Catholicos of All Armenians meets with Armenia’s ruling party officials

News.am, Armenia
 
 
Catholicos of All Armenians meets with Armenia’s ruling party officials
19:57, 29.04.2018
YEREVAN.-  Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II held a meeting on Sunday with Republican Party  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 RPA, the information department of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiatsin reported.
 
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.
 
 
National Assembly (NA) of Armenia will convene a special session on May 1, and the topic of the agenda will be the election of a new Prime Minister.
 
For reference, the new National Assembly of Armenia has 105 seats, 58 of which are allocated to the RPA, 31—to opposition Tsarukyan Bloc, 9—to Yelk, and 7—to the coalition government’s junior partner, Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Dashnaktsutyun Party.  A candidate needs 53 votes to get elected.

Armenia’s ruling party says will not stop ‘people’s candidate’ becoming PM

SwissInfo, Switzerland


Armenia’s ruling party says will not stop ‘people’s candidate’ becoming PM

Armenian opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan (R) walks with the supporter during a rally in Yerevan, Armenia . REUTERS/Gleb Garanich

(reuters_tickers)

YEREVAN (Reuters) – Armenia’s ruling party said on Sunday it would not stop protest leader Nikol Pashinyan becoming interim prime minister if all opposition factions in parliament support his candidacy.

More than two weeks of anti-government protests forced the resignation of Republican Party veteran Serzh Sarksyan as prime minister and the party has said it will not put forward one of its own members to replace him, in a bid to calm tensions.

Pashinyan, a former journalist turned lawmaker, has said parliament must elect him prime minister on May 1.

He is so far the only person to put himself forward and, as of Sunday, had received the support of all opposition parties in parliament that hold 47 seats of the 105-seat legislature where the Republicans have a majority.

After talks with Pashinyan on Sunday, the parliamentary leader of the Republican Party, Vahram Baghdasaryan, said the party would not “impede the election of the people’s candidate” if all three opposition factions in parliament supported him.

The announcement coincided with the resumption of protests in the capital Yerevan after a two-day moratorium during which demonstrations against the Republican Party and official corruption were held in smaller cities.

Addressing demonstrators on Yerevan’s Republic Square, Pashinyan said he would meet with lawmakers on Monday and called for his supporters to refrain from acts of civil disobedience.

Although demonstrations have been peaceful, the upheaval has threatened to destabilise Armenia, a close ally of Russia in a volatile region riven by a decades-long, low-level conflict with neighbouring Azerbaijan.

(Reporting by Hasmik Mkrtchyan; Writing by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)



Armenia protest leader seeks president’s backing to be PM

PBS.org
World Apr 29, 2018 1:20 PM EDT

YEREVAN, Armenia — The leader of the wave of protests that created a surprise power vacuum in Armenia said Sunday that he has met with the country’s new president and hopes to secure his support to become prime minister.

Armenia’s parliament plans to choose a replacement on Tuesday for Serzh Sargsyan, who resigned last week amid the street demonstrations over his selection as prime minister. Opposition lawmaker Nikol Pashinian, who led the protests, hopes to be the next premier.

Armenian opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan, right, walks with the supporter during a rally in Yerevan, Armenia, on . Photo by Gleb Garanich/Reuters

Pashinian’s supporters blocked traffic in the capital, marched through the city and assembled in a central square for an anti-government rally, as they did for more than a week over the political maneuvers that made Sargsyan prime minister after he was termed out of office as president.

Pashinian said Sunday that he hopes his bid to be the next prime minister receives backing from the current president, Armen Sarkisian, after their meeting. Former Prime Minister Karen Karapetian, who was appointed to the post in an acting capacity last week, is from Sargsyan’s Republic party.

The party holds a majority in parliament. A spokesman said Saturday it would not nominate a Republican candidate for prime minister, but lawmakers who are party members would vote as a bloc.

Armenian opposition supporters hold a rally in Yerevan, Armenia . Photo by Gleb Garanich/Reuters

Sargsyan was Armenia’s president for a decade before term limits forced him to step down in March. Lawmakers elected him as prime minister this month after approving governance changes that diminished the presidency’s power and bolstered the prime minister’s.

Opponents said the new system would have allowed Sargsyan to remain Armenia’s leader indefinitely.

Armenian opposition leader meets with Russian MPs

ARKA, Armenia

YEREVAN, April 29. /ARKA/. Members of the Armenian opposition Yelk parliamentary faction, led by its chairman Nikol Pashinyan, had a meeting today with a delegation of Russian State Duma (lower parliament chamber), Yelk press secretary Tigran Avinyan said.

