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Armenia Passes Bill To Allow Voiding Of Turkish-Armenian Protocols

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  • Armenia Passes Bill To Allow Voiding Of Turkish-Armenian Protocols

    ARMENIA PASSES BILL TO ALLOW VOIDING OF TURKISH-ARMENIAN PROTOCOLS

    Radio Free Europe
    February 25, 2010

    YEREVAN -- Armenia's National Assembly has passed a billthat will
    make it easier for Yerevan to abandon two protocols on establishing
    diplomatic relations with Turkey, RFE/RL's Armenian Service reports.

    The parliament passed on the third and final reading amendments to an
    existing law on interstate treaties that would allow the suspension
    or termination of international agreements that have been signed by
    Armenia before they go into force.

    The vote was 70 in favor and four against.

    The nationalist Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun)
    party boycotted the vote.

    The amendments now await President Serzh Sarkisian's signature to
    become law.

    Sarkisian announced in December his intention to enact these
    amendments in response to Turkish leaders' repeated statements pegging
    Ankara's ratification of the two protocols to a resolution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    But Sarkisian has made it clear that Yerevan will walk away from the
    deal if Ankara fails to ratify it within a "reasonable" time frame.

    The parliament overwhelmingly passed the amendments on the first and
    second readings on February 23 and 24, respectively.

    Opposition Zharangutyun lawmakers said Armenian law and international
    conventions signed by Yerevan already allow for the abrogation of
    international treaties, and voted against the amendments.

    Dashnaktsutyun deputies criticized the amendments during the first
    reading.

    Dashnaktsutyun deputy Artsvik Minasian argued that not only the
    president of the republic, but also the parliament should be empowered
    to invalidate international agreements.

    Armen Rustamian, another Dashnaktsutyun lawmaker who chairs the
    parliament committee on foreign affairs, said on February 23 that the
    National Assembly should also be given the right to ratify them with
    "reservations."

    He denied any contradiction between the Dashnaktsutyun criticism of
    the amendments and its deputies' decision to vote for them.

    Sarkisian formally submitted the two Turkish-Armenian protocols to
    the parliament for ratification on February 15.

    Leaders of the parliament's pro-presidential majority have repeatedly
    stated that the protocols will not be put to a vote before they have
    been ratified by the Turkish Parliament.
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