RFE/RL Armenian Servie – 12/29/2023

                                        Friday, 


Armenian Envoy Sacked After Collapse Of Father’s Deal With Pashinian

        • Satenik Kaghzvantsian

Armenia - Ambassador to Iraq Misak Balasanian.


Armenia’s ambassador to Iraq was sacked on Friday three weeks after the ruling 
Civil Contract party pulled out of a power-sharing agreement in Gyumri with a 
local political group unofficially led by his father.

Misak Balasanian was recalled through a presidential decree initiated by Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian. It came less than four months after Balasanian, who 
had no prior diplomatic experience, was appointed as ambassador.

The appointment was widely linked with the agreement reached following the 
October 2021 municipal elections in Gyumri. Armenia’s second largest city was 
run until then by Balasanian’s father Samvel, a local wealthy businessman.

Although Samvel Balasanian decided not to seek another term in office, a newly 
created bloc bearing his name participated in the elections and garnered most 
votes. But it fell short of a majority in the local council electing the mayor.

The Balasanian Bloc teamed up with Civil Contract, to install a relative of 
Balasanian, Vardges Samsonian, as new mayor of Gyumri. In return, two Civil 
Contract figures became deputy mayors. Three dozen other members of Pashinian’s 
party were also given posts in the municipal administration.

All those officials stepped down after Civil Contract unexpectedly announced on 
December 6 the end of the power-sharing arrangement. It said it does not want to 
be part of “shady governance,” implying that Balasanian Sr. is continuing to 
pull the strings in Gyumri.

Armenia -- Gyumri Mayor Samvel Balasanian speaks to journalists, April 24, 2018.

Commentators suggested that the ruling party will try to gain control of the 
municipality despite holding only 11 seats in the 33-member city council. The 
Balasanian Bloc indicated that it will not give up the post of mayor.

In another sign of mounting tensions between the two political forces, council 
members representing Civil Contract blocked on Friday the passage of the city’s 
2024 budget drafted by Mayor Samsonian. The latter rebuked them as well as 
councilors from two opposition groups who also voted against the budget.

Samsonian secured the insufficient backing of the third opposition force 
represented in the Gyumri legislature, the former ruling Republican Party (HHK) 
to which Balasanian was allied before Pashinian’s rise to power. Knarik 
Harutiunian, who leads the Civil Contract group in the council, scoffed at this 
fact.

Incidentally, Iraqi President Abdullatif Jamal Rashid travelled to Gyumri on 
November 23 during an official visit to Armenia. Misak Balasanian, who 
accompanied him on that trip, was sacked less than two months after handing his 
credentials to Rashid.




Armenian Church Facing ‘Existential Threat’ In Jerusalem

        • Artak Khulian

A view of the Cows' Garden property of the Armenian Apostolic Church in 
Jerusalem. (Photo by the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem.)


The Jerusalem Patriarchate of the Armenian Apostolic Church claimed to be facing 
an “existential threat” following a violent incident on Thursday which it 
attributed to an Israeli-Australian businessman’s efforts to take over one of 
its largest properties in the city.

A group of Armenian clerics and laymen were reportedly attacked by a violent mob 
as they held a vigil at Jerusalem’s Cows’ Garden property currently used as a 
parking lot.

The Patriarchate controversially agreed in 2021 to lease the former garden 
occupying one-quarter of the Old City’s Armenian Quarter to Jewish real estate 
developer Danny Rothman and his Christian Arab partner George Warwar for 99 
years. Their Xana Gardens company wants to build a luxury hotel there.

The lease agreement signed by the two sides enraged the local Armenian community 
and also drew strong condemnation from the Palestinian Authority and Jordan. 
Patriarch Nourhan Manougian subsequently blamed the “fraudulent and deceitful” 
deal on a now-defrocked priest, saying that he was misled by the latter.

Manougian’s office announced about two months ago that it has decided to scrap 
the lease and asked an Israeli court to validate the decision. Armenian 
clergymen and community activists began the daily vigil at the Cows’ Garden 
after Xana tried to start the construction.

An Armenian flag on the building of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, 
August 30, 2021.

A mobile phone video filmed by one of the priests showed the Armenians clashing 
with dozens of masked men apparently trying to drive them out of the property on 
Thursday. Several of them were reportedly injured as a result.

“Fortunately, our youths present at the scene managed to resist and repel the 
attackers,” Hagop Djernazian, a community activist, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service on Friday. He claimed that the attackers were “sent” by the real estate 
developers.

