Grigory Artemievich Arutinov or Grigor Artemi Harutyunyan (, ; November 7, 1900 – November 9, 1957) was the First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Armenian SSR from 24 September 1937 to 12 March 1953. His tenure as first secretary was the longest in the history of the Armenian SSR.
With the establishment of Soviet power in Georgia, he became the head of the propaganda department of the Telavi district committee of the Communist Party of Georgia. In 1922 he was sent to study in Moscow, at the Karl Marx Moscow Institute of the National Economy. In 1924 he was recalled to Georgia and held various positions in the Communist Party bureaucracy in Georgia, eventually becoming secretary of the Tbilisi city party committee in 1934.
During Arutinov's tenure Armenia saw considerable agricultural and industrial expansion, with the capital Yerevan in particular enjoying significant growth and development. The Armenian National Academy of Sciences was founded and the construction of the main building of Matenadaran began. After the Great Patriotic War, some 100,000 Armenians living in the Armenian diaspora immigrated to Soviet Armenia, although some were settled not in Armenia but in Siberia. In November 1945, Arutinov unsuccessfully appealed to Joseph Stalin to transfer Armenian-majority Nagorno-Karabakh, which was part of the Azerbaijan SSR, to Soviet Armenia.
In 1949, under the orders of the Ministry of State Security of the USSR, approximately 12,000 people were forcibly resettled from Armenia to the Altai Krai. After the death of Stalin in 1953, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia passed a decision to allow the survivors of the deportation to return to Armenia.
After Lavrentiy Beria's arrest in June 1953, Arutinov came under fierce criticism in Armenia due to his association with Beria. At the meeting of the Armenian Central Committee plenum of November 1953, he was removed from the post of the first secretary and replaced by Suren Tovmasyan on the recommendation of Pyotr Pospelov.
After being removed from his post, Arutinov served as chairman of a sovkhoz near Vagharshapat. He died of a heart attack in Tbilisi in the Georgian SSR on November 9, 1957.
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