Political retaliation against Tsarukyan. Whose interests does Pashinyan serve?

Nikol Pashinyan’s statements about the Ararat cement factory once again showed that the state in Armenia is gradually turning into a tool of political reprisal.


When the country’s prime minister publicly announces that a private factory “will be state-owned” and “congratulates its employees on the occasion of liberation”, this is a clear message that the government is ready to interfere in property relations for political purposes and pre-determine the fate of private business.


If there are legal issues related to any company’s activities, they should be resolved exclusively within the law, based on the principles of courts, legal procedures and the rule of law. However, when the Prime Minister personally announces what will happen to a specific enterprise, the impression is created that the political decision has already been made, and the legal process is just a formality.


Pashinyan’s vocabulary: “mafia”, “retribution”, “business backbone”, clearly shows that it is not about economic policy, but about political revenge. Gagik Tsarukyan has been one of the main political opponents of the government for many years and is one of the leaders of the favorite forces in this electoral process, and today it becomes obvious that an attempt is being made to attack not only his political influence, but also his economic supports.


However, this story is much deeper than the issue of one person or one factory.


Ararat cement factory is one of the important components of the industrial system of Armenia. It is a system-creating production that provides thousands of jobs, participates in maintaining the country’s construction and economic stability, and plays an important role in terms of economic self-sufficiency. Creating an atmosphere of political pressure, property redistribution and instability around such an enterprise is a blow to Armenia’s economic resilience.


All this is happening at a time when Armenia is facing serious security and geopolitical challenges. Under such conditions, any step that weakens the country’s industrial potential objectively harms Armenia’s economic sovereignty.


And here the most important question arises. Whose interests does the weakening of Armenia’s industrial system serve?


There are states in the region, Azerbaijan and Turkey, which are interested in having a weak, dependent and economically vulnerable Armenia. The processes of political pressures, property redistribution and economic destabilization around Armenia’s large production systems cannot but coincide with these interests.


At the same time, the pre-election calculation is also obvious. Pashinyan is trying to revive the old manipulative opposition of “the people against the oligarchy” before the elections, presenting to the public that “property is being returned to the people”. However, in reality, this is not a policy of social justice, this is a political technology, the purpose of which is to mobilize one’s own electorate and divert the public’s attention from the accumulated problems.


The most dangerous consequence of this process is the deterioration of the investment environment.


Which investor will invest capital in a country where the level of property protection depends not on the law, but on the political sentiments of the government, on the whim of one person? Who will trust the state where the prime minister can announce the future of private enterprise with a public speech?


In a rule of law, property issues are resolved in the courts, not in political speeches.


The fate of a businessman is determined by the law, not by the political expediency of the government or the whim of one person. The state cannot turn into a tool of pressure and punishment against political opponents.


Political scientist Suren Surenyants




Verelq: Regardless of the attacks, information terror, PAP will continue its preference

An unprecedented process took place today in the electoral history of Armenia and international practice. the current prime minister of the country announces during the rally that in the evening, during the next rally, he will give the name of the candidate of one of the leading opposition forces, against whom the NSS should initiate a case.


Hours later, Andranik Tevanyan’s name is heard at another rally. From the point of view of legal practice, this is an absurd and unprecedented behavior. The Prime Minister orders to open a case against the candidate of the leading opposition force, not only exceeding his authority, but also violating the logic of legal practice and international experience.

All activities of Andranik Tevanyan have always been transparent, he acted openly in accordance with his principles and value system. All his steps were always in front of the public eye.
We assess this as a blatant pre-election manifestation and an unacceptable attempt to disrupt the normal campaign.

These steps are, by and large, the assessment of the pre-election process. the authorities clearly see the dethronement of their own ranking and try to interfere in the pre-election processes by forceful methods. This is illegal and shows disrespect to the entire political field and voters. We call on the law enforcement system to serve only the law and not obey political orders.

Let’s remind how many people Nikol Pashinyan ordered as criminals of various scales during his tenure, arresting and instigating illegal criminal cases. People were later acquitted due to lack of criminal record, but the law enforcement system and human lives suffered irreversible consequences.

