Armenia Pursues “Astronomical” Fines for Defamation


May 1 2021

Warnings that new legislation will have a chilling effect on independent media.

Saturday, 1 May, 2021

Mania Israyelyan

Concerns continue to grow in Armenia over a draft defamation law referred to the constitutional court after the country’s president refused to sign the “extremely problematic” legislation.

The draft law, which would triple the penalties for insult and defamation, was adopted by parliament on March 24. It increases the fine for insult from one million drams (1,800 US dollars) to three million drams (5,600 dollars) and for insult from two million drams (3,700 dollars to six million drams (11,200 dollars).

The Journalist’s Union of Armenia immediately condemned the move as directed against freedom of speech and the press.

“Such astronomical fines for insult and slander…will be an immediate blow for the media, which already struggles to exist,” the organisation said in a statement.

The draft law was referred to President Armen Sarkissian to sign, but following discussions with a number of journalistic organisations, he decided to instead refer the decision to the Constitutional Court.

“The law is extremely problematic from the constitutional point of view,” a statement from his office read.

The author of the initiative, national assembly deputy speaker Alen Simonyan said that the law was aimed at offensive websites and social media groups, arguing that this was not a freedom of speech issue.

“Media that engages in obscenity or slander is criminal,” he said.

However Boris Navasardyan, president of the Yerevan Press Club, said that the independent media were united in their opposition to the draft law.

“This is an unjustified legislative initiative fraught with negative consequences,” he said.

Aregnaz Manukyan, editor-in-chief of 7or.am, said that the authorities were already attempting to muffle the media and distort public discourse. She said this had been clearly manifested during the 2020 Karabakh war when the government “fed society with lies and victory euphoria”.

“Those journalists who tried to alert the public to the inevitable and deliberate defeat were silenced,” she continued, adding that she herself had been detained by police during the war over a Facebook post.

If passed, Manukyan continued, the law would be selectively applied, with government supporters able to “say and do everything and remain exempt from punishment”.

Sevak Hakobyan, chief editor of the Yerevan.Today news and analytical website, also said that his organisation had already felt the effects of intimidation by the authorities․

“Our website has been searched, our equipment has been confiscated, pro-government figures have repeatedly sued us, we have been deprived of the opportunity of proper coverage in the parliament, the police have fined us 11 times,” he said.

International organisations have already drawn attention to Armenia’s increasingly fraught relationship with the media.

“There is concern about the volume of judicial proceedings against journalists and about excesses in the fight against fake news,” read the most recent report from Reporters Without Borders. “The involvement of the security services in combatting disinformation and attempts to legislate without prior discussion with civil society and journalists are alarming.”

Shushan Doydoyan, the president of the Information Freedom Centre, said that the law would have a chilling effect on independent media, which would be too intimidated to risk publishing material that might risk such heavy fines.

Doydoyan said that the current maximum penalty for such misdemeanors was rarely applied, further undermining the need for increased fines.  

“In ninety per cent of cases the court reduced the amount of compensation several times,” he said. “It is necessary to look at the practice, statistics, experience. No such analysis underlies the initiative.”

Doydoyan said that the proposed penalty was particularly disproportionate, considering that criminal offences such as extortion, possession of drugs and distribution of pornography carried far smaller penalties.

“The compensation does not correspond to the measures enshrined in our legislation,” she concluded.

Slander and insult in Armenia were decriminalised in 2010 and are now civil offences.

IWPR contacted lawmakers from the committee on state and legal affairs, the body that initially approved the bill, but none responded.

Artsakh records 3 new cases of COVID-19 over past day

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 11:55,

STEPANAKERT, APRIL 29, ARMENPRESS. 3 new cases of coronavirus (COVID-19) have been confirmed in the Republic of Artsakh in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 2,664.

70 coronavirus tests have been carried out on April 28, the ministry of healthcare of Artsakh said.

A death case from coronavirus, the first in the past 6 months, has been registered.

Currently, 28 infected patients receive treatment in hospitals.

On April 19 the vaccinations against COVID-19 have launched in Artsakh.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia’s Permanent Rep. at UN addresses letter to Guterres over Azerbaijan’s threats

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 11:14,

YEREVAN, APRIL 23, ARMENPRESS. Permanent Representative of Armenia at the UN Mher Margaryan addressed a letter to the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres regarding the incendiary rhetoric of the President of Azerbaijan containing threats to use force against the Republic of Armenia.

