168: MFA wants additional billions. The Government accepted the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ notice

April 24, 2026

Today, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs presented the agenda of the government session on approving the draft laws “On Amendments to the Law on Diplomatic Service”, “On Amendments and Amendments to the Law on “Public Service” and “On Amendments and Amendments to the Law on Remuneration of State Positions and Public Service Persons” and considering it urgent.

The proposal was accepted with a package of non-reportable issues.

According to the justification presented, the adoption of this legal act

is aimed at solving problems arising in the field, regulating various gaps that require legislative regulations and found in practice, improving the remuneration conditions of diplomats serving in diplomatic service bodies in foreign countries on the principle of rotation.

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Accordingly,

– the requirement for a diplomat to work at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs or a subordinate body for at least two years will be revised, setting it at 18 (eighteen) months.  

– regulations on establishing a diplomatic office will be introduced.

“In recent years, according to agreements reached with foreign countries, it became necessary to establish diplomatic offices in some countries.

For example, there are cases when it is necessary to have a representation of the state in a foreign country, but at that time it is not advisable to create an embassy from a financial or other point of view. In such cases, an agreement can be reached with a foreign state to establish a diplomatic office,” the document says;

the provision of paying 50 percent of the compensation to the spouse holding a lower position in the case of the service of diplomat spouses in the same diplomatic service body in a foreign country will be removed from the draft law.

According to the rationale, “such a change is aimed at ensuring equal pay conditions for diplomat spouses, as well as the principles of equal pay for equal work.”

The adoption of another draft law, “On Amendments to the Law on the Remuneration of Persons Occupying State Positions and State Service Positions”, by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was conditioned by the equalization of the official rates of diplomats serving in diplomatic service bodies in foreign countries and diplomats serving in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia.

“Currently, the official rates of diplomats serving in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs are set by the law “On Remuneration of Persons Occupying State Positions and Public Service Positions”, when a normal increase of the basic salary – official rate is set for consecutive work (for example, the calculated minimum rate of the first secretary is AMD 267,072, and the maximum rate is AMD 366,080 drams), and the official rates of diplomats serving in diplomatic service bodies operating in foreign countries on the principle of rotation are defined by the Government of the Republic of Armenia No. 738-Н of July 3, 2014 by decision, when a normal increase in the official rate is not planned and not ensured (for example, the rate of the first secretary for the countries of the single euro payment zone is established at 157,069 AMD, and for countries other than the countries of the single euro payment zone – 178,442 AMD, which is unchanged),” the justification states.

But that’s not all, the foreign ministry also attributed this change to the continuously changing security environment in the region and the world, the presence of external threats and challenges surrounding the Republic of Armenia. According to the Ministry, this requires the diplomats serving in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and in the diplomatic service bodies of the Republic of Armenia on a rotational basis to make incomparably more energetic efforts on bilateral and multilateral platforms, which in turn creates a need to “make changes to the law “On Remuneration of Persons Occupying State Positions and State Service Positions” in order to improve the remuneration conditions”.

This part of the justification, by the way, is in contradiction with the peace talks that Nikol Pashinyan addresses to the RA citizens every day.

This, in turn, implies the need for additional financial resources and expected changes in the revenues and expenditures of the state budget.

Thus, according to the rationale, after the law “On Amendments to the Law “On Remuneration of Persons Occupying State Positions and State Service Positions” comes into force. In 2026, the RA Ministry of Foreign Affairs will need an additional 93,490.3 thousand drams per month for salaries and 56,993.7 thousand drams for each half-yearly award, and in the following years the expenses will increase by 1,235,870.6 thousand drams»։

RFE/RL – Pashinian Stresses ‘Meds Yeghern’ On Armenian Genocide Anniversary

April 24, 2026


Armenia – People lay flowers at Yerevan’s Tsitsernakabert memorial to victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian again did not explicitly name the masterminds and perpetrators of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey as Armenia marked its 111th anniversary on Friday.

Pashinian instead blamed third countries who he said had drawn Armenian subjects of the Ottoman Empire into their “international intrigues” during the First World War. And he continued to put the emphasis on the Armenian phrase “Meds Yeghern” (Great Crime), rather than the term “genocide,” in reference to the slaughter of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians.

Pashinian used the term only twice in his 540-word statement issued on the occasion, compared with his five references to the “Meds Yeghern.” U.S. President Donald Trump has cited “Meds Yeghern” to avoid describing the Armenian massacres as genocide in his April 24 statements.

