Tuesday, Pashinian Meets Ter-Petrosian Armenia - Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian (L) and Nikol Pashinian greet supporters in Yerevan's Liberty Square, 31 May 2011. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and former President Levon Ter-Petrosian have met for the first time in years to discuss challenges facing Armenia. In a statement posted on its Facebook page on Tuesday, the Armenian government said the meeting took place in Pashinian’s state-owned residence in Yerevan on Monday. “The first president [Ter-Petrosian] expressed his views regarding ways of overcoming a number of challenges facing Armenia,” it said. “Issues pertaining to foreign policy and the Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) conflict were discussed.” “The meeting took place at Levon Ter-Petrosian’s initiative,” it added. No further details were reported. Ter-Petrosian’s office issued no statements on the meeting as of Tuesday afternoon. Pashinian played a prominent role in Ter-Petrosian’s broad-based opposition movement that nearly brought the latter back to power in a disputed presidential election held in February 2008. Pashinian was one of the most influential speakers at the ex-president’s anti-government rallies held at the time. He spent about two years in prison on charges stemming from a post-election government crackdown on the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition. Pashinian fell out with Ter-Petrosian after being released from prison in 2011. Accordingly, his relationship with Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress (HAK) opposition party became very strained. As recently as in February, the HAK’s deputy chairman, Levon Zurabian, scoffed at Pashinian’s plans to try to stop then President Serzh Sarkisian from extending his decade-long rule. Even so, the HAK voiced support for the Pashinian-led movement as it gained momentum in mid-April. It demanded Pashinian’s immediate release when he was detained on April 22, the day before Sarkisian decided to resign as prime minister. Ter-Petrosian, 73, issued different written statements during the unprecedented mass protests that practically paralyzed the country in late April and early May. The day before Pashinian was elected prime minister on May 8, he warned the protest leaders against taking “unconstitutional steps.” But on May 17, Ter-Petrosian, who served as Armenia’s first president from 1991-1998, expressed serious concern at street closures, blockades of government buildings, strikes and other disruptive actions which continued even after the dramatic regime change. He said they could help Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK) “sabotage” the work of Pashinian’s government. Serzh Sarkisian’s Fugitive Nephew Set To Face More Charges • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia - An armed officer of the National Security Service guards an entrance to the Yerevan house of former President Serzh Sarkisian's brother Aleksandr searched by investigators, 4 July 2018. Law-enforcement authorities have moved to bring more criminal charges against a nephew of former President Serzh Sarkisian who apparently fled Armenia late last month. The National Security Service (NSS) issued an arrest warrant for Narek Sarkisian after searching his family’s house in downtown Yerevan and other properties earlier this month. It claimed that he asked one of his friends in June to hide his illegally owned guns, cocaine and other drugs in a safer place. The NSS released a video showing two suitcases purportedly filled with those items. According to the NSS, Narek flew to Moscow on June 22 together with his bodyguard, Artem Poghosian, who was also wanted by the investigators. Poghosian returned to Yerevan and turned himself in on July 10. Narek’s younger brother Hayk was arrested and charged with attempted murder and illegal arms possession last week. The two men’s controversial father Aleksandr is a younger brother of former President Sarkisian. He was briefly detained during the NSS raid on his luxury residence. Armenia -- Narek Sarkisian, a nephew of former President Serzh Sarkisian. The Armenian police said on Monday that Narek Sarkisian, 31, is now also suspected of kidnapping a man last August with the help of his bodyguard and other individuals. It said that Narek threatened to shoot the 49-year-old man before beating him up and burning “various parts of his body” with a lighter. The man was freed only after promising not to open a nightclub in Yerevan, according to a police statement. A spokeswoman for Armenia’s Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Tuesday that his office has instructed the NSS to conduct a kidnapping and assault investigation targeting Narek. The NSS did not immediately comment on the new probe ordered by prosecutors. Also facing prosecution is the ex-president’s second brother, Levon Sarkisian. He and his daughter were charged with “illegal enrichment” after tax inspectors discovered in late June that they hold millions of dollars in undeclared deposits at an Armenian