California Courier Online, June 15, 2026

California
Courier Online, June 15, 2026

1- Democracy Hijacked:

Armenia’s Rigged Parliamentary Elections

By Harut
Sassounian

TheCaliforniaCourier.com
2- Alex Alexsanian of Burbank gets two year sentence for involvement in Medicare fraud

3- The enduring legacy of Dhaka’s historic Armenian Church
4- Women seemingly forced to sell hair to survive in Iran, following Armenian smuggling attempt
5- Social media usage and Armenia’s 2026 election
6-  Forbes 250 America’s most successful living immigrants
7- Final results of Armenia’s parliamentary elections for each party

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1- Democracy Hijacked:

Armenia’s Rigged Parliamentary Elections
By Harut Sassounian
TheCaliforniaCourier.com

Armenia’s parliamentary elections were held on June 7 under widespread, systematic, and well-documented fraudulent conditions.

These elections were not merely held to determine the representatives of the people or the future orientation of the country. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was well aware that the outcome would decide whether he could continue to rule the country single-handedly for another five years or face prosecution for violating hundreds of laws and the constitution.

Realizing that this was a fight for personal survival, Pashinyan resorted to every legal and illegal means at his disposal to secure reelection and avoid imprisonment.

The electoral fraud started long before a single vote was cast. In a series of draconian measures in the months leading up to the election, Pashinyan ordered the arrests of hundreds of opposition supporters, accusing them of buying votes. Yet, not a single one of the arrested individuals has been tried or found guilty. Furthermore, without any legal authority, he ordered the arrests of several parliamentary candidates from the opposition. His intent was to undermine their electoral campaigns and intimidate their supporters. He also violated the legal requirement of obtaining prior approval from the Central Election Commission before arresting any candidate for parliament. Pashinyan additionally barred opposition leaders Gagik Tsarukyan, Robert Kocharyan, and Narek Karapetyan from leaving the country for brief trips, again without the required approval of the Central Election Commission.

Pashinyan ordered the arrest of prominent businessman and philanthropist Samvel Karapetyan on the very day he said he defended the Armenian Apostolic Church. After spending months in pretrial detention under harsh conditions, Karapetyan was placed under house arrest. In doing so, Pashinyan effectively deprived a major political opponent of the ability to campaign for his party ahead of the elections.

Pashinyan travelled throughout the country for several weeks before the election, improperly using extensive government resources for his political campaign. He was accompanied by government ministers and parliamentary leaders who abused their official positions by failing to take leave of absence.

Contrary to election laws, the government compelled hundreds of schoolchildren and teachers to attend Pashinyan’s campaign rallies during school hours, to create the appearance of massive public support. Government employees faced similar forced attendance.

Regarding voter rolls, the Central Election Commission announced 2.5 million registered voters in a country with a population of at most three million. This includes a large number of children under 18 and hundreds of thousands of Armenians who had emigrated years earlier but whose names remained on the registered voter lists This discrepancy created ample opportunity for fraud, as the government could cast votes in the names of absent citizens. Indeed, several voters reported arrived at polling stations only to discover that someone else had already voted in their place.

Additional fraud occurred when authorities brought a large number of soldiers to polling stations and instructed them to vote for the Prime Minister’s party. These soldiers engaged in multiple voting by moving between several precincts — a tactic known as “Carousel voting.”

The authorities also created obstacles for those citizens of Armenia who had come from overseas specifically to vote. Upon arrival, many were immediately sent for 25-day military training, thus depriving them of their voting rights.

Remarkably, after only a small number of votes were counted on June 7, Pashinyan hastily announced that his party had won a majority, thereby pressuring the Central Election Commission to declare him the victor.

After preliminary counting on June 8, serious discrepancies emerged between the votes recorded at polling stations, and the totals reported by the Central Election Commission. Hundreds, if not thousands, of votes for opposition parties were undercounted. All three major opposition parties rejected the results as fraudulent, called for new elections, and appealed to the Constitutional Court. However, new elections would likely yield the same outcome under the same fraudulent methods. Moreover, all the members of the Constitutional Court were appointed by Pashinyan’s parliamentary allies, making any overturning of the results virtually impossible.

