“Russia has its own interests in Armenia,” Karapetyan says after voting, deni

Read the article in: العربية Armenian:

Strong Armenia bloc leader and business tycoon Samvel Karapetyan cast his ballot in the parliamentary elections on Sunday, as penitentiary officers escorted him from his home to the polling station, since he is under house arrest on charges of calling for a coup, which he denies, describing them as politically motivated.

Speaking to reporters after voting, he said he does not have the Kremlin’s backing and that Moscow pursues its own interests in Armenia regardless of any individual politicians.

“I think the Russians have their own interests in Armenia and are consistently carrying out their policy. This has nothing to do with either Pashinyan, me, or any other political force,” he said.

He said that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s recent remarks at a meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, expressing hope that “pro-Russian” politicians would be able to participate in elections, do not amount to support for him.

“Have you seen Russia support me? Putin simply said that people ought to have the chance to participate in the elections. Of course, I don’t consider that to be support,” Karapetyan said when asked whether he has Kremlin backing.

Asked if the Strong Armenia bloc has a plan B in case of losing the elections, he said:

“Any alternative scenario of a change of government depends on the Armenian people. How can I have another plan? Whatever the Armenian people decide will be what is decided. If Nikol Pashinyan is elected—although the probability of that is equal to zero—the Armenian people will accept it. I would like to see Armenia tomorrow with a legitimate government. This is very important for our country, because without a legitimate government we will not be able to ensure Armenia’s development.”

Published by Armenpress, original at 

Kocharyan votes, pledges “radical changes” if elected

Read the article in: ArmenianRussian:

Former President Robert Kocharyan, who is leading his Armenia Alliance in an election bid for parliament, cast his ballot on Sunday and said that, in the event of victory, they would initiate “radical changes” in line with their manifesto.

Speaking to reporters outside the polling station, Kocharyan, who ruled Armenia from 1998 to 2008 and whose bloc is currently in opposition in the outgoing parliament, said he voted for a “protected, secure, prosperous Armenia with a national identity.”

He said his bloc has a high chance of winning.

Asked about expectations from the elections, Kocharyan said they include significant changes that would stop the “ongoing retreat from principles” and the “continued loss of sovereignty.”

Published by Armenpress, original at 

Massacres of Armenians in Baku in exclusive German diplomatic documents

June: 6, 2026

In September 1918, Turkish troops occupied Baku. After capturing the city, the Turkish-Tatar guerrilla groups under the leadership of the Turkish military began to massacre the unarmed Armenians of the city.

Apart from the Armenian sources, there are documentary materials about the massacres of Armenians in Baku in Russian sources as well. Decades later, German and Austrian sources also published exceptional documentary material. 1990  Armenian translations of German archival documents were also presented to the scientific community. In those exclusive documents, we read and learn that the massacres of Armenians in Baku were organized and carried out by Turkish-Tatar terrorist groups.

We present one of those unique documents, the author of which is the head of the German imperial delegation in the region, Von Kressy.

Read also

  • They brought the papers and said, “Dear boy, sign it.” Abraham Gasparyan
  • Maybe we will manage to win the right to live by fighting. Movses Silikyan’s appeal during the Battle of Sardarapat
  • We will solve that issue. Samvel Karapetyan about the return of prisoners

«Major of the General Staff of the Ottoman Empire,
General von Kress, head of the German imperial delegation in the Caucasus

Tiflis

German delegation

(20.09.1918)

Considering the unreliability of the Turkish military units, which, according to Nuri Pasha’s own admission, had to be regrouped later, it was not possible to use the Turkish military units for police purposes. A large number of Armenians, including women and children, as well as prisoners who were particularly fit for military service, were destroyed. So far, there are no exact data on several thousand. Credible locals claim that their number is much greater than the number of Armenians killed in March. The Germans, who can be believed, independently mentioned the number 10,000. The Turks claim that there were not only Tatars in the gangs, but also mostly Persians. During the battles of September 14 and 15, there were also reports of atrocities committed by Turkish soldiers. Two German settlers (these were subjects of the empire) were also killed and the wives of several German settlers (not subjects of the empire) were raped. Similar violence was committed against Austrians (subjects of the monarchy) and Russians. The Danish consul made a report on the murder of German settlers.

