Allison Lince-Bentley
Marketing Specialist | Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural
Heritage
Cell | +1.202.236.9460
Web | www.festival.si.edu
—
Allison Lince-Bentley
cell: 202-236-9460
LinkedIn:
Allison Lince-Bentley
Marketing Specialist | Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural
Heritage
Cell | +1.202.236.9460
Web | www.festival.si.edu
—
cell: 202-236-9460
LinkedIn:
Demonstrators who were rallying outside a shopping center in Yerevan claim that plain-clothed police officers have approached them and carried out “explanatory works”.
Police spokesman Ashot Aharonyan said on Facebook that there are no plain-clothed officers on-duty at the rally sites and that the security and safety of the demonstrators is ensured exclusively by uniformed officers.
“Police are officially announcing that at this moment the security of demonstrators is ensured exclusively by uniformed police officers, no plain-clothed officers are involved in the service,” he said.
Opposition MP Nikol Pashinyan and his crowd of supporters are marching to the Republic Square from France Square. A rally is planned to take place at 19:00.
Opposition MP Nikol Pashinyan has addressed a question on continuing cooperation with Bright Armenia and Republic parties – the two other parties of the Yelk faction of the Armenian parliament.
Speaking to reporters in the Armenian parliament, Pashinyan was asked on what format he will continue cooperating with the two political parties.
“I have said that our main task will be the creation of an atmosphere of solidarity and agreement. And this goal will accompany us in all actions”, Pashinyan said.
Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II held a meeting on April 29 with Republican Party (HHK) parliamentary faction leader Vahram Baghdasaryan, acting minister of defense Vigen Sargsyan, and MP Armen Ashotyan, who also serves as Vice President of the ruling party – the HHK.
The meeting was held in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiatsin.
The meeting focused on the current domestic political situation in Armenia and peaceful settlement paths.
Opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan, head of the parliamentary Yelk faction, says he believes that snap elections should take place within two months after the May 1 election of a Prime Minister. However, Pashinyan expressed readiness to discuss the issue with other political forces and organize the elections later.
Speaking to reporters in the parliament, Pashinyan emphasized that they have their ideas over the timing of the snap parliamentary elections, however they are willing to discuss the proposals of other political forces.
“We have our ideas, however different forces of the political arena are voicing concerns that if we want to ensure equal conditions for all, then we must do it the way for the political arena to get prepared for that event. We believe that the elections can be done within two months, however we find this topic to be discussable, that it can be done a bit later, however within the limits of logic, in order for the political arena to be more ready for it,” Pashinyan said.
Asked whether or not the snap elections are possible to be held within a year, Pashinyan said: “We believe that one year is a very long time, however the issue is discussable. All arguments must be weighed.”
Armenia’s national security service (NSS) has prevented a terrorist, who was active in the Syrian war, from entering the country.
The terrorist is identified as Suleymangaji Bagandgajiyev, a Russian citizen and resident of Makhachkala. The NSS said it continues being on high alert and focusing on foreign threats or terrorist organizations, taking into account the difficult tactical situation in the country.
The national security service has heightened border control simultaneously with its other function in order to prevent the continuous attempts of terror suspects from taking advantage from the current domestic tension in Armenia and to target the country. The NSS said it had intelligence reports suggesting that terrorist organization-affiliated suspects would attempt to cross the border into Armenia.
The prevention of entry of Suleymangaji Bagandgajiyev back on 13th of February of 2018 has proven the possible threats to national security relating to international terrorist organizations.
The Russian citizen had arrived in Armenia on a transit flight from Kenya and attempted to use a fake passport of a Ukrainian citizen to illegally cross into Armenian territory.
Suleymangaji Bagandgajiyev was charged under Article 325 and 329 of the Criminal Code as part of the criminal case on using forged documents and illegal border crossing.
The Russian citizen was arrested.
The NSS also gathered intelligence reports on Bagandgajiyev’s recruitment and payment by an international terrorism organization for fighting in Syria from May 2015.
The NSS also gathered information on Bagandgajiyev’s suspicious interest towards individual locations in Yerevan and other Armenian cities.
The investigation continues.