He said the meeting took place in a rather constructive atmosphere. The sides discussed the political situation in Armenia and its impact on the Armenian-Russian relations.

The Russian delegation was led by the chairman of the State Duma committee on CIS affairs, Eurasian integration and relations with compatriots Leonid Kalashnikov.

Nikol Pashiyan had a meeting today also with the head of the Republican Party’s parliamentary faction Vahram Baghdasaryan. Speaking to reporters after the meeting Pashinyan said the Republican party’s faction is set not to impede his election as prime minister.

Pashinyan said the faction will make its final decision after considering his candidacy and a meeting with him, which is very likely to take place on Monday.  

Asked what he would do if the Republican MPs boycott the election of prime minister twice because under the constitution such scenario must be followed by the dissolution of the parliament and holding of new election, Pashinyan stressed that the preliminary mood among Republican MPs indicates the intention to have prime minister elected on May 1.

He also welcomed the decision of the Tsarukyan bloc to support the people’s choice at the elections of prime minister. -0-

Time for Trump to Recognize the Armenian Genocide

Breitbart
April 25 2018
440

Thousands of people marched in Los Angeles, home to one of America’s largest Armenian communities, to demand recognition of the genocide. Yet in his commemorative statement, Trump only went as far as describing the events as a “mass atrocity”:

Today we commemorate the Meds Yeghern, one of the worst mass atrocities of the 20th century, when one and a half million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths in the final years of the Ottoman Empire. We recall the horrific events of 1915 and grieve for the lives lost and the many who suffered.

By international law, genocide is defined as an “intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.” Although Trump’s statement recognizes the tragedy that took place, it missed an important detail, widely recognized by scholars, historians, and other experts — that what took place was not indiscriminate massacres, but a planned act of genocide.

This refusal to describe the events as a genocide is based on the U.S’s fear of upsetting the Turkish government, which vehemently denies allegations of genocide. Yet the U.S. is not alone. As of 2018, just 29 countries worldwide have officially recognized what happened in those years as a “genocide.”

Their stance is in stark contrast to a country like Germany, which has made the utmost efforts to heal the wounds of the Holocaust through commemorations and reparations. Meanwhile, Turkey continues to deny many of its crimes and even persecutes those who demand its recognition.

When former President Barack Obama came to power in 2009, he promised the more than one million Armenians living in the United States that he would recognize the genocide, although, like many of his foreign policy promises, it never materialized.

Yet recognition of the genocide remains an important conservative issue. The Armenian genocide was the first Christian genocide of the twentieth century and led to the displacement of millions of people from their Biblical homelands.

To this day, Turkey controls vast swaths of Armenian territory, while many of its Armenian inhabitants have been forced to convert to Islam. Christians are systematically persecuted, particularly those living in Kurdish territories. One recent example is the continued detention of American evangelical pastor Andrew Brunson on what appear to be phony terror-related charges.

Trump has styled himself as a defender of persecuted Christians around the world, and recognition of the genocide would go a long way to reinforcing his image as a protector of Christians in the Middle East.

A failure to recognize the past also serves as a partial endorsement of Turkey’s denial, under an Islamist regime whose leader Recep Erdogan has shown increasing aggression towards America with the threat of an “Ottoman slap” against U.S. troops in Syria.

Danny Tarkanian, an Armenian American endorsed by Trump in his race in Nevada’s 3rd Congressional District, has urged Trump to “set an example for the rest of world by formally acknowledging what truly happened.”

“If we are to prevent the worst of human tragedies from occurring, the world must recognize genocide and call it what it is,” Tarkanian told Breitbart News. “Adolf Hitler used the Armenian Genocide as a justified precedent for his atrocities against millions when he said, ‘Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?’”

Clearly defining past genocides is important to holding modern genocidal actors accountable. In 2016, former Secretary of State John Kerry rightly acknowledged that the Islamic State had committed acts of genocide against Assyrian Christians and Yazidis in Iraq and Syria. Yet why couldn’t the same recognition be given to Armenians?

Since coming to office last year, Trump has demonstrated considerable boldness with foreign policy issues ranging from North Korea to officially acknowledging Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Now, it is time for his administration to show further strength by acknowledging the tragic history of one of America’s most loyal immigrant communities.

