EU stands firmly with Armenia, says Estonian Foreign Minister

Armenia16:38, 15 June 2026
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The EU stands firmly with Armenia as it counters “Russia’s destabilising influence”, Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said after meeting his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan during the Foreign Affairs Council (FAC).

“Always good catch-ups at FAC. I reassured my friend, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, that the EU stands firmly with Armenia as it counters Russia’s destabilising influence. We will continue supporting Armenia’s efforts to deepen trade links with its neighbours and [enable] discussions on enlargement and sanctions policy with Commissioner Marta Kos, Czech Foreign Minister Petr Macinka, Irish Minister Helen McEntee, Malta’s Chris Fearne, and Slovenian Foreign Minister Tone Kajzer,” Tsahkna said on X.

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Asbarez: Central Election Commission Upholds Election Results; Prosperous Arme

The Central Election Commission meets in Yerevan on Jun. 14


Armenia’s Central Election Committee on Sunday published the final results of the June 7 Parliamentary Elections, sparking renewed accusations from opposition forces, and Armenia’s election watchdogs, of vote rigging to favor Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his Civil Contract Party.

The CEC declared Civil Contract the winner of the elections, with two opposition alliances, businessman Samvel Karapetyan’s Strong Armenia and former president Robert Kocharian’s Armenia blocs, also entering the new parliament.

Businessman Gagik Tsarukyan’s Prosperous Armenia Party did not pass the four-percent threshold because the CEC invalidated entire results from three precincts last week, prompting the party’s leaders to cry foul.

The final vote results announced on Sunday were virtually identical with the CEC’s preliminary tally released following the vote count on June 8.

According to the results, Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party won almost 49.8 percent of the votes and won 61 seats in the 105-member National Assembly. The Strong Armenia bloc came in second with nearly 23.3 percent, followed by the Armenia alliance, which received 9.9 percent of the votes. The CEC claimed that Prosperous Armenia Party only got 3.99 percent of the votes, thus not qualifying it to enter the parliament.

The Strong Armenia alliance will have 29 seats, with the Armenia bloc receiving 12 seats.

The CEC also allocated three seats to the Civil Contract Party, raising its presence to 64 seats, thus allotting the prime minister’s party a three-fifths majority. The three added votes comprise the representation of national minorities. Strong Armenia also gained one seat from the national minorities allocation.

Immediately after the announcement of the results, seven opposition forces issued a joint statement challenging the results of the elections. The signatories included the three top opposition vote getters, as well as Edmon Marukyan’s Bright Armenia party; the Armenian National Congress, headed by former president Levon Ter-Petrossian; and the Armenian People’s Group.

“Nikol Pashinyan and his regime would bear full responsibility for any further escalation of the situation in the country,” the joint statement warned.

As a result of a recounts and verification in some precincts last week, the Prosperous Armenia Party recovered 147 votes However, the CEC’s decision on Thursday to cancel vote results in the three polling stations, which gave 222 votes to the Prosperous Armenia Party, ensured that the opposition would not have more seats in parliament.

Opposition forces condemned the decision, saying that the Armenian authorities are illegally trying to give Civil Contract a more comfortable majority in the new parliament. They said the CEC should now at least rerun the elections in those rural precincts.

The commission headed by a longtime Pashinyan collaborator, Vahakn Hovakimyan, refused to do that, saying that the more than 3,000 voters living there cannot influence the overall election outcome. The opposition countered that they can give the Prosperous Armenia Party the missing votes that would translate into five parliament seats.

Hundreds of opposition members and supporters rallied outside the CEC building before its announcement.

“It’s clear that CEC is directed by one person and that person is Nikol Pashiniyan,” Propserous Armenia Party spokeswoman Iveta Tonoyan told reporters. “This is the most disgraceful election I’ve seen during my 20-year political activities.”

“Our people won’t allow government to be formed with stolen votes,” declared the Armenia Alliance’s Gegham Manukyan.

