What is Happening in the Investigative Committee. Pashinyan is Concerned. 'Fact'
'Fact' newspaper reports: 'The parliamentary investigative committee examining the circumstances of the 44-day war has been carrying out its functions for a considerable time now. Before the formation of the committee, the authorities continuously emphasized that this would be the platform and the examination body that should provide answers to all the unclear and unexplained questions that concern the public. However, uncertainty still prevails regarding the war, as many predicted, stating that nothing would be revealed during this government's tenure.
According to 'Fact' newspaper's information, the committee's work is, to put it mildly, not proceeding smoothly; there are serious issues here. Our sources convey that, at this stage, mainly representatives of the mid-ranking military personnel are being invited to the committee, who do not particularly possess crucial information and, as a rule, present standard facts that are often even well-known to the public. As one of our interlocutors put it, they are 'just making small talk.'
Moreover, so far, none of the key responsible individuals for the course of the war have been invited to the committee. Although the committee’s chairman Andranik Kocharyan publicly claims on various platforms that there are extensive testimonies, our source reports that those testimonies do not contain any crucial information.
The matter concerns information that the current authorities wish to 'obtain' in order to offload the topics of the war's course and defeat onto others for self-purification purposes. Sources say that this situation has seriously concerned Nikol Pashinyan.'
For more details, see today's issue of the newspaper.