RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/14/2022

                                        Friday, 


Armenian Governor Replaced By Son

        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia - Sedrak Tevonian is appointed as governor of Ararat province during a 
government meeting in Yerevan, .


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has sacked an Armenian provincial governor and 
replaced him by his 31-year-old son.

Razmik Tevonian, a 60-year-old businessman, was relieved of his duties on 
Thursday just over a year after being appointed as governor of southern Ararat 
province. Armenian media outlets had for months speculated about his impending 
dismissal.

Pashinian gave no reason for the sacking announced during a cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan. Nor did he explain why he decided to name Tevonian’s son Sedrak as 
Ararat’s new governor.

Sedrak Tevonian insisted on Friday that the Armenian government is not unhappy 
with his father’s track record. He said the latter simply wanted to return to 
the private sector and again run a winery belonging to their family.

Tevonian Jr. also said that there is nothing wrong with replacing a senior 
official by their son.

“Of course it’s normal,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “I see no problem. 
This is what was decided and I’m ready to serve my country.”

Most people randomly interviewed in the streets of the provincial capital 
Artashat disagreed.

“It’s a hereditary transition,” said one woman. “Obviously, everybody is against 
that.”

“We are going backwards, not forward,” opined another local resident.

There were also those who had no problem with Pashinian’s choice of their new 
governor. “We live in the 21st century. Let’s be a bit progressive,” said one 
Artashat man.

Nina Karapetiants, a Yerevan-based civic activist, had a very different idea of 
progress. She said Pashinian made mockery of his stated commitment to democracy 
and good governance.

“This is characteristic of dictatorial regimes, primordial or feudal times,” 
Karapetian said of Sedrak Tevonian’s appointment. “This is not normal for the 
civilized world.”

Tevonian Jr. was until now a member of the Armenian parliament representing the 
ruling Civil Contract party. He is not known to have ever delivered a speech on 
the parliament floor.

The new governor claimed that he kept a very low profile in the National 
Assembly because he is a “man of action.” However, he was reluctant to talk 
about his first actions in the new capacity. He only admitted planning to hang a 
picture of Pashinian in his office.

Tevonian also joked that his 8-year-old son too could become Ararat’s governor 
“in 20 years from now.”



Turkish-Armenian Talks Start In Moscow

        • Aza Babayan

Armenian negotiator Ruben Rubinian (left) and his Turkish counterpart Serdar 
Kilic.


Special envoys of Turkey and Armenia held in Moscow on Friday the first round of 
negotiations on normalizing relations between the two neighboring states.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry said the talks took place “in a positive and 
constructive atmosphere,” with the two sides exchanging “preliminary views 
regarding the normalization process.”

“The parties agreed to continue, without preconditions, negotiations aimed at a 
full normalization,” it said in a statement. “The date and venue of their second 
meeting will be decided in due time through diplomatic channels.”

The Turkish Foreign Ministry issued an identical statement on the meeting that 
lasted for about two hours.

Ankara was represented in the talks by Serdar Kilic, a veteran diplomat who 
served as Turkey’s ambassador to the United States from 2014-2021. Kilic’s 
31-year-old Armenian opposite number, Ruben Rubinian, is a deputy speaker of the 
Armenian parliament.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Vahan Hunanian, on Thursday cautioned 
against excessive expectations from the first face-to-face meeting of the two 
envoys.

“This will be an introductory meeting,” Hunanian said in written comments. “It’s 
hard to expect tangible results from the first meeting, but it will mark the 
start of the [normalization] process.”

Rubinian met with Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Rudenko ahead of his 
talks with Kilic. They discussed the Turkish-Armenian dialogue, according to the 
Foreign Ministry in Yerevan.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reaffirmed on Friday Moscow’s support for 
that dialogue. Lavrov said Turkish-Armenian negotiations will contribute to 
peace and stability in the South Caucasus.


TURKEY -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (L) and Turkish Foreign 
Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu attend a joint news conference following their talks 
in Antalya, June 30, 2021

The United States and the European Union have also hailed the negotiations.

Ankara has for decades refused to establish diplomatic relations with Yerevan 
and kept the Turkish-Armenian border closed out of solidarity with Azerbaijan. 
It provided decisive military support to Baku during the 2020 
Armenian-Azerbaijani war over Nagorno-Karabakh.

In recent months Turkish leaders have made statements making the normalization 
of Turkish-Armenian relations conditional on Armenia agreeing to open a land 
corridor that would connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave. They have 
also cited Baku’s demands for a formal Armenian recognition of Azerbaijani 
sovereignty over Karabakh.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has repeatedly made clear that Ankara 
will continue to coordinate its Armenian policy with Baku.

Cavusoglu’s Armenian counterpart, Ararat Mirzoyan, complained last November that 
the Turks are setting “new preconditions” for establishing diplomatic relations 
and opening the border with Armenia.

Armenian opposition leaders have accused Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian of being 
ready to accept those preconditions. Pashinian’s political allies have denied 
that.

Hunanian, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, insisted on Thursday that Yerevan 
continues to stand for an unconditional normalization of Turkish-Armenian ties.



Opposition Rejects Constitutional Changes Planned By Pashinian

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Senor lawmakers from the opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances 
talk during a parliament session in Yerevan, August 24, 2021.


Armenia’s two leading opposition groups have spoken out against constitutional 
amendments planned by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, saying that they are aimed 
at helping him cling to power.

Pashinian called for major changes to the Armenian constitution last year. He 
has since made conflicting statements about which articles of the constitution 
he believes should be amended.

Pashinian said about a year ago that his administration will consider restoring 
the presidential system of government. But he stated last month that Armenia 
should remain a parliamentary republic.

The constitutional reform process will be coordinated by a special council that 
will be headed by Justice Minister Karen Andreasian and mostly consist of other 
state officials. Other council members are to be nominated by non-governmental 
organizations, the three political forces represented in the Armenian parliament 
and two other political parties.

The council will in turn choose five legal scholars who will be tasked with 
drafting constitutional amendments.

The two opposition alliances holding seats in the National Assembly, Hayastan 
and Pativ Unem, confirmed on Friday that they will boycott the work of the 
council.

Hayastan’s top leader, former President Robert Kocharian, rejected the changes 
planned by Pashinian during a recent news conference.

“I don’t think that every government should write up a constitution to its 
liking after taking office,” he said.

Pativ Unem’s Hayk Mamijanian saw ulterior motives behind Pashinian’s desire to 
amend the constitution.

“This is a false agenda which is first and foremost aimed at finding a new way 
of prolonging the capitulator regime’s rule,” Mamijanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service.

One of Pativ Unem’s leaders, former President Serzh Sarkisian, faced similar 
accusations when he engineered Armenia’s transition to the parliamentary system 
through sweeping constitutional changes enacted in 2015.

Sarkisian’s attempt to remain in power as prime minister after completing his 
second and final presidential term in 2018 sparked mass protests that brought 
Pashinian to power.

Tigran Dadunts, an official from the Armenian Ministry of Justice, suggested 
that the constitutional reform council will discuss the wisdom of changing the 
country’s existing government system. But Dadunts noted in this regard that 
another constitutional task force formed by Pashinian in 2019 decided against 
recommending a return to the presidential model.

The task force was disbanded after the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh.


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