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Armenians marched to the Tsitsernakabert memorial in Yerevan during the annual remembrance of the genocide victims. The daylong procession followed an official wreath-laying ceremony at the hilltop memorial led by Pashinian.

Catholicos Garegin II, the supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church whom Pashinian has been trying to depose, was again excluded from the annual ceremony. Garegin and other top clergymen held a prayer service at Tsitsernakabert later in the morning. Armenian state television did not show the service during its live coverage from the scene.

Armenia – Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian leads an official ceremony to mark the 111th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, April 24, 2026.

The genocide began with mass arrests on April 24, 1915 of Armenian intellectuals and activists in Constantinople. Scores of Armenians were massacred or starved to death in the following months and years. About three dozen nations, including Russia, France, Germany and the United States, have recognized the genocide.

“Today we commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915, the Meds Yeghern, and pay tribute to our compatriots who were subjected to massacre, deportation, and starvation in the Ottoman Empire for being Armenians,” read Pashinian’s statement. “The Meds Yeghern is the greatest tragedy that has ever befallen us, and our people have been reliving it for 111 years.”

The statement did not mention the regime of the so-called Young Turks that ruled the crumbling empire at the time. The genocide was a “consequence of the practice of involving the Armenian people in international intrigues,” it said, clearly alluding to the Russian Empire and European powers. Armenia “cannot allow the Meds Yeghern to become a tool for international players to fight against each other,” it stressed.

Pashinian similarly declared in January 2025 that Armenians should “understand what happened” in 1915 and what prompted the subsequent campaign for international recognition of the genocide. He seemed to imply that the decades-long campaign led by the Armenian communities in the United States and Europe was instigated by the Soviet Union.

U.S. – Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meet in New York, September 24, 2024.

Armenian historians, opposition figures and retired diplomats expressed outrage at that statement. They accused Pashinian of questioning and even denying the genocide for the sake of pleasing Turkey, which continues to deny a deliberate government effort to exterminate the Ottoman Empire’s Armenian population.

Pashinian also made clear last year that his government will not strive to get more countries and international bodies to recognize the genocide. He questioned the wisdom of relevant resolutions already adopted by many foreign parliaments, saying that they undermine stability in the region.

Armenian opposition leaders again condemned Pashinian’s policy as they marked the genocide anniversary on Friday. They said greater international recognition of the genocide will be back on the Armenian government’s agenda if they defeat the ruling Civil Contract party in upcoming parliamentary elections.

“Armenia’s current leaders are trying to justify the perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide. Moreover, they are trying to equate the victim and the executioner,” charged Samvel Karapetian, a billionaire whose opposition bloc is expected to be Pashinian’s main election challenger.

“Nothing will be forgotten,” said former President Robert Kocharian leading another major opposition force.

Armenian Genocide Museum Deletes Posts On Church Head

April 24, 2026

Armenia – Catholicos Garegin II visits the Armenian genocide memorial in Yerevan, April 24, 2026.

More than one month after the resignation of its director ordered by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute (AGMI) hastily deleted on Friday its online posts on Catholicos Garegin II’s visit to the genocide memorial in Yerevan.

The supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, whom Pashinian has been controversially trying to depose, led a traditional prayer service at the Tsitsernakabert memorial as Armenia marked the 111th anniversary of the genocide in Ottoman Turkey. The service took place shortly after a wreath-laying ceremony attended by Pashinian and other senior officials.

The AGMI, which runs the memorial, posted photographs of and a short statement on Garegin’s visit on its website and social media accounts. It took down the posts several hours later without any explanation.

The development is bound to be linked to AGMI Director Edita Gzoyan’s resignation announced in early March. Pashinian admitted forcing her to step down because of what she told and gave U.S. President JD Vance during his February 10 visit to the Tsitsernakabert complex.

Gzoyan presented Vance with books about the 1915 genocide and the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. Pashinian said her “provocative action” ran counter to his policy towards Azerbaijan and Turkey.

Armenian opposition leaders as well as many public figures accused the prime minister of openly violating academic freedom in the country. Twenty-five genocide scholars based in the United States and Europe likewise denounced the “silencing of independent academic voices in favor of political convenience” in a joint statement issued on March 12.

“Dr. Gzoyan’s forced exit sends a chilling message to academics and historians everywhere: that rigorous inquiry and truthful remembrance can be displaced for diplomatic comfort,” they said.

