Tuesday, Armenia Not Democracy, Says Ex-President • Anush Mkrtchian Armenia - Former President Serzh Sarkisian and his supporters visit the Komitas Pantheon in Yerevan, March 25, 2022. Former President Serzh Sarkisian on Tuesday brushed aside government claims that Armenia became a democratic country after he was forced to resign during the 2018 “velvet revolution.” “If this is democracy, then nobody needs it,” Sarkisian told reporters, citing existential threats facing the country now. “If there are more than 20 political prisoners now, if 150,000 people were simply expelled from a part of our homeland [Nagorno-Karabakh], then what democracy are you talking about?” he said. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, who swept to power as a result of the 2018 mass protests, again claimed to have turned Armenia into a democracy when he addressed the European Parliament earlier in the day. He said his country “would have lost its independence and sovereignty had it not been democratic.” Opposition groups, including Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK) accuse him of jailing political opponents, suppressing judicial independence and issuing political orders to law-enforcement bodies. The ex-president faced similar accusations when he governed Armenia from 2008-2018. The “political prisoners” mentioned by him presumably include individuals arrested and prosecuted during last month’s anti-government protests in Yerevan sparked by the Azerbaijani military offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh. The protesters accused Pashinian of selling out Karabakh and its ethnic Armenian population that has fled the region. Sarkisian also held the Armenian premier responsible for the fall of Karabakh. Karabakh Leader ‘Forced To Dissolve Republic’ • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia - Ethnic Armenians who fled Nagorno-Karabakh embrace upon their arrival in the Armenian border village of Kornidzor, September 26, 2023. Nagorno-Karabakh’s president accepted Azerbaijan’s demands to dissolve all Karabakh government bodies to allow the region’s ethnic Armenian population to safely flee its homeland, exiled Karabakh officials in Yerevan said on Tuesday. Samvel Shahramanian signed a corresponding decree on September 28 just over a week after a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped an Azerbaijani military offensive. Under the terms of that agreement, Karabakh disarmed and disbanded its army, paving the way for the restoration of full Azerbaijani control over the territory. Shahramanian’s decree said that the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, set up in September 1991, will cease to exist on January 1. Some prominent Karabakh Armenians challenged the legality of the decree, raising more questions about the circumstances in which it was signed. Shahramanian, one of the last ethnic Armenians to leave the region, has avoided any contact with the press since arriving in Armenia along with more than 100,000 Karabakh residents. Hunan Tadevosian, the spokesman for the Karabakh interior ministry, said his decree was demanded by Azerbaijan and Shahramanian signed it in order to “save human lives.” “There was no other option,” Tadevosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. Aram Harutiunian, a lawmaker representing Karabakh’s largest party, confirmed that. He said Baku warned that Azerbaijani troops will enter Stepanakert if Shahramanian rejects the “ultimatum.” The decree in question has still not been publicized in full. Some Karabakh politicians and public figures have said that it must be declared null and void now that Karabakh has been almost fully depopulated. Several opposition figures in Armenia have echoed their calls. The Armenian government is unlikely to back them. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian pointedly declined to congratulate Shahramanian when he was elected president by the Karabakh legislature in early September. Pashinian Addresses EU Parliament, Blasts ‘Armenia’s Allies’ France - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses the European Parliament in Strasbourg, . Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian denounced Russian peacekeepers for not preventing the fall of Nagorno-Karabakh and seemingly accused Russia of using Armenia’s conflict with Azerbaijan to try to topple him in a speech delivered at the European Parliament on Tuesday. Pashinian addressed the European Parliament’s legislative body amid Yerevan's deepening rift with Moscow, its longtime ally locked in a geopolitical standoff with the West. “Democracy in Armenia … continues to receive strong blows that follow an almost exactly repeated scenario: foreign aggression, then the inaction of Armenia's security allies, then attempts to use the war or the humanitarian situation or external security threats to subvert Armenia's democracy and sovereignty by inciting internal instability with hybrid techniques directed by external forces,” he said. Pashinian pointed to Azerbaijan’s September 19-20 military offensive in Karabakh which caused a mass exodus of the region’s ethnic Armenian population and sparked renewed anti-government protests in Yerevan. “As hundreds of thousands of Armenians were fleeing from Nagorno-Karabakh to the Republic of Armenia, our security allies not only did not help us but also made public calls for regime change in Armenia,” he said. “But the people of Armenia united for their own independence, sovereignty, democracy, and another conspiracy against our state failed.” Pashinian already implicitly accused Moscow of fomenting the angry street protests against his rule in the immediate aftermath of the Azerbaijani assault. Their organizers and participants blamed him for Baku’s takeover of Karabakh, saying that he precipitated it with his recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty over the region. Pashinian again sought to shift the blame to Moscow, saying that the Karabakh Armenians fled their homeland due to the “inaction of the Russian peacekeeping contingent.” President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials have defended the peacekeepers. The Russian Foreign Ministry accused Pashinian late last month of seeking to ruin Russian-Armenian relations and reorient his country towards the West. Earlier in September, it deplored “a series of unfriendly steps” taken by Yerevan. Moscow has also been critical of Western efforts to broker an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace deal, saying that their main purpose is to drive Russia out of the South Caucasus. Putin offered last week to host fresh talks between Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. Pashinian signaled on Tuesday that he still prefers the Western mediation and hopes it will result in an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty soon. He noted that he and Aliyev are due to meet in Brussels together with EU head Charles Michel later this year. Pashinian further stated that he wants to deepen Armenia’s ties with the EU “as much as the European Union finds it possible.” Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.