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    Categories: 2024

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 02/02/2024

                                        Friday, February 2, 2024


Armenian Official Rejects Aliyev’s ‘New Precondition’ For Peace


Armenia - Bright Armenia Party leader Edmon Marukian speaks with journalists, 
Yerevan, June 11, 2021.


Azerbaijan is not serious about signing a peace treaty with Armenia, an Armenian 
official said on Friday, citing Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s demands for 
Yerevan to enact major constitutional changes.

Aliyev said on Thursday that Armenia should change its constitution and other 
documents if it wants to make peace with Azerbaijan. He specifically objected to 
the current Armenian constitution’s reference to a 1990 declaration of 
independence which he said “infringes on Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.”

Edmon Marukian, an Armenian ambassador-at-large, said Aliyev thus set a 
“completely new precondition” for the peace deal that has been discussed by the 
two sides for the last two years

“Azerbaijan avoids signing the peace treaty and continuously raises new demands 
during the whole process of negotiations, thus torpedoing the peace process,” 
tweeted Marukian. He said the “endless demands” prove that Baku “does not want 
peace in the region.”

It was not clear whether Marukian expressed the Armenian government’s position. 
The government did not officially react to Aliyev’s latest demands as of Friday 
evening.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stated on January 18 that Armenia must adopt a 
new constitution reflecting the “new geopolitical environment” in the region. 
Critics believe he first and foremost wants to get rid of the current 
constitution’s preamble that makes reference to the declaration cited by Aliyev.

In a radio interview broadcast on Thursday, Pashinian did not deny Armenian 
opposition claims that he wants to change the constitution under pressure from 
Azerbaijan. He reiterated his criticism of the 1990 declaration.

Opposition lawmakers say his unilateral concessions will only lead to more 
Azerbaijani demands and increase the risk of another war. In recent weeks, four 
of them have been allowed by the Armenian Foreign Ministry to see written 
proposals regarding the treaty exchanged by Yerevan and Baku.

In a joint statement issued on Friday, they said they visited the ministry 
earlier in the day to take a look at the most recent Armenian proposals that 
were sent to Baku on January 4.

“We note that there is no significant progress in the negotiation process and 
all the concerns we voiced after getting acquainted with the previous packages 
of proposals, which are related to Armenia not receiving any additional security 
guarantees … and new concessions imposed on Armenia with the threat of force, 
remain,” they said.

They also said that the Foreign Ministry and an unnamed security service suspect 
them of breaking their pledge not to publicize the information made available to 
them. They rejected the government “threat” and said they will continue to raise 
public awareness of the negotiation process.




Ruling Party Moves To Oust Opposition Members Of Yerevan Council

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia - Andranik Tevanian, leader of the Mayr Hayastan bloc, speaks to 
reporters outside the Yerevan municipality, February 2, 2024.


The two opposition groups represented in Yerevan’s municipal council accused the 
Armenian authorities on Friday of trying to stifle dissent after the ruling 
Civil Contract party moved to oust five of their council members.

They include former Mayor Hayk Marutian, whose party finished second in last 
September’s municipal election, and four councilors representing the radical 
opposition Mayr Hayastan alliance.

Civil Contract and its local coalition partner, the Hanrapetutyun party, want to 
strip them of their seats on the grounds that they have skipped most of the 
council votes. The city council will meet to discuss the initiative on Monday.

Isabella Abgarian, a Marutian ally, dismissed the absenteeism claims, saying 
that the opposition councilors simply boycotted council sessions and votes for 
tactical reasons. She said boycott is a legitimate tool of political struggle.

“The ruling party itself has used this tool, twice failing to attend a council 
session so that it doesn’t take place,” Abgarian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s political team, she said, is simply trying to 
silence Marutian, who has stepped up his criticism of the municipal 
administration lately.

Armenia - Former Mayor Hayk Marutian votes in a local election in Yerevan, 
September 17, 2023.

“We regard this as an act of political terror by the authorities,” Andranik 
Tevanian, the Mayr Hayastan leader, charged for his part.

Tevanian said that the authorities are seeking to punish “active members” of his 
bloc in a bid to discourage others from challenging Mayor Tigran Avinian, who is 
a senior member of Civil Contract. “They will fail to achieve that,” he said.

Civil Contract declined to respond to the opposition claims.

Pashinian’s party fell well short of a majority in the city council as a result 
of the September polls. Together with Hanrapetutyun, it controls only 32 of the 
65 council seats. Marutian’s National Progress party and Mayr Hayastan hold 26 
seats between them.

The remaining 7 seats are controlled by the Public Voice party that was until 
recently led by a controversial video blogger based in the United States. 
Although the small party campaigned on an opposition platform, it decisively 
helped Civil Contract install Avinian as mayor. It now also holds the key to the 
removal of the five opposition councilors which has to be backed by the council 
majority.

Incidentally, Public Voice’s nominal chairman, Artak Galstian, has not attended 
any council session because of being held in pre-trial detention on charges of 
blackmail and extortion. The authorities have made no attempts to strip Galstian 
of his council seat.




Indicted Ex-Official Moved To House Arrest

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Economy Minister Vahan Kerobian (left) and his deputy Ani Ispirian 
attend a news conference in Yerevan, January 8, 2024.


A former Armenian deputy minister of economy was moved to house arrest on Friday 
two days after being detained and charged with abuse of power.

Ani Ispirian was taken into custody along with several other government 
officials and business executives prosecuted over a procurement tender 
administered by the Ministry of Economy last summer. She was sacked just hours 
before her arrest.

It is still not clear whether Ispirian denies or admits the accusations. Her 
lawyer, Mamikon Muradian, refused to comment on them when he was approached an 
RFE/RL correspondent following a Yerevan court’s decision to allow the house 
arrest.

Economy Minister Vahan Kerobian effectively denied the corruption charges 
brought against his current and former subordinates when he spoke to reporters 
on Thursday. Kerobian refused to comment further on Friday.

The ministry officials are accused of illegally disqualifying an information 
technology company, Harmonia, from a procurement tender to make sure that it is 
won by another, larger firm, Synergy International Systems, which set a much 
higher price for its services. Synergy’s founder and two current and former 
employees are also under arrest. One of them, Ani Gevorgian, is the wife of 
parliament speaker Alen Simonian’s brother Karlen.

Law-enforcement authorities opened a criminal case into the tender even though 
an Armenian court invalidated it last August following a lawsuit filed by 
Harmonia. Synergy did not win a fresh tender called by the ministry shortly 
afterwards.

This fact, coupled with the authorities’ decision to arrest the young woman 
related to Simonian, fueled speculation about political motives behind the 
high-profile case. Some media outlets claimed that the controversial speaker, 
who is a senior member of the ruling Civil Contract party, is increasingly at 
odds with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s political team. The party’s deputy 
chairman, Vahagn Aleksanian, denied this.

Simonian himself has not publicly commented on the arrests so far. Still, he 
made a point of posting a photograph of him, his brother and arrested 
sister-in-law on his Facebook page on Thursday.



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