Armenia’s Garni Museum-Reserve offers free entry on Vardavar

Panorama, Armenia
Society 12:12 27/07/2019 Armenia

Garni Historical-Cultural Museum-Reserve located 28 km east of the Armenian capital of Yerevan offers a free entry to all Armenians and foreigners on 28 July marking Vardavar, a traditional holiday in Armenia.

Although now a Christian tradition, celebrating the transfiguration of Jesus Christ (the Feast of the Transfiguration), Vardavar's history dates back to pagan times, where it was associated with the goddess of water, love and fertility – Astghik.

All are invited to attend an event in line with the pagan ritual scheduled for Sunday, the Service for Protection of Historical Environment and Cultural Museum Reservoirs said in a statement on Friday.

Upon the order of Ara Tarverdyan, the director of the organization, on that day the entry to the museum-reserve will be free from 1pm to 5pm.

The Garni Song and Dance Ensemble, Haykazun Ensemble, as well as singers Arsen Hambaryan and Grigor Hambaryan are also set to perform during the event. 

Armenian School Teacher Tortured Before Her Murder in Idlib

Al-Bawaba, Middle East

Highlights
She had worked as an Arabic teacher before she retired, where she lived with a small number of other Christian Syrians in the Idlib village before her murder.

A body of a retired Syrian-Armenian schoolteacher was discovered by locals in Idlib province, the White Helmets said on Friday, with activists saying the woman was brutally tortured for hours before her murder.

Sixty-year-old retiree Suzan Dirkerkur – also spelled Der Kirkour – lived in the Christian village of Yacoubiya, near Jisr al-Shighour in opposition Idlib province, where she was a keen gardener and volunteer at a local church. 

She had worked as an Arabic teacher before she retired, where she lived with a small number of other Christian Syrians in the Idlib village before her murder.

"A shocking discovery was made of the body of the beloved and respected school teacher, Susan Dirkerkur, who was killed in a farm in Yacoubiya village near Jisr al-Shighour City," the White Helmets confirmed on Friday.

"Our teams responded to calls from the community and transferred her body to the forensic medical clinic, which confirmed that the teacher had been violently murdered with a sharp object."

The Syrian civil rescue team said they would provide all possible assistance in the hunt to find Dirkerkur's killers and called for an investigation into her murder.

The White Helmets shared an image showing its workers covering a body outside a villa.

Christian groups had earlier reported Dirkerkur's murder saying she was abducted by militants on Monday evening, repeatedly raped and then stoned to death with her body discovered in a field early Tuesday morning.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights earlier this week confirmed the circumstances surrounding Dirkerkur's horrific murder.

"Her body was found with marks of torture on it. And according to forensic medicine, the woman had been tortured for about nine hours before she was stoned to death by unidentified persons," the observatory reported.  

Christian groups have blamed former Al-Qaeda-linked elements from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which controls Idlib province.

The more hard-line Al-Qaeda aligned Huras Al-Din jihadi faction are also active in the Jisr al-Shighour region of Idlib.

Yacoubiya is one of the few remaining Christian villages in opposition areas, although activists have said that most have locals left the region after hardline factions took over Idlib.  

Christians took part in the early anti-regime protests in Syria, which were brutally suppressed by Bashar al-Assad's forces, with some even taking up arms as part of the Free Syrian Army. 

Most of Syria's Christian minority have remained neutral in the conflict, despite the calls of some leading clerics to support the regime.

This article has been adapted from its original source.

https://www.albawaba.com/editors-choice/syrian-armenian-schoolteacher-brutally-tortured-her-murder-idlib-1298378


Iran president invited to Eurasian Economic Summit in Armenia 1 October

president.ir , Iran
Iran president invited to Eurasian Economic Summit in Armenia 1 October

[Armenian News note: the below is translated from Persian]

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has been invited to attend the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) Summit in the Armenian capital Yerevan due to be convened on 1 October, the president's website report on 10 July.

According to the report, he was invited in course of a telephone conversation with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Armenia has the term presidency of EAEU until 31 December 2019.

During the conversation, Rouhani expressed satisfaction over agreements between Iran and five Eurasian countries. He added that the implementation of the agreements would boost economic and trade cooperation between Iran and Eurasian states.

