They are completely fictitious and fabricated. Defender of Serzh Sargsyan’s interests

  • 07.02.2019
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  • Armenia:
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10
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Today, some online media published information that during the interrogation within the framework of the March 1 case, Serzh Sargsyan, the third president of the Republic of Armenia, testified against the second president of the Republic of Armenia, Robert Kocharyan. According to the website, it is possible that this is what influenced today’s decision of the Appellate Criminal Court.


168.am asked S. for clarification in this regard. From Amram Makinyan, the advocate of Sargsyan’s interests.


“Serzh Sargsyan was summoned to the special investigative service of the RA within the scope of the March 1 case and questioned. I am sorry that due to the confidentiality of the preliminary investigation, I cannot present and comment on Serzh Sargsyan’s testimony in full. I am familiar with the news circulating in the press, according to which Mr. Serzh Sargsyan allegedly testified against Mr. Robert Kocharyan. I can say unequivocally that they are completely fictitious and fabricated,” Amram Makinyan, the advocate of Serzh Sargsyan’s interests, told us.

http://verelq.am/hy/node/42219?fbclid=IwAR2Dih_P0gvij1PW_4b10FBJDkKQ9k7jin7abegyM66QGgR8R6P2T4CmLRI

Armenia getting a network of EV charging stations

PanArmenian, Armenia
Jan 22 2019

PanARMENIAN.Net – A network of 23 electric vehicle charging stations will be built throughout Armenia in 2019, the government revealed in a Facebook post on Tuesday, January 22.

The move comes after the cabinet of ministers approved VAT exemption for electric motor vehicles and motorcycles (non-hybrid) starting from July 1, 2019.

The decision will be effective until July 1, 2022.

According to the document approved by the government, the bill seeks to promote the use of electric cars in order to help curb air pollution.

Book Review: May Chaderjian’s ‘Letters to Barbra’ Have a Long Life

“Letters to Barbra” is the latest novel from Paul Charderjian

Letters to Barbra,
By Paul Chaderjian
Meshag Publishing, 2018. pp. 524.

BY RUBINA PEROOMIAN, Ph. D.

As a reader who had the chance to read the manuscript before publication, I thank Paul Chaderjian for letting me into the world of “Adam Terzian,” a world in which the past, the present, and the future co-exist in conflict, never in harmony, a world that is marked with the trauma our parents and grandparents lived and unwillingly transmitted to us to shape our identity that we have to live with tragically, in conformity; and if we object, if we turn away, we are doomed; we cannot find peace. The sense of belonging is displaced, it becomes meaningless, only a source of pain and compunction, an anxiety.

If you are looking for a leisurely, easy read, a narrative that takes you on a smooth ride of chronologically recorded episodes, this book is not for you. It needs your full commitment and concentration. It is not a text you just read and forget, but something you live with. Here, the reader becomes the subject, the teller of his/her own life story. And this is because the author offers an exceptional style and language that grabs, that pulls the reader deep into the world he describes.

Letters to Barbra is profound. The torrent of ideas, the thoughts flying back and forth in time, the anachronistic sequence of events make the text difficult to digest. It does not read smoothly like a novel or an ordinary autobiography. So, I do not see it to gain popularity immediately after its release. One is to expect more than that. Chaderjian writes, “I wrote because I had to write.” So, I would add, you read because you have to read and see the mirror image of your life, a part of yourself in the complexity of your identity, an Armenian caught in the web of intricate relationships defying time and space.

Chaderjian had the courage to be honest with the character he created. As an eleven-year old boy, this character, named Adam, witnessed the Beirut bombing, the fears and tears during that senseless civil war. But that experience did not remain in the past. It comes forth like an episode recurring throughout Adam’s life, thus showing the persisting impact of the trauma. And although, the purpose of writing letters to Barbra—Barbra Streisand, a Hollywood idol of the time—comes to light only towards the end of the text, it is obvious that this “game” Adam played so faithfully was a catharsis he sought, a need that did not subside over the years. The burden of the past and its impact on his/our everyday life is there, resonating, as Adam experiences, in debilitating downfalls, unsatisfying successes, the real life and not the imagined or coveted, or the ideal in multicultural, multireligious Los Angeles, the transgenerational pain, the unfulfilled parents’ expectations. And in addition to all that, the true face of the Diaspora and the “homeland” and its people with a huge gap between them. Chaderjian/Adam felt that gap. He recognized the truth before many of us did.

