Verelq: A group of people sold fake banknotes in 29 episodes

The preliminary investigation of the criminal proceedings initiated by a group of persons in connection with the case of sale of fake banknotes in the General Department of Investigation of Specially Important Cases of the RA Investigative Committee has been completed. RA Investigative Committee informs about this.


“During the preliminary investigation, it was found that MH, together with his acquaintances RA, E.K., NK, in the period from May to December 2025, sold a total of 1 AMD 100,000, 20 AMD 50,000, 1 AMD 20,000, 5 AMD 10,000 to different people. Counterfeit AMD banknotes, fraudulently stealing 1 million 149 thousand 860 AMD property.


MH, RA, EK and NK were charged with 29 counts of counterfeiting and fraud.


House arrest was applied to MH and RA as a preventive measure, and administrative control was applied to E.K. and NK.


The criminal proceedings were sent to the supervising prosecutor with an indictment,” the message reads.


Notice: the person accused of a crime is considered innocent until his guilt is proven in accordance with the procedure established by the Code of Criminal Procedure by a legally binding court verdict.

Asbarez: ANCA Endorses Tano Tijerina to Unseat Azerbaijan Caucus Co-Chair Henr



Incumbent Cuellar Was Indicted for Accepting $600,000 in Azerbaijani Bribes to Rig U.S. Policy against Artsakh and Armenia

WASHINGTON – The Armenian National Committee of America has endorsed Webb County Judge Tano E. Tijerina in his Republican campaign for Texas’s 28th Congressional District, where he is seeking to unseat Rep. Henry Cuellar — Co-Chair of the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus whose, decades-long record of corruption in advancing Azerbaijani interests culminated in a federal indictment for accepting nearly $600,000 in bribes from Azerbaijani government sources.

“Judge Tijerina brings to this race the integrity, the faith, and the commitment to community that South Texas deserves — and that Washington has been denied by Henry Cuellar’s corrupt ties to Azerbaijan,” said Aram Hamparian, ANCA Executive Director. “For over a decade, Cuellar worked to block U.S. support for Armenia, undermine Artsakh, and advance Baku’s interests on Capitol Hill — all while, according to the U.S. Department of Justice, pocketing hundreds of thousands of dollars in Azerbaijani bribes. South Texas voters have both an opportunity and a responsibility to throw Cuellar out of Congress.”

“I am honored to receive the endorsement of the Armenian National Committee and deeply grateful for their trust and support,” stated Judge Tijerina. “Together, we will continue building bridges of opportunity, respect, and shared prosperity for all our communities.”

Following outreach by the ANCA Texas team, Judge Tijerina, his wife Kimberly, and his campaign team visited ANCA’s national headquarters in the Nation’s Capital on April 22nd, sitting down with the ANCA’s DC staff for a substantive discussion of the full range of priorities advocated by ANCA Texas and Armenian Americans across the Lone Star State. The meeting covered Azerbaijan’s genocidal ethnic cleansing of Artsakh’s Christian Armenians, the ongoing illegal detention of Armenian hostages in Baku, Azerbaijan’s systematic destruction of Armenian Christian churches, cemeteries, and sacred sites, the right of return for displaced Artsakh Armenians, and justice for the Armenian Genocide. The ANCA also praised Judge Tijerina’s longstanding commitment to fighting religious repression worldwide.

“TX-28 is ground zero in the fight to hold Azerbaijan accountable for its foreign interference in American democracy,” said ANCA Texas Co-Chair Phil Kanayan. “Judge Tijerina understands what is at stake — not just for Armenian Americans in Texas, but for every voter in this district who was betrayed by a Congressman who sold his vote to a foreign government. We are proud to stand with Judge Tijerina and will be working to deliver this seat back to the people of South Texas.”

Judge Tano Tijerina: Faith, Family, and a Record of Service
Judge Tijerina has served as Webb County’s 15th County Judge since 2015, currently in his third term. A native of Laredo, he earned his degree from Texas A&M International University after a professional baseball career that began when he was drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers in 1993. As County Judge, he has championed public safety, mental health, infrastructure investment, and opportunities for young people — earning recognition from dozens of regional organizations including the Laredo Chamber of Commerce, United Way of Laredo, and LULAC. He previously served as Chairman of the Texas Border Coalition, where he led efforts to advance regional prosperity, secure borders, and fair immigration policy, and was appointed by the Supreme Court of Texas to serve on the State Commission on Judicial Conduct.

