
ArmInfo. For the Armenian authorities, Ktrich Nersisyan (the secular name of Garegin II) is not the Catholicos of All Armenians. This was stated by Artur Hovhannisyan, secretary of the country's ruling Civil Contract faction, at a briefing on December 5.
According to him, the authorities, with the help of various clergy and individuals familiar with liturgical procedures, are conducting clarifications, which are used by RA Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to decide whether or not to participate in a given liturgy. Equally important is whether the clergyman in question shares the ideas of church modernization. "After analyzing all these circumstances, a decision is made on whether or not to participate in the liturgy. There has been and is no pressure," Hovhannisyan emphasized, adding that these individuals could include employees of the National Security Service. The change of the Catholicos, according to the parliamentarian, must occur without upheaval, in an atmosphere of brotherhood and solidarity, as occurred during the non-violent Velvet Revolution of 2018. Thus, Hovhannisyan continued, the Church will return to the people, just as power returned to them. According to the ruling faction MP, Ktrich Nersesyan seized power in the Armenian Apostolic Church on October 27, 1999, breaking his vow of celibacy.
Responding to a journalist's question about why the National Security Service (NSS) recalled the seven-year-old case against Archbishop Arshak Khachatryan on the eve of the bishops' meeting, and whether this was a manifestation of the same pressure, Hovhannisyan noted that the authorities do not handle criminal cases. This issue falls within the purview of the relevant state agencies, which, as independent entities, are obligated to handle such matters. As a reminder, Archbishop Arshak Khachatryan, head of the chancery of the Mother See of Etchmiadzin, was previously arrested in connection with a drug trafficking case. According to Archbishop Arsen Babayan, his lawyer, his client was summoned to the Investigative Committee to testify "in connection with the infamous video recording." After questioning, they exited the Investigative Committee's main entrance, where they were met by National Security Service officers, who stated that they had received an investigator's order to detain the archbishop. It was later revealed that the archbishop is accused of planting drugs in the bag of a protester against His Holiness in 2018, allegedly to discredit him. A video allegedly depicting Archbishop Arshak with a woman was also previously circulated on pro-government platforms. The video quality is very poor, and only his general facial features are visible. The source of the video is still unknown. The clergyman himself has repeatedly emphasized that he has no connection to the video.