Monday, Marukian Opposed To Changing Election Laws Before Snap Vote Edmon Marukian, the leader of the opposition Bright Armenia party (archive photo) Edmon Marukian, the leader of Bright Armenia, the second largest opposition faction in the Armenian parliament, has spoken against changing electoral laws before snap parliamentary elections announced for June 20. The ruling My Step faction has introduced a draft legislation to amend a set of election laws called the Electoral Code under which the current mixed voting system in which candidates are elected to parliament both on party lists and in individual races will be replaced with an all-proportional ballot system. A number of leading public sector organizations and political parties have called for such a change to be introduced before the early elections. Marukian, whose Bright Armenia along with the largest opposition faction, Prosperous Armenia, agreed last week not to field their candidates if Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian resigns to trigger the dissolution of parliament and the appointment of fresh elections. Pashinian’s My Step enjoys a comfortable majority in the Armenian parliament, but it has sought a sort of arrangement with the parliamentary opposition to ensure that no one is nominated to replace Pashinian if he resigns. At least one political group in Armenia is seeking the formation of an interim government after Pashinian’s resignation and does not want early elections to be held immediately. The Homeland Salvation Movement, a loose alliance of over a dozen political parties and groups, has been holding street protests since November demanding the resignation of Pashinian, whom it holds responsible for the Armenian defeat in the 2020 war against Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh. The movement wants its leader Vazgen Manukian to be voted by parliament into the prime minister’s office once Pashinian resigns before early parliamentary elections can be held within at least a year. Even after the announcement of the early election date, the Homeland Salvation Movement has refused to discontinue its street protests or change its agenda. But some of its members – notably the Prosperous Armenia party of tycoon Gagik Tsarukian and the Hayrenik (Homeland) party of former chief of the National Security Service Artur Vanetsian – have indicated that they will take part in the early elections announced by Pashinian. Speaking live on Facebook on Monday Bright Armenia’s Marukian argued that the very announcement of the election date has considerably reduced political tensions in the country. But he said that the rules of the game should not be changed before these elections are held. “To adopt new rules of the game means imperiling the announced election date, hence, deepening the crisis in the country,” he said. Marukian described the new draft election code as “unelaborated”, claiming that holding elections under changed election laws will cast a shadow over the legitimacy of the vote. The opposition politician added, however, that Bright Armenia intends to participate in the early elections in any case. Earlier, My Step’s lawmaker Nazeli Baghdasarian, who advocates a new election code, acknowledged the importance of a consensus among all parliamentary parties regarding its adoption. Pro-Government Lawmaker Sees No ‘Early Campaign’ In Pashinian Rallies • Astghik Bedevian • Marine Khachatrian Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian during a visit to the Aragatsotn province, March 20, 2021 A pro-government lawmaker does not consider the weekend rallies of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian as an “early start” of an election campaign despite criticism from political opponents. Pashinian held a number of meetings and public rallies in different rural communities as part of his Saturday trip to Armenia’s western Aragatsotn province. Addressing scores of his supporters just two days after announcing that early parliamentary elections in Armenia will be held on June 20, Pashinian raised a number of issues that observers say may become part of the future campaign, including his vision of the country’s relations with the neighbors in the region after last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh. In his public remarks Pashinian also slammed his political opponents, including former presidents Levon Ter-Petrosian and Serzh Sarkisian. Critics also claim that as the incumbent prime minister, Pashinian has been using administrative resources, including services of local officials, to organize such meetings with the public. Nazeli Baghdasarian, a member of the pro-Pashinian My Step alliance in parliament, countered that the prime minister has held similar rallies also before. My Step parliamentary faction member Nazeli Baghdasarian (R) and ARF Dashnaktsutyun party member Artur Khachatrian debate in the RFE/RL Armenian Service studio, March 21, 2020 “During his entire time in office as prime minister, Pashinian has held similar meetings in different communities. He also had a similar meeting in another region the previous weekend, which was not covered by media,” she said. Baghdasarian argued that if holding rallies is regarded as an early campaign, then the opposition Homeland Salvation Movement, which has been holding rallies in Yerevan and in provinces to demand Pashinian’s resignation, has been campaigning for months. Artur Khachatrian, a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), which is part of the Homeland Salvation Movement that comprises over a dozen political parties and groups, meanwhile, described Pashinian’s rallies as “electioneering” accompanied with the heavy use of administrative resources. “I do not pay taxes for Pashinian to gather hundreds of police officers around him or deploy thousands of police officers to close a town. He is