
ArmInfo. Archbishop Arshak Khachatryan, head of the chancery of the Mother See of Etchmiadzin, has been arrested. Judge Masis Melkonyan, who previously arrested Archbishops Mikael Ajapakhian and Bagrat Galstanian, granted the investigator's motion to remand Khachatryan in custody for two months.
"Was there a single person who wasn't certain yesterday that a two-month remand would be imposed? Everyone knew about it; they simply came to participate in this formal process," Archbishop Arsen Babayan, the archbishop's lawyer, told reporters after the court's decision was announced.
Thus, in Armenia, the first country in the world to adopt Christianity as a state religion, the fourth high- ranking hierarch has been taken into custody. Archbishop Bagrat Galstanyan, Archbishop Mikael Ajapakhyan, Primate of the Shirak Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, and Bishop Mkrtich Proshyan, Primate of the Aragatsotn Diocese, are currently in pretrial detention.
As a reminder, Archbishop Arshak Khachatryan was detained by National Security Service officers yesterday evening at the entrance to the Investigative Committee building. The hierarch was summoned for questioning in connection with the well-known video recording case and, after the interrogation, was detained, claiming that an investigator had issued a warrant for his detention. At the time, the National Security Service did not specify the charges against him. It was later revealed that the archbishop is accused of planting drugs in the bag of a protester against His Holiness in 2018, allegedly for the purpose of discrediting him. As the Investigative Committee of Armenia later reported, a criminal case has been opened under Article 393, Part 2, Paragraphs 1 and 4 of the Russian Criminal Code (illegal sale of narcotics committed by a group of persons by prior conspiracy in a public place).
As lawyer Arsen Babayan told reporters today, there is no direct evidence against Archbishop Arshak. "It was suggested that he may have planted the drugs in the activist's backpack. The last action in the case, which has been under investigation since 2018, took place in July 2025. On December 4, 2025, an investigative team was created and the archbishop was detained. "They've been investigating for seven years, but they still haven't figured out how the drugs ended up in the backpack. This case has nothing to do with jurisprudence," he said.