RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/16/2018

                                        Monday, 

EU Envoy Responds To Criticism From Armenian PM

        • Emil Danielyan

Armenia - Piotr Switalski, head of the EU Delegation in Armenia, speaks at an 
event in Yerevan, 24 January 2018.

The European Union needs to hear “very concrete ideas” from the new Armenian 
government before it can consider increasing economic assistance to Armenia, 
the head of the EU Delegation in Yerevan, Piotr Switalski, said on Monday.

Responding to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s criticism of the EU voiced last 
week, Switalski said the government has yet to come up with a set of specific 
reform-oriented projects requiring EU funding.

“We would like to hear from the Armenian government concrete ideas,” he told a 
news conference. “In what form, in what way can the European Union be helpful? 
In some ministries we have already received some preliminary ideas. We would 
like to have a comprehensive view. And when we have this view we will discuss 
how we can help.”

“We, all the people working on Armenia, are waiting for the concrete ideas of 
the Armenian side,” he said.

Pashinian hit out at the EU on Thursday after meeting the 28-nation bloc’s top 
officials, including European Council President Donald Tusk, in Brussels. The 
43-year-old premier complained that the EU has still not promised to increase 
its assistance to Armenia despite voicing strong support for his government’s 
stated reform agenda.

“Frankly, I made it clear to our partners that this is not quite understandable 
and acceptable … We specifically expect more concrete and greater assistance,” 
Pashinian told reporters.

“The EU’s policy [towards Armenia] is the same as it was three or four months 
ago. I think that they should either tone down their enthusiastic statements 
[of support for the new Armenian government] or substantially change that 
policy,” he stated bluntly.


Belgium - Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, and Armenia's Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian meet in Brussels,12 July, 2018.

Switalski countered that Pashinian himself has not signaled any major change in 
Armenia’s policy towards the EU or a desire to sign new and more far-reaching 
agreements with the EU. “If the Armenian side believes that these [existing 
EU-Armenia] documents have to be augmented … we need concrete ideas [as to] 
what they would like to change in our policy,” argued the envoy.

Ever since he swept to power in a wave of mass protests in May, Pashinian has 
repeatedly ruled out a change of his country’s geopolitical orientation. He has 
pledged to keep it primarily allied to Russia and make Russian-Armenian 
relations even “more special.”

Tusk, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and the EU’s foreign 
policy chief, Federica Mogherini, reportedly praised the recent democratic 
change of Armenia’s government when they held their first face-to-face talks 
with Pashinian on July 11-12. A spokeswoman for Mogherini said she reiterated 
that the EU stands ready to “provide concrete support to reforms” initiated by 
Pashinian. That includes “technical and financial assistance,” she said.

The EU pledged last year to provide up to 160 million euros ($185 million) in 
fresh aid to Armenia over the next three years in line with the Comprehensive 
and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) signed with the previous Armenian 
government.

Switalski emphasized the fact that the EU is already Armenia’s leading foreign 
donor. “We provide more than 50 percent of all external assistance [to 
Armenia,]” he said.

The diplomat announced in that context that a senior official from the European 
Commission, the EU’s executive body, will visit Yerevan later this week to 
discuss with Armenian leaders their “expectations and needs.” “This must be a 
very concrete discussion,” he stressed. “Projects, timelines, budgets and so on 
and so forth. When we have it on the table we can discuss it.”




Yerevan Council Fails To Elect New Mayor

        • Narine Ghalechian

Armenia - A session of Yerevan's municipal council is boycotted by the vast 
majority of its members, .

Paving the way for pre-term local elections, Yerevan’s municipal council failed 
to elect a new mayor of the Armenian capital on Monday.

Only 5 of the 65 members of the council attended its special session which was 
supposed to elect a replacement for former Mayor Taron Markarian. The vote was 
boycotted by Markarian’s Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) and the Yelk 
alliance, of which Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is a leader.

Markarian resigned on July 9 under pressure from Pashinian and his political 
allies. The HHK decided not to nominate another mayoral candidate.

Under Armenian law, the city council’s failure to elect a new mayor within two 
weeks would give the central government the right to disband the legislature 
and hold snap elections in the capital. This is Yelk’s preferred scenario.

Speaking immediately after the council’s failure to make a quorum, a senior 
Yelk councilman, Davit Khazhakian, said Yerevan residents must now be able to 
elect a new municipal legislature that will in turn pick their next mayor. The 
polls should be held in the first half of September at the latest, he said, 
citing relevant legal provisions.

