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    Categories: 2021

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/24/2021

                                        Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Nine Sentenced Over 2016 Attack On Armenian Police Station
February 24, 2021
        • Narine Ghalechian

Armenia - Gunmen occupy a police station in Yerevan, 23July2016.

An Armenian court gave on Wednesday prison sentences ranging from about 5 to 25 
years to nine key members of an armed anti-government group that seized a police 
base in Yerevan in July 2016.

The defendants and two dozen other gunmen stormed the base to demand that then 
President Serzh Sarkisian free Zhirayr Sefilian, the jailed leader of their 
radical opposition movement, and step down.

The gunmen, who took police officers and medical personnel hostage, laid down 
their weapons after a two-week standoff with security forces which left three 
police officers dead.

All but two members of the armed group called Sasna Tsrer were set free pending 
the outcome of their trials shortly after Sarkisian was toppled in the 2018 
“Velvet Revolution” led by Nikol Pashinian.

The two other members remained behind bars because of facing murder charges 
denied by them.


Armenia - Relatives of police officers killed in a standoff with opposition 
gunmen attend a remembrance ceremony in Yerevan, 28Sep2016.

The court convicted one of them, Smbat Barseghian, of murdering Colonel Artur 
Vanoyan and Warrant Officer Yuri Tepanosian and sentenced him to 25 years in 
prison.

But it found the other defendant, Armen Bilian, not guilty of the killing of the 
third police victim, Warrant Officer Gagik Mkrtchian.

The presiding judge, Mesrop Makian, said that prosecutors did not provide 
sufficient evidence in support of the accusation. He said they must order a new 
investigation into the circumstances of Mkrtchian’s death.

Bilian was released from custody despite being convicted of other criminal 
charges and sentenced to 4 years and 8 months in prison.

Bilian remained unrepentant about the deadly attack, saying that he and his 
comrades waged a legitimate struggle against Sarkisian. “We still have a lot to 
do to have justice established in Armenia,” he told reporters after his release.

The seven other defendants were sentenced to between 6 and 8 years. They were 
found guilty of illegal arms possession, hostage taking and seizure of state 
buildings.


Armenia -- Members of an armed group that seized a police station in Yerevan in 
2016 stand trial, November 11, 2017.

The defendants continued to deny the accusations and said they will appeal 
against the verdict. All of them except Barseghian will remain at large at least 
until higher court rulings on their planned appeal.

Varuzhan Avetisian, the Sasna Tsrer leader who got a 7-year jail term, has 
repeatedly defended the armed attack on the police facility located in Yerevan’s 
southern Erebuni district.

Some relatives of the slain policemen present in the courtroom were also not 
satisfied with the verdict.

Tepanosian’s wife said his convicted murderer should have been sentenced to life 
imprisonment. “May all members of this group be tried by God,” she said.

The 2016 attack was condemned by the United States and the European Union. “We 
abhor the actions of Sasna Tsrer and others who use violence or who threaten to 
harm others to serve their political agenda,” Richard Mills, the then U.S. 
ambassador to Armenia, said in 2018.



Armenian PM Accused Of Lying About Russian Missiles
February 24, 2021
        • Aza Babayan
        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - The Armenian military demonstrates Iskander missile systems during a 
parade in Yerevan, 21Sep2016.

Russian pro-government lawmakers and pundits strongly condemned Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian on Wednesday for implying that Armenia's most advanced 
Russian-made missiles proved useless during the recent war with Azerbaijan.

In an interview with the 1in.am news service aired late on Tuesday, Pashinian 
responded to former President Serzh Sarkisian’s claim that the Armenian military 
did not adequately use its Iskander missiles against advancing Azerbaijani 
troops because of wrong government orders.

Sarkisian made the claim earlier this month as he harshly criticized Pashinian’s 
handling of the the six-week war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on 
November 10.

“Let him ask why the fired Iskander did not explode or why it exploded by, say, 
10 percent,” Pashinian hit back without elaborating.

Pashinian went on to suggest that the sophisticated missile system might be 
outdated. Asked whether it could have indeed malfunctioned, he said: “I don’t 
know. Maybe it’s a weapon of the 1980s.”


Armenia - Prime Minister NIkol Pashinian is interviewed by 1in.am, February 23, 
2021.

The remarks provoked a storm of criticism in Russia which supplied several 
Iskander systems to Armenia in 2015. Senior members of the State Duma, Russia’s 
lower house of parliament, attacked Pashinian in unusually strong terms.

“The Iskander is a highly precise weapon, which has repeatedly been proved 
during military exercises,” said Viktor Zavarzin, the deputy chairman of a State 
Duma committee on defense and security.

What Pashinian said about the missile is a “complete lie,” Zavarzin told the 
Govorit Moskva radio station.

Another Russian lawmaker, Dmitry Sablin, mocked the Armenian premier and 
questioned his competence.

