World Cup 2026: Shakira to perform official song at opening ceremony in Mexico
Colombian singer Shakira will perform the official World Cup song, "Dai Dai", at the tournament's opening ceremony in Mexico City, FIFA announced on F...
Armenians will vote on Sunday in a parliamentary election that will determine whether Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan secures a new mandate to pursue peace with Azerbaijan or cedes ground to pro-Russian rivals.
The vote is being watched closely by Moscow and Western capitals. Polls show Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party leading with roughly 30% support, while his main challenger, Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, trails at between 6% and 11%.
Karapetyan, who is under house arrest on charges of usurping power, which he denies, advocates closer ties with Moscow. Another contender, former President Robert Kocharyan, also favours maintaining friendly relations with Russia.
“These are the first geo-politicised elections in Armenia’s independent history,” said Tigran Grigoryan, director of the Regional Centre for Democracy and Security think-tank in Yerevan.
“All the main domestic actors have their own geopolitical and foreign policy preferences, and all the external actors have their preferences in this electoral race.”
Pashinyan, who came to power in the 2018 Velvet Revolution, has sought to diversify Armenia’s foreign policy away from sole reliance on Russia. He envisions the landlocked nation of three million people as a “crossroads of peace”, reopening long-closed borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey.
U.S. President Donald Trump helped broker a meeting between Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and is pushing for a transit corridor across southern Armenia as part of a peace deal. Europe, too, is anxious for a foothold in a region sandwiched between Russia and Iran.
“For the EU, Armenia is the only remaining partner in the South Caucasus,” Grigoryan told Reuters. “Given what’s happening in Georgia, when the main alternative to Pashinyan are these pro-Russian forces, they don’t see any choice left.”
Sunday’s vote is the first since Azerbaijan retook the region of Garabagh in 2023. Although Mr Pashinyan touts progress towards a peace deal and the reopening of the frontier with Türkiye, no peace agreement with Baku has yet been signed.
The Prime Minister retains a loyal base. In his northern hometown of Ijevan, supporters point to newly paved roads, economic growth and a more recognisable international standing.
“We’ve certainly seen changes – freedom of speech and free elections, as strange as it may sound,” said Anna Egoyan, a resident who backs the ruling party. “Before that, we’d always periodically had rigged elections. The economy is growing.”
Since 2018, GDP per capita has doubled, hundreds of kindergartens have opened and thousands of kilometres of road have been paved.
Should Pashinyan fail to secure a two-thirds majority in parliament, a pledge to Azerbaijan to call a referendum to change Armenia's constitution would be difficult for him to fulfill, and peace efforts could stall.
The pivot away from Russia is also a delicate gamble. Armenia sends around a third of its exports to Russia and relies on Moscow for energy. In recent weeks, Russia has restricted Armenian exports and threatened to cut off cheap oil and gas.
The government in Yerevan has downplayed the risks. Yet surveys show a third of Armenians now view Russia as a threat.
Polls open at 08:00 local time (04:00 GMT) on 7 June. Preliminary results are expected early on Monday.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) said in a statement that its Aerospace Force did not strike the Kuwait Airport passenger terminal on Wednesday, and that the destruction was instead caused by a failed U.S. Patriot missile.
Israel and Lebanon have agreed to implement a ceasefire after U.S.-backed talks in Washington. The deal requires Hezbollah to halt attacks and withdraw from southern Lebanon, while both sides will resume direct talks later this month aimed at reaching a broader agreement.
Protesters chanted “I can’t breathe” and threw bins at police in Southampton on Tuesday (2 June) after footage emerged showing murdered teenager Henry Nowak being arrested as he lay dying from a stab wound.
As Armenia heads toward parliamentary elections on 7 June, the country's relationship with Azerbaijan is emerging as one of the defining issues of the campaign, with analysts and international observers highlighting the role of regional politics in shaping voters’ mindsets.
The United Kingdom has begun using SpaceX's Starshield satellite network for military operations, according to people familiar with the matter, marking one of the first known deployments of the secure government-focused system outside the U.S.
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, newly independent Armenia emerged with the promise of democracy. But in the years that followed, conflicts and political assassinations sidetracked politics in the country, until a 2018 revolution restored momentum to the promise.
The Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP), the ambitious multimodal transit corridor designed to connect mainland Azerbaijan with its Nakhchivan exclave through southern Armenia, has moved rapidly from political declaration to practical implementation.
Armenia will hold parliamentary elections on 7 June 2026, a vote that will shape the country’s political direction for the next five years. Understanding how the electoral system converts votes into parliamentary power is key to following the outcome and its wider regional implications.
Armenia is set to receive a support package worth more than €50 million ($58.2 million) from the European Union (EU) after Russia, its largest trading partner, imposed restrictions on a range of Armenian exports.
Russia wants Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to lose the upcoming election due to his increasing engagement with Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said.
You can download the AnewZ application from Play Store and the App Store.
What is your opinion on this topic?
Leave the first comment