Nikol Pashinyan: You will sit with all the murderers (video)

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan touched upon Robert Kocharyan’s statement that he was a victim of political persecution.

“If you are a victim, what do you do in freedom? Or do you think we do not know the ways of forcing judges to impose this or that illegal decision? But we have abandoned that practice and I want to say that we are proud of our government that we have abandoned that practice.”

Pashinyan stressed that nobody will be allowed to avoid responsibility.

“I exclude that anyone will avoid the responsibility for killing 10 civilians and carrying out state revolution in the Republic of Armenia on March 1. There cannot be such a thing. There cannot be such a thing,” announced Nikol Pashinyan and added, “You will sit with all the murderers. And I am authorized to declare it on behalf of the citizen of the Republic of Armenia.”

Azerbaijani forces fired more than 1500 shots toward the Armenian positions – Defense Army

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 18 2018

Azerbaijani forces violated the ceasefire along the Line of Contact between Artsakh and Azerbaijan around 170 times for the period of August 12-18), firing more than 1,50 Saturday0 shots towards the Armenian defense positions from firearms of different calibers, the press service of the Artsakh Defense Ministry.

As the release details, apart from the mentioned ceasefire violations, on August 17, a 15-member group of Azerbaijani forces attempted an offensive toward the defense position of one of the military bases located at the norther section of the Line of Contact. Armenian border guards detected the offensive actions of the adversary on time and thwarted them to their starting positions. The defense Army suffered no losses as a result of the shooting.

Defense Army vanguard units continue inflicting their will at the frontline and continue confidently implementing their combat guard, the release concluded. 

Artsakh President, Armenia Chief of General Staff meet in Stepanakert

PanArmenian, Armenia
Aug 18 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) President Bako Sahakyan on Saturday, August 18 received head of the General Staff of Armenia Armed Forces Artak Davtyan, Sahakyan's office said.

Issues related to army building and cooperation between the two Armenian states were high on the agenda.

Artsakh defense minister Levon Mnatsakanyan also attended the meeting.

William Saroyan’s unpublished plays set for L.A. world premiere

PanArmenian, Armenia
Aug 18 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – Never-before-staged scenes from William Saroyan’s unpublished plays will be performed in a world premiere production at the Los Angeles Central Library’s Taper Auditorium on September 15, Asbarez reports.

“William Saroyan: The Unpublished Plays in Performance,” created by award-winning playwright and director Aram Kouyoumdjian, will be staged by Vista Players, “a boundlessly talented” ensemble that “set the standard by which others were judged” (Sacramento News & Review).

Kouyoumdjian was granted special permission by Stanford University, where Saroyan’s unpublished manuscripts are housed, to stage the excerpts. Selections from such works as “The Armenian Play (or Opera),” “Home to Hayastan,” and “Ouzenk Chouzenk Hai Yenk” (Like It or Not, We’re Armenians) will explore a wide array of themes, including immigrant life, the trauma of genocide, and the notion of repatriation.

The performance at the Central Library is being presented as part of the Library’s “L.A. Made” series and is co-sponsored by Los Angeles City Councilmember Paul Krekorian. Councilmember Krekorian will make a special presentation to the L.A. City Council on August 31 about Saroyan, as well as the commemorative Library event, which he is scheduled to attend.

August 31 marks the occasion of William Saroyan’s 110th birthday: the impetus to present the renowned playwright’s unknown works at venerated venues in Southern and Central California. The production is slated for additional performances in Fresno and in Orange County, as well as an encore performance in L.A.

Admission to the L.A. Central Library event is free, but seating is limited and will be offered on a first-come, first-served basis. Doors open at 6:30 pm, and the performance will begin at 7 p.m.

Saroyan is the pre-eminent Armenian-American author who rose to prominence in the 1930s and went on to have a prolific career for five decades. A writer of short stories, novels, plays, and memoirs, he won the Pulitzer Prize for his most famous dramatic work, “The Time of Your Life,” and an Academy Award for his screenplay of “The Human Comedy.”

Kouyoumdjian, who wrote his Master’s thesis on Saroyan’s unpublished plays, is the winner of Elly Awards for both playwriting (The Farewells) and directing (Three Hotels). His feature plays and solo pieces have been performed in half a dozen cities, from Los Angeles (Fountain Theatre) to London (Finborough Theatre). His most recent work has included an adaptation of Levon Shant’s Ancient Gods (2014); Happy Armenians (Los Angeles, 2015; Sacramento, 2016); and i Go On, an open-air, site-specific performance piece in conjunction with the iWitness installation of Genocide survivor portraits (DTLA’s Grand Park, 2015; Glendale Central Park, 2017).

