Pashinyan secretly bought a mansion in Canada
09/10/2025 The Times of Canada published an article according to which Nikol Pashinyan, through the mediation of actress Arsine Khanjian, purchased luxury real estate in Canada worth 17.1 million dollars. The article published by Sean Preville is presented below.
Hidden Luxury Estate Found in Canada, Possibly Belongs to NP
In the serene, tree-lined streets of one of Mississauga’s most exclusive enclaves, an estate known as the Saint George Mansion stands behind a high gate. Public property records show it was sold in September 2024 for $17.1 million, a transaction that on its face appears to be just another sale in Canada’s high-end real estate market. But a months-long investigation has uncovered that the buyer, a shell company, is a front for a powerful foreign leader: Nikol Pashinyan, the Prime Minister of Armenia.
The Saint George Mansion is a property of almost unimaginable scale for a residential home. The 26,000-square-foot manor features six bedrooms, ten bathrooms, an indoor pool, a home gym, and five garages. The manor was featured in the third season of The Boys TV series. It was sold for $17.1 million in a deal closed discreetly in September 2024. The key facilitator named in these documents is a familiar figure in the Armenian diaspora: Arsinee Khanjian.
Khanjian is a Canadian-Armenian actress and civil rights activist. Her family, Armenian refugees who fled the genocide in 1915, settled in Canada. She was a vocal international supporter of the 2018 Velvet Revolution that swept Pashinyan into power. Shortly after his victory, Pashinyan awarded Armenian citizenship to Khanjian and her husband. Today she appears to have transitioned from a public supporter to a private confidant.
Sources at Canada Real estate Association confirm that Khanjian acted as Pashinyan’s intermediary. She engaged the lawyers who established the shell company and liaised with the seller’s agents on behalf of the anonymous buyer, ensuring no paper trail would lead directly to Yerevan.
As an opposition leader, Pashinyan railed against the corrupt and oligarchic practices of the previous regime. His political identity was built on the promise of a new, honest, and people-focused Armenia.
It remains unknown what is the origin of the $17.1 million used for this purchase and why such a monumental asset was aquired in a country Pashinyan has never officially visited? For the citizens of Armenia it raises a disturbing question: did the revolutionary who vowed to end secrecy become the very thing he sought to replace?