Meanwhile, independent vote-monitoring groups on Monday joined the Armenian opposition in challenging the official election results.

The Independent Observer, coalition of three watchdog groups, accused the CEC of illegally giving Civil Contract several more seats in Armenia’s new parliament.

“We didn’t expect the CEC to break the law to such an extent,” said the Independent Observer coordinator, Daniel Ioannisyan.

Hovakimyan, the CEC president, did not deny opposition claims that it deliberately left out the Prosperous Armenian Party in favor of Pashinyan’s Civil Contract.

In a statement issued on Monday, Hovakimyan said that a repeat election in the three precincts would have led to “tactical voting,” presumably by supporters of other opposition forces keen to help the BHK enter the parliament.

He claimed that this would have given then an unfair advantage over other voters who did not know on June 7 “what impact their vote would have on the final outcome.”
Ioannisyan brushed aside the explanation, arguing that the Prosperous Armenia Party already won on June 7 enough votes in the three polling stations to clear the four percent threshold. He insisted that the CEC decision runs counter to the Armenian Electoral Code. The new parliament will lack legitimacy unless the Constitutional Court will overturns the decision, added Ioannisyan.

A representative of another vote-monitoring group, Akanates (Eyewitness), also criticized the CEC for not re-running the elections in the three rural precincts.

“I find that decision very controversial first and foremost in terms of public trust in the electoral process and in terms of the legitimacy of the elections,” Meri Minasian told Azatutyun.am.

Ruben Vardanyan’s Wife Plans Women’s Humanitarian Delegation Visit to Azerbai

Ruben Vardanyan and his wife, Veronika Zonabend at the Samsung lab at UWC Dilijan, circa 2021


Veronika Zonabend, the wife of former Artsakh State Minister Ruben Vardanyan, who is serving a 20-year sentence in an Azerbaijani prison, announced a new humanitarian initiative to restore contact between Armenian prisoners being held in Baku and their families.

The announcement comes after Vardanyan, former Artsakh Parliament Speaker Davit Ishkhanyan and former Artsakh Foreign Minister David Babayan appealed to Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Anahit Manasyan, urging her to lead a delegation to Baku to meet with the Armenian prisoners and get an update on their condition.

Manasyan responded to the requests by saying that such a trip did not fall within the purview of the rights defender.

Prime Minister Pashinyan and his government have not publicly demanded the return of the captives in the same vein or aggressive tenor as Aliyev has in demanding preconditions for signing a final peace treaty.

In a conversation with Asbarez’s Executive Editor Ara Khachatourian in Septemeber, Zonabend lamented this reality, as well as the seemingly deafening silence from Armenian citizens, only a small minority of whom have dared to advocate for the release of Vardanyan and the other captives, as well as the right of Artsakh Armenians for fear of persecution by the government.

However, Zonabend was undeterred. She is determined to advocate for her husband’s rights and his release and is encouraged by the support she is seeing during her travels to various communities around the world.

The complete text of Zonabend’s appeal is presented below.

My husband has been unlawfully detained in Azerbaijan since September 2023. For more than three years, he has been kept away from his family and from everyone who loves him. During this time, his granddaughters were born — granddaughters he has never held in his arms.

I write this as a loving wife, as a mother, as a grandmother, and as someone who can no longer wait in silence while various institutions explain why they cannot — or should not — act. But this is not only about Ruben.

Eighteen more Armenians remain in detention in Azerbaijan. Many of them have not seen their loved ones in six years. They have received no letters. They have not heard the voices of those close to them. They have not held in their hands a photograph of their children, their grandchildren — and some, of their great-grandchildren.

To their families, they are not an “agenda item,” a “political problem,” or a “complex diplomatic case.” They are husbands, fathers, grandfathers, sons, and brothers. Their only offence was wanting to live on their ancestral land, to speak their language, and to preserve their culture. Today it too often seems as though their fate matters deeply to no one beyond their own families. Throughout this time, an endless conversation has continued around their fate — about mechanisms, procedures, mandates, and political circumstances. While some are occupied with preserving their political positions, others spend years in detention waiting for a single photograph, a letter, or a few words from those they love.

