Blinken, Cavusoglu discuss process of Armenian-Turkish normalization

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 4 2022

US Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken discussed the process of normalization of relations with Armenia with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

“Secretary Blinken and Foreign Minister Cavusoglu discussed issues related to the Horn of Africa, Turkey’s appointment of a Special Envoy to discuss the process of normalization with Armenia, and opportunities to deepen cooperation bilaterally and as NATO Allies to address areas of mutual concern,” the Department of State said.

Azerbaijani border guard arrested in occupied Artsakh village after killing three fellow servicemen

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 4 2022

An Azerbaijani border guard was arrested in a village in the occupied Berdzor district of Artsakh after killing three military staff members at a border outpost on Sunday, Gazeta.ru reported, citing the Azerbaijani Military Prosecutor’s Office.

The reasons for the incident remain unclear.

The man, identified as Sergeant Elkhan Avazly, opened fire on his fellow servicemen “for no apparent reason” and killed a first lieutenant and two noncommissioned officers, who were at that time at the border outpost. The suspect then dropped his weapon and fled, RT reported.

He was apprehended on January 3, shortly after midnight.

All the circumstances of the incident are being established, the military said.

Artsakh parliament expresses disagreement and frustration on a number of harmful, distorted formulations voiced by Nikol Pashinyan

panorama>>am
Dec 27 2021

The National Assembly of the Artsakh Republic has issued a statement in connection with remarks made Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan  during a recent interview. 

According to the text, throughout the chronicle of the Karabakh conflict statements distorting and falsifying the essence of the problem have regularly been circulated, which complicate and entangle the process of comprehensive and final settlement of the conflict. "We consider inadmissible any statement by different political forces and figures that questions or diminishes the subjectivity of Artsakh and its Armenian future. It is confusing that the last such statement was made by the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia while answering the questions of the representatives of media and non-governmental-organizations, on December 24," the statement said. 

The rest of the statement reads as follows: 

"The fate of Artsakh has never been and it will not be the monopoly of any political force. We express our disagreement and frustration on a number of harmful, distorted formulations and ideas voiced during the interview. 

The fact that against the background of Karabakh movement, the results of the 1988 national liberation struggle, formulations are heard, which question the existence of the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Republic, proclaimed on September 2, 1991, which is fully acting in line with the norms of international law and its ongoing struggle for international recognition, is a matter of concern.

The negotiation process of previous years, the legal and political framework of the Armenian parties, in the context of protecting our national interests, did not contradict the positions presented by international structures and mediators.

The fact that the status of Nagorno Karabakh has never been ignored in the proposals previously submitted by the mediators, is confirmed in the clarifications given by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs.

The working options discussed in the negotiation process of different years, speculations about a possible change in the negotiating framework are imaginary and false tricks to obscure the public consciousness, to distort the realities.

We consider inadmissible the statements questioning the Armenian origin of Artsakh and emphasizing the importance of the presence of possible foreign elements. Such statements are reprehensible and worthy condemnation in the memory of the thousands of Armenians who sacrificed their lives for the freedom and independence of Artsakh.

Bowing down to the memory of all those perished in the Artsakh struggle for survival, at the same time, we express our gratitude to all Armenians, particularly to our compatriots in Armenia, for standing by Artsakh, sharing its sufferings and deprivations.

For many years, the fraternal relations between the two Armenian republics have been based on the decision adopted by the Supreme Council of the Republic of Armenia on July 8, 1992, which clearly defined the attitude of the Republic of Armenia, a full member of the international community, towards the Artsakh Republic, which is striving for international recognition. With this decision, the Republic of Armenia undertakes to "consistently support the Nagorno Karabakh Republic and the protection of the rights of its population". It is also defined to «consider any international or domestic document, where the Nagorno Karabakh Republic is mentioned as part of Azerbaijan, unacceptable for the Republic of Armenia». This resolution is still relevant today.

