Tuesday, December 1, 2020 Armenian Troop Withdrawals Completed • Naira Nalbandian NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- A truck loaded with firewood and other items is seen on a road in the town of Lachin (Berdzor) as smoke rises from a burning house set on fire by departing residents, Azerbaijan regained control of another distict adjacent to Nagorno-Karabakh on Tuesday after Armenian forces withdrew from it in line with a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war on November 10. The Armenian withdrawal from the Lachin district sandwiched between Armenia and Karabakh completed the handover of large swathes of land to Baku envisaged by the ceasefire agreement. Under the terms of the deal, Azerbaijani troops did not deploy to the district’s administrative center, also called Lachin, and two other villages located along the sole road now connecting Karabakh to Armenia. The 5-kilometer-wide corridor is due to be controlled by Russian peaceepers. The Azerbaijani army recaptured four other districts around Karabakh during the six-week war. Baku agreed to stop its military operations in return for an Armenian pledge to withdraw from three other districts occupied by Karabakh Armenian forces in the early 1990s: Lachin, Kelbajar and Aghdam. The Armenian side pulled out of Aghdam and Kelbajar by November 20 and November 25 respectively. It also evacuated several thousands Karabakh Armenian settlers who lived in villages located there. NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- An ethnic Armenian soldier stands guard next to Nagorno-Karabakh's flag atop of the hill near Charektar in at a new border with Kelbajar district turned over to Azerbaijan, November 25, 2020. The Lachin district was home to a larger number of ethnic Armenian settlers. All of the 51 small villages located beyond the Lachin corridor were practically empty by Monday evening. Many of their departing residents dismantled or burned their houses. Most residents of the town of Lachin and the two nearby villages located along the Russian-controlled corridor also appear to have left their homes. But others have chosen to stay put fow now, heeding appeals from local authorities. Mushegh Alaverdian, the head of the district’s outgoing Karabakh Armenian administration, insisted on Tuesday that Azerbaijani troops will not be stationed in the three communities. He said the remaining ethnic Armenian settlers can therefore continue to live there. A local resident looks at a burning house in the town of Lachin (Berdzor), . “The [ceasefire] agreement makes clear that they can live here indefinitely,” Alaverdian told RFE/RL’s Armenaian Service. “There are no questions about the civilian population. There is a little uncertainty about local government bodies but I think that will be cleared up in the coming days.” Alaverdian admitted that he cannot give the remaining residents “full security guarantees.” “I think that there will be problems and it will be dangerous,” he said. “At any rate, it didn’t start today and it won’t end today. We just need to make a choice: do we need Berdzor (the town of Lachin) and [the villages of] Aghavno and Sus or not?” Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said, meanwhile, that Baku intends to regain control of the town as well and will therefore seek the construction of a new Armenia-Karabakh road section bypassing it. Armenian Ombudsman Sees Government Pressure On Courts • Gayane Saribekian Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian chairs a meeting with senior law-enforcement and judicial officials, Yerevan, . Armenia’s human rights ombudsman criticized Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Tuesday for summoning judges to a meeting with senior law-enforcement officials, saying that the move amounted to pressure on courts. Pashinian met on Monday with the heads of Armenian law-enforcement agencies, Justice Minister Rustam Badasian as well as several senior judges and members of a state judicial watchdog to discuss ongoing criminal investigations into riots that broke out in Yerevan on November 10 following the announcement of a Russian-brokered ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh. Pashinian seemed upset with Armenian court’s refusal to sanction the pre-trial arrest of many of the individuals arrested on charges of ransacking key government buildings and beating up parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan. “Two individuals were arrested in connection with the attack on the National Assembly chairman, while the arrest warrant for another individual was rejected [by a court,]” he complained during the meeting. “The key question is as follows: what is our evaluation and to what extent does this situation constitute an appropriate [judicial] reaction to the incident?” he said. The prime minister’s office did not release details of Pashinian’s ensuing discussion with officials present at the meeting. Opposition figures and other critics of the Armenian government deplored the very fact of the meeting, accusing Pashinian of pressuring judges and the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) tasked with monitoring courts. Ombusdman