Monday,
Pashinian Coy About Resignation Date
• Karlen Aslanian
• Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian kisses an Armenian national flag at an
event held in Aragatsotn province, 7 October 2018.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Monday that he has not yet decided when
to step down and thus pave the way for snap parliamentary elections sought by
him and his supporters.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Monday that he has not yet decided when
to step down and thus pave the way for snap parliamentary elections sought by
him and his supporters.
He insisted only that that the elections must be held in December.
Under Armenia’s constitution, such a vote can be called only if the prime
minister resigns and lawmakers fail to elect his or her successor in the next
two weeks.
Pashinian pledged to tender his resignation “in the coming days” when thousands
of his supporters rallied outside the parliament building in Yerevan on October
2. They protested against a controversial bill that could complicate the
dissolution of the National Assembly.
Speaking to reporters on Monday, Pashinian was asked whether he has already
made a decision on his resignation. “No, I haven’t” he replied. “If it was just
up to me I would have already resigned. But since the public’s reaction is very
vehement we need to once again think about that scenario.”
“But the pre-term elections must be held in December,” added the premier.
Former President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), which
controls nearly half of the parliament seats, made clear, meanwhile, that it
remains opposed to the holding of the elections in December. The HHK’s
parliamentary leader, Vahram Baghdasarian, said he can only “guarantee” that it
will not nominate or back another prime-ministerial candidate if Pashinian
agrees to delay the vote until next May or April.
Baghdasarian also indicated that the former ruling party is open to compromise
deals with the popular premier. “We are inclined to resume the negotiation
process from where it stopped … And a negotiation means consensus, it means
mutual concessions,” he told a news conference.
The HHK’s stance on the election issue was backed until the end of last week by
the second largest parliamentary force, the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK). The
latter also said that political forces should have more time to prepare for the
vote and amend the Electoral Code.
But late on Thursday the BHK leader, Gagik Tsarukian, signaled his readiness to
accept Pashinian’s demands. “If the people want the pre-term parliamentary
elections to be held in December then so do we,” he said in televised remarks.
Pashinian praised those remarks. He revealed that he and Tsarukian reached a
“common understanding” at a meeting held on Sunday. He said that they will meet
again later on Monday.
Russian-Armenian Alliance Still Going Strong, Says Moscow
• Aza Babayan
Russia - President Vladimir Putin (R) meets with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol
Pashinian in Moscow, 8 September 2018.
Russia and Armenia have continued to deepen their already close relationship
since the dramatic regime change in Yerevan, a senior Russian diplomat said in
a newspaper interview published on Monday.
Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin played down the impact on bilateral
ties of what he described as continuing political instability in the South
Caucasus state.
“You know that after the political changes in Armenia the traditionally
intensive Russian-Armenian dialogue continued at the highest and high levels,”
Karasin told the Moscow daily “Izvestia.” “In a matter of months there were
three meetings between Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Russian Federation
President Vladimir Putin and two meetings with Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.
Our leaders spoke by phone for several times.”
“We see the main political result of these contacts in the confirmation of the
unchanged policy of further strengthening Russian-Armenian allied relations in
both the bilateral format and within the framework of common integration
structures: the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), the Eurasian
Economic Union (EEU) and the CIS.”
“Despite the continuation of certain internal political instability in Armenia,
a systematic joint effort is underway in concrete directions of
[Russian-Armenian] cooperation,” added Karasin.
As a lawmaker opposed to the administration of President Serzh Sarkisian,
Pashinian was very critical of Armenia’s membership in the Russian-led blocs.
But he swiftly ruled out any change in the country’s traditional foreign policy
orientation after launching mass protests that forced Sarkisian into
resignation in late April. Meeting with Putin in Moscow in June, the
43-year-old premier pledged to make Russian-Armenian ties even “more special.”
However, the new Armenian authorities subsequently provoked a rare diplomatic
dispute with Moscow when they prosecuted former President Robert Kocharian and
the CSTO’s current secretary general, Yuri Khachaturov, on charges stemming
from the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov denounced the criminal cases as
politically motivated. For his part, Putin made a point of telephoning
Kocharian to congratulate him on his 64th birthday anniversary in late August.
Pashinian downplayed the Russian moves before again visiting Moscow and meeting
Putin on September 8. He declared after those talks that relations between the
two nations are “brilliant.”
Pashinian, Tsarukian Reach Election Deal
Armenia - Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian and Prime Minister
Nikol Pahinian sign a memorandum in Yerevan, 8 October, 2018
One week after being driven out of Armenia’s governing coalition, Prosperous
Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian committed himself on Monday to
helping Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian force snap general elections in December.
In a joint memorandum signed after a meeting in Yerevan, the two men said they
“concur regarding the conduct of pre-term parliamentary elections” before the
end of this year. The document says that the BHK will therefore not nominate or
endorse any other candidate for the post of prime minister after Pashinian’s
widely anticipated resignation.
The Armenian constitution stipulates that that the 105-member National
Assembly, in which the BHK holds 31 seats, can be dissolved only if lawmakers
fail to elect another premier in case of that resignation. Pashinian has
pledged to step down to ensure that fresh polls are held in December.
