Armenian PM congratulates Slovenia’s counterpart on National Day

Save

Share

 12:28,

YEREVAN, JUNE 25, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory letter to Prime Minister of Slovenia Janez Janša on the country’s National Day, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.

The letter says:

“I warmly congratulate you and the good people of Slovenia on the national day of the Republic – the Statehood Day, wishing peace and progress to your country and its people.

Armenia highly values the further development and deepening of cooperation with Slovenia at the bilateral format and within the frames of our partnership with the European Union.

I am sure that with joint efforts we will manage to further intensify and strengthen our bilateral agenda which can be greatly contributed by the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement.

Your Excellency, please accept the assurances of my highest respect”.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Prosecutor requests 7-year sentence for Hayk Sargsyan, former President’s nephew

Prosecutor requests 7-year sentence for Hayk Sargsyan, former President's nephew

Save

Share

 18:06, 19 June, 2020

YEREVAN, JUNE 19, ARMENPRESS. The Prosecutor's Office has requested to sentence Hayk Sargsyan, former President Serzh Sargsyan's nephew, with 7-year term, ARMENPRESS reports Yerem Sargsyan, the lawyer of Hayk Sargsyan, told the reporters.

''The prosecutor made an accusatory speech. He thinks that carrying an illegal weapon and murder attempt are evidenced. As for carrying illegal arms, the prosecutor requested that expiration of the statute of limitations be applied to the carrying of illegal weapons, but requested a 7-year sentence for the murder attempt'', the lawyer said.

He added that they have always substantiated that there is no feature of murder attempt. The defense will present the details in a speech at the next court session.

On April 1, 2007, the Police were notified that Yerevan resident Davit Simonyan, born in 1984, has been hospitalized with a gunshot wound.

On the same day, A. Ghevondyan presented a gun to the Police and told that he fired shots as a result of carelessness, injuring his friend D. Simonyan.

Criminal case has been launched into the incident. But on May 28, 2007, a decision was made not to launch criminal proceedings against A. Ghevondyan on the grounds of absence of complaint.

However, on July 3, 2018, the Prosecutor General’s Office made a decision to eliminate the aforementioned decision. As a result of investigative operations, it was revealed that Davit Simonyan received a gunshot wound not by A. Ghevondyan, but by Hayk Sargsyan.

Hayk Sargsyan was detained but later, on September 10 2018 was released from jail on bail of 50 million AMD.

Editing and translating by Tigran Sirekanyan

Lithuanian medics and experts arrive in Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
 
 
 
 

The European Union and Sweden have joined efforts with Lithuania to support Armenia to mitigate the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences.

The Lithuanian medical team comprising medical workers and experts has already arrived in Armenia. The medical team has also brought medical equipment and supplies.

The team will work alongside their Armenian colleagues to fight the virus for 14 days.

EU Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin, Lithuanian Ambassador Inga Stanytė-Toločkienė, Swedish Charge d’ Affairs a.i. Birger Karlson together with RA Deputy Foreign Minister Avet Adonts and First Deputy Minister of Health Anahit Avanesyan went to the airport to personally greet the arriving team and wish them good luck in their invaluable mission.

Լիտվան բուժանձնակազմ և բժշկական օգնություն է ուղարկել Հայաստան

Լիտվան բուժանձնակազմ և բժշկական օգնություն է ուղարկել Հայաստան. առաքելությունը կտևի 14 օր#ArmGovՀՀ առողջապահության նախարարությունՀՀ Արտաքին գործերի նախարարություն / Ministry of Foreign Affairs of ArmeniaEuropean Union in Armenia

Gepostet von ՀՀ կառավարություն am Freitag, 19. Juni 2020


Torosyan: Irresponsible behavior of citizens will lead to the collapse of the healthcare system

Arminfo, Armenia

ArmInfo. In Armenia, the state  of 470 citizens infected with a new type of coronavirus is severe,  another 116 are extremely severe and 35 of them are connected to  mechanical ventilation devices. The Minister of Health of Armenia  Arsen Torosyan stated this on air of Azatutyun.

At the same time, he added that according to today's data, these  people are at risk of dying, and doctors are doing everything in  their power to prevent this. The Minister also stated that the age of  those infected is getting younger. Torosyan recalled that as of June  15, there were 15 fatal cases and there were cases when citizens did  not have any chronic diseases, adding in this connection that there  are no guarantees that each of us will not become infected.

