Tuesday, Armenian Government Reluctant To Pay Karabakh Pensions • Anush Mkrtchian Armenia - Pensioners and other refugees from Nagorno Karabakh visit a Karabakh office in Yerevan, October 18, 2023. The Armenian government has no plans to pay the pensions and other benefits received by residents of Nagorno-Karabakh until their exodus to Armenia, Finance Minister Vahe Hovannisian said on Tuesday. The government had for decades contributed a large part of Karabakh’s budget in the form of monthly subsidies officially called “interstate loans.” The figure reportedly averaged 12 billion drams ($30 million) per month this year, with roughly half of it used for paying public sector salaries, pensions and other benefits. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s administration made clear that it will not pay them anymore shortly after more than 100,000 Karabakh Armenians took refuge in Armenia following the September 19-20 Azerbaijani military offensive that restored Baku’s control over the region. It said that all refugees will instead receive 50,000 drams ($125) each in November and December in addition to 100,000 drams given to them this month. An exiled Karabakh official told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service earlier this month that Yerevan is even reluctant to pay the September pensions and salaries despite the fact that the exodus began at the end of last month. Hovannisian confirmed this, saying that the government has no obligation to meet the Karabakh leadership’s last financial obligations. “We didn’t give pensions to anyone [in Karabakh,]” he told reporters. “We gave the government of Nagorno-Karabakh money and it decided to what to do with it: pay pensions or make other expenditures.” “We have no decision not to give [the September pensions,] but I see no reason why we should give … We are already paying people sums equivalent to pensions,” added the minister. ARMENIA - Refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh region ride in the back of a truck as they arrive in the border village of Kornidzor, September 26, 2023. A Karabakh office in Yerevan indicated, meanwhile, that the Karabakh pensioners, many of whom lack adequate housing, may still be paid for September. It said nothing about benefits paid to other categories of Karabakh’s displaced population, notably retired military personnel. Armen Arushanian, a disabled Karabakh veteran of a past war with Azerbaijan, still hoped to continue getting his monthly allowance in Armenia when he visited the office on Tuesday. “They told me to forget about military pensions,” Arushanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. Armenian opposition figures and other critics have condemned the government’s stance as immoral. They claim that Pashinian is washing his hands of the Karabakh refugees after controversially recognizing Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh in May. Pashinian has repeatedly assured the refugees that his government will help them settle down and find new livelihoods in Armenia. The government sparked another controversy last week when it decided to grant them “temporary protection” formalizing their status of refugees. It thus made clear that it does not consider the Karabakh Armenians as citizens of Armenia despite the fact that virtually all of them hold Armenian passports. Government officials described their passports as mere “travel documents,” a claim disputed by some legal experts. New Armenian Plant Moved Away From Azeri Border Armenia - The site of a steel plant that was due to be built in Yeraskh, June 15, 2023. Economy Minister Vahan Kerobian confirmed on Tuesday that a U.S.-Armenian joint venture has decided, for security reasons, to relocate a metallurgical plant which it began building on Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan earlier this year. The construction site in Yeraskh, a border village 55 kilometers south of Yerevan, came under fire from nearby Azerbaijani army positions on a virtually daily basis in June. Two Indian nationals working there were seriously wounded on June 14. The automatic gunfire began one week after the Azerbaijani government protested against the $70 million project. It claimed that building the industrial facility without its permission is a violation of international environmental norms. The Armenian Foreign Ministry brushed aside Baku’s “false” environmental concerns, saying that they are a smokescreen for impeding economic growth and foreign investment in Armenia. Despite making defiant statements, Armenian and U.S. investors behind the project suspended work on the plant later in the summer. A security guard at the Yeraskh construction site and several villagers said on September 14 that the GTB joint venture has begun moving construction and industrial equipment from the site. The company did not confirm that. An RFE/RL crew spotted a new and active construction site near the town of Ararat, several kilometers from Yeraskh. “The Yeraskh metallurgical project continues to be implemented,” Kerobian told reporters. He acknowledged that the steel plant is now constructed in a different, “nearby” location. Asked whether that means Armenia has again succumbed to Azerbaijani pressure, the minister said: “We are dealing with private investors who decide their further actions on their own. Given the geopolitical and regional environment, we are trying to be as helpful as possible.” Armenia’s largest gold mine also located on the border with Azerbaijan was likewise targeted by systematic Azerbaijani gunfire this spring. The Russian owner of the Sotk gold mine announced in June that it has no choice but to end open-pit mining operations there and put many of its 700 workers on unpaid leave. Drug Trafficking, Abuse Continues To Soar In Armenia • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia - Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian meets with parliarnent deputies, . Pro-government lawmakers called for mandatory drug tests in Armenian schools on Tuesday in response to a continuing rapid increase in drug trafficking cases in the country. The total number of drug-related crimes recorded by the Armenian police more than doubled in the first nine months of this year, continuing an upward trend observed in recent years. It is widely blamed on increasingly accessible synthetic drugs mainly sold through the internet and, in particular, the social media platform Telegram. Links to Telegram channels selling such narcotics can now be seen painted on residential buildings and other public areas across Yerevan. The alarming trend has prompted serious concern from not only opposition politicians but also parliament deputies representing the ruling Civil Contract party. The latter again raised their concerns with Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian during a meeting held as part of preliminary parliamentary discussions of the 2024 state budget drafted by the Armenian government. They were particularly worried about drug trafficking in or around schools, a new phenomenon which was virtually non-existent in Armenia several years ago. One of those lawmakers, Hayk Sargsian, described the growing drug abuse among school students as a “national security problem” and called for all teenagers to be subjected to drug test by the police at least once a year. Positive test results should be communicated to parents and/or lead to “some punitive measures,” said Sargsian. Armenia - A photo by the State Revenue Committee shows packets of heroin smuggled from Iran and seized by Armenian law-enforcement authorities, July 2, 2021. Andranik Kocharian, the chairman of the parliament committee on defense and security, said such testing must also be mandatory for police officers and other security personnel suspected of involvement in trafficking rings. Another pro-government lawmaker, Vahagn Aleksanian, said the police should instead encourage the parents of underage Armenians and “especially boys” to conduct tests at home. “If the problem is widespread among minors, then there isn’t much the police can do,” he said. “Parental control must be the key thing here.” Ghazarian backed these proposals and called for a broader toughening of the fight against the increasingly serious problem. In particular, he said, the Armenian authorities must again criminalize drug addiction. “The more we toughen sanctions against drug trafficking, the more the figures will fall,” the interior minister told the parliamentarians. The rising drug-related cases have been a key factor behind considerable annual increases in Armenia’s overall crime rate registered since the 2018 “velvet revolution.” The police recorded 29,682 various crimes in January-September 2023, up by 12 percent year on year. Critics claim that the country is not as safe as it used to be because its current government headed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is more incompetent and softer on crime than the previous ones. 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.