The public knows very well the true value and reasons for such statements. In case of any development, we will be next to our teammate. Regardless of all the blows, power and information terror, PAP will confidently continue its pre-election campaign, which implies a direct, open dialogue with the public, programmatic discussions on all issues that concern the people. Our goal is the establishment of internal solidarity in the country, stability, guaranteed peace, the well-being of our citizens and the post-war reconstruction of Armenia.

Surely, these will be the priorities of the new government to be formed after June 7.

PAP pre-election headquarters




Turkish Press: Russia warns Armenia over moves straining alliance with Moscow

Daily Sabah, turkey
May 20 2026

Russia on Wednesday accused Armenia of taking actions that undermine the spirit of its longstanding alliance with Moscow, signaling deepening tensions between the two traditional allies.

According to Russia’s state news agency TASS, Moscow said recent steps by Yerevan were “inconsistent with the spirit of allied relations,” amid Armenia’s growing engagement with Western partners and ongoing friction over regional security issues.

Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu also called the “number of actions” taken by Armenia’s leadership “clearly unfriendly.”

“This is precisely how we view the accession to the International Criminal Court, the extradition of Russian citizens to third countries, and the deliberate worsening of conditions for Russian economic operators, which, incidentally, provide jobs for tens of thousands of Armenian citizens,” he said while speaking at a Security Council special working group meeting.

“And, finally, the use of the platform at the European Political Community summit in Yerevan by the Kyiv regime to threaten the Russian Federation,” he underlined.

Shoigu stressed that Yerevan’s cooperation with Russia is the “main” driver of Armenia’s economic development, adding that ties with Moscow have enabled Armenia’s gross domestic product to grow by nearly 40% between 2022 and 2025 alone.

Shoigu added that Russia supplies Armenia with natural gas, flour, grain, fertilizer, and gasoline at prices “three times lower” than market prices, ranking first among Yerevan’s importers and exporters.

He noted that Russia’s share of Armenia’s total trade turnover is 36%.

He also noted that Armenia became a strategic partner with several countries “unfriendly” to Russia over the last year.

“The agreement with them also implies deeper cooperation in the security sphere. Joint military exercises are being conducted,” he noted.

Armenia hosted dozens of leaders in early May, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, for a summit of the European Political Community, alongside a separate summit between the EU and Armenia in the capital, Yerevan.

Addressing the summit, Zelenskyy threatened that Ukrainian drones could fly over the Russian capital of Moscow on May 9, when Russia is set to host a military parade marking the 81st anniversary of victory in World War II.

Following the event, Armenia’s ambassador in Moscow was summoned to protest Zelenskyy’s remarks and informed of the “categorical unacceptability” of giving the Ukrainian president a platform to make what Moscow described as “terrorist threats” against Russia.

Top Strong Armenia candidate Narek Karapetyan investigated on suspicion of hol

The Insider
May 20 2026

May 20, 2026 at 07:50 PM

Armenia’s Investigative Committee has opened a criminal case against Narek Karapetyan, who leads the electoral list for Strong Armenia, a bloc founded by his uncle, the Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan. According to a statement on the agency’s website, Karapetyan concealed that he holds a second citizenship in order to participate in Armenia’s upcoming parliamentary elections on June 7.

Narek Karapetyan allegedly “submitted a false declaration to the Migration and Citizenship Service of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, asserting that he is not a citizen of another state and thereby concealing information about the existence of foreign citizenship that would prevent him from seeking the post of a public official,” according to the agency.

An investigation was opened under Armenia’s Criminal Code over allegations that information was concealed that could have barred a person from obtaining or holding public office.

On May 19, the Armenian outlet Medianews published an extract from Russia’s Unified State Register of Legal Entities (EGRUL), which indicated that Narek Karenovich Karapetyan is a citizen of Russia.

The Insider verified the data and confirmed that, according to EGRUL, Narek Karenovich Karapetyan is listed as a co-owner of the Moscow-based company Mospromekspluatatsiya LLC with a 2.5% stake. The document states that he is a Russian citizen.