“Such statements come to demonstrate, once again, Azerbaijan’s blatant espousals of ideology of warmongering, violence and incitement of anti-Armenian hatred, and constitute a clearly detectable indication of threat directed not only against the Armenian people and their right to life in their homeland, but also to the peace and security of the region as a whole. They also manifest, in most explicit terms, that Azerbaijan, indeed, unleashed the war and destruction amidst global pandemic in 2020, in an attempt to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict by force, contrary to its pre-eminent obligations under international law, which prohibits the use of force to resolve disputes, and in flagrant violation of the UN Secretary-General’s appeal for an immediate global ceasefire.”

 “Armenia condemns the promulgation of incendiary rhetoric, racist ideology and threats to use force, which only serve to destabilize the situation in the region, and reaffirms the imperative of the full and timely implementation, in good faith, of the commitments under the international humanitarian law, in particularly related to the release of the prisoners of war, hostages and other detained persons”, Ambassador Margaryan writes in the letter published by the Permanent Representation of Armenia at the United Nations. 

He emphasized that Azerbaijan continues holding numerous Armenian POWS in gross violation of international humanitarian law, “while celebrating violence, racism and dehumanization of ethnic Armenians in the “military trophy park” in Baku, which bears a most striking resemblance to the nazi-era propaganda imagery.”

Ben Shapiro Praises Joe Biden’s Armenian Genocide Recognition: ‘Long Overdue’

Newsweek

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Conservative commentator Ben Shapiro has praised President Joe Biden following reports that he will recognize the mass killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during World War I was a genocide.

Shapiro, who founded The Daily Wire and serves as editor emeritus, took to Twitter on Wednesday and retweeted a report from The New York Times about the Biden administration's decision to make the announcement this week.

"All due credit to Biden on this. Long overdue," Shapiro said.

Shapiro has been critical of the Biden administration and Democrats more broadly but he has also called the massacres of Armenians a genocide and written about the need for the world to "come to grips" with the event.

"The Armenian Genocide was a vicious Islamic anti-Christian genocide. That attempted genocide continues today all over the world," Shapiro tweeted in 2015.

This Saturday, April 24, is the day when victims of the killings are commemorated and Biden will reportedly make the formal recognition then. The president is likely to use the word "genocide," according to Reuters. The move would be largely symbolic.

However, there remains a possibility that Biden will decide not to say "genocide" out of considerations for U.S. relations with Turkey, a NATO member and key regional ally.

Ben Shapiro Praises Joe Biden's Armenian Genocide Recognition: 'Long Overdue'

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It is estimated that around 1.5 million ethnic Armenians were killed in the final years of the Ottoman Empire, from 1915, during World War I, to 1923. Turkey, the successor state to the empire, officially denies there was a genocide. Ankara recognizes that many Armenians were killed by Ottoman forces but disputes the figures and denies that the killings were carried out systematically.

The U.S. government has never officially called the deaths a genocide due to the potential damage such a move would have on bilateral relations with Turkey but Biden has used the term in the past.

"Today, we remember the atrocities faced by the Armenian people in the Metz Yeghern — the Armenian Genocide," he tweeted on April 24, 2020. "If elected, I pledge to support a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide and will make universal human rights a top priority."

Relations between the U.S. and Turkey have been strained lately and Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Tuesday that recognizing the events as a genocide would harm the relationship further.

"Statements that have no legal binding will have no benefit, but they will harm ties," Cavusoglu said. "If the United States wants to worsen ties, the decision is theirs."

Biden has not spoken to his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan since his inauguration in January—a marked split from former President Donald Trump's relations with the leader.

The Senate voted unanimously in favor of a non-binding resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide in December 2019. The House of Representatives passed a similar resolution in October of that year.

Newsweek has asked Ben Shapiro for comment on this article.

Quebec National Assembly adopts resolution on 106th anniversary of Armenian Genocide

Public Radio of Armenia


The Quebec National Assembly unanimously adopted a resolution marking the 106th anniversary of the Armenian genocide.

With the resolution the National Assembly of Quebec marks the 106th anniversary of the Armenian genocide which caused the deaths of 1.5 million men, women and children.

It deplores that its political recognition throughout the world is still a subject of debate because of the denial, in particular by Turkey;

The National Assembly recalls that the Armenian people have again been the victim of bloody acts and abuses in the Nagorno-Karabakh region over the past year.

The legislature Assembly express its solidarity with the Armenian people and recognize their right to live in peace and security while preserving their language, culture and faith.

Sports: 4 athletes of Armenia Greco-Roman wrestling team to participate in championship in Sofia

News.am, Armenia
April 16 2021

The coaches of the Armenia Greco-Roman wrestling team have introduced the members who will be competing at the Olympic qualification championship to be held in Sofia from May 6 to 9.

