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New Armenian Law To Facilitate Phone Tapping

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  • New Armenian Law To Facilitate Phone Tapping

    NEW ARMENIAN LAW TO FACILITATE PHONE TAPPING
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Rdaio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 22 2007

    Armenia's parliament passed on Monday a controversial law that allows
    law-enforcement authorities to wire-tap any telephone conversation
    without a court authorization.

    The Armenian government, which the drafted the law, says it is aimed
    at making it easier for the police, the National Security Service
    (NSS) as well as tax and customs bodies to combat and investigate
    various crimes.

    The opposition minority in the National Assembly insisted, however,
    that the bill's main purpose is to stifle dissent by facilitating
    police surveillance of politicians, public figures and journalists
    critical of the government. Lawmakers representing the opposition
    Zharangutyun and Orinats Yerkir parties accused the authorities of
    seeking to turn Armenia into a police state.

    Their last-ditch attempts to scuttle the bill's adoption proved
    unsuccessful. The government-controlled parliament voted by 65 to 3,
    with 8 abstentions, to pass it in the third and final reading.

    "This parliament is worthy of such a law," Stepan Safarian, a
    Zharangutyun deputy, declared after the vote.

    The remark prompted a stern rebuke from speaker Tigran Torosian,
    who accused Safarian of insulting fellow legislators.

    The government measure, which also allows the authorities to read
    private mail at will, was made possible by one of the Western-backed
    amendments to Armenia's constitution enacted in the November 2005
    constitutional referendum. The Armenian constitution stipulated
    until then that citizens' privacy can not be breached without the
    permission of local courts. It now allows phone tapping "in cases
    specified by law."

    Many opposition politicians and even journalists have long suspected
    that their phones are illegally wire-tapped by the NSS, the Armenian
    successor the Soviet KGB. It is not uncommon for them to avoid
    discussing confidential matters by phone, a habit dating back to
    Soviet times.
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