The Republic of Artsakh National Assembly, reaffirming the determination of the people and authorities of Artsakh on the sovereignty and independence of the Artsakh Republic, declares unacceptable expressing a position without taking into account the point of view of the Artsakh authorities, as only the legitimate authorities formed by the citizens of the Artsakh Republic through elections have the right to make decisions on the future of Artsakh." 

Exquisite book in Tehran’s Armenian Museum

IRAN FRONT PAGE
Dec 28 2021

An old manuscript restorer says there is an exquisite book in the Armenian Museum in Tehran of which there are only seven similar copies in the world.

Rima Ojaghian, a veteran restorer of old manuscripts at the National Library of Iran who studied in France, told the Mehr News Agency about the old books kept in the Armenian Museum in Tehran.

“I restored these books, which are mostly Bibles, ten years ago. These books are now kept in the Armenian Museum. One of them is exquisite because there are only 7 books similar to it in the world. This book contains prayers that Armenians recited in churches,” she said.

She said that the pattern of the cover of the book is driven from the miniatures inside.

“This book was discovered in ancient Turkey in the early 1700s and was in poor condition when it was delivered to me. I had to clean it 5 times. I even had to wash it. If I remember correctly, this book was hidden in old jars. No other copies of this book were ever made. Similar books are now kept in Armenian libraries,” Ojaghian added.

“This book features the Armenian binding style to the audience. In the past, men used to sew the pages. I tried to bind this book with about 1500 pages in the same old style; even the headband and the tailband on both sides of the book were restored,” she explained.

The type of endband and binding shows well that the Armenians sewed the pages of paper, covered them with wood and closed the book in a certain style to prevent the destruction of the pages, Ojaghian stated.

She added that these books are now kept in two showcases of the Armenian Museum in Tehran.

Economic activity index grew 5,2% in January-November 2021

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 13:39,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 27, ARMENPRESS. The economic activity index in Armenia grew 5,2% in 2021’s January-November compared to the same period of 2020, according to the Statistical Committee.

The volume of industrial output grew 2,7%, while construction volume grew 6,9%.

Trade turnover grew 7,9%, while service volumes (excluding trade) grew 7,3%.

The consumer price index grew 7,1%, the industrial output price index – 9,9%, while electric-energy output volume dropped 2%.

16,6% growth was recorded in the foreign trade turnover volumes – exports grew 19,4% and imports grew 15,1%.

Coronavirus: 57% of fatalities in Armenia are men – NCDC

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 11:20,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. 57% of people who died from COVID-19 in Armenia are men, and 43% are women, according to the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC).

However, from all confirmed cases of infections 41% are men while 59% are women, NCDC Director of the Department of Epidemiology of Infectious and Non-Infectious Diseases Romella Abovyan told reporters.

The COVID-19 death toll in Armenia stood at 7942 as of December 25.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/21/2021

                                        Tuesday, 


Another French Presidential Candidate Visits Armenia


Armenia - Armenian President Armen Sarkissian meets with Valerie Pecresse, a 
Fench presidential candidate and head of Ile de France region, .


Valerie Pecresse, a French conservative politician emerging as President 
Emmanuel Macron’s main challenger in next year’s presidential elections, pledged 
continued support for Armenia when she visited the country on Tuesday.

Pecresse met with President Armen Sarkissian, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, 
parliament speaker Alen Simonian and Catholicos Garegin II, the supreme head of 
the Armenian Apostolic Church.

Official Armenian press releases on the separate meetings indicated that she was 
received in her capacity as head of the Ile de France region of greater Paris.

The region is home to a large part of France’s influential Armenian community 
numbering some 600,000 people. French presidential candidates will vie for their 
votes during the tight presidential race.

A new poll released over the weekend showed Pecresse as the likely challenger to 
Macron in the second round of the elections slated for April 2022. They were 
trailed by two far-right candidates, Eric Zemmour and Marine Le Pen.