On June 14, a full week after the elections, the Central Election Commission announced the final results. Despite documentation from the Prosperous Armenia party showing plenty of uncounted votes, the Commission claimed the party had fallen a few votes short of the 4% threshold. As a result Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party was reported to have received 49.75% of the votes — which translates to 64 parliamentary seats; Strong Armenia party received 23.27% — 29 seats; and Armenia Alliance received 9.9% — 12 seats. Pashinyan’s party secured approximately 60% of the seats in parliament, despite receiving only 49% of the public votes because 15 other parties having fallen below the 4% threshold, their votes were redistributed — largely benefiting Pashinyan’s party.

Nevertheless, Pashinyan’s party failed to achieve the two-thirds majority needed, to adopt the new constitution demanded by Pres. Ilham Aliyev. Consequently, Azerbaijan will not sign Pashinyan’s much-touted Peace Treaty. This outcome is highly embarrassing for Pashinyan, who had campaigned on a promise of peace while accusing the opposition of being “parties of war.”

Over the past week, there has been extensive debate in Armenia about whether opposition parties should take their seats in the fraudulent parliament or boycott it. Both options carry advantages and disadvantages. They will shortly announce their decision.

Regardless of whether the opposition parties choose to assume their seats, they should take two critical steps:

1)    Unite all opposition forces and jointly call for hundreds of thousands of Armenians to flood the streets of Yerevan and other cities in sustained protests until Pashinyan resigns.
2)    Form a “Shadow Cabinet,” assigning opposition politicians to unofficial ministerial positions. This body would lead the campaign to oust Pashinyan and prepare for a smooth governmental transition after his departure.

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2- Alex Alexsanian of Burbank gets two year sentence for involvement in Medicare fraud

City News Service

 Burbank man was sentenced on April 28 to two years and three months in federal prison for participating in a scheme to defraud Medicare out of at least $14 million via hospice and diagnostic testing services that were often never provided.Alex Alexsanian, 48, was also ordered to forfeit $3 million derived from the scheme. He pleaded guilty in January to one count of money laundering conspiracy.The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Alexsanian directed a foreign national to open a radiology clinic and acquire Medicare provider Console Hospice in Van Nuys, then provide control of those companies and their bank accounts and the foreign national’s personal bank accounts to the defendant.Alexsanian conspired with the foreign national — who has since left the country — and others to have the clinic and Console Hospice submit fraudulent claims to Medicare for services never rendered, prosecutors said.Co-defendant Sophia Shaklian, 38, of the Larchmont neighborhood of Los Angeles, pleaded guilty in November 2025 to a single count of healthcare fraud and was sentenced to nearly three years behind bars.A 24-count grand jury indictment filed two years ago in Los Angeles federal court charged both defendants with taking part in the scheme.Prosecutors said Shaklian, often using aliases, managed and submitted claims for seven healthcare providers enrolled with Medicare and located in Los Angeles County. The businesses included a hospice company she owned and several diagnostic testing companies.From March 2019 to August 2024 the companies submitted fraudulent claims to Medicare for services that were never provided and not needed, and received more than $14 million for those claims, federal prosecutors said. Shaklian laundered Medicare funds by transferring them to accounts in the name of a fake identity, documents show.The defendants laundered the Medicare reimbursements they received, as well as funds deposited into their accounts, through the phony identity, and used them to, among other things, buy more than $6 million in gold bars and coins, prosecutors said.

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3- The enduring legacy of Dhaka’s historic Armenian Church

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5- Social media usage and Armenia’s 2026 election

By Santiago Ferber-Azcarate
Common space.eu

On June 7, Armenians voted in a parliamentary election that returned Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract to power with a little less than half of all votes. This election, however, was not only fought in the traditional sense; it was also fought in an online information environment shaped by disinformation, diasporic relations, and a history of censorship.

Seventy years of Soviet state media left Armenians in a difficult reality. In 2001, 96.8% of the population reported having little trust in mass media, indicating a deep-seated suspicion of official information sources. Although these numbers have shifted over the last 25 years, the willingness of the Armenian people to turn to alternative media has consistently reflected this distrust. By 2024, around two-thirds of Armenians utilised social media as a primary news outlet; however, this figure is somewhat misleading, as traditional media still dominates those above 45 and in rural populations. Social media has taken a unique position in Armenia, not by supplementing already well-established journalism, but by filling a vacuum.

