Minister of Justice, candidate for mayor of Yerevan

  • 21.08.2018
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RA Justice Minister Artak Zeynalyan will head the list of “Bright Armenia” and “Republic” parties in the Yerevan Council of Elders elections. The minister announced this at the meeting with journalists, thus confirming the rumors.


During this time, the Minister will be on leave to participate in the campaign. To remind, according to the CEC decision, the campaign will last 12 days, and the election will be held on September 23.


“The name of the alliance is still under discussion,” he stressed.


To remind, July 9 Taron Margaryan resigned from the post of mayor of Yerevan.


At the moment, it is known that an actor will compete for the post of mayor of Yerevan Hayk Marutyan“Civil Contract” party, Naira Zohrabyan“Prosperous Armenia” Zaruhi Postanjyan“Yerkir Tirani”, architect Anahit TarkhanyanArtak AvetyanReformist Party, Raffi Hovhannisyan – “Heritage” Party, Ararat Zurabyan:

Artsakh MPs submit motion-request to Armenia’s Prosecutor General to change precautionary measure selected against Robert Kocharyan

Artsakh Parliament Speaker’s spokesperson Anush Ghavalyan said on Facebook that on August 7, a group of MPs of the Republic of Artsakh have submitted a motion-request to Armenia’s Prosecutor General to change the precautionary measure selected against 1st President of Artsakh and 2nd President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan.

The lawmakers have taken into consideration the services provided by Robert Kocharyan in the state-building process of Artsakh and Armenia.

MPs of the Armenian Parliament have launched a petition on changing Kocharyan’s precautionary measure. 46 MPs joined the petition.




Stepan Grigoryan: His lawyers, throwing mud at the public, are trying to get the support of the international community, it will cost them dear (video)

According to political scientist Stepan Grigoryan, Robert Kocharyan’s lawyers throw mud at the people:

“I do not see anything more vile, they condemn the velvet revolution. Where is the 37th year? When did you see the officials write the statement and quit? During Rob’s presidency? ”

Stepan Grigoryan considers those who assess the arrest of the second president as political persecution, far from reality:

“Was the persecution during Kocharyan’s presidency or is it now? Where does he get this wealth from, where are these businesses? Where can vendetta be seen?”

According to Stepan Grigoryan, Kocharyan’s arrest cannot have a negative impact on Armenia’s international rating:

“His lawyers, throwing mud at the public, are trying to get the support of the international community, it will cost them dear.”

The political scientist also refers to the accusation against CSTO Secretary Yuri Khachaturov, saying that this is only Armenia’s problem, and Russia cannot interfere. Stepan Grigoryan proposes the investigative body to inspect Khachaturov also on the April events of 2016:

“I propose to check his accounts and accounts of his relatives, we are not stupid, they do not rent out territories for free.”

