Adversary undertook sabotage infiltration attempt on June 17 – Artsakh Defense Army

Panorama, Armenia

Azerbaijani forces violated the ceasefire regime along the Line of Contact between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan for 150 times over the past week (June 17-23), firing over 1500 shots towards the Armenian frontier troops.

As the Defense Army of the Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh)Republic reports, apart from ceasefire violations, the adversary applied a shoulder fired anti-tank grenade launcher in the northern and eastern sections of the Line of Contact.

According to the release, on June 17 at around 21:45 the adversary undertook an attempt of sabotage and subversive intrusion toward one of the military positions located in the eastern direction of the Defense Army.

“The NK Army advanced detachments promptly halted the Azerbaijani subversive group’s attempt to advance and pushed back to their starting positions,” the source said.
It is reported that over the past week movement of the manpower and equipment of the Azerbaijani forces were recorded across the Line of Contact.

“Defense Army frontline units undertake necessary actions to thwart the offensive actions of the adversary and continue the reliable protection of their combat positions,” the statement concluded. 

Yerevan’s Choco Fest targeting the sweet-toothed on July 11

PanArmenian, Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Armenian capital city of Yerevan will host the annual Choco Fest on July 11, organized by The LOFT self-developmental center for the sweet-toothed.

All the producers and importers of chocolate are invited to participate in the festival, and according to preliminary estimates, 10-12 companies will join the event in total.

Those attending the fest will be able to taste and buy locally-produced desserts and even prepare chocolate themselves in a special laboratory – the ChocoLab – people behind the initiative told PanARMENIAN.Net

A chocolate-making master class will be offered too, and the guests will drink a unique type of coffee, according to the organizers.

The event will give local businesses an opportunity to introduce their products to wider audiences, expand their customer base, advertise their companies and become familiar with their competitors.

Turkey Elections: Nationalism & Piety Dominate

Heavy.com
 
 
Turkey Elections: Nationalism & Piety Dominate
 
     
 
By The Conversation
 
Published Jun 23, 2018 at 2:00pm
 
Getty Supporters of Muharrem Ince, presidential candidate of Turkey’s main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), take part in an election rally in Istanbul on .
 
By Resat Kasaba, University of Washington
 
Turkey goes to the polls to vote for president and parliament on Sunday.
 
As a scholar of the history and politics of the Middle East, I believe the most striking feature of the campaign is the ideological uniformity displayed by the main parties and their presidential candidates. With the exception of the pro-Kurdish People’s Democracy Party, candidates espouse strong sentiments of activist nationalism, Muslim piety or, sometimes, both.
 
This seems to resonate well with the majority of the Turkish electorate.
 
First as prime minister and then as president, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his Justice and Development Party have worked to recast Turkey in an increasingly nationalist and religious mold. Today, Erdoğan successfully uses these two ideas to cement his bond with voters.
 
Turkey was regarded as an outpost of Western-type secularism during much of the 20th century. But Islam and Turkish nationalism were always present in the country, even if not as strongly displayed as they have been in recent years.
 
The growing focus on religion and nationalism is leading Turkey away from democracy and democratic participation, making it difficult for diverse ideas to be advanced and respected by all parties. That has been evident in the increased authoritarianism of Erdoğan’s rule and the state of emergency he imposed after an attempted 2016 coup.
 
As Turkey becomes less liberal and more authoritarian, it contributes to the fracturing of western alliances, furthering instability in Europe and the Middle East.
 
Forcefully establishing an identity
 
Before World War I, the Ottoman Empire was home to a large number of Christian communities, Greeks and Armenians most prominent among them, and various ethnic groups.
 
But following the Ottomans’ destruction of the Armenian community in the early part of the 20th century and the expulsion of the Greeks, leaders of the new Turkish Republic devised policies to assimilate the country’s largest remaining ethnic minority group, the Kurds.
 
They believed that otherwise they would continue to lose territory and would not be able to hold on to their new country.
 
The Kurds, who are predominantly Muslim, resisted almost immediately and have been locked in an armed struggle with the Turkish state since the early days of the Republic in 1923.
 
The elimination of the largest non-Muslim groups, the Greeks and Armenians, meant that Islam became the de-facto identity for the overwhelming majority of the people who remained in Turkey.
 
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder and the first president of the Republic, initiated a radical policy of separating religion from politics. He created institutions and laws that were modeled after European counterparts, and severed ties with the country’s recent Islamic past, making Turkey the model country for successful westernization in the eyes of many observers.
 
