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Tbilisi: Armenian MPs need ethics code

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  • Tbilisi: Armenian MPs need ethics code

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Oct 22 2004

    Armenian MPs need ethics code

    According to the Armenian newspaper Aravot, it is necessary to adopt
    immediately a code of ethics for members of parliament. Some Armenian
    parliamentarians have reached this conclusion following a scandal in
    the Armenian National Meeting, during which one member of parliament
    was accusing another of being homosexual, and in response the accused
    promised him to solve this problem in the street.
    The newspaper says that parliamentarians should resolve differences
    within the framework of an ethics code, and not through unprintable
    invective - not matter what the political disagreement. Such a code
    has been suggested in the past, but never adopted, and only two of
    the post-Soviet countries - Georgia and Lithuania - have adopted such
    a code.
    Georgian MPs have signed their code recently, and the newspaper
    reports that the adoption involved a great deal of fun all round,
    with famous parliamentarian bullies promising not to fight during
    sessions any more, and young MPs swearing that they would never again
    chew gum during the sessions and voting.
    In response to the initiative of Speaker of Parliament Nino
    Burjanadze, members of parliament decided in a friendly fashion to
    dress and behave according to ethical norms. Particularly, the
    Georgian parliamentarians are obliged not to appear in the hall of
    the session in bedroom-slippers and T-shirts.
    The newspaper says that in the Armenian parliament, the opposition
    conducts itself in a more civil way then others do. "It must be said,
    that our opposition, despite being full of criminals and street
    thugs, conducts itself more seriously. Unlike the Georgia
    parliamentarians, Armenian ones do not try to attend the sessions in
    T-shirts and slippers; on the contrary, they always wear suits, but
    it is still necessary to remind them that it is impossible to quarrel
    using obscene language and to hold fisticuffs in the parliament."
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