[see link]
Sunday, Armenian Parliament Majority ‘Won’t Block’ Opposition Candidate For PM • Tatevik Lazarian Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Republican Party of Armenia at a parliament session in Yerevan 28 February 2018. A leading member of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) said on Sunday that it will not try to prevent a joint candidate of the three other parliamentary forces from becoming the country’s new prime minister. Vahram Baghdasarian, who leads the HHK faction in the parliament, made this clear after meeting with opposition leader Nikol Pashinian, the main organizer of nationwide protests that have led to the resignation of Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian. “If the three other political forces represented in the National Assembly have a joint candidate … we will not block the candidate whom they will call the people’s candidate,” Baghdasarian told reporters. HHK deputies will not boycott Tuesday’s session of the parliament which is due to elect the next premier, he said. Pashinian said he received the same assurances from Baghdasarian at their meeting. He said the HHK faction, which controls 58 of the 105 parliament seats, is “predisposed” towards letting him become prime minister. The position announced by Baghdasarian still needs to be formalized by the largest parliamentary faction. Pashinian said that he will meet with HHK lawmakers later in the day or Monday. Pashinian’s candidacy has been endorsed not only by his Yelk alliance but also Gagik Tsarukian’s bloc and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun). The three forces hold a total of 47 parliament seats, meaning that the opposition leader needs to be also backed by at least six HHK parliamentarians if he is to succeed Sarkisian as prime minister. Pashinian reaffirmed on Saturday his desire to serve as interim prime minister who would organize fresh general elections. But he said he is ready to discuss possible dates for such polls with the HHK and the other parliamentary forces. The 42-year-old again declined to shed light on the composition of his would-be cabinet. He said only that once in office he will be striving for an “atmosphere of national accord and solidarity.” Pashinian Confident About Becoming Armenian PM • Emil Danielyan Armenia - Supporters of opposition leader Nikol Pashinian block a street in downtown Yerevan, . Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian sounded confident on Sunday about his chances of becoming Armenia’s prime minister after more than two weeks of massive anti-government protests organized by him. Pashinian said there is now a “very high likelihood” that “at least some deputies” from the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) will vote for him when the National Assembly picks the next premier on Tuesday. “This means that we have a great opportunity to turn our de facto victory into a de jure victory, which in turn means that our candidate will be elected prime minister,” he told thousands of supporters that again rallied in Yerevan’s central Republic Square. “I am prepared to take up the post of Armenia’s prime minister in a responsible manner,” he declared. Pashinian addressed the crowd hours after meeting with Vahram Baghdasarian, the leader of the HHK’s parliamentary faction, the largest in the National Assembly. Baghdasarian said after the meeting that he and other HHK lawmakers will not “block” Pashinian’s candidacy if it is formally nominated by the three other political forces represented in the parliament. The opposition Yelk alliance, the Tsarukian Bloc and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) have already endorsed Pashinian for the country’s top executive post. They control 47 parliament seats between them, compared with 58 seats held by the HHK. Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian is hugged by a supporter during a rally in Yerevan, . The HHK faction is due to officially announce its position on the next premier after meeting with Pashinian on Monday. The latter said his supporters should therefore stop blocking streets and roads or taking other “civil disobedience” actions until he reports the results of the planned meeting to them next evening. But he also cautioned: “This is not yet the end of the story and we must not lose our vigilance.” Earlier in the day, Pashinian also met with a visiting delegation of Russian parliamentarians headed by Leonid Kalashnikov, chairman of a State Duma committee on relations with former Soviet republics. He said the meeting took place in a “very warm atmosphere” and that its participants came away from it as “friends.” Russian-Armenian relations will only deepen further as a result of regime change in Yerevan, he added. During his unprecedented campaign, Pashinian has repeatedly stated that he is not planning any major change of Armenian foreign policy. In particular, he has ruled out Armenia’s withdrawal from the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). Pashinian opposed Armenia’s membership in the EEU as recently as in October last year, saying that it has dealt “very serious blows” to his country’s sovereignty. 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
Parliament due to elect a new leader on 1 May
Bloodless and quick, the success of Armenia’s velvet revolution surprised everyone. But the resignation of the country’s longtime leader Serzh Sargsyan on 13 April – accompanied, as it was, by a wild party in the streets of Yerevan – now looks like being but the first chapter of a much longer story.
And as the country falls into constitutional crisis, Russia seems to be monitoring the vacant steering wheel.