Armenia – Edita Gzoyan (right) accompanies U.S. Vice President JD Vance at the Armenian genocide memorial in Yerevan, February 10, 2026.

Gzoyan’s removal also upset the AGMI’s staff and board of trustees. The board’s chairman, French-Armenian genocide scholar Raymond Kevorkian, and several members resigned in protest. Pashinian swiftly replaced them. He also installed one of his former aides, Hrachya Tashchian, as the AGMI’s acting director.

Tashchian, who is a former diplomat and has no scholarly experience, insisted on Thursday that Gzoyan’s sacking has not affected the institute’s activities. Narine Margarian, the AGMI’s research secretary, said, however, that it has upended its international cooperation programs.

“Some of the events related to our international partners are frozen or in limbo at the moment,” Margarian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“There is concern that the best genocide scholars and specialists in the field, who have publicly said academic freedom is at risk here, will decide not to attend in these circumstances,” she said.

Margarian was also concerned about the future of a research project financed by the European Union and implemented by the AGMI for the last two years.

“There are signals from the European side that perhaps it will not continue into the third year in the way it was designed to,” she said.

Russia Slams New EU Mission To Armenia

April 24, 2026



RUSSIA – A sign at the main entrance to the Russian Foreign Ministry building in Moscow, June 17, 2019.

Russia deplored on Friday the European Union’s decision to send another mission to Armenia, saying that it is part of EU efforts to turn the South Caucasus country into an anti-Russian “outpost” in the region.

The two-year mission requested by the Armenian government and approved by EU foreign ministers earlier this week is tasked with helping Yerevan cope with “hybrid threats” emanating from abroad, presumably Russia, before and after the country’s June 7 parliamentary elections.

The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, claimed that it will seek to “influence” the election outcome “under the pretext of tracking illicit financial flows and countering cyberattacks, information manipulation and information interference from third countries.”

“A mission that will claim to fight against interference in the affairs of a sovereign state is itself an instrument of such interference,” Zakharova told reporters, according to the TASS news agency.

“We hope that our Armenian allies and friends will not allow the new mission to … draw Yerevan into the West’s geopolitical games which would involve the destruction of friendly ties with our country and joining Brussels’ anti-Russian policy,” she warned.

The EU already decided last month to send a separate “hybrid rapid response team” to Yerevan for the elections. The Armenian government requested the deployment as well after implicitly alleging Russian “hybrid” threats to the integrity of the electoral process. Government officials have not publicly elaborated on those threats.

A similar EU mission was deployed in Moldova ahead of parliamentary elections held there last September. Two Moldovan opposition parties deemed pro-Russian were disqualified from the vote won by the former Soviet republic’s pro-Western leadership. The Russian Foreign Ministry claimed on March 4 that the EU is gearing up for a repeat of “the Moldovan scenario” in Armenia.

Armenia’s leading opposition groups, notably a bloc led by Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetian, are concerned that they too could be barred from running in the polls. Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian against such bans during their April 1 talks at the Kremlin.

Putin also implied that Armenia will lose its tariff-free access to the Russian market and a significant discount on the price of Russian natural gas imported by it if it keeps seeking to join the EU. Pashinian and his Civil Contract effectively ignored these warnings in their election manifesto published late last week.

Zakharova said the EU has no intention to admit Yerevan in the foreseeable future. The 27-nation bloc is only keen to “turn Armenia into its outpost,” she claimed.

Yerevan is due to host on May 4-5 a first-ever EU-Armenian summit viewed by local analysts as a pre-election show of EU support for Pashinian and his pro-Western foreign policy.

RFE/RL – Pashinian’s Wife Sued For Election Law Violation

April 24, 2026
Armenia – Prime Minister’s wife Anna Hakobian (right) accompanied by bodyguards visits the Armenian Genocide memorial in Yerevan, April 24, 2026.

A coalition of Armenian vote-monitoring groups has sued Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s influential wife, Anna Hakobian, accusing her of illegally engaging in benevolent activities ahead of the June 7 parliamentary elections.

Armenian law bans such activities by not only politicians running for office or members of their parties but also their close relatives and other individuals linked to them.

Hakobian unexpectedly announced in late February the break-up of her 30-year de facto marriage with Pashinian never registered with a relevant state body or the Armenian Apostolic Church. Critics of the Armenian government questioned the authenticity of the divorce. Some of them said it is designed to end opposition claims that Hakobian’s My Step charity is flouting the legal ban.