Letters to Barbra is an artistic chronicling of generational struggle for self-realization and quest for identity. Now that it is published and available, let it run its own life. May that be a long one.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/16/2019

                                        Wednesday, 
Armenian, Georgian Leaders Hold ‘Informal’ Talks
Georgia - Prime Minister Mamuka Bakhtadze (R) and his Armenian counterpart 
Nikol Pashiian meet in Bolnisi, .
The prime ministers of Armenia and Georgia met on Tuesday for what they called 
“informal” talks.
The meeting between Nikol Pashinian and Mamuka Bakhtadze took place in Bolnisi, 
a Georgian town located about 30 kilometers from the Armenian border. Few of 
its details were made public afterwards.
Pashinian’s office said he “stressed the importance of Armenian-Georgian 
relations in all areas.” In a separate Facebook post, the Armenian leader said 
the talks were “very cordial” and described Bakhtadze as “my friend.”
“We decided to hold a Georgian-Armenian business forum in [the Armenian town 
of] Dilijan in May,” added Pashinian.
A short statement by the Georgian government said the two leaders discussed 
“good-neighborly relations” between the two neighboring states and expressed 
readiness to “continue fruitful cooperation in the future.”
Pashinian characterized Georgian-Armenian ties as “brilliant” after meeting 
with Bakhtadze in Yerevan in September. He said they need to be reinforced by 
closer commercial links. The Armenian and Georgian governments will strive to 
help increase the annual volume of bilateral trade to $1 billion within the 
next few years, he declared.
According to Armenian government data, Georgian-Armenian trade stood at a 
modest $122 million in January-November 2018.
Longtime Dashnaktsutyun Leader Resigns
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenia - Hrant Markarian, a leader of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, 
attends a conference in Yerevan, 9 December 2015.
Hrant Markarian, the long-serving top leader of the Armenian Revolutionary 
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), announced his resignation on Wednesday more than 
one month after the party’s failure to win any seats in Armenia’s new 
parliament.
Markarian made the announcement at the start of a Dashnaktsutyun congress held 
in Nagorno-Karabakh.
The weeklong gathering is attended by representatives of the party’s chapters 
in Armenia and other countries around the world having sizable Armenian 
communities. They are due to debate its new strategy following last spring’s 
“velvet revolution” that radically reshaped the Armenian political scene. The 
congress will also elect Dashnaktsutyun’s new main decision-making body, the 
Bureau.
Markarian has effectively headed the Bureau since 2000. He said on Wednesday 
that he will not seek reelection to the body.
“We have reached a point where we need to regroup,” he told the congress 
delegates. “That regrouping also requires certain changes, and I propose to 
start the first change from myself.”
Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian awards a medal to Hrant Markarian, a leader 
of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, in Yerevan, 20Sep2016.
Markarian reportedly came under renewed fire from dissident Dashnaktsutyun 
figures in Armenia and the Armenian Diaspora after the party’s poor showing in 
last month’s snap parliamentary elections. They were said to have claimed that 
Dashnaktsutyun paid the price for its close ties with the former Armenian 
government ousted in the revolution.
Markarian blasted the “inner-party opposition” in his speech, saying that it 
has breached the 128-year-old nationalist party’s “traditions” and “moral 
concepts.” But he did not name any of his detractors.
The Iranian-born veteran politician also hit out at the current government of 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, saying that it “doesn’t reflect the mood of the 
popular movement”
“There is an extremely high risk of a merger of the executive and legislative 
branches and a strengthening of one-man rule,” he claimed. “With their 
inexperience, bad governance and poor cadres, the authorities could set the 
country several years back from its normal development.”
Dashnaktsutyun should therefore aim for removing Pashinian and his political 
team from power in the next general elections, added Markarian.
Armenia - Armen Rustamian, a leader of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, 
speaks at an election campaign rally in Yerevan, November 26, 2018.
Another Dashnaktsutyun leader, Armen Rustamian, similarly stated in November 
