Wednesday, September 8, 2021
Armenian Authorities Accused Of Covering Up Assault On Opposition Lawmakers
• Astghik Bedevian
Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Civil Contract party clash with their
opposition colleagues, August 25, 2021.
The main opposition Hayastan alliance accused the Armenian government on
Wednesday of ordering a law-enforcement agency not to prosecute pro-government
lawmakers who physically attacked their opposition colleagues on the parliament
floor last month.
The violence broke out on August 25 when a senior Hayastan member, Vahe
Hakobian, criticized the government’s five-year policy program during a heated
session of the National Assembly attended by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
Hakobian interrupted his speech before being approached by three deputies from
Pashinian’s Civil Contract party and kicked by one of them.
Hakobian and five other Hayastan parliamentarians, including deputy speaker
Ishkhan Saghatelian, were hit by a larger number of Civil Contract lawmakers in
an ensuing melee that was not swiftly stopped by scores of security personnel
present in the chamber. One of the oppositionists, Gegham Nazarian, suffered an
eye injury and required medical aid.
The Special Investigative Service (SIS) pledged to look into the ugly scenes
filmed by various media outlets and questioned a number of deputies in the
following days. It said on Tuesday that it will launch a formal criminal
investigation into the beating of only one Hayastan deputy, Gegham Manukian.
One of the video clips circulated on the Internet shows that Manukian was
assaulted by Hayk Sargsian, a controversial Civil Contract member. The SIS said
on Wednesday nobody has been charged in connection with that that assault yet.
A senior Hayastan figure, Artsvik Minasian, condemned the SIS’s decision, saying
that the law-enforcement agency is carrying out a “political order.” He said
that is further proof that Armenia’s political leadership orchestrated the
violence to bully the opposition and create an atmosphere of impunity in the
country.
Daniel Ioannisian of the Yerevan-based Union of Informed Citizens also
criticized the SIS’s stance. He said his Western-funded civic group, which has
closely examined the August 25 violence, will likely complain to the Office of
the Prosecutor-General.
In a detailed analysis and a video clip posted on his Facebook page last week,
Ioannisian named nine pro-government lawmakers involved in the violence and even
counted the number of punches thrown by each of them.
“It is evident to any sensible person that a number of deputies … carried out
actions banned by the Criminal Code in front of the whole country,” Ioannisian
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “Failure to prosecute them would send the public
a message to effect that one can solve political issues by force and get away
with that.”
The civic activist also emphasized the fact uniformed security officers waited
for about a minute before stepping in to stop the brawl. He said they acted far
more quickly when a less serious scuffle broke out on the parliament floor
earlier on August 25 after Hayastan’s parliamentary leader, Seyran Ohanian,
threw a plastic bottle at Civil Contract’s Sargsian.
“The actions of the State Protection Service on that day … show that its
officers present in the chamber at that point were carrying out a political
order or satisfying the ruling team’s political wishes,” charged Ioannisian.
Civil Contract’s Artur Hovannisian, one of the pro-government parliamentarians
who punched vice-speaker Saghatelian, defended the SIS’s decision. Hovannisian
also blamed the opposition bloc -- and Ohanian in particular -- for the violence.
Stability In Armenia ‘Very Important’ For Georgia
• Karlen Aslanian
Georgia - Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili (R) meets with his
Armenian counterpart Nikol Pashinian, Tbilisi, September 8. 2021.
Georgia’s Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili stressed the importance of
political stability in Armenia after holding talks with his Armenian counterpart
Nikol Pashinian in Tbilisi on Wednesday.
Gharibashvili praised Pashinian’s “vision” for restoring peace and strengthening
stability in the South Caucasus after last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
“The Karabakh war was a tough challenge for our region,” he told a joint news
briefing. “But after familiarizing myself with Prime Minister Pashinian’s new
vision I believe this challenge will turn into a new opportunity that will bring
prosperity to Armenia and the Armenian people.”
“I also want to make clear that political and economic stability in Armenia is
very important for us. It is directly connected with stability in our country
and the region as a whole,” he said.
Pashinian similarly spoke of new “regional opportunities” that emerged after the
Karabakh war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire last November. He
reaffirmed earlier in the day support for reopening transport links between
Armenia and Azerbaijan.
