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Council Of Europe Envoy Urges Faster Reform In Armenia

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  • Council Of Europe Envoy Urges Faster Reform In Armenia

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Nov 16 2004


    Council Of Europe Envoy Urges Faster Reform In Armenia

    By Ruzanna Khachatrian 16/11/2004 09:50

    A high-ranking representative of the Council of Europe urged the
    Armenian authorities on Monday to redouble their efforts to honor
    political commitments that earned Armenia membership in the respected
    human rights organization nearly four years ago.

    Ambassador Roland Wegener, a Strasbourg-based German diplomat
    representing the Council's governing Committee of Ministers, singled
    out the promised reform of Armenia's constitution, judicial system
    and electoral legislation.
    `We feel that progress has been made, but we also see that the most
    important projects still lie ahead,' he told reporters at the end of
    a fact-finding visit to Yerevan.

    Wegener, who heads a special monitoring team formed by the Committee
    of Ministers, met with President Robert Kocharian, Foreign Minister
    Vartan Oskanian as well as the leaders of the Armenian parliament
    factions during the three-day trip. Kocharian, according to his press
    office, assured the envoy that he is genuinely committed to bringing
    Armenian legislation into conformity with European standards.

    The Armenian authorities are currently working on a package of
    constitutional amendments that are due to be put to a referendum next
    summer. Also, the Armenian parliament, dominated by Kocharian
    supporters, approved last month in the first reading a set of
    amendments to the country's electoral code.

    Those discussions have been boycotted by the Armenian opposition
    which refuses to recognize Kocharian's legitimacy and accuses the
    authorities of creating a smokescreen of political reform to mislead
    the Europeans. Opposition leaders reaffirmed their stance in separate
    meetings with Wegener over the weekend.

    One of them, Shavarsh Kocharian, argued that the authorities have not
    prosecuted any officials involved in vote rigging and human rights
    abuses and are refusing to abolish the Soviet-era practice of
    `administrative detentions' repeatedly condemned by the Council of
    Europe. `The obligations are not being met,' he told RFE/RL. `That's
    one of the obsctales to the lack of a [government-opposition]
    dialogue urged by European structures.'

    One of the leaders of the parliament majority, Tigran Torosian, said
    Wegener urged the top Kocharian allies to give the opposition a say
    in legislative reform. He said the majority is ready to do so and
    hopes that the opposition will drop its `preconditions' for the
    dialogue.
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