The Iranian parliament on 10 June ratified an agreement that allows the government to join a free trade zone with the EAEU countries.

According to the president's website, Pashinyan said: "Armenia seriously pursues the implementation of the agreements made between the two countries."

Referring to his country's presidency of the EAEU, he said: "The agreement of forming free trade zone between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the EAEU member states has been approved by the parliaments and is ready to be implemented."

The EAEU comprises the five nations of Russia, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Belarus and Kyrgyzstan.

Putin, Pashinyan discuss arrangements for EAEU summit scheduled for October 1

ITAR-TASS, Russia
Friday 10:36 AM GMT
Putin, Pashinyan discuss arrangements for EAEU summit scheduled for October 1
 
MOSCOW July 5
 
HIGHLIGHT: Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan have discussed over the phone bilateral cooperation in the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), the Kremlin press service reported on Friday.
 
 
 
MOSCOW, July 5. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan have discussed over the phone bilateral cooperation in the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), the Kremlin press service reported on Friday.
 
"[The two sides discussed] pressing issues related to cooperation in the Eurasian Economic Union in light of Armenia’s current Presidency in the association, in particular, preparations for a meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council scheduled to be held in Yerevan on October 1 and prospects for expanding the EAEU’s external ties," the Kremlin said.
 
"Besides, they delved into cooperation in the Collective Security Treaty Organization," the press service added.
 
Putin and Pashinyan also agreed to continue contacts.

All those killed in tragic Armenia accident were minibus passengers

News.am, Armenia
July 6 2019
All those killed in tragic Armenia accident were minibus passengers All those killed in tragic Armenia accident were minibus passengers

                                       

All six people who died in a terrible accident in the Armenian Ararat province, were minibus passengers. The commander of the Ararat fire unit, Lieutenant Colonel Ashot Mirzoyan told Armenian News – NEWS.am.

According to him, two fire brigades were sent to the scene. When rescuers arrived at the scene, first aid was already provided by eyewitnesses.

As reported earlier, two passenger cars and a minibus collided as a result of an accident in Armenia. The minibus caught fire and sex people burnt alive. 

Yerevan to use solar energy

ARKA, Armenia
July 2 2019

YEREVAN, July 2. /ARKA/. The Yerevan municipality, with the European Union’s support, will launch a program this year to deploy solar energy systems on roofs of 90 houses, the press office of the municipality reports. According to the municipality’s press release, 50 houses are already chosen for this program.   

Tigran Sargsyan, chief of the municipality’s development and investment programs division, said that the energy generated by the solar energy systems will be used for servicing lifts and lightening entries of apartment blocks and also yards. He also said that new LED lanterns will be introduced as part of the program as well. The systems, he said, will serve people for at least 25 years. 

“Yerevan – Sunny Community” is a program of energy, social and environmental significance.
Thanks to the program, emission of greenhouse gases will lessen significantly in the city.  

Responsible Officer of the Delegation of the European Union to Armenia Andrea Baggioli said that the program is important especially for reduction of carbon dioxide emission. 

Now the program’s tender stage is under way, and all interested companies may take part in the tenders. -0— 

Azerbaijan hands over Armenian prisoner

Azerbaijan hands over Armenian prisoner

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15:34, 28 June, 2019

YEREVAN, JUNE 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenian citizen Zaven Karapetyan, who had appeared in Azerbaijani territory in unknown circumstances on June 20, 2017 and was kept jailed, has been handed over on June 28 by Azerbaijan to representatives of Armenian authorities and the ICRC, the foreign ministry said.

Earlier in the day, the foreign ministry said Armenia too has handed over an Azerbaijani citizen back to Azerbaijan.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/07/2019

                                        Friday, 

‘No Plans Yet’ For Kocharian, Sarkisian To Cooperate

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and his predecessor Robert Kocharian 
visit Gyumri, 7 December 2008.

Former Presidents Serzh Sarkisian and Robert Kocharian are not yet considering 
jointly challenging Armenia’s current government, a senior representative of 
Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK) said on Friday.

The HHK has repeatedly condemned as politically motivated Kocharian’s arrest 
and prosecution on charges stemming from the 2008 post-election violence in 
Yerevan. Sarkisian visited and talked to his predecessor on May 25 one week 
after the latter was released from prison pending the outcome of his trial.