Leaked Russian databases include an individual with the same full name and taxpayer identification number listed in the EGRUL extract. His passport number is shown as the letters “AN” followed by seven digits, a format used for Armenian passports. The website of Yerevan State University, Karapetyan’s alma mater, says he was born Oct. 31, 1990, while the leaked data lists his date of birth as Nov. 1, 1990.

Narek Karapetyan is the nephew of billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, the founder of Strong Armenia, which is registered to run in the June 7 parliamentary elections as part of a bloc of the same name. Narek Karapetyan tops the bloc’s electoral list. Samvel Karapetyan himself cannot run as he holds a Russian passport. Armenian law requires parliamentary candidates to have held only Armenian citizenship for at least four years.

In a May 19 investigation, The Insider published documents indicating links between Karapetyan Sr. and Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB). A source familiar with the billionaire’s entourage told The Insider that Samvel Karapetyan, who built his business empire in Russia, “has never been involved in politics” and that Moscow most likely forced him to “create the Strong Armenia bloc as a counterweight to Pashinyan.”

Samvel Karapetyan is under house arrest in Armenia while being investigated on suspicion of calling for the violent seizure of power, money laundering, and other crimes.



Rhode Island Recognizes Greek, Assyrian, Armenian Genocide

Assyrian International News Agency
May 20 2026
Rhode Island Recognizes Greek, Assyrian, Armenian Genocide

Leonidas “Lou” Raptakis is a state senator representing Rhode Island’s District 33 since 2013, with prior service in both the state House and Senate dating back to 1992. He has focused his legislative career on public safety, fiscal reform, and consumer protection. Nationally and internationally, Raptakis is a preeminent leader in Greek organizations, currently serving as President of the World Hellenic Inter-Parliamentary Association, where he connects legislators of Hellenic descent across roughly 90 countries to advocate for issues concerning Greece and Cyprus. He is also a prominent member of the American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association.

Seyfo Center extends its gratitude to Senator Raptakis for his unwavering efforts in securing this recognition. We especially appreciate his inclusion of the Assyrian lives lost during Seyfo. His leadership honors their history and resilience.

Azerbaijan Demolishes Christian Places of Worship in Seized Enclave

May 19 2026

Azerbaijan Demolishes Christian Places of Worship in Seized Enclave

May 19, 2026 | Armenia

Armenian Christian leaders and global religious freedom advocates are condemning Azerbaijan after satellite imagery confirmed the demolition of two Armenian churches in Stepanakert, the capital of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region known to Armenians as Artsakh.

The destruction has intensified longstanding fears that Azerbaijan’s military victory in the region would be followed by the systematic erasure of its Christian heritage. Research supported by satellite imagery has confirmed damage or destruction to hundreds of religious and cultural heritage sites in Artsakh.

The recently demolished sites include the Holy Mother of God Cathedral, one of Stepanakert’s most prominent churches, and the Church of St. Jacob. According to Radio Free Europe, satellite images taken in late April confirmed that both structures had been razed in recent weeks, after remaining intact through years of conflict.

Construction on the Holy Mother of God Cathedral began in 2006, and the church was consecrated in 2019. During the wars surrounding Artsakh, the cathedral’s basement served as a bomb shelter for civilians.

The destruction comes less than three years after Azerbaijan seized full control of Nagorno-Karabakh in September 2023, triggering the mass exodus of about 120,000 ethnic Armenians from the region. Since then, Armenian church leaders and cultural preservation groups have repeatedly warned that Armenian Christian monuments, monasteries, cemeteries, and churches remaining in Azerbaijani-controlled territory face grave danger.

The Holy See of Etchmiadzin, the central authority of the Armenian Apostolic Church, accused Azerbaijan of deliberately targeting Armenian Christian holy sites to erase Armenian history from Artsakh, according to Armenian media reports.

A statement from Azerbaijan’s government-affiliated Caucasus Muslims Board confirmed the demolition while framing the churches as illegitimate structures. Armenian observers say the justification reflects a broader effort to deny the historic Armenian Christian presence in the region altogether.

The destruction of Armenian religious heritage in territories controlled by Azerbaijan is not a new concern. Human rights advocates and scholars have for years documented the disappearance of Armenian churches, cross-stones, and cemeteries in areas such as Nakhchivan, where thousands of medieval Armenian monuments were destroyed during previous decades.

