Thursday, July 8, 2021 Armenian Opposition Bloc Condemns Fresh Arrests • Susan Badalian Armenia - Former President Robert Kocharian and senior members of his opposition bloc hold an election campaign meeting in Syunik region, June 7, 2021. The National Security Service (NSS) reportedly raided the offices of Armenia’s largest mining company and detained the mayor of a nearby town on Thursday in what the main opposition Hayastan alliance condemned as a continuing government crackdown on its members. NSS officers searched the office and the apartment of Kajaran Mayor Manvel Paramazian in the morning before taking him to Yerevan for unknown reasons. The security agency did not explain their actions in the following hours. Paramazian’s lawyer, Yervand Varosian, said in the evening that he is still unaware of his client’s whereabouts or the reason for his detention. “I’ve only heard something ludicrous: someone had bought some land and resold it to I don’t know whom,” Varosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. Paramazian was already briefly arrested last December on kidnapping and assault charges denied by him. An Armenian court is scheduled to start his trial on Monday. Varosian suggested that the authorities are keen to bring more charges against the opposition-linked mayor because they realize that the court is unlikely to convict him. “All this became predictable after the Hayastan bloc won the majority of votes in Kajaran,” the lawyer said, referring to the snap parliamentary elections held on June 20. Armenia - Kajaran Mayor Manvel Paramazian. Paramazian has run Kajaran, an industrial town in Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province, since 2016. He was among the heads of more than a dozen provincial communities who issued late last year statements condemning Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s handling of the autumn war with Azerbaijan and demanding his resignation. Two other Syunik mayors were also indicted late last year. One of them, Arush Arushanian, runs a community comprising the town of Goris and surrounding villages. Arushanian was questioned on Wednesday by another law-enforcement agency, the Special Investigative Service (SIS), in connection with this week’s arrest of a local official heading one of those villages, Karahunj. The official, Lusine Avetian, was charged with ordering five Karahunj residents to vote for Hayastan after allocating financial assistance to them from the local government budget. It was not clear if she will plead guilty to the accusation. According to some Armenian media outlets, SIS investigators are trying to get Avetian to implicate Arushanian in the alleged pressure exerted on the voters. Arushanian’s lawyer, Erik Aleksanian, did not rule out such a possibility, saying that the charges leveled against the village chief are politically motivated. The Goris municipality insisted, for its part, that Avetian was not in a position to give any cash handouts. It said such decisions could only be made by a municipal commission headed by Arushanian. Armenia - Former President Robert Kocharian (R) and senior members of his Hayastan alliance, Vahe Hakobian (L) and Ishkhan Saghatelian, at an election campaign rally in Yerevan, June 9, 2021. The embattled Syunik mayors and a former provincial governor, Vahe Hakobian, lead an opposition party affiliated with Hayastan, the official runner-up in the June 20 elections. Hakobian is also a major shareholder in the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine (ZCMC), a mining giant employing more than 4,000 people, many of them Kajaran residents. News reports quoted Hakobian as saying that NSS officers also searched on Thursday morning the ZCMC offices. He said they detained one of the company executives. The NSS did not confirm or deny that. During the election campaign Pashinian vowed to crack down on ZCMC’s “corrupt” owners and wage “political vendettas” against local government officials supporting the opposition. His political allies demanded after the elections that those elected mayors step down. They pointed to official vote results that showed the ruling Civil Contract party scoring a landslide victory. Meanwhile, Hayastan, which is headed by former President Robert Kocharian issued a statement on Thursday condemning the continuing “repressions” against its members and saying that they will “further deepen the political crisis” in Armenia. “The purpose of these illegal actions is clear: to weaken the [new] parliament’s largest opposition group and distract it from its efforts to confront internal and external threats facing the country,” said the statement. It said Kocharian’s bloc will continue to challenge the “regime that has brought the country to a disaster.” Pashinian Offers To Cooperate With Tsarukian Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian, Yerevan, July 8, 2021. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Thursday met with Gagik Tsarukian and expressed readiness to cooperate with his Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) after its failure to win any parliament seats for the first time since its establishment in 2006. The meeting was part of Pashinian’s ongoing consultations with mostly small political groups that will not be represented in Armenia’s new parliament elected on June 20. He told Tsarukian that his government is ready to work with them in confronting challenges facing the country. According to the official election results, the BHK won just under 4 percent of the vote, failing to clear the 5 percent legal threshold to enter the parliament. It had finished second in the previous parliamentary elections held in 2018, garnering more than 8 percent. Tsarukian’s party has not yet clarified whether it considers the June 20 vote democratic. The two other, more hardline opposition forces that won seats in the new parliament have rejected the official results as fraudulent. In his opening remarks at the meeting publicized by his press office, Pashinian said the BHK remains an “influential force” in the domestic political arena despite its election fiasco. “I would like to hear your views about further political developments, about what we can do to make the extra-parliamentary opposition and the BHK in particular and the government more responsive to each other,” he went on. Armenia - Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian greets supporters during an election campaign rally in Yerevan, June 17, 2021. Pashinian said the government is open to relevant proposals from those groups. “I don’t think that good ideas are generated only by those who get more votes in parliamentary elections,” he said. Tsarukian replied vaguely that his party will continue to “stand with the people.” Tsarukian demanded Pashinian’s resignation in June 2020, accusing the prime minister of incompetence and misrule. Shortly afterwards he was controversially prosecuted on what he