Friday, March 5, 2021 Court Frees Armenian Government Critic • Robert Zargarian Armenia - Ara Saghatelian. Armenia’s Court of Appeals on Friday set free a government critic who was arrested late last month for allegedly creating a social media account that spreads offensive comments about the country’s leadership. The National Security Service (NSS) charged Ara Saghatelian, a former chief of the Armenian parliament staff, and three other men with calling for violence and criticizing government actions in breach of martial law declared during the autumn war in Nagorno-Karabakh. The NSS claimed that the “group” led by Saghatelian did that through a Facebook page opened in the name of a certain “Gagik Soghomonyan.” It cited in particular the “fake” user’s abusive statuses blaming Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian for Armenia’s defeat in the war, branding him a “traitor” and insulting his supporters. All four men denied the accusations. Courts of first instance freed two of them, including former parliament deputy Karen Bekarian, while Saghatelian and the fourth suspect were remanded in custody pending investigation. The Court of Appeals overturned a Yerevan judge’s decision to allow the two-month pre-trial arrest of Saghatelian, who had also run a government-funded public relations agency during former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule. “This whole process is a political process organized and guided by the country’s leadership,” Saghatelian told reporters after his release. He again denied any connection with “Gagik Soghomonyan.” The Facebook page has continued to be updated on a virtually daily basis after the arrests condemned by the former ruling Republican Party and other opposition groups. Pashinian Seeks Direct Control Over State Bodyguard Agency • Satenik Hayrapetian Armenia -- A security service officer monitors an opposition demonstration from the Armenian parliament building, Yerevan, March 3, 2021. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has moved to gain full and direct control over a state agency that provides bodyguards to him and other current and former Armenian officials. The State Protection Service (SPS), which also protects key state buildings, is currently part of Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS). A bill drafted by Pashinian’s office would separate the SPS from the NSS and make it directly subordinate to the prime minister. An explanatory note attached to it says that this would help the SPS “rapidly react to the situation on a daily basis” and “take appropriate actions.” The Armenian government will decide later this month whether to formally approve the bill and send it to the National Assembly. Nina Karapetiants, a civil rights activist, said the proposed change of the SPS’s status suggests that Pashinian does not trust the NSS, whose directors have been frequently replaced during his nearly three-year rule. “It is obvious that the prime minister is trying to place under his direct control those structures which he can trust,” Karapetiants told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “This means that he distrusts the NSS so much that he has trouble entrusting it with his life.” Areg Kochinian, a political analyst, linked the bill with heightened political tensions in the country and, in particular, opposition attempts to topple Pashinian over his handling of last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh. “International practice shows that as a rule such agencies are not part of other bodies,” he said. “There is the Secret Service in the United States and the FSO in Russia. They are directly subordinate to the country’s leader. So this is normal in terms of international experience.” Still, Kochinian questioned the wisdom of turning the SPS into a separate agency, saying that this would run counter to Pashinian’s past promises to streamline the state apparatus through major staff cuts. He said that the SPS would require more government funding if it is separated from the NSS. Pashinian already plays a decisive role in the choice of the head of the SPS. The latter is nominated by the prime minister and appointed by the president of the republic. Armenian Generals Shun Ceremony Led By Defense Minister • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenia -- Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutiunian and other officials visit the Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan, March 5, 2021. Only one high-ranking officer of the Armenian army’s General Staff attended on Friday a ceremony led by Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutiunian amid its continuing standoff with the government. Harutiunian, senior pro-government parliamentarians and other officials accompanying him laid flowers at the grave of Vazgen Sarkisian, a former prime minister and one of the army’s founders assassinated in 1999, to mark his 62th birthday anniversary. The annual wreath-laying ceremony had traditionally been attended