MVRDV’s self-sufficient sustainable agriculture and ecotourism valley for Armenia

June 7 2022
Nav Pal

The valley will contain 10,000 plant species and, with the help of innovative facilities and future proof housing, will add 12,000 new housing units.

Named after cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the project is located near Lake Sevan, the largest lake in the Caucasus and only 50 kilometres from the capital Yerevan. Surrounded by mountains, roughly 11,000 inhabitants live in several villages spread throughout the valley. The landscape consists of a patchwork of different pieces of land, of which the local community owns about one third.

The aim, which will be realised in consultation with local parties, is to turn the valley into a versatile and future proof landscape that is suitable for sustainable agriculture on various scales, and to become a more attractive place to live, as well as an area for ecotourism and recreation, serving as a destination for people to walk, hike, cycle, and ride horses.

The first step towards this self-sustaining valley is to embrace the history of the area. The 10,000 existing plots will be preserved and reinforced, and the water system in the dry region will be improved by lining the boundaries between them with canals, public paths, and greenery. This forms the base of the valley masterplan, reducing evaporation while enhancing water buffers and biodiversity. On each plot, different species will be planted, which will make the landscape visually more attractive and stimulate economic diversity.

Existing roads will continue to form the starting point for connecting all the villages and additional walking and cycling paths will be created within existing structures. Water management will be improved, with the restoration and enlargement of the route of the Hrazdan River, in combination with the new canal system, and water reservoirs in the mountains and other water sources can be used to irrigate farmland.

The Gagarin Valley has several villages, some featuring buildings from Soviet times, which will be transformed into new buildings to waste as little material as possible. Traditional farmhouses will form the inspiration for the newly built homes, where green, vegetated roofs will be added. 

The vision proposes a market hall, a commercial centre, a centre for the arts, and a sunken stadium for 4,500 visitors. The heart of the valley will be formed by an educational agricultural centre, with houses stacked to form vertical villages.

We designed a sphere that acts as a mini-planet, where the classrooms surround a spherical void and where all the species of the valley and beyond are shown and monitored. The sphere will be surrounded by a central park that contains all the species – a scientific arboretum, reflected in the mirroring sphere.

Winy Maas, Founding Partner, MVRDV

https://www.worldarchitecturenews.com/article/1753388/mvrdvs-self-sufficient-sustainable-agriculture-ecotourism-valley-armenia

Iran seeks to increase trade turnover with Armenia to $1 billion

PanARMENIAN
Armenia –

PanARMENIAN.Net - Iran wants to increase trade turnover with Armenia to $1 billion annually, Tehran's ambassador to Yerevan Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri has told ISNA News Agency (via Pars Today).

"Although Armenia is a country bordering East Azerbaijan, we have not been able to exceed half a billion dollars in our trade with this country, so we must make efforts to increase this volume to $1 billion," Zohouri was quoted as saying.

The envoy said Armenia serves as a bridge between Iran and the Eurasian Economic Union and the European Union.

"Given that Armenia has preferential customs duties with EU countries, we can use that potential to export our goods, and steps should be taken by the [Iranian] provinces bordering Armenia to improve that," he said.

"Many of Armenia's neighboring provinces have excellent climate conditions, so we can use the new agricultural technologies acquired in Iran in this country."

Armenia and Iran are currently working on the the expansion of the gas for electricity swap deal between the two countries. The two sides have repeatedly stressed the importance of boosting cooperation in the trade and economic sphere, which would enable the sides to increase turnover to $1 billion.
https://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/300825/

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/10/2022

                                        Friday, 


Vanadzor Election Winner Goes On Trial

        • Karine Simonian

Armenia - Former Mayor Mamikon Aslanian stands trial in Vanadzor, 


The former mayor of Armenia’s third largest city of Vanadzor went on trial on 
Friday six months after defeating the ruling Civil Contract party in a local 
election and being arrested on corruption charges.