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/30/2018

                                        Monday, 
Russia In Rare Diplomatic Spat With Armenia
        • Emil Danielyan
        • Sisak Gabrielian
RUSSIA -- A view of the Russian Foreign Ministry building in Moscow, April 6, 
2018
Russia has criticized Armenia, its main regional ally, in unusually blunt terms 
following criminal charges brought by law-enforcement authorities in Yerevan 
against Yuri Khachaturov, the Armenian secretary general of the Russian-led 
Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).
Khachaturov was charged on Thursday with involvement in what an Armenian 
law-enforcement agency now considers an “overthrow of the constitutional order” 
that followed a disputed presidential election held in February 2008.
The vote sparked opposition demonstrations in Yerevan which were quelled by 
security forces on March 1-2, 2008. Eight protesters and two police personnel 
died as a result. Khachaturov was Armenia’s deputy defense minister at the time.
The Special Investigative Service (SIS) levelled the same criminal charges 
against former President Robert Kocharian. He was arrested late on Friday after 
angrily denying the charges as politically motivated.
Khachaturov served as chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff from 
2008-2016. Russia, Armenia and four other ex-Soviet states making up the CSTO 
appointed him as secretary general of the Russian-led defense pact in April 
2017.
A spokesman for the Armenian Foreign Ministry said on Saturday that it has 
formally asked the other CSTO members to “start a process of replacing the 
secretary general.”
Armenia -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (R) meets CSTO chief Yuri 
Khachaturov, Yerevan, 17May2018
The move seems to have irked Russia. The official Russian TASS news agency 
quoted an unnamed “high-ranking diplomatic source in Moscow” as calling it 
“amazingly unprofessional.”
“It is all the more strange to hear such statements given that the changes that 
occurred in Armenia did not reflect on the staff of the [Armenian] foreign 
ministry which only recently submitted Khachaturov’s candidacy to the CSTO,” 
the source said, adding that Yerevan must formally “recall” the Armenian head 
of the alliance before asking the other members to replace him.
In a separate report, TASS said Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov made the 
same point in a phone call with his Armenian counterpart Zohrab Mnatsakanian on 
Thursday. “In particular, it was pointed out that in accordance with CSTO rules 
and procedures, the Armenian side must officially recall its citizen from the 
post of CSTO secretary general if such a decision was made in Yerevan,” it 
cited the Russian Foreign Ministry as saying.
The Armenian side dismissed the criticism later on Saturday. The Interfax news 
agency quoted “a highly placed source in Yerevan” as saying: “We regard as 
ineffective public discussions and explanations regarding the statutes, 
procedures and other documents of the CSTO which we know well.”
“We are committed to and respect the provisions of the CSTO statutes,” the 
Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Tigran Balayan, insisted on Monday. “And 
during our presidency of the CSTO we have done everything to strengthen the 
CSTO.”
Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyum.am), Balayan would not be 
drawn on who could replace Khachaturov. “We have to wait for the decision on 
replacing him,” he said.
Armenia - General Yuri Khachaturov, chief of the Armenian army's General Staff, 
salutes troops from CSTO member states holding exercises at Marshal Bagramian 
shooting range, 30Sep2015.
Russia has rarely made public statements critical of Armenia in the past. The 
two nations have maintained close political, military and economic ties ever 
since the break-up of the Soviet Union.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has repeatedly pledged to maintain this 
“special” relationship since he swept to power in a wave of mass protests in 
May. But he criticized it when he was in opposition to Armenia’s former 
leadership.
Moscow signaled its concerns shortly after the SIS charged Khachaturov and 
asked a court in Yerevan for a permission to arrest him. “We are closely 
monitoring what is happening on this issue,” Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory 
Karasin told TASS on Friday.
The district court agreed to grant Khachaturov bail a few hours later.
The SIS bases its case against Kocharian, Khachaturov as well as for Defense 
Minister Harutiunian on a secret order that was issued to the Armenian military 
during the post-election demonstrations organized by Levon Ter-Petrosian, the 
main opposition candidate in the 2008 ballot. It says that military units were 
told to move into Yerevan before Kocharian declared a state of emergency late 
on March 1, 2008. According to the law-enforcement agency, that violated 
constitutional provisions guaranteeing the political neutrality of the Armenian 
armed forces.
Kocharian insisted on Thursday that the army was simply put on high alert in 
order to prevent some of its soldiers and officers from heeding Ter-Petrosian’s 
repeated calls for top military officials to join his opposition movement. The 
ex-president also argued that army units were not involved in vicious clashes 
between security forces and protesters which were followed by the introduction 
of emergency rule.
Pashinian, who played a key role in the Ter-Petrosian-led movement, was the 
main speaker at a March 1, 2008 rally held several hundred meters from the 
scene of the deadly violence. Pashinian subsequently spent nearly two years in 
prison for organizing “mass disturbances” in the Armenian capital. He denied 
the accusations as politically motivated.
TV Comedian Picked As Pashinian Party’s Candidate For Yerevan Mayor
        • Marine Khachatrian
        • Anush Muradian
Armenia - Comedian Hayk Marutian speaks to journalists in Yerevan, 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party has chosen a prominent 
Armenian comedian as its candidate for the vacant post of Yerevan’s mayor.
The city’s previous mayor, Taron Markarian, resigned on July 9 under apparent 
pressure from Armenia’s new government.
Markarian, who had been in office since 2011, is a senior member of former 
President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia (HHK). He was reelected 
by the current city council in May 2017.
The HHK-controlled council deliberately failed to select a new mayor on July 
16, paving the way for pre-term elections of a new municipal council.