Councilmember: Armenian American Museum will be a jewel in Glendale

PanArmenian, Armenia
Aug 18 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Armenian American Museum is going to be a jewel in Glendale, Councilwoman Paula Devine said when theGlendale City Council joined faith and community leaders this week in signing a “declaration of partnership” celebrating their work on the future museum, Los Angeles Times reports.

Museum and city officials inked the document during a joint press conference Wednesday following Glendale City Council’s unanimous approval of the ground lease agreement for the museum’s future site. The event was held on the second floor of the Downtown Central Library, overlooking the southwest corner of Central Park where the museum will be built.

“It’s great to be here on this momentous occasion,” said Glendale Mayor Zareh Sinanyan. “It is a proud day for the city of Glendale and we are excited that the Armenian American Museum’s future home is going to be in our city.”

Initially, the museum was going to be built on a 1.37-acre, city-owned parking lot at Mountain Street and Verdugo Road, but community push-back forced it to be relocated.

Councilwoman Paula Devine said Wednesday was “one of the proudest days of her life” in public service.

“The Armenian American Museum is going to be a jewel in our city and a world class center that we are all going to be proud of,” Devine said.

The $1-a-year ground lease agreement will be for 55 years with options to extend the lease term for four 10-year periods, for a maximum lease of 95 years. The current parking areas around Central Library and park will be turned into additional green space.

Construction on the 60,0000-square-foot, three-story museum will begin within the next year, once museum board members and city officials begin raising funds for the $100-million project and reviewing paperwork, said Berdj Karapetian, museum executive chairman.

The museum will also include a performing arts theater, a learning center, a demonstration kitchen and a café. A parking garage with 2,626 spaces will also be built.

“People from all walks of life will see that the citizens of Glendale led the charge for this marvelous building,” Karapetian said.

Museum officials will announce opportunities for the public to get involved with the project at a later date.

Councilman Vartan Gharpetian spoke about a portion of the museum being dedicated to the Armenian Genocide, the extermination of roughly 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire 103 years ago.

“As a descendant of a survivor of the Armenian Genocide, people ask me how did Armenians survive?” Gharpetian said. “First, we settled into an area we’re comfortable with. We build our churches first, then we build our schools and our cultural centers.

“This is a center for children, as well as present and future residents, to come in and learn about where Armenians came from and where we’re going,” Gharpetian said.

Councilman Ara Najarian, the self-described “Armenian from Ohio,” talked about how committed he would be to the museum.

“I intend to be an active partner because I am committed to this museum, and I will help make sure it is is done timely and with the full community’s support,” Najarian said.

“The museum will be a legacy for the next generation and we have taken a great step towards making the project a reality,” he said.

Iran stresses acceleration of 3rd Iran-Armenia power transmission line

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Aug 18 2018

TEHRAN, Aug. 18 (MNA) – Deputy Minister of Energy for electricity and energy affairs Homayoun Haeri met with Armenian Minister of Energy Infrastructures and Natural Resources Arthur Gregorian on Friday, during his two-day visit to Yerevan.

During the meeting, where Iran's Ambassador to Yerevan Kazem Sajjadi was also in attendance, Haeri said “taking timely measures for setting up the third power transmission line from Iran to Armenia is one of the most important parts of Iran-Armenia bilateral and multilateral cooperation.”

Pointing to the importance of economic transactions between the two countries, he stressed the need for the acceleration and finalization of the project.

Construction of the third high-voltage power transmission line from Iran to Armenia is an important part of energy cooperation between Iran, Armenia, Georgia and Russia, Haeri said, calling for further efforts by Sanir Co. and the Armenian power company to accelerate the process.

Gregorian, for his part, also referred to the fresh programs by the Armenian government to promote the interactions with the Islamic Republic of Iran, and said Yerevan is willing to implement agreements between the two countries to resolve and finalize the third power transmission line between the two countries.

He highly regarded Armenia’s ties with the Islamic Republic, expressing his government's willingness to implement the agreements.

Chess: Riga Tech University Open: Armenians on top

by Conrad Schormann
8/18/2018 – The Riga Tech University Open from August 6th to 12th was won by a pair of Armenian grandmasters: Robert Hovhannisyan and Manuel Petrosyan, each scoring 7½ / 9. Hovhannisyan was undefeated with six wins; Petrosyan scored a whopping seven wins, one loss and a draw. Among the trailing pack on 7 / 9 were the young and talented Russian GM Andrey Esipenko, and the German GM Rasmus Svane. | Photos: Tournament page

An impressive phalanx of young, strong grandmasters faced off at the RTU-Open in Latvia, among them the cream of the German crop: Bluebaum, Donchenko, Svane, Schroeder, Kollars — a series of (roughly) 2600s, which testifies that at the top of the German chess the "young savages" are gaining ground. In Riga they could expect both stronger opposition and a threefold higher prize fund (€15,000 euros) than in the German Championship.