It was in 2018 that social media first became a well-utilised tool in Armenian politics. Pashinyan’s strategy of bypassing captured broadcast media relied on multiple new media platforms, each with distinct functionalities: Facebook Live as a broadcast infrastructure, Telegram as a closed coordination tool, and livestreaming as a real-time accountability mechanism that made violence against protesters instantly costly and visible. With traditional media aligned with the ruling party, reporters had to follow Facebook groups and Telegram conversations to find out where protests would be held and what ideas would circulate; the distinction between online platforms and the press had effectively disappeared. Crucially, though, the underlying media structure that had produced this reality did not change; only the government had. Public distrust in the media continued, and Armenia’s information environment remained susceptible to manipulation.

That underlying distrust carried into the 2021 elections, where social and new media again proved a valuable political tool, although this time the strategies initially utilised to mobilise were instead deployed to polarise. The same platforms that had enabled horizontal civic communication in 2018 became vectors for blame, conspiracy, and grief, a shift shaped in large part by the trauma of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. Telegram underwent a key infrastructural shift in this regard: unlike Facebook, which is more easily monitorable, Telegram’s closed channel architecture made coordinated disinformation almost impossible to track in real time. Most political groups in Armenia effectively established a communication strategy built on emotional registers of betrayal, loss, and national humiliation; registers that would come to dominate short-form political content five years later.

By 2026, Armenia’s information environment remained shaped by these accumulated realities. Over the last 5 years, social media usage has only become more diverse, influenced by a culmination of factors such as age, gender, interests, and socioeconomic class. Social media usage had grown more diverse, influenced by age, gender, interests, and socioeconomic class, and a new set of tools had entered the picture. Short-form content became a major player in political communication, with TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram all serving as platforms for fast-paced content well suited to the dissemination of disinformation. An analysis by Respense examined around 57,561 media mentions across websites, Telegram, Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, X, and broadcast television; a reflection of Armenia’s pluralistic yet polarized information space. Social media was utilized by both major parties in the run-up to the election, creating a competing reality where outlets were instrumentalised to amplify mutual insults and divisive campaign rhetoric, offering little substantive analysis of policy platforms. Notably, around 17.5% of all TikTok videos analyzed were labeled high risk for disinformation.

The disinformation that circulated reflected strategies well-known and well-tested around the world. Themes centred on emotional pulls familiar from 2021: betrayal, loss, and national humiliation. These themes were built into fear-driven narratives designed to exploit public anxieties surrounding peace efforts and the existential threat of renewed conflict. The data reflects this starkly: the two primary opposition narratives were ‘the government betrayed Nagorno-Karabakh’, generating 1,230 videos and 15.9 million views, and ‘the 2026 elections will be rigged’, generating 594 videos and 10 million views. It should be noted that Pashinyan remains the political actor in Armenia with the largest single online following, though the opposition collectively pulled in approximately twice the amount of views. Pashinyan’s own narratives followed a similar emotional logic, engaging public anxieties surrounding peace efforts by warning that a war with Azerbaijan was imminent should the opposition win.

Alongside emotionally driven narratives came the use of AI-generated multimedia and deepfakes: fabricated clips designed to look like news broadcasts, showing falsified documents to discredit political candidates and front pages of well-known international newspapers impersonated to lend false credibility to fabricated stories. A further identifiable strategy was the use of foreign bots and influence networks, placing false information on foreign platforms and then legitimizing and spreading it through official and unofficial channels of regional actors. Many domestic online spaces also exhibited a pay-to-play dynamic, with political entities buying manipulated digital visibility and sponsoring pages to push targeted attacks on opponents. Social media was no longer simply a space for communication and mobilization; it was used simultaneously to mobilize, legitimize, disinform, and suppress