called politically motivated charges. He was arrested in September but freed on bail almost one month later. Like other opposition groups, the BHK blamed Pashinian for Armenia’s defeat in the autumn war in Nagorno-Karabakh and demanded his resignation. It joined late last year a grouping of opposition parties that staged street protests in a bid topple the premier. Tsarukian and most of his associates kept a low profile and avoided strong verbal attacks on the government this spring, fuelling media speculation about their readiness to strike deals with Pashinian. The BHK leader repeatedly stated during the recent election campaign that he would not join a possible coalition government led by Pashinian as a result of the elections. Pashinian Looks Forward To New Judicial Appointments • Naira Nalbandian Armenia - A courtroom in Yerevan, 8Jun2017. The Armenian government approved on Thursday a proposal to hire new judges who Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said will contribute to judicial reforms in the country. The 20 judges are to be nominated by the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) and confirmed by Armenia’s newly elected parliament in which Pashinian’s Civil Contract party will have a comfortable majority. The SJC, which oversees Armenia’s courts, formally proposed their appointment last week, citing amendments to the Judicial Code enacted earlier this year. Under the government-drafted amendments, the new judges will mostly deal with pre-trial arrests of criminal suspects and search warrants sought by law-enforcement bodies. They will supposedly reduce the workload of courts increasingly overwhelmed by pending criminal and civil cases. Speaking at a weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan, Pashinian said the upcoming judicial appointments will be part of “substantive reforms” of the Armenian judiciary initiated by his administration. He said the new judges will bring “new insights and new approaches” to the courts of first instance and the Court of Appeals. The government moved to increase the number of judges after Armenian courts refused to allow law-enforcement bodies to arrest dozens of opposition leaders and members as well as other anti-government activists. Virtually all of those individuals were prosecuted in connection with angry protests sparked by Pashinian’s handling of the autumn war in Nagorno-Karabakh. The prime minister charged in December that the judiciary has become part of the country’s “pseudo-elite” trying to topple him after the disastrous war. Critics claim that Pashinian simply wants to install loyal judges who would duly allow the pre-trial arrests of his political opponents and execute other government orders. The SJC is empowered to not only nominate judges but also sanction and fire them. Its chairman, Ruben Vartazarian, was controversially suspended and charged with obstruction of justice in April after Pashinian’s political allies accused him of encouraging courts to free the arrested government critics. Vartazarian denies the accusations. He has said the authorities ordered the criminal proceedings in a bid to replace him with Gagik Jahangirian, an SJC member reputedly allied to Pashinian. Jahangirian was named as acting head of the SJC pending the outcome of the criminal investigation because of being the oldest member of the judicial watchdog. According to some media outlets, he has since been trying to increase government influence on courts. Jahangirian criticized Pashinian’s political team in January for not “purging” the judiciary. He called for “getting rid of judges who committed blatant human rights violations.” Jahangirian himself was accused by media and civic activists of committing serious human rights abuses when he served as Armenia’s chief military prosecutor from 1997-2006. Armenian Court Upholds Arrest Of Pro-Opposition Doctor • Anush Mkrtchian Armenia - Former President Robert Kocharian (R) greets Armen Charchian, director of the Izmirlian Medical Center, during a rally in Yerevan, May 9, 2021. Armenia’s Court of Appeals on Thursday refused to order the release of an opposition-linked prominent surgeon arrested late last month on charges of pressuring his subordinates to participate in the June 20 parliamentary elections. Armen Charchian, the director of Yerevan’s Izmirlian Medical Center, was prosecuted after a non-governmental organization publicized a leaked audio recording of his meeting with hospital personnel. Charchian, who ran for the parliament on the main opposition Hayastan bloc’s ticket, told 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. Charchian rejects the accusations as baseless and politically motivated. Hayastan’s leadership and the Armenian Apostolic Church, which owns the hospital, have repeatedly demanded his release from custody. The doctor’s lawyers appealed against a lower court’s June 23 decision to allow a law-enforcement agency to arrest him pending investigation. A Court of Appeals judge, Lusine Abgarian, upheld that decision, drawing a strong condemnation from the lawyers. They claimed that she handed down the ruling under strong pressure from the Armenian government. “This is a mockery of jurisprudence,” one of the lawyers, Erik Andreasian, told reporters. He insisted that the court and the investigators have “no grounds” hold his client in pre-trial detention. Aleksanian said earlier that the accusations are groundless because the leaked audio contains only a short excerpt from Charchian’s comments made at the meeting with the Izmirlian Medical Center staff. He said a longer recording submitted by the defense lawyers to the court shows that the hospital chief assured his staffers that he will not resort to “repression” against anyone refusing to go to the polls. Charchian, 61, was hospitalized and reportedly underwent surgery hours before his arrest. He was taken to Yerevan’s Vartashen prison on July 3. 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. Supporters of the opposition bloc led by former President Robert Kocharian rallied outside prosecutors’ headquarters in Yerevan on June 24 to demand his release. Similar protests were also staged there by medics from the Izmirlian Center and other hospitals. Dozens of members and supporters of Hayastan and another major opposition bloc, Paniv Unem, are now prosecuted for allegedly trying to bribe or bully voters. Some of them are also held in detention. No government loyalist is known to have been arrested on election-related charges so far. Both opposition blocs claim that public sector employees openly supporting them were harassed and even fired by government officials in the run-up to or right after the elections. They have also accused central and provincial government bodies of forcing their employees to attend the ruling Civil Contract party’s campaign rallies. The authorities deny these claims. 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.