An opposition bloc led by Mamikon Aslanian essentially won the election with 
about 39 percent of the vote. Civil Contract finished second with 25 percent, 
the most serious of setbacks suffered by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s party 
in local polls held in 36 communities across Armenia on December 5.

Aslanian was thus well-placed to regain his post lost in October. But he was 
arrested on December 15, with law-enforcement authorities saying that he 
illegally privatized municipal land during his five-year tenure.

The former mayor insisted at the start of his trial that the charges leveled 
against him “have nothing to do with criminal justice.” His lawyers petitioned a 
Vanadzor judge presiding over the trial to release their client from custody 
pending a verdict in the case.

A trial prosecutor objected to the request, saying that Aslanian could exert 
pressure on witnesses if set free. Defense lawyers countered that none of the 
three dozen witnesses in the case has testified against the ex-mayor.

“If someone gave testimony refuting the accusations why would Mamikon Aslanian 
want to influence that person?” one of the lawyers told the court.

The judge will rule on Monday whether Aslanian must remain under arrest.

Armenia - The building of the Vanadzor municipality, December 13, 2021.

Aslanian’s supporters as well as opposition figures in Yerevan say that 
Pashinian ordered the ex-mayor’s arrest and prosecution to make sure that the 
Vanadzor municipality remains under his control. They have accused the prime 
minister of effectively overturning the local election results.

Vanadzor’s new municipal council has still not been able to meet and elect the 
city’s new mayor. Armenia’s Administrative Council has banned the council from 
holding sessions, citing an appeal against the election results lodged by 
another pro-government party, Bright Armenia.

The ban remains in force even though the appeal was rejected by two other courts 
earlier this year. Bright Armenia, which fared poorly in the December polls, 
appealed to the higher Court of Cassation. The latter has still not ruled on the 
complaint.

In April, Pashinian’s party swiftly pushed through the Armenian parliament a 
bill that empowered the prime minister to name acting heads of communities whose 
councils fail to elect mayors within 20 days after local elections.

On May 13, Pashinian appointed a man with a criminal record, Arkadi Peleshian, 
as Vanadzor’s acting mayor.

Peleshian served as deputy mayor from 2017-2021. An obscure party led by him won 
less than 15 percent of the vote in December.



U.S. Official Meets Armenian Oppositionists

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Kara McDonald (center) at a 
meeting in Yerevan, June 9, 2022.


A senior U.S. State Department official has met with leaders of Armenia’s main 
opposition groups holding anti-government protests during a visit to Yerevan.
Kara McDonald, the deputy assistant secretary of state for democracy, human 
rights and labor, arrived in the Armenian capital on Wednesday for talks with 
government officials, politicians and civil society members. The officials 
included Justice Minister Karen Andreasian and Deputy Foreign Minister Vahe 
Gevorgian.

The U.S. Embassy in Armenia said that during the two-day trip McDonald 
“underscored the U.S. commitment to continue helping the Armenian people build a 
future based on shared democratic values.”

It emerged on Friday that she held a separate meeting with representatives of 
the two opposition alliances represented in the Armenian parliament.

Gegham Manukian, an opposition parliamentarian, said they discussed a wide range 
of issues, including “shameful practices” in the Armenian judiciary and police 
actions against participants of continuing opposition rallies aimed at toppling 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. McDonald took note of concerns voiced by the 
oppositionists, he said.

The U.S. Embassy did not comment on that meeting. The embassy posted on its 
Twitter page photographs of McDonald’s meetings with other individuals, 
including leaders of four parties not represented in the Armenian parliament.

Armenia - Opposition supporters demonstrate in Yerevan, May 4, 2022.

The parliament’s two opposition factions criticized the U.S. ambassador to 
Armenia, Lynne Tracy, last month after she seemed to hail the outcome of last 
year’s parliamentary elections won by Pashinian’s party.

One of their leaders, Ishkhan Saghatelian, accused the United States and other 
Western powers of turning a blind eye to government pressure on the judiciary, 
the existence of “dozens of political prisoners” and other human rights abuses. 
He also said Armenians did not give Pashinian a mandate to “cede” 
Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijan.

