Wednesday, September 2, 2020 Former Police Chief’s Properties Investigated • Narine Ghalechian Armenia - Vladimir Gasparian (L), the chief of the Armenian police, argues with a protester in Yerevan, 26Jun2015. Law-enforcement authorities have launched a criminal investigation into a luxury compound belonging to Vladimir Gasparian, a former chief of the Armenian police. The Investigative Committee said on Wednesday that the properties located on the northern shore of Lake Sevan may have been built and officially registered in violation of Armenian laws strictly regulating construction in the environmentally sensitive area. In a statement, the law-enforcement body said a government agency registered the entire compound in January 2018 despite suspicions that some of its 14 houses and other structures had been built illegally. It said the registration was controversially recommended by the leadership of the state-run Sevan National Park (SNP). Vahe Gulanian, who ran the SNP at the time, categorically denied breaking any laws or government regulations when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service. He described the Investigative Committee statement as “flawed.” The statement said that the Investigative Committee is conducting a criminal investigation into forgery and failure to prevent illegal construction and seizure of public land. It has not charged anyone so far. A spokeswoman for the committee said investigators have not questioned Gasparian as part of the inquiry. A lawyer for Gasparian, Tigran Atanesian, scoffed at the probe in a short Facebook post. “Don’t you know other heroes?” wrote Atanesian. According to the Investigative Committee statement, the criminal case was opened as a result of an ongoing separate investigation into Gasparian’s threats voiced against RFE/RL reporters last month. The former police chief accosted and threatened them with violence as they filmed his compound while collecting material about illegally built villas along the Sevan coastline. Obstruction of news reporting and other journalistic work is a criminal offense in Armenia. Gasparian headed the national police service from 2011 to 2018. He was sacked immediately after the “Velvet Revolution” of April-May 2018 that toppled the country previous government. In September 2018, Gasparian was charged with abusing his powers to benefit people working for former President Serzh Sarkisian’s brothers. He denies the accusations. Yerevan Slams Turkey's Ban On German Military Flights To Armenia Germany -- The Airbus A310 of the Federal German Air Force named Theodor Heuss at the military section of Tegel Airport in Berlin, 24Jun2011 The Armenian Foreign Ministry confirmed on Wednesday reports that Turkey has refused to allow a German military transport aircraft to fly over its airspace en route to Armenia. The plane was due to pick up Armenian soldiers and transport them to Germany for further training preceding their deployment in Afghanistan. Some 120 Armenian servicemen serve in Afghanistan under German command as part of a NATO-led multinational force. The Armenian military rotates them on a regular basis. The German magazine “Der Spiegel” reported on Friday that the Airbus 310 aircraft of the German Air Force was on its way to Yerevan in late July when Turkish air traffic controllers unexpectedly refused, without any explanation, to give it overflight permission. The plane had to return to a German military airfield as a result, it said, adding that the Armenian soldiers were flown to Germany over Russia’s airspace in mid-August. “As far as I know, the Defense Ministry did not refute that information,” said Anna Naghdalian, the spokeswoman for the Armenian Foreign Ministry. “It is condemnable that Turkey now also obstructs NATO-led and UN-led peacekeeping operations based on its anti-Armenian positions,” Naghdalian told reporters. “We have raised this issue with our international partners through diplomatic channels.” Armenia -- A German army general gives medals to Armenian soldiers serving in Afghanistan. Ankara has not denied the “Der Spiegel” report. According to the report, the German military, the Bundeswehr, regards the Turkish move as a “deliberate provocation” by a NATO member state. The German plane was reportedly not allowed to fly over Turkish territory just days after the outbreak of heavy fighting on Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan, Turkey’s closest regional ally. Ankara blamed Yerevan for the weeklong hostilities, which left 17 soldiers dead, and voiced support for Baku in unusually strong terms. The Armenian government responded by accusing the Turks of trying to destabilize the region, undercutting international efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and posing a serious security threat to Armenia. Karabakh Leader Sees No