Tuesday,
Armenian Tech Sector Keeps Up Rapid Growth
Armenia - Workers at a tech company based in the Engineering City in Yerevan,
August 22, 2018.
Armenia’s technology sector is continuing to grow rapidly despite the
coronavirus pandemic that has plunged the country into recession, Prime Minister
Nikol Pashinian said on Tuesday.
Pashinian cited government data which shows the sector’s combined turnover
increasing by 24 percent year on year, to $176 million, in the first half of
this year.
He said the number of officially registered tech workers rose to 16,442 from
14,533 in the year-earlier period.
Many of them work for local subsidiaries of U.S. tech giants like Synopsys,
National Instruments, Mentor Graphics and VMware. A growing number of other
information technology (IT) engineers are employed by Armenian startups and
other homegrown firms.
“The number of companies active in the sector rose by 11 percent, from 1,007 to
1,118,” Pashinian added in a Facebook post.
Armenia -- Young people at the annual Digitec Expo exhibition in Yerevan,
October 6, 2018.
The official figures contrast sharply with Armenia’s overall macroeconomic
performance in 2020. Its economy contracted by about 14 percent in the second
quarter of the year after growing by almost 4 percent in the first quarter.
The decline followed a nationwide lockdown imposed by the Armenian government in
March. Citing the continuing coronavirus crisis, the country’s Central Bank
forecast last week a full-year GDP fall of 6.2 percent.
The Armenian tech industry dominated by software firms has been growing at
double-digit annual rates for more than a decade, making it the fastest-growing
sector of the national economy. It expanded by about 30 percent in 2019.
Industry executives say a shortage of skilled personnel is what prevents its
even faster growth. They have long complained about the inadequate quality of
education at information departments of Armenian universities. Many of their
students require additional training after graduation.
Tsarukian Denies Secret Ties To Russia
• Astghik Bedevian
Armenia -- Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian attends a parliament
session, Yerevan, March 24, 2020.
Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian denied through a
spokeswoman on Tuesday secret collaboration with Russian implicitly alleged by a
Russian opposition group.
The Moscow-based Dossier Center, which is financed by exiled former Russian
oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, listed Tsarukian last week among possible Russian
“agents of influence” who it said are overseen by a senior Kremlin official.
The official, Vladimir Chernov, is a retired intelligence general who heads a
department on “interregional and cultural ties with foreign countries” in
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s administration.
In an article posted on its website at the weekend, the Dossier Center revealed
what it described as details of the department’s shadowy operations in Armenia.
In particular, it claimed that Chernov’s office promotes Russian propaganda and
sponsors local pro-Russian opposition figures and pundits hostile to Armenian
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
The website published relevant documents allegedly leaked to the opposition
group. They include purported confidential correspondence between Chernov’s
subordinates and their Armenian contacts striving for regime change in Armenia.
Dossier also posted a photocopy of Tsarukian’s passport which it claimed to have
obtained from the Kremlin division.
The copy fuelled media speculation in Yerevan about Tsarukian’s unpublicized
ties to Russia.
Hrachya Hakobian, a pro-government lawmaker and Pashinian’s brother-in-law,
bluntly suggested on Tuesday that the BHK leader might be a Russian agent.
“In terms of his activities, I wouldn’t say that I noticed any fishy things,”
said Hakobian. “But the very fact that [a copy of] his passport ended up,
according to the Dossier Center, in a Kremlin drawer is quite suspicious and
nothing should be ruled out.”
Tsarukian’s spokeswoman, Iveta Tonoyan, categorically ruled out such a
possibility. “I would urge Mr. Hakobian to keep his internal fears and concerns
to himself,” she told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
Tonoyan insisted that she does not know how the Kremlin could have gotten hold
of the copy of Tsarukian’s passport. Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS)
should find that out instead of “looking for enemies inside the country,” she
said, referring to controversial criminal proceedings launched against the BHK
leader in June.
NSS Director Argishti Kyaramian told reporters on Monday that his agency is
already looking into the Dossier article. He said vaguely that the inquiry might
expose Armenian “names and surnames along with their passports and signatures.”
Tsarukian is known as a strong supporter of Armenia’s close ties with Russia.
The BHK, which is Armenia’s largest parliamentary opposition force, signed a
memorandum of cooperation with the ruling United Russia party last year.
Armenian Opposition Parties Schedule First Joint Rally
• Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- The Armenian Revolutionary Federation party holds a rally in
Yerevan's Liberty Square, May 23, 2019.
The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) and two other opposition
parties led by embattled businessman Gagik Tsarukian and former National
Security Service Director Artur Vanetsian announced on Tuesday that they will
hold a joint anti-government rally on October 8.
In a joint statement, Dashnaktsutyun, Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK)
and Vanetsian’s Hayrenik (Fatherland) party accused the government of having
“failed everywhere” and endangering the country’s “development prospects.” They
cited “the need for the formation of a new kind of national government.”
The statement did not clarify whether they will demand the immediate resignation
of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his government.
BHK spokeswoman Iveta Tonoyan said the three parties will soon shed more light
on the purpose of their first rally that will be held in Yerevan’s Liberty
Square. “For the moment we are noting the fact that there is a great deal of
public discontent [with the government] and that these three political forces
are providing an opportunity to make that voice heard,” she said.
