Monday, Top Armenian Judge `Not Interested' In Presidential Run . Sisak Gabrielian Armenia - Gagik Harutiunian, chairman of the Constitutional Court, speaks to journalists in Yerevan, 11Dec2017. The chairman of Armenia's Constitutional Court, Gagik Harutiunian, said on Monday that he does not want to become the next president of the republic despite speculation to the contrary. The end of President Serzh Sarkisian's second and final term in April will mark Armenia's transition to a parliamentary system of government in accordance with a controversial constitutional reform initiated by him. Most of his sweeping executive powers will be transferred to the prime minister backed by the parliamentary majority. The next head of state will be elected by the National Assembly, rather than popular vote, and have largely ceremonial powers. Sarkisian and his ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) have still not clarified who they think should occupy that post. Several Armenian media outlets have claimed in recent months that Harutiunian is Sarkisian's preferred presidential candidate. They have noted in this regard that he will turn 70 and have to retire from the country's highest court next under Armenian law. Harutiunian insisted that he has received no offers to become president when he spoke to reporters in Yerevan. Asked how he will respond if he is offered to succeed Sarkisian as president, he said: "I don't comment on `ifs.' I have no such desire, it's not on my agenda." "The media is engaged in mental exercises," he added in reference to the lingering speculation about his political future. "That's all I can say." A Communist Party figure in Soviet times, Harutiunian was elected in 1990 a deputy speaker of Armenia's first post-Communist parliament. He served as vice-president in the administration of Levon Ter-Petrosian, Armenia's first president elected in 1991. Harutiunian became chairman of the newly established Constitutional Court in 1996 shortly after the post of vice-president was abolished by a new Armenian constitution. The court has rarely handed down rulings challenging the current and former Armenian presidents. Opposition Leader Pounces On Sarkisian's Anti-Corruption Remark . Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian speaks at a conference on local governments in Dilijan, 9Dec2017. An Armenian opposition leader called for criminal investigations on Monday after President Serzh Sarkisian warned local government officials to stop embezzling public funds. Sarkisian issued the stark warning at a weekend conference in Dilijan that was attended by senior government officials and city and town mayors from across Armenia."We are not prepared to see some of you pocket our population's money," he said. "It's shameful. If such cases are detected, let nobody seek clemency." "And let nobody -- be it a provincial governor, a minister or a person close to me -- ask after the New Year [celebrations] for forgiveness for any community head in such cases," Sarkisian added in a speech. Edmon Marukian, a leader of the opposition Yelk alliance, said the president thus admitted that he has been "aware of the plunder" among local government officials. Marukian claimed that the authorities have not prosecuted that "large group of plunderers" because the latter have bought votes and provided other "services" to the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) in various elections. "They are first and foremost members of the Republican Party and the authorities forgave those people at the highest level," Marukian told a news conference. He said Armenian prosecutors must launch criminal proceedings in connection with Sarkisian's public remarks. Armenia - Opposition leader Edmon Marukian speaks during parliamentary hearings in Yerevan, 27Nov2017. The HHK spokesman, Eduard Sharmazanov, rejected the verbal attack. "The president did not report any crime in his speech," he told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). "As head of state and leader of a political team, the president of the republic is just set a task of better governance in advance of new realities and new challenges." Sharmazanov also said that it is up to law-enforcement agencies, not Sarkisian, to determine who must be prosecuted for corruption. Sarkisian, whose final presidential term ends in April, demanded a tougher fight against bribery and other corrupt practices when he met with the leadership of one such agency, the Special Investigative Service (SIS), late last month. "For us, the fight against corruption is a matter of national security," he declared. Armenia's leading anti-graft watchdog reacted with skepticism to that statement. "Serzh Sarkisian has repeatedly said such things since [taking office in] 2008," said Varuzhan Hoktanian of the Armenian branch of Transparency International. "So I don't see a fundamentally new anti-corruption policy here." Italian Firm To Build New Road Around Yerevan Armenia - Traffic in Yerevan, 28Sep2017. An Italian company has won a $33 million contract to build a section of a new highway that will bypass central Yerevan and connect two major highways leading to the Armenian capital. The highway is constructed as part of a loan agreement signed by the Armenian government and the Asian Development Bank (ADB). The first 5-kilometer stretch of the road was inaugurated a year ago. The government went on to call an international tender for its second section that will be about 10 kilometers long. The Italian construction firm, Tirrena Scavi, was declared the winner of the contest last week at a meeting of Prime Minister Karen Karapetian and officials responsible for the project. A government statement cited one of those officials as saying that Tirrena Scavi was one of five bidders in the tender which she said was said held "in