Khachik Galstyan: Thousands of Armenians have heeded opposition wake-up call

Panorama
Armenia – May 7 2022

Khachik Galstyan, a senior member of the opposition Homeland Party, and his family members has joined a car rally from Yerevan to Vanadzor, Armenia’s third largest city, to demand the resignation of Nikol Pashinyan and his cabinet.

The rally organized by the opposition forces was to start on Saturday morning.

Speaking to reporters, Galstyan expressed conviction that many people would take part in it.

He says thousands of people have heeded the wake-up call made by the opposition a few weeks ago.

“Hundreds of thousands of citizens are going through an awakening process. They are all inspired by the ideas of national liberation movement,” the oppositionist said.

Galstyan attached importance to acts of civil disobedience also in the country’s regions.

“I believe that our citizens will join us, we, united as a single fist, will drive out the external enemy and the adventurers in Armenia, who are torpedoing its development and the development of Artsakh, and will build the Armenia of our dreams,” he said.

An opposition rally is expected to kick off in Vanadzor at 1pm.

Lawyer: Level of human rights protection ‘setting new records in democratic Armenia’

Panorama
Armenia – May 7 2022

Lawyer Amram Makinyan says an Armenian woman detained by police during anti-government protests has been unlawfully held in police custody for several hours now.

“The level of human rights protection in Nikol’s “democratic Armenia” is setting new records,” he wrote on Facebook on Saturday.

“A detainee, who is a young woman, continues to be held in police custody after the expiry of the specified period (more than 6 hours now). Long live Nikol’s democracy!” the lawyer sneered.

Several tourist destinations in Armenia’s Syunik threatened, guide says

Panorama
Armenia – May 7 2022

Syunik Province is one of the popular travel destinations in Armenia with its forests, mountains, historical and cultural monuments and, naturally, healing springs. Most of the specially protected nature areas of Armenia are located in the region. However, the formerly active tourist destinations of the region are no longer used, David Hakobyan, co-founder of the Guides from the South NGO, told Panorama.am in an interview. For example, in Kapan, he says, a number of destinations can no longer be used by outbound tour operators.

“After the signing of the capitulation, the situation has changed. Recently, one of our colleagues and a tourist could not return from Meghri to Kapan via Tsav, because the Russian border service prohibited it, arguing that a special permit – a pass – was needed. The tourist was from the United States. As a result, to avoid delays, they returned via Kajaran. But there are no such obstacles for domestic tourism,” Hakobyan said.

He claims that after the 2020 war some tourist spots are threatened, in particular, the reserve “Sosu Purak” (Pine Grove), which is now a border area.

“At the 21-kilometer section of the Goris-Kapan road now under the control of the enemy, there is also a tourist destination, such as the area from the village of Bardzravan to Noravank, which is currently impossible to travel to pending the construction of a new road,” the guide added.

David Hakobyan strongly believes that economic entities engaged in tourism in Syunik need state support, adding a special policy should be elaborated and implemented. Meanwhile, Hakobyan does not pin his hopes on the current government.

“What are they going to do? After calling the territories ceded to the enemy Azerbaijani, of course, they will do nothing. Perhaps the next authorities will pursue a more national and competent state policy. It’s not only about tourism, it is more a matter of national security. The areas were of vital importance for our country and ensured its security apart from having key roads. The local authorities can do little if there is no common state policy in Armenia,” he said.

Before the war, the tourism sector in the region had already been hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic. Although, David Hakobyan claims the pandemic led to a growth of domestic tourism.

“Several hundred thousand Armenians, who were deprived of the opportunity to travel abroad, spent their holidays inside the country, including in Syunik. In Kapan and Meghri, camping clubs made several times more tours than before. After the war, however, the flow of visitors to Syunik decreased to a certain extent, but not because of reduced interest, but due to security issues,” he noted

“Travel agencies now organize tours mainly in areas up to Tatev. The flow of tourists, who used to come Armen 3-4 years ago, is now preserved in the trips up to Tatev. Not in full, but they do come,” Hakobyan said, expressing the hope that one day Syunik’s tourism opportunities will be used in full again.