A man of deep faith, Judge Tijerina has supported missionary work in India, Thailand, Panama, Central America, Mexico, and the United States — including efforts to aid victims of sex trafficking — a commitment that resonates with ANCA’s longstanding advocacy on behalf of persecuted Christian communities worldwide.

Henry Cuellar: A Decade of Betrayal
Rep. Henry Cuellar’s record on Armenian American priorities is one of consistent obstruction in service of Azerbaijan. As Co-Chair of the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus, Cuellar worked to block U.S. assistance to Artsakh, insert pro-Azerbaijan language into legislation and committee reports, and advance Baku’s geopolitical interests at the direct expense of Armenia’s security and sovereignty.

In May 2024, Cuellar and his wife were indicted on federal charges including bribery, conspiracy, acting as agents of foreign principals, and money laundering — accused of accepting over $598,000 from Azerbaijani state-controlled entities in exchange for advancing Azerbaijan’s agenda in Congress. Federal prosecutors detailed how Cuellar promised Azerbaijani contacts to influence U.S. foreign policy, deliver pro-Azerbaijan floor speeches, insert favorable legislative language, and arrange meetings with U.S. defense officials — all in exchange for payments that Azerbaijani diplomats tracked by referring to Cuellar as “el Jefe.”

In December 2025, President Trump pardoned Cuellar — a decision the ANCA condemned in the strongest terms as a free pass for foreign bribery. Within days, Trump himself soured on the arrangement: after Cuellar announced he would continue running as a Democrat, Trump publicly rebuked him for “a lack of LOYALTY” — making clear that even the president who pardoned him had concluded that Cuellar’s word could not be trusted.

“Henry Cuellar’s indictment was long overdue; his pardon a miscarriage of justice; his decision to run again an insult to every Texan who believes that foreign bribery should disqualify, not merely inconvenience, a sitting member of Congress,” added Hamparian.

Cuellar is now running for reelection in a district made more competitive under Texas’s newly drawn Congressional map. Armenian Americans across Texas — and advocates nationwide — are mobilizing to ensure that his bid fails.

The ANCA has actively targeted Cuellar for years through its #ExpelCuellar campaign, calling on the House to vote for his expulsion and on voters to reject him at the ballot box. Judge Tijerina’s candidacy represents the clearest path to accountability in TX-28.

Captive Artsakh Leaders Moved to Notorious Prison in Baku

Former Artsakh leaders were paraded in a Baku military court on Jan. 21


Former Artsakh leaders, who are being held captive by Azerbaijan and were sentenced to lengthy jail terms, have been moved to a prison facility in Baku, cited last week by Amnesty International for its inhumane practices against inmates.

International human rights attorney Siranush Sahakyan reported the news of the transfer, saying that she learned about this latest development from the family of former Artsakh State Minister Ruben Vardanyan, who was sentenced to a 20-year prison term earlier this year.

Sahakyan explained that Vardanyan was transferred from the investigative isolation cell of the National Security Service of Azerbaijan to the Umbak prison that operates under the Ministry of Justice.

“According to the information I have, 19 Armenians are currently in the Umbak prison complex,” Sahakyan told Azatutyun.am on Tuesday.

She explained that three of the 19 were housed in the Umbak prison facility since their capture in 2023, adding that 16 were recently transferred there. In addition to Vardanyan, there are seven other Artsakh leaders and eight who were active in Artsakh’s self-defense.

The transfer, according to Siranush Sahakyan, is due to Azerbaijan’s internal policies. Some of the verdicts issued in February, including Ruben Vardanyan’s, were not appealed due to the lack of guarantees for justice and are considered to have entered into force. Under these conditions, according to Sahakyan, Azerbaijan’s internal system separates the places of detention of those serving sentences and those who are being held in custody awaiting judicial decisions.

“Perhaps all Armenian prisoners are now perceived as serving sentences based on the verdicts, so they were transferred from the investigative isolation cell under the National Security Service to another institution under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Justice, which is the Umbak prison complex,” she said.

In February, the Baku military court sentenced 16 Armenian prisoners to life or long-term imprisonment, including the leadership of Artsakh.

Sahakyan learned about the transfer of the prisoners to the Umbak prison, located about 43 miles outside of Baku and in an isolated area of the city, from Vardanyan’s family.

