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    Categories: 2022

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/04/2022

                                        Monday, April 4, 2022


Vanadzor Oppositionists Decry ‘Illegal Power Grab’

        • Karine Simonian

Armenia - Former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon Aslanian prepares to cast a ballot in a 
local election, December 6, 2021


Opposition groups in Vanadzor on Monday accused Armenia’s leadership of seeking 
to nullify their victory in last December’s municipal election through what they 
see as an unconstitutional bill.

The country’s third largest city has had no mayor since Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s Civil Contract party was defeated in the election.

Civil Contract won only 25 percent of the vote there, compared with 39 percent 
polled by an opposition bloc led by former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon Aslanian. The 
bloc teamed up with the opposition Fatherland party, giving them a majority of 
seats in the local council empowered to elect the head of the community.

Aslanian thus looked set to regain his post lost in October. But ten days after 
the ballot, he was arrested on corruption charges rejected by him as politically 
motivated.

Later in December, Armenia’s Administrative Court banned the new Vanadzor 
council from holding any sessions until July this year. It cited an appeal 
against the election results lodged by another pro-government party.

The Armenian parliament hastily passed late last week government-backed legal 
amendments allowing Pashinian to appoint an acting mayor of the city. The 
authors of the bill said it is aimed at addressing the post-election “disruption 
of normal governance” in Vanadzor and possibly other communities..

Opposition lawmakers dismissed that explanation, condemning the bill as an 
attempt to overturn local election results.

Aslanian’s Vanadzor-based political allies echoed those allegations. One of 
them, Fatherland member Vahe Dokhoyan, said that Pashinian’s administration 
violated the Armenian constitution and may now be preparing to force another 
municipal election later this year.

“Why did they push such a bill through the National Assembly? In order to 
install a person of their choice as community head,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service.

Dokhoyan also claimed that the government was behind the court injunction 
blocking sessions of the Vanadzor council.

“What keeps them from allowing the court or telling it, as they always do, to 
let [the council] meet and elect a mayor?” he said.



Armenia’s Food Security Not At Risk, Says UN Agency

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - Wheat harvest in Shirak province, 1Aug2012.


Armenia is unlikely to experience a serious shortage of food staples as a result 
of the war in Ukraine, a senior official from the United Nations food agency 
said on Monday.

“The situation in the country in terms of food security is not something which 
is now an immediate threat,” Raimund Jehle, the representative of the Rome-based 
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Armenia, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service.

“There are problems with access to fertilizers and other essential items,” he 
said. “But the Armenian government is making efforts to ensure that those items 
are accessible to farmers.”

The FAO said last month that international food and feed prices could rise by up 
to 20 percent following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The two countries jointly 
account for around 25 percent of world wheat exports and 16 percent of world 
corn exports.

Armenia - FAO's Raimund Jehle speaks to RFE/RL, April 4, 2022

Armenia is heavily dependent on imports of Russian wheat, which met more than 
two-thirds of its domestic demand last year. Russia also accounts for 97 percent 
of cooking oil consumed by the South Caucasus country and nearly half of its 
sugar imports.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Economy Minister Vahan Kerobian said in early 
March that fallout from the conflict in Ukraine will push up the cost of these 
and other basic foodstuffs in Armenia.

Kerobian warned of a “serious challenge to our food security.” He urged Armenian 
farmers to cultivate more land, saying that the price hikes will make farming 
“more lucrative.”

Jehle said that the increased cost of fertilizers, seeds and fuel poses a major 
challenge to the Armenian agricultural sector. Greater government support for 
the sector could mitigate these problems, he said.

“Small and vulnerable farmers will be especially in need of assistance,” added 
the UN official.

The government decided last month to subsidize the prices of fertilizers for 
such farmers. The decision sparked protests by more affluent farmers with larger 
land holdings. They said they too should be eligible for the subsidy.



Karabakh Official Laments ‘Lack Of Support’ By Armenia

        • Artak Khulian

Nagorno Karabakh - The Karabakh president, Arayik Harutiunian , holds a session 
of his natonal security council, Stepanakert, Aprl 1, 2022


Armenia has not only stopped being the guarantor of Nagorno-Karabakh’s security 
but is also not providing the Armenian-populated territory with adequate 
diplomatic support, a senior official in Stepanakert complained on Monday.

Hayk Khanumian, the Karabakh minister for local government and public 
infrastructures, said this is what is fuelling calls by some Karabakh Armenians 
for a referendum on becoming part of Russia.

“The Republic of Armenia used to be the guarantor of our security, and in 
essence it cannot perform that function anymore,” Khanumian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service in an interview. “The Russian peacekeeping contingent does not 
have a mandate to ensure such protection. So people are just trying to raise 
security issues. They want to be protected.”

“Defense is not just about weapons and ammunition,” he said. “It’s a whole set 
of measures. Diplomacy, diplomatic service is an important part of that, and it 
is quite dire straits these days. I’m talking about Armenia.

“Often times not only does it not carry out tasks but also does not receive 
tasks. The bodies formulating [Armenia’s] foreign policy, whose orders the 
diplomatic service is supposed to execute, are confused or do not operate 
normally on the issue of Artsakh and defense.”

Armenia -- Hayk Khanumian is interviewed by RFE/RL, Stepanakert, April 4, 2022.

Khanumian spoke two days before Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s scheduled talks 
with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev that will be hosted by European Council 
President Charles Michel. The talks are expected to focus on an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani “peace treaty” sought by Azerbaijan.

Baku wants the treaty to be based on five elements, including a mutual 
recognition of each other’s territorial integrity. Pashinian publicly stated on 
March 31 that Yerevan is ready to negotiate a deal along these lines.

Pashinian did not explicitly mention the question of Karabakh’s status, speaking 
instead of the need to protect “the rights of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians.” His 
remarks were construed by Armenian opposition leaders and other critics as a 
further indication that the Armenian government is ready to recognize 
Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh.

Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan insisted on April 1 that Yerevan will seek to 
include the issue of the status on the agenda of negotiations on the peace 
accord.

NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Armored vehicles of Russian peacekeepers move along the road 
towards Agdam from their check point outside Askeran, November 20, 2020

On March 26, Karabakh’s leadership appealed to Russian President Vladimir Putin 
to deploy more Russian soldiers in Karabakh. It said that Russia’s 2,000-strong 
peacekeeping contingent is too small to carry out its mission.

The appeal came two days after Azerbaijani forces seized a village in eastern 
Karabakh and surrounding territory before engaging in deadly fighting with 
Karabakh Armenian troops. The fighting stopped following the peacekeepers’ 
intervention.

Khanumian said that the current situation in the conflict zone leaves the 
Karabakh Armenians with no choice but to primarily rely on their military and 
other security forces.

The Russian peacekeepers were deployed in Karabakh under the terms of a 
Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement that stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war 
in November 2020.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 
Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS