RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/09/2021

                                        Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Deal On Karabakh’s Status Still Not Urgent For Russia

        • Aza Babayan

RUSSIA -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov speaks to participants of an 
online forum in Moscow, May 21, 2021

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reiterated on Wednesday that 
international mediators should not rush to broker an Armenian-Azerbaijani 
agreement on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Lavrov again insisted that return to normality and confidence-building measures 
in the Karabakh conflict zone must be the top short-term priority of the U.S., 
French and Russian co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

“Many are now talking about the fact that the question of Nagorno-Karabakh’s 
status remains unresolved,” he said during a conference in Moscow. “Yes, it must 
eventually be settled with the participation of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs.”

“At this stage they [the co-chairs] probably should not periodically raise the 
issue of the status but contribute to confidence-building measures, help to 
solve humanitarian issues and help Armenians and Azerbaijanis again safely live 
side by side. In this case, it will be easier to resolve the issue of the status 
two or three years later,” he said.

The Russian-brokered agreement that stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war last 
November says nothing about Karabakh’s future status. It calls instead for the 
restoration of transport links between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev has repeatedly stated that the six-week war, 
which resulted in sweeping Azerbaijani territorial gains, essentially resolved 
the long-running conflict.

By contrast, Armenia maintains that the conflict will be unresolved as long as 
the two sides disagree on Karabakh’s status. It says that the disputed 
territory’s population must be able to exercise its right to self-determination 
in line peace proposals made by the Russian, U.S. and French mediators.



Armenian Ombudsman, Activists Deplore Toxic Election Campaign

        • Naira Bulghadarian
        • Satenik Kaghzvantsian

Armenia - Supporters of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian rally in Armavir, June 7, 
2021.

Armenia’s human rights defender, Arman Tatoyan, has accused Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and his political opponents of resorting to inflammatory rhetoric in 
their election campaigns, saying that could deepen a political crisis in the 
country.

In a statement issued on Tuesday evening, Tatoyan singled out Pashinian’s 
pledges to “purge” the state bureaucracy and wage “political vendettas” against 
local government officials supporting the Armenian opposition.

The ombudsman issued another statement the following morning urging election 
contenders to stop exploiting the issue of Armenian prisoners still held by 
Azerbaijan for political purposes. Human rights lawyers and activists added 
their voice to his appeal on Wednesday.

“The acting prime minister’s promises of ‘political vendettas,’ ‘civic revenge’ 
and ‘staff purges’ made today and his use of offensive language are extremely 
concerning,” read the first statement released by Tatoyan.

“What makes such rhetoric really dangerous is that it heightens existing 
tensions and carries the risk of being transferred into real life,” it said.

Campaigning in Aragatsotn province earlier on Tuesday, Pashinian pledged to 
crack down on heads of local communities and private entities who he claimed are 
forcing their subordinates to attend campaign rallies held by his political 
opponents.

“I’m not talking about physical violence. I’m talking about political and civil 
vendettas,” he stressed.

Tatoyan dismissed these assurances, saying that any vendetta is “associated with 
violence” and that staff purges inevitably involve mass violations of worker 
rights. Pashinian’s remarks could also send “wrong signals” to law-enforcement 
agencies and other state bodies, he said.

“Exploiting the issue of the return of prisoners illegally held in Azerbaijan 
during the election campaign is unacceptable,” the ombudsman said in the 
follow-up statement.

He referred to bitter recriminations traded by Pashinian and former President 
Serzh Sarkisian on the campaign trail.


Armenia -- Human right ombudsman Arman Tatoyan speaks during parliamentary 
hearings in Yerevan, April 5, 2019.

Sarkisian provoked the war of words by condemning Pashinian’s remark that the 
more than 100 Armenian prisoners of war and civilian captives would not mind 
spending “one or two more months” in Azerbaijani captivity for the sake of 
preventing “disproportionate” Armenian concessions to Baku. The ex-president, 
who leads a major opposition alliance, challenged Pashinian to try to swap them 
for his son Ashot.

The prime minster was quick to express readiness to do that in fiery speeches 
that also contained harsh personal attacks on Sarkisian and another former 
president, Robert Kocharian. He reaffirmed that readiness during a campaign trip 
to Shirak province on Wednesday.

“I have instructed relevant state bodies to officially communicate to the 
Azerbaijani side our proposal to the effect that my son is prepared to go to 
Baku as a hostage provided that all of our prisoners are repatriated,” Pashinian 
told supporters rallying in the village of Mets Mantash.

Speaking at a rally held in another village, Azatan, he insisted that the 
Armenian authorities have been “doing our utmost” to secure their release. “I 
have no doubts that it’s a matter of time,” he said.