Of this group, Svane performed the best with five wins and four draws to reach a tie for 3rd-9th places. The biggest piece of the prize cake was sliced off by two Armenians: Robert Hovhannisyan and Manuel Petrosyan landed in shared first with 7½ / 9, followed by local hero Igor Kovalenko and upcoming Russian star Andrey Esipenko among two of the seven players with 7/9.


The 16-year-old Esipenko is going to be one to watch in the coming years. He has been steadily moving up the ranks of the Top Juniors list — currently at number 18.

In the seventh round, he dismantled IM Cruz Lledo's dubious novelty 9…f5 in the Queen's Gambit Accepted.

Also in the seventh round, Hovhannisyan took down his main rival GM Igor Kovalenko with a killer blow: 

Petrosyan won his last three games to pull into a tie for first place including a fine effort in the last round against local Latvian GM Nikita Meshkovs.

White has been dutifully "playing for two results" and has managed to get his opponent into a position where he has no constructive moves. But 34…h6 proved to be quite destructive after the nice manoeuvre, 35.Nc3 Re5 36.Rxe5 Qxe5 37.Rd5! Qf6 38.Rf5, targeting the f7 pawn. Black is helpless.

For the German delegation, the tournament went pretty well. After two thirds she was closed on the upper ranks to find — with one exception: Matthias Bluebaum started poorly (2/4) and even had to look up to his father Karl-Ernst (Elo 2253) playing on a higher board. 

Alexander Donchenko missed with 5/6 in a superior position the jump to 6/7. He lost first the thread, then the game (see below) and ended finally with 6/9 in the "pocket money" prize group.
Dimitrij Kollars should be even less satisfied, as he scored 5/8 but lost the last round without a fight. He was in good company, however, with the prodigious new GM Praggnanandhaa among those in the 5/9 score group after he "castled" to finish the tournament — an indication of just how strong the RTU Open has become.

Kreisl, from Austria, scored his second GM-norm after pragmatically taking a short draw with white in the ninth round to finish with a performance of 2629.

Smithsonian: Artisan Master Classes Hope to Draw Travelers Into the Armenian Countryside

Smithsonian Magazine
Aug 17 2018

image: https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/PVWdP9FuT8NSogiF6cHbhPYgvfs=/800×600/filters:no_upscale():focal(1125×227:1126×228)/https://public-media.smithsonianmag.com/filer/0c/22/0c228668-90e1-40bb-9027-a63fa68ae91e/cover5.jpg

<img src=”“https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/PVWdP9FuT8NSogiF6cHbhPYgvfs=/800×600/filters:no_upscale():focal(1125×227:1126×228)/https://public-media.smithsonianmag.com/filer/0c/22/0c228668-90e1-40bb-9027-a63fa68ae91e/cover5.jpg” alt=“A carpet making “Master Class” in Armenia” itemprop=“image”> A carpet making master class run by the Getik Bed and Breakfast in eastern Armenia. (Getik B&B)

smithsonian.com
9:45AM
A small group of European travelers gather around Rusland Torosyan at his home in Armenia’s lakeside Martuni Village, where the cheesemaker is showing them how to make motal, a natural goat cheese that’s been prepared in the same traditional method for at least 5,000 years. Torosyan is one of a small number of Armenians still making the ancient cheese, and he’s condensed the three-month process into a 45-minute “master class” for visitors. He demonstrates how to knead wild local herbs like dill and tarragon into the naturally coagulated curds, which he then tightly presses into handmade terracotta bowls, seals the vessels with beeswax and places them upside down into ash. “It’s a distinctly regional process from start to finish,” says Torosyan’s sister Tanya, who works alongside her brother.

About 80 miles east of Yerevan, Armenia’s capital city, Martuni is part of eastern Armenia’s Gegharkunik region, a place known for its natural scenery: towering mountains and protected forests dotted with waterfalls and stunning river valleys. Travelers flock to the waters of Lake Sevan, the largest lake in Transcaucasia, and, in warmer months, bed down at a string of spa resorts and hotels throughout the area. Only a small number of travelers venture far from the lakeshore, though, and the summer busy season is fleeting. Torosyan and his local colleagues believe there’s a lot more in the region for visitors to experience.

