RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/27/2018

                                        Monday, 

Pashinian Again Visits Karabakh


Nagorno-Karabakh - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with Karabakh 
leaders in Stepanakert, .

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has visited Nagorno-Karabakh and met with its 
leaders for a third time since taking office more than three months ago.

Pashinian was accompanied by Armenia’s Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan and the 
chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff, General Artak Davtian, during the 
low-key visit. The three men met twice on Sunday with Bako Sahakian, the 
Karabakh president, and General Levon Mnatsakanian, the commander of Karabakh’s 
Armenian-backed army.

Pashinian’s press service issued no statements on the trip.

According to Sahakian’s office, the first meeting focused on “various issues 
relating to cooperation between the two Armenian republics.”

The second meeting was held at the Karabakh army headquarters in Stepanakert. A 
short statement by Sahakian’s office said the two sides discussed military 
affairs and, in particular, ways of strengthening the army. Also, Mnatsakanian 
was reported to brief Pashinian on the current situation along the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani “line of contact.”

The authorities in Stepanakert said in May and June that Azerbaijan is massing 
troops there in possible preparation for large-scale hostilities. The 
conflicting parties have reported few major ceasefire violations on the 
Karabakh frontlines since then, however.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov and his recently appointed 
Armenian counterpart, Zohrab Mnatsakanian, held their first face-to-face talks 
in Brussels on July 11. The U.S., Russian and French mediators co-chairing the 
OSCE Mins Group, who were present at the talks, expect them they to meet again 
in September.




‘King Of Instagram’ Gets Armenian Citizenship

        • Tatevik Lazarian

Armenia - Mnatsakan Bichakhchian C), the head of an Armenian police department 
on visas and passports, poses for a photo with U.S. celebrity Dan Bilzerian (R) 
and his brother Adam in Yerevan, .

Dan Bilzerian, a controversial American social media celebrity of Armenian 
descent, officially became an Armenian citizen on Monday during his first-ever 
visit to his ancestral homeland.

Bilzerian is a professional poker player who is primarily known for his playboy 
lifestyle. He has tens of millions of followers on Instagram and Facebook who 
are attracted by his regular photos of private jets, scantily clad women, piles 
of cash and guns.

The 37-year-old nicknamed the “King of Instagram” gave no details of his trip 
to Armenia when he announced it on Twitter shortly before arriving in Yerevan 
early on Sunday night. Accompanied by several companions, he declined to answer 
questions from journalists at the city’s Zvartnots airport.

Mnatsakan Bichakhchian, the head of an Armenian police department on visas and 
passports, announced the following morning that Bilzerian and his brother Adam 
have taken an Armenian citizenship oath. Bichakhchian posted on his Facebook 
page a photograph of himself and the two men standing in his office.

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service, Bichakhchian revealed that the brothers 
were granted Armenian citizenship in 2014 but had to take the oath in order to 
complete their naturalization process. The official suggested that they were 
strongly influenced by their ethnic Armenian father Paul Bilzerian who he said 
already holds an Armenian passport.

Dan Bilzerian, who endorsed Donald Trump during the 2016 U.S. presidential 
race, is no stranger to controversy. In 2014, for example, he was briefly 
arrested in Los Angeles on suspicion of possessing bomb-making materials.

Bilzerian is the latest Armenian American celebrity to travel to Armenia. Kim 
Kardashian, the world-famous reality TV star, visited the country in April 2015.

Unlike Kardashian, Bilzerian has rarely made public statements on issues 
relevant to Armenia or the sizable Armenian community in the United States.




French Water Operator Under Corruption Probe In Armenia

        • Tatev Danielian

Armenia - The Public Services Regulatory Commission meets in Yerevan, 17Jun2015.

Law-enforcement authorities in Armenia have launched a criminal investigation 
into what they call corrupt practices by state utility regulators and a 
French-owned company running the country’s water distribution network.

The company, Veolia Jur, on Monday angrily denied the allegations made by the 
Armenian police over the weekend.

A statement by the police said that in late 2017 the then chairman of the 
Public Services Regulatory Commission (PSRC), Robert Nazarian, and seven other 
senior officials from the regulatory body travelled to France on a visit fully 
funded by Veolia Jur. The water operator, which is part of France’s Veolia 
utility giant, covered their travel and accommodation expenses worth a total of 
over $26,000.

The statement charged that these payments amounted to a bribe which Veolia 
Jur’s director general, Christian Lefaix, and another senior executive paid in 
return for securing the PSRC’s subsequent decision to allow the company to 
raise the price of drinking water. The police also claimed to have found 
financial irregularities in Veolia’s contracts with Armenian suppliers worth 
3.7 billion drams ($7.7 million).

The preliminary investigation was initiated by an aide to Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian. It will now be continued by another law-enforcement body, the 
Special Investigative Service (SIS). An SIS spokeswoman said on Monday that 
nobody has been formally charged yet in connection with the investigation.

Veolia Jur expressed “indignation” at the allegations, accusing the police of 
violating the presumption of innocence before the completion of the probe. “The 
company does not accept the incriminating tone of the police,” it said in a 
statement. A spokesman for the operator promised to give more detailed 
explanations by Tuesday.

The PSRC also rejected the “baseless” accusations. A statement by the 
commission said that the 2017 trip to France was part of “experience sharing” 
that did not predetermine the commission’s decisions.

Veolia managed the water and sewerage network of Yerevan from 2007-2016. It has 
been in charge of water supply in the entire country since November 2016. Its 
15-year management contract with the Armenian government signed at the time 
calls for annual rises in the water price which can be reversed after 2023. The 
PSRC statement emphasized this fact.

