Sports: Oumiha, Grigoryan and Gadzhimagomedov won gold medals at the Cologne Boxing World Cup

International Boxing Association (AIBA):
April 15, 2019 Monday


Oumiha, Grigoryan and Gadzhimagomedov won gold medals at the Cologne Boxing World Cup

LAUSANNE, Switzerland

Boxers from 21 countries showed their strengths at the Cologne Boxing World Cup. 17 winners representing 11 nations were crowned. France’s defending AIBA World Champion Sofiane Oumiha and the Russian team made a brilliant performance.

Armenia’s Anush Grigoryan, light flyweight (48kg) title holder from the EUBC U22 European Boxing Championships in Vladikavkaz, arrived in Cologne with confidence. She was focused in her final against Ireland’s Carly McNaul from the first seconds, and her counter-punches delivered her a gold medal. In the men’s light flyweight (49kg) final the Armenian boxer and Rio 2016 Olympian Artur Hovhannisyan lost to Thailand’s Wuttichai Yurachai in a spectacular fight.

France’s Olympic silver medallist Sofiane Oumiha, unbeaten since June 2017, changed his weight class to the light welterweight (63kg). Oumiha adopted the strength of the punches quickly and advanced to the final against Thailand’s AIBA 2015 World Championships bronze medallist Wuttichai Masuk. Both are amazing technician, mainly counter-attacking fighters. This time mostly Masuk moved ahead and their narrow battle with impressive combinations that delighted the crowd. Oumiha’s strong finish at the last round carried him a victory.

The Russian team attended with 20 boxers, five of them earned gold medals. Albert Batyrgaziev is a strong future hope at the bantamweight (57kg) who dominated his final against Germany’s veteran Raman Sharafa, knocking down his rival once. Gabil Mamedov met the German Hamsat Shadalov and surprisingly defeated this talented rival in the final of the lightweight (60kg).

London 2012 Olympic Games bronze medallist Andrey Zamkovoy won a re-match against his teammate Khariton Agrba in the welterweight (69kg) final. Russia’s promising star Muslim Gadzhimagomedov had to push it to the max to beat Ireland’s Anthony Browne at the heavyweight (91kg). The fifth Russian gold medal was captured surprisingly by Sergei Egorov who triumphed over his National Champion teammate Ivan Veryasov in the super heavyweight (+91kg).

List of the winners of the Cologne Boxing World Cup

Women’s 51kg: Anush Grigoryan, Armenia

Women’s 54kg: Maisnam Meena Kumari Devi, India

Women’s 57kg: Michaela Walsh, Ireland

Women’s 60kg: Mira Potkonen, Finland

Women’s 64kg: Yang Chengyu, China

Women’s 69kg: Yang Liu, China

Women’s 75kg: Lauren Price, Wales

Men’s 49kg: Wuttichai Yurachai, Thailand

Men’s 52kg: Billal Bennama, France

Men’s 57kg: Albert Batyrgaziev, Russia

Men’s 60kg: Gabil Mamedov, Russia

Men’s 63kg: Sofiane Oumiha, France

Men’s 69kg: Andrei Zamkovoy, Russia

Men’s 75kg: Osley Iglesias, Cuba

Men’s 81kg: Abu-Lubdeh Abdulrahman, Germany

Men’s 91kg: Muslim Gadzhimagomedov, Russia

Men’s +91kg: Sergei Egorov, Russia

Sports: Armenian football player dies after shooting incident

News.am, Armenia
April 16 2019
Armenian football player dies after shooting incident
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from Armenian]

An Armenian football player has died after a shooting incident in Yerevan.

Mushegh Ghevondyan, the goalkeeper of Ararat-2 football club, died in hospital from shots in his head without coming to consciousness. The 23-year-old player was delivered to hospital on 15 April with two other wounded persons, who underwent surgeries.

The police found the car, where the three men reportedly received gunshots.

A criminal investigation is under way.

Ararat FC official confirmed that Ghevondyan was their player.

Sports: From July 14 to 26 of the current year Armenia will host final stage of UEFA European Under-19 Football Championship

Arminfo, Armenia
Alexandr Avanesov

ArmInfo.13 young Armenian football players will be given a one-year deferment from service in the country’s armed forces. The decision was made at a meeting of the RA government.