L’Arménie, un pays stratégique pour Moscou

La Croix, France
29 avril 2018


Commémoration du génocide arménien à Martigues

Maritima.info
26 avr. 2018
Commémoration du génocide arménien à Martigues
Ce mardi 25 avril, les Arméniens de Martigues, se sont rassemblés autour du khatchkar dressé dans le jardin Lapidaire de Martigues situé sur l’avenue Félix Ziem, afin de rendre hommage aux victimes du génocide perpétré il y a 103 ans.

La cérémonie s’est déroulée en présence de Gaby Charroux, maire de Martigues, de nombreux élus et de membres de la communauté arménienne du Pays de Martigues.

 Retrouvez en image le discours de Gaby Charroux

( images de Frédéric MUNOS Maritima Médias )



Les Réverbères de la Mémoire pour éclairer le passé de la tragédie arménienne et les défis du présent

Le Temps, Suisse
26 avril 2018

Pierre Hazan,

Enfin, après de longues années, les Réverbères de la Mémoire, une œuvre de l’artiste français Melik Ohanian, a trouvé refuge à Genève le 13 avril dernier. Il a fallu que le parlement genevois en 1998, puis le parlement suisse en 2003, reconnaissent d’abord le génocide des Arméniens. Il a fallu ensuite la détermination des porteurs de la mémoire du génocide, de la Ville de Genève et, en particulier, du Fonds municipal d’art contemporain (FMAC), pour qu’un monument qui évoque le génocide arménien et avec lui le mal que l’homme peut infliger à son prochain, puisse être choisi. Finalement, il a fallu surmonter les retenues des uns et des autres liées souvent à la crainte d’indisposer les autorités turques. Celles-ci avaient fait savoir leur opposition farouche à ce monument, refusant – pour combien de temps encore ? – d’assumer une page sombre de leur histoire. Pourtant, l’histoire de chaque pays n’est-elle pas faite à la fois de moments de grandeur, mais aussi de périodes dramatiques ?

Sur les fûts des lampadaires, l’artiste Melik Ohanian a reproduit des fragments d’un texte de la psychanalyste Janine Altounian qui se lit de bas en haut. – photo Frédéric Burnand                

Il est salutaire que Genève et la Suisse aient donné refuge aux Réverbères de la mémoire. Car la tragédie arménienne comme toute tragédie nécessite un travail de mémoire. Celui-ci est d’autant plus essentiel qu’il se heurte toujours à un négationnisme qui reste vivace. Rappelons qu’en octobre 2015, – soit un siècle après le début des massacres – la Suisse s’est faite condamner en appel par la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme pour avoir brimé la liberté d’_expression_ d’un homme politique turc, qui, sur le sol suisse, avait nié la réalité du génocide arménien.

La tragédie arménienne nous interpelle d’autant plus qu’elle préfigure les événements qui vont se succéder tout au long du 20ème siècle jusqu’à nos jours, et en particulier, les persécutions des minorités et les politiques de nettoyage ethnique, sous l’œil souvent indifférent des monstres froids que sont les Etats. Les grandes puissances coloniales de l’époque, la France et la Grande-Bretagne se sont partagées les dépouilles de l’empire ottoman au Proche-Orient (accords Sykes-Picot de 1916), alors que, non loin de là, se poursuivaient la déportation et le meurtre de centaines de milliers d’hommes, de femmes et d’enfants. Dans cet océan de malheur, quelques trouées de lumière eurent lieu, malgré tout, avec le développement à la fois de la protection des réfugiés et du droit international humanitaire. C’est dire que la tragédie arménienne et ses prolongements sont inséparables de l’histoire de la Suisse et du monde contemporain.

C’est sur le sol suisse que des décisions capitales ont été prises, dessinant l’actuelle carte de la Turquie après les massacres des Arméniens dans les années 1915-1916. En 1923, le traité de Lausanne, négocié au château d’Ouchy, satisfait le pouvoir kémaliste, en sacrifiant la création d’un Etat arménien dans le nord-est de la Turquie actuelle. Un Etat arménien, qui pourtant avait été promis par les puissances victorieuses de la première guerre mondiale lors du Traité de Sèvres de 1920. Mais le traité de Lausanne effaça celui de Sèvres…

C’est encore le traité de Lausanne qui, dans la foulée des promesses trahies aux Arméniens ainsi qu’aux Kurdes, institue des échanges obligatoires de populations entre la Grèce et la Turquie. Plus d’un million et demi de Grecs ottomans et près de 400.000 musulmans de Grèce, « baïonnette dans le dos », durent abandonner leur foyer respectif pour rejoindre leur supposée mère-patrie qu’ils n’avaient jamais vue. Ainsi, les grandes puissances de l’époque laissèrent faire le génocide des Arméniens, puis cautionnèrent une politique de nettoyage ethnique, politique dont nous vîmes encore les ravages jusque dans les années 1990 lors des guerres de l’ex-Yougoslavie, puis très récemment, avec les persécutions dont sont encore victimes différentes minorités en Syrie et en Irak, dont les Yézidis.