International observers remain largely barred from many former Armenian population centers in Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing researchers and journalists to rely heavily on satellite imagery and geolocation analysis to assess the status of religious and cultural sites.

Some Christian advocacy organizations and legal groups have described Azerbaijan’s actions as cultural genocide, arguing that the destruction of churches and religious monuments is inseparable from the forced removal of the Armenian Christian population that once worshiped there.

The issue also raises questions about the durability of recent diplomatic efforts between Armenia and Azerbaijan. While international officials have praised ongoing negotiations as a pathway toward regional peace, Armenian Christian leaders warn that any agreement that ignores religious freedom protections and cultural preservation risks legitimizing the irreversible destruction already underway.

For many Armenians, the loss of the churches in Stepanakert represents more than the demolition of buildings. It is viewed as part of an effort to remove the visible evidence of centuries of Armenian Christian life from a region where churches, monasteries, and cross-stones long served as enduring symbols of faith and identity.

Gayane Simonyan: Elevating Timeless Design Through Crystal, Marble, and Meanin

Global News
May 21 2026


Gayane Simonyan, the visionary founder and creative force behind ARCAICÓ, is redefining luxury home décor through a fusion of tradition, innovation, and timeless artistry.

With a background in political philosophy and fine arts, she brings a unique intellectual and artistic perspective to her work, combining mastery of material, form, and heritage.

Under her guidance, ARCAICÓ produces museum-grade, hand-crafted pieces, from sculptural marble furniture to lead-free crystal décor.

Her CRYSTAL DECORS collection won the Good Design Award 2025 and is featured at The European Centre–Contemporary Space in Athens. This feature is part of our Women in Design series.

GDN: In an era of constant trends, how would you describe “timeless design”?

Gayane Simonyan: In an era of constant trends, I approach timeless design as a question of continuity rather than permanence. Timeless design does not erase the moment of its creation.

I began to understand this while engaged in art history studies at university. I adopted the idea that it’s really about the ability of an object or décor to remain relevant across shifting temporal contexts, by being grounded in proportion, material integrity, and conceptual clarity—this is what allows a design to operate beyond temporal cycles.

I see timelessness achieved when a piece doesn’t rely on decoration to justify its existence. Instead, it’s defined by its structural logic, its relationship to space, and its capacity to evolve—visually and physically—without losing meaning.

A timeless object doesn’t seek attention; it holds presence. And most of the time, it takes breaking rules to create décor that becomes part of the architectural language rather than a temporary accent within it, and this we can see over and over throughout history.

In all my work, painting or décor, I have in mind the idea: what if this piece is going to be the only thing that remains that represents this specific time and area? Will it say something about the culture or presence of its time? Does it carry feelings? Because timeless design is never the absence of its time.

It always carries the imprint of its era—the techniques, the cultural atmosphere, the intention behind it. When it moves into future generations, it should still feel relevant, while quietly communicating the moment in which it was conceived.

GDN: You speak about objects carrying “energy” and becoming part of our living DNA. Can you expand on this philosophy?

Gayane Simonyan: I often mention that every object that has a permanent residence in our living space carries absorbed energy from the events we have experienced in its presence.

I believe objects are not passive; they become a part of our living style’s DNA, as over time they register interaction, light, and human presence, gradually accumulating meaning through continuity. A piece that exists within daily routines, gatherings, or moments is no longer something we actively notice—it becomes something we operate around.

In that sense, it embeds itself into our behavioral patterns. This accumulation of lived experience gives it a layered meaning over time. At a certain point, that permanence begins to influence the space itself.

An object starts to participate in the spatial logic of an interior—it affects balance, circulation, light distribution, and visual hierarchy. When I refer to “energy,” I’m defining this measurable and perceptual impact—how an object reflects, absorbs, and modulates light, and how it shapes spatial perception and behavior.

This introduces a clear responsibility in design. With that in mind, objects need to engage the senses, but they cannot dominate the environment. They should disrupt silence without creating noise.

