Friday, Armenian Church Warns Against ‘Humiliating’ Concessions To Baku Armenia - Catholicos Garegin II holds a religious ceremony on an open-air altar in Echmiadzin, April 14, 2022. The Armenian Apostolic Church on Friday warned Armenia’s political leadership against compromising on Nagorno-Karabakh’s right to self-determination in peace talks with Azerbaijan. The church’s Supreme Spiritual Council headed by Catholicos Garegin II said it must not make such concessions “regardless of existing pressures and external threats.” “Peace cannot be established through the humiliation of national dignity, amid incessant encroachments on the territorial integrity of our state, the presence of prisoners of war, and Azerbaijan’s constant threats and propaganda of anti-Armenianism,” the council said after a three-day meeting held at the church’s Mother See in Echmiadzin. It said the Armenian authorities must make sure that the Karabakh Armenians right to self-determination does not become “a subject of bargaining” in the negotiating process. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other senior officials have not stated publicly whether they will bring up the principle of self-determination of peoples, long championed by Armenia, in planned negotiations on a comprehensive peace treaty with Azerbaijan. They have said only that the talks should address the questions of Karabakh’s status and the security of its population. Speaking in the Armenian parliament on April 13, 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 hinted at his readiness to make such concessions, drawing strong criticism from his political opponents and Karabakh’s leadership. Armenia - Opposition supporters march through Republic Square in Yerevan, May 17, 2022. Armenian opposition leaders charged that Pashinian has agreed to Azerbaijani control over the disputed territory. They went on to launch on May 1 daily street protests in Yerevan aimed at forcing him to step down. The church council, which also comprises prominent laymen, expressed concern at “internal political developments” in Armenia. It urged all sides to display mutual “tolerance” and avoid violence and “disproportionate use of force.” The ancient church, to which the vast majority of Armenians nominally belong, enjoyed strong government support until the 2018 “velvet revolution” that brought Pashinian to power. The prime minister’s frosty relationship with Garegin has increasingly deteriorated since then. Pashinian openly attacked the church when he campaigned for the June 2021 parliamentary elections. He said “corrupt clergymen” are part of Armenia’s traditional political, intellectual and spiritual elites that “did everything” to prevent the 2018 regime change. Garegin’s office rejected the accusations. Turkey Worried About Opposition Pressure On Armenian PM • Tatevik Sargsian Uruguay - Turkey's Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu makes a hand gesture associated with a Turkish ultranationalist group to Armenians protesting against his visit to Montevideo, April 23, 2022. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has signaled concerns about ongoing street protests against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s conciliatory policy on Azerbaijan, saying that the United States and other foreign partners should increase their support for his government. “We can see that the Armenian authorities are under pressure from radical forces at home and the [Armenian] Diaspora abroad,” Cavusoglu told Azerbaijani journalists on Thursday. “We have told [U.S. Secretary of State] Antony Blinken and our other partners that Armenia needs to be encouraged more on this issue.” Blinken praised “the courage and the flexibility” demonstrated by Pashinian after holding talks with Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan in Washington on May 2. Armenia’s leading opposition forces launched daily demonstrations in Yerevan on May 1, accusing Pashinian of planning to cede Karabakh to Azerbaijan. Pashinian fuelled such allegations after his April 6 meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev held in Brussels. Speaking in the Armenian parliament on April 13, he said the international community wants Armenia to scale back its demands on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh and sign a corresponding peace treaty with Azerbaijan. Cavusoglu mentioned the treaty, saying that Ankara looks forward negotiations on it planned by Armenia and Azerbaijan. He also noted that Baku supports Turkish-Armenian talks on normalizing bilateral relations which were launched in January. Armenian opposition leaders have voiced serious concerns over the normalization talks as well. They say that Pashinian is ready to accept Turkish preconditions relating to not only the Karabakh conflict but also the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey. Pashinian Touts ‘Armenian Democracy’ Amid Continuing Protests • Artak Khulian • Robert Zargarian Armenia - Opposition supporters demonstrate outside the venue of the Democracy Forum attended by Armenian officials and Western diplomats, Yerevan, May 20, 2022. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian again claimed to have turned Armenia into an established democracy on Friday as the country's main opposition groups continued daily demonstrations demanding his resignation. “Our task today is to prove that democracy can ensure the internal and external security of our country,” Pashinian told a “forum for democracy” in Yerevan attended by Armenian government officials, pro-government lawmakers, civic activists and Western diplomats. “We have fought for the establishment of democracy in Armenia and we have accomplished our mission, even though we have not completed our mission,” he said in a speech. “In order to strengthen democracy, it is now very important to rally around another mission: we must bring peace to Armenia just like we have brought democracy to Armenia. One can hardly exist without the other.” Pashinian alluded to his conciliatory policy on Azerbaijan and Turkey which triggered the opposition protests three weeks ago. The prime minister said last month that the international community is pressing Armenia to “lower the bar” on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh and recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. He signaled readiness to make such concessions, stoking opposition allegations that he has agreed to help Baku regain full control over Karabakh. Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses the Armenian Forum for Demoracy, . The forum took place in a Yerevan hotel guarded by scores of riot police and other security forces. Hundreds of people led by opposition parliamentarians rallied outside the building. Some of those lawmakers tried to enter the hotel’s main conference room to take part in the forum but were stopped by Pashinian’s bodyguards. One of them, Agnes Khamoyan, said this made mockery of the declared purpose of the gathering. Other lawmakers again hit out at the U.S. ambassador to Armenia, Lynne Tracy, who effectively welcomed earlier this week the outcome of last year’s parliamentary elections won by Pashinian’s party. In an interview with the Armenpress news agency, Tracy said Armenians “recommitted themselves” to democratic values during the snap polls. Ishkhan Saghatelian, the main speaker at the ongoing opposition protests, responded by accusing the United States and other Western powers of turning a blind eye to government pressure on the Armenian judiciary, the existence of “dozens of political prisoners” and other human rights abuses in the country. “With you silence, you are contributing to dictatorship in Armenia,” Saghatelian charged on Wednesday. Armenia - Riot police guard the venue of the Armenian Forum for Democracy, Yerevan, . Speaking at Friday’s conference, Tracy expressed concern over what she described as disproportionate of use of force by the Armenian police against protesters. She suggested that Pashinian’s government is “taking heed of the need to investigate” the police actions. The U.S. envoy said at the same time that the protests should be peaceful and not create “chaos” in the streets. The police arrested hundreds of protesters in Yerevan earlier this week. Virtually all of them were set free a few hours later. Still, law-enforcement authorities are pressing criminal charges against more than a dozen opposition activists and supporters arrested since the start of the “civil disobedience” campaign on May 1. Most of them are accused of assaulting police officers or government supporters. The opposition rejects the accusations as politically motivated. 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.