Dans un registre plus positif, c’est à Genève, en 1924, que la défunte Société des Nations – dont le siège se trouvait à quelques centaines de mètres de l’emplacement des Réverbères de la mémoire – a accordé une protection internationale, le passeport Nansen, aux apatrides et rescapés arméniens pour faciliter leur quête d’une terre d’asile. Certains trouvèrent refuge en Suisse.

C’est aussi par le sang versé des Arméniens, que le droit international humanitaire – cher à Genève et à la Suisse – s’est développé pour rendre compte de cette nouvelle et monstrueuse réalité de la guerre : le fait que les populations civiles soient devenues un objet d’annihilation. En effet, alors que les massacres avaient commencé, la France, la Grande-Bretagne et la Russie ont dénoncé dans une déclaration commune en 1915 « le crime contre l’humanité et la civilisation » commis alors contre les Arméniens. A l’exception d’un orateur qui lors de la Convention à Paris en 1794 avait évoqué le crime de « lèse-humanité » pour qualifier la traite esclavagiste, c’est la première fois que le concept de crime contre l’humanité fut affirmé aussi clairement.

Mais si les puissances occidentales et la Russie à l’époque se sont offusquées des massacres des Arméniens, elles ne sont pas intervenues pour autant. Ce qui fit dire à Adolf Hitler, le 22 août 1939, soit quelques jours avant l’invasion de la Pologne : « Qui se souvient encore du massacre des Arméniens ? ». S’exprimant devant le haut-commandement allemand, il incitait ses généraux à faire preuve d’une extrême brutalité envers les populations juives et slaves dans les territoires que les nazis s’apprêtaient à conquérir à l’Est, en leur promettant une totale impunité, garantie, pensait-il, par la passivité du monde lors des massacres des Arméniens.

C’est un juriste polonais, Raphaël Lemkin, qui, comparant l’abandon des Arméniens lors des persécutions et des massacres de 1915-1916 et celui des juifs durant la deuxième guerre mondiale, qui, dans son livre Axis Rule over Occupied Europe, forgea en 1944 le terme de « génocide » (un néologisme dérivé du grec genos – genre, espèce- et du latin –cide, tuer). Il voulait ainsi capturer conceptuellement et juridiquement une nouvelle réalité monstrueuse de la guerre – l’extermination des populations civiles – pour mieux la combattre. Lemkin fut, du reste, l’infatigable artisan de la Convention pour la prévention et la répression du crime de génocide de 1948.

Tragiquement, ni la force du droit international, ni les leçons de la souffrance des Arméniens il y a un siècle n’ont constitué un garde-fou suffisant contre de nouvelles horreurs. Nous ne le savons que trop alors que des millions de Syriens et d’Irakiens ont connu et connaissent à l’heure où ces lignes sont écrites une guerre impitoyable qui n’en finit plus.

Les Réverbères de la mémoire nous invitent à faire le lien entre la tragédie d’il y a un siècle et les turpitudes du présent, parfois dans les mêmes régions où périrent tant d’Arméniens.

24 avril • Sevag Balıkçı : Ils ne nous ont pas permis d’oublier

Kedistan
25 avr. 2018

<img width=”600″ height=”315″ src=””http://www.kedistan.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/sevag-balikci.jpg” class=”attachment-post-thumbnail size-post-thumbnail wp-post-image” alt=”Sevag Balıkçı” srcset=”http://www.kedistan.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/sevag-balikci.jpg 600w, 500w, 230w” sizes=”(max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px” />

“Nous l’avons envoyé au service militaire. Nous n’avons pas pensé qu’il y aurait quelque chose de travers. Le 23 avril, une telle peur ne nous a pas traversé l’esprit. Mais sans doute, ce 24 avril, était un avertissement. Sevag, ou un autre jeune arménien devait être tué ce jour là ! L’endroit et le timing étaient bons pour Sevag. Pas d’autres jeunes arméniens, pas une seule personne pour témoigner, au milieu de la montagne, tous les éléments étaient là”. Dans le livre de Esra Açıkgöz et Hakan Alp, “Nous sommes des êtes humains mon enfant”, la mère de Sevag Şahin Balıkçı, Ani, dit ceci… Un 24 avril 2011. Si un 24 avril, dans une caserne, un Arménien meurt, personne ne peut nous faire croire à une “blague”, ni à “une balle accidentelle”.