“There was no political agenda at that meeting,” insisted Armen Ashotian, the 
HHK’s deputy chairman. “Not that I know of. There is no political agenda at the 
moment in terms of drawing up programs for cooperation between our teams in the 
future.”

“Again, the HHK support for Robert Kocharian has to do with many other 
circumstances, not a vision for a common political future. Even Robert 
Kocharian has not generated such a process yet,” Ashotian told a news 
conference.

“Of course, if we have a common concern, vision or ideas about the future, we 
will be ready to talk, cooperate with various political actors,” he said.


Armenia -- Armen Ashotian, deputy chairman of the opposition Republican Party, 
speaks at a news conference in Yerevan, June 7, 2019.

Kocharian announced his return to active politics shortly after being indicted 
in July last year. He has yet to set up his own party or team up with other 
political groups.

Sarkisian and Kocharian are both natives of Nagorno-Karabakh who had played a 
major role in the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan before holding top government 
positions in Armenia. Kocharian handed over power to Sarkisian after completing 
his second presidential term in 2008. Relations between the two men worsened in 
the following years, with Kocharian increasingly criticizing the Sarkisian 
administration’s economic and other policies.

The two ex-presidents and their political allies now share strong opposition to 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. Pashinian came to power as a result of last 
spring’s “velvet revolution” that brought down Sarkisian’s government accused 
many Armenians of corruption and mismanagement.

Ashotian reiterated the HHK’s highly negative attitude towards the current 
government. He accused Pashinian of seeking “absolute power” and not tolerating 
dissent.



Armenian Justice Minister Resigns

        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Justice Minister Artak Zeynalian speaks to journalists, Yerevan, 
April 3, 2019.

Armenia’s Justice Minister Artak Zeynalian tendered his resignation on Friday 
after just over a year in office.

Zeynalian gave no reason for his decision which he announced on Facebook. 
Instead, he thanked Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian for appointing him as 
justice minister following last year’s “velvet revolution.” He also thanked 
Justice Ministry employees for the “interesting, fruitful and responsible joint 
work.”

“I’m sure that everything will be fine … But if it won’t be fine, it will be 
very fine,” wrote Zeynalian.

A spokesperson for the Justice Ministry refused to comment on his resignation.

Zeynalian, 49, is a prominent politician and former civil rights campaigner 
affiliated with the pro-Western Hanrapetutyun (Republic) party. He retained his 
post even after the party challenged Pashinian’s My Step alliance in the 
December 2018 parliamentary elections.

My Step’s parliamentary leader, Lilit Makunts, suggested that his resignation 
is connected with sweeping judicial reforms planned by the Armenian 
authorities. Makunts said some My Step lawmakers are unhappy with the 
reform-related work of the Justice Ministry and Zeynalian in particular.

Makunts told reporters that they voiced their “concerns” after government 
supporters blocked the court buildings across the country at Pashinian’s urging 
on May 20. She insisted, however, that none of them called for Zeynalian’s 
resignation.

Speaking to journalists on May 21, Zeynalian pointedly declined to comment on 
the court blockade denounced by the Armenian opposition.

Artur Sakunts, a human rights activist, likewise linked the minister’s 
resignation with the judicial crisis. Sakunts said that the Justice Ministry 
did not initiate “drastic changes” within the judiciary under Zeynalian.

Also resigning on Friday was Gevorg Danielian, the acting head of the Supreme 
Judicial Council (SJC), a state body overseeing Armenia’s courts. In a 
statement, Danielian said the SJC needs to have a different composition in 
order to “really inspire trust” and be able to implement judicial reforms.

The SJC’s previous chairman, Gagik Harutiunian, stepped down on May 24. 
Harutiunian attributed the move to “ongoing developments relating to the 
judicial authority” and his “concerns expressed in that regard.”




Armenian, Karabakh Leaders Urged To Ease Tensions

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Nagorno-Karbabakh -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinin and Karabakh 
President Bako Sahakian lead a festive march in Stepanakert, May 9, 2019.