But the reach and penetration of these policies beyond the country’s urban centers was limited.
 
For the more than 80 percent of the population who lived in rural areas, these reforms meant little. For them, their Muslim religion continued to be the most immediate way in which they identified themselves.
 
Power of religion, nationalism
 
This year – with the exception of the Kurdish party – the parties that are running for the parliament have competed with each other to showcase their nationalist and religious credentials.
 
Most of them have formed alliances to boost each other’s chances. But they have all rejected any form of cooperation with the pro-Kurdish People’s Democracy Party, HDP. None of these parties raised any serious objections when the HDP leadership and deputies were jailed almost two years ago. Government prosecutors have charged them with aiding Kurdish terrorism but a proper trial or sentencing has not taken place yet.
 
As for Islam, none of the candidates are promising a return to the strict secularism of the early 20th century. Even Muharrem Ince, the presidential candidate of the Republican People’s Party that was founded by Ataturk, enthusiastically flaunts his religious beliefs in his rallies. In fact, his unexpected success in the polls is attributed, in part, to his embrace of Islam.
 
Eroding barrier between religion and politics
 
Center-right parties that have dominated Turkish politics and won all the elections in Turkey since the 1950s have always used a combination of Turkish nationalism and Islam to advance their chances.
 
But for most of the 20th century they had to be careful in how they used religion for political purposes.
 
Red lines separated religion and politics and were enforced by laws and by the ever-present military, which claimed to be the guardian of the secular order. Appeals to religion were carried out indirectly – for example, by showing up at Friday prayers.
 
There were, however, no limits to using nationalism in politics. With a history curriculum that excluded any reference to any aspect of the region’s multicultural past, generations grew up believing mythical theories of national origins of Turks and their superiority.
 
The lines that separated religion and politics in Turkey eroded steadily in the course of the 20th century. The political parties wanted to appeal to constituents keen on asserting their Islamic identity and practicing their religion without having to conceal their beliefs.
 
Erdoğan pushes limits further
 
Under Erdogan’s leadership, Turkey’s education and government bureaucracy have been reformed to train and govern “a pious generation”. Following the attempted coup in 2016, the military has been defanged, becoming a bystander if not an enthusiastic supporter of this epochal transformation.
 
Today, I believe it is inconceivable for any political party to be successful in Turkey by advocating a staunchly secular line of policy.
 
Similarly, national unity is a non-negotiable plank in the election platforms of all the parties.
 
The armed conflict with the Kurds continues. The Turkish military has invaded and occupied a strip of land in northern Syria in recent months to fight against the Kurds there. But no candidate, other than HDP’s Demirtaş, has seriously questioned these policies.
 
None of the political parties or presidential contenders, with the exception of HDP, veer too far away from either Turkish nationalism or Muslim piety. So the short campaign for this snap election in Turkey has almost exclusively revolved around President Erdoğan. He has become such a paramount figure that being for or against him has become the single most important marker for politicians.
 
The campaign hasn’t included a sustained discussion of Turkey’s economy or international relations, even though the country is facing serious challenges in both of these areas.
 
It is hard to know what difference electing one of the opposition candidates will make in these areas since we don’t really know where parties stand. We know, however, what staying with Erdoğan will mean.
 
If Erdoğan emerges as a victor with the newly enhanced powers of presidency, he is certain to steer Turkey further down the road of authoritarianism. This will have serious implications for the people of Turkey, the region and Europe. If he loses, there will likely be an opening that will allow for new visions to emerge.
 
Even with a new party or president in power, it will not be easy to recreate the space for genuine democratic participation in Turkey. For a more inclusive politics to develop, the constraints of religious nationalism will have to be broken.
 
Resat Kasaba, Professor of International Studies, University of Washington
 
This article was originally published on The Conversation.
 

Construction was the driver of economic growth in Jan-May 2018 in Armenia while industrial sector’s growth slackened

Arminfo, Armenia
Construction was the driver of economic growth in Jan-May 2018 in Armenia while industrial sector’s growth slackened

Yerevan June 22

Karina Melikyan. In Armenia, economic activity in January-May 2018 increased by 8.6% y-o-y at the background of growing rates of import compared to export. In May this year versus May 2017, economic activity increased by 5.4%, and in May 2018 alone increased by 10.4%. A year earlier, in January-May 2017, versus the same period of 2016, economic activity increased by 6.4%, in May compared with May 2015 – by 8.9%, and in May alone – by 11.7%.