Lorsqu’on prévient la famille d’un soldat aménien de la mort de leur fils, en expliquant qu’il est mort “en se taquinant avec son ami, par une balle accidentelle” comme pour des dizaines de milliers de jeunes kurdes, alévis, socialistes, dans des casernes de la République de Turquie, son père répond “un gavur1Mécréant, infidèle (péjoratif) est mort êtes-vous heureux ?” Les Kurdes, les Alévis, les socialistes, les Arméniens, disent après le meurtre de leurs enfants, par des auteurs connus, “nous n’oublierons pas !”. Non, nous n’avons pas oublié. En réalité, ils ne nous ont pas permis d’oublier. Oublier veut dire se mettre face à face (faire les comptes.. l’_expression_ m’échappe). Oublier veut dire panser les blessures. Oublier veut dire, vivre ensemble, en paix avec toutes les différences. Or, l’Etat “sacré” que la République de la Turquie a fondé sur des bases “d’unicité”2 Langue unique, religion unique, nation unique, drapeau unique… continue à prendre des vies en sacrifice.

Le 24 avril est pour les Arméniens, la fête de Pâques. Sevag et sa famille tiennent une conversation téléphonique, qui sera la dernière. “Fils, nous avons déjà envoyé tes gâteaux [de Pâques]” lui disent les parents. Ni Sevag, ni sa famille ne pensaient que ce seraient les derniers gâteaux que Sevag mangerait. Garbis Balıkçı entend la voix de son fils. “Regardez donc sur l’ordinateur, il n’y aurait pas une homonymie ?” Personne ne pense à des mauvaises choses. “J’ai pensé qu’il avait reçu un mérite, quelque chose comme ça”… Bien sûr qu’ils savent ce que cela veut dire de vivre en Turquie en tant qu’Arménien, mais malgré cela, il n’y songent pas  “Oui, Hrant était quelqu’un. Il était un journaliste. Pour tout le monde, il parlait trop. Maintenant on sait qu’il disait vrai. Mais trop tard ! Sevag était personne. Un fils de famille ordinaire. Mais un avertissement a été donné, c’est évident…”

Sevag était un arménien.
96 ans après le génocide arménien de 2015, une toute première fois, il devait y avoir une commémoration dans un lieu public en Turquie. La première fois, les peuples allaient pouvoir faire leur deuil ouvertement. La réponse de l’Etat à cela, fut de reprendre un Arménien de plus de nos bras. Le système “qui fait d’un enfant un assassin”, allait donc dire, je suis toujours là, bien présent.

Les destructions et massacres en Anatolie et en Mésopotamie, continuent… L’an 1915 ne se laisse pas désirer.

Hrant Dink disait dans son dernier article publié le 19 janvier 2007 :

[…] Quant à l’idée de vivre dans un pays européen, ce n’était pas du tout ma tasse de thé. Chaque fois que je vais en Occident pour quelques jours, je suis quelqu’un qui se dit, crispé d’ennui dès le quatrième jour, « j’espère que ça sera fini bientôt et que je pourrais rentrer », tellement mon pays me manque . Qu’aurais-je donc fait dans ces pays ?
Le confort, je ne suis pas fait pour !
De toute manière, quitter des “enfers bouillonnants” pour des “paradis aménagés”  n’est vraiment pas pour moi.
[…] Nous allions donc rester et résister.

Hrant est resté. Il a lutté jusqu’à la dernière minute de sa vie, pour une vie des peuples, ensemble, libres et égaux.

La justice, l’égalité ne peuvent exister selon certains et seulement pour certains. Si un soldat arménien, peut être tué par une balle, dans une caserne un beau 24 avril, si un journaliste arménien peut être tué, tiré dans le dos un 19 janvier, dans ce pays, la vie de personne n’est en sécurité. Et cela est le mieux su par les “autres” de ce pays, les Kurdes, les Alévis, les socialistes… Le fait de le savoir n’est pas suffisant. Le fait de dire “pas d’oubli” n’est pas suffisant. Au contraire, il faudrait pouvoir oublier. Et cela n’est possible qu’en se mettant face à face et en construisant un vivre ensemble avec nos différences.

