Tuesday, Indicted Businessman Seeks Medical Treatment Abroad • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia - Businessman Samvel Mayrapetian at the official opening of his Toyota-Yerevan car dealership in Yerevan, 23 June 2009. A prominent Armenian businessman prosecuted on corruption charges has appealed to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) after law-enforcement authorities in Yerevan refused to allow him to undergo medical treatment abroad. The millionaire businessman, Samvel Mayrapetian, was arrested and charged with “assisting in bribery” in October. Armenia’s Special Investigative Service (SIS) has still not publicized details of the accusations. The tycoon had greatly benefited from close ties with the country’s former governments. An Armenian court freed Mayrapetian on bail on December 27. He has remained in a Yerevan hospital since then. Immediately after his release Mayrapetian requested the SIS’s permission to leave for Germany for health reasons. The law-enforcement body refused to return his passport. Mayrapetian’s lawyers responded by asking the ECHR on January 2 to order the Armenian authorities to allow his treatment in a German clinic. The lawyers said on Monday that the Strasbourg court has accepted the lawsuit and asked the Armenian Justice Ministry to explain the investigators’ refusal to let the suspect leave the country. A ministry spokesperson confirmed the information on Tuesday. One of the lawyers, Karen Batikian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that his client is suffering from a life-threatening form of pancreatitis that requires urgent surgery. He insisted that Armenian hospitals lack modern equipment needed for such an operation. “His life is really in very serious danger,” said Batikian. “We have documents signed by doctors certifying that this disease cannot be cured in Armenia.” Batikian said later in the day that the SIS has handed the passport back to Mayrapetian but made clear that he will still not be allowed to fly to Germany. Mayrapetian is one of Armenia’s leading real estate developers who also owns a national TV channel and a car dealership. His company was involved in a controversial redevelopment of old districts in downtown Yerevan during the 1998-2008 rule of former President Robert Kocharian. Some media outlets for years linked Kocharian’s elder son Sedrak to the Toyota dealership. Kocharian is currently held in pretrial detention, having been charged in connection with the deadly breakup of post-election opposition protests in March 2008. He denies the accusations as politically motivated. Armenian, Azeri FMs Set For More Talks U.S. - Foreign Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov (R) of Azerbaijan and Zohrab Mnatsakanian (second from right) of Armenia pose for a photograph with the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs in New York, 26 September 2018. International mediators are trying to organize another meeting of Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s foreign ministers later this month, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday. “The [U.S., Russian and French] co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group have proposed a meeting of the foreign ministers in January,” the ministry spokeswoman, Anna Naghdalian, told the Armenpress news agency. “An announcement on the meeting will be made in a coordinated manner.” Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov held three face-to-face meetings in the second half of 2018. According to the co-chairs, at their most recent talks held in Milan on December 5 Mnatsakanian and Mammadyarov pledged to “work intensively to promote a peaceful resolution of the conflict and to further reduce tensions.” “They agreed to meet again in early 2019 under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs for this purpose and in order to facilitate high-level talks,” the mediating troika said in a December 6 statement. Both ministers described the Milan meeting as “useful.” Mammadyarov said that it resulted in a rare “mutual understanding” between the two parties to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The ministers met in the Italian city the day before Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev spoke to each other at a summit of ex-Soviet states held in Russia. Pashinian and Aliyev also had a brief conversation during the previous CIS summit held in Tajikistan in September. There has been a significant decrease in ceasefire violations in the Karabakh conflict zone since then. “The year 2019 will give a new impetus to the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement process,” Aliyev wrote on his Twitter page on December 14. Pashinian tweeted two hours later that a Karabakh settlement “remains a top priority” for Armenia. Court Approves Fresh Arrest Warrant Over 2008 Crackdown • Anush Muradian Armenia- Vahagn Harutyunian, the former head of a criminal investigation into the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan. A Yerevan court has approved a fresh arrest warrant against the man who led a criminal investigation into the 2008 post-election violence in Armenia during former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule. The former official, Vahagn Harutiunian, was charged in late October with forging factual evidence to cover up the Armenian army’s involvement in the deadly breakup of opposition protests staged in the wake of a disputed presidential election. He left Armenia for Russia in July, ostensibly to receive medical treatment, and apparently remains there. On November 2, a court of first instance in the Armenian capital allowed the Special Investigative Service (SIS) to arrest Harutiunian pending investigation. The Court of Appeals annulled the arrest warrant on December 13, however. Shortly afterwards, Harutiunian was also charged with two counts of abuse of power. According to an SIS spokeswoman, Marina Ohanjanian, the district court again sanctioned the former SIS investigator’s arrest on December 30. Harutiunian rejected the initial accusation leveled against him as “unfounded, illegal and fabricated” when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service by phone on November 1. He insisted that his team of investigators never found any evidence of illegal actions taken by the Armenian military during the 2008 unrest, which left eight protesters and two police servicemen dead. The SIS completely changed the official version of events following last spring’s mass protests that toppled Sarkisian. It now says that Sarkisian’s outgoing predecessor, Robert Kocharian, illegally ordered army units into the streets of Yerevan before declaring a state of emergency on March 1, 2008. Kocharian was arrested on December 7 on charges of overthrowing Armenia’s constitutional order. The former president denies them, saying that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is waging a political “vendetta” against him. Pashinian was a key speaker at the 2008 protests. The former journalist subsequently spent about two years in prison for organizing what the SIS used to describe as “mass disturbances.” He strongly denied those charges. New Parliament Majority ‘Wary’ Of Opposition Party • Gayane Saribekian Armenia - Gevorg Gorgisian (L) and other election candidates of the Bright Armenia party campaign in Yerevan, November 26, 2018. An opposition politician claimed on Tuesday that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government is too scared to cede a leadership position in Armenia’s newly elected parliament to his party. Pashinian’s My Step alliance named the incoming speaker of the National Assembly and two of his three deputies ten days after winning the December 9 parliamentary elections by a landslide. The Armenian constitution reserves the third post of deputy speaker for a representative of the parliamentary opposition. It will therefore be given to one of the two other political parties that have entered the new parliament: Prosperous Armenia (BHK) and Bright Armenia. They will have 26 and 18 parliament seats respectively. Pashinian indicated on Monday that My Step lawmakers will likely vote for a candidate of the BHK because the latter is the second largest parliamentary force. Gevorg Gorgisian, a senior Bright Armenia lawmaker, dismissed Pashinian’s explanation. “It’s a political decision, and I think it’s wrong to cover it up with different wording,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “They should just come out and openly say that they have decided to gift that post to the BHK.” Gorgisian insisted that his party will be a “strong opposition” with or without controlling the post of vice-speaker. “Maybe they are scared of further strengthening Bright Armenia by giving it [power] levers,” he said of the parliament majority. Bright Armenia, Pashinian’s Civil Contract party and another party made up the Yelk alliance that was in opposition to the country’s former government. Pashinian toppled it in May after weeks of mass protests organized by him. Bright Armenia declined to join the protest movement. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. 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