Peace Deal With Azerbaijan Nagorno Karabakh -- Karabakh President Ara Harutiunian airs a live video message on Facebook, Stepanakert, May 29, 2020 The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is unlikely to be fully resolved in the foreseeable future, Ara Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, said on Wednesday. “The likelihood of resolving this problem within decades is very low,” Harutiunian told a news conference in Stepanakert. “We don’t see that happening.” “That is why through strengthening our army we should force the enemy to reckon with the Armenian force of Artsakh (Karabakh) and maintain the status quo until major geopolitical developments that could lead to some temporary or rather partial resolution of the Karabakh conflict,” he said. “A full resolution is not possible.” The Karabakh leader said that the international community has already brokered such an interim solution to the conflict in Kosovo, an Albanian-populated former province of Serbia recognized as an independent state by most Western nations. Harutiunian spoke to reporters on the 19th anniversary of Karabakh’s declaration of independence from Soviet Azerbaijan which came just four months before the breakup of the Soviet Union and was followed by a bloody Armenian-Azerbaijani war for the territory. Azerbaijan never recognized the legality of that declaration. It continues to consider Karabakh an internationally recognized part of Azerbaijan occupied by Armenia. Harutiunian’s remarks came amid efforts by international mediators -- and Russia in particular -- to revive the Karabakh peace process following the recent heavy fighting at a volatile section of the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday that both Yerevan and Baku now seem interested in further easing tensions and resuming peace talks mediated by the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group. He stressed that the talks should continue to focus on a framework peace accord which was first put forward by the mediators in 2007 and has been repeatedly modified since then. The mediators’ so-called Madrid Principles call for a phased settlement that would start with Armenian withdrawal from virtually all seven districts in Azerbaijan proper fully or partly controlled by Karabakh Armenian forces. In return, Karabakh’s predominantly Armenian population would be able to determine the dispute region’s internationally recognized status in a future referendum. Red Cross Still Seeking Access To Armenian POW In Azerbaijan • Robert Zargarian Armenia - The Armenian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Anna Naghdalian, at a news briefing in Yerevan, December 20, 2018. Representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) have still not been able to visit an Armenian army officer who was captured by Azerbaijani troops late last month, officials in Yerevan said on Wednesday. A spokeswoman for the ICRC office in Yerevan, Zara Amatuni, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that the ICRC is continuing its “dialogue” with relevant Armenian and Azerbaijani authorities regarding the officer, Gurgen Alaverdian. She would not say when the Azerbaijani side could allow ICRC representatives in Baku to meet and speak with Alaverdian. The Armenian Foreign Ministry also reported continuing efforts to arrange such a visit. “Given the sensitivity of the issue I won’t give other details,” said the ministry spokeswoman, Anna Naghdalian. The Azerbaijani military claims that Alaverdian was taken prisoner during a failed Armenian commando raid on one of its frontline positions north of Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian Defense Ministry strongly denies this, saying that Alaverdian simply lost his way on August 22 due to poor weather. Yerevan has said that Baku’s treatment of the Armenian serviceman constitutes a serious violation of the 1949 Geneva Convention on prisoners of war. It has specifically decried an Azerbaijani Defense Ministry vide shows the serviceman saying in broken Armenian that he led a special army unit that planned to carry out “sabotage” attacks in Azerbaijan. It says he was clearly forced to read out a written text badly translated into Armenian. The Azerbaijani authorities brought a string of criminal charges against Alaverdian following the release of the video last week. Naghdalian deplored this and other “trumped-up” criminal cases brought against Armenian citizens held in Azerbaijani captivity. “I want point out in this regard that two citizens of Azerbaijan have crossed into Armenia in the course of this year alone,” she told a news conference. “Unlike Azerbaijan, Armenia has not prosecuted them or portrayed them as prisoners of war and fully respects their dignity and human rights.” 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.