Sans construire les vies égales et libres, ensemble, nous ne pouvons oublier les souffrances du passé. Tant que nous ne pouvons pas les oublier, personne ne peut être libre dans ce pays. Et cela ne change rien, quelque soit l’endroit au monde, où nous vivons.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/27/2018

                                        Friday, 
President Hails ‘New Armenia’
        • Harry Tamrazian
Armenia - President Armen Sarkissian is interviewed by RFE/RL, Yerevan, 27 
April 2018.
The dramatic anti-government protests that erupted in Yerevan two weeks ago 
have transformed Armenia and should help it become a “real democratic state,” 
President Armen Sarkissian said on Thursday.
“The way I think is that Armenia today is not even the same as the one that we 
had a couple of months ago,” Sarkisian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service 
(Azatutyun.am) in an interview. “First of all, we are seeing a rising interest 
in the global Armenian society, which includes not only the citizens of 
Armenia, with the fate of our nation. That’s great. That means that at the end 
of the day they are not indifferent, they care about the country.”
“I am happy that we have a society which is vibrant, which is young,” he said. 
“Young not only in that young people are demonstrating but young because it’s a 
young spirit of the nation.”
In a written address to the nation issued earlier in the day, Sarkissian spoke 
of a “new Armenia” emerging as a result of the nationwide protests that have 
led to the resignation of Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian. He called on the 
Armenian parliamentary forces to jointly end the continuing political crisis.
“After several days of demonstrations, now we are going towards a democratic 
process, and the democratic process will lead us to the highest democratic 
institution, which is the parliament of the Republic of Armenia,” the president 
told RFE/RL’s Armenians service (Azatutyun.am).
ARMENIA -- Yerevan residents celebrate Armenian Prime Minister's Serzh 
Sarkisian's resignation in Yerevan, April 23, 2018
“The outcome of this debate will be resolved at the parliament with the 
election of the new prime minister,” he said. “And may be the parliament will 
also vote for having new elections in the near future. Maybe they will also 
vote to amend the Electoral Code or some of the laws.”
“If we will manage this properly, if all problems which were raised by the 
demonstrations will be eventually resolved in accordance with the constitution 
and inside the parliament, then we all will be proud that we are on the real 
path to making Armenia a real democratic state,” he said.
Sarkissian also warned that Armenia “cannot afford” continued political 
instability given the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and national 
security challenges. “We must never forget that the state structures must 
remain firm,” he said.
Sarkissian pledged to strive for a “new Armenia” able to meet challenges of the 
modern world when he was sworn in as the country’s new and largely ceremonial 
president on April 9.
The 64-year-old former scholar, who had lived in Britain for nearly three 
decades, is the first Armenian president elected by the parliament, rather than 
popular vote. His predecessors enjoyed sweeping powers under the previous, 
presidential system of government.
Acting PM Refuses To Meet ‘Intransigent’ Pashinian
        • Harry Tamrazian
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
        • Karlen Aslanian
Armenia - Acting Prime Minister Karen Karapetian holds a cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan, 26 April 2018.
Acting Prime Minister Karen Karapetian again avoided meeting with Nikol 
Pashinian on Friday, saying that the opposition leader is refusing to consider 
any compromise agreements to resolve the grave political crisis in Armenia.
Pashinian proposed the meeting on Thursday after two weeks of massive 
demonstrations in Yerevan and other parts of the country which have led to the 
resignation of Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian. He said the talks must focus 
only on a full handover of power to his opposition movement and be held in the 
presence of journalists.
“Negotiations where one party only dictates one agenda while the other cannot 
come up with a different agenda cannot be considered negotiations,” said Aram 
Araratian, Karapetian’s spokesman. “Besides, Karen Karapetian remains of the 
opinion that [the demand for] holding negotiations in front of the press 
suggests that the purpose of those negotiations is not to achieve any result.”
“That is why the acting prime minister regards as unpromising his participation 
in ‘negotiations’ which stand no chance of finding solutions,” Araratian added 
in a statement.
Karapetian already rejected these and other preconditions set by Pashinian when 
he refused a planned meeting with the protest leader earlier this week.
Pashinian denounced Karapetian’s stance at a news conference held shortly after 
Araratian’s statement. He claimed that the acting premier, who now seems to be 
the new de facto leader of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), is 
“not confident about his negotiating skills.”
The 42-year-old leader of the opposition Civil Contract party insisted that the 