Civil Contract is the first Armenian party to field a mayoral candidate. Its 
nominee, Hayk Marutian, is a 41-year-old actor famous for his performances in 
popular comedy shows aired by Armenian TV channels. He has also produced his 
own shows and films in the past several years.
A strong backer of Pashinian, Marutian actively participated in mass protests 
in April and May that brought down Armenia’s former government. He joined Civil 
Contract shortly after Pashinian became prime minister on May 8.
“If we win the elections I will be one of your and will be looking at city with 
your eyes,” Marutian told reporters late after most members of the party’s 
governing board backed his candidacy late on Sunday.
The popular comedian dismissed critics claims’ that his entertainment industry 
background does not make him fit to run the Armenian capital. “Acting has made 
up only 20 percent of my professional life for the last six years,” he said. 
“The remaining 80 percent has been my organizational and managerial work in our 
production company as well as … my political and civic activism.”
Marutian was one of four Civil Contract members vying for the party’s 
nomination for Yerevan mayor. The three other hopefuls were parliament deputy 
Alen Simonian, Deputy Labor Minister Zaruhi Batoyan and an aide to Pashinian, 
Srbuhi Ghazarian.
Meanwhile, Pashinian’s government remains in no rush to dissolve the current 
city council and call snap municipal elections. Minister for Local Government 
Suren Papikian said on Monday that it wants to make sure that the Central 
Election Commission has enough time to organize the polls.
“Yerevan is home to about half of the country’s population and we need to 
properly prepare [for the elections,]” Papikian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service 
(Azatutyun.am). He indicated that they will he held in September.
Kocharian To Appeal Against Arrest
        • Artak Hambardzumian
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Lawyers and other representatives of former President Robert 
Kocharian hold a news conference in Yerevan, .
Lawyers for Robert Kocharian said on Monday that they will appeal on Tuesday 
against a Yerevan district court’s decision to allow law-enforcement 
authorities to arrest the former Armenian president on coup charges which he 
denies as politically motivated.
One of them, Aram Orbelian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) that 
they expect Armenia’s Court of Appeals to start considering their petition 
already this week.
Kocharian was arrested late on Friday one day after being charged with 
“overthrowing the constitutional order” in the wake of a disputed presidential 
election held in February 2008 two months before he completed his second and 
final term. The accusation stems from the use of deadly force on March 1-2, 
2008 against opposition supporters demonstrating against alleged vote rigging.
Kocharian angrily rejected the accusations in televised remarks on Thursday. He 
defended the legality of his decision to declare a state of emergency and order 
Armenian army units into central Yerevan late on March 1, 2008. He also said 
that the coup charges ran counter to the decisions of Armenia’s Central 
Election Commission and the Constitutional Court that validated the official 
election outcome.
Orbelian and the other defense lawyer, Ruben Sahakian, echoed that denial at a 
joint news conference with Kocharian’s spokesman, Victor Soghomonian, held on 
Saturday. They also condemned his pre-trial arrest as illegal, saying that the 
Special Investigative Service (SIS) did not present any compelling evidence to 
the lower court.
“This is a [political] order and they are going to execute it,” charged 
Sahakian.
The lawyers also insisted that Kocharian enjoys immunity from prosecution in 
line with Article 140 of the Armenian constitution. The article says: “During 
the term of his or her powers and thereafter, the President of the Republic may 
not be prosecuted and subjected to liability for actions deriving from his or 
her status.”
Kocharian’s arrest was condemned as politically motivated by the former ruling 
Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) of Serzh Sarkisian, who succeeded him as 
president following the 2008 election and the ensuing unrest. The Armenian 
Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), a political party represented in the 
current Armenian government, also expressed serious concern about it.
By contrast, the arrest was hailed as a triumph of justice by political allies 
of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, who 
led the 2008 protest movement, as well as some human rights activists and 
relatives of protesters killed in the post-election violence. They have for 
years accused the Sarkisian administration of covering up the killings.
 Press Justice
(Saturday, July 28)
“Zhamanak” says that if the coup charges levelled against former President 
Robert Kocharian are backed by Armenian courts it will mean that his successor 
Serzh Sarkisian’s decade-long rule was illegal. “This logic makes Serzh 
Sarkisian’s involved in this criminal case almost inevitable,” writes the paper.
“Haykakan Zhamanak” likewise says that the 2008 post-election violence occurred 
“in order for power to be transferred to Serzh Sarkisian.” “He was ready to 
hold on to power at any cost, including by using the army against protesting 
citizens,” claims. “Had he not wanted the blood of ten people to be linked to 
him he would have resigned after March 1 [2008.]”
The paper close to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian also hits out at another 
former president, Levon Ter-Petrosian, who did not leave his home to join his 
supporters demonstrating in Yerevan on March 1-2, 2008. “Only Ter-Petrosian’s 
presence could have mitigated the bloody clash between security forces and 
demonstrators,” it says. The paper goes on to assert that the three 
ex-presidents must get together and publicly give answers about the events of 
March 2008.
“Sometimes sticking to the letter of the law is more important that delivering 
justice,” writes “Hraparak.” “The March 2008 case must definitely be solved,” 
it says. “We need to understand who did what, who ordered what, how people got 
killed. But that must not be done by wrecking the law and being guided by a 
pre-election logic. And it’s not good when that is done by someone who was 
imprisoned and endured other sufferings as a result of March 1: Nikol 
Pashinian, whose personal interest may also be playing a role and indirectly 
influencing courts in this case.”
(Tatev Danielian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/17/2018

