Wednesday,
Armenian Authorities Rule Out Referendum Fraud
• Gayane Saribekian
• Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks at an election campaign rally in
Masis, December 3, 2018.
Armenia’s political leadership has insisted that it will not resort to fraud and
use government levers to win the upcoming referendum on controversial
constitutional changes sought by it.
“I would rather cut off my two hands than allow the falsification of a single
vote because that would mean erasing the entire life lived by us and all those
values which we stand for,” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian declared during a
referendum campaign fundraiser held by his Civil Contract Party in Yerevan late
on Tuesday.
Pashinian again defended his administration’s push to oust the chairman and six
other judges of Armenia’s nine-member Constitutional Court through the proposed
amendments. He said that they do not “represent the people” and hamper
far-reaching political reforms in the country.
Critics dismiss this explanation, saying that Pashinian is simply seeking to
fill the country’s highest court with his loyalists.
The fundraiser, which journalists were not allowed to attend, marked the
official start of the ruling party’s campaign for a “Yes” vote in the referendum
scheduled for April 5. The campaign is managed by the party’s nominal chairman,
Minister for Local Government Suren Papikian.
Armenia -- Minister for Local Government Suren Papikian at a news conference in
Yerevan, .
Papikian said on Wednesday that Pashinian and other Civil Contract figures
holding senior positions in the central and local governments will be actively
campaigning for a referendum victory in the coming weeks. He promised that
Pashinian’s political team will not use its administrative resources to secure
around 650,000 votes needed for the adoption of the constitutional amendments.
Papikian said that government officials abusing their powers for that purpose
would be “strictly punished.” “Let nobody, be it a city or village mayor, do the
authorities such a disservice,” he told a news conference. “We don’t need that.”
Armenia’s former leadership routinely pressured public sector employees and
exploited its administrative resources otherwise to win elections and
referendums marred by fraud allegations. Its election campaigns were usually
managed by Hovik Abrahamian, a once influential minister for local government
who also served as prime minister from 2014-2016 during President Serzh
Sarkisian’s rule.
Some bitter critics of the current government have speculated that Papikian,
whose ministry oversees Armenian provincial administrations and local government
bodies, will take advantage of his post in a similar fashion.
The 33-year-old minister categorically ruled out such a possibility. “Please do
not compare me to Hovik Abrahamian,” he said. “I see no similarities apart from
the position held by us.”
Pashinian Unhappy With Results Of Corruption Probes
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with senior law-enforcement
officials, Yerevan, .
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian criticized on Wednesday the results of corruption
investigations conducted by Armenian law-enforcement authorities during his
rule, saying that so far they have recovered only up to $80 million in “funds
stolen from the state.”
Pashinian said the sum makes up a fraction of the financial “damage which
Armenia has suffered in the last 30 years as a consequence of corruption-related
crimes.”
“Can we guarantee that the law-enforcement system is now fully and
wholeheartedly performing … its functions in the fight against corruption?
Unfortunately, I cannot give a definitely positive answer [to this question,]”
he said at a meeting with the heads of Armenia’s law-enforcement agencies.
“Armenia has suffered billions of dollars worth of damage as a result of corrupt
activities of high-ranking officials, and I, as the leader of Armenia, received
a popular mandate also for my pledges to recover those billions,” he told them.
“So I expect the law-enforcement bodies to live up … to our people’s just
expectations.”
Pashinian complained that investigators have failed to prevent some corruption
suspects from fleeing the country and to find evidence of current or former
state officials’ connection to illegally acquired assets. In that context, he
spoke of “traitors in the highest echelons of the law-enforcement system” who he
said had ulterior goals.
Pashinian did not name names in his opening remarks at the meeting publicized by
his press office. The office released no details of his ensuing discussion the
top security officials. It said only that they discussed “further steps in the
fight against corruption.”
Pashinian has repeatedly claimed to have eliminated “systemic corruption” in
Armenia after coming to power in the 2018 “Velvet Revolution.” The number of
corruption cases brought by Armenian law-enforcement authorities has risen
significantly since the dramatic change of government. The most high-profile of
these cases have involved former top government officials and individuals linked
to them.
Armenia has improved its position in an annual survey of corruption perceptions
around the world conducted by Transparency International. It ranked, together
with Bahrain and the Solomon Islands, 77th out of 180 countries and territories
evaluated in the Berlin-based watchdog’s 2019 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI)
released last month.