Photos shared by David Hakobyan

Sosu Purak in Nerkin Hand village of Syunik Province, Armenia

Tsak Kar Lake, a natural monument in Syunik Province, Armenia

Chakaten village in Syunik Province, Armenia


Era of peace in action: In May 2021, enemy occupied 3,200 hectares of sovereign territory of Armenia

ARMINFO
Armenia – May 7 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo.Armenia, officially and in practical terms, years ago assumed the role of guaranteeing the security of the Republic of Artsakh.  During the 2020 Artsakh war,  Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyans administration failed to provide such  security, losing the entire Artsakh district of Hadrut and parts of  the districts of Shushi, Askeran, Martuni and Martakert. The fortress  town of Shushi was also lost, Hetq.am writes.

Thus, according to the source, by the agreement of November 9  Pashinyan handed over Aghdam, Kelbajar and Lachin regions adjacent to  the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO) to Azerbaijan.  Azerbaijani forces captured Fizuli and Jabrail in the war, as well as  most of Zangelan and Ghubatlu. Armenian forces withdrew in December  2020 (according to a verbal agreement), from the remaining small  areas that were liberated in the 1990s and became part of the Artsakh  Republic.

On May 12, 2021, Azerbaijani armed units, taking advantage of the  inaction of the militarily defeated Pashinyan administration,  captured a number of strategic hills in Armenia (Syunik and  Gegharkunik), and forced Armenian troops to withdraw from their  poorly equipped military positions.

In May 2021, Azerbaijani troops occupied a minimum of 32 square  kilometers (3,200 hectares) in the Vardenis region of Armenia’s  Gegharkunik Province (in the border section from the  Norabak-Karvachar road to Big and Small Al lakes.)  

3,200 hectares is equal to 4,482 football fields.

Using a Google map (the aerial images taken by the European Airbus  and American Maxar Technologies satellites), Hetq has measured the  territory of Armenia occupied by Azerbaijan in the spring of 2021.

Google Maps and Google Earth regularly update their satellite  imagery. However, it is not the whole system that is updated, but  specific segments depending on the images received from the  satellites.

As it is known, Azerbaijani troops have also appeared in the vicinity  of the Kut settlement in Vardenis since the spring of 2021, but we  have measured the size of occupied Armenia sovereign territory south  and southeast of the neighboring village of Norabak. (This is why we  note at least 3,200 hectares). The last satellite image of the Kut  border area in Google Maps and Google Earth was taken on October 18,  2019, before the occupation, and south of Norabak, on October 23,  2021, after the occupation.

Thus, we base our findings on the positional situation as of October  23, 2021. We measured the size of the occupation by drawing a  straight line between the Azerbaijani vanguard positions. The 3,200  hectares is the area that is now behind these positions. However,  Azerbaijani troops monitor a much larger area from their positions on  the strategic heights.

As can be seen in the map, the area of the first occupied zone, from  the Norabak- Karvachar road to the neighboring positions of Nerkin  Shorzha, is 11.4 square kilometers (1,140 hectares). The area of the  second zone, 20.7 square kilometers (2,070 hectares), which includes  the section from Verin Shorzha-Tsar road to Mets Tsarasar (elevation  – 3441 meters, the mountain is outside the territory of Armenia  according to Google Maps.)

The Armenia-Azerbaijan border runs from the Sotk gold mine to the Big  and Small Al lakes along the Eastern Sevan Mountain range. One of its  highest peaks is Tsarasar, which is 3,426 m high. (Blue sign in  picture and map). This mountain, the dividing point of the  Armenian-Azerbaijani border, appeared 3.8 kilometers behind  Azerbaijani military lines in May 2021. Thus, Azerbaijani troops  advanced 3.8 km in a straight line in the Tsarasar section. The whole  Vardenis region can be observed from the top of the mountain,  including Lake Sevan, which is 29 km from the shore to Tsarasar. The  distance from the center of Vardenis is 22 km. This area vulnerable  to artillery.

On May 27, 2021, on the eve of snap parliamentary elections, Prime  Minister Pashinyan circulated his famous thesis of the mirror  withdrawal of troops in the Sotk (Gegharkunik) – Khoznavar (Syunik)  section. Responding to Azerbaijan’s false claim that Azerbaijani  troops had advanced to clarify the border, Pashinyan offered to hand  over border monitoring to a third party.

“International observers are coming, either from Russia or OSCE Minsk  Group Co- Chair countries. They will come and take up positions to  ensure that troops on both sides: If this is the case, why do we, or  they, need soldiers on the top of that mountain covered in snow for  half of the year?” Pashinyan said at the time.

On May 27, 2021, shortly after Pashinyan’s remarks, Armenian Foreign  Minister Ara Ayvazyan resigned.