She said that there is no transparency in this process, just like in their trials. The family members had no information about the transfer in advance. It is still unknown under what conditions the prisoners are being held in this facility, which was put into operation in 2023. According to the Azerbaijani authorities, Umbak meets all international standards.

“The physical conditions themselves do not yet imply that international standards are being met, because there are issues dealing with food, hygiene, ensuring contact with the outside world, and the lack of guarantees that they would not endure psychological or physical pressure. From this perspective, all international reports clearly record that torture is a widespread practice in Azerbaijani penitentiary system, ill-treatment is again widespread, and there are no effective mechanisms to curb it or punish those responsible,” Sahakyan emphasized.

Sahakyan said that following lengthy negotiations, the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture conducted a short visit to Azerbaijani prisons, including Umbak, last year. The report is ready, but Azerbaijan is impeding its publication.

Sahakyan who advocates for the prisoners in international courts, added that the current situation attests to prevailing conditions in Azerbaijani prisons.

“From here we can only draw conclusions about the serious, blatant issues raised regarding torture, which the state refuses to address and make data available to the public. The list of places where experts and committee members visited included both the pre-trial detention center, where Armenians were previously held, and the new complex in Umbak.”

Since the closure of the International Committee of the Red Cross office in Baku last September, the only way to get information from prisoners held in Azerbaijan is through weekly phone conversations that the Armenian captives have been allowed since 2023 until the recent relocation.

Armenia, Turkey Discuss Reopening Gyumri-Kars Railway at Joint Meeting

A scene from the joint working group meeting in Kars on Apr. 28


Based on the agreements reached as part of the Armenia-Turkey normalization process, the Armenia-Turkey Joint Working Group on rehabilitation and operation of the Gyumri-Kars railway was held in Kars on Tuesday.

“The parties emphasized the significance of the early operation of the Gyumri-Kars railway in the context of enhancing regional transport communications,” a statement from Armenia’s Foreign Ministry said.

The United States Embassy in Yerevan was quick to welcome the meeting, describing the development as “historic progress toward a peaceful and prosperous South Caucasus.”

According to the embassy, restoring the railway link between Armenia and Turkey is an important step toward enhancing regional connectivity and strengthening regional stability.

“Restoring this critical link between Armenia and Turkey is an important step in unlocking regional connectivity and solidifying regional stability,” the statement said.

The embassy also noted that the August 8 Washington Summit hosted by President Donald Trump set the stage for such momentous developments.

The U.S. Embassy emphasized its support for reopening economic and people-to-people links between Armenia and Turkey after decades of closure, calling the recent steps concrete progress in the Armenia-Turkey normalization process.

Asbarez: Gulbenkian Armenian Communities Announces ‘In View’ Grant Awardees

The Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation is pleased to announce the ten awardees of the 2026 արդ եւս|in view grants. This year’s cohort explores the concept of culture as a “social infrastructure” – a living, breathing network that sustains the Western Armenian language through film, digital media, music, and performance.

As the global Armenian landscape continues to evolve, the արդ եւս|in view programme remains a vital platform for contemporary creators who use Western Armenian as a dynamic tool for modern _expression_. The selected projects for this cycle demonstrate how art can act as a bridge across borders, connecting the communities, sounds, and memories of the Diaspora and its language.

This year’s selection represents a diverse geographical spread, from Lebanon and Armenia to France, Germany, Canada and the United States, reflecting the global nature of the Western Armenian creative world.

Below is the list of awardees and projects:

  • Arman Peshtmaljyan (Armenia/France/USA): 1001 Voices – A music-driven project exploring the diverse vocalities of the global Armenian experience; creating five new original works in Western Armenian, based on newly written or creatively translated contemporary texts.
  • Armenian Creatives (USA/Group): Those, words that offer to us: dispersed schools – A publication that will gather a collection of syllabi, project packets, workbooks, and more wherein each contribution offers a distinct interpretation of a lesson plan using their research findings as their source material. A compendium in which each contribution proposes an experimental school for translating and practicing Western Armenian.
  • Christopher Atamian, Tamar Hovsepian, Nane Davtyan (USA/Group): Anna Boghiguian Documentary – A cinematic portrait of the renowned contemporary artist Anna Boghiguian, whose work has significantly shaped the discourse around identity, memory, materiality, and cultural continuity in contemporary art.
  • Hakob Manukyan (Lebanon/Armenia): Armenian Soundtrack of Lebanon – A film that will document Beirut’s musical trajectory and legacy as it explores how art and language reflect their times, and how historical, political, and economic forces, in turn, shape artistic direction and _expression_.
  • Hrant Kalemkerian (France/Lebanon): ՕԴԱԲԵՐԻԿ (Otaperig) – The two-part project will feature a docufictional series using archives, photographs, letters, oral histories, and stories told within intimate circles to document stories from Armenian communities worldwide and bring them to Bourj-Hammoud to be told; and a stopmotion series, which will collect news from the daily lives of different Armenian communities.
  • Marlene Edoyan (Canada/Armenia): Psychogeography of Language – A feature-length hybrid essay film that approaches language through the lens of psychogeography. It explores how language survives when separated from stable geography and how it reshapes identity across time and place. 
  • Niagara Arminée Neige Tonolli (France). Those who left twice |: The Twice Departed – A documentary about Armenian families from the Rhône Valley in France (Décines, Valence, Vienne) who took part in the repatriation movements to Soviet Armenia during the campaigns of 1936 and 1947. 
  • Silvina Der Meguerditchian (Germany): Languages | Լեզուներ – A multilingual, experimental book based on the eponymous Western Armenian text by Krikor Beledian. The project combines selected fragments and essayistic reflections on Diaspora and multilingualism with photographic work. 
  • Serli Hachigoglu (USA): Between Tongues: The Language of Memory – An immersive, multisensory exhibition and accompanying website exploring intergenerational Armenian identity through Western Armenian as a language of nurture, survival and belonging.
  • Tsolak Galstyan (Armenia): “Embodied Language” – An interdisciplinary cultural production project that will create three short dance films in cinematic noir style, each inspired by the poetry of a major Western Armenian poet. 

By supporting these projects, the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation continues to treat culture as a fundamental infrastructure. These works do more than preserve the language; they innovate within it, ensuring that Western Armenian remains a medium for critical thought, artistic excellence, and social connection.

The արդ եւս|in view grants provide up to €10,000 in support per project. We look forward to the debut of these works, which will be shared through various digital platforms, screenings, and installations over the coming years.

For further information please visit: the Armenian Communities website, subscribe to the newsletter and follow their Facebook page.

RFE/RL – Armenian, Indian Army Chiefs Meet Again

April 28, 2026


India – Anil Chauhan (right), India’s top army general, meets his Armenian counterpart Eduard Asrian, New Delhi, April 28, 2026.

Highlighting close military ties between the two nations, Armenia’s top military general visited India on Tuesday just two months after receiving his Indian counterpart in Yerevan.

Lieutenant-General Eduard Asrian, the chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff, held talks in New Delhi with India’s Defense Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh and General Anil Chauhan, the chief of the Indian Defense Staff.

“Discussions focused on expanding military cooperation, including training, capability development and modernization,” the Indian Defense Ministry said in a short statement on Singh’s “productive” meeting with Asrian. “India reaffirmed its commitment to being a reliable partner and supporting Armenia with state-of-the-art defense equipment.”

India’s Integrated Defense Staff said, for its part, that Chauhan’s separate talks with Asrian underlined “the steady advancement of Indian-Armenian defense relations.”

“Both sides also explored avenues for joint ventures in the development of military hardware, reaffirming their shared commitment to a robust, future-oriented and mutually beneficial strategic partnership,” it added in a post on X.

According to the Armenian Defense Ministry, the two generals reached “understandings on deepening cooperation in a number of professional areas.” The ministry gave no details.

Armenian – Top Indian and Armenian military officials inspect Indian-made military hardware supplied to the Armenian army, February 7, 2026.

India has been one of Armenia’s leading arms suppliers since the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh war during which its arch-foe Pakistan strongly supported Azerbaijan. Their multimillion-dollar defense contracts reportedly call for the delivery of Indian surface-to-air missiles, multiple-launch rocket systems, howitzers, and anti-drone equipment to the Armenian army.

Chauhan inspected some of that military hardware when he visited Yerevan in early February. He met with Asrian and Defense Minister Suren Papikian during the five-day trip. Official Armenian readouts of the talks did not say whether they reached or discussed more arms deals.

Russia had long been Armenia’s principal supplier of weapons and ammunition. The Armenian government has been looking for alternative sources of weaponry due to its growing tensions with Moscow and the continuing war in Ukraine that absorbs the bulk of military hardware manufactured in Russia. Since October 2023, Yerevan has also signed a number of arms deals with French companies.