In 2016, Torosyan joined several other local artisans and bed and breakfast business owners in a four-month program devoted to promoting cultural and ecotourism in Gegharkunik’s greater Chambarack area. (Chambarack is a larger town less than eight miles from Martuni.) Organized by Machanents Tourism and Art, an offshoot of the Armenian NGO Cross of Armenian Unity, the program offered workshops in creating visually attractive, multi-language business websites, classes on using online platforms like tripadvisor.com and airbnb.com and tips for building a network of culture-based tourism offerings designed to lure travelers deeper into the region.

Arpine Gyulumyan, runs Getik Bed and Breakfast, one of three participating family-run B&Bs in the area. “Ruslan and I work together,” she says. “He sends his guests to spend the night and to our classes. And I always take my guests to him to make motal cheese.”

Gyulumyan, who speaks the basics of multiple languages, opened her B&B four years ago as a way to earn extra income in the largely agricultural area. Guests stay in her family home, where they can choose from several simple-but-private bedrooms and join in as she whips up traditional dishes like meat-stuffed grape and cabbage leaves called tolmas (dolmas) and arishta, a fettuccine-like pasta typically mixed with butter and mushrooms. Guests are also welcome to participate in farming activities such as milking the cows. She also leads walking tours of the area, which is known for its forested ruins and artisan khachkars, elaborately carved cross-stones. The B&B has been successful enough that she recently opened a second nearby guest house, the Old Mill of Getik, that features an outdoor barbecue and terraces with mountain views.

image: https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/gbjZC09iERLuX_3fzAIBoUAgWRs=/1024×596/https://public-media.smithsonianmag.com/filer/9d/17/9d175b5e-4088-4ed1-a501-69bfebfe5433/022.jpg

<img src=”“https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/gbjZC09iERLuX_3fzAIBoUAgWRs=/1024×596/https://public-media.smithsonianmag.com/filer/9d/17/9d175b5e-4088-4ed1-a501-69bfebfe5433/022.jpg” alt=” ”> (Getik B&B)

The program’s other graduating participants include two more family-run guesthouses―Mher B&B and B&B Nune―and Bee World, a honey-centric agritourism farm that offers everything from honey tastings to apitherapy, an alternative therapy which incorporates bee products such as royal jelly and pollen into its treatments. Each of the businesses work in sync to create multi-day itineraries for area visitors, pulling together activities like horseback riding, fruit picking and even carpet making. “[Together], our ecotourism offerings make a great two-to-three day excursion from Yerevan,” says Tanya. “We give visitors the ability to buy cheeses and honey right on the farms where they’re made.”

While tourists already include a mix of local Armenians and international travelers from select areas of Russia, China and Europe (“This has to do with how and where our cheese was marketed when we sold it abroad,” Tanya says)―those promoting greater Chambarack’s cultural tourism efforts, like Torosyan and Gyulumyan, are hoping to start attracting visitors worldwide.

“The quality of our services has been increasing each year,” says Gyulumyan, “and with it our number of tourists. They’re realizing these aren’t the types of experiences they can get in big hotels or cities.”

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/motal-cheese-leading-ecotourism-efforts-armenias-agricultural-east-180970054/


After 100 days, what’s new in the “new Armenia”?

EurasiaNet.org
Aug 17 2018

The new government's young team is pursuing an ambitious housecleaning, thrilling its core supporters but raising questions about overreach.

Armenia's new prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, commemorates the 100th anniversary of the first Republic of Armenia on May 28. (primeminister.am)

August 17 marks 100 days since Nikol Pashinyan became prime minister of Armenia by bloodlessly overthrowing the crooked old regime. The self-styled “Velvet Revolution” captured the world's attention and gave Armenians, cynical after so many years in a stagnant country, hope.

Pashinyan plans to mark the occasion by returning to his revolutionary roots, holding a rally in Yerevan's Republic Square. This was the site of his nightly rallies in April, some of which attracted more than 100,000 supporters, which ultimately convinced former leader Serzh Sargsyan to step down.

“I feel really happy for the opportunity to meet with you again in the square where we all together conducted the revolution of love and solidarity,” Pashinyan said in a Facebook video address inviting Armenians to the rally. “It's important to have a conversation about what has happened in Armenia in the last 100 days and what's going to happen in the near future.”

Three months into the “new Armenia” – as Pashinyan calls it – Armenians, for the most part, seem to like what they see. A broad anti-corruption campaign is targeting business, mostly connected to members of the old administration charged with evading taxes. Another campaign is bringing criminal charges against former officials for one of the darkest events in recent Armenian history, the killing of peaceful protesters in 2008. Government posts are occupied by fresh, uncorrupted faces.

“We have solved our main task in this 100 days, which was ensuring the normal functioning of the country in the post-revolutionary period and the continuous development of the economy,” Pashinyan said in an August 16 preview of his rally speech.