Senior opposition lawmakers in Yerevan on Friday called on Armenia’s and 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s leaders to defuse their increasingly visible tensions 
through dialogue.

The tensions rose on Wednesday as Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian accused top 
Karabakh officials of spreading false claims about significant territorial 
concessions to Azerbaijan planned by his government. He also claimed that 
unlike his administration, Armenia’s former government never presented details 
of its negotiations with Azerbaijan to the authorities in Stepanakert.

Bako Sahakian, the Karabakh president, was quick to deny the claim. He also 
dismissed allegations about a “treasonous” conspiracy against Pashinian plotted 
in Stepanakert.

Deputies from the two opposition parties represented in Armenia’s parliament 
expressed concern over these verbal barbs, citing the lingering risk of a 
renewed war with Azerbaijan. Gevorg Gorgisian of the Bright Armenia Party (LHK) 
said Yerevan and Stepanakert should find “the right mechanism for communicating 
with each other.”

“Any tensions must be overcome because we can solve any issue only with joint 
efforts,” Gorgisian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “Artsakh (Karabakh) cannot 
exist separately, while Armenia, I think, will be in serious trouble if we have 
problems with Artsakh.”

Sergey Bagratian, a senior lawmaker from the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), 
suggested that the tensions stem from Yerevan’s and Stepanakert’s “different 
approaches” to resolving the Karabakh conflict. “We have had discussions at our 
meetings with Karabakh authorities, and those differences are clear to me,” he 
said. “The difference between the approaches is tactical.”

Gorgisian questioned the existence of such differences, however. “I don’t think 
that Armenia can have a leader who will try to come up with a variant of the 
conflict’s resolution unacceptable to the people of Artsakh,” he said.

Meanwhile, Andranik Kocharian, the pro-government chairman of the Armenian 
parliament committee on defense and security, blamed Karabakh leaders for the 
row. He said some of them are worried about ongoing reforms in Armenia.




Press Review


“Zhamanak” says Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s statement made at a cabinet 
meeting on Thursday amounted to an “ultimatum” to the heads of Armenia’s main 
law-enforcement agencies. Pashinian demanded strong action against a “hybrid 
war” waged against his government. “If Pashinian voices the same concern or 
makes a similar speech some time later it will be hard to understand the logic 
behind his not sacking the heads of the security bodies,” comments the paper. 
“But there is also another side to the story and perhaps Pashinian’s speech is 
not a show of discontent with the efficiency of the security bodies but a 
political formulation of their new task … or, in other words, an initiative to 
politically and publicly legitimize a toughening of their actions.”

“If there are groups of individuals plotting some crimes they must definitely 
be isolated from the society, regardless of the color of their clothes,” 
“Aravot” writes in an editorial on Pashinian’s order issued to the police and 
the National Security Service (NSS). “But it’s not the country’s number one 
official who must talk about that. That must be done by law-enforcement bodies 
in a more a more reserved and businesslike manner. These threats take on a 
political dimension when they are voiced by politicians, and they may leave the 
impression of a [government] campaign against undesirable persons.”

“Unfortunately, a certain segment of the society has a wrong or superficial 
idea of a conspiracy or sellout of lands in the Karabakh conflict,” complains 
“Haykakan Zhamanak.” “For many years this issue was artificially oversimplified 
and as a result a view that there are two types of political forces -- patriots 
who send to hell anyone daring to speak of Armenian concessions and those who 
would sell out lands -- took hold in the public consciousness. The reality is 
much more complex. Let’s just leave aside the talk of ‘land sellers.’ There 
were, there are and there will be no such forces in Armenia and Artsakh. We are 
talking about mechanisms for not making unacceptable concessions.” That, the 
paper says, requires meaningful government efforts to make the country stronger 
and able to cope with external pressures.

(Lilit Harutiunian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org



RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/24/2019

                                        Friday, 

Head Of Armenian Judicial Watchdog Resigns


Armenia -- Gagik Harutiunian, head of the Supreme Judicial Council, speaks at 
the council headquarters in Yerevan, April 10, 2019.

Gagik Harutiunian, the head of a state body overseeing Armenia’s courts, 
resigned on Friday, citing recent days’ developments that followed the 
government’s strong criticism of the Armenian judiciary.

