UN chief’s spox says spying allegations in Armenia against Clark Hattingh are “baseless”

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 10:44,

YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS. United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres’ spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric says that the spying allegations against the UNICEF Representative to Armenia Marianne Clark‑Hattingh are “baseless”.

“The allegations against…  the spying allegations against her are baseless, and I would defend her strongly,” he said at a daily press briefing when asked to comment on the matter.

“What I can tell you and what my colleagues of UNICEF have told me is that UNICEF and the Government of Armenia have agreed that Marianne Clark‑Hattingh will complete her assignment as UNICEF Representative in Armenia this month, and she’ll be redeployed to another duty station. She is a highly qualified, extremely experienced and committed development professional, who has previously served with UNICEF at Headquarters, as well as being the Representative in Malaysia and other posts in places such as Somalia, Guinea, Benin and Madagascar. UNICEF has been working for the children in Armenia since 1993 and has had a close and effective partnership with the Government,” the spokesperson added.

The Armenian government earlier said that it is terminating Marianne Clark‑Hattingh’s duties because of her “failures in the implementation of her mandate and her uncooperative conduct.”

However, some media outlets reported that the real reason of the termination is that Clark-Hattingh spied for the governments of Azerbaijan and United Kingdom.

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

President applies to high court

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 09:31,

YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS. President Armen Sarkissian has applied to the Constitutional Court to determine the constitutionality of the 2017 November 15 Law on Military Service and Status of Servicemen, the presidency said in a news release.

The presidency said that Sarkissian is applying to the high court due to the problems that became obvious as a result of the PM’s dismissal of the Chief of the General Staff and the subsequent constitutional legal processes. Sarkissian expressed hope that a swift decision by the high court will bring legal certainty and contribute to a settlement of the crisis.

Shortly before that, the Prime Minister’s Office had announced that by virtue of law, the Chief of the General Staff is considered dismissed from duties.

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Army chief considered dismissed from duties by virtue of law – PMO

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 09:16,

YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS. The Prime Minister’s Office said Wednesday morning that the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces Colonel General Onik Gasparyan is from now considered dismissed from duties because the president did neither sign his dismissal order nor did he apply to the high court within the deadline prescribed by law.

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian, Russian Defense Ministers discuss military cooperation issues

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 20:24,

YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS. Defense Minister of Armenia Vagharshak Harutyunyan held a telephone conversation with Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoygu on March 10.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the Defense Ministry of Armenia, the Defense Ministers discussed a number of issues related to the Armenian-Russian military cooperation. The sides also referred to the process of the mission conducted by the Russian peacekeeping forces in Nagorno Karabakh and regional security issues.

PM Pashinyan holds consultation with top ranking military officials

 

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 19:41,

YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan held a consultation with the top ranking military officials at the Defense Ministry. Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutyunyan, Deputy Chiefs of the General Staff, Lieutenant-General Artak Davtyan and others attended the consultation.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister, at the beginning of the consultation Pashinyan said,

‘’I am glad to see you, though we all would prefer our meeting to take place in some other atmosphere. We all together, also our country and people are passing through rather a severe ordeal, but I want us to record that even at the period of the hardest challenge our country, our people, any citizen, any Cabinet member, any of us can underestimate the undeniable services that numerous generals, officers, sergeants and private soldiers, including many in this hall, have provided and continue to provide to our country.

I want to record that we together continue to bear shared responsibility and I am confident we will do it with honor. I want to record also the following – the needs of the Armed Forces were, are and will be in the focus of the Government. And of course, this means that we must be able to discuss together, analyze and answer a number of questions and of course, develop together a joint vision on the future of the Armed Forces’’, Pashinyan said, once again thanking everyone for their service.

‘’You know that Colonel-General Onik Gasparyan has been relieved of the post of the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces by force of law. I want to thank Mr. Gasparyan for the service he has provided to the Republic of Armenia, not only during the period of being the Chief of the General Staff, but during his all life, because he practically spent all his conscious life in the Armed Forces.

