RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/23/2021

                                        Thursday, 


Parliament Speaker Again Approves Hefty Bonuses

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Speaker Alen Simonian chairs a session of the National Assembly, 
Yerevan, December 8, 2021.


Sparking fresh controversy, parliament speaker Alen Simonian has allocated hefty 
holiday bonuses to members and staffers of the National Assembly for the second 
time in three months.

Simonian’s office said on Thursday that the year-end bonuses, equivalent to 
their full monthly salaries, will cost taxpayers 143 million drams ($300,000). 
It argued that payment of the so-called “13th salary” on the eve of the New Year 
and Christmas holidays has long been common practice in the Armenian parliament.

Parliament deputies did not receive such bonuses one year ago, in the wake of 
the devastating war with Azerbaijan. Then speaker Ararat Mirzoyan allocated them 
only to the staffers.

Simonian approved similar, albeit slightly more modest, bonuses on the occasion 
of Armenia’s Independence Day marked on September 21.

Both opposition alliances represented in the National Assembly criticized that 
decision as profligate and unethical Lawmakers representing them donated their 
bonuses to victims of the war and their families.

The Hayastan and Pativ Unem blocs are also critical of the latest allocation. 
Hayastan’s Artsvik Minasian said he and other deputies from the bloc will meet 
soon to decide whether to accept the bonuses.

Pativ Unem’s Hayk Mamijanian was confident that members of his faction will 
again use the bonuses for charitable purposes. “In one way or another, we give 
such money back to the people,” he told said.

Members of Armenia’s 107-seat parliament currently earn roughly 500,000 drams 
(just over $1,000). On top of that, they are paid 250,000 drams each to cover 
their job expenses.

The official monthly wage in the country stands at almost 200,000 drams.


Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Civil Contract party attend a parlament 
session, September 13, 2021.

Vahe Ghalumian, a senior lawmaker from the ruling Civil Contract party, defended 
the latest payouts.

“I find it normal that people working at the National Assembly get a 13th 
salary,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “We must strive to raise all 
pensions and wages in Armenia.”

Ghalumian would not say why the Armenian government is not planning such pay 
rises next year.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian significantly increased the amount and frequency 
of bonuses paid to civil servants and especially high-ranking government 
officials after coming to power in 2018. That prompted strong criticism from 
opposition figures and other government critics.

Pashinian has repeatedly defended these payouts, saying that they discourage 
corrupt practices in the government and the broader public sector.

Varuzhan Hoktanian, a program coordinator at the Armenian affiliate of the 
anti-graft watchdog Transparency International, dismissed the official rationale 
for hefty bonuses.

“It looks like they did the [2018] revolution to improve their lives,” Hoktanian 
said, referring to Pashinian and his political team. “At the end of the day, the 
state budget is losing money. While that was done illegally in the past, they 
now deduct public funds in a legal way.”



French Presidential Candidate Visits Karabakh


Nagorno-Karabakh - French presidential candidate Valerie Pecresse (center) 
visits the Center for Francophonie in Stepanakert, .


Valerie Pecresse, a major French presidential candidate, has visited 
Nagorno-Karabakh, prompting strong condemnation from Azerbaijan’s government.

Pecresse travelled to Karabakh on Wednesday from Armenia where she met with the 
country’s political and spiritual leaders during a trip which observers believe 
is connected with France’s forthcoming presidential elections.

The conservative candidate, who heads the Ile de France region of greater Paris, 
visited the Center for Francophonie in Stepanakert and met there with Ara 
Harutiunian and Davit Babayan, Karabakh’s president and foreign minister 
respectively. The Karabakh government issued no official statements on the 
meeting.

Pecresse was accompanied by French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier and Bruno 
Retailleau, who leads the conservative Les Republicains party’s group in the 
French Senate.

“Why does France not provide humanitarian aid on the ground for the return of 
refugees like other members of the [OSCE] Minsk Group do?” Retailleau asked in a 
tweet on their trip to Karabakh.

The French charge d’affaires in Baku was on Thursday summoned to the Azerbaijani 
Foreign Ministry and handed a protest note. The ministry condemned the trip in a 
statement, saying that it was part of the French presidential race and “directed 
at Azerbaijan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

“In Armenia, a brotherly country for France, I come to plead for the return of 
peace in Nagorno-Karabakh and the strengthening of French support in the 
economic and cultural areas and protection of religious heritage,” Pecresse 
tweeted before flying back to Paris on Thursday.

Speaking to journalists in Yerevan on Tuesday, she reportedly described last 
year’s Armenian-Azerbaijani over Karabakh as an “important warning to Europe.”

“We would be wrong to think that what happened here does not threaten us because 
the history of Europe is full of examples of threats emerging at times when they 
were underestimated,” she said.

France is home to an influential Armenian community. It was instrumental in the 
December 2020 passage by both houses of the French parliament of resolutions 
calling on President Emmanuel Macron’s government to recognize Karabakh as an 
independent republic.

Macron, Pecresse and other candidates are expected to vie for French-Armenian 
votes during the tight race. One of those hopefuls, controversial far-right 
figure Eric Zemmour, visited Armenia last week.