According to the preliminary data of the National Statistical Service of Armenia, the growth in economic activity in January-May 2018 was mainly ensured by the services sector – by 17.5% y-o-y, the construction sector – by 17.4% and the trade sector – by 10.2%, while growth in industrial and agricultural sectors was more moderate-3.3% and 1.5% respectively. Against this background the energy sector registered no growth. It is noteworthy that versus the indicators of the previous year the agriculture and construction sectors demonstrated increase, construction sector registering sharp growth. A year earlier, in January- May 2017, the industrial sector, trade, services, energy complex demonstrated growth- 14.4%, 12.8%, 11% and 4.6% y-o-y, respectively, and the agricultural sector and the construction sector demonstrated decline – 3.5% and 12.1% respectively per annum. The industrial production price index increased by 3.5% in January-May 2018 versus the same period of the previous year, and grew by 2.1% in May 2018 compared to May 2017. In May 2018 alone it declined by 1.2%. A year earlier, in January-May 2017, in comparison with the same period in 2016, the industrial production price index increased by 3.5%, in May 2017, compared to May 2016 – by 4.7%, and in May 2017 alone increased by 0.2% . In monthly terms (in May) the economic activity grew due to construction sector (42.4% growth versus 50% growth in May 2017), the agricultural sector (by 41.9% against 47.1% a year earlier), industrial sector ranks next with more moderate rates (13.3% growth versus 12.7% growth in May 2017), trade (12.1% versus 6.6% in May 2017) and service sector (6.5% against 9.5% growth a year earlier). Energy sector registered 2.3% growth in May 2018 versus 2.9% decline in May 2017.

In May 2018 versus May 2017 in terms of growth rates, the service sector was leading with 17%, construction and trade registered 8.8% growth both, at this background energy and agriculture had insignificant growth-1.8% and 0.1% respectively. The Industrial sector demonstrated decline by 3.1%, while the rate in previous year was high and even leading. A year earlier, in May 2017 against May 2016, the growth rates were more moderate: industrial sector was leading- 20%, followed by trade-15%, services-14.3% and energy sector-5.6%, while agriculture and construction fields registered decline-4.8% and 9.3% respectively.

According to statistical data in January-May 2018, the trade sector held the absolute leading position with the volume of 1.02 billion AMD ($ 2.1 billion). The industrial sector held the second place 658.2 billion ($ 1.4 billion), services were the third – 626.7 billion drams ($ 1.3 billion), agriculture-the fourth -180.3 billion drams ($ 374.1 million), and the construction sector was the fifth-93.7 billion AMD ($ 194.4 million). The volume of electricity generated in January-May 2018 was 3237.7 million kWh, of which 570.7 million kWh in may alone.

At the same time, Armenia’s foreign trade turnover in January-May 2018 was 1351.4 billion AMD ($ 2804.1 million), with annual growth of 32.4%. In its structure, the volume of exports has undergone annual growth of 24.1% to 450.8 billion AMD ($ 935.6 million), and imports – an annual growth of 37% to 900.6 billion AMD ($ 1868.5 million). In May 2018 alone, foreign trade turnover increased by 6.2%, due to the growth in imports – by 11.8% and decline in exports – by 5%, and compared to May 2017, foreign trade turnover increased by 27.9%, mainly due to the growth of imports by 32.8% with an increase in exports by 17.6%. A year earlier, in January-May 2017, Armenia’s foreign trade turnover grew by 23.1% per annum, in particular, exports – by 20.9% and imports – by 24.4%, in May 2017 alone the growth in foreign trade turnover by 35% was conditioned by growth of imports – 45% and 18.3% growth in exports, compared with May 2016 trade turnover grew by 53.4% due to raise in both imports and exports- 61.7% and 38.7% respectively.

The average calculated exchange rate of AMD was 484.09 AMD / $ in May, 2018, and 481.92 AMD / $ 1 in January-May, compared to 483.42 AMD / $ 1 in May 2017 and 485.18 AMD / $ 1 in January -May 2017.

Petr Mikyska: Czech companies interested in implementing investment programs in Armenia

Arminfo, Armenia
Petr Mikyska: Czech companies interested in implementing investment programs in Armenia

Yerevan June 22

Naira Badalyan. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan received Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Czech Republic to Armenia Petr Mikyska.

