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Hammarberg met Sefilyan & Arman Babajanyan

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  • Hammarberg met Sefilyan & Arman Babajanyan

    Lragir, Armenia
    Oct 12 2007


    HAMMARBERG MET SEFILYAN AND ARMAN BABAJANYAN


    Thomas Hammarberg, CoE human rights commissioner, said at the
    beginning of the news conference on October 11 he would decline to
    answer some questions because they will be covered in the draft
    report. He summed up his five-day visit to Armenia and said the
    conclusion will be included in the report but first the draft report
    will be extended to the Armenian government for clarification on the
    existing problems, and the final report on the state of human rights
    in Armenia will be ready three months later.

    Hammarberg only says there is considerable progress towards
    protection of human rights from the Soviet Union. It turned out that
    the CoE commissioner is not fond of comparison of countries and
    epochs and only states facts. Over his five days stay in Armenia he
    visited almost everywhere where there are people and where human
    rights can be violated, such as prisons, orphanages, old people's
    homes, homes of people with disabilities, neighborhoods of refugees,
    the area of the disaster, the office of the ombudsman, and met with
    the leadership of Armenia. Hammarberg found out that the legislation
    is complete but there are problems with its application.


    Among problems Thomas Hammarberg points to the dependence of the
    judicial system, namely the decisions of courts aimed to please the
    procuracy even though the powers of the procuracy have been limited.
    The CoE human rights commissioner says he raised the issue of
    violence in investigation. Hammarberg says there is evidence to
    violence, and he told the government it may stain the entire judicial
    system.


    Thomas Hammarberg expressed concern on the circumstance that the
    Armenian legislation still defines insult as a crime and provides for
    a criminal sentence. Besides, the human rights commissioner
    emphasized the issue of diversification of the media, namely
    television, to enable all the classes of the society to express their
    opinion. Thomas Hammarberg is going to expand these issues in the
    draft report which will be extended to the Armenian government. The
    CoE human rights commissioner says he is going to consider separate
    worrying cases he observed during the visits to prisons and meetings
    with inmates but he declined to provide more detail, preferring
    efforts to solve these problems to talks about them. He answered
    similarly the question of the reporters about his impression from the
    meetings with Arman Babajanyan, Jirair Sefilyan and other persons
    considered in Armenia as political prisoners. Hammarberg said he is
    going to discuss his individual observations with the government as
    soon as the draft report is ready. In answer to the question if the
    report is binding for the Armenian government, Hammarberg said
    formally it is not but he hopes that in reality it will be.
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