Torosyan also expressed his conviction that the irresponsible  behavior of citizens will lead to the collapse of the health care  system, and it is these citizens who will suffer in the first place.  The minister added that the collapse in the health care system, in  turn, will lead to the fact that people who might not die will die  because they will not be able to receive proper medical care.

He also expressed his readiness to resign at any time, assuring that  managing the system in a pandemic is not a pleasure.

It should be noted that according to the data at 11:00 a.m. June 15,  397 new cases of coronavirus infection were detected in Armenia,  another 62 patients recovered. In total, 17064 cases of coronavirus  were confirmed in the republic, 6276 people recovered, 285 died. Over  the last day, the disease claimed the lives of 16 people aged 41 to  88 years; all had accompanying chronic diseases. Over the past day, 3  deaths were also recorded, when the coronavirus infection was  confirmed in the patients, but death was due to other diseases. Thus,  the total number of such cases has reached 94th. Currently, 10,409  patients are receiving actual treatment. In total, 83,600 tests for  coronavirus were conducted in the republic.

Syria lures, but will Beijing bite?

Asia Times


by James M. Dorsey 

Deepening Chinese-Russian ties and Iranian dependence on China may
turn Syria into a crucial Belt and Road node


Mohammed Jarah and Ahmad Bustati’s warehouse in Damascus symbolized
China’s emergence as the largest supplier of industrial and consumer
goods to Syria on the eve of the Syrian civil war. The dilapidated
warehouse was stocked with everything from Chinese laser cutting
machines to plastic toys for children.

A decade of fighting dashed the two Syrian entrepreneurs’ hopes.
However, things seem to be looking up for businessmen like Jarah and
Bustati with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad having gained the upper
hand in the war and China seeing longer-term economic potential in
Syria as a regional node for the Belt and Road Initiative.

Syrian officials have sought to drive home China’s competitive
advantages and perceived interest in taking a lead in the
reconstruction of their country. “The Silk Road is not a silk road if
it does not pass through Syria, Iraq and Iran,” said Buthaina Shaaban,
Bashar al-Assad’s media adviser, referring to the BRI.

Chinese access to the Syrian Mediterranean Sea ports of Tartus and
Latakia is an attractive prospect for China’s multi-billion-dollar
infrastructure, telecommunications and energy-driven initiative that
seeks to link Eurasia to the People’s Republic. It would complement
Beijing’s footholds in Greece’s Piraeus and the Israeli harbors of
Haifa and Ashdod and echo Syria’s key position on the ancient Silk
Road.

Closely connected to Chinese interest in Syrian ports is the
exploration by China Harbour Engineering Company Ltd (CHEC) of the
possible upgrading of the deep seaport of Tripoli, Lebanon to allow it
to accommodate larger vessels. In contrast to Syrian ports, Tripoli
would grant China greater freedom of action because it would not have
to share control with Russia. Together with Syrian ports, Tripoli
would serve as an alternative to passage through the Suez Canal.

Russia appeared to be anticipating potential Chinese moves when it
last year negotiated with the Assad government an extension of its
access to military bases including what it describes as a “logistics
support facility of the Russian navy” in Tartus.

In the absence of making the agreement public, it remained unclear
what Russian intentions were. However, modernization of Tartus for
military purposes that would guarantee Russia a role in control of the
Eastern Mediterranean would have to involve upgrading it to be able to
accommodate all types of vessels, including aircraft carriers.

In a further move, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his
foreign and defense ministries in May to reach agreement with Syria on
an additional expansion of a 2015 accord that governs Russia’s naval
presence in Tartus and allows the Russian navy to base up to 11 ships
in the port for 49 years. Putin wants the life of the agreement to be
extended by an additional 25 years.

“From the coast of Syria, there is an opportunity to control not only
the eastern part, but the entire Mediterranean Sea,” said Captain 1st
Rank Anatoly Ivanov, a Moscow-based naval expert.

“The United States has in the Mediterranean Sea not only the ships of
its Sixth Fleet, but also an extensive ship repair base and training
centers of the Navy. For Russia, the Mediterranean Sea is much closer
not only geographically, but also geopolitically. Therefore, to use
the opportunity to establish (itself) more densely in Syria seems to
be a reasonable measure.”

