Amendments to key laws unlikely to foster Armenia’s democratization

Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
The Jamestown Foundation
May 26 2005

AMENDMENTS TO KEY LAWS UNLIKELY TO FOSTER ARMENIA’S DEMOCRATIZATION

By Emil Danielyan

Thursday, May 26, 2005

The Armenian authorities claim to have taken a further step toward
meeting their membership commitments to the Council of Europe with
the May 20 passage of amendments to the country’s controversial laws
on elections and rallies. President Robert Kocharian’s leading
political allies say the move will guarantee freedom of assembly and
seriously complicate chronic electoral fraud, the principal source of
political tension in Armenia.

However, their political opponents and leading civic groups have
dismissed the amendments as insignificant and misleading. Indeed,
they allow the ruling regime, which has failed to hold a single free
and fair election, to continue to exercise full control over all
electoral processes and to restrict anti-government demonstrations.

Besides, the regime has never quite complied with the existing laws
that declare vote rigging to be a serious crime and that guarantee
Armenians’ basic human and civil rights. This appears to be the
reason why the Council of Europe’s and other pan-European structures’
emphasis on legislative reform in Armenia has yielded few tangible
results in terms of the democratization of its deeply flawed
political system.

On paper, the amended law on public gatherings makes it somewhat
easier for opposition groups to stage demonstrations. The authorities
can now stop or disperse such protests only if they result in
“violations of the law” and feature calls for a “violent overthrow”
of the government. The legislation does not specify what those
violations could be. It also retained a highly controversial clause
whereby no rallies can be held within a 150-meter radius of the
presidential palace in Yerevan and other “strategic” facilities such
as the nuclear power plant at Metsamor.

The law in question was enacted in May 2004 at the height of an
opposition campaign of anti-Kocharian demonstrations. Legal experts
from the Council of Europe and the OSCE concluded afterward that it
does not meet European standards for freedom of assembly. They also
criticized Armenia’s Electoral Code for not envisaging sufficient
safeguards against vote irregularities.

The amendments to the code give more rights to proxies of election
candidates on polling days and should enable the police to sort out
Armenia’s notoriously inaccurate vote registers. More importantly, it
allows Kocharian to appoint only one member of each electoral
commission.

Kocharian until now named three of the nine members of the country’s
Central Election Commission and its territorial divisions. The other
commission seats are controlled by the six parties and blocs
represented in parliament. Only two of them are in opposition to
Kocharian.

The two vacant commission seats will now be given to another
pro-presidential parliamentary faction and Armenia’s Court of
Appeals, all of whose members were appointed by Kocharian. The
Armenian leader and his allies will thus retain their overwhelming
control of the bodies handling elections at various levels.

Not surprisingly, the opposition is not happy with the legislative
changes. They were also criticized on May 24 by the Partnership for
Open Society, a coalition of more than three dozen local
non-governmental organizations advocating political reform. Its
leaders claimed that some of the amendments would even facilitate
fraud. One of amendments stipulates that ballot papers no longer have
to be signed by at least three members of a precinct commission in
order to be considered valid.

The NGOs also slammed Council of Europe experts for reportedly
praising the amendments. They had already denounced the pan-European
organization’s Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) for its October 2004
resolution that made a largely positive assessment of Yerevan’s human
rights record just months after an unprecedented crackdown on the
Armenian opposition.

The 46-nation assembly noted its “excellent cooperation” with the
Armenian authorities, echoing statements by officials from the
Council of Europe’s top governing body, the Committee of Ministers.
One of them, Pietro Ago, declared during a February 2004 visit to
Yerevan that the authorities “should be congratulated for their good
actions” relating to political reform. The Italian diplomat pointed
to the abolition of the death penalty in Armenia and to the passage
of new laws on mass media, the human rights ombudsman, and
alternative service.

The enactment of those laws was among the key conditions for
Armenia’s accession to the Council of Europe in January 2001.
However, the country has hardly become more democratic since then; it
has even regressed in some areas. The Council of Europe membership
did not prevent the authorities from scandalously closing A1+, the
sole Armenian television channel not controlled by Kocharian, in
April 2002. Ironically, they used one of the laws cited by Ago to
pull the plug on the popular channel.