using the administrative lever and is doing something that he is not supposed to be doing,” Khachatrian charged. Naira Zohrabian, a member of the opposition Prosperous Armenia faction in parliament, also sees Pashinian’s recent meetings with the public as an early start of an election campaign. “I definitely agree with the assessments that Pashinian uses administrative resources and is campaigning, but, frankly, I am surprised that human rights activists, politicians, political analysts, media continue to be surprised by this. He [Pashinian] will go to any length to retain his power,” she said. My Step’s Baghdasarian said, however, that My Step has not unveiled its official election platform and that otherwise the current election laws do not regard meetings of politicians with members of the public as an election campaign. Pashinian Says Davtian Appointed New Army Chief ‘By Virtue Of Law’ Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian introduces Artak Davtian (second from the right) as new chief of the Armed Forces’ General Staff at a meeting held at the Defense Ministry, Lieutenant-General Artak Davtian is considered to have taken office as Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian wrote in a Facebook post on Monday. Pashinian explained that the appointment has come into effect “by virtue of law.” The premier visited the Defense Ministry today to introduce Davtian to the staff. He expressed his confidence that Davtian will continue his mission “at the same high level” that he did before his resignation as chief of the General Staff in June 2020 for “reasons not related to service.” Pashinian said that the army remained politically neutral during the early parliamentary elections in December 2018, expressing confidence that the same situation will be observed during upcoming early elections that he announced for June 20. “Let’s agree that the principle of the army remaining depoliticized should be sacredly observed. It is necessary not for me, not for any specific individual or group, it is an important principle that is necessary for the Armed Forces themselves in the first place,” the prime minister underscored. In a statement issued today Davtian reaffirmed that as an entity that reports to the government and is under civil control the armed forces will continue to maintain political neutrality. The Armenian premier named Davtian as new army chief earlier this month against the backdrop of a standoff with the leadership of the Armed Forces’ General Staff and its head Onik Gasparian who was dismissed shortly after he and four dozen other high-ranking officers demanded that Pashinian and his cabinet step down in a joint statement issued on February 25. Gasparian and other generals and senior officers accused the government of putting Armenia “on the brink of collapse” after last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Pashinian rejected the demand as a coup attempt and petitioned that President Armen Sarkissian sign a decree relieving Gasparian of his duties. Sarkissian refused to sign such a decree on February 27, saying that it appeared to be unconstitutional and would deepen the “unprecedented” political crisis in the country. Pashinian criticized the refusal as “unfounded” and resent his motion to Sarkissian in another attempt to get him to fire Gasparian. Sarkissian again refused to sign the decree drafted by the prime minister’s office. But he made it clear that he would not ask the Constitutional Court to invalidate it within the timeframe envisaged by the legislation, effectively paving the way for Gasparian’s removal. Under Armenian law, the president can keep blocking the prime minister’s decisions only by appealing to the court. The president eventually turned to the Constitutional Court, but he contested a provision of the law “On Military Service and the Status of Servicemen” on the basis of which the prime minister submitted the draft decree on Gasparian’s dismissal rather than the draft decree itself. The entire process took place amid continuing street protests organized by a coalition of more than a dozen opposition parties called the Homeland Salvation Movement demanding Pashinian’s resignation over the defeat suffered by Armenian forces in the 2020 war against Azerbaijan. Thousands of opposition supporters blockading a central boulevard in Yerevan voiced their solidarity with the military top brass and support for the generals’ call for Pashinian’s resignation. Later, Pashinian named Davtian as a new candidate for the post of the chief of the Armed Forces’ General Staff. Davtian already occupied the post in 2018-2020. Sarkissian initially also challenged Pashinian’s new pick for the army chief, but eventually indicated that, while not signing it, he would not take the prime minister’s draft decree to the Constitutional Court either. Meanwhile, on March 17, an administrative court accepted Colonel-General Gasparian’s lawsuit against his dismissal, effectively granting his request to be considered chief of the General Staff before the case is heard in court. The prime minister’s office, however, insisted that even though the president did not sign the decree on Gasparian’s dismissal he was still considered to be relieved of his duties “by virtue of law.” It said that the constitution does not provide for a reverse decision in such cases. Gasparian’s lawyer Artur Hovannisian as well as a considerable number of legal experts and opposition parties and groups consider, however, that after the administrative court’s decision Gasparian continues to service in his official capacity as chief of the General Staff. Hovannisian said on March 22 that his client would file a complaint against Davtian’s appointment. “Relevant statements on this crime will be sent to authorized bodies,” the lawyer said. 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.