Pashinian made a joint public appearance with Hakobian on April 19 hours after exposing her presence in his official residence on social media. He said on Thursday that he has reunited with her.

The Independent Observer coalition reported the lawsuit against My Step on the same day. Hakobian will only face a fine of up to 6 million drams ($16,000) if Armenia’s Administrative Court finds her guilty of the violation alleged by the Western-funded observers.

“Separating the My Step fund from the [ruling] Civil Contract party is clearly artificial,” the Independent Observer’s Vardine Grigorian told reporters.

Hakobian denied any wrongdoing later on Thursday. In a Facebook post, she said My Step’s activities are not connected with the upcoming elections in any way. The charity has been organizing free English-language and physical training courses and handing out material aid to people.

Hakobian refused to say whether she could suspend those activities during the election campaign as she visited the Armenian genocide memorial in Yerevan on Friday. The 48-year-old, who is believed to have exerted a strong influence on Pashinian, was surrounded by more than a dozen bodyguards who manhandled reporters trying to approach and ask her questions.

Shortly before the announcement of Pashinian’s “divorce,” Armenia’s Anti-Corruption Committee (ACC) pledged to look into Hakobian’s benevolence to determine whether it violates the law. However, the head of the law-enforcement agency, Artur Nahapetian, said on Friday that Hakobian is not under investigation.

The ACC is known to have prosecuted only opposition figures on relevant charges. Billionaire Samvel Karapetian’s opposition alliance, which is expected to be Civil Contract’s main election challenger, has been on the receiving end of such criminal proceedings in recent months.

A senior member of the Strong Armenia alliance, Gohar Ghumashian, was arrested and indicted as recently as on April 14. The ACC claimed that she handed out cash to one voter and promised “services on preferential terms” to another last month. Ghumashian denied the accusation and was freed by court hours later.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Asm. Harabedian’s Statement on President Trump’s Failu

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Friday, April 24, 2026

CONTACT: Sam Villaneda,
[email protected]
, (760) 269-9391

Tom Steel, [email protected], (916) 319-2041

Asm. Harabedian’s Statement on President Trump’s Failure to Recognize the Armenian Genocide

 

(PASADENA, CA) – On Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, Assemblymember John Harabedian, Chair of the California Armenian Legislative Caucus Foundation and the only Armenian serving in the State Legislature, issued the following
statement in response to President Trump’s failure to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide:

 

“On the very day we honor the memory of 1.5 million Armenians who were systematically murdered, President Trump once again chose silence over truth. By refusing to call the Armenian Genocide what it is, he is perpetuating a dangerous
false narrative. As an Armenian American, this is a betrayal of history and a deliberate act of denial. We will not beg any leader to recognize our history. The facts are clear, and the truth demands to be spoken,�
said Assemblymember John Harabedian
(D-Pasadena)

 

Each year on April 24, Armenians around the world commemorate the genocide that claimed over 1.5 million lives at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. Recognition is essential. Naming genocide affirms historical truth, honors the victims, and
reinforces a global promise to prevent such atrocities from happening again. 

 

President Trump’s continued refusal to use the word “genocide,� even on this solemn day of remembrance, undermines decades of advocacy and disregards the moral responsibility to confront injustice with honesty. At a time when the Armenian
people continue to face ongoing threats, this failure sends a dangerous message that truth can be ignored. 

 

California has made its position clear: we will not waver in recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

 

#####

Assemblymember John Harabedian represents the 41st District composed of the cities of La Cañada Flintridge, Pasadena, Altadena, Sierra Madre, Monrovia, Bradbury, San Dimas, La Verne, Claremont,
Upland, Rancho Cucamonga, Oak Hills, Piñon Hills and Phelan.

 

Armenpress: China’s defense minister to visit Russia, Kyrgyzstan for SCO meeti

Russia09:11, 23 April 2026
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From April 23 to 28, Chinese Defense Minister Dong Jun will visit Russia and Kyrgyzstan and attend a meeting of defense ministers of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) member states in Bishkek, the Kyrgyz capital, China’s Xinhua state news agency reported citing a statement from the country’s defense ministry.

During the meeting, Dong will deliver a speech and meet with heads of delegations from relevant countries to exchange views on international and regional situations as well as defense and security cooperation, according to the report.

