Ex-Armenian president denounces push to nationalize jailed tycoon’s company

Wait 5 sec.

Serzh Sargsyan has revealed that he personally asked businessman Samvel Karapetyan to acquire Armenia’s power grid Former Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan has denounced Yerevan’s push to nationalize a company owned by a jailed Russian-Armenian tycoon.Samvel Karapetyan was arrested in June, allegedly for calling for the overthrow of the government after he supported the Armenian Apostolic Church in a standoff with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. The prime minister later called on the government to nationalize Karapetyan’s firm, Electric Grids of Armenia – the country’s major electricity supplier. Parliament passed legislation enabling the state to confiscate the company.Speaking to journalists on Tuesday, Sargsyan, who was president from 2008 to 2018, said he had personally asked Karapetyan to acquire the utility from another operator. He added the grids were in poor condition and required someone focused on “long-term investment rather than short-term profit” – something he said Karapetyan did at least until 2018, when his presidency ended. He said he believes those investments are still ongoing.Sargsyan criticized Yerevan’s decision to “hastily adopt legislation” that allows the takeover of “someone else’s property,” firing employees and seizing control of financial resources. The former president suggested the move may be politically motivated, noting that the company’s workforce and resources could prove significant in the 2026 parliamentary elections. Karapetyan’s family has filed a $500 million claim against the Armenian government after earlier turning to the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce tribunal under a 1995 Armenia-Cyprus investment treaty. The panel has issued a binding ruling ordering Yerevan to halt efforts to seize the utility. Karapetyan remains in custody as the probe continues.The billionaire is one of several high-profile figures targeted in Yerevan’s crackdown on the opposition, alongside senior church leaders. Their arrests followed mass protests led by the church and its supporters. Demonstrators accuse Pashinyan of betraying Armenia’s national interests by handing over several border villages to Azerbaijan, a step he insists was needed to normalize relations.Moscow says it is closely monitoring the situation, especially Karapetyan’s case. The Kremlin described the unrest as an internal matter but stressed it wants Armenia to remain “a prosperous and stable country that is friendly to Russia.”