Thousands continue to march in Armenia to demand PM’s resignation

WION News, India
Feb 26 2021

WION Web Team
Yerevan, Armenia Published: Feb 26, 2021
Thousands continue to march in Armenia to demand PM's resignation, World News | wionews.com

Several thousand opposition supporters continued to march through the capital of Armenia on Friday to demand Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's resignation over his handling of last year's war with Azerbaijan.

Protesters flooded the streets of central Yerevan, waving Armenian flags and chanting anti-government slogans, hours before a planned meeting with the ex-Soviet country's president.

The small South Caucasus nation plunged Thursday into a fresh political crisis as Pashinyan defied calls to resign, accused the military of an attempted coup and rallied over 20,000 supporters in Yerevan.

The crisis spilled into a second day after Pashinyan's critics spent the night, then blocked streets near the parliament building in preparation for Friday's rally. 

The march led them to the presidency and then to the prime minister's residence, ahead of a meeting with President Armen Sarkisian at 15:40 local time (1140 GMT).

Pashinyan has said he is ready to start talks with the opposition to defuse tensions, but also threatened to arrest any opponents if they violate the law.

The prime minister has faced fierce criticism since he signed a peace deal brokered by Russia that ended the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian region that broke from Azerbaijan's control during a war in the early 1990s.

Fresh fighting erupted over the region in late September with Azerbaijani forces backed by ally Turkey making steady gains.

After six weeks of clashes and bombardments that claimed some 6,000 lives, a ceasefire agreement was signed that handed over significant territory to Azerbaijan and allowed for the deployment of Russian peacekeepers.

The agreement was seen as a national humiliation for many in Armenia, though Pashinyan has said he had no choice but to agree or see his country's forces suffer even bigger losses.

Armenia's military had backed Pashinyan for months, but on Thursday the military's general staff joined calls for him to step down, saying in a statement that he and his cabinet were "not capable of taking adequate decisions".

France, meanwhile, on Friday urged talks based on the legitimacy of President Armen Sarkisian, who holds a largely ceremonial role but has vowed to resolve this crisis peacefully, and Pashinyan himself.

(with inputs from agencies)


Armenian opposition leader urges army to rebel after PM’s coup accusation

KFGO
Feb 26 2021
Fargo, ND, USA / The Mighty 790 KFGO | KFGO
Thomson Reuters

YEREVAN (Reuters) – Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's grip on power appeared to be slipping on Friday, a day after the army called on him to quit.

Hundreds of demonstrators rallied in the capital Yerevan to demand his downfall, and a leading opposition figure called on the army to rebel against him. Two former presidents have already said he must step down.

Pashinyan, 45, accused the military of a coup attempt on Thursday and tried to sack the chief of staff, after the army issued a written statement calling for him to resign.

He has faced calls to quit since November from countrymen who blame him for a disastrous six-week war that saw ethnic Armenian forces lose swathes of territory in neighbouring Azerbaijan they had held for decades.

While crowds on Friday demanded he resign, thousands of others had gathered in the capital to rally behind him on Thursday.

Pashinyan told his supporters on Thursday he was firing Onik Gasparyan, the chief of the army's general staff. But by Friday the dismissal had not yet been approved by Armenia's president, a step needed for it to enter force.

President Armen Sarkissian held a meeting with Gasparyan, the president's office said, without releasing further details.

Vazgen Manukyan, a politician who has been touted by the opposition as a possible interim prime minister to replace Pashinyan, told hundreds of supporters at a rally that the army would never allow Gasparyan to be sacked.

"You think the army will easily agree that Pashinyan illegally removes their head? No. The army will rebel. I call on the army to rebel. The army shouldn't carry out illegal orders," Manukyan said.

The General Prosecutor's Office told Reuters on Friday that it was investigating whether the army's call for the prime minister to go constituted a crime.

"The general staff's statement and the possible risk of developments around it are the subject of our attention," Gor Abrahamyan, an aide to the prosecutor general, told Reuters by telephone. "If any elements of a crime outlined in the criminal code are revealed, a legal response will immediately follow."

Pashinyan, a former journalist and lawmaker, came to power in a peaceful popular uprising in May 2018 known as Armenia's velvet revolution.

