Monday, Armenian Authorities Accused Of Trying To Fire Jailed Oppositionist’s Brother • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia - The main entrance to the Armenian Central Bank. Armenia’s Central Bank on Monday did not confirm or deny reports that one of its senior executives is facing strong government pressure to resign because of being the brother of a jailed opposition politician. The politician, Avetik Chalabian, was arrested on May 13 on charges of trying to pay university students to participate in daily anti-government demonstrations in Yerevan. He rejects the accusations as government retribution for his active participation in the protests launched by the Armenian opposition on May 1. Chalabian referred to himself as a political “hostage” in a letter to his wife, Anahit Adamian, read out by her at a news conference in Yerevan on Monday. “As if this was not enough, my brother, Ara Chalabian, is being subjected to illegal and crude repression,” he wrote. Armenia - The wife and lawyers of arrested opposition figure Avetik Chalabian hold a news conference in Yerevan, . Ara Chalabian is the head of the Central Bank’s Department of Corporate Services and Development. Citing an opposition figure close to Avetik, Armenian news websites claimed earlier this month that the Central Bank governor, Martin Galstian, has told him to step down. An article subsequently posted on Hetq.am said the Chalabians’ father made the same allegation during a private conversation. It said Galstian told Ara Chalabian that he was “forced to do so by the government” and that Galstian himself will have to tender his resignation if Ara refuses to quit. Galstian, who was installed as Central Bank governor by the Armenian parliament in 2020, has not personally reacted to the allegations. In a short written comment to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, his press office said: “The Central Bank does not provide personal information about third parties.” The bank is supposedly independent from Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government. The latter has not commented on the alleged pressure on Galstian. Armenia - Cental Bank governor Martin Galstian speaks during a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, July 13, 2022. Ara Chalabian also remains silent on the subject. There have been no official announcements of his dismissal or resignation so far. The criminal case against Avetik Chalabian is based on leaked audio of short fragments of his conversations with Tornik Aliyan, the chairman of the student council of the Armenian National Agrarian University. Law-enforcement authorities say it shows that Chalabian offered to pay Aliyan 2 million drams ($4,800) for the presence of 2,000 students at opposition rallies. Chalabian’s lawyers insisted on Monday that the recording, which first appeared on a pro-government website, was doctored by the authorities. They again demanded the release of full audio of the conversation, saying that it would disprove the accusations leveled against their client. Avetik Chalabian, 49, leads a small opposition party. He is also a co-founder of a private charity helping the Armenian military as well as border villages in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia Plans Another Satellite • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenia - Minister of High-Technology Industry Robert Khachatrian speaks to RFE/RL in Yerevan, . A second Armenian satellite will be launched into space in the near future, Minister of High-Technology Industry Robert Khachatrian said on Monday. “The second one will also be a satellite designed to take pictures,” Khachatrian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “I can’t give any dates [for its launch,] but [it should happen] circa 2023 or 2024.” The Armenian government announced the launch of the first-ever Armenian satellite in late May. The apparently small device named ArmSat-1 was carried into space by a SpaceX rocket that blasted off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said it will be used for a wide range of purposes, including border control, natural disaster management and geology. The government is understood is to have purchased ArmSat-1 from Satlantis, a Spanish company that specializes in the production of small satellites and cameras for them. It has still not revealed financial terms of the deal or technical parameters of the satellite, fuelling skepticism among its critics about the significance of the project. Armenia - A handout photo of Armenia's first satellite released by the Armenian government on May 26, 2022. Khachatrian reaffirmed government plans to open a satellite operations center in Armenia before the end of this year. The government has already commissioned equipment for the center and started preparations for training its personnel, added the minister. Armenia’s arch-foe Azerbaijan launched its first communication and observation satellite into space in 2013. The Azerbaijani army reportedly used satellite images for its offensive military operations carried out during the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Khachatrian said that his government is also discussing with Satlantis and other firms the possibility of manufacturing observation satellites in Armenia. “We are negotiating with various companies to see what capacities exist in Armenia and how they can be used properly,” he said. “Such capacities did exist in Armenia in Soviet times and they have been partly preserved. We have good ideas and specialists here whose skills could be put to good use.” Armenians Still Prosecuted For Insulting Pashinian • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia - Artak Avetian, who was barred from leaving Armenia because of allegedly insulting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, speaks to RFE/RL, Yerevan, July 23, 2022. Three weeks after a stated decriminalization of slander in Armenia, law-enforcement authorities are continuing to formally prosecute individuals accused of insulting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian or other senior officials. Government-backed amendments to the Armenian Criminal Code enacted last summer made “grave insults” directed at state officials and public figures an offense punishable with hefty fines or prison sentences of up to three months. More than 50 Armenians have been charged with defamation and hundreds of others investigated on the same grounds since the amendments took effect in September. Many of those criminal cases stem from offensive comments on Pashinian made on social media or in public speeches. Pashinian’s political allies dismissed until recently calls for a repeal of the legislation voiced by local and Western human rights groups such as Freedom House and Amnesty International. Justice Minister Karen Andreasian unexpectedly announced last month that the punitive measure has been excluded from a new Criminal Code that came into force on July 1. The development meant that all criminal cases opened under the scrapped amendments will have to be closed. This has clearly not been the case so far. Artak Avetian, an Armenian software engineer based in Germany, arrived in Armenia on vacation with his wife and two children last month. He was later barred from flying back to Munich after discovering at Yerevan’s Zvartnots airport that he was charged in March with offending Pashinian. Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian brandishes a hammer at an election campaign rally in Sisian, June 15, 2021. Avetian was detained at the airport before spending a night at a police station in Yerevan. He was informed there that the accusation leveled against him stems from a Facebook post in which he lambasted Pashinian for the fact that the post of Armenia’s top general remains vacant following an apparent purge of the army top brass. Avetian said a law-enforcement officer told him that only a prosecutor overseeing the inquiry into the post can drop the charge. “I don’t know what the prosecutors are saying now,” the 50-year-old told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service over the weekend. “I don’t even know when the investigator appealed to them.” Avetian’s lawyer, Ruben Melikian, said he knows of several other persons who are also continuing to face such criminal charges. The Office of the Prosecutor-General could not be reached for comment on the matter. Artur Sakunts, a veteran human rights activist, denounced as illegal the authorities’ failure to close all such cases. “We are dealing with failure to comply with a legal requirement,” he said. Sakunts reiterated his view that the Pashinian administration’s 2021 decision to criminalize insults was politically motivated and unjustified. Justice Minister Andreasian defended the decision on June 11, claiming that it helped to “rein in the shameful and unacceptable behavior of certain groups and individuals.” Armenian opposition leaders maintain that it was aimed at silencing vocal critics of the current government. They say that Pashinian himself has relied heavily on slander and “hate speech” before and after coming to power in 2018. All forms of slander and defamation had already been decriminalized in Armenia in 2010. 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.