In what may have been a related development, Harutiunian’s brother Arzuman was 
dismissed as deputy director of the National Security Service. No official 
reason was given for the sacking proposed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and 
formalized by President Armen Sarkissian.

In a letter publicized by his spokesman, Harutiunian said he no longer finds it 
“expedient” to head the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) “in view of ongoing 
developments relating to the judicial authority and courts and my concerns 
expressed in that regard through the media on May 20.”

“I wish you continued fruitful activities in the establishment of an 
independent judicial authority befitting a rule-of-law state,” read the letter 
addressed to members of the council.

The concerns cited by Harutiunian followed Pashinian’s May 19 appeal to his 
supporters to block the entrances to all court buildings in the country. The 
appeal came the day after a Yerevan court ordered former President Robert 
Kocharian released from jail pending the outcome of his trial on coup and 
corruption charges. The court’s decision angered many allies and supporters of 
Pashinian.


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian visits protesters outside a court 
building in Yerevan, May 20, 2019.

Speaking at a May 20 meeting with senior state officials, Pashinian said that 
Armenian courts remain linked to “the former corrupt system” and distrusted by 
the population. He announced plans for a mandatory “vetting” of all judges. 
Many of them should resign even before the start of such a process, the prime 
minister said.

Harutiunian was among the officials invited to the emergency meeting. However, 
he did not attend it because of being unable to leave the SJC building in 
downtown Yerevan blockaded by government loyalists.

Two dozen protesters again rallied outside the building on Thursday, demanding 
the resignation of Harutiunian as well as judges.

Pashinian’s calls for the court blockade were denounced as unconstitutional by 
Armenia’s leading opposition groups. The SJC likewise said in a statement that 
any pressure on the courts is “unacceptable.”

The SJC was formed just over a year ago in accordance with sweeping 
constitutional changes enacted in 2015. According to Armenia’s amended 
constitution, its main mission is to “guarantee the independence of the courts 
and the judges.”


Armenia -- Gagik Harutiunian reads out a Constitutional Court ruling in 
Yerevan, April 28, 2017.

The council has the power to nominate virtually all new judges appointed by 
Armenia’s president and parliament. It is also empowered to take disciplinary 
action against judges or have them terminated altogether.

Harutiunian, 71, headed the Armenian Constitutional Court before until being 
elected SJC chairman in February 2018 by the country’s former parliament 
controlled by Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican Party.

A Communist Party figure in Soviet times, Harutiunian had been elected in 1990 
deputy speaker of Armenia’s first post-Communist parliament. He served as 
vice-president in the administration of Levon Ter-Petrosian, Armenia’s first 
president elected in 1991.

Harutiunian became chairman of the newly established Constitutional Court in 
1996 shortly after the post of vice-president was abolished by the 
Ter-Petrosian administration. The court has rarely handed down rulings 
challenging the former Armenian presidents.



Armenian Parliament Holds Hearings On ‘Transitional Justice’

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia -- Parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan speaks during parliamnetary 
hearings on transitional justice, Yerevan, .

The National Assembly held on Friday hearings on the introduction of 
“transitional justice” in Armenia which Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian regards 
as a major element of judicial reforms planned by him.

Pashinian told the parliament dominated by his allies to start working on 
“mechanisms for transitional justice” when he held on Monday an emergency 
meeting with senior state officials. The meeting came as his supporters blocked 
the entrances to court buildings across the country.

Pashinian called for such a blockade on Sunday following a Yerevan court’s 
decision to release his bitter foe and former President Robert Kocharian from 
custody. “The judicial authority does not enjoy the people’s trust and 
therefore lacks sufficient legitimacy to act,” he said, demanding a mandatory 
“vetting” of all judges.

According to Deputy Justice Minister Anna Vardapetian, such vetting should be 
part of transitional justice. “This in no way presupposes any humiliating 
processes,” she insisted during the hearings attended by lawmakers, government 
officials and legal experts.

“Vetting is done to verify the integrity of individuals holding public 
positions,” said Vardapetian. She listed the three main criteria for the 
planned evaluation of judges: “attitude towards human rights, attitude towards 
to the rules of professional ethics and asset status.”