Arman Tatoyan added his voice to the criticism. Armenia -- Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan speaks to RFE/RL, Yerevan, March 13, 2019. “I consider especially unacceptable the participation of several judges and members of the Supreme Judicial Council in the discussion,” Tatoyan said in a statement. “This kind of discussions jeopardize the independence and authority of the judicial system.” Vigen Kocharian, an SJC member, insisted that there was nothing wrong with his and his colleagues’ presence at the meeting chaired by Pashinian. “Members of the Supreme Judicial Council have no levers to influence decisions made by judges in one or another criminal case,” Kocharian said, adding that the controversial meeting was “of general nature” and did not put judicial indepence at risk. Incidentally, the chairman of the SJC, Ruben Vartazarian, was not invited to the meeting. Recent reports in the Armenian press have said that Vartazarian sees government efforts to influence the judiciary and is concerned by them. Another Lawmaker Leaves Ruling Bloc Armenia - Parliament deputy Gor Gevorgian. Yet another parliament deputy left Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step bloc on Tuesday, citing major disagreements with Armenia’s ruling political team. The lawmaker, Gor Gevorgian, shed little light on those disagreements when he announced his decision on Facebook. He said only that they center on “a number of key and contentious issues facing the state” in the wake of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Gevorgian also said that he will serve as an independent deputy from now on. Four other My Step deputies quit Pashinian’s bloc just days after a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the war on November 10 and sparked anti-government street protests in Yerevan. One of them, Gayane Abrahamian, denounced the ceasefire agreement as “disgraceful.” Abrahamian also resigned from the Armenian parliament altogether. At least two of the other deputies decided to keep their parliament seats. My Step controlled 88 seats in the 132-member National Assembly before the defections. Pashinian and his political allies continue to reject calls for the Armenian government’s resignation made by opposition forces and public figures holding it responsible for significant territorial losses suffered by the Armenian side. The prime minister has said that he plans to “restore stability” in Armenia over the next few months. Armenia To Again Reopen Schools Armenia -- High school students in Yerevan wear face masks, September 15, 2020. The government has decided to fully reopen Armenia’s schools that were shut down on October 15 due to a sharp rise in coronavirus infections. A resurgence in officially registered COVID-19 cases began in mid-September and accelerated after the subsequent outbreak of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian Ministry of Health routinely reported more than 2,000 cases a day in late October and the first half of November. The daily number of new cases has averaged roughly 1,500 for the last two weeks. Ministry officials say this has somewhat eased the burden on Armenia’s hospitals struggling to cope with the pandemic. The Ministry of Education ordered all schools to switch back to online classes after a two-week autumn holiday that began on October 15. It reopened primary schools across the country on November 13. The ministry announced on Tuesday that secondary and high schools must also reopen their doors to students on December 7. It said that strict sanitary and hygienic rules, set by Health Minister Arsen Torosian for all educational establishments in September, will remain in place. The rules stipulate, among other things, that there can be no more than 20 schoolchildren in a classroom at a time and all of them must be seated apart and wear face masks during classes. School administrations have to provide students with hand sanitizers and regularly disinfect classrooms. Also, teachers who are aged 65 and older or suffer from chronic diseases will still be allowed to continue working online. In addition, the rules mandate the closure of schools hit by coronavirus outbreaks affecting at least 10 percent of their students and staff. Despite the recent weeks’ decrease in the daily number of new cases, Armenia’s infection rate remains high for a country of about 3 million. So does the number of deaths caused by COVID-19. The Ministry of Health reported on Tuesday morning the deaths of 46 more people infected with the disease. The official death toll from the pandemic rose to 2,193. Health authorities say the figure does not include 559 deaths primarily caused by other diseases. A Ministry of Health spokeswoman also cautioned at the weekend that the number of COVID-19 patients remaining in a critical or serious condition has not yet started falling. At the same time, ministry data shows that more people are continuing to recover from COVID-19 than to contract it on a daily basis. There were 22,850 active coronavirus cases in Armenia as of Tuesday morning, down from 25,228 cases recorded on November 26. 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.