 

The local Danish, Swedish, Dutch and Persian consuls bitterly accepted the fact that Turkish military units were allowed to occupy Baku, which left an impression of political mystery. The neutral consuls sent a joint note to Nuri Pasha regarding the atrocities.

During the negotiations with the military fleet, which did not agree to the separation of Baku from Russia, the Turkish representative stated that the Turks attacked Baku only because the British were there, and they captured Baku only because there was no owner left in the city after the retreat of the British. Baku is now openly (though unofficially) called the capital of Azerbaijan.” (Manucharyan A. L., “1918. Armenian pogroms in Baku (documents of the political archive of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the GFA”, Social Sciences Journal, 1990, Yerevan, p. 78-79).

 

This exclusive document emphasizes that the massacres of Armenians in Baku were organized by Turks and carried out by Turkish-Tatar thugs. The Turks themselves do not deny that they organized the massacres of Armenians. Along with Armenians, Germans, Austrians and Russians were also killed in Baku. The numbers of massacred Armenians present in the document prove that the number of Armenians killed in Baku varies between 10-30 thousand according to unofficial and official data. This document is a foreign fact that shows that the plans of the Turkish-Tatar gangs never change.

They take advantage of the opportunity and carry out their crime. There was a just, healthy and honorable peace in the region only when the Armenian army defeated the Turkish-Tatar or Turkish-Azerbaijani terrorist groups. In all other cases, behind the illusion of false peace was and remains the extermination of Armenians and the destruction of our homeland.

Z. Sh:i was late




Turkish Press: FACTBOX – What to know about Armenia’s upcoming parliamentary e

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
June 6 2026
Nearly 2.5M registered voters head to polls June 7 to elect 101-seat National Assembly
Burç Eruygur, Kanyshai Butun
06 June 2026Update: 06 June 2026

İSTANBUL

  • Key opposition parties resist pro-European stance pursued by Yerevan, seek closer ties with Armenia, Russia
  • Vote expected to be crucial for foreign policy, with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s government reaffirming commitment to deepening ties with EU, which has contributed to growing pressure between Yerevan, Moscow

Armenia is set to hold a key parliamentary vote Sunday that will determine the future of the nation’s policy abroad, which has notably sought deeper ties with Europe under the incumbent government.

Nearly 2.5 million registered Armenians will head to the polls to elect the 101-seat National Assembly, where the Civil Contract, the ruling political party since a snap parliamentary vote in 2018, holds 69 seats.

Voting on June 7 will commence at 8 am local time (0400GMT) and will end at 8 pm at more than 2,000 polling stations across the country.

International observers will take part in the vote, including missions from organizations such as the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).

Sixteen political parties and two political alliances have registered to take part in the election, including the Civil Contract, which is led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Key opposition to the Civil Contract in the election includes the Armenia Alliance, a political alliance led by former President Robert Kocharyan, and Strong Armenia, a newly founded party led by billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, who is under house arrest on charges of inciting a coup.

Those opposition parties stand out with their resistance to the pro-European stance pursued by Yerevan and seek closer ties between Armenia and Russia.

The parliamentary vote is the country’s first regular election since snap elections in 2018 and 2021.

It is also the first election to take place in Armenia since Baku established full sovereignty in Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, after separatist forces in the region surrendered in September 2023.

– EAEU or EU?

The vote is expected to be crucial in terms of Armenia’s foreign policy, with Pashinyan’s government reaffirming its commitment to deepening ties with the EU, which has contributed to growing pressure between Yerevan and Moscow ahead of the vote.

Yerevan has intensified engagement with the EU in recent months and has adopted legislation launching a process aimed at eventual EU accession early last year.

In response, Russia said Moscow was not opposed to Armenia developing relations with the EU, but warned that the course could jeopardize membership in the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and result in the loss of economic benefits.

Diplomatic tensions between Armenia and Russia have increased in the meantime, notably as Yerevan hosted a summit of the European Political Community in early May, attended by European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

During the summit, Zelenskyy threatened strikes against Russia during Victory Day celebrations in Moscow on May 9, prompting Russia to summon Armenia’s ambassador for what it described as providing a platform for “absolutely anti-Russian statements.”

Responding to the criticism, Pashinyan noted that Russian President Vladimir Putin visited Baku during the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which he said did not raise concerns in Yerevan.