But there are also growing concerns – that the anti-corruption campaign is selective and lacks a long-term goal, that the 2008 prosecutions are too politicized, that the young government members are inexperienced amateurs. Some of Pashinyan’s core, socially liberal supporters are unsure about the new government's commitment to their causes.

But those concerns are mainly limited to the chattering classes. Reliable opinion polls are scarce, but anecdotal data suggests Pashinyan’s popularity remains strong. T-shirts depicting his profile, along with his signature baseball cap, are still common sights.

An informal survey of pensioners and others idling away a recent afternoon on park benches next to Republic Square found unqualified support for Pashinyan.

“There's a point to life now,” said Ara Martirosyan. “I'm 60 years old, and for 30 years it's like I wasn't living. They were stealing all of our wealth and we need to deal with that. They were billionaires and we're beggars. It's not fair.”

Martirosyan allowed some concerns about the youth and inexperience of much of Pashinyan's new government. “Maybe some of them aren't ready,” he said. “But they're making the right steps. They work for the people now, and if they start to be corrupt, the KGB will deal with it.”

Fighting corruption

The dual campaigns against corrupt businesses and former officials have been savvy political moves, said Anahit Shirinyan, a Yerevan-based fellow at the British think tank Chatham House. “Pashinyan’s government needs to demonstrate quick results, and fighting systematic tax avoidance, embezzlement and misuse [of public funds] is one way to do it,” she told Eurasianet.

The anti-corruption campaign has targeted a number of businesses – mainly associated with members of the former government – which had allegedly been shirking taxes or avoiding inspections. The State Revenue Committee also has announced it will monitor that small businesses issue sales receipts, to ensure they are recording revenue accurately. Several members of the formerly ruling Republican Party have been targets of high-profile investigations into their apparently ill-gotten wealth. A televised raid on the home of a Republican member of parliament, showing his pet tiger and preserved food that schoolchildren had sent to soldiers on the front lines, shocked the nation.

There has been some resistance: Eleven large business groups, including some associated with the families of members of parliament, wrote an open letter to Pashinyan complaining about the crackdown, saying it violated previous arrangements with the authorities. Pashinyan responded forcefully on his Facebook page, calling on consumers to boycott “the robbers and the corrupt, who want to prove […] that illegality is better than lawfulness.”

Pashinyan also has pointed to the anti-corruption campaign in his efforts to attract new foreign investment, one of his key campaign promises. At a July 27 business summit in St. Petersburg, Pashinyan argued that, thanks to the campaign, “all kinds of obstacles have been eliminated” for foreign investors.

But some have questioned whether eliminating obstacles is enough, and whether rounding up corrupt officials is a crowd-pleasing move without a broader development strategy behind it.

“The anti-corruption campaign is a crucial part of our economic plan but it is not enough,” said Artak Manukyan, an economist in Yerevan. “Creating a new economic model based on fairness is important – without this you can’t have positive long-term economic expectations – but bringing in investment requires much more.”

There have been efforts to attract investment, in particular from Armenia's global diaspora. No new significant ventures have been announced, but officials say they are working on it. Diaspora minister Mkhitar Hayrapetyan recently toured diaspora centers in the United States: Los Angeles, New York, and Boston.

“I assured our compatriots that in the new Armenia no old traditions exist; anyone, no matter who he is, can never demand a 'share' from another's business, to exert pressure on the courts,” Hayrapetyan told Eurasianet.

The ministry also has launched a grant program to bring startups to Armenia, offering awards of up to $30,000 and working space for promising proposals in order to “boost the startup ecosystem in the country.” The ministry also is mooting the idea of “diaspora bonds” to channel money that wealthy diasporans currently put into charity towards supporting the Armenian state budget instead.

“The first signs from the new government have been positive, with the government announcing a focus on increased tech and public-private partnerships,” said Areg Gevorgyan, business development manager at the startup incubator Innovative Solutions and Technologies Center. “There’s a big change in the willingness of investors to invest in Armenia again. Literally a week after the revolution, I got a call for a $10 million project from a diaspora Armenian. This message was ‘we are sure that our investments are secure and we believe in the revolution.’”

Reckoning with 2008

The investigations into the events of March 1, 2008, have made an even bigger splash than the anti-corruption campaign. Former president Robert Kocharyan was arrested, a former defense minister has been declared wanted, and another senior military official charged, all on counts related to the violent response to demonstrations against fraudulent election results that brought Sargsyan to power

The prosecutions have been widely popular. “It's not only justified, they haven't gone far enough,” said Martirosyan, the pensioner. “Ninety-nine percent of people in Armenia hate the old government,” said Arkady, another man spending the afternoon in the park, who asked that only his first name be used. “They were all criminals.”

