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    Categories: 2023

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 07/11/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Blinken, Pashinian Discuss Armenian-Azeri Talks


U.S. - U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian meet on the sidelines of a UN General Assembly session, New York, 
September 22, ,2022.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian discussed with U.S. Secretary of State Antony 
Blinken Armenia’s peace talks with Azerbaijan and Baku’s continuing blockade of 
Nagorno-Karabakh in a phone call on Tuesday.

“The interlocutors reviewed the situation in the region, ongoing negotiations on 
the peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, necessary steps to ensure the 
rights and security of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, including the need for 
a Baku-Stepanakert dialogue with international involvement,” the Armenian 
government’s press office said in a statement on the call.

“Prime Minister Pashinian referred to the deepening humanitarian crisis in 
Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from Azerbaijan's illegal blockade of the Lachin 
Corridor and steps necessary for overcoming it,” it added without elaborating.

Blinken and the U.S. State Department did not immediately issue statements on 
the conversation. It took place five days after U.S. National Security Adviser 
Jake Sullivan met with Armen Grigorian, the secretary of Armenia’s Security 
Council, in Washington. Sullivan did not comment on that meeting.

Both Blinken and Sullivan held late last month trilateral meetings with the 
Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers during their fresh round of 
U.S.-mediated peace talks focusing on the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty. 
Blinken said on June 29 that despite “further progress” made by the two 
ministers “there remains hard work to be done to try to reach a final agreement.”

Speaking in Baku on Tuesday, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stressed the 
importance of Armenia’s recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty over 
Nagorno-Karabakh which was declared by Pashinian in May.

“Now, however, the time has come to put those words to paper,” Aliyev said, 
referring to the peace deal currently discussed by Baku and Yerevan.




Opposition Lawmaker Ousted From Armenian Parliament Post

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia - A session of the National Assembly, Yerevan, .


The Armenian opposition accused Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian of dealing 
another blow to pluralism and democracy on Tuesday after his party ousted the 
last remaining opposition head of a standing parliament committee.

Lawmakers representing the Civil Contract party voted to dismiss Taguhi 
Tovmasian as chairwoman of the National Assembly’s committee on human rights 
after a brief session. The vote was boycotted by their colleagues from the 
opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances.

Civil Contract’s Hovik Aghazarian was the only parliament deputy who spoke 
during the session. He repeated the ruling party’s complaints that Tovmasian did 
not attend most meetings of the Armenian parliament’s leadership and did not 
stop “hate speech” when her committee discussed on April 4 candidacies for the 
then vacant post of the state human rights defender.

Edgar Ghazarian, the opposition candidate for the post, enraged pro-government 
lawmakers with his claim that the 2018 “velvet revolution” that brought 
Pashinian to power was in fact a “Turkish-Azerbaijani revolution.” They shouted 
abuse and threats at Ghazarian during the meeting chaired by Tovmasian.

One of those lawmakers, Artur Hovannisian, pledged to “cut the tongues and ears 
of anyone” who would make disparaging comments about the regime change. 
Pashinian’s party did not criticize his behavior.

Tovmasian, who is affiliated with Pativ Unem, insisted that she did nothing 
wrong on April 4. In a written statement, she also argued that the parliamentary 
statutes did not require her to attend meetings of the National Assembly’s 
Council consisting of speaker Alen Simonian, his deputies as well as the 
committee chairpersons.

Tovmasian again claimed that Pashinian personally ordered his loyalists to strip 
her of the parliamentary post in retaliation against her defection from his 
political team following Armenia’s defeat in the 2020 war with Azerbaijan.

“As you can see, any dissent in Armenia is strangled by imprisonment and 
dismissal,” added the former journalist and newspaper editor.

Armenia - Taguhi Tovmasian (right) and other deputies from Pativ Unem bloc 
attend a parliamernt session, September 14, 2021.

Pativ Unem voiced strong support for Tovmasian, saying that she acted 
professionally on April 4 in the face of her pro-government colleagues’ 
“hooligan behavior.” The official grounds for her dismissal are “completely 
baseless and illegal,” the opposition bloc charged in a statement.

Hayastan also condemned Tovmasian’s dismissal. “The government cannot put a 
straitjacket on the opposition; that means totalitarianism, dictatorship, 
tyranny,” said one of its senior parliamentarians, Artsvik Minasian.

Armenian law reserves a number of leadership positions in the parliament for the 
opposition minority. Tovmasian’s ouster left the opposition without any such 
posts.

Hayastan’s Ishkhan Saghatelian and Vahe Hakobian were ousted as deputy speaker 
and chairman of the parliament committee on economic affairs respectively in 
July 2022 after weeks of anti-government protests organized by Hayastan and 
Pativ Unem. Another Hayastan deputy, Armen Gevorgian, immediately resigned as 
chairman of a committee on “Eurasian integration” in protest.

Both opposition blocs made clear on Tuesday that they will not nominate a new 
head of the human rights committee. Civil Contract likewise said that it will 
not install Tovmasian’s successor.

Nevertheless, the ruling party will effectively gain control of her post even in 
the absence of a new committee chair. In line with the parliamentary statutes, 
the human rights panel will be run, in an acting capacity, by Rustam Bakoyan, 
its deputy chairman affiliated with Civil Contract.