bank. A Yerevan court issued an arrest warrant for Levon Sarkisian early this month. He has still not been arrested, however, suggesting that he too fled the country. Serzh Sarkisian, who governed Armenia from 2008-20018, has not yet publicly commented on the highly embarrassing criminal proceedings launched against his close relatives. Yerevan ‘Working’ On Aid Proposals To EU • Sargis Harutyunyan Belgium - European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meet in Brussels,12 July, 2018. The Armenian government will make soon detailed proposals designed to convince the European Union to significantly increase its economic assistance to Armenia, a spokesman for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Tuesday. Pashinian criticized the EU for not promising additional aid to Yerevan when he ended a two-day visit to Brussels last week. The head of the EU Delegation in Armenia, Piotr Switalski, countered on Monday that his government needs to first come up with specific reform-oriented projects requiring EU funding. Pashinian’s press secretary, Arman Yeghoyan, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) that the government is now working on such projects. “Those proposals are being worked out and I can say in general terms that they will mainly relate to the development of Armenia’s public infrastructures and institutional reforms … We are going to present clear programs,” he said. Yeghoyan did not specify the amount of extra EU aid that will be requested by the new authorities in Yerevan. “We are talking about a fairly solid sum, but I can’t give a concrete figure,” he said. Stepan Grigorian, a Yerevan-based political analyst, claimed that Pashinian’s government will be seeking as much as 1 billion euros ($1.17 billion) in EU funding. The EU pledged last year to provide up to 160 million euros ($185 million) in fresh aid to Armenia over the next three years in line with the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) signed with the previous Armenian government. Switalski announced that a senior official from the European Commission, the EU’s executive body, will visit Yerevan later this week to discuss with Armenian leaders their “expectations and needs.” “This must be a very concrete discussion,” the diplomat stressed. Stepan Safarian, another pro-Western analyst, was very skeptical about Armenia’s ability to attract large-scale EU aid without a change of its geopolitical orientation. “It is not realistic to expect the kind huge of assistance which the EU has been providing to Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine in return for their complete Europeanization,” he said. “Armenia must not have such expectations.” Ever since he swept to power in a wave of mass protests in May, Pashinian has repeatedly ruled out a change of his country’s geopolitical orientation. While voicing support for closer ties with the EU as well as the United States, he has pledged to keep it primarily allied to Russia. Press Review “Zhamanak” comments on European Union Ambassador Piotr Switalski’s response to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s criticism of the EU. “Ambassador Switalski says that they expect changes, new ideas from Armenia’s new government,” writes the paper. “The ambassador’s remarks are certainly appropriate. Armenia needs to make more substantive proposals to Brussels about what kind of assistance it expects, in what form and on what scale. It is not yet clear whether Nikol Pashinian presented such things during his visit to Brussels.” Pashinian should clarify that, it says. A Georgian analyst, Gela Vasadze, tells “168 Zham” that Yerevan would be wrong to think that the EU will give it more aid “just because regime change occurred here.” “We already went through that,” he says. “After that Georgia had to spend a lot of time proving its European course … The EU needs neither Georgia nor Armenia. We need the EU. We must prove that we are worthy of their standards.” “Our young rulers need to realize that they are no longer activists and none of their steps and statements goes unnoticed,” writes “Hraparak.” The paper cites controversy caused by Deputy Prime Minister Ararat Mirzoyan’s spokesman Karpis Pashoyan, who questioned motives of Armenian soldiers killed in the 2016 war in Karabakh. It also says: “While opposition politician Nikol Pashinian was free to lambaste the Europeans and the Russians and tell bitter truths about their hypocritical policies, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s slight discontent with the EU’s perceived failure to properly finance reforms in Armenia could cause an international scandal and prompt a tough reaction from the EU.” “Zhoghovurd” comments on the launch of a criminal investigation into an Armenian parliament deputy and a village mayor suspected of handing out vote bribes in last year’s general elections. The paper claims that tens of thousands of other people in Armenia can also be prosecuted on such charges given the scale of chronic vote buying in the country. (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