The Armenia team will leave for Sofia with four wrestlers, including Armen Melikyan (60 kg), Karen Aslanyan (67 kg), Artur Shahinyan (87 kg) and Davit Ovasapyan (130 kg).

Only the wrestlers who make it to the final will score a pass to Tokyo 2020.

In March, Shahinyan and Ovasapyan also participated in the European Olympic wrestling qualification championship in Budapest where they failed to score a pass.

Members of the Armenia Greco-Roman style wrestling team Karapet Chalyan (77 kg) and Artur Aleksanyan (97 kg) have passes to Tokyo 2020.

Artsakh deputy FM calls on international community not to stay indifferent to Azerbaijan’s actions

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 15:07,

YEREVAN, APRIL 15, ARMENPRESS. The international community should understand how serious the situation is in Artsakh and what tragic consequences the aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan has left, Deputy Foreign Minister of Artsakh Armine Aleksanyan said in an interview to the Italian ASRIE Analytica.

“At the moment the International Committee of Red Cross is the only international organization operating in our region by providing first aid and support to the citizens. For the sake of Artsakh and the whole humanity, much more international organizations must be involved, not only for providing aid and support, but also for witnessing and recording the war crimes and the human rights violations”, she said.

The Artsakh deputy FM stated that Azerbaijan is currently taking actions to eliminate the Armenian cultural and historical past, destroying the churches and monuments, and noted that the whole world is showing indifference to all these incidents. “Everyone should be aware of this, as what is now taking place with our people and country, can repeat in a different part of the world in the future based on the fact that the international community has closed its eyes and the Baku leadership has not given response to its committed massacres and human rights violations”, the deputy minister said.

Armine Aleksanyan also talked about the role of Turkey in the recent war launched against Artsakh, stating that Ankara provided all support to Azerbaijan, causing thousands of human deaths and displacement of tens of thousands of peoples.

She stated that after the war the Azerbaijani leadership still continues the military rhetoric, and President Ilham Aliyev is regularly making nationalist remarks based on Armenophobia.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Azerbaijan uses Armenian POW issue to develop its policy of hatred: Armenian Ombudsman tells MEPs

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 10:24,

YEREVAN, APRIL 15, ARMENPRESS. A discussion was held on April 12 at the European Parliament relating to the issue of the release and return of the Armenian prisoners of war from Azerbaijan.

Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan participated in the discussion and delivered a special report, emphasizing the need for international pressure on Azerbaijan, which, he said, will allow to avoid future crimes, the Ombudsman’s Office told Armenpress.

The discussion has been organized by head of the EU-Armenia friendship group at the European Parliament Loucas Fourlas who also delivered a report. MEP Marina Kaljurand and Executive Director of the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy Heghine Evinyan also participated in the online discussion.

Ombudsman Tatoyan told the discussion participants that on April 9 he has applied to the Council of Europe Committee of Ministers over the immediate return of the Armenian POWs who are illegally kept in Azerbaijan. He once again drew the attention on the fact that all servicemen and civilians of the Armenian side have been captured by the Azerbaijani armed forces during the continuous armed conflict, therefore, he noted, they all are prisoners of war in their status and should be immediately released and returned to the homeland without any political or other precondition.

Tatoyan stated that the Azerbaijani authorities are artificially delaying and politicizing the process, grossly violate the rights of the POWs and their families, causing sufferings and creating tension within the society.

He stated that the Azerbaijani authorities are using the issue of the Armenian prisoners of war for developing their policy of hatred. These crimes are of ethnic nature which are sponsored by the Azerbaijani authorities at the highest level, Tatoyan noted.

The Ombudsman said the EU must express its position in an institutional way to eliminate these violations and prevent the future ones.

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Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Judicial Code contradicts the Constitution, Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian applies to CC

Aysor, Armenia

Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian decided to apply to the Constitutional Court to determine the constitutionality of the bill on making amendments in the constitutional law on Judicial Code.

President’s press service reports that the bill was submitted to the president by the NA on March 22, 2021.

The president discussed the bill with the minister of justice and chairperson of State-Legal Affairs Standing Committee and experts.

The offered regulations are situational and problematic from the viewpoint of legal certainty, proportionality, division of power branches as well as correspondence to constitutional principles and demands of independence of judicial power.

“Based on the above mentioned and summarizing the expert opinions, it appears that the law significantly contradicts the Constitution, therefore the president of the republic decided to apply to Armenia’s Constitutional Court,” the president’s press office reported.