Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ISTANBUL: Court decision on protocols a real test for Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ISTANBUL: Court decision on protocols a real test for Armenia

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 16 2010


    Court decision on protocols a real test for Armenia

    Armenia's Constitutional Court has ruled that protocols signed with
    Turkey on normalizing relations and establishing diplomatic ties
    between the two neighbors are constitutional, a move seen as a real
    test showing the Armenia government's determination to move forward
    with the protocols.

    The court issued its ruling on Tuesday, ending a dispute over whether
    the protocols equate to betraying Armenian statehood, as the
    opposition had claimed. Most of the opposition parties in Armenia
    based their claims on the assumption that the protocols are a `big
    compromise' with Turkey, which has yet to recognize the so-called
    Armenian `genocide.'

    The ruling means the protocols can now move on to the Armenian
    Parliament for ratification. According to Armenian law, every
    international treaty the Armenian government signs must follow the
    same process. Ratification of the protocols, however, comes with a
    prerequisite: Turkey must ratify them first.

    The protocols, designed to end decades of hostility between the two
    countries, were a real challenge to both nations. Turkey devoted a
    great deal of effort to assure a close ally, the oil and gas-rich
    Azerbaijan, that it will protect its interests throughout the process.
    Turkey imports gas and oil from Azerbaijan at prices considerably
    lower than the global average. Armenia, in contrast, was supported by
    its historic ally Russia and faced growing opposition from both the
    worldwide Armenian diaspora and local groups.

    Armenian Constitutional Court President Gagik Harutyunyan announced
    that the protocols `conform to the constitution of Armenia' amid
    protests from those present in the courtroom and those waiting
    outside. The opposition described the court decision as a `betrayal.'

    Speaking to Today's Zaman, Richard Giragosian, director of the
    Yerevan-based Armenian Center for National and International Studies,
    said the Armenian Constitutional Court's decision comes as no
    surprise. Noting that the protocols were widely expected to be
    approved by the court, he said the timing of the next stage of
    Armenian action on the protocols depends on Turkey. `The status of the
    protocols has now clearly been delayed and is now hostage to domestic
    Turkish politics. The fact that the fate of the protocols now depends
    on the course of domestic politics within Turkey also means that no
    one -- not the Americans, not the EU, not Russia nor even Armenia --
    can influence the outcome,' Giragosian said.

    Stressing the importance of the court's ruling, the director of
    Yerevan's leading think tank said the decision was a political hurdle
    and a test for the Armenian government, adding that it clearly showed
    that authorities in Yerevan are just as committed to the protocols as
    before. To support his argument, Giragosian said Armenian authorities
    could have, had they wanted to, used the court ruling as a graceful
    way to back out of the protocols.

    Evaluating the consequences of the ruling to Today's Zaman, Laurence
    Broers, the Caucasus projects manager of the London-based Conciliation
    Resources, said the ruling `was a development to be expected,'
    pointing to the determination of President Serzh Sarksyan to take his
    Turkey policy forward and the general subordination of the judiciary
    to the executive in Armenia. While noting that the opposition's
    arguments, with the expectation of continued isolation, do not offer a
    viable or desirable alternative, Broers described the situation as one
    where `a weak president is pushing through an internationally popular
    policy that is quite divisive at home. In this context I would expect
    those institutions more or less under presidential influence [the
    ruling party, the judiciary and governmental media] to support the
    policy.'

    Emphasizing the ruling's significance as a signal of the continued
    determination of the Sarksyan administration to take the policy
    forward, Broers said people in Armenia are aware that the alternative
    -- continued regional isolation, contested and unenforceable claims to
    territory and the continued politics of mutual suspicion and
    alienation with Turkey -- is not appealing.

    While ruling out any `political message to the world' that the
    decision may convey, Giragosian said it does demonstrate the contrast
    between the two sides, as Armenia stands quite ready and willing to
    fulfill the protocols while Turkey now seems to be stalling. In
    contrast, speaking about the message sent to the world by the court's
    decision, Broers said the political message to the Western world is
    that the Sarksyan administration has not lost its determination to
    take this forward. `So one message of this ruling is that this is
    Armenia's issue [and not that of the Armenian diaspora]. Armenian
    state structures will push it through. With regard to the diaspora,
    one certainly hopes that one day a structure for addressing their
    claims will be created -- but this can only happen in a context of
    transformed Turkish-Armenian relations,' Broers concluded.

    Noting that the ruling will not weaken the arguments of the
    opposition, Broers said only continued, visible and constructive
    engagement between the Turkish and Armenian governments and convincing
    arguments about the benefits of Turkish-Armenian rapprochement can
    weaken the opposition. Voicing a similar opinion, Giragosian said the
    decision `will most likely bolster efforts by the opposition Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation [ARF, Dashnaktsutiun] to introduce a new
    legislative initiative that would essentially prohibit Turkish and
    other foreign companies from purchasing land in Armenia's border
    regions.'



    16 January 2010, Saturday
    MAHIR ZEYNALOV BAKU

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X