Later in May, Eurasian leaders, including Putin, urged Armenia to hold a referendum on choosing between the EU and the EAEU, following a meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in Kazakhstan’s capital, Astana.

Pashinyan responded that Armenia would continue working within the Russian-led economic union until a choice between the EAEU and the EU became “unavoidable.”

Ties with Türkiye, Azerbaijan

The election in Armenia is also expected to be key for the country’s policy vis-a-vis Ankara and Baku, with the Civil Contract having championed regional integration, peace with Azerbaijan and the normalization of ties with neighboring Türkiye.

Yerevan and Baku signed a declaration last August at a trilateral summit at the White House, alongside US President Donald Trump, to end decades of conflict, with commitments to cease hostilities, reopen transport routes and normalize relations.

The two countries have since taken numerous steps to bolster ties, including the lifting of economic blockades related to cargo deliveries and transit, and have conducted high-level talks at various levels in commitment to the peace deal.

The developments have also reflected positively in Yerevan’s normalization with Ankara, which was among the first countries to recognize Armenia’s independence following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Ankara, however, closed its border with Armenia and suspended diplomatic relations during the First Karabakh War in the early 1990s, and relations began to improve after the Second Karabakh War in the fall of 2020.

In 2021, Ankara and Yerevan appointed special envoys to lead a normalization process and have since held multiple rounds of talks.

Earlier this week, Pashinyan said he is confident Yerevan will achieve its goal of normalizing relations with Azerbaijan and Türkiye, arguing that establishing relations with Türkiye and securing a lasting peace agreement with Azerbaijan will create new opportunities for Armenia to become a “state of a new quality.”

He added that the absence of relations with Ankara reflects an imbalance in foreign policy and stressed the need for Yerevan to maintain ties with all countries.

As Armenia votes, Pashinyan’s European path faces domestic and Russian resist

First Post
June 6 2026

As Armenia votes, Pashinyan’s European path faces domestic and Russian resistance

FP News Desk • June 6, 2026, 14:56:48 IST

Armenians will head to the polls on June 7 in a closely watched election that could shape the country’s future for years to come, with PM Nikol Pashinyan seeking a fresh mandate

Armenians will head to the polls on June 7 in a closely watched election that could shape the country’s future for years to come, with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan seeking a fresh mandate on promise of closer integration with Europe.

Since coming to power in 2018, Pashinyan has steadily moved Armenia away from Moscow’s sphere of influence, launching the process of European Union integration and pursuing closer political cooperation with Western partners.

His government has also made progress in normalising relations with Azerbaijan.

Earlier this year, Pashinyan hosted a summit in Yerevan attended by European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, underscoring Armenia’s increasingly Western-oriented foreign policy.

Parliamentary elections mark ‘historical moment’ for Armenia, expert says

France 24
June 6 2026

Parliamentary elections mark ‘historical moment’ for Armenia, expert says

ASIA / PACIFIC

Issued on: 06/06/2026 – 12:22

Armenia’s upcoming parliamentary elections, which could reshape the country’s ties with Russia and the West, mark a “historic moment” for the country, according to Ulrich Schmid, Professor of Eastern European Studies at the University of St Gallen. Incumbent Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is seeking to normalise relations with Turkey and neighbouring Azerbaijan, with which Armenia has been locked in conflict for decades.

Watch the video at

Armenpress: Voting begins in Armenia’s parliamentary elections

Politics08:00, 7 June 2026
Read the article in: فارسیFrançaisՀայերենქართულიРусскийTürkçe

Voting has begun in Armenia’s parliamentary elections.

According to Armenpress, polling stations opened at 8:00 a.m. local time and will remain open until 8:00 p.m., after which the vote-counting process will begin.

According to data provided by the Migration and Citizenship Service of Armenia’s Ministry of Internal Affairs, a total of 2,489,031 citizens are eligible to vote in the parliamentary elections.

A total of 2,005 polling stations have been established across Armenia for the vote.

Seventy-one media outlets have been accredited to cover the elections, along with 13 local and eight international observation missions.

Eighteen political forces — including 16 parties and two alliances — have been registered to participate in the elections.

