Thursday, June 24, 2021 Armenian Church, Opposition Demand Doctor’s Release June 24, 2021 • Sargis Harutyunyan • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia - Opposition supporters demonstrate outside the Office of the Prosecutor-General in Yerevan against criminal proceedings launched agains a prominent opposition-linked doctor, June 24, 2021. Opposition supporters rallied outside state prosecutors’ headquarters in Yerevan on Thursday to protest against an arrest warrant issued for a prominent doctor accused of pressuring his subordinates to participate in the June 20 parliamentary elections. Professor Armen Charchian, the director of the Izmirlian Medical Center, was prosecuted after a non-governmental organization publicized last week a leaked audio recording of his meeting with hospital personnel. Charchian, who ran for the parliament on the opposition Hayastan bloc’s ticket, can be heard telling them that they must vote in the snap elections or face “much tougher treatment” by the hospital management. He was indicted under an article of the Criminal Code that prohibits any coercion of voters. A Yerevan court allowed the Special Investigative Service (SIS) late on Wednesday to arrest Charchian and hold him in pre-trial detention. It emerged afterwards that the renowned surgeon was hospitalized shortly before the court ruling. He was understood to remain in another Yerevan hospital on Thursday. Armenia - Armen Charchian, the director of the Izmirlian Medical Center. “Mr. Charchian has been suffering from diabetes for more than 20 years,” one of his lawyers, Erik Aleksanian, told reporters. “He also underwent serious heart surgery recently.” Aleksanian insisted that the accusations are groundless because the leaked audio contains only a short excerpt from his comments made at the meeting with the Izmirlian Medical Center staff. He said a longer recording submitted by defense lawyers to the court shows that Charchian assured his staffers that he will not resort to “repression” against anyone refusing to go to the polls. Charchian also told them that the Armenian Apostolic Church, which owns the hospital, does not want Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian to stay in power. Prosecutors say this amounted to ordering the hospital staff to vote against Pashinian’s Civil Contract party. Aleksanian denied that. The lawyer said his client made clear at the start of the meeting that he is not going to agitate for or against any political group. Meanwhile, the church’s Echmiadzin-based Mother See issued another statement on Thursday condemning Charchian’s “unfounded persecution” and demanding that the authorities revoke the arrest warrant. “Distinguished doctor Armen Charchian has saved thousands of lives in the most difficult situations and is continuing, as head of the Izmirlian Medical Center, to wholeheartedly serve our people and fatherland,” read the statement. Hayastan, which finished second in the elections, says that the charges leveled against Charchian are government retribution for his affiliation with the ruling party’s main election challenger. More than a hundred members and supporters of the opposition alliance led by former President Robert Kocharian gathered outside the Office of the Prosecutor-General to demand an end to the criminal proceedings. Hayastan and another major opposition bloc, Pativ Unem, claim that public sector employees openly supporting them were harassed and even fired by government officials in the run-up to the polls. They have also accused central and provincial government bodies of forcing their employees to attend the ruling Civil Contract party’s rallies. Civil Contract leaders deny these allegations. Putin, Pashinian Discuss Armenian-Azeri Transport Links June 24, 2021 RUSSIA -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Russian President Vladimir Putin (left to right) attend a trilateral meeting in Moscow, January 11, 2020 Russian President Vladimir Putin telephoned Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Thursday to congratulate him on his party’s victory in the Armenian parliamentary elections and discuss Russian-backed plans to restore transport links between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The Kremlin reported that Putin “emphasized the importance of consistent implementation” of the Russian-brokered agreement that stopped the war in Nagorno-Karabakh and follow-up understandings reached by the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in January. “The Russian side will continue active mediation efforts to ensure stability in the region,” it said in a statement. The Armenian government also said the two men discussed the implementation of those agreements. In that context, it said, Pashinian stressed the need for the release of Armenian prisoners of war and civilians still held in Azerbaijan. Putin spoke with Pashinian one day after his phone call with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. According to a Kremlin statement, the call took place “at the initiative of the Azerbaijani side” and touched upon “practical aspects of the realization of the agreements” reached by Aliyev, Pashinian and Putin. “Special attention was paid to intensifying work in a trilateral format on the restoration of economic links and transport routes in the South Caucasus,” added the statement. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov spoke by phone earlier on Wednesday. The agreements call for the reopening of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border for commercial traffic. They specifically commit Armenia to opening rail and road links between Nakhichevan and the rest of Azerbaijan. For its part, Armenia should be able to use Azerbaijani territory as a transit route for cargo shipments to and from Russia and Iran. At their January 11 meeting in Moscow, Putin, Aliyev and Pashinian agreed to set up a trilateral working group tasked with working out practical modalities of establishing such transport links. The group co-headed by deputy prime ministers of the three states held several meetings in the following months. The group has not met since Azerbaijani troops crossed several sections of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border on May 12-14, triggering a continuing military standoff with Armenian forces. “Given these border incidents, I don’t think it’s