Saghatelian is the main speaker at the ongoing street protests which were 
sparked by Pashinian’s conciliatory policy towards Azerbaijan and Turkey praised 
by Washington.

Reacting to the protests earlier in May, the State Department urged the Armenian 
opposition to “refrain from violence and respect the rule of law and Armenia’s 
democracy.”



Armenia Backs Alliance With Russia, Other Ex-Soviet States

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan chairs a session of top diplomats of 
the CSTO member states, Yerevan, 


Armenia on Friday expressed readiness to help strengthen the Collective Security 
Treaty Organization (CSTO) while again chiding other members of the Russian-led 
military alliance for not openly supporting Yerevan in its border dispute with 
Azerbaijan.

The Armenian government appealed to the CSTO for help shortly after Azerbaijani 
troops reportedly crossed several sections of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border 
and advanced a few kilometers into Armenian territory in May 2021. It asked the 
alliance of six ex-Soviet states to invoke Article 2 of its founding treaty 
which requires a collective response to grave security threats facing one of 
them.

Russia and other CSTO member states expressed concern over the border tensions 
but did not issue joint statements in support of Armenia. Armenian leaders have 
repeatedly criticized that stance.

Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan reiterated the criticism after hosting a 
meeting in Yerevan with the fellow top diplomats of Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, 
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.

“While the organization responded in a timely manner to the events in Kazakhstan 
in January the issue still remains open in connection with the invasion of 
Azerbaijani troops into the sovereign territory of Armenia, which began in May 
2021,” he told the press.

Mirzoyan made clear at the same time that Yerevan is intent on “stepping up 
cooperation between member states” of the bloc. That includes ensuring a closer 
coordination of their foreign policies and “enhancing the CSTO’s role in the 
international arena,” he said.

Armenia - The foreign ministers of Russia and other CSTO member states arrive 
for a meeting in Yerevan, .

In a joint statement issued after the meeting, the CSTO foreign ministers did 
not explicitly mention Russia’s war with Ukraine. They voiced concern at the 
“continuing degradation of the system of international security.” They said all 
countries must respect “the principle of equal and indivisible security.”

From Moscow’s perspective, “indivisible security” means that NATO must pledge 
not to admit Ukraine and to scale back its military presence near Russia’s 
borders. The U.S. and its NATO allies rejected these demands in the run-up to 
the Russian invasion of Ukraine which began on February 24.

Belarus is the only non-Russian CSTO country to have publicly backed the 
invasion. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko chided the other member 
states for their more cautious stance when he spoke at a CSTO summit in Moscow 
last month.



Armenian Opposition Rethinking Protest Tactics

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Parliament vice-speaker Ishkhan Saghatelian leads an opposition 
demonstration in Yerevan, May 18, 2022.


A leader of the Armenian opposition said on Friday that it is rethinking the 
tactics of its “resistance movement” almost six week after starting regular 
demonstrations aimed at toppling Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.

Ishkhan Saghatelian insisted that the protests are not dying down and that the 
opposition has no plans to suspend or end them.

“Yes, we need a new tactic,” Saghatelian told reporters. “Therefore, there may 
be changes in our steps and actions. Right now we are engaged in active 
discussions and will change some steps and actions.”

He declined to say what those changes will be.

“The movement cannot die down because its collapse or suspension would mean a 
defeat for the Armenian people,” he said.

Armenia’s main opposition groups represented in the parliament have rallied 
thousands of supporters on a virtually daily basis since setting up a tent camp 
in a central Yerevan square on May 1. They accuse Pashinian of renouncing 
Armenian control of Nagorno-Karabakh and making other concessions to Azerbaijan 
that will jeopardize the very existence of Armenia.

Armenia - Riot police arrest opposition protesters in Yerevan, May 10, 2022.
Pashinian and his political allies dismiss the demands for his resignation. They 
say that the opposition has failed to attract popular support for its “civil 
disobedience” campaign.

