Friday, April 29, 2022 Officer In Pashinian Motorcade Freed After Deadly Crash April 29, 2022 • Nane Sahakian • Marine Khachatrian Armenia - Law-enforcement officers inspect the scene of a fatal accident caused by a police car escorting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, April 26, 2022. An Armenian law-enforcement agency has set free a police officer whose car hit and killed a young woman while escorting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s motorcade in Yerevan earlier this week. The 28-year-old pregnant woman, Sona Mnatsakanian, was struck by a police SUV while crossing a street in the city center. The vehicle did not stop after the collision that sparked more opposition calls for Pashinian’s resignation. Its driver, Major Aram Navasardian, was arrested a few hours later. The Investigative Committee charged Navasardian with violating traffic rules on Friday hours before releasing him from custody. A spokesperson for the law-enforcement agency said the officer signed a formal pledge not to leave Armenia during the investigation. The investigators did not identify any other suspects in the high-profile case. Navasardian’s lawyer, Ruben Baloyan, said his client is not accused of fleeing the scene and not helping the victim who later died from her severe injuries. “He came back to the scene of the accident and took part in its examination,” Baloyan told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. According the Investigative Committee, the traffic policeman showed up only two hours after Tuesday’s crash. Pashinian’s limousine and the six other cars making up his motorcade also drove past the dying woman and did not try to help her. The prime minister has still not publicly commented on the unprecedented accident. The deputy chief of his staff, Taron Chakhoyan, claimed on Wednesday that the motorcade would have caused a traffic jam and made it harder for an ambulance to reach the victim had it stopped right after the crash. Chakhoyan also said that “internationally accepted rules” stipulate that the motorcades of government leaders “have no right to stop in unauthorized places.” Narek Martirosian, a reporter with the fact-checking website fip.am, dismissed the official’s claim. He said that both Armenian law and an international convention on road safety signed by Armenia require everyone to stop at the scene of an accident caused by them. Opposition figures have been even more critical of Pashinian’s failure to halt his motorcade. Some of them have blamed him for the woman’s death and demanded his resignation. The victim’s family has not publicly commented on the crash so far. Russia’s Lavrov Offers Talks With Armenian, Azeri FMs April 29, 2022 Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov shakes hands with Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan during a joint news conference in Moscow, Russia April 8, 2022. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has offered to hold a trilateral meeting with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts next month, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said on Friday. The ministry said Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan accepted the proposal in a phone call with Lavrov. Mirzoyan, Lavrov and Azerbaijan’s Jeyhun Bayramov would hold the talks on the sidelines of a meeting of top diplomats of ex-Soviet states that will be held in Tajikistan on May 13, it added in a statement. The Russian Foreign Ministry did not mention the proposed talks in its readout of the phone call. It said Lavrov discussed with Mirzoyan the creation of an Armenian-Azerbaijani commission on demarcating the border between the two South Caucasus states. They also “exchanged views” on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty sought by Baku. Mirzoyan and Bayramov discussed these issues on Monday in what was their second phone call in two weeks. The Armenian Foreign Ministry said the two sides will soon hold a “meeting regarding the commission” on border demarcation. Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian first agreed to form such a body during their trilateral meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin last November. However, it was not set up in the following months. Aliyev and Pashinian pledged to form the commission before the end of this month when they met in Brussels on April 6 for talks in Brussels hosted by European Council President Charles Michel. The latter said they also plan to “move rapidly” towards negotiating the peace treaty. Russia responded by accusing the European Union and the United States of trying to hijack Russian efforts to broker peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan as part of the ongoing geopolitical standoff over Ukraine. Pashinian and Russian President Vladimir Putin reaffirmed Russia’s key role in the peace process in a joint declaration issued after their April 19 talks outside Moscow. Michel phoned the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders a few days later. He said afterwards that the EU “remains committed to supporting Armenia and Azerbaijan in their dialogue.” The secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, Armen Grigorian, announced on Friday that he will meet again with Aliyev’s top foreign policy aide, Hikmet Hajiyev, in Brussels on May 2. Aliyev revealed plans for such talks earlier in the day. He