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ICG Published Report On Armenia

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  • ICG Published Report On Armenia

    ICG Published Report on Armenia

    Story from Lragir.am News:
    http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/politics26665.html
    Published: 20:46:47 - 25/06/2012

    The International Crisis Group Report Armenia: An Opportunity for
    Statesmanship

    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS

    After May's parliamentary elections, Armenia is preparing for a pivotal
    presidential vote in 2013 that will determine whether it has shed a
    nearly two-decade history of fraud-tainted elections and put in place
    a government with the legitimacy needed to implement comprehensive
    reform and resolve its problems with Azerbaijan.

    President Serzh Sargsyan has a brief opportunity to demonstrate
    statesmanship before he again faces the voters in what is likely to
    be a competitive contest. Sargsyan has demonstrated some courage to
    promote change, but like his predecessors, he has thus far failed
    to deal effectively with serious economic and governance problems,
    including the debilitating, albeit low-intensity, Nagorno-Karabakh
    war. Another election perceived as seriously flawed would serve as
    a further distraction from peace talks and severe economic problems.

    The likely consequences would then be ever more citizens opting out
    of democratic politics, including by emigration.

    The genuinely competitive parliamentary election had some positive
    signs. Media coverage during much of the campaign was more balanced,
    and free assembly, expression and movement were largely respected.

    The president's ruling Republican Party won a solid majority of seats,
    but its former coalition partner, Prosperous Armenia - associated
    with rich businessman and ex-president Robert Kocharyan - came in
    a strong second. The Armenian National Congress (ANC), led by the
    first post-independence president, Levon Ter-Petrossian, returned
    to parliament after a more than ten-year absence. Nevertheless,
    many old problems reappeared: abuse of administrative resources;
    inflated voters lists; vote-buying; lack of sufficient redress for
    election violations; and reports of multiple voting and pressure on
    some voters. Reforms adopted after the violence that left ten dead
    and 450 injured following the 2008 election that brought Sargsyan to
    power were spottily implemented.

    It is crucial that the February 2013 election in which Sargsyan will
    seek a second term, becomes "the cleanest elections in Armenian
    history", as the president had promised, not least because polls
    show very low trust in nearly all government bodies and institutions,
    including the presidency and parliament. The president initially took
    some bold steps, most noteworthy attempting to normalise relations
    with Turkey. A new class of under-40 technocrats, less influenced by
    Soviet ways of decision-making, has risen through the ranks and is
    widely seen as favouring a new style of government. But change has
    been slow. Political courage is needed to overhaul a deeply entrenched
    system in which big business and politics are intertwined in a manner
    that is often at least opaque. This manifests itself most vividly
    through the domination of much of the economy by a small group of
    rich businessmen with government connections.

    The political crisis after the 2008 post-election violence, as well
    as the 2009 world economic crisis, shook Armenia. Weak political will
    and the resistance of vested interests muted many of the long-overdue,
    if timid, reforms the administration started. The economy consequently
    remains undiversified, unhealthily reliant on remittances. Rates of
    emigration and seasonal migration abroad are alarmingly high. There
    have been few serious efforts to combat high-level corruption. The
    executive branch still enjoys overwhelming, virtually unchecked
    powers. The judicial system is perceived as neither independent nor
    competent: the prosecutor dominates procedures, and mechanisms to
    hold authorities accountable are largely ineffective.

    Media freedom is inadequate. Outright harassment of journalists and
    media outlets has decreased, but there is still a glaring lack of
    diversity in television, from which an overwhelming majority of
    Armenians get their information. No nationwide broadcasters are
    regarded as fully independent.

    Russia remains Armenia's key ally - both its main security
    guarantor and biggest trading and investment partner. Because of
    the war with Azerbaijan and frozen ties with Turkey, Yerevan has few
    realistic alternatives to Moscow, though it has frequently sought a
    "multi-vector" foreign policy and deeper ties with Euro-Atlantic
    partners. The EU and U.S. are trying to increase their influence,
    offering expertise and other aid to promote reforms, but they should
    do more to keep the government accountable and encourage the building
    of democratic institutions, especially if they want to be seen as
    credible, even-handed critics throughout the region with elections
    also due in Georgia and Azerbaijan in 2012-2013. Twenty years after
    the breakup of the Soviet Union, peaceful democratic transitions of
    power have yet to become the norm in the South Caucasus.

    President Sargsyan and his government acknowledge many of the most
    pressing problems, but numerous reforms exist only on paper or seem
    deliberately designed with ineffective enforcement mechanisms. The
    cautious, evolutionary approach to reforms provides at best weak
    stability. The breakup of the Republican-Prosperous Armenia governing
    coalition and a more competitive parliament may now provide the
    stimulus the administration needs. Limping towards change, however,
    would neither capitalise on Armenia's strengths nor be a good
    presidential campaign strategy. The country needs a better future
    than a stunted economy and dead-end conflicts with neighbours.

    RECOMMENDATIONS

    To further democratisation, economic growth and reform and make the
    government better prepared to engage in difficult discussions with
    Azerbaijan over resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

    To the Government of Armenia:

    1. Make deep governance and economic reforms a top priority to build
    public trust in state institutions.

    2.Address the shortcomings of the electoral process identified by
    the International Election Observation (IEO) mission; improve, in
    particular, voter lists and the complaints and appeals procedure;
    and investigate and penalise abuses of the elections process by
    state officials.

    3. Continue to make the fight against corruption a state priority
    by prosecuting officials involved in fraud.

    4.Pass a new Criminal Procedure Code that strengthens the
    independence of the judiciary, increases the role of the defence
    and decreases the prosecutor general's powers; and improve the
    effectiveness of the Administrative Court to hold officials
    accountable.

    5. Increase financial support for the office of the ombudsman,
    especially its activities in the regions.

    6.Establish civilian control and accountability of the police;
    tackle corruption in the force; and consider establishing a ministry
    to which the police would be subordinate.

    7. Redouble efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with
    Azerbaijan and maintain an open approach to resuming a dialogue
    with Turkey.

    To the U.S., EU and international organisations:

    8. Offer technical and financial assistance to help the government
    address voter registration problems, especially bloated voters lists,
    which undermine public trust in elections.

    9.Support aggressive judicial reform programs linked to the
    setting of benchmarks for implementation of the "strategic action
    plan 2012-2016" and passage of a new Criminal Procedure Code.

    10. Increase funding to non-state actors to support re-form; and
    hold the government accountable for any backsliding from progress
    achieved during the 2012 parliamentary vote regarding media access
    and freedom of assembly and expression.

    Yerevan/Tbilisi/Istanbul/Brussels, 25 June 2012

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