Zemmour chose Armenia for his first campaign trip which he took a week ago. The 
former journalist known for his controversial statements against Islam and 
immigration urged strong Western support for what he described as a Christian 
nation situated “in the middle of an Islamic ocean.”

Unlike Pecresse, Zemmour was not received by high-ranking Armenian officials. He 
met with several senior parliamentarians representing Armenia’s ruling party.


Armenia -- French far-right party "Reconquete!" leader, media pundit and 
candidate for the 2022 French presidential election Eric Zemmour in downtown 
Yerevan on December 12, 2021.

During her trip Pecresse was accompanied by former French Foreign Minister 
Michel Barnier and Bruno Retailleau, who leads the conservative Les Republicains 
party’s group in the French Senate. Pecresse won early this month the opposition 
party’s primary to be its presidential candidate.

Sarkissian described her as a “good friend of Armenia and the Armenian people.” 
The Pecresse campaign’s Twitter page said they spoke for two hours to “evoke the 
strong ties between Armenia and France.”

The president and the other Armenian leaders also discussed with Pecresse the 
aftermath of last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

While in Yerevan Pecresse laid flowers at the Armenian genocide memorial and the 
Yerablur military cemetery where hundreds of Armenian soldiers killed during the 
six-week war were buried.

“What happened to Armenia last year is a warning that we would be wrong to 
assume that this does not concern us,” Julien Neny, a French journalist covering 
the trip, quoted her as saying afterwards.

Pecresse also told reporters that if elected president she will organize “an 
international conference in Paris in support of Armenia.”


FRANCE -- French President Emmanuel Macron, left, welcomes Armenian acting Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian before a working lunch at the Elysee Palace in Paris, 
June 1, 2021

Her visit coincided with Macron’s 44th birthday anniversary. In a congratulatory 
message sent on Tuesday, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian wished the French 
president “unwavering will, strength and unshakable faith to lead the French 
people to new victorious horizons.”

“I assure you that in that high mission, Armenia stands with your and friendly 
France, ready to defend the common values, universal rights and civilizational 
heritage that unite us,” Pashinian wrote.

Macron and Pashinian most recently met in Brussels on December 15 during 
trilateral talks with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

“We will never abandon the Armenians,” Macron tweeted after the meeting. “We 
will always seek solutions for a lasting peace.”



Pashinian’s Choice Of Negotiator With Turkey Criticized

        • Gayane Saribekian
        • Nane Sahakian

Armenia - Deputy speaker Ruben Rubinian chairs a session of the National 
Assembly, Yerevan, October 5, 2021


Armenian analysts and opposition politicians have criticized Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian for appointing a 31-year-old political ally lacking diplomatic 
experience to represent Armenia in upcoming negotiations with Turkey.
The Armenian and Turkish governments said last week that they will try to 
normalize relations between the two neighboring states and will name special 
envoys for that purpose.

Ankara went on to choose Serdar Kilic, a career diplomat who served as Turkey’s 
ambassador to the United States from 2014-2021, for that role. For its part, the 
Armenian side named Ruben Rubinian, a deputy speaker of the parliament and 
senior member of Pashinian’s Civil Contract party.

Rubinian was appointed as a deputy foreign minister following the 2018 “velvet 
revolution” that brought Pashinian to power. He resigned from that post eight 
months later after being elected to Armenia’s former parliament.

Rubinian headed the parliament committee on foreign relations until snap general 
elections held in June this year. In August, he became one of the current 
National Assembly’s three vice-speakers.

Pashinian has not yet explained his decision to handpick a young loyalist, 
rather than a professional diplomat, to lead the planned talks with the Turks. 
The move has been construed by some as a sign of his distrust in the Armenian 
Foreign Ministry.

Pashinian has replaced two foreign ministers, both of them career diplomats, 
over the past year. One of them, Ara Ayvazian, signaled serious policy 
disagreements with the prime minister when he resigned in May. All of Ayvazian’s 
four deputies also tendered their resignations.