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Hegseth fires U.S. Navy Secretary John Phelan

U. S.09:25, 23 April 2026
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U.S. Navy Secretary John Phelan is leaving his job, the Pentagon abruptly announced Wednesday, marking the latest instance of a top defense leader stepping down or being ousted, AP reported.

According to Axios, Phelan was fired by Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth, while the Department of Defense framed it as an immediate departure.

“Phelan didn’t understand he wasn’t the boss. His job is to follow orders given, not follow the orders he thinks should be given,” Axios quoted a person familiar with the situation as saying.

The same person said Phelan and Hegseth did not “get along,” according to Axios.

Chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said Phelan was “departing the administration, effective immediately” in a post on X. He did not provide a reason.

Navy undersecretary Hung Cao will take over in an acting capacity.

The firing comes amid a naval standoff with Iran and about three weeks after Hegseth removed Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George and two other military leaders.

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Pentagon says it will take months to clear mines in the Strait of Hormuz – AP

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The Pentagon told U.S. lawmakers this week it will likely take six months to clear the mines set in the Strait of Hormuz, The Associated Press reported, citing a person familiar with the situation who was granted anonymity to discuss the sensitive information.

Officials from the U.S. Department of Defense delivered the information during a classified briefing at the House Armed Services Committee on Tuesday, according to the report.

The session left more questions than answers as lawmakers probed for information about the cost of the war against Iran, the strategy and objectives, the person told AP. The lawmakers also raised questions that have still gone unanswered about the strike on a school compound during the early days of the Iran war.

The Washington Post, citing three officials speaking on the condition of anonymity, reported that lawmakers were told that Iran may have emplaced 20 or more mines in and around the Strait of Hormuz, the vital waterway for the movement of Middle Eastern oil through the Persian Gulf.

Some were floated remotely using GPS technology, which has made it difficult for U.S. forces to detect the mines as they are deployed, the senior defense official told lawmakers. Others are believed to have been laid by Iranian forces using small boats.

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Israeli strike kills journalist after ongoing attacks blocked rescuers, Lebano

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Lebanon’s prime minister has accused Israel of war crimes after Israeli air strikes killed one journalist and wounded another in southern Lebanon on Wednesday, the BBC reports.

The strike killed Amal Khalil, who worked for a Lebanese newspaper, and injured freelance photographer Zeinab Faraj.

Officials in Lebanon say they were deliberately targeted as they sought shelter in a home after an initial air strike hit the vehicle in front of them, killing two men.

The officials also accused the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) of intentionally targeting a marked ambulance as it tried to reach the journalists in the village of Tayri.

The IDF denied that it was preventing rescue teams from reaching the area and said it did not target journalists.

Journalists Khalil, 43, who worked for Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar, and Faraj, a freelance photographer, were travelling together. The two men who died have not been named by officials.

The BBC quoted Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam as saying: “Targeting journalists, obstructing access to them by relief teams, and even targeting their locations again after these teams arrive constitutes described war crimes.”

In a statement, the IDF said it “does not target journalists and acts to mitigate harm to them while maintaining the safety and security of its troops”.

The IDF said it identified two vehicles that had “departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah”.

Earlier this month, two journalists were killed in separate Israeli strikes in Lebanon – Ghada Dayekh, a presenter with privately-owned radio station Sawt al-Farah, and Suzan Khalil, a reporter and presenter on Al-Manar TV, which is affiliated with the armed group Hezbollah.

Last month, three Lebanese journalists were killed in a targeted Israeli strike in the town of Jezzine, their employers said.

Ali Shoeib, a reporter for Hezbollah-affiliated Al Manar TV, and reporter Fatima Ftouni and her brother, cameraman Mohamed Ftouni, both from Al Mayadeen channel, were killed in the strike.

At the time, the IDF confirmed it killed Shoeib and Mohamed Ftouni, describing them as “terrorists” from Hezbollah’s military wing, while saying it was aware of reports a female journalist was also killed.

At least 2,475 people have been killed in Israeli attacks in Lebanon since the latest war began, and more than 7,500 wounded, according to the Lebanese authorities, whose figures do not differentiate between civilians and combatants. The number includes at least 274 women and 177 children.

Israeli authorities say Hezbollah attacks have killed two civilians in Israel since 2 March, and that 13 Israeli soldiers have been killed in combat in Lebanon.

Both Hezbollah and Israel have accused each other of violating the ceasefire agreement. The IDF said earlier on Wednesday that Hezbollah launched an attack on Israeli forces in southern Lebanon.

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