Pashinyan has gained political capital from the prosecutions, Shirinyan said. “For the majority, it’s a real test for the government. March 1 broke the backbone of the Armenian political society.” But she added that she didn't consider them to be politicized. “Not to pursue this case would also be a political decision,” she said. “People would be saying, 'We had 10 dead and nobody is punished.'”

Ruben Carranza, who runs the Reparative Justice program at the International Center for Transitional Justice, an New York-based NGO, recently visited Armenia and met several senior officials, including Pashinyan, to discuss the prosecutions.

Carranza said he saw the recent charges against Kocharyan and other high-profile officials of the former regime as “almost a response to [the] expectations” of Pashinyan’s supporters. “While it’s important to respond to expectations, it’s equally important to manage these expectations, satisfying demand for justice in a broader sense,” he said.

In meetings with the new government, Carranza said he stressed that while it’s one thing to investigate individuals, it’s important to help people understand that abuses committed by an individual are connected to larger networks of corruption and human rights violations. “One question that comes out of these prosecutions right now is if the evidence justifies charging these former officials. To [Pashinyan’s] credit, I think that there’s an understanding of that,” said Carranza. “He was very conscious that these prosecutions were not seen as acts of revenge.”

Amateur hour?

One of the most eye-catching features of the new government has been the youth of some of its highest-ranking figures. Hayrapetyan is 27, Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan and Pashinyan's chief of staff Eduard Aghajanyan are both 29. The government has presented this as primarily a caretaker team until a new government is formed after elections, which are expected in the next few months.

The new leadership tends to “prefer loyalty more than bringing in established professionals, and after the election they will be under more scrutiny,” Shirinyan said.

Still, the relative inexperience of many of the key figures has occasioned some complaints that the team is too green to handle the challenge of guiding Armenia through the difficult straits it's in. Foreign policy has been a particular sore spot. During a high-profile visit to Brussels, Pashinyan appeared to have unrealistic expectations about what aid Western countries would provide, prompting many in Yerevan to cringe.

Konstantin Ter-Nakalyan, the editor of the commentary website blognews.am, said he had yet to make up his mind whether or not “[Pashinyan] is good but he has a bad team,” or “both Pashinyan and his team are a catastrophe and pose a threat to national security,” he wrote in a Facebook post. “That Nikol's team is a natural disaster is already an axiomatic fact, so I want to believe that we are dealing with the first option.”

One of the more notable personnel moves was Pashinyan's Civil Contract party’s nominee for Yerevan mayor: Hayk Marutyan, a well-known comedian with little political experience.

“The current interim government is here to mobilize for the parliamentary elections and consolidate its agenda,” said Sona Ghazaryan, an activist who led one of the youth movements that supported Pashinyan. “But I was somewhat disappointed by their choice of mayoral candidate – this should be a revolution of ideas, not of personalities.”

But supporters of the government say that the experience of the old administration was not helpful.

“The problem is that there were very experienced rogues, experienced corrupt officials,” under Sargsyan, said First Deputy Prime Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, himself 35, in an interview with Voice of America's Armenian service. "So, is it better to bring in inexperienced newcomers, who have good values and will do everything … to implement these values? Or is it better to be a hostage of experienced rogues and corrupt officials? For me, the answer is obvious.”

Grigor Yeritsyan, the executive director of the Armenian Progressive Youth NGO, another protest leader, agrees. “In my opinion political experience is less relevant right now than commitment to values,” he said. “We need values to change our country. Young people and particularly young women are not part of the corrupt system that’s been in place for decades – they have no institutional memory of the kleptocracy that was in place. This is a judgement-free, forward-looking generation now taking charge. Of course experience is also important, but that can be learned.”

Youth is served

Young people were among the key leaders of the uprising that brought Pashinyan to power, and Yeritsyan said he has been pleased with the new government’s engagement in youth issues. “We had never had a deputy minister at our events before but [Deputy Minister of Sport and Youth Affairs Kristine Asatryan] has been with us two or three times now,” he said. “This signals to us that the government is now willing to work with the youth.”

The government has indicated that it intends to walk back the Nation-Army Concept, a package of legislation aimed at bringing the military into more parts of society. It was the subject of student protests last year because it attempted to weaken university students’ right to postpone military conscription. But newly appointed National Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan has said that the concept and its associated policies have been failures.

Many of Pashinyan's young, liberal, supporters have been disheartened by the government's response to a mob attack on LGBT activists in a village in southern Armenia. The episode posed a tricky political dilemma for the government, which has to not only keep the support of liberals but of the country's large socially conservative majority. The government has for the most part kept quiet, other than a statement from the ombudsman’s office six days after the incident.

