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Armenia: Will Alternative Service Reform Keep Jehovah's Witnesses Ou

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  • Armenia: Will Alternative Service Reform Keep Jehovah's Witnesses Ou

    ARMENIA: WILL ALTERNATIVE SERVICE REFORM KEEP JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES OUT OF JAIL?

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    March 19 2013

    by Gayane Abrahamyan

    Amid ongoing tension with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh peace
    process, controversy is growing in Armenia about a proposal that
    would liberalize the terms of alternative service for religiously
    motivated conscientious objectors to the draft.

    Under Armenian law, all men between the ages of 18 and 27 are
    required to serve two years in the armed forces. Although Armenia
    has had a law on alternative service since 2004, its provisions have
    "not been applied in practice," asserted human rights activist Avetik
    Ishkhanian. Men who refuse for religious reasons to perform alternative
    service under the supervision of military personnel often have received
    prison terms.

    Members of the Jehovah's Witnesses - a Christian-oriented sect that
    espouses millennial beliefs and whose members shun military service -
    have been particularly affected: Over the past decade, 274 Jehovah's
    Witnesses have done jail time for failing to fulfill alternative
    service obligations, according to Ishkhanian. The Armenian government
    has long been under international pressure to scrap the practice of
    jailing conscientious objectors. In November 2012, the European Court
    of Human Rights ordered the Armenian government to pay 112,000 euros
    ($142,338) in damages to 19 Jehovah's Witnesses who were so treated.

    The Armenian parliament approved the alternative service amendments
    in their first reading on March 18 by a 103-1 vote. After the vote,
    MPs sent the amendments back to the government for some tweaking. No
    information was immediately available about what changes the MPs
    were seeking.

    The lone MP to vote against the amendments was Shushan Petrosian,
    a member of the governing Republican Party who is also a well-known
    singer. "This is an issue when I just can't agree with the government
    and with my party colleagues, " Petrosian said. "My belief is that
    every boy who has no health problem should serve in the Armenian army."

    Under the amendments in their present form, military personnel would
    no longer supervise work done as an alternative to military service,
    and the number of required months of alternative service would be
    reduced to 30 from 42. "We need this law because the one we have is
    not effective, and at this moment more than 80 people have preferred to
    go to prison and are now in penitentiaries, rather than do alternative
    service," Justice Minister Hrayr Tovmasian commented to EurasiaNet.org.

    For Jehovah's Witnesses spokesperson Tigran Harutyunian, the amendments
    offer a welcome break from the past, when believers had to opt
    for either a three-year prison term, or alternative service that
    "contradicted their religious beliefs" and involved "humiliating"
    working conditions. Alternative service currently includes street
    cleaning, as well as hospital maintenance and guard work, mostly in
    psychiatric hospitals. District military officers are required to
    supervise the work done at least once a day. "We are hoping now that
    there will, in fact, be an alternative," said Harutiunian.

    Not all members of the governing Republican Party of Armenia are
    content with the potential changes. Concerns persist, amid a rise
    in Karabakh ceasefire violations, that Armenia cannot afford to let
    able-bodied men to avoid military service. When Justice Minister
    Tovmasian submitted the amendments to parliament on February 27, MP
    Hayk Babukhanian complained that the amendments would give a "green
    light" to "sectarians" to effectively draft-dodge. Babukhanian and
    other Republican Party MPs predict that many young Armenian men will
    join religious groups specifically to avoid military service.

    "The growth of sect numbers in our country is already a matter of
    national security," Babukhanian told EurasiaNet.org. He claimed that
    "various research" shows that "300,000 to 350,000 Armenians today
    belong to some denominations.

    Human rights advocate Avetik Ishkhanian cited Babukhanian's comments on
    sects to point out "how intolerant our lawmakers are toward religious
    minorities." Armenia has no state religion, but the Armenian Apostolic
    Church is viewed as central to the country's historical identity.

    While some Republican Party MPs are clearly disgruntled, senior party
    leaders in parliament, such as Koryun Nahapetian, chair of the Standing
    Committee on National Security and Internal Affairs, are strongly
    supportive. "These legislative changes and amendments of some other
    related laws will guarantee that the law [on alternative service]
    truly serves its purpose," Nahapetian said. "After all, the right
    to freedom of religion and conscience is first of all established in
    the Constitution of Armenia, and it is our duty to protect it."

    Some human rights activists believe that the government is less
    interested in defending civil rights than it is in avoiding additional
    negative rulings by international courts. "The government is not
    worried about protecting the rights of religious minorities, but
    is seriously concerned about the cases it has been losing," said
    Mikael Danielian, chairperson of the Helsinki Association, a human
    rights watchdog.

    Independent MP Edmon Marukian, who, as a human rights activist in
    2003, took part in discussions about the alternative-service law,
    contends that the government has only itself to blame for the costs
    incurred. "It was clear right from the beginning that ... people
    will refuse to serve on religious grounds, and, rather than creating
    favorable conditions to use their potential somewhere else, the
    state has convicted them, used taxpayers' money to keep them in
    penitentiaries, and is now paying 100,000 euros in compensation for
    illegal imprisonment," Marukian said.

    The parliamentary debate over the amendments is continuing, but
    Marukian feels certain they will be adopted. "After all, it's a
    government project, and [the Republicans] make up the government,
    so they won't go against it."

    Editor's note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a reporter for ArmeniaNow.com
    in Yerevan.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66709

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