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Armenia For Sale: Opposition Says Government Acted Illegally In Sell

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  • Armenia For Sale: Opposition Says Government Acted Illegally In Sell

    ARMENIA FOR SALE: OPPOSITION SAYS GOVERNMENT ACTED ILLEGALLY IN SELLING OFF RESOURCES

    Politics | 26.03.14 | 15:02

    Photo: www.parliament.am

    By Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    The Armenian parliament has adopted by first hearing the bill on
    changes and amendments to the law On State Property Administration,
    qualified by the four oppositional factions as anti-constitutional.

    The opposition forces say the Government is attempting to make the
    sale of Vorotan Hydro Power Plant and ArmRosGasProm Company's remaining
    20 percent stock look legal.

    Last year a US-based Contour Global company purchased Vorotan complex
    of hydropower plants comprising of Spandaryan, Shamb and Tatev HPPs.

    This was the biggest American investment in Armenia. Oppositional
    Armenian National Congress (ANC) faction member Lyudmila Sargsyan
    says this sale is perceived as a "traditional kickback". ANC faction
    leader Levon Zurabyan believes the deal was made with violations of
    the law and without the parliament consent.

    The sale of ArmRosGasProm Company's remaining 20 percent stock that
    still belonged to the Armenian side and the company's handover to
    Russia is also seen by the opposition as an illegal deal, because
    it was state property and the Government did not have the parliament
    approval to sell.

    "The government has violated the law. And one more important
    circumstance - that 20 percent of stock was the property of all of
    us, hence the government had no right to administer that 20 percent
    as a payback for private company expenses," says ANC MP Aram Manukyan.

    The oppositional law-makers say the government has no issues or
    difficulties in terms of state property because it has an overwhelming
    majority in the parliament who vote for any property privatization
    list.

    Parliament speaker Hovik Abrahamyan says he will come back to the
    bill after the first hearing and, if necessary, public hearings will
    be held.

    On March 24, the parliament finished discussing the controversial
    bill, by which the National Assembly's approval for state property
    privatization would no longer be required. What this means is that
    after introducing the changes in the law the government, in effect,
    can quietly alienate entities of highest state importance, skipping
    public discussions, hence sparing itself from criticism.

    http://armenianow.com/news/politics/53025/armenia_hydropower_plant_contour_global_state_prop erty

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