Friday, Armenian Police Struggle To Contain Continuing Protests • Karlen Aslanian • Narine Ghalechian • Tatev Danielian • Hovannes Movsisian Armenia - Police detain a protester in Yerevan, . At least 169 people were detained in Yerevan on Friday as the Armenian police tried to stop opposition supporters from again blocking streets in protest against Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian. The protests mainly involving young people resumed in various parts of the Armenian capital in the morning following opposition leader Nikol Pashinian’s calls for a “total blockade” of streets as well as roads leading to the city. Hundreds of protesters led by Pashinian marched through Yerevan’s northern and western districts, urging Armenians to “reject Serzh” and again rally in central Republic Square in the evening. They were greeted by many bystanders and car drivers honking their horns in response to Pashinian’s appeal to “beep if you are against Serzh.” Many car horns reverberated throughout the city. One of the city’s main bridges was blocked by three heavy trucks when the crowd reached early in the afternoon. The truck drivers left their vehicles parked there and joined the Pashinian-led march. “We want to stand with our young people,” one of them told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). “We want a good life for our children.” Armenia - A heavy truck blocks access to Yerevan's Kievian Bridge in a show of support for opposition protesters, . Meanwhile, smaller groups of Pashinian supporters tried to shut down traffic in several other parts of Yerevan. They were confronted by riot police keen to keep the roads open. Dozens of protesters were detained as a result. Several hundred employees one of the country’s largest information technology firms, Synopsys Armenia, went on strike and blocked a major street adjacent to their company’s offices. Police intervened to reopen Arshakuniats Avenue to traffic 30 minutes later. Synopsys engineers were joined by other protesters later in the afternoon. More than two hundred students marched unimpeded through downtown Yerevan in the meantime. Armenia - People block a street in Yerevan to protest against Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, . According to the police, the total number of detainees stood at 169 as of 2 p.m. local time. RFE/RL correspondents witnessed two dozen people bundled into police vans, personal cars and even public buses used by the police. Plainclothes policemen were also involved in the operation. The police defended the detentions, saying that the protesters are not legally allowed to block streets and law-enforcement officers have to restore “public order.” A police statement warned that failure to obey officers’ orders will lead to “negative legal consequences.” More than a hundred protesters were detained and kept in police custody for several hours on Wednesday. Karapetian Retains Key Economic Role Armenia - Outgoing President Serzh Sarkisian and outgoing Prime Minister Karen Karapetian meet in Yerevan, 7 April 2018. Karen Karapetian said on Friday that he will remain in charge of the Armenian government’s economic policies in his new capacity as first deputy prime minister. The former prime minister met a group of other senior government officials three days after being replaced by former President Serzh Sarkisian. The latter named Karapetian his first deputy on Wednesday. “We have divided our functions in this way: I will be responsible for the economic bloc and regional governance,” Karapetian told the officials, among them the ministers of economy, agriculture, energy and transport. “Accordingly, we are making some changes in the [government] staff and ascertaining the functions and tasks of departments, and so we have to work in a very targeted manner,” he said, adding that the relevant government agencies must now “review and restart the plans for this year.” Karapetian was tasked with improving the socioeconomic situation in Armenia when Sarkisian appointed him prime minister in September 2016. He subsequently unveiled an ambitious economic reform agenda. Citing robust economic growth recorded by the government last year, Karapetian said his cabinet has succeeded in achieving “all macro-objectives” set by Sarkisian when he met with the outgoing president on April 7. Sarkisian said at that meeting that he and Karapetian will be Armenia’s two top government leaders in the coming years. Armenian Church Leaders Concerned About Unrest Armenia - Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian meets with Garegin II (R), Catholicos of All Armenians (R), and Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, Yerevan, 20Apr2018. The two heads of the Armenian Apostolic Church voices their concerns in connection with continuing anti-government demonstrations in Yerevan when they met with Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian on Friday. According to Sarkisian’s press office, Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II and the Lebanon-based Catholicos Aram I “appreciated” the fact that there have been no serious violent clashes between protesters and security forces so far. Aram, who is the number two figure in the church hierarchy, said the daily protests against Sarkisian disrupting traffic in the capital are hurting Armenia. “After all, it will take months to overcome the consequences of these demonstrations and damage caused in the course of them,” he said. “The country could be damaged. We must tell the demonstrators that this is our common fatherland and all of us are its children.” In this regard, Aram hailed Sarkisian’s offers of dialogue made to the protest leader, Nikol Pashinian. Armenia’s government and opposition should discuss all contentious issues “at the negotiating table, not on the street,” he said. Garegin also called for “national consolidation and unity” but stopped short of explicitly criticizing the protesters, according his remarks publicized by Sarkisian’s office. “We are praying for this situation to gradually calm down and return to normal,” he told the premier. In a televised interview aired on Thursday, Sarkisian criticized the protests against his decision to stay in power, as prime minister, after serving out his final presidential term on April 9.“When there is no logic in people’s actions it’s very difficult to understand how events will develop,” he told the Shant TV channel. “Unfortunately, we once went down that bitter path,” he said, apparently referring to the March 2008 violent unrest in Yerevan which preceded the start of his presidency. He said his government “will do everything to avoid” a repeat of that scenario. The premier also said: “We will never opt to restrict rights under any circumstances.” Armenian Protest Leader Demands Snap Elections • Emil Danielyan • Karlen Aslanian Armenia - Opposition supporters demonstrate in Republic Square in Yerevan, 20 April 2018. Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian stepped up the pressure on the Armenian authorities on Friday, saying that he would only discuss with them the terms of Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian’s resignation and demanding snap parliamentary elections. Pashinian responded to government offers of “dialogue” as he held what appeared to be his largest rally yet, which followed spontaneous protests staged by his supporters in various parts of Yerevan throughout the day. Addressing thousands of supporters in the city’s central Republic Square late in the evening, Pashinian labelled Sarkisian a “political corpse” who has effectively lost power. “It doesn’t mean that we are not prepared to have any discussion [with the authorities,]” he said. “We are certainly ready to discuss time frames and certain conditions for Serzh Sarkisian’s resignation.” “I think you will agree with me in that we don’t want any vendettas or revenge,” he said. “And if Serzh Sarkisian opens his eyes and steps down as soon as possible that will only be good for him and Armenia.” After Sarkisian’s resignation, Pashinian went on, the Armenian parliament must appoint a “candidate of the people” as prime minister, form an interim government and then call fresh general elections that would have to be “100 percent clean, free and fair.” ARMENIA -- Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian (R) speaks in a megaphone as he takes part in an opposition rally in central Yerevan, April 17, 2018 The 42-year-old admitted his willingness to be interim premier. “If the people think I should shoulder such responsibility, I will shoulder such responsibility,” he told reporters. Sarkisian, who has governed Armenia for the past ten years, has sought to reach out to Pashinian through his Republican Party (HHK) and his junior coalition partner, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun). Dashnaktsutyun’s leadership proposed on Thursday a “forum for political consultations” between the country’s leading political groups which would be mediated by President Armen Sarkissian. First Deputy Prime Minister Karen Karapetian also made a case for dialogue on Friday, saying that he is “very worried” about the weeklong wave of protests that has swept through not only Yerevan but also several other cities and towns. “Even warring countries negotiate and find logical solutions,” Karapetian told the Armenia TV channel. “We, Armenians, must sit down in hour own home, rationally negotiate and find logical ways out of this situation. In case of instability, all of us will suffer, our country will suffer.” Karapetian, who was replaced by Sarkisian as prime minister on April 9, would not be drawn on possible government concessions to the Pashinian-led opposition. “Let us listen to concerns, make proposals, raise all contentious issues and audaciously talk about them,” he said, speaking before Pashinian’s latest speech. Armenia - Young supporters of opposition leader Nikol Pashinian converge on Republic Square in Yerevan, . An HHK spokesman insisted on Thursday that Sarkisian’s resignation is out of the question. The ruling party did not immediately react to Pashinian’s preconditions for the proposed dialogue. Pashinian, his Civil Contract party and other opposition and civic groups launched the daily protests on April 13 in a bid to prevent Sarkisian from extending his rule. The campaign showed no signs of abating on Friday as more young Armenians, including high school students, took to the streets and tried to stop traffic ahead of the Republic Square rally. More than 230 of them were detained by the police. The police continued to threaten to forcibly break up the “illegal” gatherings. A police statement released on Friday evening warned that security forces are allowed to use “special means,” presumably including stun grenades and tear gas, against protesters defying their orders. Joined by and hundeds of his supporters, Pashinian marched through Yerevan’s northern and western districts in the morning and afternoon. He said he will take his campaign to other city suburbs on Saturday morning. Press Review “Zhoghovurd” hits back at Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian’s claim that ongoing anti-government demonstrations in Armenia could have an adverse impact on the domestic economy. “Serzh Sarkisian has revealed the reason for a drop in foreign investment in Armenia,” it comments sarcastically. The paper says Armenians are now protesting against him in large numbers because “the authorities have always rigged election results, thereby incurring the public’s ire.” “By the way, does Serzh Sarkisian know by any chance for whom the last two presidential elections were falsified and who became the head of state as a result of that?” it asks, adding that it is Sarkisian and his HHK who have been “repelling investors from Armenia.” “Aravot” worries that both the authorities and the protesters led by Nikol Pashinian are reluctant to end the deepening standoff through negotiations. “Clearly, the authorities and the so-called revolutionaries are seeking a zero-sum game,” editorializes the paper. “But that is not possible because Armenia is not run by a dictatorial regime whatever some oppositionists may say. We have no resources to become a dictatorship. All other results of the game are acceptable.” The paper believes that a mutually acceptable compromise solution can be found. “Hayots Ashkhar” also discusses growing calls for such a dialogue. “A dialogue is certainly a good thing,” it says. “Political negotiations have been a part and parcel of wars and revolutions and coalition building since ancient times. And therein lies the main problem. How interested is Nikol Pashinian in a search for mutually acceptable solutions? Is he interested at all? One can say whatever they want, but how to gauge one’s sincerity?” The pro- government daily suggests that Pashinian does not really want a dialogue with the government. “Negotiations and mutual concessions just don’t fit into the strategy of street activists,” it says. “As recently as two weeks ago, everyone in Armenia was convinced that the people’s spirit of resistance has been utterly broken and that Serzh Sarkisian will do whatever he wants because people will not take to the streets in any case,” writes “Chorrord Ishkhanutyun.” “The authorities were also sure about that, asserting the irreplaceability of their boss and saying that the game is over. There are now tens of thousands of protesters in the streets of Yerevan. Rallies are also held in Gyumri, Vanadzor, Armavir and other towns. The public’s hatred towards the HHK-controlled authorities and Serzh Sarkisian personally was obviously underestimated.” (Tigran Avetisian) Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org