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Armenian Coalition Divided Over Dual Citizenship

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  • Armenian Coalition Divided Over Dual Citizenship

    ARMENIAN COALITION DIVIDED OVER DUAL CITIZENSHIP
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 22 2007

    Armenia's governing coalition remained divided on Thursday over key
    provisions of draft legislation allowing foreign nationals of Armenian
    descent to become Armenian citizens.

    A package of bills endorsed by the government and championed by the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) regulates practical
    modalities of dual citizenship, which was effectively introduced in
    Armenia in November 2005 as part of a controversial constitutional
    reform.

    The National Assembly passed them in the first reading earlier this
    week amid serious misgivings voiced by lawmakers representing virtually
    all other parliamentary parties, including Prime Minister Andranik
    Markarian's Republican Party (HHK). They are particularly unhappy with
    a provision that gives dual citizens living outside Armenia voting
    rights. Some of them have also accused Dashnaktsutyun, which has many
    supporters in the worldwide Armenian Diaspora, of seeking additional
    votes ahead of the upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections.

    But leaders of the nationalist party have denied any ulterior motives
    behind their strong support for dual citizenship. They say it will
    boost Armenia's small population and strengthen its security. "By
    failing to introduce dual citizenship we lost a major source of our
    security," one of them, Armen Rustamian told reporters.

    Still, parliament speaker Tigran Torosian and other HHK lawmakers
    insisted Thursday on their draft amendments to the legislative package
    that would enable dual citizens from the Diaspora to vote in Armenian
    elections if they have resided and paid taxes in Armenia during at
    least one of the pervious five years. "People whose fate hinges on
    developments in other countries must not decide the fate of people
    living in Armenia," Torosian said at the end of heated parliament
    debates on the issue.

    Opposition deputies made similar arguments. "People living abroad must
    not have the right to predetermine the fate of the people living in
    Armenia," said Grigor Harutiunian of the Artarutyun alliance.

    For its part, the pro-government United Labor Party (MAK) said its
    five parliamentarians continue to oppose the bills because they
    stipulate that members of Armenia's government can be dual citizens.

    The latter would only be barred from running for president and
    parliament. "That would mean a partial loss of Armenia's sovereignty,"
    said MAK leader Gurgen Arsenian.

    Justice Harutiunian David Harutiunian, who presented the bill on behalf
    of the government, rejected the amendments proposed by both the HHK and
    the MAK. Harutiunian pointed to a constitutional clause which gives
    equal rights to all Armenian citizens. "Besides, we can't check who
    has or has not lived in our country for more than 183 days," he said.

    While voicing strong objections, HHK leaders did not say whether
    they their faction, the largest in the National Assembly, will vote
    for the draft laws in the second reading. The vote is scheduled
    for Monday. Markarian and other HHK ministers have not yet publicly
    commented on the debate.
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