                                        Tuesday, 
Pashinian Meets Ter-Petrosian
Armenia - Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian (L) and Nikol Pashinian greet 
supporters in Yerevan's Liberty Square, 31 May 2011.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and former President Levon Ter-Petrosian have 
met for the first time in years to discuss challenges facing Armenia.
In a statement posted on its Facebook page on Tuesday, the Armenian government 
said the meeting took place in Pashinian’s state-owned residence in Yerevan on 
Monday.
“The first president [Ter-Petrosian] expressed his views regarding ways of 
overcoming a number of challenges facing Armenia,” it said. “Issues pertaining 
to foreign policy and the Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) conflict were discussed.”
“The meeting took place at Levon Ter-Petrosian’s initiative,” it added.
No further details were reported. Ter-Petrosian’s office issued no statements 
on the meeting as of Tuesday afternoon.
Pashinian played a prominent role in Ter-Petrosian’s broad-based opposition 
movement that nearly brought the latter back to power in a disputed 
presidential election held in February 2008. Pashinian was one of the most 
influential speakers at the ex-president’s anti-government rallies held at the 
time. He spent about two years in prison on charges stemming from a 
post-election government crackdown on the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition.
Pashinian fell out with Ter-Petrosian after being released from prison in 2011. 
Accordingly, his relationship with Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress 
(HAK) opposition party became very strained. As recently as in February, the 
HAK’s deputy chairman, Levon Zurabian, scoffed at Pashinian’s plans to try to 
stop then President Serzh Sarkisian from extending his decade-long rule.
Even so, the HAK voiced support for the Pashinian-led movement as it gained 
momentum in mid-April. It demanded Pashinian’s immediate release when he was 
detained on April 22, the day before Sarkisian decided to resign as prime 
minister.
Ter-Petrosian, 73, issued different written statements during the unprecedented 
mass protests that practically paralyzed the country in late April and early 
May. The day before Pashinian was elected prime minister on May 8, he warned 
the protest leaders against taking “unconstitutional steps.”
But on May 17, Ter-Petrosian, who served as Armenia’s first president from 
1991-1998, expressed serious concern at street closures, blockades of 
government buildings, strikes and other disruptive actions which continued even 
after the dramatic regime change. He said they could help Sarkisian’s 
Republican Party (HHK) “sabotage” the work of Pashinian’s government.
Serzh Sarkisian’s Fugitive Nephew Set To Face More Charges
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - An armed officer of the National Security Service guards an entrance 
to the Yerevan house of former President Serzh Sarkisian's brother Aleksandr 
searched by investigators, 4 July 2018.
Law-enforcement authorities have moved to bring more criminal charges against a 
nephew of former President Serzh Sarkisian who apparently fled Armenia late 
last month.
The National Security Service (NSS) issued an arrest warrant for Narek 
Sarkisian after searching his family’s house in downtown Yerevan and other 
properties earlier this month. It claimed that he asked one of his friends in 
June to hide his illegally owned guns, cocaine and other drugs in a safer 
place. The NSS released a video showing two suitcases purportedly filled with 
those items.
According to the NSS, Narek flew to Moscow on June 22 together with his 
bodyguard, Artem Poghosian, who was also wanted by the investigators. Poghosian 
returned to Yerevan and turned himself in on July 10.
Narek’s younger brother Hayk was arrested and charged with attempted murder and 
illegal arms possession last week. The two men’s controversial father Aleksandr 
is a younger brother of former President Sarkisian. He was briefly detained 
during the NSS raid on his luxury residence.
Armenia -- Narek Sarkisian, a nephew of former President Serzh Sarkisian.
The Armenian police said on Monday that Narek Sarkisian, 31, is now also 
suspected of kidnapping a man last August with the help of his bodyguard and 
other individuals. It said that Narek threatened to shoot the 49-year-old man 
before beating him up and burning “various parts of his body” with a lighter. 
The man was freed only after promising not to open a nightclub in Yerevan, 
according to a police statement.
A spokeswoman for Armenia’s Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian service on Tuesday that his office has instructed the NSS to conduct a 
kidnapping and assault investigation targeting Narek. The NSS did not 
immediately comment on the new probe ordered by prosecutors.
Also facing prosecution is the ex-president’s second brother, Levon Sarkisian. 
He and his daughter were charged with “illegal enrichment” after tax inspectors 
discovered in late June that they hold millions of dollars in undeclared 
deposits at an Armenian bank.
A Yerevan court issued an arrest warrant for Levon Sarkisian early this month. 
He has still not been arrested, however, suggesting that he too fled the 
country.
Serzh Sarkisian, who governed Armenia from 2008-20018, has not yet publicly 
commented on the highly embarrassing criminal proceedings launched against his 
close relatives.
Yerevan ‘Working’ On Aid Proposals To EU
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Belgium - European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and Armenia's Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian meet in Brussels,12 July, 2018.
The Armenian government will make soon detailed proposals designed to convince 
the European Union to significantly increase its economic assistance to 
Armenia, a spokesman for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Tuesday.
Pashinian criticized the EU for not promising additional aid to Yerevan when he 
ended a two-day visit to Brussels last week. The head of the EU Delegation in 
Armenia, Piotr Switalski, countered on Monday that his government needs to 
first come up with specific reform-oriented projects requiring EU funding.
Pashinian’s press secretary, Arman Yeghoyan, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service 
(Azatutyun.am) that the government is now working on such projects.
“Those proposals are being worked out and I can say in general terms that they 
will mainly relate to the development of Armenia’s public infrastructures and 
institutional reforms … We are going to present clear programs,” he said.
Yeghoyan did not specify the amount of extra EU aid that will be requested by 
the new authorities in Yerevan. “We are talking about a fairly solid sum, but I 
can’t give a concrete figure,” he said.
Stepan Grigorian, a Yerevan-based political analyst, claimed that Pashinian’s 
government will be seeking as much as 1 billion euros ($1.17 billion) in EU 
funding.
The EU pledged last year to provide up to 160 million euros ($185 million) in 
fresh aid to Armenia over the next three years in line with the Comprehensive 
and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) signed with the previous Armenian 
government.
Switalski announced that a senior official from the European Commission, the 
EU’s executive body, will visit Yerevan later this week to discuss with 
Armenian leaders their “expectations and needs.” “This must be a very concrete 
discussion,” the diplomat stressed.
Stepan Safarian, another pro-Western analyst, was very skeptical about 
Armenia’s ability to attract large-scale EU aid without a change of its 
geopolitical orientation. “It is not realistic to expect the kind huge of 
assistance which the EU has been providing to Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine in 
return for their complete Europeanization,” he said. “Armenia must not have 
such expectations.”
Ever since he swept to power in a wave of mass protests in May, Pashinian has 
repeatedly ruled out a change of his country’s geopolitical orientation. While 
voicing support for closer ties with the EU as well as the United States, he 
has pledged to keep it primarily allied to Russia.
Press Review
“Zhamanak” comments on European Union Ambassador Piotr Switalski’s response to 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s criticism of the EU. “Ambassador Switalski 
says that they expect changes, new ideas from Armenia’s new government,” writes 
the paper. “The ambassador’s remarks are certainly appropriate. Armenia needs 
to make more substantive proposals to Brussels about what kind of assistance it 
expects, in what form and on what scale. It is not yet clear whether Nikol 
Pashinian presented such things during his visit to Brussels.” Pashinian should 
clarify that, it says.
A Georgian analyst, Gela Vasadze, tells “168 Zham” that Yerevan would be wrong 
to think that the EU will give it more aid “just because regime change occurred 
here.” “We already went through that,” he says. “After that Georgia had to 
spend a lot of time proving its European course … The EU needs neither Georgia 
nor Armenia. We need the EU. We must prove that we are worthy of their 
standards.”
“Our young rulers need to realize that they are no longer activists and none of 
their steps and statements goes unnoticed,” writes “Hraparak.” The paper cites 
controversy caused by Deputy Prime Minister Ararat Mirzoyan’s spokesman Karpis 
Pashoyan, who questioned motives of Armenian soldiers killed in the 2016 war in 
Karabakh. It also says: “While opposition politician Nikol Pashinian was free 
to lambaste the Europeans and the Russians and tell bitter truths about their 
hypocritical policies, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s slight discontent with 
the EU’s perceived failure to properly finance reforms in Armenia could cause 
an international scandal and prompt a tough reaction from the EU.”
“Zhoghovurd” comments on the launch of a criminal investigation into an 
Armenian parliament deputy and a village mayor suspected of handing out vote 
bribes in last year’s general elections. The paper claims that tens of 
thousands of other people in Armenia can also be prosecuted on such charges 
given the scale of chronic vote buying in the country.
(Tigran Avetisian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