Armenia - Outgoing Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazian addresses Armenian Foreign 
Ministry staff during a fairwell meeting in Yerevan, May 31, 2021.

Lawmakers representing the main opposition Hayastan alliance on Monday expressed 
concern over Pashinian’s choice of the special envoy. They questioned Rubinian’s 
competence and ability to properly negotiate with his far more experienced 
Turkish opposite number.

Some Armenian pundits shared the opposition concerns on Tuesday.

“I don’t think that Rubinian is the most brilliant candidate [for the role,]” 
said Armen Baghdasarian, a veteran political commentator. “Moreover, I believe 
he can botch any initiative.”

“He is not a diplomat,” warned Ruben Safrastian, a leading expert on Turkey at 
the Armenian National Academy of Sciences. “It will be difficult for him to 
negotiate with an experienced diplomat like Serdar Kilic.”

Armen Khachatrian, a senior lawmaker from the ruling party, dismissed these 
concerns.

“You don’t become a parliament speaker, chairman of the parliament committee on 
foreign relations and a deputy foreign minister at such a young age for no 
reason,” Khachatrian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “This means the guy has 
that capacity and potential.”

Rubinian refused on Monday to answer questions about his new mission.

Meanwhile, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu announced that the Armenian 
and Turkish negotiators will hold their first meeting soon. But he gave no 
concrete dates.


U.S. -- Turkish Ambassador to the United States Serdar Kilic speaks to the 
Conference on U.S.-Turkey Relations in Washington, May 22, 2017
Cavusoglu also reiterated that Turkey will continue to coordinate its policy 
towards Armenia with Azerbaijan.

Ankara has for decades refused to establish diplomatic relations with Yerevan 
and kept the Turkish-Armenian border closed out of solidarity with Azerbaijan. 
It provided decisive military support to Baku during last year’s 
Armenian-Azerbaijani war over Nagorno-Karabakh.

In recent months Turkish leaders have made statements making the normalization 
of Turkish-Armenian relations conditional on Armenia agreeing to open a land 
corridor that would connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave. They have 
also cited Baku’s demands for a formal Armenian recognition of Azerbaijani 
sovereignty over Karabakh.

Armenian opposition figures and other government critics say that Ankara is 
continuing to set unacceptable preconditions for Yerevan. They claim that 
Pashinian may be ready to accept them.

Baghdasarian echoed those claims. “I also don’t think that Pashinian can clearly 
define the current agenda of Turkish-Armenian relations because he seems ready 
to cede practically everything,” he said.



IMF Expects Slower Growth In Armenia

        • Emil Danielyan

U.S. -- An exterior view of the building of the International Monetary Fund 
(IMF) is seen in Washington, March 27, 2020


Armenia’s economy will likely grow in the coming years more slowly than the 
Armenian government has predicted, according to the International Monetary Fund.

“Going forward, the economic outlook is generally positive with medium-term 
growth projected around 4.5-5 percent, contingent upon the COVID-19 
developments, external demand, and progress on structural reforms 
implementation,” the IMF said in a statement issued late last week.

The government’s five-year policy program approved by the Armenian parliament in 
August says that the country’s GDP should increase by 7 percent annually.

The Armenian economy contracted by 7.4 percent last year due to adverse effects 
of the coronavirus pandemic compounded by the war in Nagorno-Karabakh. It 
returned to growth this spring.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said in July that GDP growth will reach 6 percent 
this year. The IMF and the World Bank forecast more modest growth rates 
afterwards.

“An economic rebound is now underway, with projected growth of around 5.5 
percent in 2021,” read the latest IMF statement.

The governor of Armenia’s Central Bank, Martin Galstian, predicted on December 
14 an even lower growth rate for this year: 4.2 percent. Presenting the bank’s 
latest projections, he said growth should accelerate to 5.3 percent in 2022.

