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PRAGUE: Czech Court Meets Armenian Asylum Holder's Claim Of Pension

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  • PRAGUE: Czech Court Meets Armenian Asylum Holder's Claim Of Pension

    CZECH COURT MEETS ARMENIAN ASYLUM HOLDER'S CLAIM OF PENSION

    Czech News Agency
    June 24, 2009 Wednesday
    Czech Rep.

    Brno, June 24 (CTK) - The Czech Constitutional Court (US) today
    complied with the complaint by Mnatsakan Pogosyan, an Armenian holder
    of Czech asylum, against the Czech authorities' refusal to grant
    him an old-age pension. The authorities then said the Czech Republic
    had terminated its agreement with Armenia on the recognition of the
    years for which the pensioner worked before retirement, which was
    signed by then Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union in 1959. However,
    Pogosyan's defence counsel said the Czech Republic failed to publish
    the agreement's termination properly. Pogosyan lives in Prague.

    In 2005 he asked the Czech Social Security Administration (CSSZ)
    to grant him an old-age pension on the basis of the agreement
    from 1959. The CSSZ rejected his request saying that the Czech
    Republic terminated the agreement with Armenia through a diplomatic
    note. The Prague Court and at the Supreme Administrative Court then
    rejected Pogosyan's complaint. In his constitutional complaint,
    his defence counsel said the state did not announce the termination
    of the agreement in the Law Digest. US deputy chairwoman Eliska
    Wagnerova supported the defendant's position. "The constitutional law
    unambiguously implies the [state's] duty to publish all changes in
    international agreements, including unilateral legal steps. The state
    and its Foreign Ministry made a mistake when they failed to publish the
    information about the diplomatic note's content," Wagnerova said. The
    courts have to deal with the case again. They are supposed to meet
    Pogosyan's claim. Wagnerova said Pogosyan's claim must be assessed in
    a way as if the Czech Republic had never terminated the agreement. The
    CSSZ is likely to recognise the years for which Pogosyan worked in
    Armenia while calculating his pension. Pogosyan, 77, was granted
    Czech asylum for humanitarian reasons several years ago. People such
    as those refusing to serve in the military and Jehova's Witnesses,
    reportedly face persecution in Armenia.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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