An Armenian government statement on his meeting with Gharibashvili cited
Pashinian as saying that Azerbaijan’s “unconstructive policies and anti-Armenian
rhetoric” poses a threat to regional peace and stability. It said he also
praised Georgia’s “balanced position” on the Karabakh conflict.
According to the statement, economic issues were also high on the agenda of the
talks, with the two premiers pledging more efforts to expand Georgian-Armenian
trade and explore joint “initiatives” relating to energy, transport and
information technology. That includes a multilateral deal on a transport
corridor that would connect Iran’s Persian Gulf ports to the Black Sea via
Armenia and Georgia.
Gharibashvili told reporters that both sides are open to “new projects.” He did
not go into details.
The Georgian leader visited Baku and Yerevan in May.
Health Minister Defends Armenia’s Slow Vaccine Rollout
• Marine Khachatrian
Armenia - Minister of Health Anahit Avanesian holds a news briefing in Yerevan,
September 2, 2021
Health Minister Anahit Avanesian downplayed on Wednesday the slow pace of
coronavirus vaccinations in Armenia, saying that it does not testify to her
government’s failure to contain the spread of COVID-19.
According the Armenian Ministry of Health, only 7 percent of the country’s
population received at least one dose of a vaccine as of September 5. The figure
indicates that Armenia has the lowest proportion of citizens inoculated against
COVID-19 in the region.
“Yes, our indicators still have a lot of room for improvement,” Avanesian told
reporters. “But I do not consider this a failure [of the government] because we
opted for providing accurate information to the people and dispelling their
doubts first. I believe that we have succeeded in doing that.”
Avanesian again cited a recent opinion poll showing that the proportion of
Armenians ready to get vaccinated has risen to over 40 percent from just 10
percent in March.
In a bid to significantly speed up the vaccine rollout, the government is
resorting to administrative measures. Avanesian decided late last month to
require virtually all public and private sector employees refusing vaccination
to take coronavirus tests twice a month at their own expense. The new
requirement will come into effect on October 1.
The health minister said people not complying with it should not only face heavy
fines but also risk losing their jobs.
The daily number of officially confirmed coronavirus cases in Armenia has been
slowly but steadily rising since June. The Ministry of Health reported on
Wednesday morning 645 new cases and 15 deaths caused by the disease.
Pashinian Encouraged By Erdogan’s Statements
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks during a government meeting,
Yerevan, September 8, 2021.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Wednesday described as encouraging Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s recent statements on normalizing
Turkish-Armenian relations and said his government is ready for a dialogue with
Ankara.
“I must note that the president of Turkey has publicly commented on relations
with Armenia,” he said. “We see in those statements an opportunity to talk about
normalizing Armenia-Turkey relations and reopening the Turkish-Armenian railway
and roads, and we are prepared for such a conversation.”
“I am happy to point out that the Russian Federation has publicly expressed
readiness to actively assist in that process. The European Union, France and the
United States are also interested in that process,” Pashinian added during a
weekly session of his cabinet.
Pashinian already spoke on August 27 of “some positive signals” sent by the
Turkish government of late and said Yerevan is ready to reciprocate them.
Erdogan responded by saying that regional states should establish
“good-neighborly relations” by recognizing each other’s territorial integrity
and sovereignty.
“If Yerevan is ready to move in that direction Ankara could start working on a
gradual normalization of relations with Armenia,” he said.
In that context, Erdogan pointed to Azerbaijan’s desire to negotiate a
comprehensive “peace treaty” with Armenia after last year’s war in
Nagorno-Karabakh. Baku is understood to seek Armenian recognition of Azerbaijani
sovereignty over Karabakh through such a treaty.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan (L) and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
attend a signing ceremony in Shusha, in Nagorno-Karabakh, June 15, 2021.
Armenian opposition leaders and some analysts say Ankara continues to make the
normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations conditional on a Karabakh settlement
favorable to Baku. They say the Turks also want Yerevan to stop campaigning for
a greater international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide in the Ottoman
Empire.
Pashinian put a possible Turkish-Armenian dialogue in the “broader context” of
ongoing Russian-mediated talks on opening transport links between Armenia and
Azerbaijan which he said would be “very important” for Armenia. He also
reaffirmed Yerevan’s commitment to demarcating the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
Hayk Mamijanian, a senior Armenian opposition parliamentarian, denounced
Pashinian’s remarks, saying that the prime minister is intent on making
far-reaching concessions to Turkey and Azerbaijan.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called late last week for the
normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations. “We are ready to assist in that in
the most active way,” he said.