Pashinian has repeatedly called for “transitional justice” ever since he swept 
to power in May 2018 following mass protests dubbed a “velvet revolution.” But 
he has so far shed little light on what that would mean in practice.

Parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan, who chaired the hearings, admitted that 
Pashinian and his political team have yet to flesh out their plans for judicial 
reform. “The state authorities have not formulated a position,” he said. “These 
hearings are also aimed at helping to formulate that position.”

In any case, Mirzoyan said, the reform will not lead to the creation of 
“emergency courts” controlled by the current authorities. “Transitional justice 
must support, cleanse, vet and reform the existing judicial system in a legal 
and legislative manner,” he said.

Opposition lawmakers warned in this regard any reform of the domestic judiciary 
must conform to the constitution. One of them, Naira Zohrabian, said Armenian 
courts must not be told hand down ruling under popular pressure engineered by 
the government.

Armenian opposition groups have denounced as unconstitutional the court 
blockade initiated by Pashinian.



Constitutional Court Chief Visits Karabakh

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenian Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasian (L) and Karabakh 
President Bako Sahakian.

The chairman and two other members of Armenia’s Constitutional Court met with 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s president, Bako Sahakian, during a visit to Stepanakert on 
Friday.

A spokesman for Sahakian insisted that the visit had been planned beforehand 
and is not related to the dramatic developments in Yerevan triggered by a 
court’s May 18 decision to free Robert Kocharian, Armenia’s Karabakh-born 
former president prosecuted on coup charges.

The judge presiding over Kocharian’s trial cited written guarantees of the 
defendant’s “adequate behavior” which were signed by Sahakian and his 
predecessor Arkadi Ghukasian. The judge went on to suspend the high-profile 
trial, saying that the charges may contradict the Armenian constitution. He 
therefore asked the Constitutional Court to pass judgment on that.

The court said earlier this week that it has already started a “preliminary” 
examination of the appeal. The court has one month to decide whether or not to 
open hearings on it.

A statement by Sahakian’s office said the Karabakh leader discussed with the 
visiting delegation headed by Hrayr Tovmasian, the Constitutional Court 
chairman, “issues related to cooperation of the two Armenian states in the 
judicial sphere.”

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service, Davit Babayan, insisted that they did 
not discuss the criminal proceedings against Kocharian. Accordingly, Babayan 
denied any connection between Tovmasian’s visit and the Kocharian-related 
developments.

Karabakh’s leaders and parliamentary parties had repeatedly called for 
Kocharian’s release. Visiting Yerevan on May 15, the Karabakh parliament 
speaker said such statements reflect public opinion in Karabakh.

Born and raised in Karabakh, Kocharian governed the Armenian-populated 
territory from 1992-1997. He rejects the charges as politically motivated. 
Armenia’s current government and law-enforcement bodies deny political motives 
behind his prosecution.

While in Stepanakert, Tovmasian and the two other judges accompanying him also 
met with local university students.

According to a Karabakh opposition parliamentarian, Hayk Khanumian, Tovmasian 
had developed close ties with Sahakian in his previous capacity as member of 
Armenia’s parliament representing the former ruling Republican Party (HHK).



Pashinian Again Blasts Armenian Courts


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with the heads of foreign 
diplomatic missions in Yerevan, .

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian again lambasted Armenia’s courts on Friday, 
saying that they are not trusted by the population and therefore need to 
undergo radical changes.

Meeting with the Yerevan-based ambassadors of foreign states, Pashinian also 
said that his government is ready to cooperate with the international community 
in creating a “truly independent judicial system.” He insisted judicial reforms 
planned by it are not aimed at ensuring government control over the judiciary.

Pashinian reiterated that unlike the country’s government and parliament formed 
as a result of democratic elections, Armenian courts lack the “mandate to act 
on behalf of the people.” “The public just doesn’t trust our judicial system, 
and this could become a continuous source of crises,” he said.

“We hope and are confident that we will succeed in forming, through close 
cooperation with our international partners, a credible judicial system,” he 
added in remarks publicized by his press office.

The office did not release the transcript of his ensuing question-and-answer 
with the foreign envoys.