According to the Acting Minister of Sport and Youth Affairs Gabriel  Ghazaryan, from July 14 to July 26 of this year Armenia will host the  final stage of the UEFA European Under-19 Football Championship. In  addition to the Armenian national team, the national teams of Spain,  Germany, Denmark, France, England, Italy and Ireland will also take  part in the competition. In order to successfully prepare for the  tournament, 13 young players of the Armenian national team were given  a deferment from service in the Armed Forces.

In turn, RA Defense Minister David Tonoyan announced the formation of  a sports company and sports club with an indicative name – Army Sport  Club. Thus, as the head of the defense department noted, athletes  will be able to start serving in this company in a year.

President of the Football Federation of the Republic of Armenia, head  of the National Security Service Arthur Vanetsyan said that the  upcoming championship matches will be held in Yerevan, since the  stadiums of other cities are unsuitable for holding such  competitions. He also noted that the European Championship final will  be held at the Vazgen Sargsyan Republican Stadium.

Sports: Armenian government defers 13 football players from military service for 1 year

News.am, Armenia
Armenian government defers 13 football players from military service for 1 year Armenian government defers 13 football players from military service for 1 year

16:15, 18.04.2019
                  

During its April 18 session, the Armenian government decided to defer several citizens with significant achievements in the field of sport from the 2018 winter military draft for ordinary compulsory military service.

In particular, 13 football players, who are members of the U-19 football team of the Republic of Armenia and have made significant achievements in the field of sport, were deferred from ordinary compulsory military service for one year, that is, from the 2018 winter military draft until the 2019 winter military draft.

The decision was based on the fact that the final stage of the UEFA European Under-19 Championship is going to take place in Armenia in 2019.

Tense situation in Gyumri’s high school No. 37

There is a tense situation in the high school No. 37 in Gyumri. The schoolchildren again left the classroom, demanding the resignation of several teachers of the school.
 
According to the students, these teachers threaten them, violate their rights. Police officers have taken control of the school from early in the morning.



Asbarez: A Search for ‘Treasure’ on the Armenian Highland Uncovers a Wealth of History

BY MATTHEW KARANIAN

Editor’s Note: Karanian’s book was launched on April 9, at Abril Bookstore. Story and photos reprinted with permission from ‘The Armenian Highland: Western Armenia and the First Armenian Republic of 1918’ by Matthew Karanian (Stone Garden Press, 2019). This story is the account of one of the author’s many journeys during his twenty years of research in Western Armenia. Available on April 15, 2019 from bookstores, directly from the publisher, and Amazon. Below is an exclusive excerpt from the book.

High Tea in Havav. Residents of Havav, in Western Armenia, drink tea with visitors from the US, including Laura Gaboudian (far left), and Khatchig Mouradian (seated, far right)

I stopped three, maybe four, times. At each stop, my inquiry prompted the same reply. Ah, you’re looking for the altin? The gold?

These Kurdish villagers made no attempt to conceal their curiosity. Instead, they craned their necks and looked inside my car for the pickaxes and shovels that they knew I must be carrying.

Many of the people who live in the villages near Armenian monuments in Western Armenia assume that if someone is traveling all the way to the ruins of an old Armenian monastery, then the person must be looking for the buried treasure that is supposedly hidden at every Armenian church here.

At countless churches that I visited, not just in Mush, but everywhere in Western Armenia, the areas beneath altars had been excavated. The floors near the entryways had been dug up by these treasure-seekers.

If anyone really hid any treasure beneath these Armenian churches and monasteries one century ago, then the treasures must certainly have been removed by now. The continued excavations damage the foundations of these buildings, and thus threaten the survival of the real treasures, which are the monuments themselves.

And so in Mush, and elsewhere, I would reply to questions about the so-called gold by saying that I was here only to photograph the ruins.

This, of course, would lead to another question. You have come all the way from the US just to take pictures of stones?

Conversations such as these usually involved a Kurdish man from Diyarbakir named Zulkuf. During the past four years of travels in Western Armenia, Zulkuf has been my driver. But Zulkuf had, over the years, become more than a driver. He had also become a translator and a facilitator during my search for what’s left of Armenia in today’s Turkey.

Yes, Zulkuf would tell the inquisitive villagers, he really wants to make pictures of the stones.

“But,” he would add, “They are the stones of his grandparents. He’s Armenian.”

Asbarez: Iraq Muslim Leader Calls of Turkey to Apologize for Genocide

Armenia’s Ambassador to Iraq, Hrachya Poladyan (center), with leaders of Iraq’s Muslim community

The chairman of Iraq’s National Religious Council Sheikh Yusif Al-Nasri said Turkey must apologize to Armenians “for their actions” referring to the Armenian Genocide, which he had condemned during a meeting Monday with Armenia’s Ambassador to Iraq Hrachya Poladyan.

