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    Categories: 2021

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/11/2021

                                        Monday, 


Armenian Authorities Mull COVID-19 Health Pass

        • Narine Ghalechian

France - A woman shows a COVID-19 health pass in a cafe in Paris, August 9, 2021.


Armenia’s health authorities are considering introducing a mandatory coronavirus 
health pass for entry to cultural and leisure venues, Health Minister Anahit 
Avanesian revealed on Monday.

Speaking in the Yerevan studio of RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, Avanesian said the 
extraordinary measure may be needed to increase the very low vaccination rate in 
the country of about 3 million.

According to the Armenian Ministry of Health, just over 344,000 people received 
at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine and only 170,212 of them were fully 
vaccinated as of October 10.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian deplored these “very bad” numbers last week and 
said the authorities must rely on their “administrative levers” more heavily to 
speed up the vaccination process.

Avanesian said her ministry is now looking into the experience of Western 
countries where people must produce the health pass showing they have been 
vaccinated against COVID-19 or have had a recent negative test in order to visit 
bars, restaurants and other public venues.

“We are working on that,” she said, answering questions from Facebook users. “We 
are collecting facts about what enforcement mechanisms should be put in place.”

“A tentative draft decision will be ready soon, within two weeks,” added the 
minister.

The government has already taken other administrative measures in a bid to have 
many more Armenians get vaccinated. A recent directive signed by Avanesian 
requires virtually all public and private sector employees refusing vaccination 
to take coronavirus tests twice a month at their own expense.

The requirement took effect on October 1, prompting protests from some 
opposition politicians and anti-vaccine campaigners.

Avanesian again defended it. She argued that Armenian hospitals are increasingly 
struggling to cope with a new wave of coronavirus infections that began this 
summer.

The Ministry of Health has reported an average of over 1,000 cases and at least 
20 coronavirus-related deaths a day over the past week.



Armenian Court OKs Heavier Fines For Defamation


Armenia - The Constitutional Court holds a hearing in Yerevan, July 9, 2021.


In a ruling condemned by press freedom groups, Armenia’s Constitutional Court 
has upheld the constitutionality of a government-backed bill that will triple 
maximum legal fines set for defamation.

The bill involving amendments to the Armenian Civil Code was drafted by a close 
associate of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and passed by the National Assembly 
in March. It stipulates that media outlets and individuals convicted of 
“slander” could be fined as much as 6 million drams ($12,450) while those making 
offensive claims will face a maximum fine of up to 2 million drams.

President Armen Sarkissian refused to sign the bill into law in April, saying he 
shares concerns that it could be exploited by government officials and 
politicians to stifle press freedom. Sarkissian also suggested that the bill is 
“contentious in terms of its constitutionality ” and asked the Constitutional 
Court to pass judgment on that.

In its verdict publicized at the weekend, the court ruled that the amendments do 
not run counter to the Armenian constitution.

Armenia’s leading media associations expressed outrage at that conclusion in a 
joint statement issued on Monday. They argued that it contradicts a 
Constitutional Court ruling on the issue handed down in 2011 and accused the 
court of ignoring Council of Europe recommendations and precedent-setting 
decisions of the European Court of Human Rights.

The statement signed by 11 organizations also says: “Application of the 
disproportionately strict measures would cause more damage than contribute to 
the struggle against vices. Especially given that both politicians and officials 
and representatives of various strata of the population often perceive criticism 
directed at them as a defamation or insult and go to court. This could create 
serious obstacles to unfettered activities of the media.”

The main author of the controversial bill, parliament speaker Alen Simonian, 
earlier rejected such criticism echoed by Western watchdogs such as Freedom 
House and Reporters Without Borders.

The Armenian media groups linked the heavier fines for defamation to what they 
described as other curbs on news reporting imposed by the country’s current 
leadership. Their statement points to recently enacted bills that banned media 
outlets from citing social media accounts belonging to unknown individuals and 
made it a crime to gravely insult state officials.

The Armenian authorities’ decision to criminalize slander and defamation was 
strongly criticized by Freedom House late last month. The Washington-based group 
said it testifies to a “clear degradation of democratic norms in Armenia, 
including freedom of expression.”



Georgian PM Visits Armenia On ‘Mediation’ Mission

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - Prime Ministers Nikol Pashinian of Armenia and Irakli Gharibashvili of 
Georgia meet in Yerevan, October 9, 2021


Georgia’s Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili visited Yerevan and met with his 
Armenian counterpart Nikol Pashinian on Saturday as part of his attempts to 
improve Armenia’s relations with Azerbaijan.