Armenians Evacuated From Coronavirus-Hit Iran
• Susan Badalian
Armenia -- Armenian citizens flown back from Iran are seen at Yerevan airport,
.
Fifty-two Armenians were evacuated from Iran on Wednesday as the Islamic
Republic continued to grapple with the spread of coronavirus.
The Armenian nationals arrived at Yerevan’s Zvartnots airport on a special
flight from Tehran arranged by the Armenian government. They wore medical masks
and received guidance from medics deployed by the Ministry of Health at the
airport’s arrivals section.
Another medic was on the plane that brought them back to Armenia. None of the
passengers was said to have a fever or other potential coronavirus symptoms.
The evacuees were not placed under quarantine. Health authorities instead
collected their contact details and pledged to regularly monitor their condition.
“There is more panic here [than in Iran,]” one of the evacuees told reporter at
Zvartnots.
Armenia plans to evacuate more of its citizens from Iran with another special
flight scheduled for Friday.
The Armenian government decided on Monday to suspend regular flights between the
two countries and close the Armenian-Iranian border for individual travel for at
least two weeks. The border will remain for open cargo shipments.
According to the Armenian Health and Labor Inspectorate, 155 Iranian truck
drivers and 11 other persons crossed into Armenia on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Armenian health officials briefly examined their condition at the border
checkpoint and detected no suspected cases of the virus, said the government
agency.
Iran -- An Iranian woman wears a protective mask at a drug store in Tehran,
.
Iranian authorities reported on Wednesday that 139 people have been infected by
coronavirus in Iran and 19 of them have died so far. This is the highest number
of deaths from coronavirus outside China, where the virus emerged in late 2019.
Kuwait, Iraq, Bahrain, Oman, Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates and Afghanistan
have all reported cases of coronavirus involving people who traveled to Iran.
No cases have been reported in Armenia. The authorities in Yerevan say they are
continuing to take precautionary measures against the possible spread of the
virus.
In a related development, the Armenian Defense Ministry on Wednesday temporarily
banned visits by relatives and friends of military personnel to all army bases.
It also cancelled the soldiers’ leaves.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
Month: February 2020
Envoy: Armenia and EU work jointly on realization of EU-Armenia deal
Two Trials of Two Former Presidents in a Day in Armenia
Two trials of two former presidents of Armenia, Robert Kocharyan (1998-2008) and Serzh Sargsyan, (2008-2018) were held in Armenia on Tuesday 25th of February. While Kocharyan is charged for overthrowing the constitutional order in 2008 by releasing an anti-constitutional top-secret order 0038, commanding the army leadership to bring the army units to the capital and then using them against the popular opposition movement lead by the 1st president of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosyan (1991-1998), continues for over a year, Sargsyan is charged for corruption and his trial just started.
Former president of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan, who was widely unpopular and was forced to resign in 2018 April because of nationwide anti-government protests known as Velvet Revolution, is charged for corruption. The Prosecutor’s office says, Sargsyan “organized embezzlement by a group of officials” of 489 million drams (over $1 million) in government funds allocated in 2013 for the provision of subsidized diesel fuel to low-income farmers.
The investigation established that the former president interfered in a government tender for the fuel supplier to ensure that it is won by the company owned by his classmate and close friend Barsegh Barsegian.
The government paid 1.8 billion drams ($3.8 million) to the fuel supplier Flash company, as part of the government program to subsidize the fuel expenses of thousands of low-income farmers in Armenia, while another company Maxhur, which was suggesting a cheaper price for the same purposes, lost the tender. The price suggested by Maxhur would have allowed the government to save about half billion drams, but the government rejected the suggestion, giving preference to the company owned by the close friend of the president.
The incriminating pre-trial testimony was reportedly given by Sergo Karapetyan who served as minister of Agriculture at Sargsyan’s government (2010-2016).
Sargsyan was greeted by about 100 of his supporters and party members near the building of the court. Addressing the small crowd Sargsyan made a short pseudo-patriotic speech linking his charges with his position on Nagorno Karabakh conflict but didn’t say anything about the trial or accusations against him.
While his predecessor is imprisoned, Sargsyan is in freedom, pending trial without an opportunity to leave the country. His brothers and close relatives are also charged for corruption and illegal activities. During his rule 2008-2018, Sargsyan was widely criticized by Transparency International and other famous organizations for institutional corruption and financial manipulations. During his presidency, Armenian foreign debt increased from 1.9 to 7 billion US dollars.