To understand the scale of the problem, it is worth mapping the specific clusters of disinformation that circulated during the campaign. The content was not random; it was calculated and drawn on deep wells of public anxiety that have been building in Armenia for years. The dominant cluster was security-based, with the most widely circulated narratives portraying Armenia on a path toward military confrontation, with the drawing of comparisons to Ukraine’s lived experience. These narratives were frequently delivered through fabricated news content. Hundreds of fake videos had been published by early May 2026 alone, including fabricated clips falsely claiming that NATO instructors were present in Armenia and that a military conflict with Russia would be provoked after the election. Security fears were especially potent given Armenia’s lived memory of violence, and disinformation consistently exploited this wound. The second major cluster concerned Nagorno-Karabakh itself, with disinformation narratives spreading falsities, especially among the Armenian diasporas in Russia, blaming the current government for the consequences derived from the conflict. An inherent attempt to frame the conflict as an emotional binary reality, removing the complex regional context that exists.

The third cluster focused on economic realities, with false narratives about the economy being prevalent throughout the campaigns. This included fabricated claims about what EU integration entails and what it would mean for Armenian households, jobs, and trade. These were reinforced by real economic pressures, as in late May 2026, Russia’s consumer protection agency temporarily suspended imports and added restrictions on Armenian flower exports to Russia; a move perfectly timed to coincide with the electoral campaign, recalling the economic pressure Russia had applied to Moldova and Georgia when those countries pursued European integration.

A fourth cluster operated on cultural and identity lines, linking geopolitical messaging in order to reach audiences otherwise indifferent to foreign policy debates. This included fabricated claims that EU integration carried a mandatory condition to sever Armenia’s ties with the Armenian Orthodox Church, a narrative cynically designed to weaponize religious identity and stoke fear that European alignment would threaten centuries of spiritual tradition. Perhaps the most corrosive was the institutional trust cluster. Much of this disinformation was explicitly designed not to persuade voters toward any particular outcome, but simply to erode confidence in the electoral process itself. The narratives aimed to undermine democratic practices and break trust in institutions. This form of disinformation is arguably the most durable, because even after a vote is concluded and results are certified, the doubt it plants can continue to linger.

What made the 2026 campaign distinct from previous Armenian information environments was not simply the volume of disinformation, but rather the sophistication of its delivery infrastructure. Politically affiliated networks created fake media websites, impersonated journalists and legitimate news outlets, and amplified false narratives through influencers and interconnected websites in an attempt to make fabricated stories seem credible. The result was a layered information environment in which it was genuinely difficult for ordinary users to differentiate between authentic journalism, domestic political messaging, and foreign-produced fabrication. It is important to note that foreign and domestic disinformation did not operate in isolation; they fed each other, amplified each other’s emotional registers, and collectively produced an information space that was structurally hostile to nuance.

Despite the scale of the operations, not all of the disinformation had its intended effect. The relationship between disinformation and public belief is not automatic, as context, lived experiences, and pre-existing trust levels all shape how different narratives land. International observers reported that authorities took steps to address disinformation, though the transparency and effectiveness of these efforts were limited. Civil society organizations, independent fact-checkers, and media literacy initiatives did attempt to counter false claims in real time. The Armenian government itself used the same social media platforms carrying disinformation to run voter education campaigns. The fact that this was necessary at all is itself significant, as the information environment had become so contested that the state felt compelled to compete within it rather than regulate from above.

Armenia’s trajectory with social media mirrors a pattern visible across post-Soviet and democratising states: early adoption as a tool of liberation, followed by instrumentalization as a tool of control, polarisation, and manipulation. The 2018 Velvet Revolution demonstrated the emancipatory ceiling, and the 2021 and 2026 elections demonstrated the adversarial floor. The most plausible near-term trajectory, hence, is not a resolution of this tension but the entrenchment of it. This is especially as short-form video content continues to grow in popularity, particularly among younger Armenians, meaning the speed at which emotional narratives can be distributed will outpace institutional fact-checking capacity. AI-generated multimedia lowers the production cost of disinformation to near-zero. And as long as the underlying condition persists, a population with high social media use but historically low institutional media trust, every new platform becomes a new vector for the same structural vulnerability. The hopeful reading is not naive optimism. Armenia has a growing civil society, a generation politically formed by the experience of 2018, and a population that has now, demonstrably, lived through a major coordinated disinformation campaign and retained enough critical capacity to assess it. The question for the coming years is whether media literacy, platform accountability, and institutional reform can develop quickly enough to match the pace of the threat, or whether the conversation will remain fatally one-directional.