“There is no political crisis in Armenia,” Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said 
on Thursday. Echoing statements by other Armenian officials, he said that 
Pashinian’s political team won a popular mandate to run the country for the next 
five years in the 2021 general elections.

Saghatelian, who has been the main speaker at the protests, dismissed that 
argument. He said that Pashinian does not have such a mandate anymore because he 
broke his election campaign pledge to help the people of Nagorno-Karabakh 
exercise their right to self-determination.

“They are now talking about ‘lowering the bar’ [on Karabakh’s status] and 
leading the country to new concessions,” he said.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Approaches to Border and Transit Issues Clarified by Commission

The Armenia-Azerbaijan border


The deputy prime ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia met in Moscow on Friday and, according to official reports, clarified their approaches on border, customs and other control mechanisms that include the safe passage of citizens, vehicles and cargo through the territories of Armenia and Azerbaijan through transit routes and railways.

Mher Grigoryan, Shahin Mustafayev and Alexei Overchuk—the deputy prime ministers—are the leaders of respective commissions charged with unblocking transit connections between Armenia and Azerbaijan, as well as delimiting and demarcating the border, in accordance with agreements signed by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia.

Friday’s meeting was the 10th such meeting held by the commission.

Commenting on the meeting, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Monday reiterated Yerevan’s position that the so-called unblocking process must adhere to the sovereignty and legislation of the countries through which roads pass.

“As an outcome of the meetings of leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan held in Sochi on November 26, 2021 and the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and the President of the European Council held in Brussels on December 15, an agreement over re-launching the railway communication has been reached. Works on this direction continue. There is a common perception that all transportation infrastructure, roads and railways to be unblocked should operate under the sovereignty and legislation of the countries through which they pass,” Mirzoyan said at a briefing of the parliament’s committee on foreign relation.

Also speaking on the matter, as well as the delimitation and demarcation of borders, was Stanislav Zas, the Secretary General of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, commonly known as the CSTO. Zas is in Yerevan to take part in the group’s parliamentary assembly, which kicked off on Monday.

“The trilateral agreement of November 9, 2020 continues to play an important role in stabilizing the situation. The successful completion of the demarcation and delimitation of the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan can undoubtedly make a great contribution to strengthening the security of the entire region,” Zas said.

In the difficult conditions in the Eurasian region, the CSTO Secretary General sees the need for unity of the member states of the organization, as well as further development of activities in foreign relations, strengthening of defense, improvement of crisis response forces, complex measures to meet modern challenges and threats.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/06/2022

                                        Monday, June 6, 2022


Government Hints At Delay To Health Insurance Plan

        • Anush Mkrtchian
        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia - A newly built hospital in Vanadzor, November 10, 2018.


Citing financial constraints, the Armenian government signaled on Monday that it 
will put on hold plans to introduce a system of national health insurance that 
would cover the country’s entire population.

The Ministry of Health announced in January that it has drafted relevant 
legislation and submitted it to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s cabinet for 
approval. Ministry officials indicated that it can be put into practice already 
next year.

Under the proposed bill, free healthcare would be financed by a 6 percent 
personal income tax. Public and private employers would pay half of the new tax 
to be levied from their workers.

Finance Minister Tigran Khachatrian said the insurance plan would still require 
the government to more than double in 2023 public spending on healthcare 
projected at up to 140 billion drams ($310). The government cannot ensure such a 
drastic increase, he said, adding that the new system should be introduced 
gradually and slowly.

“We have asked our colleagues [from the Ministry of Health] to present an action 
plan on how they can follow that reform path by steadily and consistently 
increasing funding volumes in the coming years,” Khachatrian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service.

Deputy Health Minister Lena Nanushian acknowledged that the government could 
delay the new system or opt for its phased introduction. She also did not rule 
out other changes in the proposed plan.

