly stressed that the agreement was 
based on the principles developed by the Minsk Group co-chairs.

Amid statements from Baku and Ankara that Turkish military will also be involved 
in the peacekeeping mission in Nagorno-Karabakh, at today’s press conference the 
top Russian diplomat reiterated that according to the document, only Russian 
peacekeepers will be deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh, while “the mission of Turkish 
observers will be limited to the geographical coordinates of the Russian-Turkish 
monitoring center in Azerbaijan, which is not close to Nagorno-Karabakh and 
which will be agreed upon additionally.”

Yesterday, the Russian and Turkish defense ministers signed a memorandum on the 
establishment of a joint ceasefire control center in Nagorno-Karabakh. According 
to a statement issued by the Russian Defense Ministry, the joint center will be 
located in the territory of Azerbaijan.

Hours after the signing of the memorandum, official Baku and Ankara announced 
that there will be not only Russian but also Turkish peacekeepers in 
Nagorno-Karabakh. Moscow has repeatedly denied it at different levels today.

Dmitry Peskov, spokesman for the Russian president, once again stated today that 
the issue of Turkish peacekeepers has not even been discussed and that their 
deployment in Nagorno-Karabakh is not possible without Yerevan’s consent.



Pashinian Says Truce With Azerbaijan Still Not A Solution To Karabakh Problem


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses the nation, 

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian insists that the statement he signed 
with the leaders of Azerbaijan and Russia earlier this week about ending 
hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh still does not amount to a solution to the 
longstanding problem concerning the status of the region.

“The problem remains unresolved just like it was before,” Pashinian said in his 
address to the nation on Thursday.

“We have a lot to do in this sense in the future,” he added.

The trilateral statement on November 10 sparked large-scale protests in Armenia, 
with opposition forces accusing Pashinian of treachery.

Armenia signed the document putting an end to a bloody six-week war after a 
series of defeats in the battlefield that the prime minister said forced the 
Armenian military to seek a diplomatic way out of the conflict.

Under the terms of the accord with Azerbaijan, by December Armenian forces will 
gradually withdraw from three districts held since the 1994 ceasefire agreement, 
while Azerbaijan will keep the territory in Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding 
areas captured during the conflict.

Armenians will also forfeit the Lachin region, where a crucial road connects 
Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. The agreement calls for a 5-kilometer wide area in 
the so-called Lachin Corridor to remain open and be protected by around 2,000 
Russian peacekeepers.

The agreement also calls for Russian border services to monitor a new transport 
corridor through Armenia connecting Azerbaijan to its western exclave of 
Nakhijevan, which is surrounded by Armenia, Iran, and Turkey.

Amid growing political tensions in Armenia nearly two dozen opposition parties 
demanded Pashinian’s resignation over the deal viewed by them as an act of 
surrender.

They reiterated their demands during rallies and street protests organized the 
following day.

At least a dozen opposition politicians, including leaders of political parties, 
have been arrested so far on charges of organizing disorders as authorities said 
they defied martial law by organizing and holding rallies.

In his address to the nation Pashinian sought to reaffirm his control of the 
situation, stressing that restoration of an atmosphere of stability and security 
is a priority for his government. He called on citizens to rally around the 
government so as to be able to overcome the current situation and ensure further 
development of Armenia.

Pashinian again defended his decision to put an end to hostilities at the cost 
of concessions, saying that the continuation of fighting was fraught with even 
greater losses, including the lives of thousands of Armenian soldiers.

Pashinian said that signing the deal prevented a collapse of Armenian defense 
lines and encirclement of up to 25,000 soldiers that would be cut off from the 
rear.

“In such a situation it is not the soldier that ought to die for the homeland, 
but it is the homeland that ought to make a sacrifice for the soldier,” the 
prime minister said.

Pashinian admitted that the document he signed is “bad for us.” “But it should 
not be presented as worse than it is,” he said, discarding the talk about 
Armenia ceding territories in the south as absolute nonsense.

He said that the matter concerns unblocking transport communications in the 
region from which Armenia could also benefit.

The prime minister emphasized that the tasks regarding the status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh have not changed. “The international recognition of Artsakh 
[the Armenian name for Nagorno-Karabakh] becomes an absolute priority and there 
are more weighty arguments for that now,” Pashinian said.



