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    Categories: 2022

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/17/2022

                                        Thursday, 


Prosecutors Seek Pashinian’s Acquittal In 2008 Unrest Case

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenia - A man walks past burned cars on a street in Yerevan where security 
forces clashed with opposition protesters, 2 March 2008.


Prosecutors have asked Armenia’s Court of Cassation to absolve Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian from all responsibility for the 2008 post-election unrest in 
Yerevan that left ten people dead.

Pashinian played a major role in an opposition movement led by former President 
Levon Ter-Petrosian, the main opposition candidate in a hotly disputed 
presidential election.

The then 32-year-old journalist was the main speaker at an opposition rally held 
in Yerevan on March 1-2, 2008 amid vicious clashes between some protesters and 
security forces. Eight protesters and two police officers were killed in what 
was the worst street violence in Armenia’s history.

Outgoing President Robert Kocharian declared a state of emergency and ordered 
Armenian army units into the capital, accusing the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition 
of attempting to seize power.

Pashinian went into hiding but surrendered to law-enforcement authorities in 
July 2009. He was subsequently tried and sentenced to seven years in prison for 
organizing the “mass disturbances,” a charge rejected by him as politically 
motivated.

Like other Ter-Petrosian allies, Pashinian was released from jail in May 2011 
under a general amnesty declared by the former Armenian authorities.


Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian addresses protesters that barricaded 
themselves in central Yerevan, 1 March 2008.

A spokesman for Armenia’s Office of the Prosecutor-General confirmed on Thursday 
that it has appealed to the Court of Cassation to overturn the guilty verdict in 
Pashinian’s trial and declare him innocent.

The official, Gor Abrahamian, insisted that the move “has nothing to do with the 
position occupied” by Pashinian at present. He said it is based on a ruling 
handed down by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) last month.

The Strasbourg court ruled that Armenian law-enforcement authorities had 
violated Pashinian’s freedom of speech and assembly.

The authorities radically changed the official version of the events of March 
2008 shortly after Pashinian swept to power in May 2018. They prosecuted 
Kocharian and three other former officials on coup charges strongly denied by 
them.

Kocharian was first arrested in July 2018. He was then twice freed and twice 
rearrested before Armenia’s Court of Appeals released him on bail in June 2020.

A district court in Yerevan acquitted Kocharian and the other defendants in 
April 2021 after the Constitutional Court declared the coup charges 
unconstitutional.

The 67-year-old ex-president has said that his prosecution is part of a 
“political vendetta” waged by Pashinian. The prime minister has denied that.



Yerevan Seeks Railway Accord With Baku

        • Karine Simonian

Armenia - A disused railway leading to Azerbaijan's Nakhichevan region.


Official Yerevan said on Thursday that it needs to sign a legally binding 
agreement with Baku before it can start building a railway that will connect 
Azerbaijan with its Nakhichevan exclave.

The Armenian government set up last month a task force that will coordinate 
construction of the 45-kilometer railway estimated to cost about $200 million. 
The move followed verbal understandings reached by Prime Minister Pashinian and 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev late last year.

Speaking at a weekly session of his cabinet, Pashinian reiterated on Thursday 
that the Armenian side is already gearing up for the construction.

“Although technical and design works have already started, we hope that the 
understandings reached will soon be registered in the form of a document so that 
a de jure process also unfolds in full swing,” he said.

Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian, who represents Armenia in Russian-mediated 
talks on transport links with Azerbaijan, defended this position.

“Before we can launch such a project there needs to be a written agreement to 
that effect because it requires substantial investments,” he told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service.

Grigorian discussed the matter with Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Alexei 
Overchuk and the head of Russian Railways (RZD) state monopoly, Oleg Belozerov, 
when they visited Yerevan two weeks ago. He gave no details of the talks, saying 
only that the Russian and Armenian governments are closely cooperating.

RZD runs Armenia’s railway network, called South Caucasus Railway (SCR), in line 
with a 30-year management contract signed with the former Armenian government in 
2008. Grigorian indicated that the Azerbaijan-Nakhichevan rail link passing 
through Armenia’s Syunik province will also be managed by SCR.



Kocharian Deplores Armenia’s ‘Pro-Turkish Drift’

        • Nane Sahakian

Armenia - Former President Robert Kocharian speaks at a news conference in 
Yerevan, .


Armenia’s political leadership is succumbing to “the Turkish-Azerbaijani threat” 
instead of strengthening the armed forces and deepening military ties with 
Russia, former President Robert Kocharian said on Thursday.