Armenia’s former governments too promised to put in place mandatory health 
insurance for all citizens. But they eventually backed away in the face of 
financial difficulties.

Public access to healthcare in the country declined following the collapse of 
the Soviet Union as cash-strapped Armenian hospitals were allowed to charge 
their patients. Most of those hospitals were privatized in the 1990s.

Only state-run policlinics are now required to provide medical services to the 
population free of charge. Healthcare, including surgeries, is also supposedly 
free for children aged 7 and younger. Also, over the past decade the state has 
partly covered healthcare expenses of civil servants, schoolteachers and other 
public sector employees.



Armenian Authorities, Opposition Blame Each Other For Clashes

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Police detain demonstrators during an opposition rally in Yerevan, 
June 3, 2022.


The Armenian authorities and opposition groups continued to blame each other on 
Monday for violent clashes between security forces and demonstrators demanding 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation.

The clashes broke out late on Friday after riot police did not allow thousands 
of opposition supporters to approach the parliament building in Yerevan on the 
34th day of nonstop anti-government protests.

The police fired stun grenades as some of the protesters tried to break through 
a police cordon in chaotic scenes that left at least 60 people injured. One of 
them, a protester, suffered a severe head injury and underwent surgery.

According to law-enforcement authorities, 40 police officers received medical 
assistance in hospitals after being pelted with bottles, stones and other 
objects and assaulted by demonstrators.

The Investigative Committee launched a criminal inquiry into “mass disturbances” 
which it said were provoked by unnamed opposition leaders. It did not say 
whether it will prosecute any of those leaders.

The committee brought instead criminal charges against most of at least 13 
protesters arrested during or after the clashes. It said that they did not obey 
police orders and resorted to violence.

Armenian courts freed several detainees, including opposition activist Vahe 
Harutiunian, over the weekend and on Monday, citing a lack of incriminating 
evidence.

Vahe Yeprikian, a lawyer representing Harutiunian and two other protesters, who 
remained under arrest, said investigators did not present any video evidence 
corroborating the accusations leveled against his clients.

Armenia - Riot police clash with opposition protesters in Yerevan, June 3, 2022.

Opposition leaders condemned the use of force as excessive and unjustified. They 
singled out the use of stun grenades, saying that policemen mishandled them and 
wounded their own colleagues.

“Those who fired [the stun grenades] and their commanders should be tried or 
beaten up by other policemen for the fact that they are so unprofessional that 
they didn’t learn how to use those special means,” said Gegham Manukian of the 
main opposition Hayastan alliance.

The police insisted that only two officers were injured by stun grenades and 
that other dozens of others were attacked by angry protesters. They also 
released on Monday a fresh video of the clashes meant to justify the crackdown.

The police did not comment on other videos posted on social media which showed 
several policemen punching protesters as the latter were dragged away and 
arrested by other officers. None of those policemen was placed under 
investigation as of Monday evening.

Meanwhile, Armenia’s Office of the Prosecutor-General said it has ordered an 
inquiry into the use of stun grenades and other instances of police brutality 
alleged by the opposition.

Opposition leaders demanded such an inquiry as they again rallied thousands of 
supporters in the center of Yerevan. One of them, Ishkhan Saghatelian, said the 
protests will continue in the days ahead. He said their organizers are now 
discussing “tactical changes” designed to “give us new impetus and expand our 
movement.”


EU Not Vying With Russia Over Karabakh, Says Envoy

        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia - Toivo Klaar (R), the EU's special representative to the South 
Caucasus, meets Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, June 3, 2022.


The European Union is not competing with Russia in its efforts to facilitate a 
“comprehensive settlement” of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the EU’s special 
representative to the South Caucasus, Toivo Klaar, insisted at the weekend.

Klaar’s comments contrasted with what another EU official late last week. The 
official, who asked not to identified, said that the EU has replaced Russia as 
the lead player in international efforts to broker peace between Armenia and 
Azerbaijan. He claimed that both Yerevan and Baku are now “very scared of 
Moscow” because of the war in Ukraine.