talks with the government must be televised. “It’s very important to be 
transparent in these processes,” he said.
Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian holds a news conference in Yerevan, 
.
Pashinian warned that the Armenian parliament, in which the ruling HHK has a 
clear majority, will deepen the crisis if it refuses to elect him interim prime 
minister at an emergency session slated for May 1. The handover of power would 
reflect “the will of the people,” he said.
“If a Republican is elected prime minister, this crisis will not be resolved 
because we will continue our peaceful demonstrations and try to explain to the 
HHK and Karen Karapetian … that they don’t understand the political situation 
in Armenia,” said Pashinian. Accordingly, he urged supporters to “flood the 
streets and squares” and also surround the parliament building in Yerevan on 
May 1.
Pashinian also rejected the idea of a “neutral prime minister” who would govern 
the country until the conduct of snap parliamentary elections. In that case, he 
said, nobody would be able to prevent such a premier from doing “something bad.”
In a potentially significant development, Russian President Vladimir Putin on 
Thursday phoned Karapetian and called for a settlement that would be based on 
“the results of the legitimate parliamentary elections held in April 2017.” The 
elections were won by the HHK.
Pashinian insisted that Putin’s comments did not amount to a show of support 
for Karapetian. “As a country respecting international law, Russia is not 
interfering in Armenia’s internal affairs,” he said. “This is a purely internal 
Armenian affair.”
The opposition leader was due to hold a rally in Gyumri later in the day, and 
proceed to Vanadzor on Saturday. He told supporters on Thursday to suspend 
their “civil disobedience” actions in Yerevan for two days.
Also on Thursday, Pashinian met with President Armen Sarkissian and leaders of 
the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), which pulled out of the 
governing coalition following Serzh Sarkisian’s resignation. A Dashnaktsutyun 
leader, Arsen Hambardzumian, described the meeting as “useful” but did not 
elaborate.
Earlier, Pashinian also held talks Gagik Tsarukian, a millionaire businessman 
leading the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), the second largest in the 
parliament. He confirmed on Friday that neither Tsarukian nor the 
Dashnaktsutyun leadership has so far promised to vote for his appointment as 
prime minister.
“I hope that Dashnaktsutyun and Tsarukian’s bloc will clarify their positions 
and announce who their deputies are going to vote for on May1,” he said.
Ruling Party Figure Sees No ‘Regime Change’ In Armenia
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian is greeted by supporters on his way 
to Gyumri, .
The parliamentary faction of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) will 
not vote to elect opposition leader Nikol Pashinian the country’s new prime 
minister next week, a senior HHK lawmaker said on Friday.
Gevorg Kostanian, the chairman of the parliament committee on legal affairs, 
insisted that Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian’s resignation on Monday did not 
mark “regime change” in Armenia.
“In parliamentary republics regime change presupposes a change of the 
parliamentary majority,” he told reporters. “A change of the prime minister or 
other officials alone can never been deemed regime change.”
Asked whether HHK lawmakers will vote for Pashinian when the parliament picks 
the new premier on May 1, Kostanian said: “I rule that out because I can’t 
imagine such a possibility.” They will back “a candidate who will be chosen by 
the HHK faction,” he said.
Another senior HHK lawmaker, Vahram Baghdasarian, reaffirmed his party’s 
readiness to discuss “any issue” with Pashinian. “But we are not going to 
succumb to ultimatums and coercion,” he stressed.
The remarks came as Pashinian continued to press the HHK majority in the 
National Assembly and other parliamentary factions to install him as interim 
prime minister and call fresh elections. Pashinian said earlier on Friday that 
hundreds of thousands of people should take to the streets of Yerevan and 
blockade the parliament building during the May 1 session.
“We are following the constitutional path, and if this is his constitutional 
path, then let him do that,” commented Baghdasarian.
The HHK controls 58 seats in the 105-member parliament, compared with 9 seats 
held by the opposition Yelk alliance.
Yelk has officially nominated Pashinian for prime minister. None of the other 
parliamentary parties has officially endorsed the opposition leader. Those are 
the Tsarukian Bloc and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun).
Dashnaktsutyun, which pulled out of the government following Sarkisian’s 
resignation, on Friday urged the parliamentary forces to “agree on a joint 
candidate enjoying the trust of the people” by May 1. They would also determine 
by consensus the composition of the new government and its policy program, it 
said. The party did not say who that candidate might be.
EU Insists On ‘National Dialogue’ In Armenia
Belgium - EU flags in front of European Commission in Brussels.
The European Union called on Armenia’s government and leading political forces 
