Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Challenges Facing Armenia May Require New Solutions

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

  • Challenges Facing Armenia May Require New Solutions

    CHALLENGES FACING ARMENIA MAY REQUIRE NEW SOLUTIONS

    19:43 27.08.13

    Below is an interview with Davit Harutyunyan, Chairman of the Standing
    Committee on State and Legal Affairs, Parliament of Armenia.

    - Mr Harutyunyan, the 168 zham website, quoting its sources, has
    reported that constitutional amendments are planned. In an interview
    with the media outlet you said you saw the need for them. Are you
    informed of when the process is to be started?

    - When a relevant task group has been formed. I think the process
    will be started soon afterwards.

    - Is it expected to be under a presidential order?

    - Yes

    - Who are prospective members of the group? Ministers, the President
    of the Constitutional Court?

    - I cannot say. It is up to Armenia's president to decide.

    - You have said that a transition from the current semi-presidential
    system to parliamentary government is not on the agenda now. You
    mentioned amendments concerning democratic institutions and so on. Can
    you say that the amendments will not bring about any changes in the
    government system?

    - I only said that all the issues would be discussed.

    - I far as I remember, at parliamentary hearings, you objected to a
    switch-over to the proportional representation system and a switch-over
    from the semi-presidential system to parliamentary government. Do
    you still hold this stand?

    - Parliamentary government exists in dozens of forms. I objected to
    the form that was proposed and I still do.

    - The Armenian Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktsutyun (ARF-D) is one
    of the four political forces that were involved in the hearings. Lilit
    Galstyan, a member of the ARF-D parliamentary group, explains the
    amendments by "the elite's passions" - desire for reproduction. In his
    turn, Heritage party member Styopa Safaryan feels something "fishy"
    about it.

    - They are nothing but political statements which do not need comments.

    - Mr Harutyunyan, the concepts of parliamentary government,
    semi-presidential and presidential systems have supporters. Their
    argument is that Armenia is a blockaded country and has a frozen
    conflict. So it needs the institution of presidency.

    - I think any issue needs discussing. And present-day challenges
    facing Armenia may require new solutions.

    Armenian News - Tert.am

Working...
X