Qingdao Haixi Heavy-Duty Machinery Co. has already sold Tripoli port
two 28-storey container cranes capable of lifting and transporting
more than 700 containers a day, while a container vessel belonging to
China’s state-owned COSCO Shipping Lines docked in Tripoli in December
2018, inaugurating a new maritime route between China and the
Mediterranean.

Major Chinese construction companies are also looking at building a
railroad that would connect Beirut and Tripoli in Lebanon to Homs and
Aleppo in Syria. China has suggested that Tripoli could become a
special economic zone within the BRI and serve as an important
trans-shipment point between the People’s Republic and Europe.

Adding to China’s expansion in the Eastern Mediterranean, COSCO
acquired in 2015 a 65% stake in Turkey’s  Kumport Terminal on the
Ambarli coast of Istanbul. To round off the circle, Egypt’s navy last
year signed an agreement with China’s Hutchinson Ports to build a
terminal in Abu Qir, a port 23 kilometers northeast of Alexandria.
Chinese companies already operate Alexandria’s own port as well as
that of El Dekheila, 10 kilometers west of the city.

Trump warning

Chinese influence in at least 10 ports in six countries bordering the
Eastern Mediterranean – Israel, Greece, Lebanon, Turkey, Egypt, and
Syria – could complicate the US and NATO’s ability to maneuver in the
region.

This was one reason that the Trump administration warned Israel that
Chinese involvement in Haifa, where the Chinese have built their own
pier, could jeopardize continued use of the port by the US Sixth
Fleet.

Informing US thinking is China’s Military Strategy white paper,
published in 2015, that emphasizes the “strategic requirement of
offshore waters defense and open seas.” It raises the specter of
Chinese-managed or owned ports in the Eastern Mediterranean serving
the People’s Republic’s economic and commercial, as well as military
interests.

The Chinese sway over multiple ports in the Eastern Mediterranean
could also encourage  Turkey to bolster its grip on the  energy-rich
waters in violation of international law. Turkish military support for
the internationally-recognized Libyan Government of National Accord
produced a maritime agreement between the two entities that created an
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) in the Eastern Mediterranean favoring
expansive Turkish claims.

China’s interest in Mediterranean ports is part of a larger effort to
integrate the Middle East into the maritime leg of the Belt and Road
that also includes the Gulf, the Arabian Sea with the Pakistani port
of Gwadar as its focal point, and the Red Sea with the establishment
of the People’s Republic’s first military outpost in Djibouti.

The integration is further advanced by Chinese investment in ports and
logistics facilities in among others Dubai and Oman, as well as
industrial parks linked to maritime infrastructure. China’s moves have
been embraced by Gulf states, several of which have incorporated them
in long-term plans to diversify and streamline their economies.

Qi Qianjin, China’s ambassador in Damascus, spelled out China’s
interest in Syria when he stressed in 2018, in a statement to the
People’s Republic’s state-run news agency Xinhua as well as in a
letter, his country’s intent to expand its economic, political, and
military footprint in the region.

“I think it’s about time to focus all efforts on the development and
reconstruction of Syria, and I think China will play a bigger role in
this process by providing more aid to the Syrian people and the Syrian
government,” Qi said during a visit to a hospital in the Syrian
capital.

Donations in recent years of at least US$44 million to Syria for
humanitarian purposes back up Qi’s statements.

In  a letter written in August 2019, the ambassador focused, among
other things, on the development of Syrian railways and seaports. The
letter was published a month after Chinese President Xi Jinping
promised to lend  $20 billion to Syria, Yemen, Lebanon, and Jordan for
reconstruction and economic development.

Circumventing sanctions

Few doubt that China, even prior to the coronavirus pandemic and its
devastating economic fallout, is best positioned to be a key, if not
the key player, in post-war reconstruction of Syria, which is
estimated to require between  $250 and $400 billion in investment.

This is even more the case as other potential funders – the United
States, Europe, Russia and the  Gulf Cooperation Council states – will
either refuse to work with the government of Assad or be consumed with
fighting a domestic and global recession and substantial loss of
revenues in the wake of the pandemic.

