Armenia’s Foreign Minister and member of the Civil Contract party’s board, Ararat Mirzoyan, said at the party congress on Saturday that during the most difficult trials, the people stood by the ruling party and upheld democracy, the country’s sovereignty, and later also peace.
He thanked party delegates for shaping a leadership that, “led by Nikol Pashinyan, will continue to seek a mandate to govern the country and assume responsibility for administering a homeland with an area of 29,743 square kilometers.”
“Recently, I was discussing the ongoing processes in our country with several friends who are not members of Civil Contract, and we were drawing parallels between April 2026 and April 2018. We recalled some of my remarks addressed to tens of thousands of citizens in Republic Square. On that day, when the victory of the people’s, non-violent Velvet Revolution had already become tangible, I told the people that this was not the end of the process or the struggle, because there were forces that would try to take away the people’s achievements and that victory. I assured them that those who assumed leadership during the revolution, just as they stood on the front line of the struggle then, would continue to do so. But I also had a request—an appeal—to our citizens: I urged them not to abandon us in the next stages of the struggle, but to stand by our side,” Mirzoyan said.
The minister noted that what followed was both anticipated and, at the same time, difficult to foresee.
“There were extremely difficult trials, during which the citizens of Armenia did not abandon us and stood by democracy, the country’s sovereignty, and later also peace. Much will still be said about this, but there is another side to the story. During those severe trials, we did not abandon the citizens of Armenia either. We wavered under the blows, we were wounded, but we remained standing—we did not flee, we did not abandon our share of the front line. By the mandate of our people, we led them toward sovereignty, peace, and democracy,” Mirzoyan said.
The minister added that throughout this process, what they had years earlier called the “Civil Contract” took shape, materialized, and was strengthened.
“This was the contract that was concluded, embodied, and put into practice between us and the citizens—between everyone, and even between any two individual citizens. Today, we can say that during those trials, all parties to the contract fulfilled their obligations with honor. I see that the citizens of Armenia have not finished their work, and they see that we, too, have not completed ours—the mandate they entrusted to us, for which they have paid a high price and continue to pay. Therefore, we must continue to implement our shared contract together, move forward together, and stand by our democracy, peace, and sovereignty,” Ararat Mirzoyan concluded.