Last year, Bakoyan’s former wife accused him of systematically beating her, 
publicizing purported photographs of injuries sustained by her. Bakoyan, who 
denied the allegations, was not prosecuted or even censured by Pashinian’s party.




Government Vows To Tackle ‘Police Violence Against Lawyers’

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian speaks in the parliament, Yerevan, 
March 1, 2023.


Armenia’s Interior Ministry and national bar association agreed on Tuesday to 
set up a joint working group tasked with protecting lawyers against violent 
police actions.

The agreement was announced after hundreds of lawyers again went on a one-day 
strike and marched to the ministry headquarters in Yerevan to show support for 
their colleagues allegedly beaten up by police officers.

Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian received the leaders of the Armenian Chamber of 
Advocates, which organized the protest. One of them, Ara Zohrabian, was 
satisfied with the meeting that lasted for less than an hour.

Zohrabian said they received assurances that “there will no such instances 
involving lawyers anymore.” Lawyers assaulted by police officers will now be 
able to swiftly appeal to the joint commission that will comprise three Interior 
Ministry officials and three lawyers, he told journalists.

Neither Ghazarian nor the ministry’s press office made any statements to that 
effect immediately after the meeting.

The protests began late last month after one attorney, Karen Alaverdian, claimed 
to have been subjected to “undue physical force” while trying to stop several 
policemen kicking and punching his client at a Yerevan police station.

Armenia - Lawyers protest outside the Interior Ministry in Yerevan, July 11, 
2023.

Armenia’s Investigative Committee denied the allegations on June 13, saying that 
Alaverdian himself shoved and even hit the officers in a bid to free the 
criminal suspect. The law-enforcement agency charged him with “hooliganism” and 
obstruction of legitimate police actions. The Chamber of Advocates voiced 
support for Alaverdian and demanded a proper investigation into the incident.

Alaverdian revealed on Tuesday that two senior officers working at the police 
department of Yerevan’s central administrative district have been indicted by 
another law-enforcement body, the National Security Service (NSS), and suspended 
as a result. He welcomed the development.

Two other lawyers claimed to have been ill-treated at another Yerevan police 
station in February while representing a teenage criminal suspect. Their 
allegations were likewise denied by the Armenian police and the Investigative 
Committee.

The protesting lawyers say that the national police chief, Karlen Hovannisian, 
is personally responsible for the alleged violence. More than 500 of them have 
signed a petition demanding his dismissal.

According to Zohrabian, Hovannisian also attended the interior minister’s 
meeting with the Chamber of Advocates leadership. The latter insisted on 
Hovannisian’s resignation during and after the meeting.




Azerbaijan Again Blocks Medical Evacuations From Karabakh

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - A Red Cross vehicle is seen in Syunik province, June 1, 2023.


Azerbaijan has again banned the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) 
from evacuating seriously ill persons from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia.

Azerbaijan’s state border guard service said on Tuesday that it made the 
decision because Karabakh residents returning home from Armenia repeatedly tried 
last week to “smuggle” cigarettes, mobile phone screens, gasoline and other 
items. The ICRC failed to stop such “illegal actions,” it said, adding that the 
Azerbaijani checkpoint controversially set up in the Lachin corridor in April 
will remain completely closed until the end of its inquiry into the alleged 
smuggling attempts.

The ICRC has transported hundreds of Karabakh patients to Armenian hospitals 
since Baku blocked last December commercial traffic through Karabakh’s sole land 
link with Armenia. Only Red Cross vehicles as well as convoys of Russian 
peacekeepers were able to pass through the road.

The ICRC said later on Tuesday that four of its hired drivers “tried to 
transport some commercial goods in their own vehicles which were temporarily 
displaying the ICRC emblem.”

“These individuals were not ICRC staff members and their service contracts were 
immediately terminated by the ICRC,” it added in a statement.

"Our work along the Lachin corridor is always strictly humanitarian. This 
essential work, which has allowed more than 600 patients to be evacuated for 
medical care and for medical supplies, food, baby formula and other essentials 
to reach health care facilities and families, must be allowed to continue.”

Baku already blocked the medical evacuations in late April and on June 15. They 
most recently resumed on June 25.

Karabakh’s leadership did not immediately react to the latest Azerbaijani ban. 
The Armenian Foreign Ministry expressed concern about it, saying that “more 
international efforts and actions are needed to lift the 7-month blockade of 
Nagorno-Karabakh.”

“It is obvious that Azerbaijan is simply looking for excuses to finally close 
the only way through which medicines and other medical supplies were brought to 
Karabakh,” Artur Harutiunian, a senior Karabakh lawmaker, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service.

Harutiunian argued that family members accompanying Karabakh patients on their 
way back from Armenia did not try to smuggle weapons or drugs. He said they only 
carried things that are running out in Karabakh due to the Azerbaijani blockade.

Baku further tightened the blockade on June 15, banning the Russian peacekeepers 
from shipping limited amounts of food to Karabakh. It has also been blocking 
Armenia’s electricity and gas supplies to the Armenian-populated region.


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