Furthermore, the Armenian presidential and parliamentary elections
held in 2003 were again judged undemocratic by Western observers, and
the U.S. State Department continues to describe the Kocharian
administration’s human rights record as “poor.”

The Armenian authorities have repeatedly demonstrated that they can
easily trample a law or constitutional clause if it threatens their
grip on power. They have rejected the few Council of Europe
recommendations that pose such a threat. The authorities, for
example, have stubbornly resisted demands to scrap the Soviet-era
practice of “administrative arrests,” which they have used to
imprison hundreds of opposition activists and supporters. Nor have
they agreed to significantly curb Kocharian’s sweeping powers as part
of a planned reform of the Armenian constitution.

(RFE/RL Armenia Report, May 19, 24; February 6, 2004)

Concerns expressed about Azerbaijan arrests

European Report
May 25, 2005

CONCERNS EXPRESSED ABOUT AZERBAIJAN ARRESTS.

A recent “series of arrests” by the authorities in Azerbaijan led
Dutch Socialist MEP Jan Wiersma to express concerns on May 20. “These
arrests could be confirmation of a pattern of intimidation of the
opposition in the run-up to parliamentary elections in November”, he
said. The MEP added that, “in the light of recent statements by the
Azerbaijan government, outlining their intention to create closer
relations with the EU, the authorities in Baku should be aware that
arresting opposition members is contrary to the basic values of the
EU”. Just days ahead of a planned May 25 ceremony marking the opening
of the $4 billion Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, Azerbaijan police
prevented an unauthorised opposition rally from taking place,
reportedly leading to the arrest of 45 protestors. In April, EU
Foreign Ministers invited the European Commission to start joint
discussions to prepare ‘neighbourhood policy’ action plans that would
aim for closer ties – linked to reforms and ‘common values’ – between
the EU and each of the three South Caucasus countries – Armenia,
Azerbaijan and Georgia.

BEIRUT: A Tashnak Delegation visits Solange Jumeyel

An-Nahar, Lebanon
May 25 2005

Translated from Arabic exclusively for Armenian News Network by Katia
M. Peltekian

A Tashnak Delegation visits Solange Jumeyel

Mrs. Solange Basheer Jumeyel met with a Tashnak delegation headed by
Hagop Pakradouni, vice-president of the Party and a candidate for a
parliamentary seat in Al-Metn, Mardig Boghossian, member of the
Central Committee of the Party, and Baruyr Arsen, director of the
Party’s parliamentary office.

Pakradouni congratulated Mrs. Jumeyel for winning the Maronite seat
in Ashrafieh uncontested and then informed her of the Party’s
decision to nominate him for the Armenian Apostolic seat in the
Al-Metn district to replace Sebouh Hovnanian.

Mrs. Jumeyel confirmed that the election law of 2000 was drawn
according to the conditions at the time that imposed on Lebanon
certain electoral combinations. She also stated that the current
electoral law will be amended as soon as the elections are over…

Acknowledgement of Genocide possible only having realized its causes

Pan Armenian News

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF GENOCIDE POSSIBLE ONLY HAVING REALIZED ITS CAUSES

24.05.2005 06:14

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Unless the Turkish society realizes and gets to know the
causes and consequences of the events of 1915, it will not be able to
acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. Stated Editor-in-Chief of Agos Turkish
journal Hrant Dink, when commenting on the holding of Ottoman Armenians in
Period of Collapse of the Empire: questions of scientific policy and
democracy conference in Istanbul, reported the Yerkir newspaper. In his
words, before the 20-es of the past century there was no taboo in Turkey on
the discussion of the Armenian issue, moreover, monuments to Genocide
victims were erected. However, since 1923, when people, who had committed
the Armenian Genocide, started `penetrating’ into the ruling elite of
Turkey, the discussion of the issues of the Armenian Genocide was banned.
Moreover, pensions were assigned to those charged for committing the
Armenian Genocide and the Turks killed. As noted by Dink, the Turkish people
thought for a rather long period of time that the Armenian issue is long ago
solved by the Treaty of Lausanne. The journal editor noted that the fact
that only 50-60 thousand Armenians live in Turkey today is an outcome of
Turkey’s brutal policy regarding national minorities. Answering the question
why Turks decided to exterminate the Armenian population he said that the
world wanted to return the indigene Armenians to the territories inhabited
by them, but the Young Turks decided to massacre Armenians to avoid it and
to leave the issue out of the agenda. As of the statements made in Turkey
that Armenians exterminated Turks, these are consequences of the wide-scale
genocide. Such actions were committed by revenge groups of Armenian, who had
lost their relatives.