Armenia’s 2022 state budget approved by the parliament earlier this month is 
based on a 7 percent growth target set by Pashinian’s government. It calls for 
significant increases in public spending and tax revenue. Opposition politicians 
and some economists say the government targets are not realistic.


Armenia - Workers at a new textile factory in Gyumri, December 7, 2018.
As well as predicting slower growth, the IMF praised the government’s five-year 
program and, in particular, reforms envisaged by it. It also said the Armenian 
authorities “appropriately responded” to the 2020 recession.

“The Fund’s financial support will help Armenia meet its challenges -- including 
the social and economic implications of COVID-19 pandemic -- while moving ahead 
with its reform agenda,” added the statement.

The IMF made its latest growth projections as it announced the disbursement of a 
fresh $72 million installment of a $432 million Stand-By Arrangement, a loan 
designed to help Armenia cope with economic consequences of the pandemic.

The loan tranche brought to about $396 million the total amount of funds 
allocated to the country under the three-year lending program launched in May 
2019.



Azeri Soldiers Captured, Freed By Armenia

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Armenian soldiers take up positions on the border with Azerbaijan, 
December 20, 2020.


The Armenian military released and repatriated two Azerbaijani soldiers late on 
Monday two days after capturing them on Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan.

The Defense Ministry in Yerevan said they were detained at an Armenian border 
post on Saturday. It gave no details.

A short amateur video circulated online earlier on Monday showed Armenian 
military personnel handcuffing the Azerbaijani soldiers and putting them in a 
military truck parked at what looked like an army outpost.

A ministry statement said they were sent back to Azerbaijan “for humanitarian 
considerations and with Russian mediation.”

Russian peacekeeping forces stationed in Nagorno-Karabakh confirmed the handover 
on their Telegram page on Tuesday. They also posted pictures of Armenian, 
Azerbaijani and Russian officers sitting at a table and signing a document in 
the presence of the freed soldiers.

The latter were reportedly captured at a border section close to the scene of 
the November 16 fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces that left at 
least 13 troops from both sides dead. Three dozen Armenian soldiers were taken 
prisoner that day in what Yerevan condemned as an Azerbaijani attack on Armenian 
territory.

Twenty-one of those soldiers have been set free since then. The eleven others 
remain detained in Azerbaijan.

Opposition leaders strongly criticized the Armenian authorities for not swapping 
the two Azerbaijanis with these or other Armenian prisoners of war held by Baku. 
The authorities declined to clearly explain their decision to swiftly free the 
Azerbaijani soldiers.

“Why were the two [Azerbaijani] POWs sent back? Let our security bodies not 
divulge any details to you,” Andranik Kocharian, the pro-government chairman of 
the Armenian parliament committee on defense and security, told journalists.

“If the [Azerbaijani] POWs were handed over to the enemy, it means that there is 
something there stemming from our interests,” Kocharian said vaguely.

Aram Vartevanian, a lawmaker from the main opposition Hayastan bloc, argued that 
Baku is continuing to hold dozens of Armenian POWs in breach of Russian-mediated 
agreements reached during and after last year’s war over Nagorno-Karabakh.

“When our adversary behaves this way, how can the Armenian authorities’ behavior 
be explained?” he said. “I would call it … yet another toothless action by these 
authorities.”


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Turkish press: Armed with drones, Turkey explores African arms salesArmed with drones, Turkey explores African arms sales

  • December 15 2021 13:23:00

Armed with battle-tested drones, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has been deepening defence ties with African countries ahead of a major gathering of the continent’s leaders in Istanbul.

The two-day Turkey-Africa partnership summit starting Friday comes fast on the heels of a top-level business forum in October that focused on investment and trade.

The next phase of this fast-blossoming relationship is security, experts say, with a host of African leaders looking to buy up military hardware at cheaper prices and with fewer strings attached.

Leaders and top ministers from 39 countries – including 13 presidents – have confirmed attendance, with Erdoğan set to make a speech on Saturday.