“The European Union is not engaged in any kind of competition,” Klaar told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “We are solely interested in trying to help the 
process along.”

“If there are other actors, who are able to help things along, then we are very 
happy,” he said. “We know that the Russian Federation has invested quite a bit 
in different [Armenian-Azerbaijani] meetings and most recently in the deputy 
prime ministers’ meeting.

“So from our perspective there is most definitely no competition, there is no 
interest in any competition. We are simply interested in a peaceful and 
prosperous South Caucasus.”

The president of the EU’s decision-making European Council, Charles Michel, has 
hosted three trilateral meetings with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in the last five months.

Russia has denounced the EU’s mediation efforts, saying that they are part of 
the West’s attempts to hijack Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks and use the 
Karabakh conflict in its standoff with Moscow over Ukraine. A Russian Foreign 
Ministry spokeswoman warned Brussels last week against playing “geopolitical 
games” in the conflict zone.

The EU’s peace efforts also prompted criticism from Karabakh’s leaders. They 
were angered by Michel’s comments made after the latest Armenian-Azerbaijani 
summit held on May 22. They claimed that he signaled support for Azerbaijani 
control over the disputed territory.

A spokesman for Michel insisted afterwards that the EU’s top official did not 
advocate any “predetermined outcome of discussions” on Karabakh’s future.

Klaar, who met with Pashinian in Yerevan on Friday, stressed in this regard that 
Karabakh’s predominantly Armenian population should be a party to an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace deal.

“It is clear that there are many people living in Karabakh who have a 
fundamental interest in how ... a comprehensive settlement is shaped,” said the 
diplomat. “I personally cannot see how we can arrive at such a settlement 
without a process in which these people’s opinions and views are taken into 
account.”



Russia Reports Progress In Talks On Armenian-Azeri Transport Links


Russia - Deputy Prime Ministers of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan meet in 
Moscow, January 30, 2021


Russia said over the weekend that Armenia and Azerbaijan narrowed their 
differences on planned transport links between the two countries during fresh 
talks held in Moscow.

A Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani commission dealing with the matter met late on 
Friday for the first time in six months.

“The parties discussed and brought closer their positions on issues of border, 
customs and other types of control, as well as the safe passage of citizens, 
vehicles and goods on roads and railways through the territories of the Republic 
of Azerbaijan and the Republic of Armenia,” the Russian government said in a 
statement.

The statement did not go into details of the meeting co-chaired by deputy prime 
ministers of the three states. It said the parties “will continue to work on the 
implementation” of relevant Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements that were brokered 
by Russian President Vladimir Putin during and after the 2020 war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Armenian government issued a virtually identical statement on the Moscow 
meeting.

Putin, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev reported decisive progress towards opening the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border to passenger and cargo traffic after talks held in the Russian city of 
Sochi in November. However, the trilateral commission failed to put the 
finishing touches on their understandings at a meeting held in Moscow in 
December.

Yerevan and Baku continued to disagree on the status of a road and a railway 
that will connect Azerbaijan with its Nakhichevan exclave through Armenia. 
Aliyev said later in December that people and cargo passing through that 
“corridor” must be exempt from Armenian border controls. Pashinian rejected the 
demand.

Moscow moved to revive the activities of the Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani 
commission in April after accusing the West of trying to hijack its efforts to 
make peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The accusations followed Pashinian’s April 6 meeting with Aliyev hosted by 
European Council President Charles Michel. The three leaders met again in 
Brussels for follow-up discussions on the transport links, the demarcation of 
the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and a possible peace treaty between the two 
South Caucasus nations.

Aliyev continued to claim after the latest summit that Yerevan will open a 
permanent land corridor for Nakhichevan. Armenian leaders flatly denied that. A 
spokesman for Michel likewise stated last week that the Armenian and Azerbaijani 
leaders agreed at Brussels that there will be no “extraterritorial claims with 
regard to future transport infrastructure.”


