
ArmInfo. "We cannot treat the candidacy of the Chairman of the Anti- Corruption Committee in the same way as other officials," said Daniel Ioannisyan, coordinator of the public organization "Union of Informed Citizens", a member of the competition committee for the selection of candidates for the Chairman of the Anti-Corruption Committee, at a press conference on March 11, declaring his disagreements with other members of the committee on the issue of selecting candidates.
Ioannisyan recalled that in November 2024, the Office of the Prime Minister of Armenia announced a competition for the participation of two representatives of civil society in the competition committee for the selection of candidates for the Anti-Corruption Committee. Based on the results of the first stage, the competition committee did not support the candidacy of Rafael Yeritsyan, Head of the Main Department of the National Security Service for Economic Security and Anti-Corruption, who was the only one in the competition.
In the second stage, 5 candidates competed for the position of Chairman of the Anti-Corruption Committee: lawyer Karen Batikyan, senior investigator of the Third Investigation Department of the Anti-Corruption Committee Artashes Mailyan, head of the Department for Coordination of the Work of Inspection Bodies Petros Martirosyan, deputy chairman of the Investigative Committee Artur Nahapetyan and senior prosecutor for cases of confiscation of property of illegal origin of the Prosecutor General's Office Gevorg Kocharyan. Three candidates passed the threshold of the competition: Artur Nahapetyan, Petros Martirosyan and Gevorg Kocharyan. The government will decide which of them to appoint as the head of the Committee, but theoretically this may not happen. Then a new competition will have to be held, Ioannisyan explained.
The selection committee selected candidates based on the following criteria: personal qualities, integrity and professional knowledge. All candidates have a higher legal education. At the same time, the law does not require a candidate to have a legal education.
According to Ioannisyan, he had a number of disagreements with other members of the selection committee. In particular, in connection with the candidacy of Petros Martirosyan. According to the human rights activist, the level of integrity of the latter does not meet the required level.
Thus, in his <special opinion>, he pointed out a number of <questionable>, in his assessment, aspects in connection with Martirosyan's activities both as the head of the Department for Coordination of the Work of Inspection Bodies and as the prosecutor of the Lori region. Ioannisyan is also concerned about how he was able to save 6 million drams on the prosecutor's salary and that he keeps his savings in cash, which creates risks in terms of the fight against corruption. He also does not like Martirosyan's close circle, his friends, who made <politically incorrect> statements.
The position of the head of the Anti-Corruption Committee, created at the end of 2021, has been vacant since November 2024, when Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan called on the first chairman of the committee, Sasun Khachatryan, to resign.