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EU Likely To Stay Cautious On Political Reform In Armenia

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  • EU Likely To Stay Cautious On Political Reform In Armenia

    EU LIKELY TO STAY CAUTIOUS ON POLITICAL REFORM IN ARMENIA
    Emil Danielyan

    http://www.armenialiberty.org/content/a rticle/2049408.html
    21.05.2010

    When the European Union formally launched the Eastern Partnership
    program one year ago it signaled a significant upgrading of its
    political and economic engagement in six former Soviet republics
    covered by the scheme. It also fuelled hopes for a more aggressive
    EU push for democratic change there.

    Yet all the indications now are that in at least one of them, Armenia,
    the bloc will continue to tread carefully in pressing for democratic
    elections, respect for human rights and other political reforms
    required by the Eastern Partnership. Accordingly, local civic groups,
    which believe EU involvement in democracy building in the country
    has been insufficient, are cautious in their positive expectations
    from the program.

    "It will reflect positively on democratic changes in Armenia only in
    one case: if the European structures put forward very serious demands
    before our authorities," said Amalia Kostanian, chairwoman of the
    Anti-Corruption Center, the Armenian affiliate of the Berlin-based
    group Transparency International. "So far, we have seen only
    declarative demands."

    Boris Navasardian, the chairman of the Yerevan Press Club closely
    monitoring the effort, is more optimistic. "I believe that any
    initiative coming from our European partners is an opportunity for the
    country," he told RFE/RL's Armenian service. "Just how the country
    and its government structures, political parties and NGOs will use
    that opportunity is a different matter."

    In Navasardian's words, a lot will also depend on details of an
    "association agreement" stemming from the Eastern Partnership which
    the EU is due to negotiate with Armenia in the coming years. "Only the
    results of the negotiations will clarify what the program's priorities
    are," he said.

    EU member governments gave on May 10 the formal go-ahead to the start
    of association talks with Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. According
    to Raul de Luzenberger, head of the EU Delegation in Yerevan, the
    talks between the EU's executive European Commission and the Armenian
    government will get underway "in the coming months."

    Armenia - Serzh Sarkisian, President of Armenia, and Angela Merkel,
    Chancellor of Germany, at the EU Eastern Partnership Summit,
    Prague,07May2009

    "It depends very much on Armenia how quickly it will be possible to
    conclude an association agreement," Luzenberger said in an interview
    with RFE/RL. "We are working with Armenia to speed this up."

    As part of those talks, the two sides are to work out a "comprehensive
    institution building" program, or CIB, which will apparently be the
    main legal instrument of the Eastern Partnership. "It will focus
    on a few selected institutions that will have a central role in the
    implementation of the Association Agreement," the European Commission
    explained in a recent policy paper on Armenia. The Brussels-based
    commission said it will spend at least 32 million euros ($40 million)
    on reforming those institutions in the next four years.

    Luzenberger described a free trade regime and a facilitation of visa
    procedures for Armenians traveling to the EU as "the two main pillars"
    of the future agreement. Therefore, he said, only those Armenian
    government agencies that mainly deal with immigration, trade and
    other economic issues will be chosen for the CIB.

    "The Association Agreement does not specifically cover electoral reform
    or judicial reform," stressed the EU official. "But the rule of law and
    respect for democracy and human rights are an important element of the
    common values that are the fundamental of an association agreement."

    The EU's new National Indicative Program on Armenia, which sets out the
    bloc's reform efforts and objectives there in 2011-2013, likewise makes
    clear that "sufficient progress" in the country's democratization is
    "one of the main preconditions for upgrading contractual relations
    under the Eastern Partnership." That means, among other things, an
    "improved quality of the electoral process and administration in line
    with international standards."

    It is unclear whether that also means the next Armenian presidential
    and parliamentary elections must be evaluated by Western monitors
    more positively than the last ones. Luzenberger said only that the
    EU is "encouraging Armenia to make progress in improving and better
    implementing the electoral law." He said the EU has provided technical
    assistance for that purpose in other countries. It has primarily take
    the form of training of election officials, monitors and proxies of
    election contenders.