conformity with Asian Development Bank procedures." The Italians offered to build the road for almost $33 million, said the statement. Yerevan Mayor Taron Markarian and a senior Tirrena executive, Giacomo Lombardi, signed a construction contract on Monday. Lombardi was reported to say at the signing ceremony that the quality of the highway section "will satisfy everyone." Under the contract, work on the four-lane road will start early next year and take two years. The road will pass through Yerevan's southern and western suburbs close to the two national highways. Officials say that it will reduce traffic congestion in the city. Armenian Minister Cautious Over President's GDP Target . Tatevik Lazarian Armenia - Finance Minister Vartan Aramian speaks at a news conference in Yerevan, 25Sep2017. Finance Minister Vartan Aramian declined to clarify on Monday whether he considers realistic President Serzh Sarkisian's latest forecast that Armenia's per capita income will triple, in dollar terms, in the next "several" years. In a weekend speech, Sarkisian said that the country's GDP per capita, which currently stands at roughly $3,500, will reach $10,000. He set no specific dates for meeting that target. A long-term strategy for socioeconomic development adopted by the Armenian government earlier set such a target for 2025. It also predicted that GDP per capita will rise to $4,200 by 2017. Aramian was reluctant to comment on Sarkisian's remark when approached by journalists. He suggested that the president simply made an "appeal" to the government to the effect that "you must make efforts in this direction." "Now you want the finance minister to come out and say, `Dear people, that $10,000 [target] is not possible,'" Aramian complained. "Will you give me time to make calculations and answer you accordingly?" he added when pressed on the subject. In its five-year policy program approved by parliament in June, Prime Minister Karen Karapetian's cabinet pledged to ensure that the Armenian economy grows by around 5 percent annually. It expects economic growth to exceed 4 percent in 2017 and accelerate in 2018. Asked whether such growth rates would be enough to triple GDP per capita in the near future, Aramian said: "It's hard to tell." Opposition representatives, meanwhile, dismissed Sarkisian's forecast as unrealistic. Sergey Bagratian, a parliament deputy from the Tsarukian Bloc, said that the authorities will fail to quickly improve living standards in the country unless they break up economic monopolies and ensure fair competition. He insisted that they are not committed to "liberalizing the economy." Aram Sargsian, a leader of the Yelk bloc, agreed. "I don't see any evidence that the current authorities have a desire to change ways or are taking steps to change ways," he told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). The president famously stated in 2013 an Armenian government failing to achieve a growth rate of at least 7 percent must step down. Economic growth in Armenia has since fallen well short of that figure. Press Review (Saturday, December 9) "Zhamanak" dismisses President Serzh Sarkisian's recent remark that corruption now poses a serious threat to Armenia's national security, saying that his government's declared efforts to combat the problem are not commensurate with that threat. "Either Serzh Sarkisian exaggerated the scale of corruption # or it is more likely that in Armenia they do not fight against corruption as strongly as they do against national security threats," comments the paper. "Because in Armenia corruption is not just a phenomenon, it's an axis upon which the entire government system is built." "Aravot" weighs in on controversy caused by Hakob Hakobian, a senior pro-government lawmaker who has said that the latest rises in the prices of some foodstuffs will not hurt the poor because they could not afford those products anyway. The paper disagrees with calls for his resignation from the National Assembly made in recent days. "Yes, the chairman of the National Assembly committee on social issues must understand that butter or meat are not luxury goods as they are part of any modern healthy food diet and their increased cost deals a severe blow to our low-income people," it says in editorial. "Also, a politician living in a poor country must think carefully before making judgments about poverty. But stripping [a parliament deputy] of their seat because of their views could set a bad precedent. The best way to punish the deputy is not to reelect him. In a normal society, Hakob Hakobian would never be reelected to parliament." Paul Goble, a U.S. political analyst, tells "168 Zham" that Turkey's involvement in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process is "extremely undesirable" because the current Turkish leadership is unpredictable and could seek to undermine Russia's central role in international mediation efforts. "Turkey will continue to intervene," he is quoted as saying. "That intervention will likely succeed only in cases like the April 2016 events [in Karabakh.] Or else, such intervention will not be allowed in the negotiation process influenced by both Russia and the U.S." "Haykakan Zhamanak" comments on the results of the latest opinion polls released by in recent days. According to them, Prime Minister Karen Karapetian's approval rating has fallen from 85 percent to 57 percent and is now slightly lower than President Serzh Sarkisian's. The paper predicts that the government-linked pollsters will report further drops in Karapetian's popularity before Sarkisian completes his final presidential term in April. By contrast, it says, Serzh Sarkisian's approval rating will reach 60-70 percent. (Tigran Avetisian) Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2017 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org