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Armenia: Yerevan Avoids Pace Punishment Yet Again

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  • Armenia: Yerevan Avoids Pace Punishment Yet Again

    ARMENIA: YEREVAN AVOIDS PACE PUNISHMENT YET AGAIN
    Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet
    Jan 28 2009
    NY

    The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe declined on
    January 27 to punish Armenia over Yerevan's failure to implement
    mandated reforms in the wake of 2008's political violence in the
    Armenian capital Yerevan.

    At stake in a January 27 PACE vote was the suspension of Armenia's
    voting rights in the European legislative body. By a 141-3 margin,
    deputies decided not to impose such a punishment on Yerevan. In so
    acting, PACE appeared to back away from implementing penalties outlined
    in two previous resolutions, both of which demanded that the Armenian
    government provide a full and transparent account of its actions during
    the 2008 political crisis. So far no such independent investigation has
    been conducted [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. PACE
    had also demanded that the government release what the European group
    portrayed as political prisoners being held in Yerevan.

    A third PACE resolution, adopted January 27, extended the
    organization's deadline for Armenia's compliance with democratization
    mandates until April. "It was important that Armenian colleagues
    understand that the Assembly sought to integrate Armenia into the
    community of values to which it had chosen to belong, and not simply
    to criticize," said PACE President LluÃ~C­s Maria de Puig.

    Last November, PACE's patience with Armenia's foot-dragging appeared
    near an end. Following a fact-finding tour late that month, Council
    of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights Thomas Hammarberg told
    EurasiaNet that Yerevan would be stripped of its voting rights unless
    it implemented required reforms by the late January deadline. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    In the weeks leading up to the January 27 PACE vote, Armenian President
    Serzh Sargsyan granted amnesty to at least a dozen individuals, and
    pardoned 16 others, all of whom had been jailed in connection with
    the February-March political violence in Yerevan. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Despite these moves, opposition
    leaders maintained that dozens of other individuals remain behind
    bars and should be counted as political prisoners.

    Pro-government lawmakers in Armenia applauded PACE's restraint. "The
    prospect of Armenia being deprived of its voting right seemed vague
    to me," parliament member Eduard Sharmazanov of the ruling Republican
    Party of Armenia told EurasiaNet. He went on to insist that Armenian
    leaders were committed to fulfilling the requirements outlined in
    PACE resolutions. "Authorities [in Yerevan] have the political will
    and they are taking steps," he said. "We have until April, but we
    realize we will be continuously implementing reforms."

    Vardan Khachatrian, a MP and member of the opposition Heritage Party,
    expressed doubt over whether the Armenian government would make the
    PACE-mandated changes by the new deadline. He suggested that PACE
    lacks leverage to enforce compliance on Yerevan, and Armenian leaders
    are keenly aware of this. "It was clear Armenia would not be deprived
    of its voting right, because Armenia and Azerbaijan have to stand on
    an equal position," Khachatrian said, referring to the ongoing peace
    process surrounding the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh territory.

    Yervand Bozoyan, an independent political analyst, expressed the
    belief that the government would at least take some steps to please
    PACE before the next deadline passes. "Authorities [in Yerevan} are
    not interested in straining the situation and will most likely take
    real steps by April," Bozoyan said. "If Armenia loses its voting
    right in April it will hurt the country's image significantly."

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
    in Yerevan.

    --Boundary_(ID_0r928zL9Jrubla4J7M1OyQ)--
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