Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Bill On Dual Citizenship Passed

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Bill On Dual Citizenship Passed

    ARMENIAN BILL ON DUAL CITIZENSHIP PASSED
    By Astghik Bedevian and Ruben Meloyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 26 2007

    The National Assembly adopted on Monday a controversial bill that
    allows millions of foreign nationals of Armenian origin to become
    citizens of Armenia and vote in national elections held there.

    Deputies voted by 66 to 5, with one abstention, to pass, in the
    second and final reading, a package of government-drafted amendments
    to relevant Armenian laws, despite serious objections voiced by the
    leaders of the parliament's largest faction.

    The legislators representing the governing Republican Party (HHK)
    insisted as recently as last Thursday that dual citizens from the
    worldwide Armenian Diaspora be granted voting rights only if they
    live in Armenia during at least one of the five years preceding
    a particular election. The demand was backed by the parliament's
    opposition minority which boycotted the parliament vote. Justice
    Minister David Harutiunian, who authored the amendments on behalf of
    the government, rejected it as unconstitutional.

    Parliament speaker Tigran Torosian and virtually all other Republicans
    eventually fell in line, suggesting that President Robert Kocharian
    personally pushed for the bill's adoption. Torosian attributed the
    U-turn to a "political agreement" reached by the country's governing
    coalition.

    The leader of the HHK's parliament faction, Galust Sahakian, denied
    any pressure from Kocharian. "The matter should not be linked with
    the president," he said.

    The five votes against the amendments, made possible by the November
    2005 abolition of a constitutional ban on dual citizenship, came from
    the deputies affiliated with the pro-Kocharian United Labor Party
    (MAK). The MAK is unhappy with the fact that dual citizens will be
    allowed to hold ministerial positions in the Armenian government. The
    amended law on citizenship only bars them from running for president
    and parliament.

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), another
    coalition member and the main proponent of the right to dual
    nationality, welcomed the adoption of the bill. Dashnaktsutyun deputies
    celebrated it with an improvised reception promptly held in their
    parliament offices. "This law is an opportunity to consolidate our
    nation," one of them, Ruben Hovsepian, said.

    Dashnaktsutyun leaders earlier shrugged off opposition claims that the
    nationalist party has been strongly advocating introduction of dual
    citizenship because it has many members and supporters in the Diaspora.

    The ban on dual citizenship was imposed by former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian and his Armenian Pan-National Movement (HHSh), which
    remains staunchly opposed to the idea. The HHSh deputy chairman,
    Andranik Hovakimian, insisted on Monday that it is "extremely
    dangerous" and fraught with "numerous risks" for Armenia's national
    security.
Working...
X