At a farewell meeting with ministry staff in June, Ayvazyan said he  decided to leave to “ensure that there is never any suspicion that  this ministry could take measures or accept certain ideas,  initiatives, which go against our national and state interests”.

Last month, Ayvazyan revealed that it was Pashinyan’s border policy  that led him to leave office.

Former Armenian Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan, noting  Azerbaijani advances in the Parukh-Khramort section of Artsakh, also  criticized Pashinyan in this regard.

“The government’s proposal to withdraw troops in parallel is  destructive for the security of Armenia and Artsakh. The objective  evidence is the recent illegal actions and invasions of Azerbaijan in  Artsakh (Parukh, Khramort, Karaglukh). This idea was deplorably  brought to the public domain, promoted and became part of an agenda  favorable to Azerbaijani interests.”

Pashinyan’s proposal never saw the light of day because Ilham Aliyev,  to put it mildly, paid no heed. Instead, Azerbaijani armed groups  continue to pose a threat to the population of the entire Vardenis  region, and especially to residents of the border villages of Kut,  Norabak, Nerkin Shorzha and Verin Shorzha.

Moreover, on January 11 of this year, Azerbaijani troops launched new  attacks in this area using firearms, artillery and unmanned aerial  vehicles. They targeted Armenian military positions, killing three  soldiers and wounding others, Hetq.am concludes.  

Immortal Regiment March to be held in Yerevan

ARMINFO
Armenia – May 7 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. The Immortal Regiment March, organized by the Armenian Immortal Regiment Patriotic NGO, will be held in Yerevan in memory of the heroes of the Great  Patriotic War.

At 11:00am at the eternal flame in Victory Park, everyone will be  able to join the March and raise photos of their relatives.

Similar Marches will be held in Vanadzor, Kapan, Hrazdan and other  cities of Armenia.

It should be noted that the Immortal Regiment March, which has  already become traditional, has been held in Armenia since 2016.

On the same day, on May 9 at 3:00pm at the Moscow Cinema, the  Armenian Immortal Regiment Patriotic NGO will screen the documentary  film “War for Victory”. The project is dedicated to the 77th  anniversary of the Great Victory, which tells about the main events  and battles in which the army of Soviet Armenia took part.

The film is based on the memoirs of Armenian veterans of the Great  Patriotic War, where they talk about their direct participation in  the hostilities and the solidarity of the Soviet army.

Veterans of the Second World War, schoolchildren and students of  Armenia, ambassadors of Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus are invited to  the event.

This is the fourth documentary film about the Armenian veterans of  the Great Patriotic War, prepared by the Immortal Regiment of Armenia  and aimed at the patriotic education of young people.

Boat carrying two people goes missing in Lake Sevan

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 12:17, 7 May, 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 7, ARMENPRESS. Maritime rescue teams of the Ministry of Emergency Situations are searching for a boat carrying two persons that left the coast near the Vardenik-Zolakar village into Lake Sevan but failed to return since May 6.

Bad weather conditions prompted the rescue teams to suspend the search on May 6 but the efforts were re-launched on May 7, the Ministry of Emergency Situations said.

Other details weren’t immediately clear.

Artsakh Ombudsman comments on incident with Azerbaijani military convoy

ARMINFO
Armenia – May 6 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo.Artsakh Ombudsman Gegham Stepanyan reacted to the incident with Azerbaijani military convoy. 

Thus, as the press service of the Artsakh Ombudsman reports, the  statement of Stepanyan reads: “On May 5, at around 13:00 pm, on the  24th km of the Martakert-Drmbon Road, a truck traveling as part of  the Azerbaijani convoy, came out to the opposite side of the road and  collided with a Renault Logan taxi service car of Artsakh  registration, as a result of which the car rolled 12 meters into the  gorge on the right side of the road.

There were 2 passengers in the car beside the driver. As a result of  the preliminary examination, the passengers did not receive any  bodily injuries. Material damage was caused to the taxi service  company. 

Based on the facts collected by the Human Rights Defender’s Staff, at  the moment we can state:  

The Azerbaijani truck, seeing the possible collision could have  stopped driving to avoid the crash, after which the taxi rolled into  the gorge.

After the collision, seeing that the taxi had rolled into the  gorge, the Azerbaijani truck did not stop and kept driving.

According to the taxi driver and the passengers, the taxi driver  tried to avoid the collision but had no chance.

The law enforcement bodies of the Republic of Artsakh are conducting  an investigation, but the above-mentioned circumstances prove the  obvious intention to cause collision and damage.”

