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    Categories: 2023

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 07/19/1012

                                        Wednesday, 


Armenian Judges Defy State Watchdog

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - A meeting of the General Assembly of judges, Yerevan, .


Armenian judges on Wednesday criticized the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) for 
sacking their colleagues and accused it of trying to effectively rig the 
election of a new member of the state body overseeing the country’s courts.

The several hundred judges gathered in Yerevan to fill a vacant seat in the SJC 
reserved for one of them. Only judges formally notified by the judicial watchdog 
can run for it. The SJC staff sent out such notifications only to provincial 
judges, excluding their colleagues working in Yerevan courts from the contest.

Several prominent judges condemned the decision as illegal. One of them, Davit 
Balayan, said he has challenged it in court.

“In my view, the judicial department predetermined the circle of judges eligible 
for nomination,” Balayan told reporters. “I believe this cannot be done.”

The SJC said that provincial judges are not among its current nine members and 
that it believes the remaining seat should be given to one of them. Most 
participants of Armenia’s General Assembly of Judges were unconvinced by that 
explanation, postponing the election of the SJC member.

The judicial watchdog has wide-ranging powers, including the right to nominate, 
sanction and even fire judges. It is headed by Karen Andreasian, a former 
justice minister widely regarded as a political ally of Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian. Andreasian and four other SJC members were installed by the Armenian 
parliament controlled by Pashinian’s party. The four others were elected by the 
General Assembly.

Armenia - Karen Andreasian, head of the Supreme Judicial Council, chairs an SJC 
hearing in Yerevan, June 29, 2023.

Over the past year, the SJC has significantly increased the number of 
disciplinary proceedings against judges accused by the Ministry of Justice of 
various violations. Armenian opposition leaders and some legal experts claim 
that this is part of government attempts to further curb judicial independence 
in Armenia under the guise of Western-backed “judicial reforms.” Pashinian’s 
government denies these claims.

The SJC controversially dismissed four judges as recently as on July 3. One of 
them, Davit Harutiunian, was ousted after saying that the SJC arbitrarily fires 
his colleagues at the behest of a single person. The Ministry of Justice accused 
him of breaching the Judicial Code and discrediting the Armenian judiciary.

“I believe that Mr. Harutiunian was unfairly ousted from the judicial system,” 
Balayan said in this regard.

“I am very concerned about so many disciplinary proceedings … I am concerned 
that four judges can be terminated in one day,” said another district court 
judge, Arman Hovannisian.

Vazgen Rshtuni, a judge of Armenia’s Court of Appeals, echoed those concerns and 
said he and his colleagues should be able to openly discuss them.

“The Supreme Judicial Council is not a holy site and the people working there 
are not saints either,” Rshtuni told journalists.

But another senior judge, Gevorg Gyozalian, said his colleagues should stay away 
from the press. “The only platform for addressing our problems is the General 
Assembly,” said Gyozalian, who worked as Pashinian’s private lawyer before being 
appointed to the Court of Cassation last year.




No Progress Made In Armenian-Azeri Border Delimitation Talks


ARMENIA -- Azerbaijani (L) and Armenian border posts by the Sotk gold mine, June 
18, 2021.


The Armenian government essentially confirmed on Wednesday that Armenian and 
Azerbaijani officials did not make major progress last week during another round 
of negotiations on delimiting the border between their countries.

The joint session of Armenian and Azerbaijani government commissions on border 
demarcation and delimitation took place at a relatively peaceful section of the 
heavily militarized frontier on July 12. It was co-chaired by Deputy Prime 
Minister Mher Grigorian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Shahin Mustfayev.

No concrete agreements were announced following the meeting, with the Armenian 
Foreign Ministry saying only that the two sides “addressed a number of 
organizational and procedural issues.”

News.am quoted Grigorian’s office as saying that they did not agree on which 
maps should be used for the delimitation purposes. “No decision was made 
regarding any map,” it said.

Speaking after his June 1 meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev held 
in Moldova, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian suggested that Baku is open to 
accepting an Armenian proposal to use 1975 Soviet maps. The Azerbaijani Foreign 
Ministry denied that, however. It said that Azerbaijan has demarcated its 
borders with other neighboring states “on the basis of analyses and examination 
of legally binding documents, rather than any specially chosen map.”

The issue was also on the agenda of another Aliyev-Pashinian meeting hosted by 
the European Union’s top official, Charles Michel, in Brussels on July 15. 
Michel said the two leaders “agreed to intensify and accelerate the work of the 
commissions.”

The practical modalities of the border delimitation are one of the stumbling 
blocks in ongoing talks on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty.




EU Backs Azeri Supply Line For Karabakh

        • Astghik Bedevian
        • Susan Badalian

Armenia - EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in 
Georgia Toivo Klaar visits Yerevan, June 6, 2023.


The European Union has again welcomed Azerbaijan’s offer to send food and other 
humanitarian supplies to Nagorno-Karabakh via an alternative route bypassing the 
Lachin corridor blocked by Baku for the last seven months.

"The Lachine corridor should be opened,” Toivo Klaar, the EU’s special envoy to 
the South Caucasus, told Alphanews.am late on Tuesday. “At the same time, I 
think that every offer should also be used, not as an alternative to Lachine but 
as a complement to it.”

