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  • Free By The Grace Of Sargsyan

    FREE BY THE GRACE OF SARGSYAN
    by Arpi Harutyunyan

    Transitions Online
    http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLa nguage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=332&N rSection=1&NrArticle=20737
    July 30 2009
    Czech Republic

    Armenian analysts and politicians disagree on the motivation and
    possible consequences of the presidential amnesty.

    YEREVAN | The amnesty extended to most of the Armenian oppositionists
    jailed for taking part in violent anti-government demonstrations
    18 months ago was a gesture of good will and a call to dialogue by
    President Serzh Sargsyan. That is the view of the ruling Republican
    Party and most other parliamentary parties. Opponents outside
    parliament, headed by former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, claim
    the authorities' cognizance of the illegality of sending opposition
    supporters to jail pushed Sargsyan to free them, with a nudge from
    the gadfly Council of Europe.

    Sargsyan appears to have smoothed the often ragged relations with the
    Council of Europe, the continent's largest human rights monitoring and
    enforcement body. But his political opponents have not been mollified
    by the amnesty, which they say was a sham because those imprisoned
    had committed no crimes.

    The president in military dress and thoughtful mood. Photo: Armenian
    Presidency

    This spring, more than a year after 10 people died in protests against
    the election of Sargsyan and more than 100 opposition supporters were
    jailed, signs of a thaw began to emerge.

    During celebrations of First Republic Day on 28 May, the president
    said he was ready to appeal to the parliament with an amnesty request
    if asked to do so by political forces and civil society.

    Some observers had predicted such a move, among them political analyst
    Alexander Iskandaryan, who directs the Caucasus Institute think tank.

    "I believe the authorities should not see them as a threat anymore," he
    said after the amnesty was announced, referring to the oppositionists
    jailed after the violence of 1-2 March 2008. "It's a step that will
    relieve the domestic tensions created after the 1 March events."

    The government had come under strong pressure from the Council of
    Europe. Co-rapporteurs on Armenia for the Parliamentary Assembly of
    the Council of Europe, John Prescott and George Colombier held more
    than a dozen meetings with Armenian officials, and Armenia was warned
    it could be stripped of its right to vote in the assembly. After
    PACE passed three resolutions urging Armenian authorities to release
    all political prisoners, the government amended two articles of the
    criminal code, on usurpation of power and organizing mass disorder,
    under which several of the accused had been charged.

    Early in May, Colombier and Prescott expressed satisfaction over the
    changes to the criminal code but repeated PACE's urging to release
    all the jailed protesters who had not been convicted of violent crimes.

    At that point the government had little alternative, political
    scientist Abraham Gasparyan says, and its only option was to make
    a move that would satisfy both the public and the international
    community.

    "Armenia's foreign policies have a European vector, and it could not
    ignore a Council of Europe demand like that," he said.

    PROTESTS SPARKED MASS ARRESTS

    On 19 June a special session of the National Assembly approved
    Sargsyan's request for a general amnesty by a vote of 98 to 1, with
    three abstentions.

    Even though more than 2,000 prisoners were eligible to be amnestied,
    the focus of public attention fell on the 110 or so arrested during
    the March 2008 protests and on several prominent opposition figures
    who had not been charged but were under official suspicion of helping
    foment unrest. By late July nearly 700 prisoners had been freed.

    The jailed opposition figures included former high officials and
    current parliamentarians who had appeared in court charged with
    instigating, organizing, and leading the protests that got out of
    control on 1-2 March 2008, two weeks after a disputed presidential
    election.

    After losing that election to Sargsyan, Ter-Petrosian contested the
    legitimacy of the result and asked his supporters to launch a series
    of rallies and sit-ins demanding Sargsyan's impeachment. Early in the
    morning of 1 March, saying the opposition's 11 daylong sit-ins were
    unsanctioned and claiming to have information that some protesters
    were concealing weapons in preparation for a coup, police dispersed
    the crowds on the capital's Liberty Square.

    The opposition supporters moved to another square where they erected
    barricades and then, authorities say, assaulted police. The resulting
    street fighting left 10 dead, including two soldiers. A series of
    arrests followed the clashes; more than 110 people were charged with
    owning unauthorized weapons, as well as instigating, organizing,
    and leading mass disorders. The opposition viewed the arrests of its
    activists as political persecution and insisted its jailed supporters
    were political prisoners.

    The most prominent prisoners included parliamentarians Myasnik
    Malkhasyan and Hakob Hakobyan, former Foreign Minister Alexander
    Arzumanyan, and the former head of the interior ministry's security
    service, Suren Sirunyan, all of whom received jail terms of four to
    five years.

    The amnesty also applies to those were charged over the 2008 violence
    but never brought to trial, if they report to authorities by 31
    July. One prominent protest leader who did so, newspaper editor Nikol
    Pashinyan, however, was arrested after he emerged from hiding and
    reported to a police station on 1 July.

    The amnesty did not concern the cases of 17 imprisoned politicians
    whose sentences exceeded five years, including Sasun Mikayelyan,
    who was sentenced to eight years in prison for possession of an
    unauthorized weapon.

    The amnesty also set free prisoners age 60 and older, juveniles
    who committed crimes before the age of 18, and those charged with
    election fraud.