You are also informed that I have I have filed a request to the President of the Republic on appointing Lieutenant General Artak Davtyan Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces. Mr. Davtyan used to be Chief of the General Staff in 2018-20 and everyone knows him and the path he has passed. I am confident we will be able to overcome this challenge together and as a result of this challenge the Armed Forces and the Republic of Armenia will become stronger’’, Pashinyan said, asking everyone to continue their service as Generals and officers of the Armed Forces, as pillars of the body securing Armenia’s security and territorial integrity.

Pashinyan added that they will have more detailed conversation on the occasion of the appointment of the new Chief of the General Staff, emphasizing that consolidation in hard periods is the most important thing.

OSCE Chairperson-in-Office to visit Armenia, Azerbaijan

OSCE Chairperson-in-Office to visit Armenia, Azerbaijan

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 19:37,

YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS. OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sweden, Ann Linde plans a visit to Armenia and Azerbaijan in the near future, ARMENPRESS reports Ann Linde wrote on her Twitter page.

‘’ Useful briefing by Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group and my Personal Representative Kasprzyk ahead of my upcoming visit to Azerbaijan and Armenia’’, Linde wrote.

After Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Armenians want domestic reform and stability, IRI Survey

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 19:24,

YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS. A new nationwide poll of Armenia by the International Republican Institute’s (IRI) Center for Insights in Survey Research shows strong demand for socioeconomic reform and political stability, as well as support for the ruling party and government. The first survey conducted since the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, this poll gauges Armenia’s public sentiment in the wake of the November ceasefire, ARMENPRESS reports, citing the official website of the IRI.

“In times of crisis, Armenians are relying on their government to provide stability and ensure the socio-economic well-being of their country,” said IRI Regional Director for Eurasia Stephen Nix. “Approval of the ruling party remains high, but to maintain that support, the government must continue its efforts on its reform agenda and effectively communicate those reform efforts to citizens.” 

When asked about next steps following the November ceasefire, 97 percent of Armenians think the government should focus on domestic issues such as the economy, political stability and social issues. Reintegrating Artsakh residents emerged as the second most prominent focal point, with 92 percent of citizens agreeing the government should focus on ensuring their secure return to areas patrolled by Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, Armenians cited political instability (12 percent), unemployment (11 percent) and Nagorno-Karabakh conflict (9 percent) as the top three problems facing their country today.

Despite their concerns, public opinion of the government remains strong, with 33 percent of Armenians reporting they would vote for the ruling party if elections were held next Sunday. According to the poll, the next highest performing party would be Prosperous Armenia, with just three percent of the vote. And though the Prime Minister’s approval ratings have dropped by 22 points since 2019, more than half of Armenians continue to possess either a “very” (29 percent) or “somewhat” (25 percent) favorable view of his office. 

Against this backdrop, 62 percent of Armenians would trust the outcome of snap elections if the current government organized them. Regardless, citizens overwhelmingly support electoral improvement in Armenia, with 74 percent believing in the importance of reforms to the Electoral Code. More specifically, 73 percent of Armenians agree candidates should provide details on their campaign expenditures and 68 percent want increased opportunities for citizens to inform party lists.

Methodology 

The survey was conducted on behalf of IRI’s Center for Insights in Survey Research by Breavis (represented by IPSC LLC) between February 8 and February 16, 2021. The data was collected through phone interviews with 1,510 Armenian residents aged 18 or older. The response rate was 26 percent, and the margin of error does not exceed plus or minus 2.5 points for the full sample. The data is weighted for 11 regional groups, age, gender and community type. This survey was made possible by the generous support of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

President Sarkissian convenes a meeting between Pashinyan, heads of parliamentary groups and FSM

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 19:04,

YEREVAN, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has invited PM Pashinyan, heads of parliamentary groups and Fatherland Salvation Movement (FSM) to hold a meeting at the Presidential Residence on March 13 to discuss the domestic political situation in the country and find mutually acceptable solutions for overcoming the crisis.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the President’s Office, the announcement runs as follows,

‘’The political crisis continues in the country, the situation remains tense which can lead to unpredictable and irreversible consequences for our country and statehood.