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/06/2022

                                                Friday, May 6, 2022
Armenian Speaker Explains Mother’s Middle-Finger Salute To Protesters
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- A screenshot of a video that shows the mother of parliament speaker 
Alen Simonian giving opposition protesters the middle finger, Yerevan, May 6, 
2022
Parliament speaker Alen Simonian defended his mother on Friday after cameras 
caught her showing the middle finger to opposition protesters demanding Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation.
A video circulated on social media showed a middle-aged woman repeatedly making 
the offensive gesture and spitting at the protesters from the balcony of an 
apartment in downtown Yerevan.
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service established that the apartment is the place of 
residence of Simonian’s mother, Mariam Hovannisian.
Simonian confirmed later in the day Hovannisian was the one who stuck her middle 
fingers out at the demonstrators. He claimed that she did so because some of 
them recognized and insulted her.
Armenia - Parliament speaker Alen Simonian at a session of the National 
Assembly, September 13, 2021.
“Knowing that this is our apartment, protesters shouted insults addressed to me 
and my family,” he said. “In response to that, my mom lost her temper.”
There is no evidence in support of Simonian’s claim in the publicized video of 
the incident.
The protesters were led by two opposition lawmakers. Simonian insisted that his 
mother’s gestures were directed not at the lawmakers but at some of their 
supporters. He suggested that she therefore cannot be prosecuted under a 
controversial law passed by the Armenian parliament last year.
Armenia - Opposition protesters block a street in Yerevan, May 6, 2022.
The law made it a crime to gravely insult state officials and public figures. 
Law-enforcement authorities have used it to prosecute dozens of government 
critics in recent months.
RFE/RL journalists stumbled upon Simonian’s mother’s apartment last October as 
they looked for the offices of an obscure construction firm managed by the 
speaker’s brother. They discovered that the apartment matches one of the 
company’s two officially registered addresses.
The company called Euroasphalt won earlier in 2021 two government contracts 
worth a combined $1.4 million, raising suspicions of a conflict of interest and 
even corruption. Simonian, who is a figure close to Pashinian, condemned 
Armenian media outlets for questioning the integrity of those deals.
Armenian Police Try To Arrest Former Chief At Anti-Government Protest
        • Robert Zargarian
Armenia - Security forces try to arrest former Armenian police chief Valeri 
Osipian during an opposition demonstration in Yerevan, May 6, 2022.
The Armenian police attempted to arrest their former chief on Friday as he 
participated in continuing anti-government protests organized by the country’s 
leading opposition groups.
General Valeri Osipian joined one of four large groups of opposition supporters 
who simultaneously marched to various parts of the city from its France Square, 
the epicenter of the daily protests, early in the afternoon. The demonstrators 
continued to condemn Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s policy on the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and demand his resignation.
One of the marching crowds was confronted by riot police after stopping at a 
busy street intersection and blocking traffic through it. The police officers 
jostled with the several hundred protesters and began arresting some of them.
Several officers dragged away Osipian, meeting with strong resistance from other 
protesters, who tried to prevent the arrest. In ensuing chaotic scenes, it was 
not clear whether they managed to take him into custody.
The police refused to clarify afterwards whether Osipian was among at least 59 
opposition supporters detained on Friday.
The former police chief did not answer phone calls. He spoke to some media 
outlets in France Square a couple of hours after the incident.
“They didn’t manage to take me away,” Osipian told the Hraparak daily. “People 
didn’t let them do that.”
Armenia -- Armenian opposition leader Nikol Pashinian talks to police Colonel 
Valeri Osipian during a rally in Yerevan, April 29, 2018.
Pashinian named Osipian to run the national police service in May 2018 two days 
after being elected prime minister following weeks of anti-government protests 
led by him. Osipian was until then a deputy head of Yerevan’s police department 
responsible for public order and crowd control.
He personally monitored many anti-government rallies staged in the Armenian 
capital during former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule. Osipian frequently 
warned and argued with Pashinian during the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that 
toppled Sarkisian.
Osipian was sacked in September 2019. He publicly voiced support for former 
President Robert Kocharian in the run-up to last year’s snap parliamentary 
elections.
Kocharian is the top leader of the Hayastan alliance, one of the two opposition 
forces that launched the “civil disobedience” campaign aimed at toppling 
Pashinian.
The ex-president’s younger son, Levon, was among demonstrators that marched 
through other parts of Yerevan on Friday. They nearly clashed with riot police 
at one point.
Levon Kocharian accused the police of trying to intimidate the opposition and 
its supporters. “But I can definitely that that is having the opposite effect,” 
he told reporters.
Court Refuses To Free Armenia’s Former Top Prosecutor
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Outgoing Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian speaks with journalists, 
Yerevan, September 13, 2013.
A court in Yerevan on Friday refused to grant bail to former Prosecutor-General 
Aghvan Hovsepian who was arrested last September on a string of corruption 
charges denied by him.
Hovsepian served as Armenia’s chief prosecutor from 1998-1999 and 2004-2013. He 
went on to become the first head of a newly created law-enforcement agency, the 
Investigative Committee, in 2014. He ran the committee until the 2018 “velvet 
revolution” that brought Nikol Pashinian to power.
Hovsepian was one of Armenia’s most powerful state officials during his tenure.
The 69-year-old now stands accused of bribery, money laundering and illegal 
entrepreneurial activity. The Anti-Corruption Committee (ACC) claims that he 
also misappropriated several properties while in office.
An ACC official leading the criminal investigation told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service last month that Hovsepian abused his powers to earn roughly 6.8 billion 
drams ($14.5 million) through various businesses controlled by him. His lawyer 
insisted that the businesses belonged to his adult sons and that the 
ex-prosecutor had nothing to do with them.
Hovsepian again denied the charges at the start of his trial earlier this week. 
He said they are based on false testimony given by two individuals.
Hovsepian also hit out at ACC chief Sasun Khachatrian, who also used to work as 
a prosecutor. He claimed that Khachatrian is taking revenge for his refusal to 
give him a job in the Investigative Committee.
Defense lawyers petitioned the court to free their client from custody on bail. 
The presiding judge, Mnatsakan Martirosian, rejected the request. The lawyers 
said they will appeal against the decision.
The veteran judge is notorious for rarely making decisions going against the 
current and former Armenian authorities’ wishes.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