Turkey provided decisive military assistance to Azerbaijan during the six-week
war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
again thanked Ankara for that aid when he and Erdogan visited in June the
Karabakh town of Shushi (Shusha) captured by the Azerbaijani army.
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.
Category: 2021
CivilNet: Normalizing relations with neighbors is priority for Armenia, says Pashinyan
- Two Armenian POWs return from Azerbaijan.
- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili hold talks in Tbilisi.
- Normalizing relations with neighbors is priority for Armenia, says Pashinyan.
Armenpress: Russia realized it was deceived by cooperating with Turkey and Azerbaijan, says political analyst
Russia realized it was deceived by cooperating with Turkey and Azerbaijan, says political analyst
08:52, 7 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. A senior analyst says that Russia is lately gradually changing its emphases over the Artsakh issue towards a more pro-Armenian position after realizing that it has been deceived by Turkey and Azerbaijan by cooperating with them.
Doctor of political science, Professor Garik Keryan at the Yerevan State University told ARMENPRESS in an interview that this is happening despite the fact that Moscow has serious disagreements with its Western colleagues of the OSCE Minsk Group – France and the United States, including over the status of Artsakh.
“Russia launched its drift towards a pro-Armenian position. That is, Russia is also saying ‘you know the issue isn’t solved, we still have to determine the status’ and so on. A question arises here, why did Russia start to drift to a more pro-Armenian side, and in this regard some consensus was created between Russia, France and the United States over revitalizing the OSCE Minsk Group process. There is an answer to this question too. The Russians had made a very gross and primitive mistake by cooperating with Turkey and Azerbaijan over the Artsakh issue,”
Keryan, the head of the Chair of Political Institutes and Processes at the YSU says that as a historian and political scientist he is unable to understand how Turkey is succeeding in finding formats of cooperation with Moscow when for 300 years it has continuously deceived Russians, acted against Russian interests and backstabbed Russia every time. According to Keryan, Moscow realized this only after Ankara – without taking into account what it had received from Russia – namely the nuclear power station, the South Stream pipeline, the S-400 missile systems, as well as concessions in Syria – sent foreign minister Cavusoglu to Kiev to take part in the Crimean Platform, where the Turkish FM claimed “Crimea is an integral part of Ukraine”.
“The Crimean issue is very painful for Russians, like the Artsakh issue is for us. Crimea is sacred for them. And after so many years, when Russia finally succeeded in returning Crimea, some Cavusoglu reserves the right to announce that ‘Crimea doesn’t belong to Russia and Turkey will do everything for Crimea to return to Ukraine’. This is where Russia’s counterinfluence began, and the Russians realized that they have made a mistake when first of all they allowed the war to end with such results, and second of all allowed the infiltration of Turkish influence into South Caucasus. And they’ve been deceived in the matter of Azerbaijan also. Moscow’s main goal was to pull Azerbaijan towards the Eurasian integration zone. And every time Aliyev was bargaining by saying ‘solve the Karabakh issue and I will come’. Now they saw that after ‘solving’ it, not only didn’t he come but on the contrary they lost Azerbaijan,” Keryan said.
As paradoxical as it may seem, he continued, today there are more favorable conditions for a fundamental discussion of the Artsakh issue than before the war. The only problem is that it would be very difficult to bring Azerbaijan to the negotiations table.
“Since the only item left on the negotiations table is the issue of Artsakh’s status, it seems to me that Azerbaijan will not sit down for talks under any condition. And if suddenly the Co-Chairs were to mention the item of restoring the NKAO [Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast] territorial integrity, which would make Hadrut and Shushi come under some kind of common administrative unit, this would mean a loss of influence for them. That is why Azerbaijan and Turkey won’t go to negotiations. They will talk, delay, like the negotiations process was protracted for 26 years,” the analyst said.
Professor Keryan ruled out Azerbaijan recognizing Artsakh’s status without getting under some serious sanctions. Moreover, he argues, there are “very interesting and effective sanctions” that would give results in a few days.
Whether or not Azerbaijan would agree to restart talks under the Minsk Group format depends on Turkey’s stance, because, as professor Keryan says, the Azerbaijan Republic isn’t an independent country for a long time now, it is rather a Turkish protectorate.