As recently as on October 2 Tsarukian’s party helped former President Serzh
Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK) push through a bill that could complicate
the success of Pashinian’s plans. The premier reacted furiously to the
development, accusing the BHK and another coalition partner, Dashnaktsutyun, of
involvement in a “counterrevolutionary” conspiracy. He also scrapped his
power-sharing agreements with the two parties reached in May.
BHK representatives said that the fresh elections should be held in May or
June, rather than in December. Like HHK leaders, they argued that political
forces need time to amend the Electoral Code and properly prepare for the
ballot.
Tsarukian signaled a change of this position in a televised interview aired
early on October 5. “If the people want the pre-term parliamentary elections to
be held in December then so do we,” he said.
Pashinian hailed that statement at the start of Monday’s meeting with
Tsarukian. “It was obvious from the content of your interview that we have
something to discuss,” he said in remarks publicized by his office.
Tsarukian, who is also a wealthy businessman, stressed for his part that he and
his party supported the Pashinian-led “revolution” that toppled Armenia’s
previous government headed by Sarkisian. “Nobody expected that Serzh Sarkisian
will resign,” the tycoon told Pashinian. “I told the people then that I stand
with you.”
Sarkisian’s HHK controls around half of the parliament seats. The former ruling
party remains opposed to holding the elections in December. But it has yet to
clarify whether it will try to install another prime minister if Pashinian
tenders his tactical resignation this month.
Armenian Tycoon Arrested
• Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Businessman Samvel Mayrapetian at the official opening of his Toyota
car dealership in Yerevan, 23 June 2009.
A wealthy Armenian businessman who has benefited from government connections in
the past was arrested at the weekend for reasons that remained unknown on
Monday.
“We can confirm that Samvel Mayrapetian was arrested,” a spokeswoman for
Armenia’s Special Investigative Service (SIS) told RFE/RL’s Armenian service
(Azatutyun.am). “But in the interests of the investigation we cannot give any
details at the moment.”
The official, Marina Ohanjanian, would not say what Mayrapetian is accused or
suspected of.
Under Armenian law, law-enforcement authorities have three days to formally
charge or free detainees. As of Monday evening, it was not clear if the SIS has
brought any accusations against Mayrapetian.
The businessman is one of the country’s leading real estate developers who also
owns a national TV channel and a car dealership. His company was involved in a
controversial redevelopment of old districts in downtown Yerevan during the
1998-2008 rule of President Robert Kocharian.
Media outlets critical of the former government for years linked Kocharian’s
elder son Sedrak to the Toyota dealership officially belonging to Mayrapetian.
Kocharian is currently under investigation over his role in the deadly breakup
of post-election demonstrations in Yerevan staged during the final weeks of his
decade-long presidency. Last month, the National Security Service (NSS), a more
powerful law-enforcement body, launched a separate corruption inquiry into the
embattled ex-president.
The NSS director, Artur Vanetsian, said on September 11 that investigators are
scrutinizing what he described as hundreds of millions of dollars worth of
assets belonging to Kocharian and his family members. Vanetsian promised two
weeks later that their findings will be made public “soon.”
Kocharian has denied enriching himself or his family while in office and
accused the current Armenian authorities of waging a political “vendetta”
against him. He has only admitted that his two sons are engaged in
entrepreneurial activity.
Sedrak Kocharian reportedly filed a defamation suit against Vanetsian last
month.
Press Review
(Saturday, September 6)
“Zhamanak” dismisses arguments that fresh parliamentary elections must not be
held now because in that case Armenia’s parliament will be completely dominated
by a single political force. The paper says that the freedom and fairness of
the elections is more important than their outcome. “If the public gives an
overwhelming mandate to a single force that is not a tragedy at all,” it says,
adding that many democracies around the world are governed by one party.
“Democracy doesn’t suffer from that,” continues the paper. “Democracy suffers
from vote rigging, restrictions on liberties, corruption, a lack of public
oversight institutions.”
“Before the velvet revolution voters were not allowed to express their opinions
because the HHK, which had unlimited power, was sure that it would not be
serious to leave an important issue such as elections to the people,” writes
“Haykakan Zhamanak.” “Now that voters have an opportunity to freely elect their
candidate, as was the case in the municipal elections in Yerevan, the HHK makes
the following argument: the people are euphoric. It would not be fair to say
that there is no post-revolutionary euphoria. There is euphoria and it will
persist as long as Armenia’s citizens see the risk of a return [to power] of
Robert Kocharian or the HHK.”
“Obviously, the Republicans do not want to give up their parliament seats
because they are well aware that they will not be present in the next National
Assembly,” writes “Zhoghovurd.” “And so they take every opportunity to speak
out against holding pre-term elections.” The paper rejects HHK claims that
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is violating the Armenian constitution in his
push for the fresh polls. Pointing to the October 2 rally outside the
parliament building in Yerevan, it says that such a vote is demanded not just
by Pashinian but also “the people.” The paper also dismisses HHK calls for a
multi-party dialogue on the issue. A party that has long violated the
constitution has no moral right to allege unconstitutional actions by others,
it says.
(Artur Papian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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