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Why Hairapetyan Resigned

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  • Why Hairapetyan Resigned

    Why Hairapetyan Resigned


    Naira Hayrumyan

    Story from Lragir.am News:
    http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments26753.html

    Published: 11:31:30 - 04/07/2012


    Yesterday evening MP Ruben Hairapetyan noted that those guilty for
    Harsnakar tragedy will be punished by law. `But it is not even a
    matter of law,' continued Ruben Hairapetyan, shifting the question to
    the moral field.

    In fact, the problem is the law. Merely, our half-criminal community
    thinks law is the Criminal Code. Many think that law is crime and
    punishment.

    In the meantime, there is a general law that is the Constitution which
    defines all the general principles of social life, duties and rights,
    including the right to government. The Constitution runs clearly that
    people engaged in business cannot be elected Member of Parliament and
    occupy state positions.

    Violations of the Constitution and anti-national policy are not
    considered a violation because the Criminal Code does not prescribe
    punishment for failure of economy, falsification of elections unless
    they influence the final return of elections, obviously criminal
    businessmen in parliament, disinformation on television.

    These matters, though they are more legal than murder and theft, are
    usually considered in the moral domain. For example, to find out the
    income of members of parliament and their compliance with the law the
    Commission of Ethics has been established, apparently, to make an
    `ethics' authority rather than legal, in order to consider a violation
    of the Constitution not as a crime but a breach of ethical standards.

    In this sense, Ruben Hairapetyan's resignation means respect for law,
    the Constitution which bans people like him from parliament.
    Apparently, Serzh Sargsyan warned him that in case he does not resign,
    the Commission on Ethics will consider his issue.

    Vice-chairman of this commission was Nikol Pashinyan but he resigned
    yesterday though he stated that he will remain a member of the
    commission. We think the first case the commission needs to deal with
    is to enlarge its powers vesting it with not only `ethical' but also
    legal functions, up to the right to appeal to the Constitutional
    Court.

    Perhaps, it is up to this commission to free the Armenian parliament
    of oligarchs and criminals. The first step has already been made. One
    of the most odious oligarchs has been removed from the parliament, he
    is crushed and scared. The situation of the rest is no better.

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