As the press service of the government reports, stressing the importance of further development of the Armenian-Czech relations, the prime minister expressed satisfaction with the level of bilateral political cooperation. At the same time, Pashinyan considered it necessary to intensify and expand the Armenian– Czech relations in the economic sphere. The Prime Minister stressed that the executive body is interested in attracting Czech capital to the Armenian market and added that the Armenian government is consistently making real changes that will guarantee the security of investments.

Petr Mikyska, in his turn, welcomed the reforms carried out by the new Armenian authorities in various spheres. He stressed that the Czech Republic is ready to help the Armenian government implement its priorities. The ambassador said that various Czech companies are interested in implementing investment programs in Armenia in specific areas.

The Prime Minister thanked the Czech side for its readiness to help the Armenian government and touched upon the further development of Armenia-EU relations, the negotiation process on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement and the issues of mutual interest.

Japan offered Armenia to implement the project "One Village – One Product"

Arminfo, Armenia
Japan offered Armenia to implement the project “One Village – One Product”

Yerevan June 22

Alexander Avanesov. Japan offered Armenia to implement the project “One Village – One Product”, which was previously successfully implemented in the Land of the Rising Sun. The ambassador of Japan to Armenia, June Yamada, addressed the Minister of Agriculture of Armenia Artur Khachatryan with this proposal, the RA Ministry of Agriculture press service reported.

According to the source, Artur Khachatryan, in turn, stressed that the Armenian side is open for interaction on any proposals. According to him, at present the state focuses on small farms that provide large volumes of agricultural production. To further develop the sphere, from the minister’s point of view, it is necessary to expand the areas of uncultivated land, introduce modern technologies, modernize the agricultural park, combine farming and create agricultural cooperatives. It is also important to actively develop organic agriculture, to organize the production of high-quality products and to diversify export destinations.

During the meeting, the parties discussed the implementation of certain programs aimed at acquiring technical equipment, equipment and services on the grant funds of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JIKA). The possibilities of export of Armenian agricultural products to the Japanese market were also discussed.

The project “One Village – One Product” is a strategic movement, specially developed and initiated in Japan, which contributed to the successful regional development of the Land of the Rising Sun. The uniqueness of this approach is that by identifying and further manufacturing products exclusively from local resources, developing packaging and label design, subsequent quality control, and promoting to local and world markets, it is possible to achieve economic development of the region.

Iraqi-Armenian refugee family plans to remain in Armenia, start small business

ArmenPress, Armenia
Iraqi-Armenian refugee family plans to remain in Armenia, start small business



YEREVAN, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS. The family of Iraqi-Armenian Mazin Nesrob Mosi, who immigrated to Armenia two years ago from Iraq, doesn’t plan to live its ancestral homeland, despite wishing peace in its birthplace in Iraq.

ARMENPRESS talked to the family members on their occupation and reasons of permanent residence in Armenia. “The situation in Iraq was very tense. Coming here, we understood that this is our country, and our children must grow up here,” says Mazim Nesrob Mosi. He came to Armenia with his wife Anush, and two daughters Maya, 7, and Berna, 4.

Although the parents speak poor Armenian, they are proudly stating that their daughters are very fluent in the language already.

“I have already finished the first grade. I study well at school,” Maya said.

The family has settled in the village of Darakert in Masis, where Mazin is working as a car mechanic. “I am very happy that I came to Armenia. I am happy that my daughters already speak Armenian,” he said.

The Armenia office of the UN High Commissioner for refugees is supporting the family in various ways. Mission Armenia charity NGO is also supporting the Mosis, by compensating the house rent. The family is also willing to start a small chicken business. The Armenia office of the UNHCR is discussing likely assistance in this matter also.

Asked whether or not they plan to return to Iraq if the situation stabilizes there, the Mosis said they will not go back even when everything gets alright. “I am tied to Armenia with my people. Everyone here are Armenians,” Mazin said.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

‘Armenia is committed to the exclusively peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict’ – FM Mnatsakanyan’s remarks

ArmenPress, Armenia
Armenia is committed to the exclusively peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict’ – FM Mnatsakanyan’s remarks at Eastern Partnership informal ministerial meeting


YEREVAN, JUNE 22, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s minister of foreign affairs Zohrab Mnatsakanyan delivered remarks at the 10th Informal Dialogue of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Eastern Partnership Countries in Minsk, Belarus.

