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CoE Says Constitutional Reform 'Vital' For Armenia

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  • CoE Says Constitutional Reform 'Vital' For Armenia

    COUNCIL OF EUROPE SAYS CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM 'VITAL' FOR ARMENIA
    By Emil Danielyan and Astghik Bedevian

    Armenialiberty.org, Armenia
    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 10 2005

    The top decision-making body of the Council of Europe urged Armenians
    on Monday to vote for President Robert Kocharian's constitutional
    amendments at next month's referendum, saying that they are "vital"
    for Armenia's democratic future.

    "The referendum to be held on 27 November on this reform will be vital
    for Armenia," Diogo Freitas do Amaral, Portugal's foreign minister
    and the chairman of the Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers,
    said in a statement.

    "By turning out to vote during the referendum, the people of Armenia
    will indeed be deciding on changes of fundamental importance for
    their future," he said, adding that the proposed changes would shore
    up Armenia's weak judiciary and create a "more balanced distribution
    of power between the executive and the legislative branches."

    Amaral emphasized the fact that Kocharian's constitutional package
    has been endorsed by the Venice Commission, the Council of Europe's
    advisory body on legal reform which has been actively involved in the
    reform process. The head of the commission, Gianni Buquicchio, called
    for a "yes" vote at the referendum during a recent visit to Yerevan.

    The European Union and the United States have also expressed support
    for the draft amendments. Western officials say that as well as curbing
    sweeping powers vested in the Armenian presidency, the proposed reform
    would facilitate Armenia's integration into pan-European structures.

    A similar statement was adopted on Monday at a conference of an
    organization representing various-level Armenian judges that are
    presently appointed and can be dismissed by the president. Under the
    proposed reform, the president would continue to appoint them but
    would have less control over a body that nominates judges.

    "The constitutional draft is close to being a perfect legal document,"
    stated the chairman of the Union of Judges, Hovannes Manukian.

    The one-day gathering was also attended by Justice Minister David
    Harutiunian, who is believed to exercise considerable influence
    on Armenian courts notorious for their corruption and lack of
    independence. "If our country is to maintain the existing pace of
    growth, we must make great efforts to have an established judicial
    system in Armenia," Harutiunian said in his address to nearly two
    hundred judges.

    Armenia's leading opposition groups, meanwhile, remain adamant
    in rejecting the amendments as insignificant and irrelevant to
    the country's democratization. In a joint statement last month,
    17 opposition parties said their enactment would only "legitimize
    the regime and prolong its life." They pledged to work together in
    trying to scuttle the referendum.

    But the opposition leaders disagree on whether they should urge
    Armenians to boycott the referendum or vote against the draft
    amendments. The National Unity Party (AMK) of Artashes Geghamian
    announced last week that it prefers the latter option, while the
    second opposition force represented in parliament, the Artarutyun bloc,
    has yet to formulate a common position on the issue.

    One of the nine parties aligned in the bloc, the National Democratic
    Union (AZhM), decided at the weekend to urge supporters not to take
    part in the upcoming referendum. The AZhM's prominent leader, Vazgen
    Manukian, argued earlier that a low voter turnout would make it more
    difficult for the authorities to rig the vote.

    The AZhM said in a statement that it will deploy observers in all
    1,865 polling stations across Armenia in an effort to prevent vote
    falsifications. The party also pledged to step up its "propaganda
    struggle" against Kocharian's constitutional changes.
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