There are numerous problems, and urgent and structural changes are necessary for solving them, including Constitutional and legislative changes.

Both the authorities and parliamentary and extra-parliamentary forces have expressed their positions several times. But there is no mutual understanding or desire to make a step towards one another. Moreover, calls for intolerance have become more frequent.

In the existing conditions my only goal was and remains keeping the country away from shocks and preventing the creation of situations that can lead to unpredictable consequences.

Resolving the situation is an urgent imperative stemming from the interest of the state and the people.

Guided by national interests, I invite the Prime Minister of the Republic, heads of parliamentary groups and the Fatherland Salvation Movement to meet at the Presidential Residence on March 13 at 12:00 to discuss the existing situation and find mutually acceptable solutions for overcoming the crisis.

I reaffirm my confidence that negotiations and dialogue are the only way to settle disputes and disagreements, and the only path for the development of Armenia and Artsakh is the unification of the efforts and capacities of all of us’’.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/10/2021

                                        Wednesday, 
Pashinian Meets Armenian Army Top Brass
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with the Armenian military's top 
brass, .
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian met with the Armenian military’s top brass on 
Wednesday two weeks after it accused him of misrule and demanded his resignation.
The meeting came just hours after Pashinian completed the sacking of 
Colonel-General Onik Gasparian, the chief of the army’s General Staff.
Gasparian condemned his removal as “unconstitutional” and said he will challenge 
it in court. The army top brass issued, meanwhile, a separate statement that 
voiced support for the general and reiterated its demands for the prime 
minister’s resignation.
In his opening remarks at the meeting, Pashinian made no explicit mention of 
those demands rejected by him as a coup attempt. He indicated that he has no 
plans to fire other top military commanders.
“I believe that together we will manage to overcome this crisis and our state 
and armed forces will emerge stronger from this crisis,” Pashinian said.
“I want to ask everyone present here to continue their military service as 
generals, officers of the armed forces and as pillars of the structure serving 
as the guarantor of Armenia’s security and territorial integrity,” he said.
“I trust in you and believe that you have served the country in good faith. I 
want to repeat that your services are worthy of highest marks and that this 
evaluation cannot vanish under any circumstances.”
Pashinian went on to promise to have a “more detailed conversation” with the 
generals after President Armen Sarkissian approves his pick for the new chief of 
the General Staff, Lieutenant-General Artak Davtian.
“In this situation, unity is the most important thing needed by Armenia and its 
people,” added the embattled premier.
Pashinian’s office did not divulge other details of the meeting held amid 
continuing opposition demonstrations in Yerevan aimed at forcing him to resign 
over his handling of last year’s war with Azerbaijan.
The Homeland Salvation Movement, an opposition alliance staging the protests, 
has hailed the military’s February 25 statement demanding Pashinian’s 
resignation.
Sarkissian Offers To Host Talks Between Government, Opposition
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia -- Riot police are seen outside the Armenian parliament building in 
Yerevan during opposition protests, .
President Armen Sarkissian offered on Wednesday to host talks between Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian and opposition leaders aimed at ending the political 
crisis in Armenia.
Sarkissian said that the continuing crisis triggered by the autumn war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh is fraught with “unpredictable and irreversible consequences” 
for the country and requires an urgent solution.
In a statement, Sarkissian invited Pashinian, representatives of the three 
political forces represented in the Armenian parliament as well as the leaders 
of the opposition Homeland Salvation Movement to meet at the presidential palace 
in Yerevan for that purpose on Saturday. They should try to find “mutually 
acceptable ways of overcoming the crisis, he said.
“I reaffirm my belief that negotiations and dialogue are the only way to settle 
differences,” added the president.
The offer came one day after Sarkissian paved the way for the sacking of Onik 
Gasparian, Armenia’s top army general who has demanded, along with 40 other 
high-ranking officers, Pashinian’s resignation. The president pointedly declined 
to ask the Constitutional Court to rule on the legality on Pashinian’s decision 
to fire Gasparian.
The Homeland Salvation Movement reacted furiously to Sarkissian’s stance, 
accusing him of acting on the embattled prime minister’s orders. One of the 
leaders of the opposition alliance, Vazgen Manukian, branded the president a 
“rich tourist” who does not care about Armenia’s future.
Another opposition leader, Ishkhan Saghatelian, scoffed at Sarkissian’s offer of 
crisis talks. “They [Sarkissian and Pashinian] did their dirty deed and are now 
asking for some meetings?” he told reporters.
Saghatelian said that the alliance uniting more than a dozen opposition parties 
should only discuss a “roadmap for Pashinian’s resignation.”
The alliance has been trying to unseat Pashinian with street protests launched 
after the Armenian side’s defeat in the war with Azerbaijan stopped by a 
Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10.
Its supporters continued to blockade the parliament building in Yerevan on 
Wednesday. They again marched through the city center to reiterate the 
opposition demands for Pashinian’s resignation.
Sarkissian too urged Pashinian to resign and hand over power to an interim 
government late last year. The premier has rejected such calls.
Armenian Schools To Stay Open Despite COVID-19 Resurgence
        • Narine Ghalechian
Armenia - Children play basketball at a school in the town of Gavar, March 9, 
2021.
Armenia’s government has no plans to again shut down schools despite a renewed 
increase in coronavirus cases in the country, a senior official said on 
Wednesday.
The Armenian Ministry of Health reported in the morning that 340 more people 
have tested positive for COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, significantly up from 
the daily number of new cases officially confirmed in early and mid-February.
The ministry also recorded five more fatalities caused by the disease, bringing 
to 3,237 the official death toll in the county of about 3 million. The figure 
does not include the deaths of 834 other people infected with the coronavirus. 
According to the ministry, they were primarily caused by other diseases.
Romela Abovian, a senior official from the ministry’s National Center for 
Disease Control and Prevention, said that the daily number of COVID-19 
infections has nearly doubled in the last two weeks.
Abovian warned that more than 3,000 new cases will be registered in the next few 
days unless “appropriate measures” are taken to make Armenians again wear masks 
in public, observe social distancing and stick to other safety rules set by the 
government.
“If things continue like this we could be faced with a serious problem,” she 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.
Health Minister Anahit Avanesian likewise expressed concern last week about the 
resurgence of the respiratory disease. She said health authorities have to set 
up more hospital beds for COVID-19 patients.
According to Abovian, over 90 percent of about 1,000 such beds currently 
available at hospitals across the country are already occupied by patients. More 
than 550 of them are in a severe or critical condition, added the official.
Deputy Education Minister Zhanna Andreasian said, meanwhile, that government 
officials have already discussed implications of the worsening epidemiological 
situation for Armenian schools.
“We had a discussion in the government with our colleagues from the Ministry of 
Health,” said Andreasian. “The issue of switching all schools back to online 
classes was not discussed. There is no such decision.”
“We just need to again strictly follow the existing simple rules: wear masks, 
frequently wash hands,” she said.
Andreasian also stressed the need to comply with the Ministry of Health’s safety 
protocols for schools introduced last year.
The government most recently shut down the schools on October 15 following a 
surge in coronavirus cases. It reopened all of them by December 7.
Armenian Military Stands By Fired Commander
ARMENIA -- Armenian Chief of General Staff Onik Gasparian
The Armenian military reaffirmed its calls for the government’s resignation on 
Wednesday as the chief of its General Staff, Colonel-General Onik Gasparian, 
pledged to challenge in court Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s decision to sack 
him.
Gasparian indicated at the same time that he will step aside and not hold on to 
his post until a court ruling on his “unconstitutional” dismissal.
Pashinian petitioned President Armen Sarkissian to relieve Gasparian of his 
duties on February 25 immediately after Armenia’s top general and 40 other 
high-ranking officers issued a joint statement demanding the government’s 
resignation. He rejected the demand as a coup attempt.
Sarkissian refused to sign a relevant decree on February 27, saying that it 
appears to be unconstitutional and would deepen the “unprecedented” political 
crisis in the country. Pashinian resent his motion to Sarkissian in another 
attempt to get him to fire Gasparian.
The president again refused to sign the decree drafted by the prime minister’s 
office. But he decided not to ask the Constitutional Court to invalidate it, 
effectively paving the way for Gasparian’s removal.
Citing Sarkissian’s failure to appeal to the court, the Armenian government 
stated on Wednesday morning that Gasparian has automatically ceased to be the 
chief of the General Staff.
The defiant general issued a statement early in the afternoon describing the 
government statement and “the entire process of my dismissal” as 
unconstitutional. He said it shows that only Pashinian’s resignation and the 
holding of snap parliamentary elections can end the political crisis in the 
country.
Gasparian made clear that he will not continue to perform his duties and has 
instead asked the Administrative Court to reinstate him as army chief. “I will 
continue my service to the homeland and the Armenian people in another 
capacity,” he said.
Gasparian went on to urge Armenian military personnel to “continue your selfless 
and patriotic service.”
In a separate statement released shortly afterwards, the military’s top brass 
reaffirmed support for Gasparian and said it stands by its earlier “evaluations 
of the existing situation in the country.”
“There is only one solution to the situation and it is mentioned in 
[Gasparian’s] appeal,” read the statement.
Meanwhile, Pashinian moved to replace Gasparian by another general, Artak 
Davtian. President Sarkissian did not immediately sign a relevant decree 
requested by the prime minister.
Davtian already served as chief of the General Staff from May 2018 to June 2020.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