Achieving that balance takes time—sometimes months—until a piece reaches that precise equilibrium between restraint and _expression_.

GDN: What draws you to materials like crystal and marble?

Gayane Simonyan: My interest is focused on materials that are active participants, rather than passive carriers of form.

Their significance lies beyond surface, in how they hold weight, transmit light, and register time. The work begins with understanding these inherent properties and composing them with precision and restraint.

Crystal operates through light. It refracts, reflects, and distorts, introducing a controlled instability—an object that shifts in perception depending on its environment. Its clarity is exacting; it exposes proportion and geometry without tolerance for excess.

Marble, by contrast, is grounded and finite. It arrives already resolved, shaped by geological time. Its connection to ancient art and architecture is structural rather than referential—a discipline of proportion, permanence, and measured intervention. The veining is intrinsic, and the role of design is to frame, not compete.

The work evolves through the tension between materials—translucency against mass, precision against irregularity. Looking forward, I aim to extend this language into compositions that integrate wood and steel, introducing a different register of warmth and structural clarity.

I also design fine jewelry, where the same principles are applied—every proportion, junction, and surface becomes critical. A disciplined approach to material and balance defines the final form.

GDN: How do you define responsible luxury today?

Gayane Simonyan: I define luxury today not by price or exclusivity, but by intention and longevity. A responsible object is designed to endure, both aesthetically and functionally. It resists trends and is conceived with a clear understanding of material origin, fabrication processes, and long-term impact.

Within this framework, sustainability becomes a core value—not an added feature, but a condition of good design. I see it emerging through restraint: choosing fewer, more meaningful objects, reducing waste through precision, and valuing craftsmanship over mass production.

It also requires accountability in sourcing and production, ensuring that each decision contributes to durability rather than excess.

For me, responsible luxury is not about accumulation, but about discernment. It is the ability to create and choose objects that justify their existence over time—pieces that remain relevant, age with integrity, and establish a lasting relationship between material, function, and the individual.

GDN: What changes would you like to see in the global design industry to better support women designers?

Gayane Simonyan: I believe the industry does not need symbolic inclusion, but rather structural recalibration.

However, I would first acknowledge that today, women have significantly greater visibility, rights, and freedom of _expression_ than at any point in the past century.

However, I see that visibility alone does not translate into influence—the gap still remains in access and authority. I believe women designers must have equal access to capital, manufacturing networks, and large-scale commissions.

Without this, recognition stays surface-level. True participation depends on the ability to build, scale, and lead, not only to be seen.

I also believe there is a need to recalibrate how design is evaluated. Work should be judged on intellectual rigor, technical precision, and innovation, rather than being filtered through expectations or narratives often assigned to women.

Removing these constraints allows for a more accurate and expansive understanding of design contributions.

For me, progress will be evident when representation is no longer framed as an exception or an achievement, but becomes an unremarkable constant across all levels of the industry—from emerging designers to decision-making positions.

GDN: What still excites or challenges you most about the journey ahead?

Gayane Simonyan: As a woman and a mother of two young girls, there is nothing more exciting to me than the shift I am witnessing today.

I feel that people are becoming more aware of themselves and their surroundings. They have more platforms to speak, express, and use their voices for something meaningful and compassionate.

There is a growing understanding of individual abilities, potential, and unique talents, which I find very powerful.

What as a designer continues to drive me is the tension between control and unpredictability and the constant search for new ways of creating. I think, we are entering an era where human creation will become more valuable than ever and I feel a responsibility to contribute my work to this expanding ocean of creativity.

It is an important moment not to lose human _expression_ within the uniformity of machine- and AI-driven grayness.

The challenge I see is a shift in how we inhabit space. In an environment increasingly shaped by technology and efficiency, finely considered objects are becoming rare—almost at risk of disappearing.

Removing beauty from our interiors is, in a way, like removing the soul from the body while still expecting depth of experience.

I fully embrace the dynamism of contemporary living, yet I believe in the enduring value of objects that carry intention and presence. I am particularly interested in expanding the role of objects within interiors—moving beyond function toward spatial influence.