that Pashinian may be trying to “replace old political and economic monopolies 
with new ones.”
Dashnaktsutyun joined a coalition government formed by Serzh Sarkisian 
immediately after he was controversially elected president in 2008. It pulled 
out of the government a year later in protest against Sarkisian’s policy of 
rapprochement with Turkey. It reached another power-sharing deal with the 
former president in 2016.
The party, which remains influential in the Diaspora communities in the Middle 
East, the United States and France, cut a similar deal with Pashinian shortly 
after he came to power in May. The popular prime minister fired his 
Dashnaktsutyun-affiliated ministers in October, accusing their party of 
secretly collaborating with Sarkisian’s Republican Party.
Dashnaktsutyun won less than 4 percent of the vote in the December 9 elections, 
failing to clear the 5 percent threshold to enter the parliament.
Justice Ministry Seeks To Protect Embattled Lawyers
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia - Angry residents of Echmiadzin block a highway in protest against a 
Yerevan court's decision to release retired General Manvel Grigorian from 
pretrial detention, January 12, 2019.
Armenia’s Justice Ministry and national bar association have drafted a bill 
that would make it a crime to insult lawyers or threaten them and their family 
members with violence.
The move results from angry public reactions to high-profile court cases 
involving former senior government and military officials accused of 
corruption. They have also targeted lawyers representing some of those former 
officials, including Manvel Grigorian, a retired army general prosecuted on 
corruption charges.
Last week one of Grigorian’s lawyers, Arsen Mkrtchian, was confronted outside a 
court in Yerevan by protesters furious with his client’s recent release from 
pretrial detention. Some of those protesters verbally abused Mkrtchian and spat 
at his car.
Armenia’s Chamber of Advocates condemned the incident and demanded stronger 
government protection of its members dealing with sensitive criminal cases. The 
chairman of the bar association, Ara Zohrabian, said earlier this week that 
failure to do so would put lawyers at risk of serious physical attacks.
The resulting bill drafted by the Justice Ministry and the Chamber of Advocates 
calls for criminalizing slander, insults and threats voiced against lawyers. 
All forms of libel were decriminalized in Armenia about a decade ago.
Not all Armenian lawyers agree with the proposed bill. Yervand Varosian, a 
prominent trial attorney, considers it a potential threat to the freedom of 
expression in the country.
“Why is it necessary to criminalize slander in the case of lawyers but not 
journalists?” Varosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Wednesday. “Why don’t 
we also protect doctors, prosecutors, investigators, politicians or government 
officials [in the same fashion?]”
Varosian said that relevant authorities should instead “talk and explain things 
to the society.” “The lawyers must be in a situation where the society 
understands their role and importance,” he added.
Armenian judges dealing with ongoing corruption cases have also faced such 
angry reactions. Late last month, the national Union of Judges condemned what 
it called growing “hate speech” against some of its members. The union urged 
Armenian authorities, political and civic groups as well as ordinary citizens 
to refrain from demanding explanations for court rulings, discrediting judges 
or exerting any pressure on them.
Grigorian’s release from jail earlier in December was the result of one such 
ruling. It provoked angry street protests in the town of Echmiadzin where the 
disgraced general lived before being arrested in June. The protests resumed 
late last week, with several dozen people blocking a highway leading from 
Yerevan to Echmiadzin. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Tuesday warned them 
againstresorting to more such blockages.
Armenian, Azeri FMs Meet Again
        • Emil Danielyan
France - The Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers and the co-chairs of 
the OSCE Minsk Group pose for a photograph in Paris, .
The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan acknowledged the need for 
“concrete measures to prepare the populations for peace” when they held fresh 
talks in Paris on Wednesday, according to international mediators.
Zohrab Mnatsakanian and Elmar Mammadyarov met in the presence of the U.S., 
Russian and French mediators co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group for the fourth 
time in six months.
