Wednesday, October 1, 2025

European Court Orders Azerbaijan to Report by November 4 on 23 Armenian Hostages Facing Sham Trials...

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has ordered Azerbaijan to provide a detailed...

Zvartnots Dance Ensemble to Present Vostan Hayots at Mission Playhouse in Los Angeles on October 12

On Sunday, October 12, 2025, at 6:00 PM, the legendary Zvartnots Dance Ensemble will...

Armenian Bans Loud Modified Car Sound Systems, Sets Fine at 10x Minimum Wage

Armenia’s Parliament (National Assembly) has approved amendments banning the installation and use of non-standard...

Seven Political Parties & Three Blocs Join The Mayoral Race In Gyumri.

HomelandSeven Political Parties & Three Blocs Join The Mayoral Race In Gyumri.

Seven political parties and three blocs have applied to run in local elections that will be held in Gyumri on October 17, reports Azatutyun.

They will vie for 33 seats in the municipal council that will elect the next mayor of Armenia’s second largest city.

Gyumri has been run by Samvel Balasanyan, a local businessman, for the last nine years. He was allied to the former Armenian government that helped him win reelection in 2016.

Although Balasanyan has decided not to seek another term in office, a newly created party bearing his name has joined the mayoral race. Its list of election candidates is topped by one of the outgoing mayor’s relatives, Vardges Sanosyan. The latter heads a municipal agency providing utility services.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party is expected to be the pro-Balasanyan party’s main challenger. Civil Contract’s mayoral candidate, Hovannes Harutiunyan, is the governor of Shirak province, of which Gyumri is the capital.

Harutiunyan did not say why he agreed to run for a less important position in the state hierarchy. He said only that he made a “very difficult decision.”

Harutiunyan also insisted that Civil Contract will not abuse its administrative resources in a bid to install him as Gyumri mayor.

The ruling party was accused by its political opponents of committing such abuses in the June 20 parliamentary elections. Its election campaign in Shirak was managed by the current provincial governor.

Only one major national opposition group, former President Serzh Sarkisyan’s Republican Party of Armenia, will participate in the Gyumri election. The main opposition Hayastan alliance led by another ex-president, Robert Kocharyan, has decided to sit out the vote.

Two opposition parties affiliated with Hayastan have also refrained from participating in it on their own. But they will field candidates in local elections that will held in other parts of Armenia in October and November.

The Central Election Commission should register all election contenders, among them three Gyumri-based blocs, by September 17.

- A WORD FROM OUR SPONSORS - spot_img

CATCH UP ON THE LATEST NEWS

Search other topics:

Subscribe to our newsletter

To be updated with all the latest news, podcasts, and announcements.

Most Popular Articles