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Evicted Families Dismiss Kocharian's Extra Cash Pledge

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  • Evicted Families Dismiss Kocharian's Extra Cash Pledge

    EVICTED FAMILIES DISMISS KOCHARIAN'S EXTRA CASH PLEDGE
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Aug. 14, 2006

    Disgruntled families whose old houses have been torn down in an
    ongoing redevelopment in downtown Yerevan on Monday bristled at
    President Robert Kocharian's pledge to slightly raise compensations
    paid to them by his government.

    In televised remarks broadcast late Friday, Kocharian announced
    that the government was wrong to controversially levy a 10 percent
    income tax from the already modest sums paid to hundreds of displaced
    families. He said proceeds from the tax, worth about 1.3 billion drams
    ($3.3 million), will be given back to them in the next few months.

    Kocharian's remark that "the issue will be closed" with the payment
    of extra cash seems to have angered those former house owners who
    feel that the compensations offered to them were well bellow the
    market value of their demolished properties. Vachagan Hakobian, head
    of a group representing their interests, said it does not represent
    a fundamental solution to their grievances.

    "We are not fighting for 10 percent," Hakobian told RFE/RL. "We just
    want the amount of compensation to be revised [upwards] and individuals
    who committed illegal acts to be punished."

    "They won't deceive us with that sum. Of course, we will take the cash
    because it was stolen from us. But we will continue our struggle to
    the end," he said.

    The pledge of extra money was Kocharian's first public statement
    on the controversy surrounding his government's handling of the
    redevelopment program that was effectively declared illegal by
    Armenia's Constitutional Court in April. Angry evicted residents,
    backed by human rights activities, opposition politicians and
    prominent public figures, have for months protested outside his
    officials residence in the hope of clinching heftier sums.

    The Armenian constitution stipulates that private property can
    be confiscated by the state "only in exceptional cases involving
    overriding public interests, in a manner defined by law, and with a
    prior commensurate compensation." The court backed critics' argument
    that the process, marred allegations of high-level corruption,
    has been regulated only by a government directive and is therefore
    unconstitutional. Still, it stopped short of ordering the authorities
    to return the increasingly expensive land to their former owners.

    Some of those residents were baffled by the timing Kocharian's
    announcement and saw political motives behind it. "Elections are
    coming up," one of them, Aleksandr Safian, said. "The president has
    gone public to present himself in a better light. We don't believe
    in fairy tales."

    Another man, Zohrab Vahanian, claimed that the Armenian authorities
    are worried about lawsuits filed by several disgruntled families to
    the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. "They have realized
    that we can't do anything against them only in Armenia and that things
    work a bit differently there [in Strasbourg,]" he said.

    Kocharian's statement, whatever its motives, is totally irrelevant
    to Gohar Gharibian and her family that were offered $14,000, barely
    enough to buy a tiny apartment in a Yerevan suburb, for their now
    demolished house in the city center. They rejected the sum and now
    hope for a "just" verdict by the Strasbourg court.

    "We didn't sign any [compensation] agreements," said Gharibian. "They
    came and threw us out. Our case is now considered by the European
    court. That's why I don't care about that 10 percent."
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