In discussing the Armenian Genocide issue, Al-Nasri strongly condemned “the inhuman crime committed in the Ottoman Empire,” before urging Turkish authorities to apologize for “their own generation.”

Al-Nasri was accompanied by members of Iraq’s Standing Committee on Coexistence and Communal Peace, a government body dedicated to advancing relations with the various ethnic and religious communities in the country.

The Muslim spiritual leaders briefed Poladyan on their efforts aimed at strengthening cooperation between religious and national minorities of Iraq, emphasizing the invaluable role of the Armenian community of Iraq and the Iraqi diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, especially in during the war and its aftermath.

At the conclusion of the meeting, the spiritual leaders conveyed their greetings and well wishes to the His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians, stressing the Iraqi government’s commitment to religious and national minorities. They also highlighted the need to develop joint initiatives to advance the needs of the multi-ethnic and multi-faith population of Iraq.

Stratfor Ranks Artsakh as ‘De Facto Independent State’

Straftor bills itself as the “world’s leading geopolitical platform”

The Austin, Texas-based independent think tank Stratfor has ranked Artsakh among de facto independent countries in its latest study covering recognized states, states with partial recognition or no recognition at all.

“One of the most basic questions for map-lovers is: ‘How many countries are there in the world?’ But anyone who just gives you a number isn’t telling the whole truth. It actually depends a lot on how you define a ‘country,’” Stratfor, which bills itself as the “world’s leading geopolitical platform” said in its report published on Monday.

The study cites the United Nations’ figures, according to which there are a total of 195 sovereign states in the world, of which 193 are the organization’s member states, while the two other countries, Vatican City and Palestine, have the status of observer states.

In addition to Artsakh, Strafor lists Transnistria and Somaliland in its list “de facto independent countries.”

“The three places most often considered de facto independent countries despite having no recognition from U.N. members are Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), Transnistria and Somaliland. And since 2014 there have been three more contenders for the list, questionable because they’re located in active war zones and have only limited government structures: The so-called “Islamic State” is almost out of the running now that it’s lost most of its territory in Syria and Iraq, but the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Lugansk People’s Republic, which claim independence from Ukraine, don’t seem to be going anywhere,” reads the report.

President Sahakian Discusses a 3rd Highway Linking Armenia and Artsakh

Artsakh President Bako Sahakian (right) presents his “State of the Republic” address to the National Assembly

Artsakh President Bako Sahakian on Wednesday said that the possibility of constructing a third highway between Armenia and Artsakh that would run from Kapan to Hardrut and through Mekhakavan, formerly known as Jebrayil, was being discussed.

Sahakian said that the issue had been broached with Armenian government authorities, as well as the Armenia Fund, which oversaw the construction of the other roads—the Goris-Stepanakert highway and the recently opened Vartenis-Martakert highway.

The Artsakh leader was responding to questions from members of the Artsakh parliament during his annual presentation of his “State of the Republic” address.

In response to a question regarding a potential third highway from Armenian Revolutionary Federation parliament bloc leader Davit Ishkhanian, Sahakian explained that preliminary discussion have taken place with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian and Armenia’s transport minister, as well as the leadership of the Armenia Fund.

The official ribbon-cutting of the Vartenis-Martakert highway in Sept. 2017

“During the joint Armenia and Artsakh security council session, I brought up the issue of a national agenda, which was welcomed by Armenia’s prime minister and my other colleagues,” said Sahakian. “A third road connecting Artsakh with Armenia is priorities on the agenda.”

“We cannot say that the Vartenis-Martakert highway is more important than the proposed Kapan-Hadrut highway because they are both have equal significance for our country,” added Sahakian.

“Answers to questions about the fate of the liberated territories must be in the form of projects such as this [the third highway], because they are more succinct than any clever answer that might be given,” said Sahakian, explaining that the Armenia Fund has already undertaken feasibility studies, which will be presented in the near future.

“The construction of the highway in that area is one of the most needed projects, which will greatly benefit our other strategic goals—the development of the Arax [River] valley,” said Sahakian.

This was in line with Sahakian’s emphasis on strengthening the national security of Artsakh, which he highlighted during the “State of the Republic” address. He also reiterated the need for Artsakh’s participation in the Karabakh conflict resolution negotiation process.