Source: Santiago Ferbel-Azcarate is a Senior Research Assistant at LINKS Europe Foundation.

6- Forbes 250 America’s most successful living immigrants

Edited By Alex Knapp and Michael Noer, Forbes

No less an icon than the Statue of Liberty celebrates
America’s 50 million foreign-born residents, welcoming the “huddled masses
yearning to breathe free.” Lady Liberty is herself foreign-born, an 1885 gift
to the nation from France, and a reminder that this is a place where people
come to build a new life for themselves and their children. In that spirit, for
the country’s 250th anniversary, we have ranked America’s 250 greatest living
immigrants (the greatest in history can be found here) and also looked at
immigrants’ impact as a whole on the nation. As many billionaire immigrants
told us themselves, despite any current challenges, the American Dream is alive
and well.

Forbes 250 America’s Most Successful Immigrants

#29. Noubar Afeyan, 63 • Lebanon

Afeyan came to the United States to study biochemical
engineering. He stayed to become an investor, whose firm Flagship Pioneering
has launched more than 70 healthcare companies.

#129. Ardem Patapoutian, 58 • Lebanon

Before the 2021 winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine
conducted his research on how sensory perception works, he helped pay for his
undergraduate education by delivering pizza.

In addition, Aso Tavitian is number 216 on the list of
America’s most successful historic immigrants.

Aso tavitian (1940- 2020). Born in Bulgaria. Tavitian
cofounded SyncSort (now Precisely), one of the first software development
companies, and served as its CEO from 1975-2008.

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7- Final results of Armenia’s parliamentary elections for each party

Armenpress

Armenia’s Central Electoral Commission on 14 June finalized and announced the official results of the parliamentary elections held on 7 June.

The results were presented by CEC Chairman Vahagn Hovakimyan.

According to the final results:

 • Civil Contract Party – 726,819 votes (49.7456%)

 • Strong Armenia Alliance – 340,006 votes (23.2710%)

 • Armenia Alliance – 144,983 votes (9.9231%)

 • Prosperous Armenia Party – 58,287 votes (3.9893%)

 • Wings of Unity Party – 33,537 votes (2.2954%)

 • Meritocratic Party of Armenia – 30,642 votes (2.0972%)

 • Democracy, Law and Discipline Party – 25,758 votes (1.7630%)

 • New Force Reformist Party – 25,551 votes (1.7488%)

 • I Am Against Everyone Democratic Party – 21,181 votes (1.4497%)

 • Republic Party – 15,808 votes (1.0819%)

 • Bright Armenia Party – 7,439 votes (0.5091%)

 • In the Name of the Republic Democracy Protection Alliance – 6,754 votes (0.4623%)

 • Pan-Armenian National Democratic Pole – 5,481 votes (0.3751%)

 • Democratic Consolidation Party – 5,269 votes (0.3606%)

 • Armenian National Congress Party – 3,143 votes (0.2151%)

 • Christian Democratic Party – 2,671 votes (0.1825%)

 • Kochari National Revival and Awakening of the Nation Party – 1,986 votes (0.1359%)

 • Reformists Party – 1,425 votes (0.0975%)

A total of 1,476,769 voters, or 58.9% of eligible voters, participated in the election.

Under the final results, three political forces will enter the National Assembly: Civil Contract Party, which secured a parliamentary majority and will be able to form the government; Strong Armenia Alliance; and Armenia Alliance.

The CEC had invalidated the voting results at three polling stations earlier this week. Prosperous Armenia Party and Strong Armenia Alliance had submitted applications for a recount at two of those three stations. The CEC is currently reviewing those applications.

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Disclaimer: This article was contributed and translated into English by Garo Vardanian. While we strive for quality, the views and accuracy of the content remain the responsibility of the contributor. Please verify all facts independently before reposting or citing.

Direct link to this article: https://www.armenianclub.com/2026/06/16/california-courier-online-june-15-2026/

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