Pashinian already stated on Monday that the domestic judiciary “does not enjoy 
the people’s trust” because it remains connected to Armenia’s former 
leadership, having validated “dozens of illegalities” which he said were 
committed by the latter. All judges must therefore undergo a mandatory 
“vetting,” he said, adding that many of them should resign even before the 
start of such a process.

On Sunday, one day after a Yerevan court ordered former President Robert 
Kocharian’s release from custody, Pashinian urged supporters to block the 
entrances to all court buildings in the country. The move prompted strong 
criticism from Armenian opposition parties. Some of them accused Pashinian of 
illegally pressuring the courts and paralyzing their work.

Two representatives of the Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) 
likewise expressed concern at the court blockade on Tuesday. Council of Europe 
Secretary General Thorbjorn Jagland discussed the issue with Pashinian by phone 
the following day.

A statement released by the Strasbourg-based organization said Jagland and 
Pashinian agreed that judicial reforms “should proceed in conformity with the 
Constitution, the relevant international standards and Armenia's obligations as 
a member state of the Council of Europe.” It also announced that a team of 
Council of Europe experts will travel to Yerevan soon to “offer advice and 
assistance with the necessary reforms.”

For its part, the European Union expressed readiness on Thursday to help the 
Armenian authorities carry out a “comprehensive and far-reaching judicial 
reform” with “technical and financial assistance.”

“We welcome the unequivocal commitment by the Armenian Government to pursue 
justice reform in accordance with the Armenian Constitution and Armenia's 
international commitments,” read a statement released by the Yerevan-based 
diplomatic missions of the EU and its member states.



Press Review


“Haykakan Zhamanak” says that political opponents of the Armenian authorities 
accuse them of seeking to stifle dissent while their supporters claim that they 
are too cautious in reforming the country. “These pressures exerted on the 
authorities from both sides sometimes lead them to make mistakes, which are 
skillfully exploited by their rivals ‘hardened’ by political and 
quasi-political intrigues,” writes the paper edited by Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s wife, Anna Hakobian. “The first apparent mistake of the authorities 
is that they thought that as soon as the government stops interfering in the 
work of the courts judicial independence and impartiality will be guaranteed. 
It turned out that this is not the case. They should have not only refrained 
from interfering in the courts but also prevented others from interfering.”

The second mistake, the paper goes on, was the protests which were staged by 
government supporters outside a Yerevan court holding the trial of former 
President Robert Kocharian. “They should have put the pressure not on the court 
but on those who were pressuring the court,” it says.

“Zhoghovurd” reports on an anti-government rally held by the Armenian 
Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) in Yerevan’s Liberty Square on 
Thursday. “As expected, the rally was attended not only by Dashnaktsutyun 
figures but also members of the [former ruling] HHK,” writes the paper. It 
notes that the rally marked the first major protest against Pashinian’s rule. 
“And it was organized by a party which was part of Pashinian’s government in 
not-so-distant past,” it says.

In another commentary, “Zhoghovurd” comments on the “serious crisis in 
Armenia’s judicial system.” The pro-government paper points out that the Court 
of Appeals issued a statement on Thursday criticizing recent decisions made by 
the Constitutional Court regarding appeals filed by former President Robert 
Kocharian and Vachagan Ghazarian, who used to work as former President Serzh 
Sarkisian’s chief bodyguard. It says that that the Constitutional Court had 
never been openly criticized by another court before. Echoing Pashinian’s 
statements, the paper says that the Armenian judiciary is “under the influence 
of the former corrupt authorities.”

(Lilit Harutiunian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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Chess: Levon Aronyan drops out of the FIDE Grand Prix

Panorama, Armenia

Leading player of the Armenian chess team Levon Aronyan failed to overcome the 1/8 finals of the first round tournament of the FIDE Grand Prix series held in Moscow, the National Olympic Committee reported.

Levon Aronyan drew the second game with Russian Ian Nepomniachtchi playing with white pieces and dropped out of the competition. The Russian GM had won the first game on the 72nd move. The tournament is held in a knock-out format.

To note, the 2019 FIDE Grand Prix series consists of four tournaments, with 16 players each. A total of 22 players will compete, and the top two finishers in the overall standings will qualify for the 2020 Candidates' Tournament. The winner of that tournament will be the new challenger of Magnus Carlsen in a title match scheduled for November 2020.