Following the closure of the ICRC delegation office in Baku, the families of Armenian detainees have been left without regular, independent humanitarian access to their loved ones. The international mechanisms designed to protect people in such circumstances have, in practice, ceased to function. Armenia’s Human Rights Defender has stated that this matter falls outside her mandate. Official delegations from their own country, when visiting Azerbaijan, have not found a way to see these people — to check on their conditions of detention or their state of health.

In the face of this institutional vacuum of accountability, I can no longer simply wait. At Ruben’s request, I intend to organise an international women’s humanitarian delegation to travel to Baku in the coming weeks.

I call upon Azerbaijan’s Human Rights Commissioner, Ms. Sabina Aliyeva, and her office, to facilitate the arrival of this delegation in Baku, to arrange an official meeting, to organise a visit to the Armenian prisoners held at the Umbaki Penitentiary Complex, and to enable the formal transfer of packages, photographs, letters, and permitted personal belongings from their families, in accordance with Azerbaijani law.

For those who are imprisoned, this will serve as a reminder: they have not been forgotten.

I believe we remain human only when we refuse to let indifference become the norm — when we continue to cultivate compassion, love, and mercy within ourselves, even in the most difficult of circumstances.

I want to believe that even where politics has destroyed trust, there remains space for a human gesture. Leaders of nations and powerful states are remembered by history not only for their victories, but for the mercy they showed to those who found themselves in their power. It is precisely such acts that history values most — for they reveal strength united with dignity.

This initiative is not a political act. It is an attempt to restore at least a minimal connection between those in detention, their families, and all those who care about their fate. Such a connection helps a person preserve their dignity — and without dignity, it is impossible to speak of genuine and lasting peace between neighboring peoples.

Over the next two weeks, we are collecting letters of support for the Armenian prisoners held in Azerbaijan. We will do our best to deliver them alongside family packages as part of this humanitarian initiative.

Letters may be sent in any language to: [email protected]. Subject line: Letter of Support – Armenian Detainees. If your letter is addressed to a specific person, please include their name in the subject line.

The names of the women who will form part of the delegation will be announced in due course.

Asbarez: Aliyev’s Adviser Enters Armenia Through Delimited Border

Hikmet Hajiyev meets with Armen Grigoryan in Dilijan on Jun. 14


Hikmet Hajiyev, a top adviser to President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan, on Sunday entered Armenia through the part of the border that was delimited last year in order to hold a meeting with Armenia’s National Security chief Armen Grigoryan.

“Azerbaijani President’s Assistant Hikmet Hajiyev and the delegation accompanying him arrived in Armenia via the delimited and demarcated land border, having passed all relevant procedures,” Grigoryan’s office told Armenpress when asked about the Azerbaijani official’s arrival.

The delimitation and demarcation of the border in the Tavush Province, raised concerns and found several Armenian villages falling into Azerbaijani control, displacing the local population.

The meeting, held in Dilijan, in Armenia’s Tavush Province, was not a meeting to discuss border delimitation and opening of transport routes, but rather a meeting between Armenia’s security chief and Aliyev’s advisor to discuss the peace process between the two countries.

“The importance of sustained bilateral dialogue was underscored in the context of efforts aimed at promoting lasting peace and stability in the region,” a statement issued by Grigoryan’s office said. “The parties also exchanged views on confidence-building measures between the civil societies of the two countries.”

Hajiyev and Grigoryan reportedly agreed to maintain these bilateral contacts and confirmed that next such meeting will be held in Azerbaijan.

They also exchanged views on efforts aimed at strengthening mutual trust between the civil societies of the two countries.

Armen Grigoryan and Hikmet Hajiyev agreed to continue working contacts, noting that the next meeting will take place in Azerbaijan.

CC: What Pashinyan can and cannot do without a supermajority

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