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23 Jul, 2025 12:47

Jailed Russian-Armenian tycoon wins lawsuit against Yerevan

A Stockholm tribunal has blocked an Armenian government plan to nationalize Samvel Karapetyan’s energy firm
Jailed Russian-Armenian tycoon wins lawsuit against Yerevan

A Stockholm arbitration court has blocked the Armenian government from moving forward with plans to nationalize a major electricity supplier owned by a jailed Russian-Armenian billionaire. 

Samvel Karapetyan was arrested in June on charges of calling for the seizure of power after publicly supporting the Armenian Apostolic Church in its confrontation with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s government.

Following his arrest, Pashinyan stated that “it is time to nationalize” Karapetyan's company Electric Grids of Armenia and called for swift action. The Armenian parliament later passed legislation enabling the state to confiscate the company. 

In response, the Karapetyan family filed a lawsuit with the Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce (SCC), a tribunal that specializes in commercial and investor-state disputes, invoking a 1995 bilateral investment treaty between Armenia and Cyprus. 

On Tuesday, the tribunal ruled that Armenia must refrain from enforcing the new laws and from taking any further steps to seize the company. The SCC stated that such measures would make it difficult for the plaintiffs to recover full damages if they lose control over the firm. The decision is binding on the Armenian government. 

Karapetyan is one of several high-profile figures to have been targeted in Yerevan’s recent crackdown on the opposition. Archbishop Bagrat Galstanyan and the head of the Shirak Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Bishop Mikael Ajapakhyan, have also been detained. Furthermore, earlier this month, an Armenian court ordered the arrest of opposition lawmaker Artur Sarkisyan on charges of conspiring to stage a violent coup. 

The arrests were in response to a wave of 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 move the prime minister has defended as necessary to normalize relations with Baku. 

Moscow has said it is closely monitoring the developments, especially those concerning Karapetyan, who holds Russian citizenship. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov reiterated that while the unrest is an internal matter for Yerevan, Moscow wants Armenia to remain “a prosperous and stable country that is friendly to Russia.”

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