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Opposition leader: Pashinyan simply asked Aliyev and his other partners for a ‘timeout’

Panorama
Armenia – May 25 2022

Opposition protesters demanding Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation blocked the Armenian presidential residence in central Yerevan on Wednesday, preventing employees from entering or leaving it.

"They [the authorities] cannot hide behind the police and security officials for a long time," one of the opposition leaders Ishkhan Saghatelyan, a deputy parliament speaker, told reporters at the protest, responding to the statement of ruling Civil Contract faction MP Vahagn Aleksanyan, who called Tuesday’s blockade of the Armenian Foreign Ministry by opposition demonstrators an act of “hooliganism”.

“Before making such statements, they must realize that their rule is not eternal and each of them will sooner or later answer for their statements and steps,” Saghatelyan said. "They are hooligans themselves, who are consistently leading the country to disaster.”

Asked whether they will return to the parliament if they fail to force Pashinyan from office, Ishkhan Saghatelyan noted: "We will return to the parliament with our own agenda."

He claims the opposition campaign has disrupted the plans of the Armenian authorities to make concessions to Azerbaijan in the near future.

“The meeting in Brussels is a clear proof of that. I am sure that in parallel with the verbal commitments, which were announced, Nikol simply asked Aliyev and his other colleagues for a timeout given the current situation in Armenia, hoping that the tensions would somehow ease or they would be able to stop the campaign. In this sense, the results achieved by the people are obvious," Saghatelyan said.

The opposition leader says the Turkish-Azerbaijani duo is evidently in a hurry to capitalize on the advantages gained in the 2020 war in Artsakh.

"They understand that when they lose Nikol Pashinyan’s rule in Armenia, their plans will not be fulfilled," the opposition figure said.

Saghatelyan stressed the need to step up pressure on the government.

"Obviously, the people have stood up and there is a public demand to oust the treacherous authorities. The task is to attract all our supporters to the rallies and to give new momentum to the morning protests," he said.

EU ambassador visits Syunik Province

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 14:20, 25 May 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 25, ARMENPRESS. As part of Europe Day, the EU Head of Delegation in Armenia Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin visited the Goris Medical Center in Syunik on May 25.

Ambassador Wiktorin donated a modern x-ray machine to the hospital as part of a larger EU assistance to Armenia’s COVID-19 response.

As part of the EU’s Solidarity for Health Initiative, the Goris Medical Center was equipped with 1 ECG device and 3 oxygen concentrators, which helped hundreds of patients recover from COVID-19 related diseases.

Ambassadors of EU-member states joined the event. The ambassadors also visited a vaccination site in Goris where they met senior citizens who received medical consultation and were vaccinated as part of the EU-funded Vaccination is Care campaign.

Prime Minister Pashinyan honors the memory of the heroes of the Battle of Sardarapat

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 11:37,

YEREVAN, MAY 28 ARMENPRESS. On the occasion of the Republic Day, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan together with President Vahagn Khachaturyan, President of the National Assembly Alen Simonyan, top leadership of the Republic of Armenia and diplomatic missions accredited in Armenia visited the Memorial Complex of Sardarapat Battle, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister.

Nikol Pashinyan laid a wreath at the memorial to the heroes of the Battle of Sardarapat and paid tribute to their memory.

The Prime Minister also attended the state awards ceremony at the Sardarapat Memorial, Museum of Armenian Ethnography.

U.S. must support Armenian PM in bid to fend off Russia

Boston Herald, MA
May 19 2022


  • May 19, 2022 at 12:21 a.m.
  • Categories:Opinion

Demonstrators holding Armenian national flags attend a protest rally in Yerevan, Armenia, Thursday, May 5, 2022. The demonstrators marched chanting "Armenia without Nikol," referring to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Demonstrators holding Armenian national flags attend a protest rally in Yerevan, Armenia, Thursday, May 5, 2022. The demonstrators marched chanting "Armenia without Nikol," referring to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. (Vahram Baghdasaryan/PHOTOLURE via AP)(Vahram Baghdasaryan/PHOTOLURE via AP)

For weeks, protests have roiled Armenia. Thousands have marched in the streets calling for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to step down. Post-Ukraine, in what Moscow views as its backyard, and with the leading protagonists not only sympathetic but warm to Vladimir Putin’s worldview, the crisis should be cause for alarm amongst Western governments — and particularly U.S. officials.