BAKU: Ex-NK mediator says launch of oil pipeline rules out new war

Ex-Karabakh mediator says launch of oil pipeline rules out Azeri-Armenian war

Bilik Dunyasi news agency
23 May 05

BAKU

“No matter how great the economic and political importance of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline might be, this project will pour cold
water on the military option for resolving the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict,” the former Russian co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group,
Vladimir Kazimirov, has said.

According to the Russian diplomat, the project sponsors believe that
the chances of military action in the region are much slimmer than
those of a negotiated settlement to the conflict.

Kazimirov also commented on the latest round of negotiations [on 15
May] between the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents on the Nagornyy
Karabakh problem in Warsaw. He said that despite the continuing
statements about the return of occupied territories to Azerbaijan, it
would be wrong to hope that a settlement could be achieved before the
status of Nagornyy Karabakh had first been established.

L’Armenie =?UNKNOWN?Q?cel=E8bre?= les 1.600 ans de son alphabet

L’Armenie celèbre les 1.600 ans de son alphabet

Agence France Presse
21 mai 2005 samedi 1:30 PM GMT

EREVAN 21 mai 2005 — L’Armenie, qui celèbre en 2005 les 1.600 ans
de son alphabet, a inaugure samedi non loin d’Erevan une “allee des
lettres antiques”, destinee a commemorer l’invention du pretre Mesrop
Machtots en 405 après J.C.

A 1.600 mètres d’altitude au dessus de la capitale, 36 lettres de
pierre, d’une hauteur d’un mètre cinquante, ont ete erigees dans un
espace d’un demi-hectare au pied du mont Aragats.

Mesrop Machtots, aujourd’hui canonise par l’Eglise armenienne,
avait invente les 36 premières lettres de l’alphabet toujours en
usage aujourd’hui. Trois autres lettres ont ete rajoutees lors des
siècles suivants.

Les Armeniens considèrent que leur alphabet a ete un puissant facteur
d’identite de leur communaute, notamment pendant les periodes de
domination persanne et turque.

–Boundary_(ID_S78EzKPOX020kWaA0AK/uA)–

Sex is central to edgy new films in Cannes

Sex is central to edgy new films in Cannes
By Erik Kirschbaum

CANNES, France, May 21 (Reuters) – Group sex, violent sex, gay sex,
and wife-swapping were among the central elements of stories in
entries at the Cannes Film Festival this year.

Whether a reflection of changing sexual mores around the world or
merely the work of edgy directors pushing new limits, Cannes audiences
were shown a great number of films with stories revolving around or
showing non-traditional sex.

“As the boundaries of what’s considered acceptable on and off the
screen get pushed back, directors are moving in to occupy that vacuum
of space and push the boundaries even further,” said Variety’s European
Editor Adam Dawtrey.

“In times that are tough for independent films, it’s important for
them to find an edge to give them some commercial appeal, though not
in a cynical way. The instinct is: ‘How do you grab audiences?’ And
the answer is with juicy scenes.”

Films with heterosexual intercourse or romantic suggestions of it have
long helped filmmakers in many genres to tell and sell their stories.

But this year a great diversity of sex has been displayed.

In “Where the Truth Lies”, Kevin Bacon and Colin Firth play a popular
entertainer duo with multiple daily sex partners, but their friendship
ends after sex with their hotel maid goes awry.

“I wanted to create this world that was intoxicating,” said Canadian
director Atom Egoyan, describing the need for group sex. “They could
take any amount of drugs they wanted and have as much sex as they
wanted. It was an unbridled atmosphere.”

“Don’t Come Knocking” is about a degenerate Hollywood star played by
Sam Shepard who learns he fathered two children, now adults, decades
earlier. But he’s slept with so many women in his life he at first
can’t even vaguely recall their mothers.