CivilNet: Chief of General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Formally Dismissed

CIVILNET.AM

11 Mar, 2021 09:03

By Varak Ghazarian

On March 10, the Armenian government issued a statement regarding the dismissal of Onik Gasparyan from his post as Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces.

“Taking into account the fact that the President of the Republic did not sign the draft submitted by the Prime Minister and did not apply to the Constitutional Court within the timeframe outlined in Section 3 of Article 35.1 of the Law on Military Service and Status of Servicemen, and based on Section 3 of Article 139 of the Constitution, as well as Section 6 of Article 35.1 of the Law on Military Service and Status of Servicemen and Section 3 of Article 40 of the same Law: Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces, Onik Gasparyan, has been legally dismissed from his position as of ,” the statement reads.

Gasparyan responded to his dismissal with a statement, announcing that his “position remains unchanged.” He added that “both the published statement and the entire process of dismissal are unconstitutional, which, once again, confirms that a patriotic solution to the current crisis can only be ensured as a result of the resignation of the Prime Minister of the Republic and early parliamentary elections.”

“In order to ensure the supremacy of the Constitution and law in the Republic of Armenia and to exercise force exclusively based on law, I applied to the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Armenia,” he stated.

Gasparyan finished stating that he “will continue my service to the homeland and the Armenian people in a different status.”

Head of the Information Department of the Administrative Staff of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces, Colonel Samvel Asatryan, reaffirmed Gasparyan’s statement. He stated that “there is only one solution to the existing situation” and is the one mentioned by Gasparyan regarding the resignation of the Prime Minister of the Republic and hosting early parliamentary elections.

With the formal dismissal of Gasparyan, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has submitted a motion to the president to appoint Artak Davtyan as new Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces. 

Artak Davtyan held the position of chief of the general of staff from 2018-2020. On July 16, 2020, he was appointed chairman of the Military Industry Committee by Pashinyan, and on November 11, he was relieved of this position.

###

On February 25, Onik Gasparyan, General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces issued a statement demanding the resignation of the Armenian prime minister. Following the announcement, the prime minister submitted a proposal to the president on the same day to dismiss Gasparyan from his post. 

On February 27, the President Armen Sarkissian sent back the mentioned draft with his objections. The prime minister did not accept the objections presented by the president, and on February 28, a letter was sent to the president with the relevant justifications.

On March 2, the presidential administration reported that Armen Sarkissian decided not to sign the decree drafting releasing Onik Gasparyan from his post. The following day, Sarkissian met with Onik Gasparyan to discuss his dismissal and the country’s current situation.