LPG Prices In Armenia Surge Again

  • Robert Zargarian
April 28, 2026

Armenia – A gas station in Yerevan, April 28, 2026.

The prices of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) used by most vehicles in Armenia have jumped by over 30 percent in recent days following a fresh disruption of their supplies from Russia.

LPG not only cost more but was also in short supply across the country on Tuesday. Cars formed long lines outside one of the few gas stations in Yerevan’s northern Nor Nork district that had the fuel.

“I’ve checked all stations in the area, it’s is only available here,” one car driver told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

The fuel is delivered to Armenia through the Russian-Georgian border crossing at Upper Lars, which was closed last week due to a snowstorm. Although traffic through the mountainous crossing resumed at the weekend, Georgian authorities reportedly tightened rules for the passage of heavy trucks through sections of the Georgian highway leading to the border.

Local fuel importers told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that hundreds of LPG trucks bound for Armenia remain stuck there. There was also speculation that Russia is deliberately limiting LPG exports to Armenia as part of its retaliatory measures against the Armenian government’s pro-Western foreign policy.

In its first official reaction to the fuel crisis, the government said it is monitoring the situation and ready to prevent “unfounded” price hikes. The Armenian Economy Ministry blamed them on problems at Upper Lars but did not elaborate. It urged motorists to avoid panic buying of LPG, which remains cheaper than petrol.

LPG prices in the country already soared last July amid similar logistical problems reported by Armenian fuel-importing firms. They said at the time that hundreds of their trucks are held up by Georgian authorities for unknown reasons.

Turkey, Armenia Hold More Talks On Restoring Rail Link

April 28, 2026


Turkey – A Turkish-Armenian working group on of the Gyumri-Kars railway meets in Kars, 28 April, 2026.

Turkish and Armenian officials met in the Turkish city of Kars on Tuesday for fresh talks on restoring a railway link between their countries which were welcomed by the United States.

The Armenian and Turkish foreign ministries reported no concrete agreements in their identical short readouts of the latest session of a bilateral working group dealing with the rehabilitation of the Kars-Gyumri railway closed by Ankara over three decades ago.

“The parties emphasized the significance of the early operation of the Kars-Gyumri railway in the context of enhancing regional transport communications,” they said.

The U.S. Embassy in Yerevan hailed the talks in a social media post titled “Historic progress toward a peaceful and prosperous South Caucasus.”

“Restoring this critical link between Armenia and Turkiye is an important step in unlocking regional connectivity and solidifying regional stability,” it wrote on X.

According to the embassy, the Turkish and Armenian officials met on Tuesday to “establish a joint working group for rehabilitating the Kars-Gyumri Railroad.” Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said last month that the group has already been set up and held two meetings.

The two sides agreed to conduct “the necessary technical studies” for relaunching the rail link during Turkish envoy Serdar Kilic’s visit to Yerevan last September. They also pledged to “expedite” the implementation of a 2022 agreement to open the Turkish-Armenian border to Armenian and Turkish diplomatic passport holders as well as citizens of third countries.

Turkish media reported afterwards that this will likely happen in March, ahead of Armenia’s parliamentary elections slated for June. However, Ankara has continued to drag its feet over the partial border opening which Pashinian hopes would boost his and his party’s reelection chances.

In a sign of Yerevan’s frustration, Mirzoyan skipped an annual diplomatic forum in the Turkish city of Antalya earlier this month. Another Armenian official, parliament speaker Alen Simonian, complained a few days later that Ankara is “not taking any new steps” to normalize Turkish-Armenian relations.

Turkish leaders have made clear in recent months that the normalization remains conditional on a resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan.

RFE/RL – Armenian Mineral Water Banned In Russia

April 28, 2026
Armenia- Jermuk mineral water bottles, April 14, 2026.

One month after President Vladimir Putin’s stern warnings to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Russian authorities have reportedly banned on sanitary grounds sales of Armenia’s most famous brand of mineral water.

A senior Russian official, Revaz Yusupov, told the RBC news agency on Tuesday that the state consumer watchdog Rospotrebnadzor initiated the temporary ban, citing the need to “prevent possible harm to the life and health of Russian citizens.” In his words, some 338,000 bottles of water produced by Armenia’s Jermuk Group from February 17 through March 5 will be taken off the Russian market pending the findings of an ongoing safety inspection.