But the loss of territory in and around the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh last year was a bitter blow for Armenians, who had won control of the area in the 1990s in a war which killed at least 30,000 people.

The conflict was brought to a halt by a ceasefire deal brokered by Russia. Moscow, which has deployed peacekeepers to enforce the ceasefire, said on Friday it was vital the agreements be fully implemented despite Armenia's crisis.

(Reporting by Artem Mikryukov and Nvard Hovhannisyan; Writing by Tom Balmforth; Editing by Peter Graff)

Prosecutors in Turkey seek to strip several MPs, including Armenian Garo Paylan, of immunity

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 20 2021

The Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office has prepared summaries of proceedings for nine lawmakers from the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), seeking the lift of their legislative immunities, Bianet reports.

The HDP lawmakers, along with 99 other defendants, are facing aggravated life sentences for having allegedly organized the deadly “Kobane protests” in Kurdish-majority cities in October 2014.

The summaries of proceedings have been sent to the Ministry of Justice to be submitted to the parliament for a vote after being reviewed in relevant committees.

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and its ally Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) have the parliamentary majority to approve the summaries of proceedings.

HDP Co-Chair Pervin Buldan, its parliamentary group deputy chairs Meral Danış-Beştaş and Saruhan Oluç, and Garo Paylan, Hüda Kaya, Sezai Temelli, Pero Dundar, Fatma Kurtulan and Serpil Kemalbay-Pekgözegü are the MPs that the investigation concerns.

Dozens of HDP politicians were detained on September 25 after the investigation was launched and 17 of them were later remanded in custody.

The indictment charging the suspects with 25 different offenses, including “managing a terrorist organization” and “attempted overthrow,” was accepted on January 7.

The protests in question began in late September 2014 when ISIS launched an offensive to take over Kobane, a Kurdish town in northern Syria. Incidents between different protesting groups and the police response to protesters turned violent from October 6, resulting in the deaths of  42 people.

While the government has accused the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) of orchestrating the protests and held it responsible for the losses, the party says most of the killed were its supporters and the incidents have not been effectively investigated.

Several senior HDP politicians had been previously investigated over the incidents but none of them received a sentence.

Armenpress: Construction of ”Engineering city” to kick off soon – Deputy PM presents details

Construction of ''Engineering city'' to kick off soon – Deputy PM presents details

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 19:46, 12 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. The layout of the ‘’Engineering city’’ has already been confirmed and soon a tender for the construction will be announced and the construction will kick off, ARMENPRESS reports Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Tigran Avinyan wrote on his Facebook page.

The project of the ''Engineering city'' has entered an active pahse. It's carried out in collaboration with the World Bank.

Tigran Avinyan added that the ''Engineering city'' will be comprised of the buildings of 22 engineering companies, laboratory, parking, garden and engineering infrastructures.

Artsakh reports 1 new case of COVID-19 over past day

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 11:36,

STEPANAKERT, FEBRUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. 1 new case of COVID-19 has been detected in Artsakh in the past one day, the healthcare ministry reported.

58 COVID-19 tests were conducted in the Republic on February 11.

Currently, 5 COVID-19 infected patients receive treatment in hospitals. The remaining confirmed cases receive treatment at home.

The total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Artsakh is 2370.

The ministry again urged the citizens to follow all the rules to prevent the spread of the disease.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Perspectives | What the Second Karabakh War tells us about the liberal international order | Eurasianet

EurasiaNet.org
Feb 1 2021

Kevork Oskanian Feb 1, 2021

 

We live in a time of uncertainty: The order that has governed the basic parameters of international politics since the end of the Cold War is coming under unprecedented challenge. Last year’s war between Armenia and Azerbaijan can be seen as the first interstate war of this new era and so has relevance beyond the borders of the Caucasus. What can the Second Karabakh War tell us about the fate of what is known by international relations scholars as the “liberal international order”?

The liberal international order is the post-World War II system of interstate relations, backed by American power, that promised a more peaceful and orderly world through democratization, international law, and economic integration. In Europe – where these norms had been most fully realized – this order was being expanded by means of NATO and the European Union. Organizations like the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the Council of Europe, and others were devised to spread the benefits of liberal internationalism to the less fortunate states left outside that expanding zone, including the South Caucasus.

