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Armenia's European Judge Controversy

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  • Armenia's European Judge Controversy

    ARMENIA'S EUROPEAN JUDGE CONTROVERSY

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #768
    Feb 25 2015

    President invalidates candidate selection amid allegations that
    process was flawed.

    25 Feb 15 By Lilit Arakelyan

    Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan has announced a rerun of the
    selection process for a judge to sit at the European Court of Human
    Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg.

    Sargsyan declared last year's shortlisting process null and void
    after the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE),
    which oversees the ECHR, deemed the choice of candidates from Armenia
    "impossible". PACE selects judges for the court from a shortlist
    of three submitted by member states, assesses their suitability,
    and picks one, who must be "of high moral character and possess the
    qualifications required for appointment to high judicial office, or
    jurisconsults of recognised competence". States are asked to ensure
    that one of the three candidates is a woman.

    In October 2014, the national selection process in Armenia came up
    with three names - former ombudsman Armen Harutyunyan, human rights
    activist and international law specialist Ara Ghazaryan, and Nelik
    Harutyunyan, who heads the international legal department in the
    prosecutor general's office.

    All three were due to travel to Strasbourg to be interviewed before
    the parliamentary assembly voted on them. They are now unhappy about
    the decision to hold the selection process all over again.

    According to an official statement from Armenia's justice ministry,
    a PACE working group stated in December that Nelik Harutyunyan did
    not meet the requirements in that she was not a lawyer of sufficient
    repute.

    Harutyunyan objected to the view that she was under-qualified.

    "It's interesting that during the last election of Armenian judges to
    the ECHR in 2007, in which I also ran, I came second in the voting by
    190 PACE delegates," she told IWPR. "Eight years ago I was considered
    sufficiently qualified. Eight years on, of course, my career has not
    gone backwards. It's entirely contradictory, and they need to give
    a serious reason for disqualifying me."

    Ghazaryan, who is deputy director of the law firm Arnie Consult,
    said the decision to re-run the selection process was a major
    inconvenience. He received an invitation from the foreign ministry
    to attend an interview in Strasbourg on January 16, and is annoyed
    that he has paid for an air ticket and visa for nothing.

    Civil society organisations in Armenia that acted as observers during
    the selection process said there were "serious reasons" to discredit
    it. They have questioned its fairness and transparency and said there
    were a number of procedural violations.

    "The identity of the candidates and the documents they submitted
    were kept secret from the public," Tigran Yegoryan, a lawyer for
    the Europe in Law Association told IWPR. "Just before the deadline,
    there were 11 applicants, but then the number increased to 14."

    Yegoryan's association says many of the candidates did not meet the
    standards set by PACE. It alleged that some had relatives on the
    Armenian selection commission. Two were disqualified without a reason
    being given.

    In October 2014, 26 human rights organisations, lawyers and others
    sent a letter to the selection commission highlighting flaws in the
    process, but they are far from satisfied with the response.

    As Sona Ayvazyan of Transparency International told IWPR, "Only the
    ministry of justice responded to our letter, but instead of a proper
    answer it came out with a contradictory statement that ignored our
    concerns, cited poor examples from international practice and just
    called on us to be happy with the way things were going."

    Yegoryan says it is right that the selection process should stand up
    to scrutiny. He argues that it is very important for Armenia to have
    a representative at the ECHR who genuinely meets the requirements
    and has been elected according to the rules.

    "Otherwise we will simply be excluded from the process of joining
    the developed world," he said. "Our reputation will be damaged and
    we will place at risk as well as the ECHR's authority."

    Lilit Arakelyan is a freelance journalist in Armenia.

    https://iwpr.net/global-voices/armenias-european-judge-controversy



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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