Below is the full transcript of the minister’s remarks, as reported by the foreign ministry:

“Dear colleagues, Dear Commissioner Hahn,

First of all, I extend my gratitude and appreciation to Minister Vladimir Makei for the warm reception and for hosting the Eastern Partnership Informal Dialogue.

I am very happy to be back in Minsk, a place celebrated for its hospitality and kindness towards visitors. I thank also Commissioner Hahn for the consistency and commitment in promoting the Eastern Partnership in the European Union, as well as encouraging the spirit of cooperation among the partner countries.

I extend my greetings to all the good friends around the table. I’m sure by now you have been well briefed about the latest developments in Armenia. I want to reiterate the unwavering and strong commitment of the new government led by the Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to resolutely deliver on the clear mandate of the people of Armenia and to consolidate the rule of law democratic principles, fight against corruption, the protection and the promotion of the rights of the Armenian people to secure fairness and equal opportunities for all in economic social and other activities. Having been in office for more than one month the Government has been steadfast in its manifest actions.

I also reiterate that the developments in Armenia over the months of April and May were of strictly domestic nature, they concern Armenia, they are about Armenia and are about the aspirations of the Armenian people.

In our foreign policy priorities, as formulated in the Government programme, Armenia pursues continuity, predictability and reinforced engagement with all its friends and partners on the basis of sovereign equality and in consolidation of our efforts to promote the interests of Armenia and advance mutually beneficial cooperation and partnership.

I have arrived in Minsk from Brussels, I have arrived in the very small hours of the morning following the delay, so I’m still looking forward to enjoy Minsk if I had that opportunity.

In Brussels, with Vice President and High Representative Federica Mogherini we held yesterday our first Partnership Council following the activation of the provisional application of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement. This was an important opportunity to take stock of the present phase of our partnership and sketch out the priorities for the way ahead. Provisional application of the Agreement was made possible following the ratification of the CEPA by the Armenian Parliament on 11 April. The CEP Agreement represents the new legal foundation of our relations with the European Union and its member states and builds on the long tradition of cooperation. For Armenia it is also a valuable instrument in assisting to our reform agenda.

We will continue to decisively pursue the mobility partnership and visa liberalization agenda with the European Union. Amongst other things, the political significance of this agenda is in promoting people to people contacts, as human interactions represent a fundamental source of advancing mutual respect and understanding in interstate relations.

Eastern Partnership continues to be an important platform for advancing the spirit of co-operation on the basis of shared principles and set of values. We will continue to insist on advancing such spirit in our relations and to work towards building trust and mutual respect amongst partner countries. This message of Europe born out of the deprivations of the Second World War remains as relevant as ever. And Commissioner Hahn has been referring to it, the message of stability in your statement as well. The turbulence of the present international and European agenda should compel us to reinforce such message and action.

Sustainable peace remains a challenge to our region. Armenia is committed to the exclusively peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict within the internationally agreed format of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmanship. The status and security of Nagorno-Karabakh are the overarching priorities of Armenia. The environment conducive to peace is crucial for enhancing the effectiveness of the negotiation process and should be given a prominence. Escalation along the Line of Contact between Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan and along the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, war mongering and the hate rhetoric, denial of genuine people to people contacts should be firmly rejected. Both EU member states and Eastern partner countries should resolutely withhold all activities contributing to the arms race in the region and tolerating actions, which undermine the peace process or challenge the agreed format of negotiations. The concept and message of Eastern Partnership is pertinent and reinforcing in reiterating Armenia’s commitment to peace.

The 2017 Brussels summit empowered us with 20 deliverables by 2020 at the core of which is the promotion of regional coherence, co-operation and dialogue between the EU and the Eastern Neighbours and among the partners themselves. Armenia reiterates its commitment to advance this agenda. I thank Minister Makei for initiating an exchange of views for our present meeting on the prospects of the Eastern Partnership in relation to the Multiannual Financial Framework priorities and the External Investment Plan. We consider the latter to be an important undertaking to enhance our economic resilience and performance in critical areas related to the sustainable development agenda. We would welcome a sustained focus on the Eastern neighbourhood in future EU budgetary deliberations, as we should collectively aim at securing the implementation of the already agreed mid- and long-term joint programmes directly linked to modernisation efforts and reforms.

The government agencies and the civil society of Armenia have been significantly benefiting from participation in multiple activities within the Eastern partnership. We continue to receive additional support for the reforms and institutional capacity building in Armenia and underline the importance of the incentive-based approach as defined in the Brussels Declaration. I would also want to underline the importance of sustained engagement of our civil society organisations in promoting the Eastern partnership agenda.