“This is how the Australian-Israeli businessman Danny Rothman (Rubenstein) and 
George Warwar (Hadad) react to legal procedures,” the Armenian Patriarchate said 
in a statement issued the previous night.

“The Armenian Patriarchate’s existential threat is now a physical reality,” it 
said, urging the international community to “help us save the Armenian Quarter 
from a violent demise.”

“It is obvious that the provocateurs are once again trying to seize the ‘Cow’s 
Garden’ estate through terror, threats and violent actions, violating the 
procedures established by the law,” read a separate statement released by the 
Armenian Apostolic Church’s Mother See in Echmiadzin, Armenia. It urged Israeli 
authorities to stop the “criminal acts against the Patriarchate and the Armenian 
community.”

An Armenian religious procession in the Old City of Jerusalem, June 24, 2021.

Jerusalem’s Deputy Mayor Fleur Hassan-Nahoum described Thursday’s incident as a 
brawl between “some Arab Muslim men and some men from the Armenian community.” 
She did not link it to the dispute over the Cows’ Garden.

“The city of Jerusalem will not tolerate any criminal activity, whether 
religiously motivated or otherwise, and the police will prosecute those 
responsible,” The Jerusalem Post newspaper quoted Hassan-Nahoum as saying.

Rothman and his company did not comment on the clash. The businessman did not 
answer questions e-mailed by RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Armenia’s government also did not react to the violence as of Friday evening,

The Foreign Ministry in Yerevan expressed “deep concern” but refrained from 
demanding any action by Israeli authorities after a series of fresh attacks on 
Jerusalem Armenians reported a year ago and blamed on Jewish extremists.

In one of those attacks, an angry mob wreaked havoc on a restaurant located in 
the Armenian Quarter. According to the restaurant owner, they shouted “Death to 
Christians!” and “Death to Arabs!”

The Armenian Church has for years accused radical Jews of regularly cursing and 
spitting at its clergymen in the streets of Jerusalem’s Old City. Two Israeli 
soldiers were briefly detained by police in November 2022 for doing so during a 
religious procession led by an Armenian archbishop.




Armenia Maintains Flight Service To Border Town Despite Security Risk


Armenia - An L-410 plane carrying Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian lands at Kapan 
airport, August 17, 2023.


Regular commercial flights between Yerevan and Kapan have continued even after 
Azerbaijani troops repeatedly fired at the Armenian border town’s airport four 
months ago, Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel 
Sanosian said on Friday.

According to Armenia’s state border guard service, the small airport first came 
under cross-border fire on August 18 less than 24 hours after a plane carrying 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian landed there. It said gunshots fired from 
Azerbaijani army positions overlooking the facility damaged the airports roof 
and one of the windows.

Another shooting incident was reported on August 19 just minutes after a plane 
carrying other Armenian officials touched down on the runway. Local officials 
accused Azerbaijan of trying to disrupt the first post-Soviet flight service 
between Yerevan and Kapan launched by the NovAir airline on August 21.

Later in August, the Armenian government notified the International Civil 
Aviation Organization (ICAO) about the shootings and asked the 193-nation body 
to help prevent a repeat of such incidents. The local airport was reportedly 
again hit and damaged by gunfire on September 1. But no further shooting 
incidents were reported in the following months.

Sanosian told reporters that the twice-weekly service has continued since then 
and will be maintained next year. He said the government has purchased more 
sophisticated navigation and meteorological equipment for the Kapan airport that 
will minimize flight disruptions caused by bad weather.

Armenia - Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel 
Sanosian holds a news conerence in Yerevan, .

NovAir uses small L-410 aircraft capable of carrying up to 17 passengers. 
According to Sanosian, the private airline has carried out 22 flights since 
August, transporting a total of just 189 passengers to and from Kapan. The 
minister acknowledged that the lingering security risk discourages many people 
from taking the 50-minute flights.

“Most of the time, the flights are not sold out,” he said. “We understand the 
reason for that but will not stop the flights.”

Kapan is the administrative center of Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province 
sandwiched between Azerbaijan and its Nakhichevan exclave. Baku has for years 
demanded an extraterritorial corridor to Nakhichevan passing through Syunik, 
which is also the sole Armenian province bordering Iran. Yerevan rejects those 
demands.

Azerbaijan’s recent recapture of Nagorno-Karabakh raised more fears in Yerevan 
that it could also invade Syunik to try to open the so-called “Zangezur 
corridor.” Iran as well as Western powers have warned Baku against doing that.

Tehran opened a consulate in Kapan in 2022. Russia and France are expected to 
follow suit in 2024.



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