The participating political forces, listed according to their ballot numbers, are:

1. Reformists Party

2. “I Am Against Everyone” Democratic Party

3. Strong Armenia Alliance

4. Meritocratic Party of Armenia

5. New Force Reformist Party

6. Wings of Unity Party

7. Prosperous Armenia Party

8. National Democratic Pole Pan-Armenian Party

9. Kochari National Revival and National Awakening Party

10. Armenian National Congress Party

11. Republic Party

12. Christian Democratic Party

14. Democratic Consolidation Party

15. Democracy Law and Discipline Party

16. Civil Contract Party

17. Armenia Alliance

18. Defenders of Democracy for the Republic Alliance Party

19. Bright Armenia Party

The Alliance Party had also been registered to participate in the elections and had been assigned ballot number 13. However, the party later applied to the Central Electoral Commission to cancel its registration, and the commission approved the request.

Read the article in: فارسیFrançaisՀայերենქართულიРусскийTürkçe

Published by Armenpress, original at 

Azerbaijan’s media apparatus goes all-in for Pashinyan

OC Media
June 5 2026

The world of Azerbaijani pro-government media has long been harshly critical of all things Armenia. Given the tight restrictions on the press in the country, pro-government media forms the bulk of what is actually available, creating a narrow information ecosystem in which narratives are largely uniform and distributed in a top-down fashion.

Yet, in recent months, it appears Azerbaijan’s media apparatus has begun churning out pro-Pashinyan content, just in time for Armenia’s parliamentary elections. At the same time, however, the government has appeared to give its consent to anti-Pashinyan messages to be released by detained former Nagorno-Karabakh officials.

While Azerbaijani media does not often make for the most nuanced takes, analysing the reports can provide valuable insights into how Baku’s media outlets have shifted from bashing Pashinyan to openly suggesting he is Armenia’s only hope — and provide hints to what is behind the contradictory messages.

Contrasting candidates of peace versus war

In rough terms, both Pashinyan and Azerbaijani pro-government media have portrayed the upcoming parliamentary elections as a referendum on war or peace. In particular, Pashinyan has declared himself the candidate of peace, looking forward to the future with the promise of a long-awaited treaty with Azerbaijan actually being signed, while casting the opposition as revanchist forces that will draw Armenia back into war.

The three main opposition figures — former President Robert Kocharyan, oligarch Gagik Tsarukyan, and detained Russian–Armenian tycoon Samvel Karapetyan — form what Pashinyan has deemed the ‘three-headed war party’, a narrative that Azerbaijani media has echoed.

Who’s who in Armenia’s 2026 parliamentary elections?

Even Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has used similar language, including in a recent speech on 10 May during which he alleged that ‘within Armenia’s political sphere there are still circles driven by hatred toward the Azerbaijani people and state’.

‘If they come to power, it is the Armenian people who will suffer’, Aliyev added.

For their part, while all three main opposition figures have criticised Pashinyan’s handling of the peace process, none have openly called for using military force to retake Nagorno-Karabakh.

Nonetheless, Kocharyan, who served as the leader of Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1990s, is one of the primary focuses of ire from Azerbaijani media, which views him as one of the ideological backbones of the Karabakh movement. Indeed, Azerbaijan media has repeatedly cast him as an extremist who is engaged in a ‘toothless attempt at revanchism’.

Other articles in the stridently pro-government outlet Caliber, one of the most active (and vitriolic) commentators on foreign policy and Armenia, emphasise Kocharyan’s close ties with Russia and Kremlin propagandists such as Vladimir Solovyov.

Solovyov has become an effective persona non-grata in Azerbaijan amidst the breakdown in ties between Moscow and Baku.

Not all of the attacks on Kocharyan have focused solely on his connections to the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, however.

In one ‘analytical’ Caliber article entitled ‘Pashinyan’s fight against the “party of war” ’, unsurprisingly focusing on echoing Pashinyan’s narratives about the opposition, there were also appeals to Armenian voters that had nothing to do with threats of war.

‘The opposition is further weakened by the fact that a significant portion of Armenia’s population vividly remembers the dark times when the country was led by Robert Kocharyan and Serzh Sargsyan — both now fervently seeking power. That period was marked by a relentless economic crisis, total dependence on external patrons, rampant corruption, and unbridled abuse of authority’.

Similar articles critical of Karapetyan no longer focus solely on either past conflicts or the perceived threat the opposition poses for future fighting, but instead read almost as if they could be found in a pro-Pashinyan Armenian media outlet.