In conclusion, Armenia is willing and ready to assume greater ownership and engagement with the EU, its member states and partner countries towards transforming our common area into a secure, stable and prosperous neighbourhood.

Thank you.”

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

The Armenian state restoring its exclusive right to use force. The arrest of ‘General Manvel’ is aimed at disarming paramilitary feudal lords, who emerged from the Karabakh war

Regnum, Russia
June 21 2018
The Armenian state restoring its exclusive right to use force.
The arrest of ‘General Manvel’ is aimed at disarming paramilitary feudal lords, who emerged from the Karabakh war

by Ruben Grdzelyan
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from Russian]

The arrest of Gen Manvel Grigoryan (“General Manvel”) [on 16 June] and a heightened emotional follow-up of the act without any more or less appropriate assessment of what is happening has become an informational trend in Armenia over the past few days.

The government and the state-run and private media that serve them have done a lot to make the public perceive this issue only within the emotional sphere. However, this act is far from comprising an emotional component alone. The Armenian government are quite pragmatic in their objective of getting rid of the remaining vestiges of the war that ended back 24 Years ago and transferring certain powers back to the state.

On the one hand, Grigoryan’s arrest is a demonstrative punishment for those, who continue to live and become rich in Armenia and [Azerbaijan’s breakaway Nagorno-]Karabakh at the expense of the past war. Grigoryan is a classical representative of the class, paramilitary bourgeois, who rose due to the war and were becoming rich for decades at the expense of ancient glory [Grigoryan was awarded the title of hero of Karabakh for his contribution to the victory of the Armenian forces in the Karabakh war]. The Yerkrapah Union of Volunteers public organisation that he headed was in high demand in the 1990s. The regular army of the country was only being formed at that time and it was volunteers organised in various formats, who replaced the state institutions that were inexistent or inefficient due to the lack of experience. After the war, such organisations helped veterans and families of the deceased and defended volunteers’ rights, often interpreting these rights in a peculiar manner.

Later, as the army and state institutions came into being, the formal need in organisations like Yerkrapah started decreasing. However, changing their aims and aspirations, they joined politics. Yerkrapah became involved in politics back during the Karabakh war in 1992-1994. At the beginning, they resorted to petty criminal activities (for example, taking cars and real property allegedly for the needs of the army) and by the elections of 1996, they were already an influential force in politics, their methods remaining within the frames of the definitions of the Criminal Code. This is not a specifically Armenian phenomenon. It is called “Vietnam syndrome” and it emerges in societies effectively after any war. This is how historian Karen Ghazaryan described the phenomenon for the Regnum news agency:

[Passage omitted: description of the Vietnam syndrome by Ghazaryan]

Up until now, Grigoryan has efficiently combined complexes (psychological traumas) with the political purposes of his clan. He and his Yerkrapah that had effectively turned into a militarised structure have always been necessary to the government – [former presidents] Levon Ter-Petrosyan, Robert Kocharyan, and Serzh Sargsyan. Local feudal lords used to suppress dissent during elections and ensure votes in favour of the government not only within the frames of their dominions – the area of Ejmiatsin, but also in other regions, where Yerkrapah members were present. Due to this, the government was ready to forgive them anything. Moreover, the government delegated to General Manvel the exclusive right of the state to use force. In the meantime, duplication of absolute and exclusive rights of the state weakens the latter and, among others, reduces the standing of the state even in the eyes of those, who are part of the state machine.

It is obvious that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan does not need Yerkrapah’s support at the forthcoming early parliamentary elections. The denial of rumours that Pashinyan’s companion Sasun Mikayelyan intended to head Yerkrapah also confirms this. It is obvious that the organisation will be dissolved as something that turned into an atavism on the body of the state long ago. I would like to repeat that the essence of what is happening cannot be reduced to the new government’s struggle against corruption. A couple of KamAz trucks full of tinned meat and a couple of offroaders stolen from the army are just an insignificant part of the top of the iceberg of corruption.

Police shake-ups of the representatives of the “thieves'” and criminal world are in the same line with the case of “General Manvel”. Pashinyan is depriving individual groups the right to violence government has granted them over 25 years, obviously concentrating it in the hands of the state, which is how it should be. It is another issue, how the government will use the right of the state to use force, when it becomes exclusive.