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Armenia: Parliamentary Vote Deals Blow To Turkish Reconciliation Cha

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  • Armenia: Parliamentary Vote Deals Blow To Turkish Reconciliation Cha

    ARMENIA: PARLIAMENTARY VOTE DEALS BLOW TO TURKISH RECONCILIATION CHANCES
    Gayane Abrahamyan

    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/ insightb/articles/eav022510d.shtml
    2/25/10

    Armeni a is ready to back out before it enters into a binding
    reconciliation agreement with its long-time foe, Turkey.

    The Armenian parliament on February 25 approved legislative amendments
    by a 70-4 margin that make it easy for the country's leaders to
    suspend or abrogate international treaties. In effect, the amendments
    enable the Armenian government to withdraw from protocols signed last
    October with Turkey that govern a process to normalize relations. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. The protocols will enter
    force only after they are ratified by the two countries' respective
    parliaments. So far, neither has done so.

    Progress toward ratification has been at a standstill in recent weeks.

    [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Officials and political analysts said that the amendments to the
    Law on International Treaties adopted on February 25 were a way for
    Armenia to hedge its bet on the reconciliation process. ""We will
    continue the process, the Armenian side wholeheartedly wishes for
    the protocols to become reality. However, we have to have necessary
    mechanisms for any possible scenario, and, come the need, the law
    will be applied to the protocols as well," Armenia's Foreign Minister
    Edward Nalbandian told EurasiaNet.

    Representatives of the Heritage Party and the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (ARF), two opposition parties with seats in parliament,
    said they weren't fully satisfied with the amendments. Even so, the
    ARF voted with the governing coalition to approve the amendments. The
    Heritage Party opted to oppose them.

    "This is a step forward, however, according to this draft only
    the executive branch will have the power to suspend the signing and
    ratification processes of international agreements, and we demand that
    the legislative branch also have this right," ARF MP Armen Roustamian
    told EurasiaNet.

    A Heritage leader, meanwhile, described the amendments as a "bad
    exit strategy."

    "We believe that the draft needs a number of improvements and
    additions and because this is only a half-step; we do not approve
    of half-steps," the head of the Heritage faction, Stepan Safarian,
    stated in parliament.

    Stepan Grigorian, the director of the Analytic Center on Globalization
    and Regional Cooperation in Yerevan, took issue with the timing of the
    parliamentary vote. He suggested that it unnecessarily put Yerevan on
    the defensive in what is now shaping up in a public-relations contest
    to assign blame for the stalemate in the reconciliation process.

    "Armenia could have simply ratified [the protocols] and waited for
    Turkey's steps, and if Turkey failed [to ratify], then ? we could have
    appeared before the international community with a clear conscience,"
    Grigorian told EurasiaNet. "In this case, Turkey can use the [adoption
    of] the amendments to say that Armenia is getting ready to pull-out."

    Ratification of the reconciliation protocols remains a hot topic
    in Armenia. Earlier in February, National Assembly Deputy Speaker
    Samvel Nikoian hinted that Armenia might take the first move toward
    ratification. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Nikoian's statement generated a sharp reaction from representatives
    of the Prosperous Armenia party, a member of the governing coalition.

    Prosperous Armenia leaders have insisted that Yerevan should consider
    ratification only after the Turkish legislature has already done so.

    At this point, many with ties to the governing coalition are sceptical
    about ratification. "I consider it most unlikely that Armenia might
    ratify the protocols first," former Justice Minister David Harutyunian
    told EurasiaNet.

    Editor's Note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a freelance reporter based
    in Yerevan.
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