Azerbaijani officials have made the offer while dismissing international calls 
to lift the blockade and denying a humanitarian crisis in Karabakh despite 
severe shortages of food, medicine, fuel and other essential items there. They 
say that the region can be supplied with basic necessities from Azerbaijan 
proper and the town of Aghdam in particular.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev apparently insisted on this idea during his 
trilateral meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and EU head 
Charles Michel held in Brussels on July 15. Michel said after the talks that as 
well as urging Aliyev to reopen the Lachin corridor he “noted Azerbaijan’s 
willingness to equally provide humanitarian supplies via Aghdam.”

“I see both options as important,” he said, prompting strong criticism from 
Karabakh’s leadership that regards the Aghdam option as a ploy designed to 
facilitate the restoration of Azerbaijani control over Karabakh.

“Our position is that there is an international obligation [by Azerbaijan] 
regarding the unhindered functioning of the Lachin corridor and it must be 
fulfilled unconditionally,” Artur Harutiunian, a senior Karabakh lawmaker, told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Wednesday.

Harutiunian pointed to a Russian-brokered 2020 agreement that committed Baku to 
ensuring unfettered commercial traffic through the sole road connecting Karabakh 
to Armenia.

“For some reason, European officials keep talking about humanitarian aid,” he 
complained. “They seem to think that the people of Artsakh should only live off 
humanitarian supplies and are looking for some alternative arrangements for 
that.”

Nagorno-Karabakh - Residents of Stepanakert line up outside a local food store, 
January 20, 2023.

Several non-governmental organizations based in Stepanakert also denounced 
Michel’s remarks. “Assistance to people facing a humanitarian catastrophe cannot 
come at the expense of their dignity from a country that can offer them nothing 
but hatred, suffering and pain,” they said in a joint statement.

Many ordinary Karabakh Armenians appear to back this stance despite the fact 
that one month after the tightening of the Azerbaijani blockade there is 
virtually nothing they can now buy in local food stores apart from limited 
quantities of bread.

“No way, only the lifeline road to Armenia,” a resident of the village of 
Khramort said when asked about the possibility of accepting food supplies from 
Azerbaijan.

Khramort has about 220 residents. It now receives only 35 loaves of bread each 
day.

“They [the Azerbaijanis] only want a Karabakh without Armenians,” said Janik 
Petrosian, a schoolteacher who fled another village that was seized by 
Azerbaijani forces during the 2020 war.

On Tuesday, a group of local activists placed concrete barriers on a Karabakh 
road leading to Aghdam. They also put a banner reading “The road to death.”

It remains unclear how Pashinian reacted to the Azerbaijani proposal during his 
weekend talks with Aliyev. The Armenian government’s press office has not 
commented on that so far.

The Armenian premier sparked uproar in Stepanakert and Yerevan in May when he 
effectively recognized Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh. He regularly calls 
for an internationally mediated dialogue between Baku and Stepanakert on “the 
rights and security” of Karabakh’s population. His critics counter that no 
security guarantees can convince the Karabakh Armenians to live under 
Azerbaijani rule.




Armenian Army Chief Visits U.S.


U.S. - Gen. Charles Brown, chief of U.S. Air Force Staff, meets Lt.-Gen. Eduard 
Asrian, the Armenian army chief, Washington, .


Armenia’s top army general has met with high-ranking U.S. military officials 
during a visit to Washington.

The officials included Admiral Christopher Grady, the vice chairman of the Joint 
Chiefs of Staff, and General Charles Brown, the chief of the U.S. Air Force 
Staff.

The Defense Ministry in Yerevan said on Wednesday that Lieutenant-General Eduard 
Asrian, the chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff, discussed with them 
U.S.-Armenian “defense partnership” and “the conduct of joint activities” 
stemming from it.

The two sides explored “opportunities for broader cooperation in the Air Force 
sector,” a ministry statement said, adding that “regional security” was also on 
the agenda. It gave no other details. The Pentagon issued not statements on 
Asrian’s trip.

The secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, Armen Grigorian, visited Washington 
earlier this month for talks with U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan 
and Laura Cooper, the U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, 
Ukraine and Eurasia.

In an interview with the Armenian Service of the Voice of America published last 
week, Grigorian said the United States and Armenia are now discussing ways of 
“opening new doors” in bilateral military cooperation.

“We have made great progress. The results will be visible in the long term,” he 
said without elaborating.

Washington has given no indications that it could provide Armenia with weapons 
or other military equipment.

Armenia - U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Armenian Defense Minister Suren 
Papikian (cemter) meet in Yerevan, September 18, 2022.

In September 2022, then U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and three other 
pro-Armenian U.S. lawmakers fuelled speculation about such military aid when 
they met with Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikian during a visit to 
Yerevan. Pelosi said the meeting was meant to “convey America’s support for 
Armenia's security” in the face of Azerbaijan’s “illegal and deadly attacks on 
the Armenian territory”

Grigorian insisted that Armenia’s close military ties with Russia are not 
hampering the expansion of its defense cooperation with the U.S.

Armenia’s relations with Russia and the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty 
Organization (CSTO) have deteriorated significantly over the past year due to 
what Yerevan sees as a lack of support from its ex-Soviet allies in the conflict 
with Azerbaijan. In January, the Armenian government cancelled a CSTO military 
exercise which it was due to host this year.

In April, Moscow demanded explanations from Yerevan after the U.S. Department of 
Defense initially listed Armenia among 26 nations that will participate in an 
upcoming U.S.-led military exercise in Europe. The demand came after the 
Pentagon promptly removed the South Caucasus country from the list, citing a 
technical error. The Russian Foreign Ministry charged that the Defender 23 
drills are part of U.S. efforts to drive a wedge between Russia and other 
ex-Soviet states.


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