
ArmInfo.As European leaders gather i of prominent political prisoners in Armenia. "Not since the worst days of Soviet rule has the Armenian Apostolic Church faced state-sponsored persecution of suchn Yerevan for the first EU-Armenia summit, the human rights group is publishing a list depth and intensity," states a new report published today by Christian Solidarity International (CSI).
The report includes a list of prominent political prisoners in Armenia—the first of its kind published by an international human rights group. The report was authored by Peter Fuchs, an international lawyer and historian specializing in religious freedom in Eastern Europe, the Baltic states, and the Caucasus. The report is based on the findings of his recent research mission to Armenia. Combining legal analysis with historical context, the report details Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's attempts to "subordinate the Church to state control."
The political prisoners mentioned in the report include clergy, their relatives, podcasters, church workers, and others detained by Armenian authorities during the campaign against the Church. The list of political prisoners was compiled by CSI in consultation with the Armenian Center for Political Rights.
The release of the report coincides with the visit of European leaders to Yerevan: the 8th European Political Community Summit is taking place there on May 4, and the first-ever EU-Armenia Summit on May 5.
"European leaders attending well-organized political events in central Yerevan should be aware that they are just minutes away from the prison where Archbishop Bagrat Galstanyan is being held on trumped-up charges," said Dr. Joel Veldkamp, CSI's Director of Public Affairs.
Since May 2025, Prime Minister Pashinyan has been waging a public campaign to force the resignation of the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Catholicos Karekin II. According to the report, Pashinyan's government has arrested three Armenian archbishops, imposed travel bans on the Catholicos and other high-ranking church leaders, and attempted to provoke a schism within the church.
On March 12, 2026, the International Observatory for Democracy in Armenia (a watchdog group led by Kenneth Roth, former executive director of Human Rights Watch) issued a warning about democratic backsliding in Armenia, including "the government's apparent weaponization of the judiciary and security forces against political opponents."
The government's campaign against the church began in May 2025, after the Catholicos spoke at a conference in Switzerland organized by the World Council of Churches. There, the Catholicos publicly defended Armenian refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh, a region subjected to ethnic cleansing by Azerbaijan in 2023, and called for their right to return to their homes.
Pashinyan made signing a peace treaty with Azerbaijan the centerpiece of his national platform and called discussions of refugees' right of return "dangerous" for peace. In his speech to the European Parliament in March, he accused church leaders of seeking to start a new war with Azerbaijan.
In the introduction to the report, CSI President John Eibner argues that the Pashinyan government's campaign against the Church should be seen as part of Turkey and Azerbaijan's efforts to "weaken the Armenian nation and deprive it of the ability to resist subjugation and integration into the emerging Turkish-led regional order."
"Today, the Armenian Apostolic Church, more than any other Armenian institution, is an obstacle to the plans of Turkey and Azerbaijan," Eibner states.
The report concludes with a series of formal CSI recommendations for European and American policymakers. These include: publicly reaffirming the right of the Armenian Church to choose its leaders without state interference; calling on the Armenian government to release detained clergy and other political prisoners; and engaging with independent human rights groups in Armenia. The Swiss Parliament's support for the Nagorno-Karabakh Peace Initiative.
"Now is the moment for principled and coordinated action," Fuchs concludes in the report. "Armenia's security and prosperity will not be enhanced by subordinating the Armenian Apostolic Church. On the contrary, they depend on protecting the fundamental rights of all Armenians, as well as their national church."
It should be noted that Christian Solidarity International (CSI) is an interdenominational Christian advocacy group advocating for religious freedom and human dignity. It assists victims of religious persecution, child victims, and disaster victims. CSI is a non-governmental organization in consultative status with the UN Economic and Social Council. The organization was founded in Switzerland in 1977 by Pastor Hans Stuckelberger and operates in more than 20 countries.