Until the late 2000s, this order had appeared unassailable. But the global financial crisis of 2008, the fallout from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the rise of China and the challenge of populism in the West all put it into doubt. The onetime promise of peace and prosperity though the spread of liberal values was quickly losing credibility.

The fact that the bloodiest and most virulent of all “frozen” conflicts in the former Soviet space exploded again when that order had deteriorated was no accident; the declining salience of the previously dominant, taken-for-granted norms and values played a major role in its thawing.

To be sure, the South Caucasus had always been a region where this order had remained relatively weak. Even between Georgia and Azerbaijan – the region’s friendliest dyad – energy cooperation and investment flows had not translated into more institutionalized bilateral integration. Moreover, the region’s three states had chosen to engage with the main suppliers of liberal public goods – NATO and the EU – on an ad-hoc basis, and to vastly varying extents. The deadly enmity between Armenia and Azerbaijan had, in no small part, been kept in check through an old-fashioned balancing act orchestrated by Russia – happy to provide weaponry to both sides – rather than an acquired respect for the liberal norms inherent to international law.

How that balance between Armenia and Azerbaijan broke down is by now well understood: the Armenian leadership vastly – and fatally – underestimated the disparity between its own capabilities and those of Azerbaijan, pursuing an assertive foreign policy it could not afford. Armenia also misjudged the willingness and ability of both Russia and the West to intervene in the conflict and furthermore was caught off guard by changes in regional politics – most importantly, a much more interventionist Turkish foreign policy. Combined, those developments all made it possible for Baku to undertake the war that ended in a decisive victory.

But what this account – centered as it is on power-political shifts – leaves out is how the decline of the liberal international order enabled it all.

Consider how much the picture has changed over the past 10 years.

In 2010, the U.S. was still a power to be reckoned with in the South Caucasus: pushing NATO membership for Georgia and energy corridors between Azerbaijan and Europe that bypassed Russia, while remaining actively involved in the OSCE Minsk Group mediating the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict. The EU’s newly launched Eastern Partnership, and its inherently liberal normative framework, was seen as a desirable short-cut towards development in all three regional capitals. And EU-candidate Turkey could still be coaxed by the U.S. – and to a lesser extent the Europeans – into pursuing “football diplomacy” with Yerevan, while still seeing its security as integrated with, and inseparable from, the wider NATO framework. The region’s states had to orient themselves in a context defined by straightforward competition between Russia on the one hand, and ‘the West’ – broadly defined – on the other.

A decade later, that world had changed beyond recognition. The U.S. had lost interest in grand, long-term strategic interventions in peripheral regions, and had moved away from most of the demonstrative commitment to “values” in its foreign policy; it was little more than an irrelevance during the negotiations surrounding the Second Karabakh War. The Eastern Partnership had diverged into ad-hoc, à-la-carte arrangements with former Soviet states much less willing to accept unilaterally imposed modernizing packages; the most Brussels could muster during the conflict were ineffective expressions of “concern” in the face of large-scale violations of international humanitarian law. The erosion of the U.S. and EU influence had opened the door for middle-power Turkey to choose its own assertive foreign-policy path, independently providing a range of services for clients of its own choice around its neighborhood.

For smaller countries with flexible foreign policies and the ability to play several sides – like Azerbaijan – this development was a boon: The appearance of Turkey as an autonomous actor in particular allowed it leverage against Russia. To small states with fewer options – like Armenia – these developments proved disastrous. Moscow’s long-standing lock on Yerevan’s foreign and security policies – predicated in no small part on the latter’s deep-seated historic distrust of Turkey – left it far less prepared for a more fluid and unpredictable world, where playing within the simple binaries of the past – West/Russia, democratic/authoritarian – no longer had the same currency.

A blip, or the new normal?

The current implications go far beyond the South Caucasus itself. In the U.S. the question is to what extent a new administration, arguably much more wedded to the tenets of the liberal international order, will be able to roll back the damage done to the institutional and normative restraints once taken for granted by regional and extra-regional actors – and not just in the South Caucasus.

In the coming years, will there be a reversion to the pre-Trump templates or a new, more restrained, less interventionist foreign policy? Was the Trump era a blip, a mere interlude, or the indication of something deeper, something structural?