    Armenian opposition groups and civil society representatives believe
    that a similar training program in Armenia would not address the root
    causes of the country's increasingly entrenched culture of electoral
    fraud. As Kostanian put it, "Even assuming that members of an election
    commission know electoral legislation perfectly, if they get an order
    from above to turn a blind eye to fraud or stuff ballots or bully
    observers, proxies or journalists, they will duly comply."

    What the EU considers a democratic election is another question. The
    bloc, for example, endorsed OSCE observers' largely positive verdict
    on the disputed Armenian presidential ballot of February 2008, which
    was followed by the worst street violence in the country's history. By
    contrast, the U.S. State Department branded the vote as "significantly
    flawed," giving more weight to opposition allegations of massive vote
    rigging. There is similar disparity between the EU and U.S.

    assessments of the May 2009 municipal polls in Yerevan, which were
    also denounced as fraudulent by the Armenian opposition.

    Armenia -- Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos of Spain, current
    holder of EU presidency, comments on the Eastern Partnership at a
    news conference in Yerevan on March 2, 2010.

    U.S. officials have also been more vocal (at least in public) in
    criticizing the Armenian government's 2008 post-election crackdown
    on the opposition that involved use of deadly force and mass arrests.

    European diplomats insist privately that the EU has been no less active
    in conveying its concerns to President Serzh Sarkisian behind the
    scenes. They also argue that the 27-nation bloc has lent full support
    to another pan-European structure, the Council of Europe, which has
    brought the Sarkisian administration to task over the crackdown.

    Even so, the dominant sense among local opposition and civic groups
    is that EU pressure on the Armenian authorities has so far been
    too weak to generate any meaningful democratic change. They regard
    as practically fruitless Armenia's participation in the European
    Neighborhood Policy (ENP), another, less ambitious EU scheme launched
    five years ago. In a recent assessment report, the European Commission
    said Yerevan has made "progress in several areas" of an ENP action
    plan aimed at bringing the country's political and economic systems
    into greater conformity with European standards.

    Kostanian is "quite disappointed" with this conclusion. Reflecting a
    common view among local pro-democracy campaigners, she claimed that
    Armenia has in fact regressed in terms of democracy and human rights
    in recent years. She argued in particular that more a dozen supporters
    of opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian arrested following the 2008
    election on dubious charges still remain in prison.

    "One of the most important flaws of the ENP is that it has been too
    much focused on institutional or formal reforms such as the adoption
    of laws, [structural] improvements in the activities of various
    state structures," said the YPC's Navasardian. "While that process
    is certainly very important, it doesn't solve the problem in full."

    "If citizens see no serious changes in their relationships with state
    institutions and their lives in general, if they don't see that
    corruption, bureaucratic red are declining, that their rights are
    better protected, then those formal changes become not only meaningless
    but could also be harmful in the sense that they discredit the very
    idea of reforms," he warned.

    The EU seems to realize this, having decided to somehow involve civil
    societies in all six ex-Soviet states in the Eastern Partnership. In
    each of them, it is now helping to cobble together coalitions of NGOs
    interested in promoting the program and monitoring their respective
    governments' compliance with its requirements.

    Navasardian, who coordinates the NGO selection process in Armenia,
    hopes that this will give EU officials a vital feedback which he thinks
    has been sorely missing in their reform initiatives. Yet neither the
    YPC chairman, nor other pro-democracy activists are convinced yet
    that EU pressure for democratization in Armenia will grow markedly
    as a result of the Eastern Partnership.

    Ambassador Luzenberger also sounded a cautious note. "We are here to
    support reforms that bring Armenia closer to the values that are the
    fundamental part of our society, and we do it through a very broad
    range of instruments," he said. "Nonetheless, our ability to support
    is limited, first of all, by our budget possibilities and then by the
    ability of the beneficiaries to receive our support and implement it."
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