Moreover, in opposition to Western states, China on six occasions
backed Russian vetoes in the United Nations Security Council that
blocked condemnations of the Syrian government and its backers, Russia
and Iran, calls for ceasefires, and the sanctioning of alleged war
criminals.

One  of China’s comparative advantages in heavily sanctioned Syria is
the experience it garnered in circumventing US and United Nations
sanctions imposed on Iran and North Korea.

China further benefits from alternative institutions that it built –
like the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization – that it either controls or in which it has
considerable influence.

That has not stopped the US Justice Department from accusing Chinese
telecommunications giant Huawei of operating in Syria in violation of
US sanctions. The department is seeking the extradition from Canada of
Meng Wanzhou, the company’s chief financial officer and daughter of
its founder. Meng was detained in Canada at the request of the United
States.

Seemingly oblivious to the risk of being targeted by the long arm of
US justice, some 200 Chinese companies in 2018 and 58 in 2019, active
in sectors such as telecommunications, oil and gas, and
transportation, attended the Damascus International Fair where they
discussed deals ranging from car manufacturing to development of
mobile hospitals.

The participation of China National Heavy Duty Truck Company
highlighted Chinese interest in the Syrian automotive sector. Syria
could also prove to be a lucrative market for Chinese military
exports.

Assad could well see Chinese interest as a way of loosening Moscow and
Tehran’s grip on his country despite Russian and Iranian efforts to
reap the benefits of their boots-on-the-ground support for his
government by winning lucrative reconstruction contracts.

China has so far refrained from responding in any real way to Syrian
urging to kickstart reconstruction of critical national infrastructure
even before remaining rebel strongholds in the country are
reconquered. It has, however, exploited commercial opportunity.

The vast majority of Syrian exports go to China and Chinese goods are
ubiquitous in Syrian markets. Hama, Syria’s most important industrial
region after the collapse of manufacturing in Aleppo and Damascus as a
result of the war, is awash with Chinese-made car parts, machine tools
and equipment for the automobile, motorcycle, and shoe industry.

Multiple delegations of Chinese investors and businessmen have visited
Syria in recent years. In 2018, China hosted its First Trade Fair on
Syrian Reconstruction Projects with some 1,000 Chinese companies in
attendance and pledged $2 billion for the construction of industrial
parks.

Uyghurs in wings

Assad’s ability to regain control of most of Syria, with the exception
of the rebel-held northern region of Idlib, created not only economic
opportunity but also heightened already existing Chinese security
concerns.

As Syrian government forces rolled back rebel fighters, China feared
that their battle-hardened Uyghur and Central Asian contingent would
gravitate towards Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and Pakistan from where it
would be easier to target China.

The presence of Uyghur fighters in Syria was one driver for a brutal
crackdown on Turkic Muslims in China’s troubled north-western province
of Xinjiang. It also persuaded China to step up border security
cooperation with Tajikistan and Afghanistan, where militants of the
Uyghur jihadist Turkistan Islamic Party, an al-Qaeda-affiliated group,
allegedly fight alongside the Taliban.

The Uyghur presence in Syria prompted China to consider sending
Chinese troops to join the fight for Idlib in violation of its foreign
and defense policy principles. China ultimately dropped the idea,
which would have amounted to the People’s Republic’s first military
intervention in recent memory beyond its borders.

Repeated unconfirmed media reports have, however, suggested that China
has been sharing intelligence with Syria and has been sending military
advisers for the past four years to help in the fight against Uyghur
militants.

The discussion about an intervention followed a pledge in 2016 by Rear
Admiral Guan Youfei of the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) to
increase military cooperation with the  Syrian government.

Two years later, a Syrian state-controlled newspaper, Al Watan, quoted
Qi, the Chinese ambassador, and China’s military attaché, Wong Roy
Chang, as saying that China wanted to contribute “in some way” to
Syrian military campaign against the rebels in Idlib. The PLAN took
nine days to deny Chinese interest in getting involved in the
fighting, calling the report a “misunderstanding.”

While supportive of efforts to negotiate an end to the Syrian war,
China has studiously avoided taking a leading role. Its sole
initiative to shape the outcome of the conflict was a four-point plan
that never gained significant traction.

China’s dilemma in Idlib lies partially in sensitivity to Turkish
opposition to an all-out assault on Idlib. Turkey fears that it would
likely spark a renewed refugee exodus and concern that Chinese
involvement in an assault could whip up pro-Uyghur sentiments in
Turkey despite growing anti-refugee sentiment in the country.

