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  • Armenia Mulls Citizenship Law Changes

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    Feb 23 2007

    Armenia Mulls Citizenship Law Changes

    New legislation could dramatically increase number of Armenian
    citizens.

    By Rita Karapetian in Yerevan (CRS No. 380 23-Feb-07)

    A new law granting the right of dual citizenship in Armenia has come
    under fire from critics who say they are worried it is open to abuse.

    Citizenship in Armenia is a major issue because twice as many
    Armenians live outside the country as inside it. The republic's
    population is officially three million people, while more than twice
    that number live elsewhere. There are large diaspora communities in
    United States, France, Lebanon and elsewhere, mainly descendants of
    the 1915 genocide in the Ottoman Empire. The largest community is in
    Russia, formed during the Soviet Union and by large-scale migration
    there since 1991.

    President Robert Kocharian made a law on dual citizenship one of his
    first pledges, before he first took office in 1998. However,
    Armenia's 1995 constitution explicitly ruled out the possibility of
    dual citizenship and it was not until 2005 that a referendum was held
    that approved constitutional amendments and allowed for a new law to
    be adopted.

    This week, parliament has been debating amendments to Armenia's
    citizenship law, which will allow under certain conditions for the
    first time citizens of other countries to hold Armenian citizenship
    as well. The assembly will vote on the draft law on February 26.

    The most passionate support for the change has come from the
    nationalist Dashnaktsutiun party, which has a strong base outside
    Armenia. One of the Dashnak leaders, Hrant Margarian, said dual
    citizenship was the first step towards uniting the Armenian people.

    Dashnaktsutiun parliamentary leader Hrair Karapetian said it was
    important from a moral point of view to accept the principle of dual
    citizenship. `Historical justice will be restored regarding the
    Armenians, who lost their motherland against their will,' he said.

    Karapetian also argued that dual citizenship would help attract more
    diaspora money to Armenia. He said that up to now the diaspora's
    economic potential has not been fully used, because Armenians living
    abroad feel offended, thinking that in Armenia they are seen as `milk
    cows' who provide investments but get nothing in return.

    The draft law allows citizens of other countries to take up Armenian
    citizenship but under certain conditions. If they are male, they are
    eligible for military service in Armenia, unless they have already
    done in another country.

    In parliament, Justice Minister David Harutiunian said that
    foreigners seeking to obtain Armenian citizenship would be stripped
    of their right to diplomatic protection on Armenian territory, while
    businessmen who were dual nationals would no longer benefit from the
    privileges enjoyed by foreign investors.

    Additionally, a dual citizen of Armenia will enjoy the right to vote
    if they are on Armenian territory, but cannot be a candidate for the
    presidency or parliament.

    Critics of the bill have focused their concerns on the possibility
    that a large number of foreigners could suddenly acquire the right to
    vote in Armenia, saying this could open up elections to abuse.

    Several leading opposition politicians have said they will only
    support the new measures if dual citizens are not given the right to
    vote.

    Armenia is due to hold parliamentary elections in May this year and
    presidential elections next year.

    Suren Sureniants of the opposition Republic party said that including
    foreign Armenians in voter registers would make it easier to
    manipulate electoral lists, which he said already contain the names
    of thousands of dead people.

    Sureniants called the plans `absolutely unacceptable both politically
    and morally, and even from the viewpoint of the country's national
    interests'. `People from countries with opposing interests [to ours]
    could become dual nationals and make Armenia the setting for the
    collision of these interests,' he told IWPR.

    Prime Minister Andranik Margarian rejected the accusations, saying
    that the number of dual citizens who would actually vote would be
    small.

    Two American Armenians told IWPR that they were hurt by the
    implication that dual citizens could pose a threat to their historic
    homeland.

    Nairi Balanian from Philadelphia told IWPR that she would abide by
    all citizenship regulations and her son would be ready to serve in
    the army. `I will travel to Armenia to vote, I will pay taxes for
    Armenia,' she said.

    Asbet Balanian, also from Philadelphia, said, `I find the official
    position of the Armenian Republic very offensive when they classify
    overseas Armenians as `odar' (`foreigner' in Armenian). I am no less
    Armenian than an Armenian who was born in Armenia. I am even better
    than many Armenians who migrated from Armenia, to countries of the
    world and lost their Armenian identity and became real odars.'

    Balanian said that diaspora Armenians should have analogous rights to
    Jews, who have the right to go and settle in Israel and receive
    citizenship - so long as they paid taxes and obeyed the laws of the
    country.

    To the charge that the new law would put the fate of Armenia in the
    hands of foreigners, Margarian countered that Armenians abroad
    already wielded strong influence over the economy of the country. `If
    we think that way, we should pull down an iron curtain and not allow
    our compatriots to work in Armenia,' he said.

    Rita Karapetian is a correspondent with Noyan Topan news agency. IWPR
    Armenia editor Seda Muradyan also contributed to this article.
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