Jermuk sales were already blocked in Russia in late 2024 following the death of a man in the Russian city of Vladikavkaz who was said to have drunk the water. Russian health officials claimed at the time that it may have been contaminated with vinegar acid. The Armenian company ruled out such a possibility. A Russian law-enforcement agency reopened a criminal investigation into the death last week.

Armenia’s Food Safety Inspectorate said later on Tuesday that it has not yet received any “official notifications” from the Russian side regarding the ban. A spokeswoman for the government agency told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that it is “taking measures to understand the situation and take appropriate steps.”

Jermuk Group did not immediately comment on the development. The company is controlled by Ashot Arsenian, a wealthy businessman who used to be very close to former President Serzh Sarkisian but now has a warm rapport with Pashinian’s political team. Arsenian’s son Vahagn was investigated for draft evasion before being elected mayor of the town of Jermuk on the ruling Civil Contract party ticket in 2021. Pashinian appointed Arsenian Jr. as governor of the surrounding Vayots Dzor province last year.

Meeting with the Armenian premier in Moscow on April 1, Putin publicly warned that Yerevan’s moves to eventually join the European Union are “not compatible” with Armenia’s continued membership in the EEU, which gives Armenian exporters tariff-free access to the Russian market. Putin also said that Pashinian’s administration should not bar pro-Russian opposition groups or politicians from running in Armenia’s upcoming parliamentary elections.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk threatened the next day far-reaching retaliatory measures against what he described as the Armenian government’s efforts to push Russia’s state-owned railway monopoly and other major companies out of Armenia. For his part, the head of Russia’s state agricultural watchdog reported a major tightening of its controls on multimillion-dollar imports of food and flowers from Armenia.

And in what looked like another related development, Russia’s state alcohol and tobacco regulator moved in the following days to revoke the import license of a major Armenian brandy manufacturer heavily dependent on Russia’s market. It accused the Proshian Brandy Factory of fraud.

Russia is the principal market for agricultural products as well as alcoholic and soft drinks exported by Armenia. Armenian exports to Russia totaled almost $3 billion last year. By comparison, Armenian firms exported $667 million worth of goods to European Union member states.

If Pashinyan wins the elections, religious freedom will be lost in Armenia

April 28, 2026

Ahead of the June elections, Armenia’s ruling “Civil Contract” party published a political plan calling for the removal of the Catholicos of All Armenians and outlining a politicized “roadmap” for the reconstruction of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

According to critics, this unprecedented step is a direct violation of the country’s constitution and a drastic state intervention in religious affairs. writes the International Christian Concern (International Christian Concern, ICC

The program published before the upcoming elections mentions the removal of the “actual head” of the Armenian Apostolic Church as its 10th political goal, referring to Catholicos Garegin II. Notably, the document avoids using his ecclesiastical title, which observers say reflects a broader effort to undermine both the position and the institution.

In addition to the leadership change, the party’s program proposes a series of wide-ranging church reforms, including the appointment of a vicar of the Catholicos, the development of a new Church charter and the eventual election of a new Catholicos under revised structures. The proposed charter would introduce mechanisms for financial oversight and clerical discipline, areas traditionally governed by the Church.

Legal experts and defenders of religious freedom warn that such proposals are a direct political interference in the internal management of a religious body. The Constitution of Armenia recognizes the exceptional role of the Armenian Apostolic Church in national life and enshrines the principle of separation between the Church and the state.

This dual framework is further reinforced by the 2007 Law on Church-State Relations, which clearly recognizes the Church’s right to self-governance. Critics argue that any attempt by a political party to preempt leadership changes or impose structural reforms violates those protections.

As noted, tensions have escalated significantly over the past year, and the government has become more hostile in its efforts to limit the Church’s independence.

More than 90% of the population identifies with the Armenian Apostolic Church, which has long served as a cornerstone of national identity, particularly during periods of foreign rule and genocide.

Historically, attempts to establish political control over the Church have been associated with external forces, including the Soviet authorities, who sought to limit religious influence. Critics warn that the current proposals repeat those earlier efforts, raising concerns about the future of religious freedom in the country.

If the ruling party secures an electoral victory, it can later claim a public mandate to implement proposed changes, including interference in Church governance, despite the lack of a clear public debate on the issue.