RFE/RL – Armenia Report – 07/06/2018

                                        Friday, 
Pashinian Advocates ‘Fact-Based’ Decision On Amulsar Gold Mine
        • Karlen Aslanian
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian holds a meeting on the Amulsar mining 
site in Jermuk, 6July, 2018
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian called for a decision on the future of 
a gold mining project at Amulsar that would be “based on facts rather than 
emotions” as he met with all stakeholders in the central Armenian province of 
Vayots Dzor on Friday.
Pashinian arrived in the town of Jermuk on the second day of his two-day tour 
of the southern and central Armenian provinces with the purpose of getting 
firsthand information about a local dispute between some members of the 
community and environmentalists on one side and an international mining company 
prospecting for gold at a nearby deposit on the other.
All roads leading to Amulsar have been blocked since June 23 by a group of 
residents of nearby communities as well as some environmental activists 
protesting against gold mining operations planned there. The protesters claim 
the operations of Lydian International, a U.S.-based mining company, would 
contaminate air and water in the mountainous area. Lydian maintains that it 
will use advanced technology to prevent any damage to the local ecosystem.
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with protesters at Amulsar, 
6July, 2018
The company, which had won exclusive rights to develop the Amulsar deposit, 
says it has suffered millions of dollars in losses and could take legal action 
if one of the largest business projects in Armenia’s history is disrupted.
More than 1,400 people employed by the company, many of them also local 
residents, have been unable to go to work for days. More than 200 Lydian 
employees demonstrated in Yerevan on July 2 against the blockage of the 
construction site at the gold deposit imposed by the protesters despite Premier 
Pashinian’s call to end the protests.
Pashinian met with representatives of Lydian, the local communities and 
environmental activists in one place to discuss possible ways of resolving the 
situation. In particular, he insisted that an inspection involving all 
stakeholders, including experts, should be carried out to provide credible 
answers to two key questions – whether the operations of the mining site affect 
the quality of water resources and the future development of Jermuk as a resort 
town.
“I believe that decisions of the government concerning the mine must be made on 
the basis of facts rather than emotions. Theoretically, one can also make 
emotional decisions, but we should understand that emotional decisions, 
especially in state governance, are not particularly useful. And secondly, we 
now have a de jure situation and every resolution of this situation has its own 
potential development. If we make any unlawful step in this situation – even 
one that is deemed unlawful not necessarily from our standpoint but at least 
from the point of view of international relations – we may face major 
problems,” Pashinian said.
Both sides appeared to agree on an inspection of Lydian’s compliance with 
environmental norms proposed by the prime minister, but neither agreed to make 
concessions in terms of the current activities on the deposit. Community 
representatives and environmental activists insisted that construction of gold 
mining and smelting facilities at Amulsar should be suspended for the period of 
the inspection, with Lydian’s representative finding such an approach 
unacceptable.
Joao Carrelo, President and Chief Executive Officer of Lydian International, 
said that every day that goes by without activities costs the company about 
half a million dollars that it has to additionally find on the market. He said 
that due to the downtime to date the company has already incurred losses to 
offset which it has to find an additional $14 million.
“There has been an investment from the United States, Canada, the UK to the 
tune of over $400 million. Investors will only invest if they feel secure that 
their investment is secure and the environmental permits have been given to the 
company. As far as I know the company has used the highest standards in the 
industry in the world to ask for permits based on IFC (International Finance 
Corporation) and also EBRD (European Bank for Reconstruction and Development) 
standards. So, the company has a permit to work. And it has responsibility to 
all of the stakeholders to make sure it does the best job possible to the 
highest standards in the world. That includes the investors, our workforce, the 
communities and the government of the country that we are in,” said Carrelo, 
who took up his current job in May.
Lydian’s representative suggested that inspections can be carried out in 
parallel with the mining activities. “For a responsible company every day that 
goes by without activity delays all of the benefits that this project could 
bring to the community, to the country. The international community is watching 
and they want to know whether more investments will come into Armenia,” Carrelo 
added.
In their turn activists present at the discussion said that they will continue 
to stage protests and will not unblock the roads leading to the mining site.
Armenia - Gold mining facilities constructed by Lydian International company at 
Amulsar deposit, 18 May 2018.
Lydian started construction at Amulsar in 2016 after going through a lengthy 
licensing process administered by Armenia’s former government. It pledged to 
invest more than $400 million in the deposit and more than triple Armenia’s 
gold exports which stood at an estimated $100 million last year.
Gold production at Amulsar was due to start before the end of this year. It is 