The press services of both ministers described the meeting, which lasted for 
more than four hours, as “useful.” They said the two sides will hold more 
“results-oriented” negotiations on resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
“The Ministers discussed a wide range of issues related to the settlement of 
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and agreed upon the necessity of taking concrete 
measures to prepare the populations for peace,” read a separate statement 
released by the Minsk Group co-chairs.
“During the meetings, the Co-Chairs reviewed with the Ministers key principles 
and parameters for the current phase of the negotiation process,” said the 
statement.
They also discussed a possible meeting between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, it said, adding that such a 
summit could “give a strong impulse to the dynamic of negotiations.”
Aliyev and Pashinian spoke to each other for the first time on the sidelines of 
a summit of former Soviet republics held in Tajikistan in September. There has 
been a significant decrease in ceasefire violations around Karabakh and along 
the Armenian-Azerbaijani border since then.
The two leaders talked again during another ex-Soviet summit that took place in 
Russia in early December. Aliyev said afterwards that the year 2019 will see a 
“new impetus” to the Karabakh peace process.
In virtually identical statements released after the Paris talks, the Armenian 
and Azerbaijani foreign ministries confirmed that Mammadyarov and Mnatsakanian 
discussed ways of preparing their populations for a peaceful settlement as well 
as achieving “security and sustainable regional development.” But they gave no 
details.
The mediators said in this regard that they “underlined the importance of 
possible mutually beneficial initiatives designed to fulfill the economic 
potential of the region.” They did not elaborate on those initiatives, saying 
instead that they plan to meet with Pashinian and Aliyev “in the near future.”
Despite the continuing positive tone of statements made by Yerevan and Baku it 
remains unclear whether the conflicting parties narrowed their differences on 
how to end the protracted conflict.
Press Review
Armenia -- Newspapers for press review illustration, Yerevan, 12Jul2016
“Aravot” says that for all the criticism of its many young and inexperienced 
members the new Armenian parliament is better than the previous ones. “The 
number of oligarchs [in the parliament] has drastically decreased while that of 
women, young people and scholars has gone up,” argues the paper. It is 
particularly enthusiastic about the newly elected parliamentarians who are too 
young to remember the Soviet times.
“Granted, there is [Gagik Tsarukian’s] Prosperous Armenia Party in the National 
Assembly, which represents the old political system,” “Aravot” goes on. “There 
are likeable people, including Tsarukian, in that party. But let us acknowledge 
that the situation where a rich person keeps a party and decides everything 
single-handedly based on his interests is simply outdated.”
“Hraparak” reacts to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s statement to the effect 
that critics of the disgraced General Manvel Grigorian or other groups of the 
population must not block streets or roads in protest against something. 
Pashinian said this week that they do not have a popular mandate to take such 
actions at will because Armenians now have a democratically elected government 
that has different obligations to them. The paper questions Pashinian’s 
“contentious” logic, citing counterarguments that Pashinian and his team 
themselves heavily relied on street blockades when they toppled the country’s 
former government and came to power last year.
“Zhamanak” says that the presidents of Russia and other “Eurasian” countries 
such as Belarus and Kazakhstan have congratulated Pashinian on being 
reappointed as Armenia’s prime minister on Monday. They did not send 
congratulatory messages after Pashinian’s My Step alliance won the December 9 
parliamentary elections. “Does this testify to a change in their attitudes 
towards Armenia?” writes the paper. “Of course not. It’s just that the absence 
of congratulations in this case (i.e., Pashinian’s reappointment) would have 
testified to a conflict-like situation for which the Eurasian Economic Union 
member statements would have been responsible … So the congratulations rather 
reflect the existing problems than their resolution, and Yerevan should be 
better prepared for difficult discussions than friendly treatment by the EEU.”
(Sargis Harutyunyan)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