Markarian, 40, served as Yerevan mayor for nearly seven years.




Armenian Man Detained In Azerbaijan

        • Sisak Gabrielian

Armenia - Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman Tigran Balayan at a news briefing 
in Yerevan, 22 May 2018.

A resident of an Armenian border village was detained by Azerbaijani 
authorities after crossing into Azerbaijan in unclear circumstances at the 
weekend.

The Azerbaijani military claimed to have captured the 34-year-old Karen 
Ghazarian while thwarting an Armenian incursion into Azerbaijani territory.

The Armenian Defense Ministry was quick to deny the alleged incursion attempt, 
insisting that Karapetian is a civilian resident of Berdavan, a village in the 
northern Tavush province located just a few kilometers from the Azerbaijani 
border. It said he has a history of mental disease.

“He suffers from mental problems and because of that didn’t serve in the armed 
forces of Armenia,” Tigran Balayan, the Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman, 
insisted on Monday.

Berdavan’s mayor, Smbat Mughdusian, also said that Ghazarian lives in the local 
community and suffers from mental disorders. Mughdusian said he went missing 
shortly after midnight.

The mayor suggested that Ghazarian lost his way and accidentally crossed the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border. The man’s family house in the village is closest 
to the frontier, he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am).

According to Balayan, the Armenian authorities are now trying to help 
repatriate Ghazarian, including through the International Committee of the Red 
Cross (ICRC). An ICRC spokesperson in Yerevan said its representatives in Baku 
are already trying to visit him in custody.

Three Armenian nations are currently held captive in Azerbaijan, according to 
the ICRC.

One of them, Zaven Karapetian, was captured in June 2014, with Baku similarly 
claiming to have thwarted an Armenian incursion. Yerevan dismissed that version 
of events, saying that Karapetian was a civilian resident in Vanadzor, an 
Armenian city around 130 kilometers from the border section which he crossed 
for still unknown reasons.

Three residents of other Tavush villages strayed into Azerbaijan in 2014. Two 
of them were branded Armenian “saboteurs” by the authorities in Baku and died 
shortly afterwards.

Karen Petrosian, a 33-year-old resident of Chinari village, was pronounced dead 
in August 2014 one day after being detained in an Azerbaijani village across 
the border. The Azerbaijani military claimed that he died of “acute heart 
failure.” Many in Armenia believe, however, that Petrosian was murdered or 
beaten to death. The United States and France expressed serious concern at 
Petrosian’s suspicious death at the time.

A 77-year-old resident of another Tavush village, Verin Karmiraghbyur, died in 
May 2014 three months after being apprehended on the Azerbaijani side of the 
frontier in similar circumstances. Doctors in Yerevan said the man, Mamikon 
Khojoyan, suffered serious injuries during his month-long captivity.

Another Armenian civilian died in Azerbaijani custody in 2010. The 20-year-old 
Manvel Saribekian, whose Tutujur village is also very close to the Azerbaijani 
border, was paraded on Azerbaijani television following his capture. Saribekian 
was found hanged in an Azerbaijani detention center shortly afterwards.




Tax Chief Vows Continued Fight Against Informal Economy

        • Harry Tamrazian

Armenia - Davit Ananian, head of the State Revenue Committee, arrives for a 
news conference in Yerevan, 13 July 2018.

Tackling the sizable informal sector of Armenia’s economy is a top priority for 
tax authorities, the head of the State Revenue Committee (SRC), Davit Ananian, 
said over the weekend.

Ananian said he has decided to set up a task force that will strive to measure 
the precise scale of tax evasion in various sectors of the economy. He admitted 
that the SRC currently lacks full information about it.

“If we don’t have estimates of the informal sector we won’t be able to say with 
which instruments we should be combatting it and whether that fight can be 
deemed effective,” Ananian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am).

“For the first time we are setting up a working group in order to gauge that 
grey economy,” he said. “This will be the cornerstone of the SRC’s activities.”

Ananian promised a tougher crackdown on companies and individuals 
underreporting their earnings when he was appointed as head of the SRC in late 
May. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said last week that the tax and customs 
service has since recovered more than 20 billion drams ($42 million) of unpaid 
taxes. The sum was collected from 73 companies, according to the SRC.

“The number of such firms is going up by the day and so is the figure cited by 
the prime minister,” said Ananian. He insisted that the main purpose of these 
fines is not to boost the government’s tax revenues but to make businesses 
“change their behavior.”


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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