Ankara already has a military base in Somalia, and Morocco and Tunisia reportedly took their first delivery of Turkish combat drones in September.

Angola became the latest to express an interest in unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) during Erdoğan’s first visit to the southern African country in October.

Turkey in August also signed a military cooperation pledge with Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who has been embroiled in a war with Tigrayan rebels for the past year.

"The most important sector is the defense sector because this is a new asset. Turkey has pushed this sector a lot, especially drones," Federico Donelli, an international relations researcher at the University of Genoa, told AFP.

Russia has been the dominant player on the African arms market, accounting for 49 percent of the continent’s imports between 2015 and 2019, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

But interest in Turkish weaponry is peaking.

The TB2 Bayraktar model is in high demand after it was credited with swinging the fate of conflicts in Libya and the occupied of Nagorno-Karabakh in the past few years.

The drones are made by the private Baykar company, run by one of Erdoğan’s sons-in-law.

"Everywhere I go in Africa, everyone asks about UAVs," Erdoğan boasted after a visit to Angola, Nigeria and Togo in October.

Turkish defense and aviation exports to Ethiopia rose to $94.6 million between January and November from around $235,000 in the same period last year, according to figures published by the Turkish Exporters Assembly.

Sales to Angola, Chad and Morocco experienced similar jumps.

Turkey’s drones first made international headlines after Ankara signed two deals with the U.N.-recognized Libyan government covering maritime and security in 2019.

It then swarmed the conflict zone with drones, stalling an advance by rebel eastern forces backed by Turkey’s regional rivals and paving the way for a truce.

Turkey cemented its drones’ reputation last year by helping Azerbaijan recapture most of the land it lost to separatist ethnic Armenian forces in Nagorno-Karabakh nearly three decades ago.

"Now Turkey with drones has more cards to play when they have to bargain with other countries," researcher Donelli said.

"This is a very good bargaining chip for Turkey."

The head of Turkey’s Foreign Economic Relations Board – the NGO that hosted the October forum in Istanbul – insisted the growing relationship was not just about weapons.

"We care about the defense sector and our relations with Africa," the board’s head Nail Olpak told AFP.

"But I would like to emphasize that if we see the defense sector only as weapons, rockets, guns, tanks and rifles, it would be wrong."

He highlighted Turkish mine-clearing vehicles in Togo, which qualify as defense industry sales.

Donelli agreed, referring to Togo’s plans to improve its army with the support of Turkey through training and armored vehicles, weapons and other kinds of equipment.

Turkey has reportedly set up a web of 37 military offices across Africa in all, in line with Erdoğan’s affirmed goal of tripling the annual trade volume with the continent to $75 billion in the coming years.

RFE/RL – Armenian Report – 12/17/2021

                                        Friday, 


Crackdown On Armenian Election Contenders Condemned

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia - Opposition supporters hold pictures of former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon 
Aslanian and other arrested opposition members during a demonstration in 
Yerevan, .


Human rights campaigners on Friday accused the Armenian authorities of resorting 
to arrests and intimidation to gain control of communities where the ruling 
Civil Contract party failed to prevail in this month’s local elections.

Arman Tatoyan, Armenia’s human rights ombudsman, said opposition groups that did 
well there are being illegally pressured not to install their leaders or allies 
as community heads.

“That is being done under the guise of so-called criminal and political 
proceedings,” he said. “Explanations are not given to the public adequately or 
not given at all. Dangerous interventions are carried out with regard to people 
directly elected by citizens.”

“Pressure is exerted on elected council members so that they vote ‘accordingly’ 
during the inaugural sessions of the councils. These practices are fundamentally 
at odds with democratic norms,” added Tatoyan.

Civil Contract was defeated or failed to win outright in some of the 36 
communities across Armenia that elected on December 5 local councils empowered 
to appoint their mayors. The party led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
suffered its biggest setback in the country’s third largest city of Vanadzor.