praised the EU’s “honest” role in the peace process. Armenia’s Top Court Upholds Criminalization Of Insults April 29, 2022 • Naira Bulghadarian • Artak Khulian Armenia - The Constitutional Court announces its decision to reject opposition appeals against official results of the June 20 parliamentary elections, Yerevan, July 17, 2021. The Constitutional Court has refused to strike down a controversial law that made it a crime to insult Armenian officials and public figures. The amendments to the Armenian Criminal Code passed by the country’s parliament last summer made “grave insults” directed at individuals because of their “public activities” an offense punishable with hefty fines or prison sentences of up to three months. Those individuals may include government and law-enforcement officials, politicians and other public figures. Opposition and human rights groups have criticized the measure, calling it an infringement of free speech. Late last year, opposition lawmakers as well as human rights ombudsman Arman Tatoyan asked the Constitutional Court to declare the amendments unconstitutional. The court said on Friday that it has rejected the appeals. It is due to publicize the full text of the decision by Tuesday. The Office of the Prosecutor-General reported on Thursday that 51 Armenians have been charged with defamation and hundreds of others investigated on the same grounds since the amendments took effect in September. Six of them have already been found guilty by courts, it said in a statement. Many of those individuals are thought to have been prosecuted for insulting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. According to the statement, the vast majority of people facing such criminal proceedings are not politicians or journalists. The prosecutors portrayed this as further proof that the controversial law is not meant to suppress press freedom or political dissent. Ashot Melikian of the Yerevan-based Committee to Protect the Free Speech dismissed that argument. “Freedom of speech does not just apply to mass media,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “It’s a much broader concept.” Melikian again called for a repeal of the legislation that has also been criticized by Western watchdogs such as Freedom House and Amnesty International. Senior lawmakers representing Pashinian’s Civil Contract party have repeatedly dismissed such calls. All forms of slander and defamation had been decriminalized in Armenia in 2010 during former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule. Pashinian Meets Karabakh Leaders, Defends ‘Peace Agenda’ April 29, 2022 • Astghik Bedevian Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pasinian and Karabakh President Arayik Harutiunian arrive for a meeting in Yerevan, Aprl 29, 2022. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian defended his conciliatory policy towards Azerbaijan as he met with Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership in Yerevan on Friday. “I want to say that the agenda of peace is not an agenda of defeat,” he told Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, and other senior Karabakh officials. “The agenda of peace is an agenda of overcoming the horrors of war and the difficulties that followed the war and guaranteeing the security, rights and future of the people.” It was Pashinian’s first face-to-face meeting with the Karabakh leaders since his April 13 speech in the Armenian parliament which caused an outcry in Armenia and Karabakh. Addressing the parliament, Pashinian said that the international community is pressing Armenia to “lower a bit the bar on the question of Nagorno-Karabakh’s status” and recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. He signaled Yerevan’s intention to make such concessions to Baku. Armenian opposition leaders portrayed the speech as further proof that Pashinian has agreed to Azerbaijani control over Karabakh. The authorities in Stepanakert also deplored it. In a resolution, the Karabakh parliament demanded that the Armenian authorities “abandon their current disastrous position.” Earlier this week, Harutiunian claimed to have received assurances from Pashinian that Yerevan will not back any agreements on the territory’s status unacceptable to the Karabakh Armenians. Pashinian said in this regard on Thursday that he will not cut any peace deals with Azerbaijan without consulting with the Karabakh leadership. Harutiunian confirmed his support for the “agenda of peace.” But he also stressed: “On the other hand, I want to make clear that we see no way of deviating from our right to self-determination.” Pashinian made no mention of that right in his opening remarks publicized by his press office. He again did not specify Karabakh’s future status acceptable to Yerevan. He reiterated instead that the people of Karabakh must be able to continue to live in the disputed territory and “consider themselves Armenians.” “This is the agenda which we must jointly advance. I am convinced that we are moving in the right direction, and I am happy when the Artsakh authorities share that conviction,” added the Armenian premier. The meeting with Harutiunian and other Karabakh officials came amid intensifying opposition demonstrations in Yerevan sparked by Pashinian’s Karabakh discourse. Armenia’s leading opposition groups are trying to force Pashinian to resign. 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.