A1+: Black ice on roads of Aparan and Gavar regions

The Ministry of Emergency Situations reports that as of 08:30, there is black ice on the roads of Aparan and Gavar regions.

All the interstate and republican roads are open.

Road construction contractors perform cleaning and salt and sand processing on roads.

Yerevan City Hall urges parents to not take influenza-sick children to school until recovery

Yerevan City Hall urges parents to not take influenza-sick children to school until recovery

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11:13,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 10, ARMENPRESS. Due to the season of acute respiratory infections, Yerevan City Hall has called on parents to not take children who have the flu to school or kindergarten until they recover.

Earlier on January 8 the healthcare ministry said the influenza situation is ordinary and under control.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/08/2019

                                        Tuesday, 
Indicted Businessman Seeks Medical Treatment Abroad
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Businessman Samvel Mayrapetian at the official opening of his 
Toyota-Yerevan car dealership in Yerevan, 23 June 2009.
A prominent Armenian businessman prosecuted on corruption charges has appealed 
to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) after law-enforcement authorities 
in Yerevan refused to allow him to undergo medical treatment abroad.
The millionaire businessman, Samvel Mayrapetian, was arrested and charged with 
“assisting in bribery” in October. Armenia’s Special Investigative Service 
(SIS) has still not publicized details of the accusations. The tycoon had 
greatly benefited from close ties with the country’s former governments.
An Armenian court freed Mayrapetian on bail on December 27. He has remained in 
a Yerevan hospital since then.
Immediately after his release Mayrapetian requested the SIS’s permission to 
leave for Germany for health reasons. The law-enforcement body refused to 
return his passport.
Mayrapetian’s lawyers responded by asking the ECHR on January 2 to order the 
Armenian authorities to allow his treatment in a German clinic.
The lawyers said on Monday that the Strasbourg court has accepted the lawsuit 
and asked the Armenian Justice Ministry to explain the investigators’ refusal 
to let the suspect leave the country. A ministry spokesperson confirmed the 
information on Tuesday.
One of the lawyers, Karen Batikian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that his 
client is suffering from a life-threatening form of pancreatitis that requires 
urgent surgery. He insisted that Armenian hospitals lack modern equipment 
needed for such an operation.
“His life is really in very serious danger,” said Batikian. “We have documents 
signed by doctors certifying that this disease cannot be cured in Armenia.”
Batikian said later in the day that the SIS has handed the passport back to 
Mayrapetian but made clear that he will still not be allowed to fly to Germany.
Mayrapetian is one of Armenia’s leading real estate developers who also owns a 
national TV channel and a car dealership. His company was involved in a 
controversial redevelopment of old districts in downtown Yerevan during the 
1998-2008 rule of former President Robert Kocharian. Some media outlets for 
years linked Kocharian’s elder son Sedrak to the Toyota dealership.
Kocharian is currently held in pretrial detention, having been charged in 
connection with the deadly breakup of post-election opposition protests in 
March 2008. He denies the accusations as politically motivated.
Armenian, Azeri FMs Set For More Talks
U.S. - Foreign Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov (R) of Azerbaijan and Zohrab 
Mnatsakanian (second from right) of Armenia pose for a photograph with the OSCE 
Minsk Group co-chairs in New York, 26 September 2018.
International mediators are trying to organize another meeting of Armenia’s and 
Azerbaijan’s foreign ministers later this month, the Armenian Foreign Ministry 
said on Tuesday.
“The [U.S., Russian and French] co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group have proposed 
a meeting of the foreign ministers in January,” the ministry spokeswoman, Anna 
Naghdalian, told the Armenpress news agency. “An announcement on the meeting 
will be made in a coordinated manner.”
Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar 
Mammadyarov held three face-to-face meetings in the second half of 2018.
According to the co-chairs, at their most recent talks held in Milan on 
December 5 Mnatsakanian and Mammadyarov pledged to “work intensively to promote 
a peaceful resolution of the conflict and to further reduce tensions.”
“They agreed to meet again in early 2019 under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk 
Group Co-Chairs for this purpose and in order to facilitate high-level talks,” 
the mediating troika said in a December 6 statement.
Both ministers described the Milan meeting as “useful.” Mammadyarov said that 
it resulted in a rare “mutual understanding” between the two parties to the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