Turkey has long supported Uyghur rights and has frequently turned a
blind eye to Uyghur militants.

An Uighur dressed in a Turkish military uniform and sporting an
automatic weapon, claiming in a video clip posted on Twitter that he
was fighting in the northern Syrian district of Afrin alongside
Turkish-backed rebels, advised Han Chinese residents of China’s
troubled north-western province of Xinjiang to leave the area.

“Listen you dog bastards, do you see this? We will triumph! We will
kill you all. Listen up Chinese civilians, get out of our East
Turkestan. I am warning you. We shall return, and we will be
victorious,” the Uyghur said.

Beyond its hesitancy of becoming embroiled in the Syrian war, China,
despite its consistent backing of the Syrian government as a secular
bulwark against Islamic extremism, feared that greater involvement in
Syria could jeopardize its successful efforts to remain aloof in the
conflict between Saudi Arabia and Iran that influenced multiple
disputes in the Middle East.

That fear has receded with states in the GCC ending their
long-standing support for anti-Assad rebels and cozying up to the
Syrian leader in an effort to counter Iranian and Turkish influence.

Chinese aloofness also shielded it from entering into direct
competition with Russia and Iran in the post-war reconstruction phase.
Deepening Chinese-Russian ties in the wake of the pandemic and
perceived greater Iranian dependence on China may allow for a divvying
up of the pie in ways that turn Syria into an important Belt and Road
node.

Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow
at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies in Singapore. He is also an adjunct senior
research fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East
Institute and co-director of the University of Wuerzburg’s Institute
of Fan Culture in Germany



 

Armenpress: Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 12-06-20

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 12-06-20

Save

Share

 17:36,

YEREVAN, 12 JUNE, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 12 June, USD exchange rate up by 0.18 drams to 481.79 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 2.64 drams to 545.53 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.06 drams to 6.93 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 1.89 drams to 609.42 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 260.90 drams to 26925.33 drams. Silver price up by 2.58 drams to 276.88 drams. Platinum price down by 273.97 drams to 12701.72 drams.

Turkish press: Ankara, Baku celebrate 102 years of diplomatic ties

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan shakes hand with Azeri President Ilham Aliyev, Baku, Nov. 15, 2019. (AA)

Turkey and Azerbaijan on Thursday celebrated the 102nd anniversary of establishing bilateral diplomatic relations.

Shortly after the foundation of the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic (ADR) on May 28, 1918, it inked the Treaty of Batumi with the then-Ottoman Empire on June 4, 1918, thus marking the beginning of friendly political, legal, commercial and military relations.

With the treaty, the Ottoman Empire recognized the independence of Azerbaijan, which could in turn apply to the Empire for military help in the case of any threat.

The agreement was signed by Halil Bey Menteşe, the head of the Ottomans' Chamber of Deputies. and the Commander of the Caucasian Front of the Ottoman Army, Mehmet Vehib Paşa, and the President of the Azerbaijan National Council Mammad Amin Rasulzade and ADR's Foreign Minister Muhammad Hasan Hajinski.

The treaty, which confirmed the friendship and cooperation between the two nations, also underlined that both sides would support each other in the development of rail transport and apply reduced tariffs in trade.

After the ADR proclaimed independence in Georgia, the government led by Fatali Khan Khoyski came to Ganja, in current-day northwestern Azerbaijan, in June and was not able to travel directly to Azerbaijan's present capital Baku, which was then controlled by Armenian militants and the Bolsheviks.

On Sept. 15, 1918, an elite Ottoman force, dubbed the Caucasian Islamic Army, under the leadership of Nuri Pasha (Killigil), was sent by then Minister of War Enver Pasha to what is today Azerbaijan in the closing months of the World War I in response to a plea from the region's people.

The Caucasian Islamic Army, comprising of Azerbaijani and Turkish soldiers, completed its mission in September, liberating Baku and thus laying the groundwork of the country's independence decades later in 1991.

The liberation of Baku at the time paved the way for the transfer of the capital from Ganja and ensured the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, drawing the basis for its contemporary boundaries.

Enver Pasha personally conveyed the message that Baku had been liberated from Armenian gangs to the Ottoman capital Istanbul.