not yet clear whether the continuing protests there will delay it.
The mining project is strongly supported by the U.S. and British governments. 
The U.S. ambassador to Armenia, Richard Mills, argued last year that it has 
been deemed “fully compliant” with environment protection standards set by the 
World Bank and the EBRD. The EBRD holds a minority stake in Lydian.
Mills apparently expressed concern over the disruptions when he met with Deputy 
Prime Minister Tigran Avinian on June 14. According to Avinian’s press office, 
the U.S. envoy “stressed the importance of the continuation of Lydian Armenia’s 
activities.”
According to the National Statistical Service, Lydian was the main source of 
$246 million in foreign direct investment attracted by Armenia last year.
Armenian PM Sees No Targeted Crackdown On Sarkisian Family
        • Karlen Aslanian
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian presides over a government session, 
June 21, 2018
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has ruled out that any specific family 
in Armenia is being targeted after a series of high-profile revelations by 
law-enforcement agencies concerning close relatives of the country’s former 
president Serzh Sarkisian.
In separate statements on Thursday the Investigative Committee and the National 
Security Service said that two nephews of Sarkisian, who lost power under the 
pressure of the Pashinian-led protest movement in April, are implicated in 
different crimes. In particular, Hayk Sarkisian was named as a suspect in a 
reopened 2007 attempted murder case and Narek Sarkisian is currently wanted by 
police on suspicion of theft and illegal possession of weapons and drugs.
The statements were made after a search at the residence of Hayk’s and Narek’s 
father, Aleksandr Sarkisian, a controversial brother of the ex-president better 
known to the public as “Sashik.” A video of the search released by the National 
Security Service (NSS) late on Thursday showed large sums of money, expensive 
watches and artworks, numerous gold coins and pieces of jewelry found at 
Aleksandr Sarkisian’s apartment. The NSS said the legality of the items will be 
checked as part of the criminal investigation.
Aleksandr Sarkisian is thought to have made a big fortune in the past two 
decades. Unconfirmed reports in the Armenian press have said that he spent 
millions of dollars buying real estate in Europe and the United States.
Meanwhile, the State Revenue Committee in late June launched a probe against 
another brother of the former president, Levon Sarkisian, and his two children 
on suspicion of ‘illegal enrichment’ after law-enforcement authorities 
discovered nearly $7 million held by them in a commercial bank.
“We are not going after anyone’s family or individual, we follow alerts that 
law-enforcement bodies receive as well as the information that they have,” 
Prime Minister Pashinian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) on 
Friday, commenting on the cases.
Pashinian, who announced a crackdown on corruption after being elected prime 
minister on May 8, excluded ‘political’ solutions to legal cases involving 
crimes.
“There is no certain plan that we follow in terms of exposure. The task is 
formulated differently. Law must be respected in the country and 
law-enforcement bodies should work effectively. Whatever happens within the 
framework of these two principles is not something that we plan, but is a 
matter that comes out of the realities,” the premier said.
Pashinian, who for years spoke about widespread government corruption as an 
opposition member, stopped short of evaluating the extent of corruption exposed 
by Armenia’s law-enforcement agencies so far. He only said that he was shocked 
by “cynicism” in some cases.Pashinian also denied that ex-president Sarkisian 
tried to contact him over the investigations concerning members of his extended 
family.
Serzh Sarkisian, who had been president for 10 years, moved to the newly 
powerful post of prime minister in mid-April but stepped down within less than 
a week after peaceful street protests led by then-opposition lawmaker Pashinian.
Armenia’s Water Operator Vows To Restore Full Service In Yerevan After Shortages
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia -- Residents of Yerevan celebrate the festival of Vardavar pouring 
water upon each other (file photo)
Armenia’s water operator has pledged to restore full supply in the nation’s 
capital Yerevan where residents in recent days have complained about water 
shortages amid a midsummer heat wave.
Households in many districts of the city experienced difficulties as Veolia 
Djur, a French company providing maintenance of water supply and sewerage 
nationwide, reported major breakdowns in the system and had to disconnect whole 
neighborhoods from water supply for hours.
Meanwhile, air temperatures in Yerevan and the rest of Armenia in recent days 
stayed at around 40 degrees Celsius, making it more difficult for residents to 
cope with water shortages.
Gor Grigorian, an operations director at Veolia Djur, said on Friday that water 
supply in the whole of Yerevan will be restored already on July 7, incidentally 
the eve of Vardavar, a religious festival in Armenia during which people 
traditionally pour water on each other in the streets.
Grigorian did not deny that the company experienced problems with supplying 
water during the past week due to a major breakdown in the system that the 
water utility manager described as unprecedented for Yerevan.
“Sometimes breakdowns require much time to repair. Here it coincided with hot 
weather, a breakdown of pumps and a breakdown of the water main. We have never 
had such a coincidence,” Grigorian said.
Veolia Djur’s operations director said that 90 percent of the problems have now 