Kocharian, who leads the main opposition Hayastan alliance, accused the 
authorities of being ready to increase “Turkish influence” at the expense of 
“Russian presence” in the country.

“More than one year has passed since the war [in Nagorno-Karabakh] but during 
this time almost nothing has been done to restore our army’s combat readiness 
and weaponry,” he told a news conference.

In these circumstances, he said, Russia has become the only real guarantor of 
Armenia’s national security.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian pledged to deepen military ties with Moscow and 
embark on “large-scale defense reforms” following Armenia’s defeat in the 
six-year war stopped by a Russian-brokered truce in November 2020. Russian 
Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu promised continued military aid to Yerevan in 
August.

Kocharian insisted that only Moscow can help Armenia rebuild its army and 
develop a “new military-industrial complex.”

“We need to understand to what extent Russia is prepared for such assistance and 
cooperation with Armenia. I believe that is possible but also doubt that there 
are such signals or requests from our side,” he said.

The ex-president claimed that Pashinian has different geopolitical priorities 
now, pointing to ongoing talks on normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations.

“Turkey will cease to regard us as an obstacle to its [regional] programs only 
if it gains total influence on our political processes and policies,” he said. 
“This means that Turkey must also have dominant positions in our economy and 
strong influence on our political elite.

“When could this happen? When the Russian presence here starts coming to an end 
and being replaced with Turkish influence.”

Kocharian’s bloc and other opposition groups have expressed serious concern over 
the Turkish-Armenian talks, saying that Yerevan is ready to make unilateral 
concessions to Ankara. Pashinian’s government insists that it continues to stand 
for an unconditional normalization of bilateral ties.

Russia as well as the United States and the European Union have publicly 
welcomed the Turkish-Armenian dialogue. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov 
again discussed it with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan in a phone call 
on Tuesday.



Armenia Pressing Ahead With Road Upgrades In Strategic Region

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian chairs a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, 
.


The Armenian government on Thursday took the first step towards attracting 
potential contractors for the multimillion-dollar construction of a new highway 
in Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province bordering Iran.

The 60-kilometer highway is to connect the provincial towns of Sisian and 
Kajaran. It will significantly shorten travel time between Armenia and Iran and 
bypass Armenian-Azerbaijani border areas.

Armenia lost control over a 21-kilometer stretch of an existing Syunik road 
leading to the Iranian border after a controversial troop withdrawal ordered by 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian following the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Yerevan had to hastily finish work on a 70-kilometer bypass road late last year. 
Pashinian has acknowledged that it is not convenient enough for heavy trucks and 
needs further upgrades.

The bypass road will presumably overlap the Sisian-Kajaran highway. According to 
Minister for Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel Sanosian, the 
mountainous highway will include as many as 27 bridges and five tunnels with a 
combined length of 12 kilometers.

“We will do everything to get large international companies seriously interested 
[in the project,]” Sanosian told a weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan.

Pashinian announced at the meeting that his government has formally initiated a 
“prequalification” of prospective bidders that will be shortlisted for an 
international tender for the project.

“We hope that by the end of the year we will have [selected] a company that will 
carry out that work,” he said.

Pashinian also said that the 60-kilometer highway will cost Armenia “several 
hundred million dollars.” Neither he nor other government members specified the 
sources of funding for the project.

The government is understood to expect Western donors, notably the European 
Union, to foot the bill. The EU expressed readiness last year to provide up to 
600 million euros ($680 million) in grants, loans and loan guarantees for road 
construction in Armenia.

Pashinian suggested on Thursday that the Kajaran-Sisian highway will link up 
with another planned road in Syunik that would connect Azerbaijan with its 
Nakhichevan exclave.

Yerevan and Baku disagree on the status of that road link. Azerbaijani President 
Ilham Aliyev has repeatedly demanded an exterritorial land corridor passing 
through Syunik.

The Armenian side rejects these demands, saying that Azerbaijani freight cannot 
be exempt from Armenian border controls. Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi appeared 
to back Yerevan’s stance during a January 3 phone call with Pashinian.

The Iranian ambassador in Yerevan, Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri, said later in 
January that Syunik must remain a key route for cargo shipments between Armenia 
and Iran even after the anticipated launch of Armenian-Azerbaijani transport 
links. The Iranian side is therefore looking forward to further highway upgrades 
in the strategic Armenian region, he said.


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