Armenia -- Human right ombudsman Arman Tatoyan speaks during parliamentary 
hearings in Yerevan, April 5, 2019.

A bloc led by former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon Aslanian practically won the local 
ballot with about 39 of the vote. Civil Contract came in second with 25 percent.

Aslanian was thus well placed to regain his post during the first session of the 
new municipal council initially slated for this Friday. However, he was arrested 
on Wednesday on a string of charges rejected by him and his allies as 
politically motivated.

Artur Sakunts, a veteran human rights activist based in Vanadzor, described the 
criminal proceedings launched against Aslanian as “political persecution.” He 
said the authorities are trying to distort election outcomes in these and other 
communities.

“In essence, these actions are an attempt to alter the results of popular votes 
with methods that are obviously not democratic,” Sakunts told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service. This will only undermine popular trust in Pashinian’s administration 
and electoral process, he said.


Armenia -- Human rights activist Artur Sakunts.

Pashinian’s loyalists maintain that none of the post-election arrests was 
politically motivated. They also deny that the authorities are forcing their 
challengers to back Civil Contract’s mayoral candidates.

In a community comprising the town of Vartenis and surrounding villages, the 
ruling party won 46 percent of the vote on December 5. But two local blocs 
challenging it got 37 percent and 16.5 percent respectively, putting them in a 
position to have a common candidate elected as mayor.

The leaders of those blocs announced such a deal last week. Law-enforcement 
authorities arrested one of them on corruption charges and raided the other’s 
home in the following days.

In another town, Talin, a similar power-sharing deal was reached by three other 
opposition groups that won between them 11 of the 21 seats in the local council.

Karen Grigorian, the leader of one of those parties called Hayk party, broke 
ranks and voted for Civil Contract’s mayoral candidate on Friday, enabling the 
latter to take over the local government. Grigorian gave no clear reasons for 
the move. According to press reports, he has faced strong government pressure in 
recent days.

Three Talin-based members of another opposition party, Zartonk, were briefly 
detained by police earlier this week. In a statement issued later on Friday, 
Zartonk alleged “police and other interventions” in the local race.



Armenian Parliament Speaker Again Lands In Hot Water

        • Robert Zargarian

Armenia - Parliament Speaker Alen Simonian talks to journalists, August 25, 2021


Parliament speaker Alen Simonian has caused another scandal after reportedly 
telling journalists to stand up when seeing him in the National Assembly 
building in Yerevan.

When Simonian entered the parliament lobby on Thursday he did not like the 
posture of cameramen sitting there and had all chairs frequently occupied by 
them and other reporters removed from there. His spokeswoman, Tsovinar 
Khachatrian, defended the decision on Friday, saying that the cameramen sat 
cheekily and thus disrespected the speaker.

The chairs were brought back after parliamentary correspondents met with 
Simonian later on Thursday. Khachatrian said the cameramen apologized for their 
“inappropriate and impolite posture.”

According to Hripsime Jebejian, a journalist with the Aravot daily present at 
the meeting, Simonian told her and her colleagues that they must stand up every 
time they see him or other lawmakers.

“That demand was very surprising,” Jebejian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “We 
told him that we cannot comply with it.”

Jebejian also condemned the removal of the chairs. “Even if someone behaved 
inappropriately in the National Assembly, why should all journalists suffer as a 
result of that … and be deprived of elementary working conditions which the 
National Assembly is obliged to put in place?” she said.


Armenia - Relatives of Armenian POWs clash with riot police outside the 
parliament building in Yerevan, December 8, 2021.

Simonian, who is a senior member of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s party, 
imposed unprecedented restrictions on press coverage of the National Assembly 
immediately after becoming its speaker in August. He curbed journalists’ freedom 
of movements inside the building and banned them from filming ugly scenes on the 
parliament floor.

Armenia’s press freedom groups as well as the parliamentary opposition strongly 
condemned those restrictions.