Gharibashvili met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Baku late last 
month three weeks after receiving Pashinian in Tbilisi. He said he discussed 
with Aliyev “the importance of transforming the region” but did not elaborate.

Gharibashvili also divulged few details of his latest “productive” talks with 
Pashinian. He tweeted on Sunday that they discussed a “new peace initiative for 
the South Caucasus and Georgia’s readiness to pursue active mediation to create 
more opportunities for sustainable peace and development in the region.”

“Tbilisi has taken on an active mediating role in normalizing relations between 
its neighbors, notably Armenia and Azerbaijan,” the Georgian premier told 
reporters on Monday. He again did not go into details.

An Armenian government statement on the talks said the two leaders “exchanged 
thoughts on the situation and developments in the region.”

“The parties reaffirmed their readiness to consistently deepen bilateral 
friendly ties and agreed to continue their active dialogue,” added the statement.

Speaking ahead of his September 29 trip to Baku, Gharibashvili said he could 
play a “positive role” in building bridges between Georgia’s two South Caucasus 
neighbors locked in a bitter conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. His foreign 
minister, Davit Zalkaliani, said on Friday that he has already helped to 
establish “active communication” between Yerevan and Baku.

In June, the Georgian government facilitated the release of 15 Armenian 
soldiers, taken prisoner by Azerbaijan during last year’s war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh, in exchange for maps of Armenian minefields provided to Baku. 
It is not clear whether Tbilisi hopes to arrange more such swaps or assist in 
the opening of Armenian-Azerbaijani transport links.

Alexander Iskandarian, the director of the Yerevan-based Caucasus Institute, 
noted that Armenia has until now negotiated with Azerbaijan mainly with Russian 
mediation.

“It’s hard to tell at this point just how serious these contacts [initiated by 
Georgia] are and whether they can yield any results,” Iskandarian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service.

Pashinian paid an official visit to Georgia on September 8. Turkish President 
Recep Tayyip Erdogan said afterwards that the Armenian prime minister 
communicated through Gharibashvili an offer to meet with him and discuss the 
possibility of normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations.

Erdogan appeared to make such a meeting conditional Armenia recognizing 
Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh and agreeing to open a transport corridor 
that would connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave.

The press offices of the Armenian and Georgian premiers refused to say on Monday 
whether Turkish-Armenian relations were also on the agenda of their weekend 
talks.



Karabakh Civilian Killed In Truce Violation

        • Marine Khachatrian

Nagorno-Karabakh - A road sign at the entrance to the town of Martakert.


An ethnic Armenian farmer in Nagorno-Karabakh was shot dead by Azerbaijani 
forces while working in his pomegranate grove at the weekend, authorities in 
Stepanakert said.

The 55-year-old man, Aram Tepnants, was a resident of Martakert, a small town in 
northern Karabakh town close to the Armenian-Azerbaijani “line of contact” in 
and around the disputed territory.

“He worked with his own tractor and in his own grove,” a spokesman for the 
Karabakh police told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Saturday. “An Azerbaijani army 
sniper noticed him and fired in that direction, fatally wounding him.”

The Martakert mayor, Misha Gyurjian, said that Russian peacekeeping soldiers 
deployed along the “line of contact” witnessed the incident. “Peacekeepers were 
sitting with [Tepnants] inside his tractor,” claimed Gyurjian.

The Russian Defense Ministry confirmed on Sunday that the farmer was killed “as 
a result of gunfire from the Azerbaijani side.”

“The Russian [peacekeeping] contingent command is conducting an investigation 
into the incident with the participation of representatives of the two sides,” 
the ministry said in a statement.

Azerbaijan denied that its troops killed the Karabakh Armenian civilian.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry insisted that he was killed by Azerbaijani sniper 
fire and accused Baku of violating the terms of a Russian-brokered ceasefire 
that stopped last year’s Armenian-Azerbaijani war. In a short statement, it 
demanded a “proper investigation” into Tepnants’s death.

Tepnants is the first Karabakh civilian killed since the ceasefire came into 
force on November 10, 2020.

In the last several months, Karabakh authorities have periodically accused 
Azerbaijani troops of opening small arms fire at Karabakh villages mostly 
located close to the town of Shushi (Shusha) occupied by them during the 
six-week war. They have said that such incidents are aimed at intimidating 
Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population and causing them to leave the territory.

The Karabakh foreign ministry charged that the purpose of the deadly shooting 
outside Martakert was to not only trigger a “mass emigration” of Karabakh 
Armenians but also undermine the Russian peacekeeping mission. It urged Russia, 
the United States and France, the three world powers co-heading the OSCE Minsk 
Group, to “hold the Azerbaijani side accountable and prevent such incidents in 
the future.”


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