“The position of official Stepanakert remains unchanged. Azerbaijan-Karabakh conflict settlement should go on peacefully in the sidelines of the OSCE Minsk Group with the participation of Artsakh as a full-fledged party of the negotiations,” emphasized Sahakian.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/17/2019

                                        Wednesday, 
Armenian Police, Hospitals Blamed For Suspect’s Death
        • Narine Ghalechian
Armenia -- Larisa Ytarian (L), the mother of a man who died after police 
interrogation, speaks to RFE/RL in Yerevan, Aptil 16, 2019.
Armenian law-enforcement authorities on Wednesday pledged to investigate the 
death of a man which followed his arrest and interrogation by police in Yerevan.
The 36-year-old Edgar Tsatinian was detained late last week in connection with 
the killing of an elderly woman who lived in his neighborhood. He reportedly 
died from drug intoxication several hours after being rushed to hospital from a 
police station in Yerevan’s Nor Nork district.
Tsatinian’s mother, Larisa Yetarian, claims that police officers beat him up in 
in an attempt to get him to implicate two other persons in the murder. Yetarian 
says that they planted a drug in his pocket after he refused to give such 
incriminating testimony.
“My boy then took it from his pocket and swallowed it for fear [of 
prosecution,]” she told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Tuesday.
Yetarian alleged that Tsatinian was denied medical assistance at the nearby 
Surb Grigor Lusavorich Medical Center before being taken to another hospital, 
the Armenia Medical Center, where he died several hours later. He was not 
properly treated there, she said.
“Edgar kept telling me, ‘Mom, don’t leave the [hospital] ward, they got orders 
to kill me,” added the grief-stricken mother.
A deputy director of the Surb Grigor Lusavorich hospital, Petros Manukian, said 
that Tsatinian was turned away from his hospital simply because it is not 
equipped to treat drug intoxications. Officials at the Armenia Medical Center 
insisted that Tsatinian did receive adequate medical care there.
The Armenian police, for their part, denied ill-treating Tsatinian. A police 
statement also emphasized the fact that he had a criminal record. It warned 
that his mother’s allegations may amount to “false denunciation,” a criminal 
offence in Armenia.
Nevertheless, the allegations prompted serious concern from human rights 
activists and some opposition parliamentarians. One of those activists, Nina 
Karapetiants, said that the police may be bullying the deceased man’s family 
with the “false denunciation” warning.
Armenia’s Special Investigative Service (SIS) announced, meanwhile, that it has 
launched a criminal investigation into possible negligent homicide. The 
investigation was recommended by the Office of the Prosecutor-General.
According to local and international human rights groups, ill-treatment of 
criminal suspects in custody has long been commonplace in Armenia. Justice 
Minister Artak Zeynalian claimed on Tuesday that the Armenian police have 
stopped resorting to the illegal practice.
Russia Encouraged By Armenian-Azeri Talks
        • Aza Babayan
RUSSIA -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov delivers a speech during a 
meeting with Arab League's officials in Moscow, Russia .
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov sounded optimistic on Wednesday about 
the implementation of confidence-building agreements reached by his Armenian 
and Azerbaijani counterparts at their latest talks mediated by him.
Foreign Ministers Zohrab Mnatsakanian and Elmar Mammadyarov met with Lavrov in 
Moscow on Monday more than two weeks after an Armenian-Azerbaijani summit held 
in Vienna. They were also joined by the U.S., Russian and French mediators 
co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group.
A joint statement issued by the participants said the warring sides reaffirmed 
their earlier pledges to strengthen the ceasefire regime and take other 
confidence-building measures in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone.
They specifically agreed to “allow families to have access to their relatives 
held in custody in the respective detention centers of the parties.” “The 
Ministers expressed their willingness to start concrete work on establishing 
contacts between people, including through mutual visits of media 
representatives,” added the statement.
“I believe that this is a very useful agreement,” Lavrov told a news conference 
in Moscow. “I have read comments that similar things, especially in the 
humanitarian sphere, had been agreed upon earlier but not always implemented. 
This is true.”
“But as a result of the talks held in Moscow … I have reason to think that both 
Baku and Yerevan are interested in ensuring that these agreements do not remain 
on paper this time around. We will be assisting them in that,” he said.
Mammadyarov on Wednesday described the Moscow meeting as “productive.” He said 
he and Mnatsakanian also discussed a peace plan which was proposed by Russia 
following the April 2016 fighting in Karabakh.
Lavrov confirmed this, saying that the plan is in tune with the basic 
principles of a Karabakh settlement which have repeatedly been laid out by the 