Earlier this month, Veolia asked the PSRC to raise the price by another 7 
percent, saying it needs additional revenue to upgrade the aging water network. 
Inessa Gabayan, the recently appointed head of the State Committee on Water 
Resources, strongly objected to the proposed measure. Citing a recent series of 
water main breaks and other accidents in and outside Yerevan, she said that 
many Armenians are dissatisfied with the company.

Veolia managed to phase out Soviet-era water rationing in the vast majority of 
Yerevan’s neighborhoods after taking over the municipal network. “By 2030 the 
entire population of Armenia will be supplied with drinking water [around the 
clock] thanks to Veolia,” the company pledged in November 2016.




Armenian PM, Speaker Meet To Ease Tensions

        • Tatevik Lazarian

Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (R) and Parliament Speaker Ara 
Babloyan.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and parliament speaker Ara Babloyan reportedly 
agreed on Monday to defuse political tensions in Armenia following bitter 
recriminations traded by the country’s current and former leaders.

The two men met one week after Babloyan expressed serious concern over 
Pashinian’s far-reaching statements made at an August 17 rally in Yerevan.

Addressing tens of thousands of supporters, the premier accused Armenian judges 
of acting on orders issued by the former government and threatened to create 
“bodies of transitional justice.” He also announced plans to push through the 
parliament constitutional amendments that would facilitate the conduct of fresh 
parliamentary elections. He told his supporters to be ready to press lawmakers 
to enact those changes.

Senior representatives of former President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican Party 
(HHK) reacted furiously to Pashinian’s speech, accusing him of stifling 
dissent, blackmailing the Armenian parliament and seeking to control the 
judiciary.

Babloyan, who is also affiliated with the HHK, similarly accused Pashinian of 
subjecting the parliament to “pressure and coercion.” “Prime Minister 
Pashinian’s speech at the rally contained extremely dangerous messages to the 
constitutional order,” he said in an August 20 statement.

The speaker added that he will discuss his “deep concerns” with Pashinian, 
President Armen Sarkissian as well as other Armenian officials and foreign 
diplomats based in Yerevan. Pashinian expressed readiness to meet him.

Babloyan’s office said that the two men reached a number of understandings at 
their meeting. In particular, it said, they agreed that everyone in Armenia 
should enjoy “freedom of speech and dissent,” that judicial independence “must 
not be undermined,” and that any elements of transitional justice must conform 
to the Armenian constitution. It was also agreed that any amendments to the 
Armenian constitution should be enacted as a result of “broad-based political 
discussions,” said the office.

The Armenian government did not issue any press releases on the meeting.

President Sarkissian welcomed the “agreements” reached at the premier’s talks 
with the speaker later in the day. “The president hopes that we will see 
positive results very soon,” read a statement by the presidential press service.

Hakob Badalian, a Yerevan-based political analyst, believes that Pashinian’s 
tough speech was a response to the political comeback of Robert Kocharian, 
another former president who is facing criminal charges stemming from the 2008 
post-election violence in Yerevan. Kocharian made the announcement on August 
16. HHK representatives have not ruled out the possibility of cooperating with 
him.

Badalian suggested that the HHK and Pashinian agreed to “restore the status 
quo” that existed until their latest war of words. “I think the statement [by 
Babloyan’s office] implies that there is no need for transitional justice, that 
the parliamentary elections will be held as planned and that the former 
government is not reneging on its pledges,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.

The policy program of Pashinian’s cabinet, reluctantly approved by the 
HHK-controlled parliament in June, calls for the holding of snap parliamentary 
elections within a year. Under the existing constitution, such polls can be 
held only if the prime minister resigns and the National Assembly twice fails 
to elect his or her replacement.

In his August 17 speech, Pashinian warned of the possibility of the HHK and 
other parliamentary forces installing another prime minister in case of his 
resignation. He said his political team will therefore draft constitutional 
amendments that would allow the parliament to dissolve itself. But speaking to 
journalists on August 22, Pashinian said that this is only “one of the 
scenarios” considered by his government.




Press Review



(Saturday, August 25)

1in.am hails German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s first-ever official visit to 
Armenia as “historic” and notes that it took place just a few months after the 
democratic revolution in the country. The online publication says the visit was 
a unique opportunity for the new Armenian government to present its foreign 
policy to the leader of a key European Union member state.

“Aravot” reports that the chairman of the Central Election Commission (CEC), 
Tigran Mukuchian, is ignoring calls for his resignation made by a small 
political party. The leader of the party, Andrias Ghukasian, is quoted by the 
paper as saying that the CEC and its territorial divisions are still dominated 
by members of the former ruling HHK who could manipulate upcoming elections in 
Armenia for “counterrevolutionary” purposes. Mukuchian insists, meanwhile, that 
he and other members of the CEC are now busy gearing for the proper conduct of 
those elections.

“Our society is still not prepared for being objective and constructive on many 
issues,” editorializes “Hraparak.” “For some reason elementary values and 
standards are not observed in our country. Our love for the [new] authorities 
is turning into a personality cult, while hatred is taking the form of calls 
for prosecuting, punishing, hanging and killing [opponents] … Instead of 
rejecting crimes and demanding fair punishment for criminals, we insult and 
humiliate them, expel them from the society, and treat them like lepers.” The 
paper points out that many of the people voicing such demands for decades 
tolerated the previous governments.

“Haykakan Zhamanak” reports that some officials in Azerbaijan have floated the 
idea of their country joining the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty 
Organization (CSTO). The paper believes that Azerbaijan’s membership in the 
CSTO would “disrupt the normal functioning of the organization” due to the 
unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

(Tigran Avetisian)


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