possible to constructively work on that [Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani] platform,” the group’s Armenian co-chair, Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian, said recently. Grigorian’s Azerbaijani opposite number, Shahin Mustafayev, suggested earlier this week that the trilateral task force will resume its activities after a new Armenian government is formed as a result of the June 20 elections. Pashinian Touts Armenia’s ‘Democratic’ Elections June 24, 2021 • Nane Sahakian ARMENIA -- Armenian acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian delivers a speech during a rally in central Yerevan, June 21, 2021 Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian insisted on Thursday that the weekend general elections in Armenia won by his party were free and fair. “The conclusions of international and local observers and the international community are unequivocal: the elections were held in conformity with democratic standards. In effect, we set a new standard,” Pashinian said, opening a weekly meeting of his cabinet in Yerevan. “When pre-term parliamentary elections were held in 2018 and the international community gave those elections unprecedentedly high marks … it was said at the time that the election outcome was obvious for everyone in advance and that the incumbent government did not need, so to speak, to falsify the election results. The outcome of the 2021 parliamentary elections was not predictable and everyone knew that they are probably the most unpredictable elections in the Third Republic’s history,” he said. In their preliminary report released on Monday, European observers gave a largely positive assessment of the Armenian authorities’ handling of the snap elections held on Sunday. They said the vote was “competitive and generally very well-managed.” Both the United States and the European Union cited the findings of the observer mission mostly deployed by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in their official reactions to the conduct of the snap polls. The U.S. State Department urged the Armenian opposition to accept the official election results that gave a landslide victory to Pashinian’s Civil Contract party. The two leading opposition groups that won seats in Armenia’s new parliament have alleged widespread irregularities, however. They are expected to ask the Constitutional Court overturn the official results. Former President Robert Kocharian’s Hayastan bloc, the official runner-up in the polls, accused the European observers on Monday of turning a blind eye to violations which it said benefited the ruling party. Armenian law-enforcement authorities have charged more than a dozen opposition members and supporters with trying to bribe or bully voters. No government officials and loyalists are known to have been prosecuted for electoral offenses so far. Pashinian cited on Thursday the election-related criminal cases. “I am convinced that they will be properly investigated,” he said. Opposition Party Blames Kocharian For Poor Election Showing June 24, 2021 • Naira Nalbandian Armenia - Edmon Marukian, the leader of the Bright Armenia Party, speaks at an election campaign meeting in Yerevan, June 18, 2021. The leader of the Bright Armenia Party (LHK), one of the two opposition groups represented in the outgoing Armenian parliament, on Thursday blamed former President Robert Kocharian for its failure to win any seats in the new National Assembly. According to official results of the June 20 elections, the LHK won only 1.2 percent of the vote, falling far short of the 5 percent legal threshold for entering the parliament. It had garnered 6.4 percent in the previous elections held in 2018. LHK leader Edmon Marukian said his party was on course to clear the vote threshold until the last few days of campaigning marked by bitter recriminations traded by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and two hardline opposition alliances led by Kocharian and another former president, Serzh Sarkisian. Marukian claimed that many LHK sympathizers deserted his camp after Kocharian’s Hayastan bloc held the biggest rally of the entire election campaign in Yerevan on June 18. He said they felt that Kocharian’s return power is a real possibility and that they should prevent it by voting for Pashinian’s Civil Contract party. “Our representative in Yeghegnadzor told me that people are coming to the [local LHK] office and saying, ‘Sorry, we planned to vote for you but after seeing that rally we thought that they are returning [to power] and decided to give extra votes to the authorities so that it doesn’t happen,” he told a news conference. Armenia - Supporters of former President Robert Kocharian and his opposition alliance attend an election campaign rally in Yerevan, June 18, 2021. The official results showed Civil Contract getting almost 54 percent of the vote, compared with 21 percent and 5.2 percent polled by Hayastan and Sarkisian’s Pativ Unem bloc respectively. Both opposition forces are expected to ask the Constitutional Court to overturn what they call fraudulent results. During the 12-day election campaign, the LHK positioned itself as a viable alternative to Armenia’s current and former rulers. It pledged to form a “government of national unity” in case of making a strong showing in the polls. “The megaphones of the current and former authorities were much stronger than ours,” complained Marukian. “Our voice was drowned out as a result.” The LHK leader also accused Hayastan and Pativ Unem of helping Pashinian to stay in power. He said that lawmakers representing the radical opposition will be an easy target for the reelected prime minister. Supporters of the two ex-presidents claim the opposite. They say that Pashinian will face “real opposition” in the parliament for the first time since coming to power more than three years ago. Hardline critics of the Armenian government have for years questioned the LHK’s opposition credentials. They have accused Marukian of secretly cooperating with Pashinian, his erstwhile political ally. Like other major opposition forces, Marukian’s party blamed the government for Armenia’s defeat in last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh. But it did not join street protests organized by them in an attempt to force Pashinian to resign. 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.