A piece in Caliber in March ostensibly centred around allegations that Karapetyan’s My Way party was operating a social media bot factory instead stooped to personal, sophomoric attacks on Karapetyan’s nephew Narek, who is effectively managing his uncle’s campaign. In addition to calling him ‘pampered’, the article took a pot-shot at Narek Karapetyan’s weight, describing him as a ‘well-fed man’.

Tsarukyan, arguably the least likely among the three to find success at the ballot box, was described by Caliber as a ‘clown in [an] Armenian political circus’. Most other reporting by Caliber on Tsarukyan has focused on his run-ins with the law.

Careful praise for Pashinyan

Name-calling, insults, and characterisation of Armenian politicians by Caliber and other Azerbaijani media outlets is nothing new, of course.

Indeed, much of the country’s entire media ecosystem has long been focused on not just demonising Armenia, but also pushing pseudo-history that claims Armenians are actually from India, among other fantastical theories.

Against this backdrop, seeing these same media outlets slowly increase their open support and praise for Pashinyan can be a jarring experience.

It has not always been this way.

Pashinyan’s rise to power after the 2018 Velvet Revolution was greeted by some in Azerbaijan, particularly in the country’s opposition, with careful optimism.

For the most part, however, Pashinyan has been subject to the same type of attacks in Azerbaijani media previous leaders had received. After his election, a number of media outlets claimed there was foul play, that Pashinyan would become a dictator, and other criticisms. The full-throated attacks continued for the first few years of his tenure in office — an article in Trend following the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in 2020 cited an Armenian cleric who called Pashinyan ‘mentally ill’ and said he was ‘leading Armenia to death’.

However, the coverage of Pashinyan shifted alongside Armenia’s defeat in the war in 2020, the surrender of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2023, and subsequent progress towards peace that has occurred in the following years.

‘At the moment, a Pashinyan victory is more beneficial for the region, for Azerbaijan, and for Armenia as a whole, and the Azerbaijani leadership understands this well’, says Jamil Hasanli, chair of the National Council of Democratic Forces, an opposition coalition.

‘That’s why anti-Armenian rhetoric in government media has decreased today’, he says. ‘The government orders the media to do what suits it, and they carry out these orders’.

Indeed, in the leadup to the election, coverage of Pashinyan in Caliber and other media outlets is typically favourable, if not openly laudatory — a trend that is present in both articles produced by Caliber writers as well as external experts and respondents cited.

Azerbaijan’s public broadcaster has also openly supported Pashinyan’s election campaign, stating that ‘Pashinyan’s government is acceptable to Azerbaijan in terms of achieving lasting peace in the region’. Similarly, the state-run television channel AzTV has provided constant monitoring of Pashinyan’s campaign, translating all of his official statements into Azerbaijani.

In general, the narrative often promoted echoes that of Pashinyan’s own campaign strategy, that the election is existential, and that Pashinyan is the only one who can lead Armenia to victory.

An article in Caliber on 13 April described Pashinyan’s campaign strategy as being aimed at ‘recognising the new regional architecture that emerged following Azerbaijan’s restoration of its territorial integrity, and on attempting to integrate Armenia into a system of regional peace, open communications, and economic cooperation’.

In contrast, the opposition figures of Kocharyan, Tsarukyan, and Karapetyan were characterised not just as ‘revanchists’, but as figures who have avoided ‘providing a direct answer to the central question: “What exactly do you propose as an alternative?” ’.

Later on in the article, the black-and-white dichotomy is made even more clear:

‘For a significant portion of society, the choice appears to be between an imperfect but understandable strategy of peace and an uncertain, potentially dangerous course of revanchism. The prime minister and his team articulate the risks of returning to a confrontational policy fairly clearly and, importantly, speak to society in the language of reality rather than illusions’.

Azerbaijani historian Altay Goyushov, who currently lives in exile in France, told OC Media that Pashinyan’s re-election would be beneficial to Azerbaijan because ‘he rejects military rhetoric, renounces revenge, and also declares an interest in establishing relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey’.

He stressed that the issue of rapprochement with the EU would be very beneficial to Aliyev, since he is trying to restore relations.

At the same time, Goyushov emphasised that Aliyev did not want forces close to Russia — as most of Armenia’s opposition has been linked to — to come to power in Armenia, likely reflecting the tense relations Baku and Moscow hold currently.

