Tuesday, Ruling Bloc Mulls Easier Dissolution Of Armenian Parliament • Gayane Saribekian Armenia -- Deputies from the ruling My Step bloc attend a session of the Armenian parliament, Yerevan, January 22, 2021. Lawmakers representing the ruling My Step bloc discussed on Tuesday a potential constitutional amendment that would make it easier for them to dissolve the Armenian parliament and pave the way for fresh general elections. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has expressed readiness to hold such elections in response to opposition demands for his resignation sparked by the Armenian side’s defeat in the autumn war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Under Armenia’s existing constitution, snap polls must be called only if Pashinian resigns and the National Assembly twice fails to elect another prime minister. His bloc officially controls 83 seats in the 132-member parliament and should in theory be able to easily prevent the election of another premier nominated by the opposition minority. Nevertheless, Pashinian demanded earlier this month that the two parliamentary opposition parties formally pledge to refrain from such nominations in the event of his tactical resignation. Both parties, Prosperous Armenia (BHK) and Bright Armenia (LHK), refused to do that. Their senior representatives say Pashinian fears that pro-government lawmakers would break ranks and vote to install another premier. My Step deputies stoked the opposition speculation when they met on Tuesday to discuss the possibility of enacting a constitutional amendment that would allow the parliament’s pro-government majority to dissolve the National Assembly without Pashinian’s resignation. “It was a very tentative discussion,” one of them, Hamazasp Danielian told reporters after the meeting. “Most members of our parliamentary faction were not present at the meeting … and it’s really too early to formulate any position.” To pass, the would-be constitutional amendment must be backed by at least 88 parliamentarians. A senior My Step lawmaker, Vahagn Hovakimian, admitted that Pashinian’s political team cannot enact it without opposition support. Hovakimian did not clearly explain the rationale for amending the constitution instead of activating the existing constitutional mechanism for the parliament’s dissolution. “This idea is designed not only for the current political situation,” he said. Armenia -- Edmon Marukian (L), the leader of the opposition Bright Armenia Party, talks to senior pro-government lawmakers on the parliament floor, Yerevan, January 18, 2021. Meanwhile, opposition lawmakers insisted that Pashinian does not trust his own parliamentary group. “Why is Nikol Pashinian afraid of resigning?” said the BHK’s Naira Zohrabian. “Even if he resigns and the BHK or the LHK nominate a prime-ministerial candidate we won’t have enough votes without being backed by a large number of My Step deputies. This means that Pashinian does not trust even his own political team.” “They are not sure their team would not elect, say, [LHK leader] Edmon Marukian as prime minister,” agreed the LHK’s Gevorg Gorgisian. “That is why they are choosing this option.” Five deputies have defected from My Step since a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement stopped the war on November 10. One of them publicly demanded Pashinian’s resignation last week. Virtually all Armenian opposition groups want the fresh elections to be held after Pashinian’s resignation. President Armen Sarkissian has also called on the prime minister to step down and hand over power to an interim government. Armenian President Discharged From Hospital Armenia -- President Armen Sarkissian addresses the nation, November 16, 2020. President Armen Sarkissian has been discharged from hospital but has not yet fully recovered from COVID-19, his office said on Tuesday. The office said in a statement that Sarkissian is “continuing his treatment at home.” “The Armenian President’s condition has relatively improved, there is a positive dynamic in his health state, but he is still monitored by doctors,” the statement said, adding that he is continuing to perform his duties remotely and will return to Armenia “immediately after the doctors' permission.” According to the presidential press office, Sarkissian tested positive for the coronavirus days after travelling to Britain late last month to spend New Year’s Eve with his sons and grandchildren living in London. The office announced on January 13 that the 67-year-old head of state was hospitalized there after developing double pneumonia and showing other symptoms of the disease. It remains unclear whether Sarkissian, who has consistently observed physical distancing rules during his official engagements, was infected with COVID-19 in Armenia or the United Kingdom. Both countries have been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic. Opposition Leader Threatens ‘Uprising’ • Robert Zargarian Armenia -- Opposition leader Vazgen Manukian meets with opposition supporters in Ararat, . The Homeland Salvation Front should stage an anti-government “uprising” if it fails to topple Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian with conventional street protests, a leader of the alliance of 17 Armenian opposition parties said on Tuesday. “We are now following the constitutional path in trying to kick out Nikol Pashinian,” Vazgen Manukian told hundreds of opposition supporters in the southern town of Ararat. “If the constitutional path proves fruitless we should organize an uprising.” “This is a natural right of the people. It is enshrined in the U.S. declaration of independence which says that if the government fails to fulfill its obligations the people have a right to revolt,” he said. “At stake is the future of our country and people. We will either get destroyed or move forward,” added Manukian. Speaking to journalists after the indoor meeting, Manukian explained that the uprising favored by him would involve nonviolent seizures of government buildings. It was not clear if the comments reflected only his personal views or also those of the parties making up the alliance. Manukian was nominated by them late last year to serve as a prime minister in an interim government which they believe should be formed after Pashinian’s resignation. The opposition alliance blames Pashinian for Armenia’s defeat in the war with Azerbaijan stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10. It staged a series of demonstrations later in November and December in a bid to force him to resign. The protests did not attract large crowds. The alliance coordinator, Ishkhan Saghatelian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Monday that the opposition forces are now exploring a “new tactic” for their push for regime change. Pashinian has rejected the opposition demands and offered to hold fresh parliamentary elections instead. The opposition says that such polls must take place only after his resignation. Armenian Trucks ‘Attacked In Georgia’ Armenia -- A commercial truck enters Armenia from Georgia through the Gogavan border crossing, November 29, 2018. (Photo by the Armenian State Revenue Committee) Armenian heavy trucks were pelted with stones and damaged early on Monday as they drove through a region in Georgia mostly populated by ethnic Azerbaijanis, according to the Armenian Embassy in Tbilisi. A statement released by the embassy said the incident took place near the village of Qvemo Ponichala just outside Tbilisi. It said unknown persons threw stones at the trucks and smashed some of their windshields before fleeing the scene. “The trucks were then escorted by [Georgian] road police to the Georgian-Armenian border and crossed it,” read the statement. The embassy added that Georgian law-enforcement authorities have launched a criminal investigation and that it is “actively working” with them to ensure that the attackers are brought to justice and to “prevent a repeat of such incidents.” The Georgian Interior Ministry issued no statements on the reported attack. The Yerevan.today news service reported that more than 30 Armenian trucks were damaged in the incident. “Cargo shipments through Georgia are becoming very dangerous,” it quoted one of their drivers as saying. The online publication also posted a mobile phone video that showed a truck cab littered with broken glass. Qvemo Ponichala is located along a highway connecting Tbilisi to the main Georgian-Armenian border crossing. It also passes through other Azerbaijani-populated towns and villages. Armenia - Trucks at the main Armenian-Georgian border crossing at Bagratashen, December 5, 2020. The Sadakhlo-Bagratashen crossing was effectively shut down on September 28 the day after the outbreak of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Citing security reasons, Armenian and Georgian authorities told commercial trucks with Armenian license plates to use another, more remote and smaller border checkpoint leading to Georgia’s Javakheti region mostly populated by ethnic Armenians. The Sadakhlo-Bagratashen crossing was reopened for cargo traffic on December 1, three weeks after a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the war. Georgia serves as the main transit route for Armenia’s trade with the outside world. Armenian trucks mainly use Georgian territory for cargo shipments to and from Russia as well as European countries. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.