Armenian Opposition Leaders Arrested Amid Growing Political Tensions


ARMENIA -- People protest outside the government headquarters in Yerevan during 
a rally against the country's agreement to end fighting with Azerbaijan over 
Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Armenian opposition groups continue to push for the resignation of Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian despite the arrest of a dozen leaders on charges of 
organizing mass disorder.

A loose alliance of nearly two dozen opposition parties angered by Pashinian’s 
signing a Russian-brokered accord with Azerbaijan to end six weeks of fighting 
over Nagorno-Karabakh mostly on Baku’s terms planned a fresh anti-government 
protest rally in Yerevan on November 12.

But hours before of the planned rally, the Special Investigation Service said 10 
prominent opposition figures had been arrested for “organizing illegal violent 
mass disorder.”

The announcement of the truce deal early on November 10 sparked a furious 
reaction in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, where angry protesters stormed 
government buildings and parliament.

The next day, thousands of demonstrators gathered in Yerevan, defying martial 
law, under which rallies are banned, calling Pashinian a “traitor.”

Representatives of 17 opposition parties called for Pashinian to step down, 
blaming him for what they described as heavy concessions.

Those arrested in the criminal case initiated by the Special Investigation 
Service include Gagik Tsarukian, leader of the Prosperous Armenia Party, 
Homeland party leader Artur Vanetsian, Ishkhan Saghatelian and Gegham Manukian 
of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), and Eduard 
Sharmazanov of the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK).

The opposition parties denounced the arrests as illegal.

Meanwhile, Armenian President Armen Sarkissian held a meeting with Prime 
Minister Pashinian on Thursday morning, the president’s office said. The 
official report said that the current situation in the country was discussed. No 
details of the discussion were revealed.



Lawyer Claims Tsarukian Arrested ‘Unlawfully’

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian (archive photo)

Opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian was arrested 
yesterday on suspicion of organizing a rally in violation of the law, his lawyer 
Yerem Sargsian wrote on Facebook on Thursday.
Sargsian said Tsarukian’s arrest was “clearly unlawful.” He said the politician 
was kept for hours at the National Security Service (NSS) to where he had been 
invited to be questioned as a witness earlier on Wednesday. “For nine hours NSS 
officers were struggling to find any grounds for Tsarukian’s arrest,” the lawyer 
claimed.

The party led by Tsarukian was one of 17 opposition forces that took part in a 
rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian over the 
statement he signed with the leaders of Azerbaijan and Russia to end the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh on terms that are largely viewed by Armenia’s opposition as an 
act of surrender.

Leaders and senior members of other parties participating in the protests were 
also arrested or summoned for questioning by the NSS on November 11.

Despite the arrest, the loose opposition alliance vowed to continue its 
anti-government protests and also seek the release of arrested leaders and 
activists.

Tsarukian’s lawyer said that his client’s arrest was also unlawful because the 
crime he is suspected to have committed is not considered a heavy crime and is 
punishable by a fine of up to $600 or imprisonment for up to two months.

Tsarukian is currently under investigation as part of a separate criminal case 
in which he is charged with organizing a vote-buying scheme in 2017 
parliamentary elections.

The BHK leader was stripped of his parliamentary immunity in June and was 
arrested on September 25. Tsarukian claimed political motives behind his 
prosecution and arrest. He was freed on bail on October 22.

Later on Thursday, Armenia’s law-enforcement authorities said that Tsarukian was 
arrested on charges of organizing mass disorders. Several other opposition 
leaders and activists, including the Armenian Revolutionary Federation’s (ARF, 
Dashnaktsutyun) Gegham Manukian and Eduard Sharmazanov of the former ruling 
Republican Party of Armenia are also arrested and charged with organizing mass 
disorders.

Homeland Party leader Artur Vanetsian is arrested and charged with organizing 
mass disorders and revealing a state secret. ARF leader Ishkhan Saghatelian is 
also arrested and charged with revealing a state secret.

All in all, 10 people have been arrested, the authorities said.



Vanetsian Detained Over Defying Martial Law, His Party Says

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Former director of the National Security Service, opposition Homeland party 
leader Artur Vanetsian (archive photo)

Former director of Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) Artur Vanetsian, 
who currently leads the opposition Homeland party, has been detained, his party 
says.

