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Armenia Faces European Sanction

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  • Armenia Faces European Sanction

    ARMENIA FACES EUROPEAN SANCTION
    By Naira Melkumian

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    http://www.iwpr.net/?p=crs&s=f&o =349389&apc_state=henh
    Jan 22 2009
    UK

    The country could lose its vote in PACE for refusing to conform to
    European rights body's resolutions.

    A Europe-wide human rights body may suspend Armenian delegates
    from voting next week in protest against the South Caucasus state's
    continued failure to implement its demands, including the release of
    opposition activists.

    The move by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe,
    PACE, would be a humiliation for Armenia, and would severely damage
    its international reputation.

    A PACE committee recommended last month that Armenia lose its voice
    at the meeting if progress had not been made to conform to PACE's
    resolutions, and a visit last week by two officials is appears unlikely
    to have changed its mind.

    "It's no accident that the monitoring committee adopted the draft
    resolution. As a rule, such drafts are adopted at the plenary
    session. There would have to be a miracle for it not to be adopted,"
    said Zaruhi Postandjian, a deputy in the Armenian parliament form
    the opposition Zharangutian (Heritage) party.

    The PACE investigation stems from the suppression of opposition
    protests, which followed February presidential elections. Ten people
    died in the protests, and as yet no one has been charged for their
    murders.

    The presidential polls themselves were described by international
    observers from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation
    in European as having been "mostly in line with the country's
    international commitments", but candidates including Levon
    Ter-Petrossian - the country's first post-independence president -
    said Serzh Sargsian had stolen the election.

    Two weeks of mass protests by supporters of Ter-Petrossian and other
    candidates followed, but they were crushed on March 1, with the
    government declaring a state of emergency and banning independent
    news coverage.

    In two successive resolutions - number 1609 in April and number 1620
    in June - PACE demanded that Armenia guarantee citizens' rights to
    protest; allow an unbiased investigation into the deaths; and that
    it free activists "seemingly detained on artificial and politically
    motivated charges".

    But three parliamentary deputies and ex-foreign minister Alexander
    Arzumanian are among seven people still in detention charged with
    organising the mass protests, and attempting a coup, making it likely
    that PACE will exclude Armenia from its ranks

    "If this decision is taken, then it will affect Armenia in a negative
    way, because such things affect the country's rating, including
    its attractiveness for investors," said analyst Alik Iskandarian,
    director of the Caucasus Institute.

    The court case against the detained opposition leaders has been already
    adjourned five times, because the defendants were not sufficiently
    respectful to the court. A hearing on January 16 lasted just a few
    minutes before the judge rescheduled it for January 30 because the
    defendants had not stood up when he came in.

    Few Armenians doubt that the court is acting to keep the opposition
    activists behind bars as long as possible.

    "Maybe this has a legal base, but this is really a political process
    just with a legal form. I think PACE's decision could either speed
    up or prolong this process," said Andranik Tevanian, the head of the
    Politekonomia think tank.

    John Prescott and Georges Colombier, co-rapporteurs for PACE, visited
    Armenia last week to check the country's progress. They held meetings
    at the highest level, including with Present Sargsian, who promised
    them Armenia was determined to follow PACE's recommendations.

    They also met General Prosecutor Aghvan Ovsepian, who told them that
    the detained opposition activists had aimed to seize power.

    "They played a key role in the organisation of the disturbances,
    in the course of which several dozen cars and shops were burned and
    looted, while hundreds of people were hurt in different ways and ten
    people died," he told them, according to a press release.

    But the prospect of the country losing its right to vote at PACE
    has caused splits among the parliamentary deputies of the governing
    coalition, not all of whom are as forthright as the prosecutor.

    Eduard Sharmazanov, secretary of the Republican Party of Armenia,
    said Armenia was only harming itself if it did not go along with
    PACE's resolutions.

    "It is a fact that much of what is in resolutions 1609 and 1620 is
    unacceptable to us, but we must recognise that no one is forcing us
    into European structures, it is our choice. No one is more interested
    than us in solving problems within the country," he said.

    But despite such doubts, the opposition leaders were unconvinced that
    pressure from PACE would help free their detained colleagues.

    "There can be no doubt that there are political prisoners in the
    country. These defendants are political prisoners," said Arman
    Musinian, spokesman for Ter-Petrossian.

    He said that the prisoners were being abused in prison, with
    investigators trying to force them to sign confessions.

    "From this we can conclude that the PACE resolutions will remain
    unfulfilled, and the situation in the country will just get worse. The
    government has exhausted its resources and it has nothing to show
    PACE," he said.
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