By Karen Tovmasyan
Armenia’s Ejmiatsin city hall buys gold rings with diamond stones
CSTO secretary general to hold talks with Armenia’s political, military authorities
MOSCOW, 26 February (BelTA) – Secretary General of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) Stanislav Zas has gone to Armenia on a visit which will last through 29 February, BelTA learned from OSCE spokesman Vladimir Zainetdinov.
“The visit envisages a meeting with Armenia Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. The CSTO secretary general will also hold talks with Minister of Foreign Affairs Zohrab Mnatsakanyan, Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan, Secretary of the National Security Council Armen Grigoryan and President of the National Assembly Ararat Mirzoyan,” the spokesman said.
This is the first visit of Stanislav Zas to Armenia in the capacity of the CSTO secretary general.
Armenian parliamentary committee discusses bill on repatriates
Armenian cemetery in Nicosia a vivid example of Armenian presence long before the Genocide
The story of the old Armenian cemetery in Nicosia
By Kyriaki Christodoulou/CNA
The Armenian cemetery in Nicosia, near the dividing line, which splits the Cyprus capital into two, stands as a vivid evidence of the history of the Armenian community on this East Mediterranean island Republic, long before the Armenian Genocide.
The cemetery, located near the Ledra Palace Hotel, in the UN-controlled buffer zone, and the Law Courts, carries a long history that dates back to the 15th Century, when it became – according to the records – a burial site for the Lusignans and the Dominicans.
Its existence came to my attention for the first time in 2008. The renovation works were still under way and I was then wondering why this site had been left neglected and what kind of history it carries. Several years passed by and a recent visit to the Home for Cooperation reminded me of the place. And so, I decided to write a story about it.
Researcher-scholar Alexander-Michael Hadjilyra was my guide back to time for the purpose of this story. He perhaps knows better than anyone the rich history of this cemetery and when I spoke to him on the phone he was enthusiastic about the idea and excited that he would be able to share his deep knowledge with a journalist.
He visited my workplace, carrying a lot of pictures and useful material from many years of research.
From our hour-long conversation, I was mostly impressed by a few things: some graves in the cemetery are of particular interest. A tomb (Stepan Papazian, 1875) carries a tombstone with an inscription in Armenian script but in the Turkish language, a second one (Araxi Djiladjian, 1909) has a column cut slantwise, the Masonic symbol of separation, a third one is an obelisk and a mausoleum (Bedros Parounagian, 1928), a fourth one dates back to 1867 (Hagop Guvezian) and an unidentifiable one, from 1888 in the form of a khachkar (cross-stone). Also of striking interest are the medieval tombstones, with coats of arms and crests.
The tombstone in Turkish written in the Armenian script is the tomb of Stepan Papazian. He was just eight years old when he passed away, on 20 August 1875. Hadjilyra tells us that, according to the inscription on the tomb, the child’s health was frail, he was in misery and discomfort for eight years and he found tranquillity in the eternal life.
Stepan Papazian was the son of Ohannes Papazian from Yerzinga and Negdar Eramian, daughter of the famous land owner Artin Boghos Eramian, from the village of Dheftera in the Nicosia district, and Caterina Carletti.
Hadjilyra tells us that what is also important and has a historic significance about the cemetery and Nicosia as a whole is the fact that when Royal Engineers Lieutenant Horatio Herbert Kitchener visited the new colony (Cyprus) during 1878-1879, he prepared a map of the city and marked eight points outside the walls of Nicosia. One of them is the Armenian cemetery, which is the only location of Kitchener’s map that exists until today. Kitchener (1850-1916) would later conduct an extensive work for the trigonometric survey of the island.
The cemetery, according to the records, seems to have existed as a burial ground since the 15th Century, just off the Venetian walls of Nicosia.
Hadjilyra tells us that there is no precise date of the construction of the site. However it is believed that it was destroyed during the construction of the Venetian walls of Nicosia. We know that whatever stood there around 1567-1570 was razed to the ground by the Venetians for security reasons, he explains: not even trees were spared, out of fear that the Ottomans could use them as a foothold.
We do not know exactly when this site became an Armenian cemetery, because according to research and available records, any information that existed regarding this was destroyed during a fire that broke out at the Armenian Prelature in 1860.
The Armenian Prelature, Hadjilyra says, was founded in Cyprus in 973 and information on its Prelates exist since 1179, partial for the Latin Era (1192-1570) and more complete from the Ottoman Era (1571-1878) and later on. He points out that the 1860 fire has deprived us of a lot of information from the past. However, information from the Armenian families of the island during the Ottoman occupation show that the first burials must have taken place around 1810, if not earlier.