French commentators say that with their pro-Armenian gestures Pecresse and 
Zemmour are also reaching out to France’s non-Armenian conservative electorate 
attached to traditional Christian values.

Pecresse stressed in Yerevan the importance of “protecting Christians” not only 
in Armenia but also France and other European countries. They are facing common 
“dangers,” she said.

A French opinion poll released over the weekend showed Pecresse as the likely 
challenger to Macron in the second round of the presidential elections slated 
for April 2022.



Ousted Yerevan Mayor’s Allegations ‘Investigated’

        • Narine Ghalechian
        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia -- Yerevan Mayor Hayk Marutian at a meeting on August 4, 2020


Prosecutors said on Thursday that they are looking into former Yerevan Mayor 
Hayk Marutian’s allegations that senior officials pressured him to fire his 
subordinates criticizing the government and ensure preferential treatment of 
their cronies doing business in the Armenian capital.

Marutian voiced the allegations on Wednesday shortly before the municipal 
assembly ousted him in a vote of no confidence initiated by its majority loyal 
to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.

He claimed that during his three-year tenure he routinely received phone calls 
from unnamed “various officials” asking for construction permits, land 
allocations, tax advantages and other privileges for “people close to them.” He 
did not name any of them, saying only that he rejected all such requests.

Marutian further alleged that Armenia’s “most high-ranking officials” repeatedly 
pressured him to sack municipal employees posting or “liking” comments on social 
media critical of Pashinian’s government. He said he withstood that pressure as 
well.

Leaders of the pro-government My Step bloc controlling the city council scoffed 
at the allegations, saying that the outgoing mayor has never told them about the 
alleged pressure before.

Daniel Ioannisian, a prominent civic activist leading the Yerevan-based Union of 
Informed Citizens, likewise rebuked the ousted mayor for not going public with 
his accusations earlier.

“This is part of a broader problem that we have, and Marutian’s case is not the 
first time we hear about such stories after the sacking of people involved in 
them,” he said.

Still, Ioannisian took Marutian’s claims seriously and submitted a relevant 
“crime report” to Armenia’s Office of the Prosecutor-General.


Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian receives Yerevan's new Mayor Hrachya 
Sargsian, 

A spokesman for the law-enforcement agency told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that 
it is “examining” the report. The prosecutors did not announce a formal criminal 
investigation as of Thursday evening.

The prosecutors claimed to have still not received a separate report filed by 
Ioannisian earlier this week. It stems from allegations about government 
pressure exerted on city council members refusing to impeach Marutian.

Two such members affiliated with My Step claimed to have been blackmailed ahead 
of the vote of no confidence.

One of them, Lusine Mkhoyan, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Tuesday that 
council majority leaders threatened to strip her of her seat for absenteeism if 
she continues to support Marutian. Mkhoyan said she skipped many sessions of the 
municipal council because of her maternity leave and infection with COVID-19.

The other member, Grigor Yeritsian, claimed to have been forced to resign from 
the council. “I would have never thought that my colleagues could warn me that I 
will have to go if I don’t vote against [the mayor,]” he said.

Marutian pointed to these allegations in his farewell speech on Wednesday. “With 
‘good old’ methods, they literally threatened to fire one member of the Council 
of Elders and cut funding to another,” he charged.

Armen Galjian, the council majority leader, denied the accusations.

My Step, which is controlled by Pashinian’s Civil Contract party, holds at least 
54 seats in the 65-member council. The motion of no confidence in Marutian was 
backed by 44 council members.



Armenian Opposition Refuses To Meet Pashinian


Armenia - Leaders of the opposition minority in the Armenian parliament talk 
during a failed session boycotted by the ruling Civil Contract party, Yerevan, 
November 15, 2021.


Armenia’s two leading opposition forces said on Thursday that they have turned 
down Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s offer to meet behind the closed doors to 
discuss the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances said their parliamentary groups received 
the offer through speaker Alen Simonian.

“The opposition factions replied that they will attend the meeting only in open 
and equal conditions involving accountability to the people, which was rejected 
[by Pashinian,]” they said in a joint statement.

The opposition blocs insisted that “the format of closed-door meetings on issues 
relating to the Armenian people is unacceptable to begin with.” They also 
claimed that Pashinian has repeatedly “manipulated and distorted” such 
discussions which he held with opposition members during last year’s war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Zhoghovurd daily quoted a spokeswoman for Simonian as confirming that 
Pashinian communicated such an offer to the parliamentary opposition and that 
the latter said the meeting must be open to the press. She said the prime 
minister was ready to discuss with his political opponents Armenia’s ongoing 
talks with Azerbaijan.

The paper added that the offer was made “several days ago.”

Pashinian twice met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev during a visit to 
Brussels last week. The two leaders reportedly made progress towards easing 
tensions on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and restoring rail links between the 
two nations.

Following the Brussels talks the Armenian and Turkish governments appointed 
special envoys for upcoming talks on normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations.

Armenian opposition leaders regularly accuse Pashinian of planning to make 
sweeping concessions to Baku and Ankara. The joint statement by Hayastan and 
Pativ Unem denounced his “secret” and “suspicious” talks.


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