U.S., Russian and French mediators in recent years. “The details are certainly 
confidential,” he said.
The Minsk Group co-chairs reaffirmed their compromise peace formula, also known 
as the Madrid Principles, in a March 9 statement. They said “any fair and 
lasting settlement” must involve “return of the territories surrounding 
Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijani control; an interim status for Nagorno-Karabakh 
providing guarantees for security and self-governance; a corridor linking 
Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh; future determination of the final legal status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh through a legally binding expression of will.”
Speaking at a March 19 news conference in Yerevan, Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian said that the Madrid Principles are open to different interpretations 
and need to be clarified. Pashinian said afterwards that he raised the matter 
with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and the mediators at the Vienna summit 
held on March 29.
Armenian Opposition Rejects New Government Structure
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenia -- Bright Armenia Party leader Edmon Marukian speaks during a 
parliament session in Yerevan, .
The opposition minority in the Armenian parliament condemned the government on 
Wednesday for reducing the number of its ministries from 17 to 12 and refusing 
to limit Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s powers.
Lawmakers representing the opposition Prosperous Armenia (BHK) and Bright 
Armenia (LHK) parties rejected a government bill setting a new structure of 
Pashinian’s cabinet. But leaders of the pro-government majority in the National 
Assembly defended the bill, practically making its passage a forgone conclusion.
The bill calls for abolishing the post of first deputy prime minister, meaning 
that Pashinian would have only two deputies. Also, the Armenian ministries of 
education, culture, and sports and youth affairs would be turned into a single 
agency. A similar merger of the ministries of energy and local government would 
lead to the creation of a new Ministry of Territorial Administration and 
Infrastructures. The Diaspora Ministry is due to be scrapped altogether.
The bill also means that Armenia’s police, National Security Service (NSS) and 
State Revenue Committee (SRC) would remain subordinate to the prime minister, 
rather than his cabinet. They were directly controlled by Armenia’s presidents 
under the previous, presidential system of government.
Armenia - Prime Minister NIkol Pashinian meets with senior police officers, 
Yerevan, January 26, 2019.
Former President Serzh Sarkisian made sure that they will be accountable to the 
prime minister when turned Armenia into a parliamentary republic. Sarkisian 
planned to stay in power as prime minister after serving out his second 
presidential term in April 2018.
Pashinian, Edmon Marukian and other leaders of the now defunct Yelk opposition 
alliance accused him of introducing a “super prime-ministerial” system of 
government with the aim of maintaining a tight grip on power.
Pashinian has been reluctant to change that system since he swept to power in 
last spring’s “velvet revolution.”His government has objected to an LHK bill 
that would turn the police and the NSS into ministries and incorporate the SRC 
into the Finance Ministry.
Marukian, who leads the opposition LHK, denounced Pashinian’s adherence to the 
“super prime-ministerial” system which he likened to a “suit made for Serzh 
Sarkisian.” “Why have you put on Serzh Sarkisian’s suit?” he said during a 
parliament debate on the bill.
Lilit Makunts, the parliamentary leader of Pashinian’s My Step bloc, rejected 
the criticism, saying no government in the world would draft a bill limiting 
its own powers. Makunts also said My Step is ready to draft, together with the 
opposition factions, new legislation that would require the police and NSS 
chiefs to regularly answer questions from parliament deputies.
Armenia - Employees of the Armenian ministries of culture and Diaspora protest 
against possible staff cuts in Yerevan, December 21, 2018.
The BHK was more concerned about the planned downsizing of the government and 
the resulting layoffs of many civil servants. Justice Minister Artak Zeynalian 
said that “several hundred” government employees will only temporarily lose 
their jobs because they will be placed on a “reserve” list. “This is not 
unemployment,” claimed Zeynalian.
“I’m sure that you too don’t doubt that they will stay [on that list] forever,” 
countered the BHK’s Naira Zohrabian.
Pashinian has repeatedly pledged to downsize the government. He has said that 
it will operate more efficiently as a result.
Mikael Melkumian, another senior BHK lawmaker, dismissed those assurances. 
“This [new government] structure lacks elementary efficiency,” he said.
Tsarukian Cancels Mass Layoffs For Now
        • Robert Zargarian
Armenia -- Gagik Tsarukian, the leader of Prosperous Armenia Party, addresses 
workers of a cement plant in Ararat,.
Businessman Gagik Tsarukian assured on Wednesday workers of a cement plant 
owned by him that they will not be laid off for now because he still hopes that 
