RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/19/2021

                                        Friday, 

Defense Contractor Protests Against ‘Illegal’ Arrest

        • Gayane Saribekian
        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia -- A screenshot of a National Security Service vide of the arrest of 
defense contractor Davit Galstian, February 1, 2021

The owner of a company supplying Armenia’s armed forces with weapons and 
ammunition on Friday strongly denied fraud charges leveled against him and said 
he was arrested illegally.

The businessman, Davit Galstian, protested his innocence as the Court of Appeals 
opened hearings on his pre-trial arrest which was sanctioned by a lower court 
earlier this month.

The charges stem from a $1 million contract for the supply of artillery shells 
which Galstian’s Mosston Engineering company signed with the Armenian Defense 
Ministry in 2018.

In a February 1 statement, the National Security Service (NSS) said the company 
breached the contract by providing the ministry with ammunition designed for 
older and different artillery systems. It said artillery units could not 
accomplish their “combat tasks” with those shells.

A Yerevan court of first instance agreed to remand Galstian and Mosston’s 
executive director, Armen Baghdasarian, in custody pending investigation. The 
suspects asked the Court of Appeals to overturn that decision.

“The court of first instance made an illegal decision,” Galstian’s lawyer 
insisted after the first Court of Appeals hearing. He said the ammunition sold 
to the Armenian military “fully corresponded to the requirements of the supply 
contract.”

Galstian is also facing three other criminal investigations into his companies’ 
dealings with the military. The NSS has so far released no details of those 
inquiries.

It remains unclear whether any current or former Defense Ministry officials are 
also under investigation.

In a written statement issued on Friday, Galstian blamed his “illegal” arrest 
and prosecution on “interested individuals” who he said what to scapegoat him 
for Armenia’s defeat in the autumn war in Nagorno-Karabakh. In that regard, he 
pointed the finger at unnamed individuals who have alleged corrupt practices in 
the Armenian government’s military procurements.

Former President Serzh Sarkisian made such allegations earlier this week in 
response to government loyalists’ claims that during his decade-long rule 
widespread corruption had a severe impact on national security.

Sarkisian charged that before and during the six-week war the current government 
bypassed the Defense Ministry to buy weapons and ammunition at grossly inflated 
prices. In particular, he said, it purchased flak jackets for Armenian soldiers 
for as much as $600 apiece.

A spokesman for Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service 
on Friday that law-enforcement authorities are looking into Sarkisian’s 
allegations

The official, Gor Abrahamian, said at the same time that the NSS launched in 
November an inquiry into the supply of flak jackets. He would not say whether 
anybody has been charged as part of that probe.



Armenian Authorities Reaffirm Plans For Limited COVID-19 Vaccination

        • Marine Khachatrian

RUSSIA -- A medical worker holds a vial with Russia's Sputnik V vaccine against 
the coronavirus at a vaccination point at the GUM department store in Moscow, 
January 18, 2021.

Armenian health authorities have reaffirmed plans to start vaccinating next 
month “high risk” groups of the country’s population against COVID-19.

According to a directive signed by Health Minister Anahit Avanesian on Monday, 
the “first phase” of vaccination will cover medical workers, care home 
personnel, persons aged 65 and older as well as younger Armenians suffering from 
chronic diseases. Military and law-enforcement personnel, rescue and public 
transport workers, civil servants, schoolteachers and university lecturers will 
be the next to get vaccine shots free of charge.

Avanesian gave no detailed timetables for the vaccination process when she spoke 
with journalists on Thursday. She said only that it will start in March.

Nor did Avanesian specify how many Armenians will have access to free 
inoculation against the coronavirus. She indicated that many people not included 
in either “high risk” category will have to pay for their vaccination.

“The quantity of vaccines imported to Armenia will depend on a number of 
factors, including their price and the amount of money the state can allocate 
for their acquisition,” she said.

Gayane Sahakian, the deputy director of the Armenian National Center for Disease 
Control, said last month that the authorities are planning to vaccinate only 10 
percent of Armenia’s population.

Sahakian said the first batch of a relatively cheap vaccine developed by the 
British company AstraZeneca and Oxford University will be delivered to the 
country soon. She said it will be supplied by the COVAX Facility global 
partnership supported by the World Health Organization.

Avanesian stated early this month that the Armenian government would also like 
to buy Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine and is negotiating with Moscow for 
that purpose. No contracts for its acquisition have been announced so far.

The minister said on Thursday that the health authorities have also approved the 
Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. “It’s just that there are issues related to ensuring 
Pfizer’s storage temperature and they need to be solved,” she said.

“From the purely logistical standpoint, Sputnik V has some advantages,” Davit 
Melik-Nubarian, a public health expert, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“For example, while Moderna and Pfizer vaccines require a special regime for 
storage and transportation, namely a very low temperature, and are very 
sensitive to shaking, there are no such requirements in the case of Sputnik V,” 
said Melik-Nubarian. “For that reason, both Sputnik V and AstraZeneca will be 
easier to use in Armenia.”



Another Anti-Pashinian Mayor Prosecuted

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia -- Meghri Mayor Mkhitar Zakarian speaks with journalists, September 21, 
2019.

Armenian prosecutors have brought criminal charges against yet another local 
government official who demanded Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation 
following the war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

In a statement released on Thursday, the Office of the Prosecutor-General said 
Mkhitar Zakarian, the mayor of the southeastern towns of Agarak and Meghri and 
nearby villages making up a single administrative unit, has been charged with 
abuse of power.

The accusation stems from the use of a small plot of agricultural land belonging 
to the community which has been rented by an Agarak resident since 2007. The 
statement said that the latter illegally rented the land to a mobile phone 
company at a much higher price.

“[Zakarian] should have annulled the lease agreement because of its blatant 
breach,” Sedrak Besalian, a prosecutor overseeing the investigation, told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Besalian also claimed that the mayor caused his community 3.7 million drams 
($7,100) in financial damage.

Zakarian on Friday dismissed the accusation as “absurd.” “I can’t understand 
what my alleged crime is all about,” he said. “They won’t give me any clear 
explanation.”

Zakarian argued, in particular, that the lease agreement was signed before he 
was elected mayor of Agarak and that he significantly improved its financial 
terms for the local community after taking office in 2008.

The official was careful not to describe the accusation as politically 
motivated. But he did suggest that prosecutors may have indicted him in order to 
please the Armenian government.

Zakarian was among the heads of a dozen communities in Armenia’s southeastern 
Syunik province who issued statements in early December condemning Pashinian’s 
handling of the war with Azerbaijan and demanding his resignation. They also 
accused Pashinian of putting Syunik’s security at grave risk with Armenian troop 
withdrawals from adjacent areas southwest of Karabakh.

Later in December law-enforcement authorities leveled separate criminal charges 
against two of those mayors running the towns of Goris and Kajaran. Armenian 
courts refused to allow their arrest sought by investigators.

Both mayors rejected the accusations as politically motivated. They encouraged 
hundreds of local residents who blocked a regional highway to disrupt 
Pashinian’s visit to Syunik on December 21.

The prosecutors did not move to arrest Zakarian. The Meghri mayor told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service that he agreed to post bail to avoid pre-trial detention. He 
said he is confident that he will be cleared of any wrongdoing.


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