Objects should not simply occupy space; they should actively shape it. That intersection between art, architecture, and object design is where I see the next phase of my work.



RFE/RL – Armenian Oppositionist Denies Secret Russian Citizenship

May 20, 2026

Armenia – Opposition leader Narek Karapetian speaks during a campaign rally in Yerevan, May 8, 2026.

Opposition leader Samvel Karapetian’s nephew and right-hand man Narek on Wednesday strongly denied police claims that he hid his dual Russian citizenship from authorities in order to be eligible to run in Armenia’s upcoming parliamentary elections.

The Armenian constitution bars dual citizens, who have not lived in the country for the past four years, from holding senior government posts or seats in the National Assembly. This is why Samvel Karapetian, who has mainly lived in Russia since the early 1990s, is not on the list of his Strong Armenia bloc’s election candidates.

The list is topped by Narek Karapetian. Since his uncle remains under house arrest, he also leads nationwide campaign rallies held by the bloc widely regarded as the ruling Civil Contract party’s number one election challenger. Citing information provided by the Armenian police, the Investigative Committee said he “deliberately hid” his Russian citizenship from the Central Election Commission.

Alen Simonian, the Armenian parliament speaker and a leading Civil Contract member, was the first to make such an allegation late on Tuesday. Simonian posted on Facebook a purported document from a Russian state registry of companies which refers to Narek Kirakosian as a Russian national. The document does not specify his passport number or other personal data.

Karapetian Jr. was quick to deny having a Russian passport. “I have probably spent less time in Russia than in England or Switzerland,” he told journalists.

While not denying the document’s authenticity, he insisted that its reference to his dual citizenship is the result of a “mistake.” He said he has already asked the Russian Embassy in Armenia to certify that. He also threatened to sue the Investigative Committee if it does not refute the “fake news” within 24 hours.

As of Wednesday evening, it remained unclear whether the law-enforcement agency has formally charged Karapetian or summoned him for questioning. Nor did the Armenian Interior Ministry clarify whether it has asked the CEC to remove him from the ballot. Also, both agencies declined to say whether they will ask Russian authorities to confirm or deny Karapetian’s citizenship.

The Armenian government earlier fueled speculation about the entire opposition bloc’s possible disqualification after asking the European Union to send a “hybrid rapid response team” to Armenia for the elections. A similar EU mission was deployed in Moldova ahead of legislative polls held there last September. Two Moldovan opposition parties deemed pro-Russian were barred from the vote won by the former Soviet republic’s pro-Western leadership.

The Russian Foreign Ministry claimed in March that the EU is gearing up for a repeat of “the Moldovan scenario” in Armenia. Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Yerevan against doing that when he met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in Moscow on April 1.

Moscow Reviewing Ties With ‘Unfriendly’ Yerevan

May 20, 2026


Russian Security Council’s Secretary Sergei Shoigu attends a meeting of Russian President Vladimir Putin with commanders of troops of military districts, Moscow, May 15, 2024.

The secretary of Russia’s Security Council, Sergei Shoigu, accused Armenia’s leadership of systematically taking hostile steps against Moscow when he met with other Russian officials on Wednesday to discuss the future of relations between the two countries.

“We fully understand the Armenian leadership’s desire to continue to draw economic benefits from relations with our country,” Shoigu said at the start of a meeting of the council’s “special working group.” “However, cooperation and strategic partnership are a two-way street. Therefore, I propose now discussing the further development of cooperation with Armenia in the political, economic and security spheres.”

“It is no secret that the leadership of that country has taken a number of steps of late that do not correspond to the spirit of allied relations with the Russian Federation,” he said, according to the TASS news agency.

In particular, Shoigu rebuked the Armenian government for seeking to join the European Union and accused it of increasingly siding with the EU against Russia on the international stage. He also blasted it for allowing Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to attend a recent European Political Community summit in Yerevan and implicitly threaten to disrupt the annual Victory Day parade in Moscow with drone strikes.

Shoigu went on to list other “unfriendly” steps taken by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s administration. Those include Yerevan’s ratification of the founding treaty of the International Criminal Court (ICC), which issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2023, extradition of Russian citizens to third countries and what he called efforts to drive Russian companies out of Armenia.