been solved and all problems will have completely been solved by tomorrow after 
which full water supply of Yerevan will be ensured.
The French company worked in Yerevan alone for a decade before becoming a 
nationwide water operator in 2016.
Mayor Of Armenian Town Resigns After PM’s Visit
        • Karlen Aslanian
Armenia - Kapan mayor Ashot Haryapetian stands next to Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian at a public rally in the town's central square, Kapan, 07Jul2018
Ashot Hayrapetian, the mayor of Kapan, has announced his resignation hours 
after the visit of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian to the southern Armenian town.
The information was confirmed to RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) by 
the mayor’s spokeswoman Armine Avagian.
Premier Pashinian was in Kapan as part of his tour of the Syunik province on 
Thursday. There he got a warm reception as held a public rally in the town’s 
central square where hundreds of local residents had an opportunity to pose 
questions to him. At the same time, Kapan residents booed at the town’s mayor, 
a member of the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), who stood next 
to Pashinian during the rally.
“You were installed here by the HHK; your regime is in the past,” Kapan 
residents shouted to Hayrapetian in the square, showing their anger.
After announcing his resignation Hayrapetian wrote in a Facebook post: “My 
ideas about how to continue programs for the community and expectations of the 
public are different.”
Hayrapetian is one of several HHK-affiliated mayors to have resigned since the 
change of government in May.
HHK leader Serzh Sarkisian, who had been president for 10 years, moved to the 
newly powerful post of prime minister in mid-April but had to step down within 
less than a week under the pressure of peaceful street protests led by 
then-opposition lawmaker Pashinian.
Pashinian was voted in as prime minister on May 8 by a parliament still 
dominated by the HHK. The Sarkisian-led party officially lost its parliamentary 
majority in the subsequent weeks as several lawmakers quit its faction.
As the focus of protests shifted to local government bodies, leaders of several 
Armenian communities, including the majors of Armavir, Hrazdan and Echmiadzin, 
resigned in recent weeks.
Activists in Yerevan have also been demanding the resignation of the Armenian 
capital’s mayor Taron Markarian, a senior figure in the former ruling party.
Meanwhile, in an unrelated development the mayor of Masis, Davit Hambartsumian, 
who is also affiliated with the HHK, was arrested on Friday on charges of 
“organizing mass disturbances and committing violence and an act of hooliganism 
with the use of weapons or items used as weapons.”
Hambartsumian was already briefly arrested in May on another criminal charge 
stemming from his alleged involvement in violent attacks against opposition 
supporters who protested against Sarkisian in April.
Press Review
“Zhoghovurd” comments on the statements made by Constitutional Court Chairman 
Hrair Tovmasian on Constitution Day that was marked in Armenia on July 5. “And 
who is now speaking about the protection of the Constitution? It is the person 
who was a key figure in the former Republican government and is the main author 
of the current Constitution that was tailored to the needs of former president 
Serzh Sarkisian and several others so as to ensure their continued stay in 
power… It can be certainly said today that the parliamentary form of government 
is a ticking bomb for the statehood of Armenia,” the paper contends.
In the context of the recent news that investigators have summoned former 
President Robert Kocharian for questioning in connection with a deadly 
post-election crackdown on opposition protesters in Yerevan in 2008 “Zhamanak” 
remembers the ex-leader’s infamous statement made in 1998 that he saw “no man 
in Armenia who could carry out a change of government.” “Talking to journalists 
then Kocharian elaborated on his ‘only man’ principle on the basis of which he 
ruled for 10 years, laying the foundation for two decades of kleptocracy… The 
‘only man’ myth has been busted before everyone’s eyes as Kocharian and his 
successor Serzh Sarkisian found themselves in total isolation. Criminal 
prosecution against them is a matter of days, probably weeks.”
“Hraparak” says Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian continues the “tradition” of 
former heads of government who surrounded themselves with numerous advisors. 
“According to the official website of the prime minister, Pashinian has one 
chief advisor, four advisors and seven advisors who work without a salary – 12 
advisors in total. It is difficult to say what kind of advice they give to the 
prime minister and whether he follows all of them or any of them. Let’s hope 
that he is not guided by the principle laid down in the famous saying that ‘one 
has to listen to all pieces of advice, but move on using one’s own brain’.”
“Haykakan Zhamanak” sees an upward trend in the real estate market, implying 
that it may be the result of the recent change of government implemented 
through peaceful street protests. Invoking the latest official statistics, the 
paper reports that housing prices in May went up in all districts of the 
Armenian capital. “It is difficult to say how far this is connected with the 
‘velvet’ revolution in Armenia, but it is remarkable that during the first 
three months of the year housing prices were going down as compared with the 
corresponding period of last year and in April real estate prices went up 
slightly only in several districts of Yerevan,” the paper writes.
(Anush Mkrtchian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Azerbaijan shoots down Artsakh recon UAV across line of contact during monitoring flight