According to Arsen Babayan, a member of the Homeland party council, Vanetsian is 
suspected of “disobeying the lawful demands of the police, deliberately 
organizing and holding a rally in violation of the order established by law, as 
well as for violating the temporary restrictions imposed during martial law.”

No official statement by law-enforcement bodies has yet been made in this regard.

Earlier on Wednesday Vanetsian was summoned for interrogation by the NSS. Later 
he told reporters that he was interrogated as a witness in a case concerning 
violations of the rules for publishing or disseminating information during 
martial law.

The party led by Vanetsian was one of 17 opposition forces that took part in a 
rally demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian over the 
statement he signed with the leaders of Azerbaijan and Russia to end the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh on terms that are largely viewed by Armenia’s opposition as an 
act of surrender.

Among the 17 parties supporting the demand are also the former ruling Republican 
Party of Armenia, the Prosperous Armenia Party and the Armenian Revolutionary 
Federation (ARF, Dashnaktsutyun). Leading members of these parties, including 
Prosperous Armenia leader Gagik Tsarukian, were also invited to the NSS for 
questioning on Wednesday.

At a press conference convened after midnight ARF Supreme Body member Artsvik 
Minasian said that that they “will not only fight for the removal of Nikol 
Pashinian, but also for the release of numerous political prisoners in Armenia.”

Minasian said that a significant part of the leaders of the movement, as well as 
other important figures were detained and arrested.



Parliament Majority Suggests Opposition Clarify Its Position Before Challenging 
Truce Deal


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (C) talks to deputies from the 
majority My Step faction during a parliament session, Yerevan, September 16, 
2020.

The ruling parliamentary My Step faction has issued a statement in which it 
calls on the opposition parties to clarify their position on several issues 
before discussing the legality of the statement on ending the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh signed by the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan.

On November 11, the two opposition factions in Armenia’s National Assembly – 
Bright Armenia and Prosperous Armenia – initiated a special session of 
parliament to discuss the document that has largely been branded by the 
opposition as an act of surrender.

It followed a day of street protests staged by 17 opposition parties, including 
Prosperous Armenia, during which demonstrators also called for the resignation 
of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.

In its statement My Step suggested that before challenging the deal the 
opposition parties should “very clearly declare to all Armenians and the world 
that they support the abolition of Russian mediation; support the withdrawal of 
Russian peacekeepers from the line of contact; stand for the continuation of the 
war.”

“After that, the opposition forces should also present a proposed roadmap for 
victory in the renewed war,” the ruling faction said, adding that accepting the 
announced conditions in the current situation was the only way to avoid the 
total loss of Nagorno-Karabakh and thousands of human lives.

At the same time, My Step said it believes that the public should receive 
answers to all questions that concern it. The faction also said that it is not 
going “to take part in any sessions aimed at destabilizing the situation” in 
Armenia.

“Honoring the glorious memory of the military servicemen and volunteers who 
participated in the fighting and died in the heroic battle of Artsakh [the 
Armenian name for Nagorno-Karabakh], sharing, with deep sorrow, the pain of 
families, friends and relatives of the victims, taking into account the internal 
political events in Armenia and Artsakh that followed the military actions and 
the truce, the My Step faction declares: the current analysis of the military 
operations provides grounds to ascertain that the Armenian people with its joint 
efforts fought, in fact, not only against Azerbaijan, but also against one of 
the largest armed forces in the world, an army with ultra-modern weapons and an 
unlimited human reserve, mercenary terrorists and special forces recruited from 
different countries. During the 45 days of the war, outstanding heroism was 
shown along the entire front line, thanks to which it was possible to prevent 
the unleashed genocidal crime of the enemy against Armenians,” My Step’s 
statement reads.

The ruling faction emphasized that “the pan-Armenian potential was involved in 
the logistical support of the army during the hostilities.” “The hostilities 
were taking place in parallel with major geopolitical events conditioned by 
security challenges that led to the failure of all international efforts to 
establish a ceasefire regime, including numerous attempts by the three 
co-chairing countries of the OSCE Minsk Group,” My Step said.

The two parliamentary opposition factions had collected enough signatures to 
convene a special session of parliament, however, as leader of the Bright 
Armenia faction Edmon Marukian said, a meeting of the National Assembly Council 
was to take place before convening the session, which, however, did not take 
place. Of My Step lawmakers only Deputy Speaker Lena Nazarian had come to 
parliament.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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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