The ministers met in the Italian city the day before Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev spoke to each other at a 
summit of ex-Soviet states held in Russia.
Pashinian and Aliyev also had a brief conversation during the previous CIS 
summit held in Tajikistan in September. There has been a significant decrease 
in ceasefire violations in the Karabakh conflict zone since then.
“The year 2019 will give a new impetus to the Armenia-Azerbaijan 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement process,” Aliyev wrote on his Twitter page 
on December 14.
Pashinian tweeted two hours later that a Karabakh settlement “remains a top 
priority” for Armenia.
Court Approves Fresh Arrest Warrant Over 2008 Crackdown
        • Anush Muradian
Armenia- Vahagn Harutyunian, the former head of a criminal investigation into 
the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan.
A Yerevan court has approved a fresh arrest warrant against the man who led a 
criminal investigation into the 2008 post-election violence in Armenia during 
former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule.
The former official, Vahagn Harutiunian, was charged in late October with 
forging factual evidence to cover up the Armenian army’s involvement in the 
deadly breakup of opposition protests staged in the wake of a disputed 
presidential election. He left Armenia for Russia in July, ostensibly to 
receive medical treatment, and apparently remains there.
On November 2, a court of first instance in the Armenian capital allowed the 
Special Investigative Service (SIS) to arrest Harutiunian pending 
investigation. The Court of Appeals annulled the arrest warrant on December 13, 
however.
Shortly afterwards, Harutiunian was also charged with two counts of abuse of 
power. According to an SIS spokeswoman, Marina Ohanjanian, the district court 
again sanctioned the former SIS investigator’s arrest on December 30.
Harutiunian rejected the initial accusation leveled against him as “unfounded, 
illegal and fabricated” when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service by phone on 
November 1. He insisted that his team of investigators never found any evidence 
of illegal actions taken by the Armenian military during the 2008 unrest, which 
left eight protesters and two police servicemen dead.
The SIS completely changed the official version of events following last 
spring’s mass protests that toppled Sarkisian. It now says that Sarkisian’s 
outgoing predecessor, Robert Kocharian, illegally ordered army units into the 
streets of Yerevan before declaring a state of emergency on March 1, 2008.
Kocharian was arrested on December 7 on charges of overthrowing Armenia’s 
constitutional order. The former president denies them, saying that Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian is waging a political “vendetta” against him.
Pashinian was a key speaker at the 2008 protests. The former journalist 
subsequently spent about two years in prison for organizing what the SIS used 
to describe as “mass disturbances.” He strongly denied those charges.
New Parliament Majority ‘Wary’ Of Opposition Party
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenia - Gevorg Gorgisian (L) and other election candidates of the Bright 
Armenia party campaign in Yerevan, November 26, 2018.
An opposition politician claimed on Tuesday that Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s government is too scared to cede a leadership position in Armenia’s 
newly elected parliament to his party.
Pashinian’s My Step alliance named the incoming speaker of the National 
Assembly and two of his three deputies ten days after winning the December 9 
parliamentary elections by a landslide.
The Armenian constitution reserves the third post of deputy speaker for a 
representative of the parliamentary opposition. It will therefore be given to 
one of the two other political parties that have entered the new parliament: 
Prosperous Armenia (BHK) and Bright Armenia. They will have 26 and 18 
parliament seats respectively.
Pashinian indicated on Monday that My Step lawmakers will likely vote for a 
candidate of the BHK because the latter is the second largest parliamentary 
force.
Gevorg Gorgisian, a senior Bright Armenia lawmaker, dismissed Pashinian’s 
explanation. “It’s a political decision, and I think it’s wrong to cover it up 
with different wording,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “They should just 
come out and openly say that they have decided to gift that post to the BHK.”
Gorgisian insisted that his party will be a “strong opposition” with or without 
controlling the post of vice-speaker. “Maybe they are scared of further 
strengthening Bright Armenia by giving it [power] levers,” he said of the 
parliament majority.
Bright Armenia, Pashinian’s Civil Contract party and another party made up the 
Yelk alliance that was in opposition to the country’s former government. 
Pashinian toppled it in May after weeks of mass protests organized by him. 
Bright Armenia declined to join the protest movement.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Armenia convict serving life sentence dies