“Sam’s character is a womaniser and that’s one of his life’s
tragedies,” director Wim Wenders told Reuters. “It’s a disease like
alcohol. It’s why he missed his life because he was only always
thinking of the thrill of sex, drugs and rock and roll.”

In “Chromophobia”, a prostitute played by Penelope Cruz wears a
nurse’s costume for a sex ritual with a client, an elderly retired
judge who turns out to be her daughter’s father.

In Woody Allen’s “Match Point” a sizzling affair between the
brother-in-law and sister-in-law in a rich British family starts in
a rain-drenched wheat field but ends tragically after he gets her
pregnant and kills her to keep the scandal romance a secret.

Wife-swapping is the spice in life belatedly discovered by a retired
French couple in “Peindre ou Faire L’Amour”.

Barry Pepper clips and smells his dirty toenails in “The Three Burials
of Melquiades Estrada” before rising from the couch for a quick,
animal-like sex session with his bored wife while she continues to
watch television from the kitchen.

Perhaps the most controversial film is director Carlos Reygadas’
“Batalla en el Cielo” (Battle in Heaven). It starts with a teen girl
performing fellatio on an obese middle-aged Mexican who later has
graphic sex with his even heavier wife.

But he rejected criticism sex in his film is gratuitous.

“The whole world is involved in sex,” Reygadas said.

05/21/05 13:50 ET

Soldiers refuse alternative military service

SOLDIERS REFUSE ALTERNATIVE MILITARY SERVICE

A1plus

| 14:53:15 | 20-05-2005 | Social |

“The people preferring alternative military service are also
Armenians. The society and the military men must not have negative
attitude towards them”, said Avetik Ishkhanyan, head of the Armenian
Helsinki Committee. He is surprised by the fact that the Government
does not want to amend the RA Law on “Alternative Military Service”
which was adopted in 2004.

Today by the initiative of the “Cooperation for Open Society” organized
a discussion about the problem in which besides non-governmental
organizations representatives of the OSCE Yerevan office and
the Ministry of Defense took part. Ministry of Defense Juridical
Administration head Sedrak Sedrakyan informed that at present 24
RA citizens are in alternative military service. 11 of them have
applied to the commanders saying that they refuse to continue their
service. The reason was that the officers make them do duties proper
to soldiers and thus violate the law and their religious convictions.

Yesterday 4 alternative servers left their place of service in the
Vardenis for the same reasons. They will be put to Military tribunal,
as according to the law the punishments for the alternative and
traditional servers are the same.

According to the Armenian Helsinki Committee the Law must be amended
as soon as possible. Particularly, the date of 42 months for the
alternative servers must be reduced by at least 6 months. Also the mark
on their uniforms “Alternative server” must be eliminated, and, which
is most important, their service must be regulated not by military,
but by civic organs.

BAKU: French Senate To Conduct Day Of Caucasus

FRENCH SENATE TO CONDUCT DAY OF CAUCASUS

Azer Tag
[May 18, 2005, 15:04:07]

The Day of Caucasus will be organized on May 19 at the French Senate,
the country’s Embassy in Baku has announced. The goal of the event
initiated by Ubiframce, the International Agency for Development of
Enterprises is provide French companies with information on business
environment in the South Caucasus. At the Azerbaijan-related hearings
to be presided by Chairman of the France-Azerbaijan friendship
group Ambrose Dupont and French Ambassador in Baku Roland Blatman,
will particularly focus on the country’s oil sector, and small and
medium business. The Azerbaijan-France business Forum to be organized
by Ubiframce in Baku on June 22-24 will also be discussed during
the event.

BAKU: Armenia dismisses reports on return of Azeri regions

Armenia dismisses reports on return of Azeri regions

Baku, May 18, AssA-Irada

Armenia has dismissed reports that it reached an agreement with
Azerbaijan on its withdrawal from the occupied Azerbaijani regions.

“This statement contradicts reality”, Armenian foreign ministry
spokesman said on Wednesday.

Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said following the three-hour
meeting of Azeri and Armenian Presidents Ilham Aliyev and Robert
Kocharian in Warsaw on Monday that the two discussed a timetable for
Armenia’s withdrawal from the occupied Azeri territories.*