by most senior generals. Only one of them, Andranik Makarian, visited at the Yerablur military pantheon with Harutiunian this time around. Makarian, who is a deputy chief of the General Staff, was among a handful of officers who refused to sign last week a joint statement by the military’s top brass that accused Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government of misrule and demanded its resignation. Pashinian rejected the demand as a coup attempt and drafted a presidential decree relieving the chief of the General Staff, Colonel-General Onik Gasparian, of his duties. President Armen Sarkissian appears to have delayed Gasparian’s sacking at least until March 8. Makarian declined to explain his refusal to sign the military’s unprecedented statement when he was approached by reporters at Yerablur. “All officers of the Armenian army are in the army and stand with the army,” he said, refusing to comment further. Harutiunian was also reluctant to comment on the standoff which deepened a post-war political crisis in Armenia. “Dear journalists, today is Vazgen Sarkisian’s birthday and I’m not going to answer any questions,” he said. Harutiunian was appointed as defense minister in November shortly after a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the war in Nagorno-Karabakh. He is believed to remain loyal to the prime minister. Pashinian’s Election Offer ‘Still Not Discussed’ By Tsarukian’s Party • Tatevik Lazarian Armenia -- Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian speaks at an opposition rally in Yerevan, February 20, 2021. The opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) remained on Friday in no rush to respond to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s offer to hold snap general elections. Senior representatives of the party led by Gagik Tsarukian said it has not yet discussed the proposal aimed at ending the political crisis in the country deepened by the Armenian military’s demands for Pashinian’s resignation. “We will refrain from voicing personal opinions about the issue until the [BHK’s] Political Council headed by Gagik Tsarukian discusses the proposal and presents our political position on it,” one of them, Iveta Tonoyan, told reporters. She did not say when the council could meet for that purpose. Tonoyan also said that Tsarukian will not meet with Pashinian until the BHK leadership formulates its position. “A meeting between Gagik Tsarukian and Nikol Pashinian is not planned now,” she added. Pashinian expressed readiness to organize fresh elections on Monday amid renewed anti-government protests staged by an alliance of opposition parties, including the BHK, trying to oust him over his handling of last year’s war with Azerbaijan. He said that their conduct is conditional on consensus among his My Step bloc, the BHK and the second opposition party represented in the parliament: Bright Armenia (LHK). Pashinian and LHK leader Edmon Marukian met but failed to reach any election-related agreements on Thursday. Marukian said he insisted during the meeting that Pashinian must stop trying to sack the country’s top army general, Onik Gasparian. The prime minister rejected that condition, he said. Unlike Tsarukian’s party, the LHK is not part of the opposition alliance that set up a tent camp outside the parliament building last week. The alliance called the Homeland Salvation Movement is scheduled to hold its next rally on Saturday. RFE/RL President ‘Disturbed’ By Attacks On Azatutyun Journalists In Yerevan RFE/RL President Jamie Fly (archive photo) Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) President and Chief Executive Officer Jamie Fly has expressed his concern over recent attacks on RFE/RL Armenian Service (Azatutyun) journalists in Yerevan. “I am disturbed by physical and verbal attacks on Azatutyun journalists covering the February 23 protests in Yerevan. Our journalists are only trying to bring live news reporting to our audiences in Armenia,” Fly said in a statement from Washington on March 4. “While I am heartened that Armenia’s Investigative Committee has initiated a probe that could result in criminal charges against those who obstructed the legal professional activities of Azatutyun’s journalists, I urge Armenian law enforcement to make sure that all journalists can do their jobs without fear of harm,” he added. RFE/RL Armenian Service journalists RFE/RL Armenian Service journalist Artak Khulian and cameraman Karen Chilingarian, on assignment to provide live coverage of the opposition protests in Yerevan on February 23, were attacked by a group of protesters who kicked them, used abusive language against them, and damaged their equipment. Armenia’s Investigative Committee announced on March 3 that it had opened a probe into the attack, after a criminal case was opened by the Central Police Department under Article 164, Part 1 of the Criminal Code (“Obstruction of the legitimate professional activities of a journalist”). 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.