News.am, Armenia
Jan 6 2019
Armenia convict serving life sentence dies Armenia convict serving life sentence dies

11:15, 06.01.2019
                  

Armenak Mnjoyan, who was serving a life sentence in Armenia, has died.

“Armenak Mnjoyan was 54 years old,” reads, in particular, the respective statement posted on the Free Arsen Arzrouni Facebook page.

Mnjoyan’s health condition grew worse on Thursday morning, at the Nubarashen penitentiary in capital city Yerevan. He was hospitalized having suffered a heart attack and swelling of the lungs.

Armenak Mnjoyan was arrested in 1995, and in 1996, he was sentenced to death.

But in 2003, and by a decree of the President of Armenia, Mnjoyan’s death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment.

Iranian, Armenian Diplomats Discuss U.S. Sanctions

Armenian Ambassador Artashes Toumanyan (left) with Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Tehran on Dec. 26

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)—Armenia’s ambassador to Iran has reportedly discussed with a senior Iranian official ways of reducing the impact of U.S. sanctions against Tehran on bilateral commercial ties.

According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Ambassador Artashes Tumanyan briefed Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on recent political developments in Armenia and his government’s foreign policy priorities when they met on Wednesday.

A statement released by the ministry on Thursday said they then discussed Armenian-Iranian relations.

“In particular, they spoke about deepening the political dialogue, developing economic cooperation in the conditions of American sanctions, organizing high-level mutual visits and a number of other issues,” added the statement. It gave no other details.

Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan made clear on December 22 that his government intends to “deepen not only economic but also political relations with Iran” despite the U.S. sanctions that have been re-imposed by President Donald Trump. He spoke at the official opening of an Armenian-Iranian joint venture in the northern city of Vanadzor.

Pashinyan said last month the United States “understands” Armenia’s desire to maintain a “special” relationship with the Islamic Republic.

Earlier in November, a team of U.S. officials visited Yerevan to explain the sanctions to Armenia’s government and private sector. Iran was also high on the agenda of U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton’s October trip to Armenia. Bolton said after talks with Pashinyan that commercial and other traffic through the Armenian-Iranian border is “going to be a significant issue” for Washington.

With Armenia’s borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey closed due to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Iran as well as Georgia serve as the sole conduits for the landlocked country’s trade with the outside world.

Armenia also imports Iranian natural gas and other fuel. The gas supplies should increase significantly after the ongoing construction of a third power transmission line connecting the two countries is completed next year.

According to official Armenian statistics, Armenia’s trade with Iran soared by 40 percent, to $297 million, in the first ten months of this year.

2 young men hospitalized after Armenia stab incident

News.am, Armenia
Jan 1 2019
2 young men hospitalized after Armenia stab incident 2 young men hospitalized after Armenia stab incident

17:44, 01.01.2019
                  

Two young men were hospitalized on Tuesday after stabbing in Armenia’s Aragatsotn province, Shamshyan.com reported.

Aragats Police Department’s operative group found out that the injured were residents of Tsaghkahovit village.

The police officer established that 18-year-old Gurgen N. was stabbed.

The investigation has been launched.