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Armenian Courts Allowed To Challenge Utility Fees

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  • Armenian Courts Allowed To Challenge Utility Fees

    ARMENIAN COURTS ALLOWED TO CHALLENGE UTILITY FEES
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 16 2007

    In a largely symbolic setback for the government, Armenia's
    Constitutional Court rescinded on Tuesday a legal provision preventing
    citizens from challenging utility tariffs set by state regulators in
    lower courts.

    Acting on an appeal filed by 30 parliamentarians, the court declared
    unconstitutional a relevant clause in an Armenian law regulating the
    work of the Public Services Regulatory Commission (PSRC).

    The state body has the exclusive authority to set the price of
    electricity, gas and other utilities. Under the existing law, its
    decisions are not subject to any appeal.

    The legal challenge against it was initiated late last month
    by the opposition Orinats Yerkir party of former parliament
    speaker Artur Baghdasarian which says the existing utility fees are
    disproportionately high. The move was widely construed as the start of
    Orinats Yerkir's preparations for this year's parliamentary elections.

    Making the plaintiffs' case in the court, Hovannes Markarian, an
    Orinats Yerkir lawmaker, said the PSRC should have revised the utility
    prices downwards given the dramatic appreciation of the national
    currency, the dram, in recent years. He said Armenians should be able
    to stop utility companies making extra profits at their expense.

    But lawyers from the Armenian parliament's staff defended the
    controversial legal clause. "As an independent state body, the Public
    Service Regulatory Commission is not accountable to any branch of
    government," one of them, Ashot Khachatrian, said. "Therefore, we
    believe that the impossibility of appealing against tariffs in no
    way violates the constitution and the principle of the separation
    of powers."

    The nine judges of the Constitutional Court rejected these arguments
    after three hours of deliberations. However, their ruling will not
    necessarily have practical consequences as Armenian courts of first
    instance will still be unable to set any prices. Lawyers the courts
    can now only advise the PSRC to reconsider its decisions.
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