RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/26/2020

                                        Wednesday, 

Armenian Authorities Rule Out Referendum Fraud

        • Gayane Saribekian
        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks at an election campaign rally in 
Masis, December 3, 2018.

Armenia’s political leadership has insisted that it will not resort to fraud and 
use government levers to win the upcoming referendum on controversial 
constitutional changes sought by it.

“I would rather cut off my two hands than allow the falsification of a single 
vote because that would mean erasing the entire life lived by us and all those 
values which we stand for,” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian declared during a 
referendum campaign fundraiser held by his Civil Contract Party in Yerevan late 
on Tuesday.

Pashinian again defended his administration’s push to oust the chairman and six 
other judges of Armenia’s nine-member Constitutional Court through the proposed 
amendments. He said that they do not “represent the people” and hamper 
far-reaching political reforms in the country.

Critics dismiss this explanation, saying that Pashinian is simply seeking to 
fill the country’s highest court with his loyalists.

The fundraiser, which journalists were not allowed to attend, marked the 
official start of the ruling party’s campaign for a “Yes” vote in the referendum 
scheduled for April 5. The campaign is managed by the party’s nominal chairman, 
Minister for Local Government Suren Papikian.


Armenia -- Minister for Local Government Suren Papikian at a news conference in 
Yerevan, .

Papikian said on Wednesday that Pashinian and other Civil Contract figures 
holding senior positions in the central and local governments will be actively 
campaigning for a referendum victory in the coming weeks. He promised that 
Pashinian’s political team will not use its administrative resources to secure 
around 650,000 votes needed for the adoption of the constitutional amendments.

Papikian said that government officials abusing their powers for that purpose 
would be “strictly punished.” “Let nobody, be it a city or village mayor, do the 
authorities such a disservice,” he told a news conference. “We don’t need that.”

Armenia’s former leadership routinely pressured public sector employees and 
exploited its administrative resources otherwise to win elections and 
referendums marred by fraud allegations. Its election campaigns were usually 
managed by Hovik Abrahamian, a once influential minister for local government 
who also served as prime minister from 2014-2016 during President Serzh 
Sarkisian’s rule.

Some bitter critics of the current government have speculated that Papikian, 
whose ministry oversees Armenian provincial administrations and local government 
bodies, will take advantage of his post in a similar fashion.

The 33-year-old minister categorically ruled out such a possibility. “Please do 
not compare me to Hovik Abrahamian,” he said. “I see no similarities apart from 
the position held by us.”




Pashinian Unhappy With Results Of Corruption Probes


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with senior law-enforcement 
officials, Yerevan, .

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian criticized on Wednesday the results of corruption 
investigations conducted by Armenian law-enforcement authorities during his 
rule, saying that so far they have recovered only up to $80 million in “funds 
stolen from the state.”

Pashinian said the sum makes up a fraction of the financial “damage which 
Armenia has suffered in the last 30 years as a consequence of corruption-related 
crimes.”

“Can we guarantee that the law-enforcement system is now fully and 
wholeheartedly performing … its functions in the fight against corruption? 
Unfortunately, I cannot give a definitely positive answer [to this question,]” 
he said at a meeting with the heads of Armenia’s law-enforcement agencies.

“Armenia has suffered billions of dollars worth of damage as a result of corrupt 
activities of high-ranking officials, and I, as the leader of Armenia, received 
a popular mandate also for my pledges to recover those billions,” he told them. 
“So I expect the law-enforcement bodies to live up … to our people’s just 
expectations.”

Pashinian complained that investigators have failed to prevent some corruption 
suspects from fleeing the country and to find evidence of current or former 
state officials’ connection to illegally acquired assets. In that context, he 
spoke of “traitors in the highest echelons of the law-enforcement system” who he 
said had ulterior goals.

Pashinian did not name names in his opening remarks at the meeting publicized by 
his press office. The office released no details of his ensuing discussion the 
top security officials. It said only that they discussed “further steps in the 
fight against corruption.”

Pashinian has repeatedly claimed to have eliminated “systemic corruption” in 
Armenia after coming to power in the 2018 “Velvet Revolution.” The number of 
corruption cases brought by Armenian law-enforcement authorities has risen 
significantly since the dramatic change of government. The most high-profile of 
these cases have involved former top government officials and individuals linked 
to them.

Armenia has improved its position in an annual survey of corruption perceptions 
around the world conducted by Transparency International. It ranked, together 
with Bahrain and the Solomon Islands, 77th out of 180 countries and territories 
evaluated in the Berlin-based watchdog’s 2019 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) 
released last month.




Armenians Evacuated From Coronavirus-Hit Iran

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia -- Armenian citizens flown back from Iran are seen at Yerevan airport, 
.

Fifty-two Armenians were evacuated from Iran on Wednesday as the Islamic 
Republic continued to grapple with the spread of coronavirus.

The Armenian nationals arrived at Yerevan’s Zvartnots airport on a special 
flight from Tehran arranged by the Armenian government. They wore medical masks 
and received guidance from medics deployed by the Ministry of Health at the 
airport’s arrivals section.

Another medic was on the plane that brought them back to Armenia. None of the 
passengers was said to have a fever or other potential coronavirus symptoms.

The evacuees were not placed under quarantine. Health authorities instead 
collected their contact details and pledged to regularly monitor their condition.

“There is more panic here [than in Iran,]” one of the evacuees told reporter at 
Zvartnots.

Armenia plans to evacuate more of its citizens from Iran with another special 
flight scheduled for Friday.

The Armenian government decided on Monday to suspend regular flights between the 
two countries and close the Armenian-Iranian border for individual travel for at 
least two weeks. The border will remain for open cargo shipments.

According to the Armenian Health and Labor Inspectorate, 155 Iranian truck 
drivers and 11 other persons crossed into Armenia on Tuesday and Wednesday. 
Armenian health officials briefly examined their condition at the border 
checkpoint and detected no suspected cases of the virus, said the government 
agency.


Iran -- An Iranian woman wears a protective mask at a drug store in Tehran, 
.

Iranian authorities reported on Wednesday that 139 people have been infected by 
coronavirus in Iran and 19 of them have died so far. This is the highest number 
of deaths from coronavirus outside China, where the virus emerged in late 2019.

Kuwait, Iraq, Bahrain, Oman, Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates and Afghanistan 
have all reported cases of coronavirus involving people who traveled to Iran.

No cases have been reported in Armenia. The authorities in Yerevan say they are 
continuing to take precautionary measures against the possible spread of the 
virus.

In a related development, the Armenian Defense Ministry on Wednesday temporarily 
banned visits by relatives and friends of military personnel to all army bases. 
It also cancelled the soldiers’ leaves.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS