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ICG: Armenia: Picking Up The Pieces

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  • ICG: Armenia: Picking Up The Pieces

    ARMENIA: PICKING UP THE PIECES

    International Crisis Group
    http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id =5385&l=1
    April 8 2008
    Belgium

    Armenia's flawed presidential election, the subsequent lethal crackdown
    against a peaceful protest rally, the introduction of a state of
    emergency and extensive arrests of opposition supporters have brought
    the country to its deepest crisis since the war against Azerbaijan
    over Nagorno-Karabakh ended in 1994. The situation deprives Serzh
    Sarkisian, scheduled to be inaugurated as president on 9 April 2008,
    of badly needed legitimacy and handicaps prospects for much needed
    democratic reform and resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    alike. Unless the U.S., EU and others with significant diplomatic
    leverage over the regime in Yerevan exert pressure, Armenia is
    unlikely to make progress on either. The Sarkisian administration
    must urgently seek credible dialogue with the opposition, release
    prisoners detained on political grounds, stop arrests and harassment
    of the opposition and lift all measures limiting freedom of assembly
    and expression. Unless steps are taken to address the political crisis,
    the U.S. and EU should suspend foreign aid and put on hold negotiations
    on further and closer cooperation.

    On 1 March 2008, police and security troops broke up a peaceful
    demonstration that had been going on continuously in Yerevan's Liberty
    Square to protest the announced official result of the 19 February
    presidential election. Clashes with demonstrators intensified later
    in the day, and the violence, involving firearms, arson and looting,
    left seven civilians and one police officer dead.

    More than 450 people were reportedly injured, including several dozen
    police and troops.

    Outgoing President Robert Kocharian reacted by declaring a sweeping
    twenty-day state of emergency, which suspended many basic civil
    rights and temporarily banned independent media reporting. The
    authorities used the claim that an attempt, involving a vague
    "international conspiracy", had been made to topple the government
    as justification for arresting over 100 opposition figures. Though
    the state of emergency was officially lifted on 21 March, President
    Kocharian signed a new law into effect four days earlier placing new
    controls on political manifestations.

    Sarkisian, prime minister since 2007, is Kocharian's hand-picked
    successor, but questions about his election and its violent aftermath
    will undermine his authority. The 19 February election was marred
    by serious irregularities, and the subsequent use of excessive force
    and wide arrests by the authorities has caused a deep rift in society.

    Unless opposition figures are freed, dialogue resumed and justice
    pursued, this division will deepen.

    Armenia's democracy has in most respects been in retreat for over a
    decade. Some constitutional and legal reforms have been undertaken,
    but they are mostly formalistic and the exception. The rule has been
    flawed elections, concentration of power in the hands of the executive,
    an army and security services which enjoy virtual impunity, a court
    system subservient to and manipulated by the government, and increased
    government censorship and control of key media outlets. Though the
    economy has performed relatively well and poverty has decreased,
    corruption and cronyism still seriously restrict sustainable,
    equitable growth.

    Armenia needs to address the electoral violence as well as more
    fundamental questions regarding the country's governance. If the
    incoming presidency takes the right course, the EU and U.S. need to
    help foster reconciliation and deeper institutional reform. Their
    reaction to the flawed election and lethal crackdown, however,
    has been inadequate. The international community needs to send a
    stronger message to ensure that Armenia remains a democratic state,
    with a functional opposition that does not live in fear, and where
    basic human rights, including the right to freedom of assembly and
    expression, are guaranteed.

    To avoid a crisis of legitimacy and the concomitant political
    instability, the Armenian authorities should:

    -release persons detained due to their political activity and cease
    arrests and threats against the opposition, including against the
    runner-up in the 19 February election, former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian; -authorise an independent investigation, with
    international participation, into the 1 March violence and follow
    through on the pledge to punish police officers who illegally used
    weapons against civilians; -revoke the amendments to the law on
    freedom of assembly adopted during the emergency rule and allow
    peaceful protests in locations where they will not cause a threat
    to public order; -lift remaining media restrictions and refrain
    from new restrictions on the media or access to the internet;
    -investigate claims of violence and attacks against political party
    vote monitors at polling stations and initiate criminal proceedings
    against perpetrators; and -pursue a credible dialogue process with
    the opposition in an effort to lower political tensions.

    To defuse tensions, the Armenian opposition should:

    -agree immediately and without preconditions to enter into dialogue
    with the government; -impress upon supporters that protests which aim
    to stir unrest, such as blockading government buildings and impeding
    the work of government ministries, will not be condoned; and -appeal
    the Constitutional Court's decision on the elections to the European
    Court of Human Rights and consider the same course with respect to
    other court decisions when all domestic remedies are exhausted.

    To facilitate a way out of the impasse, the EU and U.S. should:

    -encourage all major Armenian political forces to engage in direct
    negotiations to find ways to defuse tensions and speed reconciliation;
    and -deliver clear messages to the Sarkisian administration that
    business as usual will not be possible until serious steps are taken
    to reconcile the Armenian polity as well as to address the root causes
    of the current instability.

    If the government does not take credible steps to implement the
    measures recommended above and if arrests of opposition members
    continue:

    -the EU and U.S. should suspend foreign aid; -the Council of Europe
    should consider suspending Armenia's membership; and -the U.S., EU
    and EU member states should consider, especially if there is more
    violence, initiating a diplomatic embargo on visits by President
    Sarkisian and senior officials of the security services.
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