If protesters succeed in ousting Pashinyan, Russian control will once again spread beyond its borders. Unlike Ukraine, it would not be through invasion. Effective annexation would nevertheless be the result.

Armenia’s former president, Robert Kocharyan, is reportedly spearheading the protests and has already set out his vision. Just days before Russia invaded Ukraine, he called for Armenia to join a Moscow-led union state, reaffirming his past commitments to fully fledged integration with Armenia’s neighbor. Kocharyan is not only an eager supporter but a seeming client of Russia. He has long sat on the board of one of the country’s largest investment companies, Sistema; the same company to post part of his multimillion-dollar bail when he faced criminal charges in 2020. In the context of the war in Ukraine, the U.S. cannot afford for another post-Soviet state to fall under the control of a Putin ally. Washington must therefore look to shore up Prime Minister Pashinyan.

The protests themselves center on the issue that has dominated Armenia since independence from the Soviet Union: Nagorno-Karabakh. Legally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, it has been under the control of Armenian separatists since the Soviet Union’s collapse in the early 1990s; the territory governed as an effective extension of Armenia — like the Russian Republics of Crimea or Donetsk in Ukraine, or Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia.

A short conflict two years ago saw Azerbaijan regain most of its territory. Having removed a critical obstacle to the decades-long conflict, efforts to formally reach a peace settlement appear to be taking shape and compromises will be necessary. Armenia will need to rescind its territorial claims over Azerbaijan, presumably for formal protections for ethnic Armenians living there. But any hint of concession is what demonstrators rally against.

With thousands in the streets, Pashinyan’s future looks shaky. Even if he is not replaced by a Russian puppet, the protests could still secure Russian interests. The prime minister may see his survival only in acquiescing to protesters’ demands and spoiling the peace deal. That would maintain the current status quo, which currently protects and projects Moscow’s influence in the region. Accordingly, the U.S. must persuade Pashinyan to stay the course.

An agreement would also break Armenia’s economic dependence on Russia, equally essential for peeling away support. With a durable peace comes the end of Armenian isolation — not only opening borders with Azerbaijan to the east, but unlocking them with Turkey to the west. To the south lies Iran, but the difficult terrain is inhospitable to trade. Ankara severed diplomatic relations in the 1990s in support of its ally Azerbaijan. Trade and renormalization with both offers the opportunity to diversify away from food and remittances reliance on Russia; Armenia receives, for example, 99% of its wheat from Russia, in addition to 5% of its GDP in remittances from emigrant workers based there. Natural gas-rich Azerbaijan also holds out a break with its near total dependence on Russian energy, as well as new opportunities for renewable-generated electricity from wind and hydro-rich Karabakh.

Free from such dependency, Russia could not so easily impose its will on Armenia — regardless of who sits atop the government.

America must lend a hand to Armenia’s embattled prime minister. Only by taking a broad approach can Russian aggression be checked. The recent trip by the Armenian foreign minister to meet with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and sign an memorandum of understanding on civil nuclear cooperation is a start. But more diplomatic support must be forthcoming, and assurances given that America stands with him, and will assist, were Russia to economically punish Armenia for not toeing the line.

The U.S. must therefore forcefully encourage the peace deal with Azerbaijan and parallel rapprochement with Turkey — even if it comes at the price of concessions. Only then, in the long-term, can Armenia break free from Russia’s orbit.


Prof. Ivan Sascha Sheehan is the executive director of the School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Baltimore. The opinions expressed are his own. Follow him on Twitter @ProfSheehan.