The Russian task force did not report any decisions right after the meeting that highlighted the latest upsurge in Russian-Armenian tensions. It came just over a week before a Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) summit in Kazakhstan during which Putin is expected to discuss Armenia’s continued membership of the Russian-led trade bloc. Putin and other Russian officials have said in recent weeks that it is not compatible with Yerevan’s European integration drive.

Pashinian has decided to boycott the summit. His foreign minister, Ararat Mirzoyan, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Wednesday that Armenia cannot be forced to quit the EEU which guarantees its exporters’ tariff-free access to the Russian market.

According to TASS, Shoigu spent much of his extensive opening remarks detailing the South Caucasus nation’s heavy economic dependence on Russia.

“Cooperation with Russia is the main driver of the Armenian economy,” declared the Russian security chief. “It’s difficult to dispute this fact.”

“I wonder in what quantities and under what conditions Armenian apricots, trout and mineral water will be supplied to the European Union,” he said, hinting at retaliatory measures against Armenian exporters.

Pashinian Claims Good Rapport With Putin Amid Rising Tensions

May 20, 2026

Russia – Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian during their meeting at the Kremlin, Moscow, April 1, 2026.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian claimed to have a warm rapport with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday the day after Moscow questioned Armenia’s continued membership in a Russian-led trade bloc vital for the Armenian economy.

“We will not take any drastic action in relations with Russia,” Pashinian told an election campaign rally in the northern Lori province. “I have truly friendly relations with the president of the Russian Federation. I doubt that the president of the Russian Federation has had more contacts with any other leader since 2018. During this period, we have had more than 200 phone conversations.”

“And in general, our attitude towards Russia is very warm,” he added while alleging that the Armenian opposition is infested with Russian “agents.”

Amid the latest upsurge in Russian-Armenian tensions, Pashinian likewise accused Moscow on Tuesday of “sending agents to Armenia.”

The tensions were exposed during Pashinian’s most recent meeting with Putin held in Moscow on April 1. They rose further after Yerevan hosted on May 4-5 two European summits attended by Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Putin said on May 9 that Armenia should choose “as soon as possible” between remaining part of the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) and striving to join the European Union.

Russia – A Eurasian Economic Union summit in Saint Petersburg, December 21, 2025.

Putin is due to raise the issue at the EEU’s May 29 summit in Kazakhstan that will be boycotted by Pashinian. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk said on Tuesday that he will specifically discuss with the leaders of other EEU member statutes “Armenia’s status” in the bloc.

Responding to Overchuk’s statement, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan stressed on Wednesday that Armenia cannot be kicked out of the EEU against its will.

“They can always talk, and we can always participate in a conversation on any topic,” Mirzoyan said of the upcoming summit in comments to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “But the issue of leaving the EEU is not on our agenda at the moment. Therefore, that discussion may be very amateurish or philosophical in nature.”

Overchuk also warned that the South Caucasus country can no longer combine its pursuit of EU membership with tariff-free access to the Russian market, a significant discount on the price of Russian gas and other economic advantages offered by Moscow.

Russia accounted for 35.8 percent of Armenian foreign trade last year, compared with the EU’s 11.7 percent share. Citing this and other data, Armenian opposition leaders claim that Armenia will face economic ruin if Pashinian wins the June 7 parliamentary elections

Armenia – The grandfather of a deceased soldier is forcibly removed from Nikol Pashinian’s campaign rally in Spitak, May 19, 2026.

The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, underscored the heightened tensions with Yerevan on Wednesday when she expressed shock at Pashinian’s public altercations with disgruntled voters which have marred his election campaign. She said that Western media should pay attention to those voters instead of accusing Moscow of trying to undercut Pashinian.

“That woman who ‘should be grateful’ that, as [Pashinian] said, her head was not smashed in a toilet around the corner, that man – my heart is bleeding, look at that footage – whose grandson died [during military service] and who came to Pashinian’s rally and asked a question, and he was accused of coming there for $550,” Zakharova told Sputnik Radio.

“What does Russia have to do with that? No, it’s not us, it’s Pashinian,” added the official.