Structural or not, the question of whether – and how – the new team in Washington will be able to successfully address the challenges to the liberal international order will matter far beyond America’s borders. It will matter to supra-national institutions like the EU, built on liberal precepts and thus far incapable of wielding the blunter power-political instruments – hitherto largely outsourced to the U.S. through NATO – needed in these more illiberal times. It will be relevant to middle powers like Turkey, and their choice to explore their own policy autonomy in a less hegemonic era.

And it will matter to small states like Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, and the foreign policy choices at their disposal, as NATO expansion, the continued viability of liberal values, and the formal negotiations around Nagorno-Karabakh all have come into question. Whether we see a (last-gasp?) attempt to revert to the old, a more pragmatic adaptation to the new, or something in between, the result will be significant for already complex regions like the South Caucasus.

 

Kevork Oskanian is an honorary research fellow at the University of Birmingham. 

Mikayel Minasyan: We must realize that ‘gang of Turkish-Azerbaijani agents’ is in power in Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 4 2021

Armenia’s former Ambassador to the Holy See Mikayel Minasyan took to Telegram on Thursday to strongly condemn the recent remarks of MP Anush Beghloyan from Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s My Step bloc about Artsakh.

The lawmaker came under fire for her statement that “it is not important who started the war or whose historical land Artsakh is” during a meeting via video conference on 2 February.

“The walking madam did not say anything new. It follows Nikol's political line, which he started 2,5 years ago, creating from the image of the enemy an educated and constructive partner and presenting the generals who built the state and army as criminals and thieves,” he wrote.

Minasyan also referred to an interview of Deputy Speaker of the Armenian National Assembly Lena Nazaryan, where she calls for living in peace instead of “regaining what has been lost”.

“We have reached the point where the usurer holding the post of minister of social affairs feels free to mock the people of Artsakh who have been left homeless, stating that “there are no social or humanitarian issues in post-war Artsakh.” The problems of the Nikol and his team are resolved while they are in power. This is what allows them to constantly ignore the public opinion,” the ex-ambassador said.

“Few people know that according to the verbal agreement between Aliyev and Pashinyan, the office of the Artsakh representation in Russia is being closed. This is a continuation of the same policy of pacifying the enemy, giving it all the elements of our victory and unquestioningly fulfilling all his demands.

“We must realize that the power in Armenia is held by a gang of Turkish-Azerbaijani agents, who trample on state and national interests every single minute. And it is up to us how long we will allow them to live comfortably,” he said. 

Artsakh reports 4 new cases of COVID-19 over past day

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 12:01,

STEPANAKERT, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. 4 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Artsakh in the past 24 hours.

41 tests were conducted on January 27, the ministry of healthcare told Armenpress.

A total of 2326 cases of coronavirus have been confirmed in Artsakh.

The number of active cases is 25.

The death toll stands at 31.

The ministry of healthcare has again urged the citizens to follow all the rules to avoid new outbreaks and overcome the disease.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian Church considers applying to Pope Francis for return of POWs from Azerbaijan

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 28 2021

The Armenian Church is making every effort to facilitate the return of Armenian prisoners of war (POWs) from Azerbaijani captivity, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, told reporters in the Yerablur Military Pantheon where he visited to pay tribute to fallen soldiers on the Army Day on Thursday.

Asked whether they may apply to Pope Francis for the repatriation of Armenian POWs, Catholicos Karekin II said they are considering the issue and taking steps.

Also, he denounced the desecration of Armenian churches in the Artsakh territories that fell under Azerbaijan’s control during the 2020 war, adding they are making efforts for the international community to also condemn such phenomena.

"We express our appreciation to the Russian authorities and the primate of the Russian Orthodox Church for the support that made it possible for Dadivank Monastery to continue its operation and mission," Karekin II said. 

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 27-01-21

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 17:35,

YEREVAN, 27 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 27 January, USD exchange rate down by 0.10 drams to 518.16 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 0.43 drams to 628.06 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.03 drams to 6.89 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 3.80 drams to 711.59 drams.

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

Gold price down by 10.14 drams to 30929.52 drams. Silver price down by 4.00 drams to 423.14 drams. Platinum price down by 70.20 drams to 18408.45 drams.