Some activists have alleged that the attacks are part of a pattern on the part of revanchist members of the old government to rile up conservatives against Pashinyan. “The previous government is now putting pressure on Pashinyan’s government and spreading false information,” said Mamikon Hovsepyan, a leading LGBT activist. “Their main strategy is connecting the government with issues the public are largely opposed to, chief among these being issues relating to LGBT rights.”

Nevertheless, Hovsepyan said his allies remain supportive of the new authorities. “As a government, they haven’t really pushed through any changes in terms of policy,” he said. “But the LGBT community is more or less positive. The government no longer makes hate speech, which is a very important shift. In addition, there are a lot of LGBT-friendly members of government and some of them condemn attacks against LGBT [people] on their personal social media accounts – something that was unthinkable under Republican leadership.”

Of course, 100 days is too little time to accurately assess a government's performance, and most supporters say they remain optimistic even if they've seen relatively few results so far.

“I’m patient but I’m also practical, and I know the government needs to start showing us tangible results,” said Yeritsyan, the youth activist. “People want larger salaries, opportunities and the right to live a better life. Optimism cannot feed you forever.”

“We hope it will be better, but we can't be 100 percent sure,” said Arkady, one of the men idling in the park. “But we can say 100 percent: Whatever happens will be better than the last government.”

Grigor Atanesian is a freelance journalist who covers Armenia. Bradley Jardine is a freelance journalist who covers the Caucasus. Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at Eurasianet, and author of The Bug Pit.

CAUCASUS BLOG: But Mr Pashinian, Putin may not want the new “ancient Greece” on his doorstep…

BNE IntelliNews
Aug 17 2018


The sudden rise of Pashinian (left) almost certainly even came as a big surprise to Putin.
By Will Conroy in Prague

‘People’s Prime Minister’ Nikol Pashinian delivered a spirited speech to tens of thousands who on August 17, the day that marked his first 100 days in office, filled Republic Square in the Armenian capital of Yerevan.

In scenes reminiscent of the “velvet” revolutionary times of April and May, when the government was toppled in the face of huge, relentless crowds that packed out the central square day after day, and refused to budge, Pashinian addressed an impassioned audience—and made the striking claim that his administration had established the kind of “people’s direct rule” that once existed in ancient Greece.

In a speech that lasted more than an hour, Pashinian said the international community still failed to grasp what had happened in Armenia, saying: “In Armenia, there is no coalition government. In Armenia, there is no parliamentary majority. In Armenia, supreme power directly belongs to the people and the people carry out direct rule. This is the key meaning of the revolution that took place in Armenia.”

And he didn’t stop there. For anyone who didn’t get just how unprecedented the changes in Armenia were, he went on to describe Republic Square as the “supreme body of the people’s rule,” adding: “This means that from now on this government will be accountable to this square, will obey this square, and all key decisions must be made here at this square… In the future, the Republic of Armenia could be cited in the historical context just like ancient Greece is cited now and Yerevan could be cited like ancient Athens.”

Nagging feeling
By all accounts, the 43-year-old Pashinian’s performance was infectious, but a quick read through the online debates among Armenians and the far-flung Armenian diaspora makes it clear that there is a nagging feeling out there that the Kremlin is looking askance. Pashinian may be in the driver’s seat pushing the pedal of anti-cronyism and anti-corruption to the floor, but just lately Moscow has shown signs of becoming something of an argumentative back seat driver.

The “people’s democracy” that Pashinian is seeking to build in the small, impoverished nation of Armenia—a country of just 2.9mn people—clearly bears no resemblance to the highly centrally controlled ‘authoritarian democracy’ that holds sway in the giant neighbour to the north. Might Moscow have started worrying that the Armenians are beginning to set a rather ‘bad example’ to those reformist Russians who would dearly like to see the awakening of a threatening level of resistance to their illiberal state?

On July 31, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stepped forward and communicated that Moscow was "concerned". Concerned, that is, that Armenia's new government was making politically motivated anti-corruption moves against members of the dislodged establishment.

Referring to how on July 27 former Armenian president Robert Kocharyan had been arrested on charges of violently putting down the “Marti mek” (March 1) protests against his successor Serzh Sargsyan that took place in 2008 [Editor’s note—Kocharyan was two weeks later freed by Armenia’s Court of Appeals after a decision condemned by Armenia’s Special Investigative Service (SIS) as “illegal”], Lavrov added: "The events of the last few days… contradict the recent declarations of the new Armenian leadership that it was not planning to pursue its predecessors on political grounds."