More than 50 of the Armenian POWs are army reservists who were drafted from 
Shirak during the autumn war with Azerbaijan. Pashinian briefly spoke with some 
of their relatives after the Azatan rally. The latter seemed dissatisfied with 
the conversation and refused to talk to reporters.

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, many other relatives also urged all 
election contenders to avoid exploiting the issue during the parliamentary race. 
Zhanna Aleksanian, a human rights activist, echoed their calls.

“He should not speak about his son in that context,” Aleksanian said of 
Pashinian. She at the same time faulted Sarkisian and other former government 
for claiming that the current authorities have done nothing to have the 
prisoners freed.



Armenian Opposition Leader Favors Closer ‘Integration’ With Russia

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - Former President Serzh Sarkissian (R) and former National Security 
Service Director Artur Vanetsian present an electoral alliance set up by their 
parties at a ceremony outside Yerevan, May 15, 2021.

Artur Vanetsian, a leader of a major opposition bloc running in the upcoming 
Armenian parliamentary elections, called on Wednesday for Armenia’s “deeper 
integration” with Russia.

“Russia is our ally and Armenia cannot have a better ally,” Vanetsian told 
Vladimir Solovyov, an outspoken Russian TV host close to the Kremlin, in an 
interview live streamed on the latter’s YouTube channel. “We must have the 
right, straightforward relationship with Russia.”

“Russia is not an ordinary country, Russia is a superpower,” he said. “I think 
that after coming to power we will need to consider having closer cooperation, 
deeper integration processes with the Russian Federation. Relations between 
Armenia and Russia must be upgraded to a lever where nobody would be able to 
change it.”

Vanetsian is a former director of Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) who 
tops the list of the Pativ Unem bloc’s candidates in the early elections slated 
for June. The bloc consists of his Fatherland party and former President Serzh 
Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia (HHK). It is seen as one of Prime Nikol 
Pashinian’s main challengers.

Vanetsian, Sarkisian and their associates accuse Pashinian of seriously 
undermining Russian-Armenian relations during his three-year rule. The prime 
minister has also faced similar accusations from other opposition leaders, 
notably former President Robert Kocharian.

Kocharian, who leads another opposition alliance, has repeatedly made a case for 
much closer ties with Russia after Armenia’s defeat in last year’s war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Pashinian has also vowed to deepen Russian-Armenian ties. He stated in April 
that Russian military presence in Armenia is vital for the country’s national 
security and should become even stronger soon.

Vanetsian also effectively endorsed Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea strongly 
condemned by the West. He said it was backed by the vast majority of the 
Ukrainian region’s population.

“I believe that everyone must respect the Crimean people’s right to 
self-determination and I’m sure that Crimea is Russian,” he declared.

Vanetsian, 42, was appointed as head of Armenia’s most powerful security agency 
immediately the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that toppled Sarkisian and brought 
Pashinian to power. He quickly became an influential member of Pashinian’s 
entourage but eventually fell out with the prime minister and resigned in 
September 2019.



Armenian Soldier Freed


Armenia - A view of an area in Armenia's Syunik province where Armenian and 
Azerbaijani troops are locked in a border standoff, May 14, 2021. (Photo by the 
Armenian Human Rights Defender's Office)

An Armenian army soldier was set free early on Wednesday hours after being 
captured by Azerbaijani forces on Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan.
The Armenian Defense Ministry said that the 25-year-old soldier, identified as 
A. Katanian, lost his way and strayed into Azerbaijani-controlled territory in 
thick fog. It denied Baku’s initial claims that he was part of an Armenian 
“sabotage group” that tried to lay landmines in the Lachin district bordering 
Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province.

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said on Tuesday night that a further 
investigation into the incident established that Katanian indeed crossed the 
border by accident. It said he has therefore been released.

The Defense Ministry in Yerevan announced the following morning that the 
serviceman was handed over to the Armenian side and is currently in 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s capital Stepanakert.

The ministry did not comment on Armenian press reports that the commander of 
Russian peacekeeping troops stationed in Karabakh, Lieutenant-General Rustam 
Muradov, personally negotiated with Azerbaijani officials to secure Katanian’s 
release.

According to a local government official from the Syunik village of Verishen, 
Katanian was captured at a nearby section of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. 
Armenian and Azerbaijani troops deployed there have been locked in a tense 
standoff for the past month.

The standoff began after Azerbaijani troops reportedly crossed several sections 
of the border and advanced a few kilometers into Syunik and another Armenian 
province, Gegharkunik, on May 12-14.

Six other Armenian soldiers were taken prisoner in Gegharkunik on May 27. Baku 
has refused to free them so far.


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