Vanetsian has repeatedly called for regime change in recent months. Tsarukian,
whose party has the second largest group in Armenia’s parliament, likewise
demanded Pashinian’s resignation in June. He accused the government of
mishandling the coronavirus crisis and its socioeconomic consequences.
Armenia - Gagik Tsarukian arrives for a court hearing on his pre-trial arrest
sought by prosecutors, Yerevan, June 17, 2020
The three parties agreed to work together in challenging the government shortly
after Tsarukian was stripped of his parliamentary immunity from prosecution and
charged with buying votes later in June. The tycoon rejects the accusations as
politically motivated.
Representatives of Pashinian’s My Step bloc seemed undaunted by what could be
the biggest opposition rally in Armenia since the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that
brought Pashinian to power. One of them, Ruben Rubinian, insisted that most
Armenians continue to trust the ruling political team that won over 70 percent
of the vote in parliamentary elections held less than two years ago.
“I believe that these three political forces will never manage to mobilize
serious [popular] support,” Rubinian told reporters. “They can look for reasons
for that in their past, present and elsewhere.”
The BHK, Dashnaktsutyun and Hayrenik will not be joined by Bright Armenia (LHK),
the second opposition party represented in the National Assembly. LHK leader
Edmon Marukian made clear that his party has no intention to campaign for snap
general elections. He said it hopes to topple the current government as a result
of regular polls due in 2023.
“In order for there to be pre-term parliamentary elections, 200,000 to 300,000
people have to take to the streets and occupy this [parliament] building,” said
Marukian. “There is no other way of dissolving this parliament.”
Armenia - Artur Vanetsian speaks to RFE/RL, Yerevan, September 1, 2020.
Tsarukian’s BHK and Marukian’s LHK won 8.3 percent and 6.4 percent of the vote
respectively in the last elections held in December 2018. Dashnaktsutyun got
only 3.9 percent, failing to win any parliament seats.
Dashnaktsutyun and the BHK had for years been represented in Armenia’s former
government toppled during the 2018 uprising. They joined Pashinian’s first
cabinet formed in May 2018 but were ousted from it five months later when
Pashinian accused them of secretly collaborating with the former ruling
Republican Party.
As for Hayrenik, Vanetsian set up the party early this year several months after
falling out with the prime minister and resigning as National Security Service
director. Vanetsian told his loyalists last week that Hayrenik will be playing a
key role in “very serious political developments” which he said will unfold in
Armenia very soon.
Arrest Warrant Issued For Serzh Sarkisian’s Son-In-Law
• Robert Zargarian
Armenia-Former Armenian Ambassador to the Vatican Mikael Minasian.
A court in Yerevan approved on Tuesday an arrest warrant against Mikael
Minasian, former President Serzh Sarkisian’s fugitive son-in-law facing
corruption charges strongly denied by him.
Armenia’s State Revenue Committee (SRC) moved to arrest Minasian in late April
one month after charging him with illegal enrichment, false asset disclosure and
money laundering. A Yerevan court of first instance allowed the arrest in early
May. The decision was overturned by the Court of Appeals a month later, however.
The SRC responded by broadening the criminal charges leveled against Minasian.
It said that he had also failed to declare his “de facto” ownership from
2012-2018 of a 49 percent stake in Armenia’s largest food-exporting company.
Nevertheless, investigators were rebuffed by a lower court in early July.
The SRC is understood to have further expanded the case against Minasian before
making yet another attempt to secure permission to arrest him. A court judge
agreed to the demand this time around.
A spokesman for the Office of the Prosecutor-General, Gor Abrahamian, welcomed
the ruling. He said it allows Armenian law-enforcement authorities’ to seek
Minasian’s extradition.
Minasian’s lawyers did not immediately react to the ruling. They said earlier
that their client is a victim of “political persecution” overseen by the
Armenian government.
Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and his son-in-law Mikael Minasian
during a joint public appearance in Yerevan, 07Nov2009.
Minasian enjoyed considerable political and economic influence in Armenia when
it was ruled by Sarkisian from 2008-2018. He is also thought to have developed
extensive business interests in various sectors of the Armenian economy.
A vocal critic of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Minasian left Armenia shortly
after he was dismissed as ambassador to the Vatican in late 2018. He has so far
declined to reveal his place of residence. According to some media reports, the
42-year-old currently lives in Russia.
Earlier this year, Minasian posted on Facebook a series of lengthy video
addresses to Armenians accusing Pashinian of corruption and misrule. For his
part, Pashinian has repeatedly accused the ex-president’s son-in-law of
illegally making a huge fortune during Sarkisian’s rule.
Another law-enforcement body, the Special Investigative Service (SIS), is
conducting a separate corruption inquiry relating to Minasian. The probe stems
from the 2010 privatization of a hydroelectric plant in northern Armenia.
The DzoraHEK plant was sold to a company reportedly controlled by Minasian for
3.6 billion drams ($7.5 million). Prosecutors say that the 26-megawatt facility
was in fact worth 8 billion drams ($16.8 million).
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.