Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Court Gives Green Light For Iraq Deployment

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

  • Armenian Court Gives Green Light For Iraq Deployment

    Armenian Court Gives Green Light For Iraq Deployment
    By Anna Saghabalian 09/12/2004 09:02

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep
    Dec 9 2004

    Armenia's Constitutional Court gave the government the green light
    on Wednesday to send Armenian non-combat troops to Iraq, a deployment
    which Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian claimed will spare the country
    international isolation.

    The ruling paved the way for a debate on the issue in parliament
    dominated by President Robert Kocharian's loyalists. Some of them
    have serious misgivings about the wisdom of the deployment, sharing
    concerns about the security of Iraq's Armenian community.

    But Sarkisian brushed aside those concerns as he addressed the panel
    of nine judges. "Armenia could not have stayed isolated from regional
    developments," he said. "Hence, the Armenian authorities' decision
    to participate in the process of Iraq's stabilization."

    Sarkisian warned that Armenia's failure to follow neighboring
    Azerbaijan's and Georgia's example and join the U.S.-led "coalition
    of the willing" in Iraq "could create certain obstacles to a further
    expansion of Armenia's cooperation in the international arena." He
    did not elaborate.

    The one-day court hearing centered on an agreement between Poland and
    18 other countries that have troops in a Polish-led multinational
    division controlling south-central Iraq. Kocharian promised to
    place about 50 Armenian military doctors, sappers and truck drivers
    under Polish command during a visit to Warsaw last September. The
    Constitutional Court found that the agreement does not run counter
    to the Armenian constitution.

    Sarkisian said Yerevan will sign up to the document on the condition
    that the Armenian military personnel take part only in "defensive
    and humanitarian activities" and avoid joint actions with the bigger
    Azerbaijani contingent. "Performance of joint tasks with the contingent
    of Azerbaijani armed forces stationed in Iraq will not be acceptable,"
    he said.

    Speaking to reporters afterward, the powerful defense chief was
    confident that the National Assembly will endorse the deployment
    plans welcomed by the United States. "I think that the overwhelming
    majority of our parliamentarians care about Armenia's future and will
    not make emotional decisions," he said.

    Critics have been warning that an estimated 25,000 Iraqi citizens of
    Armenian descent could face retaliatory attacks from Iraqi insurgents
    once Armenia becomes part of the U.S.-led occupation force. The
    insurgents have routinely kidnapped and killed citizens of countries
    cooperating with it.

    Leaders of the Iraqi Armenians have themselves exhorted Kocharian
    not to send any servicemen. Underscoring their fears was Tuesday's
    bombing of Armenian and Chaldean churches in the northern Iraqi city
    of Mosul. News reports said gunmen burst in and set off explosions
    inside the buildings, damaging them but hurting no one.

    The Armenian Apostolic Church condemned the violence, with Catholicos
    Garegin II warning of a "danger to the centuries-old co-existence
    of the Christian and Islamic peoples" of Iraq. Garegin urged Iraqi
    spiritual leaders to prevent the continuing unrest in the country
    from degenerating into a religious conflict.

    The alarm was echoed Pope John Paul II on Wednesday. "I express
    my spiritual closeness to the faithful, shocked by the attacks,"
    John Paul said, speaking from his apartment window above St. Peter's
    Square on the Roman Catholic feast of the Immaculate Conception.

    In Yerevan, meanwhile, one of the Constitutional Court judges, Kim
    Balayan, wondered if the planned deployment could put the lives of
    Iraqi Armenians at greater risk. Sarkisian countered that they will
    be insecure regardless of Armenian military presence in Iraq.
Working...
X