Chairman Of Parliamentary Commission For State And Legal Affairs To

CHAIRMAN OF PARLIAMENTARY COMMISSION FOR STATE AND LEGAL AFFAIRS TO MAKE PROPOSALS REGARDING POSSIBLE AMNESTY

ArmInfo
2009-06-03 14:31:00

ArmInfo. ‘The text of proposal on amnesty announcement will be
ready in ten days’, Chairman of Parliamentary Commission for State
and Legal Affairs David Haroutiunyan told ArmInfo. Asked if the
parliamentarian Khachatour Sukiayan will be wanted despite the
possible amnesty announcement, D. Haroutiunyan said: ‘He is charged
with rather serious articles. I do not think the amnesty will apply
to such serious offences. In such cases when there is no judicial act,
amnesty is not applied’.

Earlier on Tuesday President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan held a working
meeting with the law-enforcement agencies and charged relevant
departments to make proposals till June 15 on the terms and legal
procedures of amnesty announcement in the country.

WHAT COMPLAINTS HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDER GOT

WHAT COMPLAINTS HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDER GOT

Lragir.Am
13:36:59 – 01/06/2009

The office of the Human Rights Defender of Armenia issued a statement,
which runs that on May 31, in connection with the Yerevan Mayor
election, the Yerevan office of the Human Rights Defender got more
than a decade of complaints concerning the following problems.

– People are taken to the polling stations by mini-buses and are
instructed to vote for this or some other candidate.

– People are taken to Yerevan from Gyumri, Vanadzor and other cities
to vote in the election – The principle of secrecy of the election
has been broken at a number of polling stations – Work of journalists
is impeded, as well as cases of violence against the reporters are
registered

The Armenian Human Rights Defender is ready to examine the electoral
breaches in the framework of his power. The Human Rights Defender
condemns the violence against reporters and calls on the relevant
bodies to take up necessary measures to punish those responsible.

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Armenian Ombudsman Receives Numerous Complaints For Violations Durin

ARMENIAN OMBUDSMAN RECEIVES NUMEROUS COMPLAINTS FOR VIOLATIONS DURING ELECTIONS TO YEREVAN CITY COUNCIL

ArmInfo
2009-06-01 13:19:00

ArmInfo. Armenian Ombudsman Office has received numerous complaints
for violations during the elections to the Yerevan City Council,
says the statement by Ombudsman Armen Haroutiunyan.

Thus, the complaints were mostly related to mass delivery of electors,
including from the towns of Gyumri and Vanadzor, to polling stations in
Yerevan; calls for voting in favor of specific candidates; violation
of secret ballot principle. Ombudsman received also alarms about
hindrance to activity of journalists and even cases of violence
to journalists. Ombudsman says that he is ready to discuss every
complaint on falsifications within his competence and calls on the
authorized bodies to verify the reports on the given violations. Armen
Haroutiunyan also condemns violence to journalists.

Armenian-Turkish border is guarded by all Armenians

Armenian-Turkish border is guarded by all Armenians
30.05.2009 15:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia is a sovereign independent state, capable of
protecting its border on its own, Lieutenant-General Sergey Bondarev,
Head of RF FSB’s Administration in Armenia, told a PanARMENIAN.Net
correspondent in Armavir during a meeting with journalists. He
referred to the 1992 Armenian-Russian Agreement on Joint Protection of
Armenian-Turkish border. `I’m just confident that border is protected
by all Armenians. As to us, we just perform our duties of delivering
aid,’ he stressed.
On May 30, Armenian frontier forces celebrated their 85th
anniversary. The troops guard the border section extending along the
rivers Araks and Akhouryan (with a length of 126.2km.). The total
length of the Armenian-Turkish border is 328 km. Another border
section is guarded by Gyumri frontier forces.

Citizens of Yerevan to elect the first City Council

Citizens of Yerevan to elect the first City Council
30.05.2009 14:33

Lusine Vasilyan
`Radiolur’

The elections for the Yerevan City Council are expected tomorrow. For
the first time residents of the capital city will elect members of the
Council, thus indirectly giving preference to this or that candidate
for the Mayor of Yerevan. On the eve of the electrons it’s worth
reminding how the results of the voting will be calculated, and which
the mechanism of distribution of mandates is.