In April 2005 works were carried out at the cemetery; sadly, the bulldozer driver hastily destroyed the entire southern part of the cemetery, due to miscommunication and this is one of the reasons we cannot be sure when the first burials took place from the graves and the tombstones, Hadjilyra tells us.
The research done by Hadjilyra demonstrates that in 1963, before the inter-communal troubles, the then Vice President of the Republic, Dr. Fazıl Küçük, moved his practice on Shakespeare street, where the cemetery is located. The road was widened to accommodate his office, so the road was extended to the northern part of the cemetery.
Hadjilyra adds that about a hundred graves had to be demolished and the remains were transferred to the second cemetery in nearby suburban village of Ayios Dhometios. Therefore, he says, possibly the oldest section was the northern part of the site, which does not exist today.
He says that when the remains were exhumed, Father Vazken Sandrouni, who was the Armenian parish priest at that time, had some kind of a memorial for each and every one of them and he then buried them in a massgrave in Ayios Dhometios, where the second Armenian cemetery stands.
One can find records about the burials at the Prelature dating back to 1 November 1877. Hadjilyra informs us that a new priest had just arrived on the island back then, Fr. Hovhannes Shahinian, who considered it his duty to register all data relating baptisms, marriages, burials, etc. He also conducted a census of the 152 Armenians who were then residents on the island.
According to the available data from the late Ottoman Era, around 150-200 Armenians used to live in Cyprus, a number that gradually increased to exceed 600 in the 1911 census. This was the result of previous persecutions and also employment opportunities in Cyprus.
Hadjilyra says that, because of the Armenian Genocide by the Turks, around 9,000 refugees suddenly arrived on the island. Some of them found a permanent home here, but for many Cyprus wasn’t the final destination, rather a way station.
Some of them died on the island, others chose to remain here and make it their home and suddenly the Armenian community reached 1,573 persons in 1921 census. It is clear that, due to the increase in numbers, the burials also increased. The last burial took place in 1931 and that is because, Hadjilyra informs us, the British – who then ruled the island – prohibited the operation of cemeteries in close proximity to the city, for public health reasons.
The 1931 burial took place on July 5th. A baby of just 9 months old (Bedros Aynedjian) was buried on that date. Infant mortality was not uncommon back then, Hadjilyra explains.
From 1932 until 1963 memorials were held for the souls of the buried a few times a year, but from then onwards the cemetery became neglected, due to its proximity to the dividing line. Small-scale repairs took place in 1988 at the cemetery’s chapel, but the substantial restoration started in 2008.
Hadjilyra says that work began in June 2008 and carried on until May 2009, thanks to the initiative and efforts of the Armenian MP in the House of Representatives, Vartkes Mahdessian, and the Armenian Ethnarchy. An important sum was secured from the Ministry of the Interior, making the restoration possible, and the cemetery stands as we see it today.
In late March 2010 a commemorative plaque was placed, visible from the entrance of the cemetery. Hadjilyra explains that it is considered perhaps the only one of its kind in Cyprus. It lists the names of the 419 people buried there, along with their burial dates. For example, for the years of 1877-1879 we have only one name next to each year, but for the years when more than one burial took place, the names are listed alphabetically. The maximum number of burials in a year is 25, for 1922 and 1926.
The Prelature records show, Hadjilyra says, that from 1877 until 1931 there were 463 documented burials (of which the remains of 44 people were transferred to the Ayios Dhometios cemetery in 1963), however it is almost certain that more people were buried there.
Hadjilyra explains that Catholic and Protestant Armenians were also buried there and obviously the funeral ceremonies did not take place at the Orthodox Armenian Church, therefore he believes that more burials actually took place.
The cemetery’s chapel is dedicated to Saint Paul (Boghos) and is locked for safety reasons, as is the cemetery. Inside the chapel there is a wooden altar inside, an icon of the Virgin Mary with the baby Jesus, a small candle counter, a candelabrum and some pews.
The cemetery gate is also of great importance. It was built, along with the surrounding, in 1888 with the donations of the faithful and it bears a commemorative inscription. The gate, as Hadjilyra indicates, does not remind us of the modern era, it is unique in its kind. The benefactor, Boghos (Paul) G. Odadjian from Constantinople (1853-1891), came to Cyprus to work as an interpreter. The chapel was built in his memory and his tomb is located next to the chapel, just in front of the tomb of Apisoghom Utidjian, also from Constantinople (1853-1929), Chief Translator and Interpreter for the British.
