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    Categories: 2021

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/16/2021

                                        Friday, 

Preparations Finalized For New Bridge On Armenian-Georgian Border


Armenia/Georgia - A Soviet-built bridge connecting Armenia and Georgia border, 
4Nov2016.

Armenian and Georgian government officials discussed on Friday final 
preparations for the repeatedly delayed construction of a new bridge on the 
Armenian-Georgian border designed to facilitate travel and commerce.

The “Friendship Bridge” is to be built over the Debed river flowing through the 
main border crossing at Bagratashen-Sadakhlo. It currently has a single narrow 
bridge constructed in Soviet times.

The Armenian and Georgian governments signed a deal on the new bridge in late 
2014 two years after the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) 
pledged to finance the project with a loan extended to Armenia.

Work on the bridge was originally due to start in 2017 and last for two years. 
However, the Armenian government completed an international tender for the right 
to build the bridge only in 2018. An Iranian construction firm, Ariana Tunnel 
Dam, won the tender with a $9 million bid.


Armenia/Georgia - Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian (R) and Georgian Prime 
Minister Giorgi Kvirikashvili at the opening ceremony for a newly reconstructed 
Armenian border checkpoint at Bagratashen, November 4, 2016.

The Armenian Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures 
announced the impending start of the construction on Friday after a virtual 
meeting of a Georgian-Armenian task force dealing with the project.

A ministry statement said the working group gave final approval to the 
architectural design of the planned bridge which is due to be 386 meters long 
and have two sections with a total of four traffic lanes. It also approved a 
“simplified procedure” for construction workers’ access to the border area.

The new bridge will be used for Armenia’s trade with not only Georgia but also 
Russia, its number one trading partner. Much of Russian-Armenian trade, worth 
almost $2.2 billion in 2020, is carried out by heavy trucks passing through the 
Bagratashen-Sadakhlo crossing.


Armenia - The main Armenian-Georgian border crossing at Bagratashen, 4Nov2016.

Armenian passport control and customs facilities at Bagratashen were expanded 
and modernized in 2016 as part of a $65 million program mostly financed by the 
European Union.

The session of the Georgian-Armenian task force coincided with President Armen 
Sarkissian’s official visit to Tbilisi. Meeting with Georgian parliament speaker 
Archil Talakvadze, Sarkissian said the two neighboring states should “encourage 
the implementation of joint projects” now that their economies are reeling from 
recessions caused by the coronavirus pandemic.



Former Army Chief Urges Parliament Probe Of Karabakh War

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia -- Colonel-General Onik Gasparian (C), the chief of the Armenian army's 
General Staff, meets with senior Russian military officials, Yerevan, January 
25, 2021.

Onik Gasparian, Armenia’s former top general controversially replaced last 
month, called on Friday for a parliamentary inquiry into the political and 
military authorities’ handling of last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
In a letter to the leadership of the Armenian parliament posted on Armlur.am, 
Gasparian cited the need to answer “many questions” about the outcome of the 
six-week war and ease political tensions in the country.

The appeal came two days after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian blamed former 
Presidents Serzh Sarkisian and Robert Kocharian for Armenia’s defeat in the war 
stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10.

Addressing the National Assembly, Pashinian also attacked Gasparian, who was 
sacked as chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff after initiating a February 
25 statement by the army top brass that demanded the government’s resignation.

The embattled premier denied Gasparian’s December claims that three days after 
the outbreak of the 2020 hostilities he warned Pashinian that Armenia and 
Karabakh are heading for defeat and that the fighting must be stopped as soon as 
possible. He insisted that Gasparian made a statement to the contrary at a 
September 30 meeting of his Security Council.

Gasparian stood by his claims and accused Pashinian of “shamelessly distorting 
facts.”

Andranik Kocharian, the pro-government chairman of the Armenian parliament 
committee on defense and security, spoke out against the formation of an ad hoc 
parliamentary commission proposed by the general.

Kocharian argued that the commission would have no time to conduct such an 
inquiry because the current parliament is expected to be dissolved in June. Only 
the next National Assembly can properly investigate all circumstances of the 
war, he said.

One of the two parliamentary opposition parties, Bright Armenia (LHK), already 
demanded such a probe in December. The parliament’s pro-government majority 
objected to the idea.

During Wednesday’s parliament debate, LHK leaders accused Pashinian of trying to 
dodge responsibility for the outcome of the war which left at least 3,600 
Armenia soldiers dead and led to sweeping Azerbaijani territorial gains.



Armenian Government Accused Of Persecuting Top Judicial Official

        • Artak Khulian
        • Marine Khachatrian

Armenia - The head of Supreme Judicial Council, Ruben Vartazarian, at a press 
conference in Yerevan, December 29, 2020.

The head of an independent body empowered to nominate, sanction and fire judges 
on Friday accused Armenia’s political leadership of ordering criminal 
proceedings against him in a bid to replace him with a government ally.

Ruben Vartazarian told the Hraparak newspaper that he was formally charged with 
obstruction of justice on Thursday hours after the Supreme Judicial Council 
(SJC) agreed to suspend him pending investigation.

Neither the SJC nor the Office of the Prosecutor-General gave any details of the 
criminal case.

Under Armenian law, judges and other judicial officials cannot be prosecuted on 
charges stemming from their professional activities without the SJC’s consent. 
The SJC said on Thursday that the case against its chairman not connected with 
the performance of his duties.

Vartazarian asserted, however, that he stands accused of abusing his powers to 
interfere in the work of a court. He confirmed reports that the accusation is 
based on incriminating testimony given by Andranik Simonian, a newly appointed 
deputy director of Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS).

Simonian worked as a judge of the court of first instance of the country’s 
northern Lori province until being moved to the NSS by Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian late last month.

Lawmakers representing Pashinian’s My Step alliance harshly criticized 
Vartazarian during a parliament debate earlier in March. They implicitly accused 
him of encouraging courts not to allow pre-trial arrests of opposition figures 
arrested following last year’s war with Azerbaijan. Vartazarian denied those 
claims.


Armenia - Gagik Jahangirian, a former deputy prosecutor-general, is interviewe 
by RFE/RL, Yerevan, June 21, 2019.

Speaking to Hraparak, Vartazarian dismissed the charges leveled against him, 
saying that they are part of government attempts to oust and replace him with 
Gagik Jahangirian, another SJC member reputedly allied to Pashinian.

“Everything is very clear and simple,” said the SJC chairman, who is also a 
district court judge.

Jahangirian will head the SJC pending the outcome of the criminal investigation 
because he is the oldest member of the body overseeing the Armenian judiciary.

Zhanna Aleksanian, a human rights activist, also suggested that Vartazarian is 
prosecuted for political reasons. She deplored the lack of official information 
about the case.

“The authorities do not like transparency at all and I don’t exclude that they 
want to remove Vartazarian in this way in order to install a candidate 
acceptable to them,” Aleksanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Nikolay Baghdasarian, a pro-government parliamentarian, denied any political 
motives. “If the authorities wanted to persecute him there were many ways of 
doing that,” he said. “But the existence of a criminal case means the 
prosecutors have more evidence than they do in the case of ordinary citizens.”


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.

 
Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS