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ID Matters: Justice Minister Says Only Passports Will Enable Armenia

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  • ID Matters: Justice Minister Says Only Passports Will Enable Armenia

    ID MATTERS: JUSTICE MINISTER SAYS ONLY PASSPORTS WILL ENABLE ARMENIA CITIZENS TO VOTE
    By Siranuysh Gevorgyan

    ArmeniaNow
    17.02.12 | 12:30

    Minister of Justice Hrayr Tovmasyan

    The government has come up with a proposal to change some language in
    several laws after discovering that the new identification cards to be
    introduced for Republic of Armenia citizens in June cannot be used for
    stamping during elections as required by the amended Electoral Code.

    Besides the Electoral Code, some other laws will have to be edited,
    including the laws on citizens' passports and identification cards.

    Minister of Justice Hrayr Tovmasyan said at a government meeting on
    Thursday that only the passport constitutes a legal document for the
    country's citizens to participate in ballots.

    "It transpired during the preparation of identification cards that
    they cannot have any paper material, or if they have, the degree of
    their protection will essentially reduce. Therefore, only passports
    are to be used as documents for elections," the minister explained.

    Ink and stamp will be applied on several voting-related documents
    to exclude the possibility of multiple votes. Under Article 66,
    paragraph 4, of the amended Electoral Code, "the member of the
    commission responsible for putting a seal on the ballot envelopes
    and for the ballot box shall seal the ballot envelope and allow the
    elector to drop the ballot envelope into the ballot box only after
    checking the presence of a stamp in the elector's identification
    document pertaining to participation in the given elections, and in
    case no such stamp is present, only after putting such stamp on the
    elector's identification document."

    It was announced recently that a new anti-fraud mechanism will be
    introduced ahead of the May parliamentary elections - for the first
    time, voters in Armenia will have their passports dyed to indicate
    that they have cast a ballot. The special ink from the British company
    Lantrade Global will disappear off the document after 12 hours. The
    Government's Reserve Fund will spend about $43,000 on the project.

    Armenian citizens, who now have a single passport for domestic use
    and foreign trips, will need two separate ones after the introduction
    of biometric passports and IDs later this year.

    "One passport will be valid outside Armenia and the other one inside
    Armenia. IDs can be alternatives to internal passports for domestic
    use only," said Tovmasyan.

    Since the changes will come into effect in June, they will not concern
    the May parliamentary elections.

    Citizens will be able to use IDs as a legal document only within the
    Republic of Armenia, while biometrical passports will be used for trips
    abroad (the passport profile will include the prints of a citizen's
    forefingers of both hands). Receiving such a biometrical passport will
    be voluntary and will come at a fee of 25,000 drams or about $65. But
    even after June 1 citizens will be allowed to receive or prolong
    their old passports that will remain valid both in Armenia and abroad.




    From: A. Papazian
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