RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/16/2022

                                        Wednesday, 


Pashinian, Putin Discuss Karabakh In Phone Call


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Russian President Vladimir Putin 
during their meeting in Sochi, Russia, November 26, 2021.


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed the situation around 
Nagorno-Karabakh and other issues in a telephone conversation with Russian 
President Vladimir Putin reported on Wednesday.

The transcript of the call released by Pashinian’s press office said that the 
two leaders, in particular, discussed the process of implementing agreements 
reached by Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia and included in their trilateral 
statements of November 9, 2020, January 11 and November 26, 2021.

Pashinian and Putin also reportedly discussed Armenia’s application to the OSCE 
Minsk Group co-chairs, including Russia, for the organization of talks on a 
peace treaty with Azerbaijan.

“The leaders of Armenia and Russia exchanged views on the Armenian-Turkish 
dialogue, recent regional developments and the situation around Ukraine. Issues 
related to the forthcoming official visit of the prime minister of Armenia to 
the Russian Federation were also discussed,” the press release said.

In an unrelated development Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hailed the 
process of Turkish-Armenian normalization as he hosted his Turkish counterpart 
Mevlut Cavusoglu in Moscow on Wednesday.

“We welcome the course towards the normalization of these bilateral ties between 
the two neighboring countries,” Lavrov said.



Armenian Opposition Seeks Debate In Parliament On Humanitarian Issues In Karabakh

        • Naira Nalbandian

The Armenian parliament in session (file photo)


Two opposition factions in the Armenian parliament have called for a discussion 
of humanitarian issues in Nagorno-Karabakh at a regular session of the 
legislative body scheduled to begin next week.

Hayastan and Pativ Unem said they are particularly concerned about the situation 
in Stepanakert and other areas of the region that for days have been left 
without natural gas supplies from Armenia following reported damage on the main 
pipeline passing via Azeri-controlled territory.

The situation affects both businesses and ordinary residents in Nagorno-Karabakh 
some of whom have to fall back on firewood for heating amid still freezing 
temperatures.

Hayastan lawmaker Aram Vardevanian said it is important that Armenia adequately 
respond to what he described as a humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“Since March 8, thousands of our compatriots in Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh – ed.] 
have been deprived of the possibility of heating their homes [with natural gas]. 
Even hospitals have been left without heating. I was in Artsakh a few days ago, 
and I saw with my own eyes how, for example, in a children’s hospital where 
there are more than 40 patients there is no heating,” the opposition lawmaker 
said.

For an urgent discussion on a particular issue its initiators are required to 
enlist the support of a quarter of lawmakers. The two opposition factions 
together are able to collected the required number of signatures.

Hayastan and Pativ Unem said they want the sitting to be held on March 22 and 
have already invited Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and Deputy Prime Minister 
Mher Grigorian to attend it as co-rapporteurs from the government. The 
opposition factions said they have not received a response from the ruling 
faction on whether its members will participate in the discussion or not.

The opposition has designated Tigran Abrahamian, a member of Pativ Unem, as the 
keynote speaker during the discussion.

“Artsakh is in crisis. We see a problem not only in the current situation. It is 
obvious that Azerbaijan will also have the opportunity in the future – something 
that it has already shown – to use these tools to influence our compatriots 
living in Artsakh and extort concessions on issues related to Artsakh and 
Armenia. Officials who are related to this humanitarian situation in 
socio-economic or infrastructural terms or should have been in contact with 
relevant bodies of Artsakh should also provide an explanation about what steps 
they had taken to prevent such a situation,” Abrahamian said.

The pipeline supplying gas from Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh was damaged at a 
section passing near Shushi (Susa), a town that has been controlled by 
Azerbaijan after a 2020 war in the region.

De-facto authorities in Stepanakert accused Azerbaijan of not allowing ethnic 
Armenian maintenance workers to approach and repair the damaged pipeline to 
restore gas supplies vital for the region.

The lack of natural gas has, in particular, created problems for the work of 
bakeries in Nagorno-Karabakh. Power outages are also frequent in the region as 
the local grid has to work at its maximum capacity. Ethnic Armenian authorities 
suspended classes in schools on Monday because of the absence of heating in 
classrooms.

Officials in Stepanakert said on Wednesday that following negotiations held with 
the assistance of the Armenian government and Russian peacekeepers Azerbaijan 
today began repairing the damaged section of the gas pipeline. They said that 
gas supply to Nagorno-Karabakh would be restored shortly.

Ahead of his two-day visit to Armenia earlier this week the European Union’s 
special representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in Georgia Toivo 
Klaar said that Brussels was concerned over the disruption of natural gas 
supplies to Nagorno-Karabakh as well as the latest shootings in the region. The 
European diplomat said these issues would “certainly be on the agenda” of his 
meetings in Yerevan.

“Obviously, these developments are of concern to the EU. It would be essential 
that the gas pipeline is repaired as soon as possible and that the shootings 
stop,” Klaar said.



Armenian Government Urged To Take Preventive ‘Anti-Crisis’ Measures

        • Artak Khulian

A textile factory in Armenia (file photo)


The Armenian government should implement a full-scale anti-crisis program to 
prevent irreversible economic losses, an opposition lawmaker has said.

Tadevos Avetisian, a member of the opposition Hayastan faction, made this 
statement in an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service late on Tuesday amid an 
admission by the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) that the country’s economy will 
significantly slow down this year because of the indirect effects of Western 
sanctions imposed on Russia over the war in Ukraine.

Russia is Armenia’s number one trade partner. Consumer demand in Armenia is also 
largely shored up due to remittances wired by Armenian migrant workers in Russia 
back home. The depreciating Russian ruble and expected fall in the purchasing 
power of the population in Russia may also cause problems for Armenian exporters.

The CBA on Tuesday revised its forecast for Armenia’s annual economic growth in 
2022 from 5.3 percent down to 1.6 percent. Martin Galstian, the governor of the 
CBA, said that certain problems are currently observed in Armenia’s mining and 
processing industries, while the construction sector is also somewhat shrinking.


Tadevos Avetisian

Avetisian said that in such conditions the government should take urgent steps 
to prevent the economic situation from further deteriorating.

“It is incomprehensible that the government is not bringing a full anti-crisis 
program now, because we are again facing an imminent economic crisis,” the 
opposition lawmaker said.

Avetisian, in particular, called for an urgent revision of the state budget in 
favor of spending more on anti-crisis measures. “There are numerous programs and 
funds that were included in the budget, to put it mildly, for populist motives. 
In ordinary conditions those programs perhaps would have been understandable. 
But in the current conditions those programs should be revised to provide more 
stimulus for the economy,” he said.

Government officials in Armenia have not yet reacted to opposition calls for 
‘anti-crisis’ steps. The government is likely to address some of the 
difficulties stemming from the global geopolitical and economic situation during 
its next session due on Thursday.

Meanwhile, to curb inflation, which stood at 6.5 percent in February, the CBA on 
Tuesday raised its benchmark interest rate by 1.25 percentage points – to 9.25 
percent.

“In the current situation, the CBA’s governing board considers it expedient to 
increase the refinancing rate by a relatively large step,” the regulator said.

The CBA expects that as a result of such policy measures Armenia’s 12-month 
inflation will gradually decrease, reaching the target of 4 percent.


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