FM Mirzoyan presents Armenia’s position on NK conflict’s peaceful settlement to US Senator Menendez

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 11:16, 6 May, 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan met with US Senator, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Bob Menendez during his working visit in Washington D.C., the foreign ministry said in a press release.

Member of the Committee, Senator Jim Risch also attended the meeting.

The sides touched upon the agenda of the Armenian-American relations, as well as the security situation around Armenia and Artsakh, and a number of issues relating to regional security.

The sides praised also the achievements registered in the Armenian-American diplomatic relations over the past 30 years. The Armenian FM highlighted the importance of the US support to Armenia’s ongoing reforms, strengthening of democracy, economy development, as well as touched upon the significance of the agreements reached during the visit.

At the meeting FM Mirzoyan also highly valued the contribution of Senator Menendez to the adoption of the Senate resolution on the recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

The Armenian FM also presented the humanitarian situation in Nagorno Karabakh and the position of Armenia over the peaceful settlement of the NK conflict. In this context the impermissibility of provocation of tension by Azerbaijan was emphasized.

The sides stressed the necessity for repatriation of Armenian prisoners of war and civilian captives held in Azerbaijan.

Ararat Mirzoyan also presented the latest developments in the Armenia-Turkey normalization process.

Ararat Mirzoyan handed over the Friendship Order to Bob Menendez, who was awarded on the 30th anniversary of the establishment of Armenia-US diplomatic relations, for his significant contributions to the development and strengthening of the Armenian-American friendly relations.

Yerevan Mayor receives French Ambassador

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 15:13, 6 May, 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS. Mayor of Yerevan Hrachya Sargsyan had a meeting with Ambassador of France to Armenia Anne Louyot, the press service of the Yerevan City Hall said.

Highly valuing the role of France in the programs implemented in Yerevan so far, the Mayor expressed confidence that the warm relations with the Embassy will continue, which in its turn, he said, will contribute to the further expansion of the friendly and practical relations between Yerevan and French cities.

The French Ambassador thanked for the readiness to expand the partnership and said that she will do the utmost within her powers to assist all the initiatives aimed at strengthening the bilateral ties.

Today the Yerevan City Hall is cooperating with Paris, Marseille, Lyon, Nice and Île-de-France. The sides highlighted expanding this partnership.

Touching upon the next conference of decentralized cooperation to take place in Lyon this year in June, the Mayor of Yerevan and the French Ambassador expressed confidence that it will serve as a good occasion to discuss the vision and programs of future cooperation.