The elections for the Yerevan City Council will be held with the
application of the proportional representation system, the whole area
of the capital will be viewed as one multi-mandate electoral district.

The Electoral Code states that the elections for the City Council
should be organized with the same principle and procedure used during
the proportional representative elections for the National Assembly.
Therefore, the results of the voting will be summed up with the same
principle used during parliamentary elections.

Thus, which are the ways of turning the voting ballot into a party
mandate? First of all the law reminds that the mandates of the members
of the City Council are distributed among the parties and blocs, which
have crossed the threshold of 7 and 9% respectively. This is the first
point that should be taken into consideration, when speaking about the
calculation of results, member of the Union
of Community Financiers
Mkrtich Gimishyan reminds.

`The law clearly states that the parties should cross the threshold of
7%, while the blocs should get 9%,’ he said. The parties that will fail
to cross the threshold of 7 % will help others. Their votes will be
redistributed among the parties and blocs that have gained enough votes
to be represented at the Yerevan City Council.

After summing up the results of the voting, the Central Electoral
Commission will either declare that the members of the City Council
have been elected or will announce the elections invalid.

Tigran Karapetyan Does Not Welcome CEC Decision

TIGRAN KARAPETYAN DOES NOT WELCOME CEC DECISION
Sona Hakobyan

"Radiolur"
29.05.2009 17:35

Leader of the People’s Party Tigran Karapetyan is satisfied with his
election campaign. He is content with the meetings and contacts, which,
however, cannot be said about the election campaign, as a whole. Tigran
Karapetyan told a press conference today that he did not welcome the
last decision of the Central Electoral Commission, which allows the
army to participate in the local self-government elections.

Thus, not being satisfied with the election campaign and noting that
it failed to be honest and fair, Tigran Karapetyan expressed confidence
that they had long crossed the threshold of 10%.

The leader of the People’s Party had declared at one of the press
conferences that he would provide air time to the leader of the
Armenian National Congress Levon Ter-Petrosyan. Asked whether the
agreement was in force, Tigran Karapetyan said he would provide even
his own air time if only the guest appeared.

Avet Adnots Appointed Ambassador To Belgium

AVET ADNOTS APPOINTED AMBASSADOR TO BELGIUM

A1+
12:23 pm | May 27, 2009 | Politics

President Serzh Sargsyan signed a decree on relieving Vigen
Tchitetchian of the post of Armenia’s Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary to the Kingdom of Belgium and the head of the Armenian
delegation to the European Union.

Under another Presidential decree, Vigen Tchitetchian was appointed
Armenia’s Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Republic
of France (seat in Paris).

On May 26 Avet Adonts was appointed Armenia’s Ambassador Extraordinary
and Plenipotentiary to the Kingdom of Belgium (seat in Brussels)
and the head of the Armenian delegation to the European Union.

Avet Adonts is a member of the Armenian delegation to the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE).

Freedom: Everywhere Or Nowhere

FREEDOM: EVERYWHERE OR NOWHERE

Civilitas Commentary / Democracy
Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:09

On May 3, Armenia, along with the rest of the world, celebrated World
Press Freedom Day. Two days earlier, Freedom House, the New-York
based NGO which promotes freedom around the world, released a list of
countries ranked by the degree of media freedom in each. Armenia is
included among the "Not Free" countries, and ranks 151, along with
Singapore. In a previous Freedom House report, Armenia was in 144th
place, near Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, the Maldives, Moldova and Pakistan.

Just as Freedom House registered Armenia’s drop in the rankings, two
events took place in Armenia to reinforce the rating: in the space of
a few days, two journalists – ArmeniaToday editor Argishti Kiviryan and
Shant TV news analyst Nver Mnatsakanyan were both attacked. The reasons
for the attacks remain unclear. Mr. Kyviryan remains hospitalized.

The Background Everyone assumes of course that these journalists were
attacked because they did something or said something as journalists
that displeased someone – perhaps someone in government, but not
necessarily. In other words, such events are explained in the context
of a not-free press.

