
ArmInfo.RA Deputy Defense Minister Arman Sargsyan is not involved in issues related to the hygiene of the country's armed forces. He stated this to journalists on April 6, commenting on the assertions of Hayk Sargsyan, a member of the National Assembly from the ruling "Civil Contract" faction, that soldiers are only able to bathe once a week.
"There are areas within the Ministry of Defense that I personally do not regulate, including the issue of which soldier bathes when. I don't understand what you're talking about, but I am certain that there are no unwashed soldiers in the army," the Deputy Minister emphasized, adding that there have been no issues regarding this matter to date. In turn, Andranik Kocharyan, Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Defense and Security, noted that Hayk Sargsyan is fond of fantasizing. The bill he presented, incidentally, as Kocharyan continued, is full of problematic points, and therefore, the faction itself voted against its adoption. The head of the committee urged journalists to present concrete facts about military bribes, rather than engaging in imaginary speculation.
Earlier, Hayk Sargsyan expressed concern that Armenian Armed Forces servicemen only bathe once a week. Speaking to journalists, he referred to data from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, highlighting that 3,000 young men renounce their citizenship every year. According to him, there are many classes in the country that do not have conscripts after graduating from high school.
"If you have acquaintances, especially in elite schools, you can ask them, for example, how many boys from your school graduated in 2025, and how many of them went to the army. The scheme works like this: those who have money renounce their citizenship before turning 18. They spend this money not in Armenia, but abroad - a lot in Europe, and less in Russia. As a result, the money leaves Armenia, these guys leave our reserves, judging by the statistics, and we lose both them and their money. I proposed to close this scheme and change it so that this money does not leave Armenia, but goes into the pockets of those who serve," the deputy said, adding that the number of conscripts in Yerevan is critically low. "When we say that conscription in the republic is 30-35%, this is largely due to the regions, in Yerevan it is 10- 16%. We had a year when it was 10 percent, that is, there is inequality. By repealing the law, they want to say that this injustice did not happen, but in reality, this injustice will worsen, which I regret," Hayk Sargsyan stated.