    Most Armenian political forces, including the parliamentary and some
    non-parliamentary parties, welcomed Sargsyan's move as a significant
    step toward the building of democratic institutions and discovering
    the truth about the post-election protests.

    HUMANITARIAN GESTURE OR SURVIVAL GAMBIT?

    Where analysts and politicians disagree is on the question of
    Sargsyan's motivation for freeing the opposition protesters at
    this time.

    Rafik Petrosyan, a prominent member of the ruling Republican Party of
    Armenia, said there was certainly "some connection between the PACE
    demands and the pardon. ... We are a member of the Council of Europe
    and need to keep to its rules, whether we wish to or not, or we can
    leave. PACE demanded an amnesty specifying that it concern only the
    dissidents [those detained for political views], while keeping in
    prison persons who committed offenses under criminal law. The state
    then took its step, choosing something in the middle," Petrosyan said.

    Petrosyan's colleague, Republican Party spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov,
    however, said on 24 June that "the amnesty was granted for our country,
    not the European structures."

    "I share my colleagues' views that the page has not been completely
    turned on the 1 March events by the amnesty, but I'd like to add
    that the country has avoided crisis during the year and a half
    following the events, and there are no grounds for political tensions
    [now]. That the opposition plans new rallies is its right, I believe,
    and it is clear already the [opposition] Armenian National Congress
    is preparing for 2012 parliamentary elections."

    Political analyst Gasparyan argues that Sargsyan finally acted to ease
    a multitude of burdens that had descended on his shoulders since his
    disputed election.

    "Despite the number of reforms initiated by President Sargsyan to
    improve the efficiency of the political system over the last year
    and a half, the period of his rule so far has been full of dramatic
    social developments, including the 1 March events, the negative
    response of the international community, the economic crisis, the
    unfair elections. A humanitarian move of the kind was therefore a
    necessity to ease public tension amid all those calamities, above all
    for the sake of keeping power in [his own] hands," the analyst said.

    Opposition groups viewed the authorities' handling of the imprisoned
    demonstrators in a more critical light. The extra-parliamentary
    parties crowed at scoring their biggest victory over the regime. Levon
    Zurabyan, coordinator of Ter-Petrosian's Armenian National Congress,
    stated on 20 June that there was nothing to forgive or pardon the
    released prisoners for because they had committed no crimes.

    "We believe the authorities are not aiming to create an atmosphere of
    national reconciliation or even to ease the political atmosphere. In
    fact, semi-measures like this will only intensify the confrontation,"
    Zurabyan said.

    "The charges against us were not proved in court. This was a show
    that lasted a year, with false witnesses and fabricated evidence. This
    so-called amnesty is not comprehensive and many of our friends are in
    jail, so we will go on struggling!" former Foreign Minister Arzumanyan,
    one of the major organizers of the post-election protests, stated
    after his release.

    Armenian Foreign Ministry photo of Alexander Arzumanyan, who
    served as minister from 1996 to 1998 during the presidency of Levon
    Ter-Petrosian. Arzumanyan was jailed for his part in the March 2008
    anti-government protests and released under the June amnesty law.

    Responding to opposition accusations of the illegality of the
    detentions and trials, Sharmazanov of the Republican Party claimed
    that "the 1 March events were prepared well ahead. The facts brought
    out in court proved that some of the defendants kept large amounts
    of explosives and weapons in their homes in preparation for a coup
    d'état. Who, if not the person making a coup attempt, should stand
    responsible?"

    On 17 May a court heard a tape of a phone call prosecutors said was
    recorded on 1 March 2008 in which Arzumanyan allegedly urged other
    opposition activists to continue the disorderly protests.

    Most of those charged over the March 2008 violence are now
    free. Meanwhile, the extra-parliamentary opposition continues to demand
    Sargsyan's impeachment and to reject any possibility of dialogue
    with the authorities; this position was reiterated by Ter-Petrosian
    on 2 July, countering officials' claim that the amnesty had created
    a forum for dialogue.

    Karapet Rubinyan of the Armenian National Congress, a member of
    parliament during Ter-Petrosian's years in office (1991-1998) said,
    "The authorities should not expect those released to be grateful to
    them. On the contrary, those who were arrested and charged in regard
    to the 1 March events will sue them after their release."

    No such lawsuits have been filed against authorities.

    The ANC, though, believes the amnesty was, as coordinator Zurabyan
    put it, "a serious victory over the incumbent regime that came after
    a year and a half of consistent struggle and the pressure imposed by
    the Council of Europe," rather than a manifestation of the authorities'
    political will.

    Political analyst Gasparyan sees the amnesty if anything as a boost to
    Sargsyan. The doubts of the non-parliamentary opposition, Ter-Petrosian
    in particular, that the authorities would have the will to go through
    with an amnesty proved wrong, he said.

    The government's recent decisions paid off, Gasparyan said, when at
    its summer session PACE welcomed the amnesty and the changes to the
    criminal code. The assembly's resolution also repeated its calls
    for an unbiased investigation of the 2008 unrest and for Armenian
    authorities to respect the principle of freedom of assembly, and, amid
    allegations of irregularities during the Yerevan municipal election
    in May, urged the government to make cleaner elections a priority.

    Arpi Harutyunyan is a reporter for the non-commercial news site
    ArmeniaNow.com.
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