The story of freedom of the press in Armenia runs parallel to the
history of Armenia. The first years of independence were years
of true press freedom in Armenia when the Soviet authorities had
disappeared and the new regime was still taking shape. However,
that freedom was not institutionalized and formalized, it did not
become an important attribute of a new culture of statehood, rather
it gradually fell victim to political interests and domestic political
processes. The Soviet not-free press was all pro-government. Therefore,
free press came to be synonymous with anti-government. When independent
Armenia’s new political elite began competing amongst themselves,
instead of with their Soviet counterparts, they were not able to
resist the temptation to drag the press into that game. The press,
lacking traditions and means of sustaining their independence, went
along. Newspapers and television became a direct political tool,
they became politicized, partisan and came under the same political
pressures which existed in daily political life, in tandem with the
existing political culture. Respect for the free flow of ideas, the
freedom to voice a variety of ideas, had no time to take root either
in society or in the media. The public, mired in economic woes, did
not demand such outlets. Editors, subject to those economic ills,
could not ensure their independent survival through traditional
subscription and advertising channels. So, to continue to exist,
media found their sponsors and those sponsors espoused not political
or ideological views but partisan or personal interests for which
their own private media became the m outhpiece.

As society became more polarized, so did media. The political
intolerance devolved to personal, individual intolerance. There are
no media outlets for honest, fair, consistent, continuous battles of
words. Instead, those battles have been moved to the streets.

Analysis All this would have been sufficient explanation last
year or the year before to comprehend the real situation of our
media. However, this year, when 10 journalists have already been
attacked, none of the cases resolved, none of the crimes solved,
the situation can no longer be explained. It is unacceptable and
intolerable. Violence against journalists has become commonplace. In
a society where it is also common to resort to violence to resolve
any number of problems – including practical, daily personal issues –
attacks against journalists are automatically assumed to be caused
by the victim’s profession.

Especially since beyond standard condemnations, there is no effort to
truly punish or prevent such actions, this leads one to believe that
such an intimidating environment suits someone. Better to have careful,
self-censoring, scared journalists, than to allow them to question,
comment, criticize – even if they do so unevenly, according to their
own agenda.

This ‘policy’ is reinforced by the controlled ‘use’ of opposition
figures in the electronic media – rather than allowing the public
discourse to de termine who should be invited to airwaves, there is
clear control and direction about who to invite when for what time
period, on what topic. This exacerbates the tension and is at least
partially responsible for the extreme intolerance often found in the
opposition print media. If the press exists and is not free, then it
is altogether unnecessary because it does not promote a free and open
dialogue within the population. It in fact harms reforms by creating
an environment of pretense, which in turn, insults, disengages and
makes an entire nation feel more cynical and powerless. It is because
there is no real dialogue and debate and confrontation in the press
that there is such physical, personal confrontation on the streets,
with members of the press. Of course, it is true, that in some cases,
the attacked individual’s professional affiliation had nothing to do
with the purpose of the attack. But we’ll never know, since there is
no culmination, no resolution, no public information available about
why and how these incidents take place.

Outlook So long as government does not take responsibility for its
part in correcting this situation, three things will continue to
happen: 1. The public will assume that this situation is to the
government’s liking.

2. Members of the press corps will continue to assume that they do
not fall within the government’s sphere of responsibility to protect,
and the refore their own responsibility to professionally, fairly,
honestly report the news can also be suspended.

3. Violence will continue to reign as the effective method of
problem-solving, to be embarked upon with impunity, in all spheres
of life.

ANKARA: Davutoglu Azerbaijan And Turkey Are Strategic Partners

DAVUTOGLU AZERBAIJAN AND TURKEY ARE STRATEGIC PARTNERS

Journal of Turkish Weekly
May 27 2009

Turkey and Azerbaijan are not only ordinary allies and neighbors,
they are also two strategic partners, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
said on Tuesday during an official visit to Baku.

Davutoglu arrived in the Azerbaijani capital late on Monday when
he flew from Damascus with his Azerbaijani counterpart, Elmar
Mammadyarov. The two ministers had participated in the 36th session
of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Organization of the Islamic
Conference (OIC) held in the Syrian capital.

In Turkey, everybody has different political thoughts, however,
everybody attaches importance to relations with Azerbaijan, Davutoglu
said on Tuesday at a joint press conference following talks with
Mammadyarov, the Anatolia news agency reported. "Turkey and Azerbaijan
are not two ordinary friend, neighbor and brother countries, they
are at the same time two strategic partners.