Simonian, who reportedly controls a pro-government news website, also came under 
fire last month when the Armenian government allocated 90 million drams 
($185,000) for the purchase of a new limousine for him. He claimed that his 
current official car frequently breaks down and requires expensive repairs.

The 41-year-old speaker caused an even greater controversy with his disparaging 
comments about Armenian prisoners of war revealed on December 7. He had been 
caught on camera branding many of those soldiers as deserters who “laid down 
their weapons and ran away” during fighting with Azerbaijani forces.

The remarks sparked street protests by angry relatives of POWs. Pashinian and 
members of his political team did not publicly criticize or disavow them.



Tsarukian Ally Elected Town Mayor

        • Narine Ghalechian

Armenia - The Prosperous Armenia Party's mayoral candidate Eduard Babayan 
attends an election campaign rally in Abovian, December 1, 2021.


Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian’s right-hand man and 
former bodyguard became the new mayor of the town of Abovian on Friday two weeks 
after defeating the ruling Civil Contract party in a local election.

Eduard Babayan topped the list of BHK candidates in the election held on 
December 5. The opposition party won 44.4 percent of the vote, compared with 
35.2 percent polled by Civil Contract.

Two other parties also won seats in the municipal council empowered to appoint 
the mayor of Abovian and surrounding villages making up a single community.

The 27-member council, in which the BHK controls 13 seats, narrowly elected 
Babayan during its inaugural session. The latter became mayor thanks to the 
backing of the sole council member representing the Armenian Revolutionary 
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), a more hardline opposition party.

Twelve other members of the local legislature voted for Civil Contract’s mayoral 
candidate, Pavel Tsugunian.

Located about 15 kilometers north of Yerevan, Abovian has long been a political 
stronghold of Tsarukian. Despite failing to win any seats in Armenia’s current 
parliament elected in June, the tycoon and his party appear to have retained 
much of their influence in the town of some 44,000 inhabitants.

Abovian’s previous mayor was also allied to Tsarukian. He defeated another Civil 
Contract candidate and got reelected in 2019.

Speaking right after his election, Babayan said that he has a popular mandate to 
govern Abovian.

“The people voted; I have nothing else to say,” he told reporters. “I will 
answer all your questions soon.”


Armenia - Businessman Gagik Tsarukian and his chief bodyguard Eduard Babayan (R) 
at an election campaign rally in Hrazdan, 11 April 2012.

Babayan, 49, was known as Tsarukian’s chief bodyguard until he became a 
parliament deputy in 2018. In 2019, he was sentenced to three and a half years 
in prison on charges of violent assault denied by him. The burly ex-policeman 
did not go to jail thanks to a general amnesty declared by the Armenian 
authorities.

Civil Contract’s Tsugunian, sought to rationalize the ruling party’s defeat in 
Abovian.

“Elections have been held every year [since 2018,]” he said. “People were 
probably tired and didn’t go the polls [in large numbers.]”

The party led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian was also defeated in several 
other major communities, notably Armenia’s third largest city of Vanadzor, on 
December 5. Opposition leaders now accuse Pashinian of trying to reverse most of 
those setbacks with crackdowns on the leaders of local opposition groups that 
won or did well in the polls.

Mamikon Aslanian, a former Vanadzor mayor who was well placed to regain his 
post, was arrested on Tuesday on corruption charges rejected by him as 
politically motivated.

Law-enforcement authorities earlier arrested a local leader who looked set to 
prevent Civil Contract from installing its preferred mayor of another community. 
They deny political reasons for the arrests.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Armenian President off to the State of Qatar for working visit

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 8 2021

President Armen Sarkissian has left for the State of Qatar for a working visit, the President’s Press Office reports.

Within the framework of the visit, President Sarkissian is scheduled to meet with the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.

The meeting will focus on strengthening ties and developing relations between the two countries, including in the context of regional events.

At the Doha International Airport, the President of Armenia was welcomed by the Minister of State of Qatar Hamad bin Abdulaziz Al Quwari and other officials.