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Freedom House: Report Notes No Progress In Armenia In Terms Of Polit

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  • Freedom House: Report Notes No Progress In Armenia In Terms Of Polit

    FREEDOM HOUSE: REPORT NOTES NO PROGRESS IN ARMENIA IN TERMS OF POLITICAL FREEDOM
    By Gayane Abrahamyan

    ArmeniaNow
    20.01.12 | 15:12

    Once again Armenia has been included on the list of 'partially free'
    countries in the Freedom House Annual Report 2012, published on
    Thursday, however, Nagorno-Karabakh, as last year, has registered
    regress, being defined as a 'non-free' territory, instead of the
    previous 'partially free'.

    Author of 'Freedom in the World 2012: The Arab Uprisings and Their
    Global Repercussions' report Arch Puddington says that in 2011 "the
    political uprisings that swept across the Arab world over the past year
    represent the most significant challenge to authoritarian rule since
    the collapse of Soviet communism. Whereas many countries, Armenia among
    them, have registered no progress, ending up in the stagnation phase."

    According to the methodology of the report, a 'partly free' country is
    one in which there is limited respect for political rights and civil
    liberties. Partly Free states frequently suffer from an environment
    of corruption, weak rule of law and a political landscape in which
    a single party enjoys dominance despite a certain degree of pluralism.

    The authors of the report have registered deteriorating tendencies
    particularly in Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    The report states that serious regress has been registered in
    Azerbaijan which is considered to have "the region's most repressive
    regime."

    "In Azerbaijan, the government of President Ilham Aliyev used force
    to break up demonstrations, jailed opposition activists, tried to
    neutralize the international press, and misused state power to evict
    citizens from their homes as part of grandiose building schemes,"
    the report reads.

    "The developments are worrying" in neighboring Turkey, too. The authors
    of the report state that Recep Tayyip Erdogan started his office with
    serious reforms, however, a number of arrests on the Ergenekon case
    within the recent one year "caused serious concerns."

    Generally the report singled out 48 authoritarian states, which makes
    24 percent of the world's states, and more than 35 percent of the
    world's population lives under such regimes.

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