After leading tens of thousands of Armenians onto the streets, there is little Mr Pashinyan lacks little in the way of charisma, popular support or momentum. But the former journalist is behind on one key metric: the formal numbers game.
The constitutional balance of power remains with the ruling Republican Party of Armenia, returned with a large majority in April’s disputed elections. It is unlikely to hand the premiership over without a fight.
The Republican Party had hoped the quick appointment of a new acting prime minister, the former Gazprom official Karen Karapetyan, would be enough to calm the public mood. But Mr Pashinyan has continued to press home his popular following, and his supporters appear to be going nowhere. On Friday, he took the protest to Gyumri, Armenia’s second city.
For most of the past fortnight, the Kremlin has played an unusual role of relaxed bystander.
Speaking to journalists on Thursday, presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov insisted to journalists Russia was not in the least concerned by a revolution against corruption and authoritarian rule in Russia’s backyard.
“The issue is exclusively a domestic Armenian affair,” he said.
But in recent days, Russia has hinted at new activism. Secret delegations have scuttled in and out of Yerevan, rumoured to have included the presidential chief of staff Vaino. On Thursday, Armenia’s foreign minister was in Moscow. Later that day, Vladimir Putin spoke with acting prime minister Karen Karapetyan.
The readout of that high-level call appeared to be a game changer. The Armenian crisis should be resolved quickly, within the constitution, and “on the basis of the results of the legitimate parliamentary elections held in April 2017”, the Russian president told his counterpart. Mr Putin’s formulation implicitly favoured the old guard so despised by the protest movement.
Almost immediately, the government found new resolve in dealing with Mr Pashinyan’s hardline negotiation stance. On Friday, Mr Karapetyan rejected outright the possibility of talks with the protest leader – describing his absolutist terms as unacceptable.
The confluence of events has suggested to many that the Kremlin has shifted to openly embrace its man on the ground.
“Karapetyan is now seen as a man on a mission, more committed to fulfilling Moscow’s demands than meeting popular Armenian expectations for change,” says Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Centre, an independent think tank in Yerevan.
The opposition leadership has been careful to distance itself from anti-Russian sentiment.
On various platforms, Mr Pashinyan said he supported economic and military collaboration with Russia, including retaining a Russian army base. He has also insisted the Armenian revolution had little in common with other, anti-Russian colour revolutions.
“This is not a Euromaidan,” he said, referencing the Ukrainian revolution four years ago. “Not a single penny has been given from a foreign agency towards this movement.”
But with Moscow’s bid to counter the protest ascendancy, that neutrality would appear now to be at risk – and with unpredictable consequences.
“Putin and Karapetyan are are recklessly misreading the mood on the Armenian street,” says Mr Giragosian. “And they are missing the first lesson from the downfall of Serzh Sargsyan: that it is dangerous for any incumbent elite to ignore popular demands for change.”
April 29, 20:29 UTC+3 YEREVAN
YEREVAN, April 29. /TASS/. Relations between Armenia and Russia will grow rapidly in the future, opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan told the rally underway in the capital of Yerevan, a TASS correspondent reported from the scene.
“Today, I had a meeting with members of the State Duma [lower house of Russia’s parliament]. Both sides had a good impression. I assure you that relations will be actively growing between Armenia and Russia,” Pashinyan said.
According to the opposition leader, “Armenia will deal intensively with all foreign partners.”
“Thanks to your actions, Armenia’s authority has surged in the world arena,” he told the supporters.
Since April 13, opposition’s widespread protests have gripped Armenia. On April 23, Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan tendered his resigned in the wake of protests. On April 25 the ruling coalition broke up after the Dashnaktsutyun party had left it. The parliament is scheduled to elect prime minister on May 1. Three parliamentary factions – the Tsarukyan Alliance and Dashnaktsutyun and Yelk parties – vowed that they would vote in favor of Pashinyan. The ruling Republican Party of Armenia will not nominate its candidate.
Pashinyan (an MP of the Yelk faction) will become prime minister if 53 out of 105 (a simple majority) of MPs vote for him in the one-chamber parliament. The faction of the ruling Republic Party of Armenia has 58 seats in the parliament, while Yelk has nine, Dashnaktsutyun has seven, and the Tsarukyan bloc has 31 seats.