Hadjilyra emphasises that the cemetery has a great importance and symbolism to the Armenian-Cypriot community, but it is also a major highlight of Nicosia and should, somehow, be highlighted.
It is worth noting that house located opposite the cemetery, currently fenced-off for safety reasons, belongs to a Turkish-Cypriot woman called Emine. According to historical information, the first General Commissioner of the Cyprus Scouts, Hagop Palamoudian, used to live there.
The house that stands in a good condition at the Chateau Status complex belonged to the Latin Pietroni family, while the adjacent building, which has no roof and currently hosts various receptions, belonged to the Dombourian family, who were Protestant Armenians.
Father Momik of the Armenian Prelature tells CNA that the Armenian cemetery is a historical symbol for the Armenian community of Cyprus. He says that it is a historic monument showing that the Armenians used to live on the island long before the Genocide.
Ruins of Armenian Church in Famagusta built in XIV century by Armenian refugees from Cilicia
A.Savin (Wikimedia Commons)
Many people are buried there, infants and babies who were frail and others who had suffered because of the Genocide, he told us. He said that the cemetery and the historical references suggest that the Armenian community of Nicosia is a very old one and that many tombs there are of special significance.
The Armenian MP in the House of Representatives, Vartkes Mahdessian said that “the cemetery is very important, being a reminder that Armenians used to live in Cyprus long before the Armenian Genocide. Our ancestors, many of whom were refugees of the Genocide, are buried there and therefore this is important for us.”
He expressed his gratitude to the Ministry of the Interior for its financial contribution that made the restoration possible and hoped that the site would be included in the Nicosia sightseeing tours.
Text:
CNA
Today, the first group of Armenian citizens returned from Iran to Yerevan on a special flight
ArmInfo. The first group of Armenian citizens returned from Iran to their homeland on a special flight. “The plane with the citizens of Armenia landed in Yerevan at 4:00 pm,” Arsen Avagyan, head of the Department of Bordering Countries of Ministry of Foreign Affairs, stated.
It should be noted that the next group of Armenian citizens will return from Iran on February 28. Earlier, 65 RA citizens applied to the Armenian Embassy in Iran with a request to return to their homeland. To recall, after the spread of the coronavirus in Iran, Armenia stopped air communication and partially ground one with this state for two weeks. However, this restriction does not apply to Armenian citizens who wish to return to their homeland.
Armenian Minister of Healthcare dismissed head of Republican AIDS Prevention Center who had disagreed with him
ArmInfo. The Minister of Healthcare of Armenia Arsen Torosyan dismissed the head of the Republican Center for the AIDS Prevention Samvel Grigoryan, who categorically disagreed with the position of the minister on the need to unite the Center with the Infectious Disease Hospital for optimization purpose.
According to ArmInfo’s information, Samvel Grigoryan as a demarche had already written a resignation letter in advance and expected that the Minister of Healthcare would nevertheless “change his mind” and will not take radical actions. The employees of the Center expressed their disagreement with the Ministry of Healthcare and demanded that the minister rethink his decision. They noted that this decision was made in the light of the lack of specialized discussions with the Center staff. This raises particular concern given the fact that in the republic, besides the Center, there is no other specialized organization working in the field of treatment and prevention of AIDS. They believe that there is a danger of losing important, significant achievements Armenia had recorded in this area. This, in particular, concerns the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, effective control of the epidemic and the quality of HIV research. We are confident that maintaining the Center as a separate structure proceeds from the interests of the state, since this ensures the activity of the most cost-effective and controlled system that promptly and timely responds to changes in the situation.
Meanwhile, to eliminate the negative consequences of the destruction of this system will take decades, as well as significant financial resources. According to the minister, scientific advances and modern international approaches in the fight against AIDS indicate that this issue should be integrated into the national health system. As was noted, the need for separate institutions dealing with the problem of AIDS existed about 40 years ago, when the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome was just detected. Meanwhile, according to official data of the same Ministry of Healthcare, from January to December 2019, the number of people infected with HIV in Armenia increased by 2.10%. According to official data, in 2018, 429 cases were registered, while in 2019 – 438 cases, of which 135 are women. However, in recent years, AIDS is not on the list of registered infectious diseases, which is the direct result of the work of the Center. It turns out – the better you work, the less your work is appreciated, ” the Center’s employees state.