Yet, the underlying narratives remain the same

Critics often co-opted Azerbaijan’s apparent preference of Pashinyan and his Civil Contract party, regularly accusing the prime minister of being in Baku’s pocket. Yet, these current trends do not mean Azerbaijani attacks against him, his associates, or the overall antagonism directed towards Armenia has ended.

‘For example, on social media, even on television, the rhetoric of “Western Azerbaijan” hasn’t weakened at all. It’s intensifying’, historian Altay Goyushov tells OC Media. Western Azerbaijan is a term used by some Azerbaijanis to describe some or all of Armenia.

Other rhetorical broadsides appear aimed at framing specific members of Pashinyan’s coterie as being extremist or revanchist, while others attempt to display the divisions on issues involving history and policy toward Azerbaijan within the government.

At times, there can be a jumbled mix of several of these elements within the same article, such as a piece in Caliber on 11 April that criticised the Armenian Foreign Ministry’s use of the Armenian toponym Maraga (Maragha) in a commemorative post about an Azerbaijani massacre of Armenian civilians during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War.

‘The peace agenda is declared at the level of Prime Minister Pashinyan, while the conflict-driven narrative is implemented at the level of the diplomatic apparatus, as if the left hand does not know what the right hand is doing. Or, more likely, it knows perfectly well’, the article read, arguing that ‘Armenian policy suffers from a severe form of institutional schizophrenia, in which official statements by one branch of government completely negate the efforts undertaken under the auspices of another’.

Elsewhere, even state-run outlets like Azertac continue to directly attack Pashinyan. In an interview the outlet published in December 2025 with political analyst Sahil Karimli, the analyst accused Pashinyan’s government of being a ‘dictatorship’ and carrying out human rights violations.

Karimli conceded ‘radical and occupation-minded forces in Armenia have become more active, attempting to create tension in the peace treaty process with Azerbaijan’, but argued it was no justification for increased ‘repression’.

Pashinyan’s feud with the Armenian Apostolic Church has also been criticised in Azerbaijani media — even as the same outlets describe the Church as a bastion of revanchism and pro-Russian sentiment.

Any comment or policy suggestions made by Pashinyan or his associates can garner condemnation in Azerbaijani media, as can the failure of the government to actively undertake measures that align completely with Baku’s preferences.

The issue of changing Armenia’s Constitution, which Azerbaijan says contains territorial claims and must be altered as a precondition for the signing of any peace treaty, is one such example. Pashinyan has pushed for the constitution to be changed, but rather than changing it unilaterally, he said it should be connected to a national referendum.

Although the end goals appear aligned, the process is not close enough to what Azerbaijan wants, creating a space for further criticism.

Caliber and other media outlets have published articles questioning Pashinyan’s sincerity about the constitution issue and suggesting that he is attempting to pass the buck on the difficult decision on to Armenian society.

Beyond the direct comments, Azerbaijani media has also continued to spread disinformation about Pashinyan and the Civil Contract party, Armenian fact-checkers have found.

Beyond Azerbaijan’s pro-government media, the Azerbaijani government itself has taken steps that could hinder Pashinyan in the elections.

Several former Nagorno-Karabakh officials detained in Azerbaijan have issued audio messages criticising Armenia’s government, and sending anti-Pashinyan remarks. Given the strict control exercised by Azerbaijani authorities over detainees and the absence of international monitoring in court, the frequency of such audio-messages in the pre-election period appears deliberate.

For example, in former State Minister and Russian-Armenian tycoon Ruben Vardanyan’s latest address, published on 25 May, Vardanyan launched his strongest criticism yet of Pashinyan, calling him ‘a liar, a fantasist, and a plagiarist’, after reading a copy of a book authored by Pashinyan.

Commenting on the elections, he said that the war was not over, but continued ‘in other forms’.

‘We are in great danger. If we do not change our conduct, neither Russia nor the European Union awaits us. What awaits us is becoming a Turkish [province]’, Vardanyan said.

Two days after Vardanyan’s message, former Nagorno-Karabakh Parliamentary Speaker Davit Ishkhanyan shared what appears to be a second audio message, in which he claimed that the length of their detention in Azerbaijan was up to the will of the Armenian authorities.