The Azerbaijani Democratic Republic was toppled after two years by the Soviet Union and the country regained its independence only after the collapse of the USSR in 1991.

Azerbaijan opened its embassy in Turkey In 1992.

Pashinyan comments on decline in prices of face masks

Save

Share

 11:44, 4 June, 2020

YEREVAN, JUNE 4, ARMENPRESS. During the meeting with Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, Chairman of the State Commission for the Protection of Economic Competition Gegham Gevorgyan expressed hope that the prices of face masks will further decrease.

“Yesterday the SCPEC Chairman reported that the prices of face masks declined to some extent, also thanks to the actions taken, and there is hope that the price will further decline”, PM Pashinyan said live on Facebook today.

Armenia made compulsory wearing face masks in all public places starting June 4 to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

According to the latest data, 697 new cases of coronavirus were confirmed in Armenia, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 11,221. The death toll has reached 176. The total number of recovered people is 3,468. The active cases stand at 7,509.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

President of Artsakh addresses congratulatory message on Children’s Day

Save

Share

 10:17, 1 June, 2020

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan addressed a congratulatory message on the International Day for Protection of Children.

Armenpress presents the text of the message:

“Dear compatriots,

On the occasion of the International Day for Protection of Children, I address my warmest congratulations to everyone regardless of age. The key of the state policy to build a dignified future and the united efforts of all of us is to make our children’s tomorrow brighter and grow up a healthy, developed and creative generation under the proper guarantee of their rights.

The state will surely continue and expand all the educational, healthcare and social programs which will contribute to the work of having a healthy, developed generation and their upbringing with the national value system. The exercise of our children’s right to safe and happy childhood is among the state’s priority duties, and the authorities will do everything for properly fulfilling it.

Dear children,

Each day of the year is yours, each of our hopes and effort is directed to you. I wish you family warmth, happy childhood, peaceful sky and constant educational and creative achievements.

All the best to you”.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Artsakh President Appoints Rivals to Key Posts


Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan at the Artsakh Foreign Ministry with the newly-reappointed Masis Mayilyan

Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan on Friday appointed his political rivals Samvel Babayan and Masis Mayilyan to key posts in his government, with Mayilyan staying on as Artsakh’s Foreign Minister, while Babayan being named as secretary of Artsakh’s security council.

Mayilyan came in second in the recent presidential elections, during which he and Harutyunyan traded barbs and accusations. In announcing Mayilyan’s re-appointment as foreign minister, Harutyunyan said that the two agreed to shoulder “responsibility for our country’s future” as it faces serious “challenges and dangers.”

Babayan’s United Homeland party won the second largest majority in parliament during the March 31 elections. On Monday, he and Harutyunyan signed a memorandum of understanding between their respective parties, effectively giving Harutyunyan, who bloc won 16 of the 33 seats in parliament, a majority.

However, in announcing Babayan’s appointment as a key security leader in Artsakh, Harutyunyan said that Babayan, who was the commander of the Artsakh Liberation Army from 1991 to 1994, never asked for a government post.

Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan (right) after signing a cooperation agreement May 26 with Samvel Babayan, his new national security secretary

“We made the final decision yesterday in Yerevan,” Harutyunyan said in a Facebook Live broadcast on Friday. “Before that Samvel Babayan had never hinted at holding any position, he is always ready for cooperation for the sake of the future of the country and its people.”

“Yesterday I proposed him the position of the Secretary of the Security Council of Artsakh,” Harutyunyan said. “I want to thank Samvel Babayan for assuming this important responsible duty at this difficult period.”

Having been once considered the most powerful person in Artsakh, Babayan has not held political office there for more than two decades. In 2000, he was arrested and charged with allegedly attempting to assassinate Artsakh’s then president Arkady Ghukasyan. He was released from prison in 2004, after which he went to Moscow.

In 2016, Babayan returned to Armenia, only to be charged during the Serzh Sarkisian administration, for money laundering and weapons trafficking. He was sentenced to six years in prison, but in June, 2018 he was released from prison.

Babayan wanted to run for Artsakh president during the 2020 elections. However, the fact that he had not lived in Artsakh for ten years, disqualified him for that contest. He formed the United Homeland party, which won nine seats in the parliamentary elections.