on Friday to overcome the continuing political turmoil in the country through a 
dialogue.
“We continue to believe that it is imperative that the current situation is 
resolved swiftly and peacefully,” Maja Kocijancic, an EU foreign policy 
spokesman, told RFE/RL in Brussels.
“In this context, a national dialogue involving all political stakeholders 
remains crucial,” she said. “We support the consultations that are currently 
led by President [Amen] Sarkissian.”
“And more broadly, the European Union is looking forward to continuing to take 
forward the EU-Armenia agenda, which is based on the Comprehensive and Enhanced 
Partnership Agreement,” added Kocijancic.
Kocijancic did not say whether the EU supports opposition leader Nikol 
Pashinian’s demands for the Armenian parliament to appoint him as interim prime 
minister and call snap general elections. Pashinian insists that this is the 
only possible solution to the crisis.
The EU official similarly called for an “inclusive dialogue” in Armenia on 
April 22, the day before massive street protests organized by Pashinian forced 
Prime Minister Serzh Sarkissian to step down.
The United States has also repeatedly urged Armenian political factions to end 
the two-week standoff through negotiations.
“We urge all sides to engage constructively in dialogue within the legal 
framework of the Armenian constitution,” Harry Kamian, the acting head of the 
U.S. mission to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, said 
on Thursday. “We look forward to working closely with the new government on our 
many areas of shared interest.
Armenian Protest Leader Seeks To Reassure Russia
Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian holds a rally in Gyumri, 27 April 
2018.
In an apparent appeal to Russia, opposition leader Nikol Pashinian again said 
on Friday that he will not pull Armenia out of Russian-led defense and trade 
blocs if he succeeds in coming to power.
Pashinian denounced what he called false claims about the anti-Russian 
character of his protest movement as he addressed thousands of people 
demonstrating in Gyumri, the country’s second largest city home to a Russian 
military base.
“I don’t even want to say that we are not enemies of Russia because it’s 
obvious that we are not,” he said. “But even more so, we are not enemies of our 
country who would put our country on imprudent and adventurist paths.”
“We have never said and are not saying that Armenia must leave the Collective 
Security Treaty Organization (CSTO,” he said. “We guarantee that Armenia must 
remain a member of the CSTO. Not because we love it or don’t but because that 
stems from Armenia’s national interests.”
“We affirm that Armenia will continue to honor all of its international 
obligations,” Pashinian went on. That includes its accession treaty with the 
Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) signed in October 2014, he said.
Pashinian was one of seven members of Armenia’s parliament who voted against 
the ratification of the treaty in December 2014. And as recently as last fall, 
the Yelk alliance comprising his Civil Contract and two other opposition 
parties demanded Armenia’s exit from the Russian-led union.
Armenia - Nikol Pashinian (L) and other deputies from the opposition Yelk 
alliance attend a parliament session in Yerevan, 3Oct2017.
Pashinian said in October 2017 that EEU membership has dealt “very serious 
blows” to his country’s sovereignty. Yerevan must sign instead an Association 
Agreement with the European Union, he said.
The 42-year-old leader has repeatedly denied any “geopolitical” motives or 
objectives of the nationwide anti-government protests launched by him earlier 
this month. Earlier on Friday, he insisted that Russia is not supporting 
Armenia’s acting Prime Minister Karen Karapetian in the standoff.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday phoned Karapetian and called for a 
settlement of the Armenian crisis that would be based on “the results of the 
legitimate parliamentary elections held in April 2017.” The elections were won 
by the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK). Putin’s comments were 
therefore construed by some observers as a show of support for Karapetian.
Putin’s press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, on Friday urged “all interested 
parties” to end the crisis by “consensus.” “In this regard, we are now waiting 
for and monitoring the election of the [new Armenian] prime minister which will 
take place in the parliament on May 1,” Peskov told reporters in Moscow.
Meanwhile, a high-level delegation of both houses of Russia’s parliament was 
visiting Yerevan amid the lingering political tensions there. The delegation 
reportedly included Leonid Kalashnikov, chairman of a State Duma committee on 
“Eurasian integration,” and his first deputy, Konstantin Zatulin.
“We are familiarizing ourselves with the situation,” Zatulin told the Interfax 
news agency. He said the Russian lawmakers have already met with the Armenian 
parliament speaker, Ara Babloyan, and would also like to hold talks with 
Pashinian.
The RIA Novosti news agency quoted a spokesman for Pashinian as saying that the 
protest leader is “ready for such a meeting.”
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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