These messages, which could only have been shared with the permission of the Azerbaijani authorities, appear to go against the rhetoric shared more broadly within Azerbaijani media in support of Pashinyan.

‘The main problem here is that I don’t believe Ilham Aliyev wants peace’, Goyushov argues.

‘That is, I don’t believe he wants peace of his own free will. Therefore, I don’t believe the nationalist spirit and sentiment in the country, the issue of Western Azerbaijan, Zangezur — all of these are very important issues for Ilham Aliyev to exploit and retain power’, he concludes.

Armenia Vote Tests Europe’s Democratic Reach in the South Caucasus

The European Times
June 6 2026

Armenia’s parliamentary election on Sunday, 7 June 2026, has become more than a domestic contest. It is a test of whether a small European neighbourhood democracy can choose its strategic direction under pressure from Russia, while the European Union tries to turn support for sovereignty, resilience and fair elections into practical policy.

Voters will decide the composition of Armenia’s parliament after a campaign shaped by security anxiety, economic pressure and a widening argument over the country’s place between Moscow and Brussels. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s government has sought deeper ties with the EU and the United States after years of disappointment with Russia’s role as Armenia’s traditional security partner.

The vote comes two days after the EU moved to soften the impact of Russian trade restrictions. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Brussels was preparing more than €50 million in immediate assistance for Armenia, along with measures to help affected exporters and a joint EU-Armenia task force to coordinate further support.

A domestic election with regional consequences

The campaign has exposed a central tension in Armenian politics: many citizens want stronger European links, but the country remains economically and strategically exposed to Russia. Armenia is still tied to Russian-led security and economic structures, relies heavily on Russian gas and grain, and hosts a Russian military base in Gyumri.

That dependence makes the election unusually consequential for the EU. A stable, credible vote would strengthen Armenia’s claim to sovereign choice at a time when European institutions are trying to support democratic resilience across their eastern neighbourhood. A disputed or destabilising outcome would give Moscow and domestic hardliners more room to challenge Yerevan’s European course.

The European Parliament’s research service has warned that foreign policy orientation is now one of the campaign’s defining issues. It has also noted that support for closer EU integration is significant, while many Armenians still favour balanced relations with both Russia and the West. That mixed public mood helps explain why the election is not simply a referendum on Brussels or Moscow, but a broader argument over security, economic risk and national dignity.

Observers watch for interference and intimidation

International scrutiny will be high. The OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights has deployed an election observation mission for the 7 June parliamentary elections, with other European parliamentary observers also expected to follow the vote.

The presence of observers matters because concerns about foreign interference, disinformation, campaign finance and intimidation have grown across Europe’s neighbourhood. Earlier European discussions on Russian influence operations have already highlighted Armenia among countries vulnerable to pressure through politics, media, religion and civic networks, as reported in European Parliament concerns over Russian interference.

For Armenian voters, those risks are not abstract. The country is still absorbing the political and humanitarian shock of Azerbaijan’s 2023 takeover of Nagorno-Karabakh, which displaced more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians. Many Armenians blame Moscow for failing to prevent the crisis despite Russia’s long-standing security role in the region.

That experience helped accelerate Yerevan’s search for other partners. But closer EU ties also come with difficult questions: whether Armenia can diversify trade quickly enough, whether European support can reach affected workers and businesses, and whether democratic reforms can proceed without deepening polarisation at home.

Europe’s credibility is also at stake

For Brussels, Armenia is a test case for a wider promise. The EU says countries in its neighbourhood should be free to choose democratic, economic and security partnerships without coercion. Yet such promises are only meaningful if they are backed by timely help, patient diplomacy and attention to rights on the ground.

The Commission’s support package is therefore not just financial. It signals that the EU sees economic pressure as part of a broader contest over sovereignty. Assistance for agriculture, trade routes and connectivity may sound technical, but for a landlocked country under pressure it can shape whether political independence is viable in everyday life.

The election result will not settle Armenia’s future in one night. Coalition arithmetic, observer findings and the response of losing parties will all matter. So will the conduct of state institutions if allegations of interference or abuse arise.

But the stakes are already clear. Armenia’s voters are deciding who governs them. Europe is being tested on whether it can support that choice without treating the country merely as a geopolitical chessboard. For a region still marked by war, displacement and pressure from larger powers, that distinction matters.