“A bad dancer is hampered by other things. This popular saying best describes 
the Armenian prime minister’s claims about the use of the Iskander in the last 
war and its being obsolete,” the RIA Novosti news agency quoted Sablin as saying.

Vladimir Solovyov, Russia’s leading political talk show host, and other 
pro-Kremlin commentators likewise denounced Pashinian’s remarks widely 
circulated by the Russian media.


RUSSIA -- A Russian Iskander-K missile is launched during a military exercise at 
a training ground at the Luzhsky Range, near St. Petersburg, Septtember 19, 2017

Pashinian also came under fire from his political opponents at home.

“How can 10 percent of a missile explode and the remaining 90 percent not 
explode after hitting a target?” said Seyran Ohanian, a retired general who 
served as Armenia’s defense minister during the acquisition of Iskander missiles.

“I think that [Pashinian] is very far from being qualified to make judgments 
about them,” Ohanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

But Andranik Kocharian, a senior lawmaker representing the ruling My Step bloc, 
dismissed the criticism, saying that Pashinian’s statement must be seriously 
investigated. “If Mr. Pashinian’s suspicions turn out to be correct we must 
review everything,” he told reporters.

Asked whether the remarks could damage Russian-Armenian relations, Kocharian 
said that Sarkisian’s claims are more “dangerous” for Armenia’s national 
security.

With a firing range of up to 500 kilometers, the Iskander is known for its 
precision and ability to overcome modern missile defense shields. Russia 
prompted serious concerns from the United States and other Western powers when 
it deployed such missiles to its Kaliningrad exclave on the Baltic Sea in 2018.



EU To Keep ‘Working With Russia’ On Karabakh Peace
February 24, 2021
        • Harry Tamrazian

Armenia -- Toivo Klaar, the European Union’s special representative for the 
South Caucasus, meets with Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazian, Yerevan, 
February 22, 2021.

A senior European Union diplomat has praised Russia for stopping the autumn war 
over Nagorno-Karabakh and said that despite mounting tensions with Moscow the EU 
will continue to work with it in facilitating a peaceful resolution of the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

Ties between Russia and the West have deteriorated further of late due to the 
arrest and prosecution of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny. On Monday EU foreign 
ministers agreed to sanction four senior Russian officials close to President 
Vladimir Putin in response to Navalny’s jailing.

Moscow warned earlier this month that it is ready to sever ties with the EU if 
the 27-nation bloc hits it with fresh economic sanctions.

Toivo Klaar, the EU’s special representative for the South Caucasus, was asked 
about the sanctions’ possible impact on EU-Russia cooperation on the Karabakh 
settlement when he spoke with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service after meeting with 
senior Armenian officials in Yerevan on Tuesday.

“I think we have interacted and I have personally had many meetings in Moscow 
over the years,” Klaar said in an interview. “In the case of Nagorno-Karabakh 
and also in the case of the conflict in Georgia, we will continue to have 
contacts and work with Russia.”

“Frankly, I think that it was a great achievement to have a ceasefire and Russia 
is to be commended for the fact that it was able to achieve a ceasefire in 
November,” he said. “The deployment of the [Russian] peacekeeping forces has 
helped to bring security and that is to be welcomed. Of course, this is only 
part of the way in the sense that we have not yet a peaceful settlement, we have 
a ceasefire.”

The Armenian-Azerbaijani ceasefire agreement was brokered by Putin on November 9 
after six weeks of heavy fighting in and around Karabakh that left thousands of 
soldiers dead.


Armenia -- Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian meets with Toivo Klaar, 
the European Union’s special representative for the South Caucasus, Yerevan, 
February 23, 2021.

The agreement also calls for the restoration of transport links between Armenia 
and Azerbaijan. Russian President Vladimir Putin, his Azerbaijani counterpart 
Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian decided to set up a 
trilateral “working group” for that purpose when they met in Moscow on January 
11.

Klaar held talks on Tuesday with the working group’s Armenian co-chair, Deputy 
Prime Minister Mher Grigorian. He said they had “very good discussions on what 
is being talked about in the trilateral working group on communication links.”

“Of course, right now we are not part of this trilateral working group but with 
the outcomes of the trilateral working I’m sure that the EU will look to play a 
positive role where it can to support the opening of communication links,” added 
the diplomat.

Klaar dismissed suggestions that a lack of EU support for Armenia and its 
current government formed as a result of the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” has helped 
Russia increase its already strong influence on the South Caucasus state after 
the war.

“I don’t agree with those who say that the EU failed Armenia,” he said, pointing 
to the upcoming entry into force of the EU’s Comprehensive and Enhanced 
Partnership Agreement with Armenia signed in 2017. He also argued that the EU 
has provided “substantial” aid designed to help Yerevan cope with the 
coronavirus pandemic and humanitarian consequences of the Karabakh war.

“I do realize that the present situation is very difficult in Armenia and I have 
heard that many times over during the meetings that I have had here … But again, 
the European Union stands firmly with Armenia and with the region,” stressed the 
EU envoy.


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