One of the fundamental foreign policy priorities which is embraced by
everybody in Turkey — no matter what political thought those [people]
have — is the existing strategic partnership with Azerbaijan,"
DavutoÃ~Câ~@~^Ã.. .¸lu was quoted as saying by the Cihan news agency.

The minister, whose visit to Baku is his second official visit upon
being appointed to his current post earlier this month, underlined
that nobody should have doubts about Turkey’s sensitivities concerning
Azerbaijan.

Kiniklioglu we pass Turkish concerns to Armenians

Suat Kiniklioglu, member of Parliament and deputy chairman of external
affairs for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party), has
said a workshop like this week’s Turkey-Armenia relations gives an
opportunity to Turkey to talk about concerns of the both sides as the
process of rapprochement with Armenia continues. "We want to share the
concerns in Turkey here. Even from the language used at the workshop
we see that we don’t know each other well. We talk about Turkey-Armenia
relations as well as Azerbaijan’s role in it in the context of regional
dynamics," said KÃ~Câ~@~^±nÃ~Câ~@~^ ±klÃ~Câ~@~^±o&#xC3 ;~Câ~@~^Ÿlu
yesterday at Turkey-Armenia Relations Workshop organized by the
Foundation for Political Economic and Social Research (SETA).

Asked about the influence of the Karabakh issue in that regard,
KÃ~Câ~@~^±nÃ~C&# xE2;~@~^±klÃ~Câ~@~^Â&#xB 1;oÃ~Câ~@~^Ÿlu said there is
parallel process to the Turkey-Armenia negotiations on the issue
taken by the Minsk group. "The process is parallel and they support
each other. But these are difficult topics. They would have been
solved in 16 or 17 if they were easy," he said. "Turkey has good
relations with both Azerbaijan and Georgia, and wants to add Armenia
into this. News of the normalization process with Armenia affects
Karabakh but the film is continuing and there will be developments,
hopefully positive." He also indicated that normalization of relations
with Armenia and resolution to the Karabakh conflict are both "mutually
reinforcing each other and interacting."

Attending the workshop Alexander Iskandaryan, director of the Caucasus
Institute based in Yerevan, said that they don’t expect that the
border between Armenia and Turkey will be open soon, closed by Turkey
in 1993 protesting the Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh in
Azerbaijan. "We don’t expect that the border will be open in a short
period of time but once the border opens historical dimension of
Turkey-Armenia relations will not be so much important," he said.

Most of the participants at the workshop indicated that a closed
border with Armenia, "an anomaly of the Cold War years," should be
corrected, and this is the last legacy of the Soviet Union as NATO
member Turkey faces a closed border.

Bulent Aras from SETA said the Cold War has been continuing in the
Caucasus although it ended in the rest of the world. Yonca Poyraz
DoÃ~Câ~@~^Ÿan Ã~Câ~@~^°stanbul

"Our Azerbaijani siblings should know that Turkey will be by the side
of Azerbaijan in the future as well, as it has been in history,"
DavutoÃ~Câ~@~^Ã…&# xC2;¸lu said. "Our message intended for the actors
in the region, particularly intended for Armenia, is very open and
clear. The region should now be cleansed of occupations, stresses
and high tensions," he added, in an apparent reference to the
Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

The way of resolving frozen conflicts in the region passes through
setting bilateral, multilateral and all kinds of relations oriented
toward resolution in motion, DavutoÃ~Câ~@~^Ÿlu said, adding:
"Past incidents showed that frozen problems are like bombs ready to
explode in our hands and have the potential of increasing regional
tensions. Now, the time has come to get rid of these bombs which are
ready to explode."

Turkey, in every platform, has been voicing the need to resolve the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, DavutoÃ~Câ~@~^Ÿlu said, stressing
that Turkey supports the resolution of the conflict within the
framework of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, while also calling
on the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
Minsk Group of countries, mediating talks between Yerevan and Baku
to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, to intensify their efforts.

Mammadyarov said they had reviewed bilateral relations between the
countries and that the relationship between the two neighbors has
been continuing well. He expressed confidence for the future relations
between Ankara and Baku.

Mammadyarov said his country is not satisfied with the trade turnover
level of $2 billion between Turkey and Azerbaijan: "We also discussed
cooperation in the fields of energy, economy and culture. Our countries
have signed around 150 documents in total, but we don’t have to stop
at what has been achieved."