Categories
Artsakh
Official
Region

Azerbaijani forces have downed an Artsakh recon UAV as it was carrying out a monitoring flight around 11:20, June 19 in the south-eastern part of the line of contact, the Artsakh military said.

“Despite the fact that by these actions the Azerbaijani side is attempting to obstruct the defense-significance flights of Armenian UAVs, the Artsakh military command is determined to continue the normal process of aerial monitoring, and at the same time, like previously, to continue suppressing the adversary’s both airborne and land activeness with punitive actions,” Artsakh’s military said in a statement.

Sports: Mkhitaryan signs autographs in Yerevan toy store, promotes MickiToy

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
 Saturday
Mkhitaryan signs autographs in Yerevan toy store, promotes MickiToy
YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Football star Henrikh Mkhitaryan,
captain of Armenia’s national team and midfielder of London’s Arsenal,
made an appearance today in a Yerevan toy store to promote his
MickiToy – the mini-me version of himself.

Hundreds of children attended the event, some even waited outside the
store from early morning to be the first to get an autograph.
Welcoming the visitors, Mkhitaryan said he is happy to be next to the kids.
Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

Sports: Adidas unveils Predator 18’s designed for Henrikh Mkhitaryan

Panorama, Armenia
June 8 2018

PM Pashinyan comments on criticisms regarding absence of clarity and numbers in government’s program

Categories
BUSINESS & ECONOMY
Politics

Armenian Prime Minster Nikol Pashinyan commented on the criticisms according to which there is no clarity in the government’s program, it is not clearly stated what economic growth is expected and to what extent the poverty will decline.

The PM told reporters in the Parliament that at the moment the government’s task is to assess the shadow volumes of the country’s economy. “This is very important issue. Now, for instance, who can say how many percent shadow our economy has? The government previously estimated it 22%, the international organizations assess it 46% and so on. I want to draw your attention on the fact that the numbers fixed in the previous government’s programs have not become a reality as a rule. We are going not to write numbers, but to make major changes in the country. And these changes will lead to results”, the PM said.

In response to the question that if today the government’s program is approved, the next mechanism is going to be his resignation for the snap elections, when to expect his resignation, PM Pashinyan said: “Within a year”.