An “interest in the stability of the Armenian state”
More ominously, Lavrov also remarked that "Moscow, as an ally of Yerevan, has always had an interest in the stability of the Armenian state, and therefore what is happening there must be of concern to us," and concluded that his ministry had raised its concerns with the Armenian leadership and was hoping for a "constructive" response.

Once an activist jailed by the Armenian regime dominated by the Republican Party (HHK), and a former newspaper editor and opposition MP, Pashinian is nothing if not ambitious. On taking office he wasted no time in firing the country’s police chief and national security advisor, while on the eve of becoming prime minister he stated categorically that he would not be tolerating any oligarchs in his government or be allowing monopolies to operate in the Armenian economy. Just imagine what Russian-Armenian networks of power, influence and gain have been exposed or broken by that little pledge.

Not that Armenia doesn’t need a radical cleanse. As bne IntelliNews reported in early May, Armenia places 129th in Jeffrey Sachs’ World Happiness Report 2018, which makes Armenians one of the unhappiest nations in the world. Among things that make Armenians unhappy are corruption, low incomes and social injustice. Anti-graft watchdog Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index 2016 ranks Armenia as 113th of 176 countries, which makes it one of the most corrupt countries in the world. The Legatum Prosperity Index 2017’s sub-component of Economic Quality, meanwhile, places Armenia 114th out of 149 countries. Corruption is a cancer, the economy, dominated by the local strongmen, has underperformed and this country with an ancient history and a vibrant youth has grown deeply frustrated that talented people are simply unable to realise their potential.

But the self-made Pashinian, whose look and manner are informal and oriented to the younger generations, must know that he has come as a shock to the elites who previously ruled the roost—and he must know that any strategic move he makes, including the tentative steps he has taken so far to achieve better relations with the EU and Nato, will matter greatly to Moscow.

Quick to make nice
Pashinian was indeed quick to make nice with President Vladimir Putin, meeting the Russian leader in Russia’s Black Sea resort of Sochi on his first trip abroad since becoming PM and promising him that close Russo-Armenian ties would endure, and stating: “We have things to discuss, but there are also things that do not need any discussion. That is the strategic relationship of allies between Armenia and Russia. … I can assure you that in Armenia there is a consensus and nobody has ever doubted the importance of the strategic nature of Armenian-Russian relations.”

Armenia is of course locked in a decades-long conflict with its neighbour Azerbaijan over breakaway enclave Nagorno-Karabakh and Moscow, which has military bases in Armenia, has acted as a guarantor of security. That’s nothing to be sniffed at. Russia, moreover, sells arms to both countries and maintains a military presence in Armenia near Turkey—a powerful ally of Azerbaijan that does not have diplomatic relations with Yerevan.

All in all, Pashinian made a convincing start in persuading Russia—which reacted harshly to the revolutions in Ukraine and Georgia—that it would not be foolish in wishing him on his way and letting him head back to Armenia to make his own choices on what freedoms to offer his people. But nerves that were steady before have been rattled—along with having to decipher Lavrov’s slightly menacing words, Armenians were discomfited on July 17 when locally-based Russian troops carried out a military exercise in Panik village, Shirak Province, without giving notice to Armenian officials, causing some panic among the locals. And Pashinian, it seems, is actively attempting to quell any unease in the Kremlin.

Telephoned Putin
On August 16, Pashinian telephoned Putin to discuss activities of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). A bland enough assignment you might think—but it takes on that much more urgency when you bear in mind that the current CSTO secretary general, Yuri Khachaturov, Armenia’s former top army general, is facing criminal charges in Armenia related to the Marti mek crackdown a decade ago.

The Kremlin, noting that the conversation was initiated by Pashinian, said in a statement that the two men discussed bilateral relations between their countries and their “interaction in common integration structures and the CSTO framework in particular”. It remains to be seen whether Russia will tolerate the appointing of another Armenian chief of the military alliance of six former Soviet republics. The Russian foreign ministry has insisted that Khachaturov goes through a formal dismissal before that will even be considered.

Prior to Pashinian’s reaching out to Putin, on August 10, while visiting Armenia’s northern Tavush province, the Armenian leader reportedly came across as unfazed when answering questions on Lavrov’s remarks. “I think that this is a different situation,” he told reporters, according to the Armenian service of RFE/RL. “All of us, including our Russian partners, need to adapt to this situation. So everything is normal.”

Pashinian had more soothing words for Moscow in his ‘100 days’ address. While dismissing claims that his officials are scaring away investors with audits and undermining Armenia’s strategic relationship with Russia, he said. “I can say for sure that Russo-Armenian relations are not only not bad but … are good and will get even better.”

Whatever his more nuanced feelings may be, Pashinian will surely know that he’s in a game of realpolitik and that Putin’s officials will pick through the entirety of his speech with an unerring eye.