the Armenian government will impose tariffs on cement imports from Iran.
The government decided to introduce such tariffs earlier this year, citing 
mounting losses incurred by Armenian cement manufacturers. An Armenian 
parliament committee on economic issues watered down a relevant government bill 
on April 12 to ensure that the extra import duties do not apply to cement 
clinker, a nodular material developed before the final stage of cement 
production.
Tsarukian’s Multi Group holding company was quick to notify most of the 1,100 
or so employees of the Ararat Tsement plant in writing that they will fired 
within two months. It said Ararat Tsement would need a fraction of its current 
workforce to manufacture cement with cheap Iranian clinker.
Hundreds of workers of the plant located about 50 kilometers south of Yerevan 
went on strike on Monday in protest against the planned layoffs. They also 
demanded a meeting with Tsarukian.
The tycoon, who also leads the opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), met 
with the workers and told them to “tear up and burn” the notices of termination 
sent to them by the company management.
“I thought, ‘If they [the authorities] don’t care, then I don’t care either,’” 
he said. “But then I realized that I, as Tsarukian, as the leader of the party 
… can’t neglect you. I was just outraged by that wrong decision.”
Tsarukian said the BHK’s parliamentary group, the second largest in the 
National Assembly, will lobby the government and the parliament majority loyal 
to it to restore the initial version of the cement bill. BHK lawmakers will 
organize discussions on the issue on Thursday, he said, inviting one of the 
Ararat Tsement workers, Henrik Khechumian, to take part in them.
Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service afterwards, Khechumian said he will go to 
the parliament only with several of his colleagues.
Although the workers agreed to suspend their strike, Khechumian did not seem 
satisfied with Tsarukian’s assurances. “We may find ourselves in the same 
situation one week later,” he said.
Ararat Tsement, which reportedly accounts for at least 70 percent of cement 
production in Armenia, is facing an uncertain future amid renewed tensions 
between the BHK and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step alliance. Earlier 
this month Tsarukian publicly criticized the government’s economic policies and 
said many government officials are incompetent.
This was followed by bitter recriminations traded by My Step and the BHK over a 
transgender activist’s bombshell speech delivered in the Armenian parliament. 
On April 9 Pashinian accused a senior BHK lawmaker of organizing a “political 
provocation” against the parliament majority loyal to him. Tsarukian and his 
associated rejected the accusation.
Tax officials raided a market and pressurized gas stations belonging to 
Tsarukian in the following days. BHK representatives suggested that the tax 
audits are politically motivated.
The tycoon denied on Wednesday any political motives behind his initial 
decision to fire many Ararat Tsement workers.
Press Review
“Zhamanak” reports that Mihran Poghosian, a former senior security official 
charged with corruption, has revealed that he now lives in Moscow and does not 
intend to return to Armenia and face arrest there. The paper wonders if Russian 
authorities will agree to extradite him to Armenia. It notes it this regard 
that former Defense Minister Mikael Harutiunian, who is facing coup charges, 
avoided extradition after it emerged that he is a Russian citizen. “It looks 
like Russia is becoming a political safe haven for members of Armenia’s former 
regime,” it says. “Basically this is not surprising given the fact that that 
regime operated under Russia’s tutelage. That sponsorship is thus continuing, 
and if things continue like this one must not rule out the emergence of an 
Armenian government in exile, shadow cabinet or alternative power in Moscow a 
few months or one or two years later.”
“Zhoghovurd” is disappointed with bitter verbal arguments that have erupted on 
the Armenian parliament floor of late. The paper says some parliament deputies 
seem to view the current National Assembly as a penitentiary institution and 
instead of “working in a constructive atmosphere” are busy threatening and 
lecturing their political opponents.
“Haykakan Zhamanak” says there are “suspicions” that protests staged by 
employees of three large Armenian companies facing an uncertain future are part 
of “well-organized sabotage” against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
government. “In any case, we are dealing with possible layoffs of workers and 
this is where elements of sabotage are visible because the chief executives of 
those companies are engaged in pretty much the same behavior,” writes the paper 
edited by Pashinian’s wife, Anna Hakobian. “They present the problems of their 
workers like this: ‘We have to make staff cuts as a result of government 
policies.’ Put simply, the owners of these large businesses are clearly trying 
direct the wave of discontent by people, who risk of losing jobs because of 
their inefficient work, at the government.”
(Lilit Harutiunian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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