“If you want to know whether or not Azerbaijan will sit down for negotiations, you ought to change your question – will Turkey sit down for negotiations or not? And Turkey, as you know, doesn’t give a damn about anything. When needed, they even go against the Americans, and America is unable to do anything. That’s why I assume that they’d either delay the talks, or deceive, or simply opt out at all,” he said.
Moscow announced on September 2 that it is supporting the activation of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs work over the Karabakh settlement based on the existing mandate. The new Russian co-chair of the Minsk Group then visited Baku and Yerevan for talks.
Interview by Aram Sargsyan
Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
French national arrested in Yerevan on suspicion of cocaine smuggling
10:14, 7 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. A French national has been arrested by Armenian law enforcement agencies on suspicion of cocaine smuggling and intent to distribute.
The National Security Service said the suspect smuggled over 221 grams of cocaine on board the Nice-Paris-Yerevan flight and intended to sell the narcotics in Armenia. Customs agents found the drugs in the suspect’s belongings at the Yerevan airport.
The suspect was remanded into custody.
The NSS said they are investigating to determine whether the suspect had accomplices.
Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
‘Armenians are appreciated people in Iraq’, FM Hussein tells Ambassador Poladyan
11:12, 7 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. On September 6, on the occasion of the completion of the diplomatic mission, Ambassador of the Republic Armenia to Iraq Hrachya Poladyan met with Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iraq Fuad Hussein, the Armenian Embassy reported.
At the meeting the FM thanked the Armenian Ambassador for the productive cooperation, wishing success in his future diplomatic service. He stated that the Consulate General of Armenia, the Armenian Cultural House opened in Iraq thanks to the efforts of Ambassador Poladyan. The Foreign Minister noted that both sides have conducted a productive work in recent years aimed at developing the bilateral relations.
“Armenians in Iraq are appreciated people and are always in safe hands”, the Iraqi FM said.
In his turn the Armenian Ambassador thanked for the warm reception and appreciation.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
Coronavirus: Armenia reports 501 new cases, 15 deaths
11:26, 7 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. 501 new cases of COVID-19 were recorded over the last 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 245,765, the Armenian Center for Disease Control and Prevention said.
4659 tests were administered.
15 patients died, bringing the death toll to 4939. This number doesn’t include the deaths of 1167 other people infected with the virus who died from co-morbidities.
A total of 229,957 people recovered so far (398 in the last 24 hours).
As of September 7, 11:00 the number of active cases stood at 9702.
Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
Artsakh reports 3 daily coronavirus cases
12:38, 7 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. 3 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in the Republic of Artsakh in the past 24 hours, the ministry of healthcare said today.
51 COVID-19 tests were conducted on September 6.
Currently, 30 infected patients receive treatment in hospitals. 4 of them are in serious condition.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
CivilNet: What can Armenia learn from the Afghanistan crisis?
Iraqi President highlights expansion of diplomatic presence of Armenia in the country
11:33, 7 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. On September 6, on the occasion of the completion of the diplomatic mission, Ambassador of the Republic Armenia to Iraq Hrachya Poladyan met with President of Iraq Barham Saleh, the Armenian Embassy in Iraq reports.
During the meeting, President Saleh thanked Ambassador Poladyan for the effective work done within the framework of the development of bilateral relations noting the expansion of diplomatic presence of Armenia in Iraq, the activation of economic, cultural programs and initiatives. During the meeting President Saleh conveyed his warm greetings and best wishes to the leadership of Armenia.
Ambassador Poladyuan thanked President Saleh for the warm welcome and words of appreciation highlighting the active support of Iraqi authorities and President Saleh personally in the implementation of various programs and initiatives of the Armenian Embassy in Iraq.
Armenian PM congratulates President of Brazil on Independence Day
11:44, 7 September, 2021
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory message to President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro on the occasion of the Independence Day, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.
The message runs as follows:
“Your Excellency,
I convey to you my warmest congratulations and best wishes on the National Holiday of the Federative Republic of Brazil – the Independence Day.
The friendship and mutual trust established between our countries are serious preconditions for the further development and strengthening of relations. I am convinced that with joint efforts we will add new content to our bilateral agenda and will link Armenia and Brazil with many new strong ties.
Please accept, Excellency, the assurances of my highest respect”.