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PACE Head Presses For Political Reforms In Armenia

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  • PACE Head Presses For Political Reforms In Armenia

    PACE HEAD PRESSES FOR POLITICAL REFORMS IN ARMENIA
    Irina Hovannisian, Karine Kalantarian

    http://www.armenialiberty.org/content /article/2041469.html
    13.05.2010

    Armenia -- Mevlut Cavusoglu, president of the Council of Europe
    Parliamentary Assembly, at a news conference in Yerevan, 13 May 2010.

    Mevlut Cavusoglu, the president of the Council of Europe's
    Parliamentary Assembly (PACE), urged the Armenian authorities to hold
    democratic elections and press ahead with other political reforms at
    the end of a high-profile visit to Yerevan on Thursday.

    The Turkish politician also dismissed Armenian concerns about his
    efforts to have the Strasbourg-based body again discuss and pass
    judgment on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Cavusoglu met with President Serzh Sarkisian, leaders of Armenia's
    leading political forces as well as local civil society representatives
    during the two-day trip. He said political reforms promised by the
    Armenian authorities and sought by the PACE were the main focus of
    the talks.

    Speaking at a concluding news conference in Yerevan, Cavusoglu singled
    out the need to end Armenia's culture of electoral fraud "It is very
    important that the next elections that will be held in Armenia in 2012
    meet the highest European standards," he said. "This will show your
    citizens and us that Armenia has turned a dark page of its recent past
    and is determined to move forward in its democratic transformation."

    Cavusoglu said this as well as a reform of Armenia's judicial and
    law-enforcement systems would address the political fallout from the
    2008 post-election strife in Yerevan and prevent a repeat of such
    dramatic events.

    Such reforms have also been recommended by the PACE's Monitoring
    Committee and an Armenian parliamentary body that investigated the 2008
    deadly unrest. David Harutiunian, a senior pro-government lawmaker
    heading the Armenian delegation at the PACE, presented a tentative
    plan of relevant government measures to the committee in March.

    Cavusoglu told journalists that he heard "some very encouraging
    responses from Mr. Harutiunian" in Yerevan. "His committee will submit
    a report to the [Armenian] National Assembly and this will be a good
    opportunity for your parliament to strengthen its vital function of
    parliamentary control," he said.

    "We are now expecting that the authorities will provide to the
    [Parliamentary] Assembly with a detailed list of all the reforms
    ... as well as specific deadlines," he added.

    The PACE head went on to criticize the Armenian authorities for their
    refusal to free all opposition members arrested following the February
    2008 presidential election. He said he specifically raised with them
    the case of Nikol Pashinian, an opposition leader and newspaper editor
    who was sentenced to seven years in prison earlier this year.

    Armenia -- Armenian President Serzh Sarkissian meets PACE President
    Mevlut Cavusoglu, Yerevan, 12May2010

    Cavusoglu also deplored the authorities' failure to prosecute anyone in
    connection with the deaths of ten people in the post-election vicious
    clashes between security forces and supporters of opposition leader
    Levon Ter-Petrosian. "It is unacceptable that nobody has been held
    responsible in relation to the ten deaths that occurred during the
    March 2008 events," he said. "Public confidence will not be restored
    until individual justice is done."

    Cavusoglu held what he described as a "very emotional meeting" with
    close relatives of most of the unrest victims earlier on Thursday.

    Some of the participants told RFE/RL's Armenian service that they
    expressed their anger with what they see as a Council of Europe
    reluctance to bring the Sarkisian administration to task over the
    unrest deaths.

    The Council of Europe and its legislative arm in particular were also
    strongly criticized by top representatives of Ter-Petrosian's Armenian
    National Congress (HAK) who met the PACE president on Wednesday.

    Speaking to RFE/RL after the meeting, one of them, Levon Zurabian,
    accused the PACE of turning a blind eye to its own resolutions that
    demanded a reversal of the Armenian government's 2008 crackdown on
    the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition.

    Both the HAK and other major Armenian political forces also expressed
    serious concern about Cavusoglu's intention to revive and lead the work
    of a PACE subcommittee tasked with facilitating a peaceful resolution
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. They claim that the ad hoc body can
    not be impartial because his country, Turkey, continues to lend strong
    and unconditional support to Azerbaijan in the conflict. They cite
    pro-Azerbaijani statements made by Cavusoglu before he was elected
    PACE president in January.

    The issue apparently sparked tense exchanges between Cavusoglu and
    representatives of the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), a junior partner
    in Sarkisian's governing coalition, and the opposition Zharangutyun
    (Heritage) party. Naira Zohrabian, a senior BHK lawmaker, called his
    Karabakh-related intentions "unacceptable."

    "I said that since he represents Turkey's ruling Justice
    and Development Party, which has been extremely biased on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict during all these years, we are not confident,
    with all due respect for Mr. Cavusoglu, that [the subcommittee]
    will not be biased," Zohrabian told RFE/RL. She said the Turkish
    parliamentarian was "very offended" by her arguments.

    Stepan Safarian, a Zharangutyun leader, said he and his party
    colleagues conveyed the same message to Cavusoglu. The latter responded
    by accusing them of "national discrimination," Safarian told RFE/RL.

    The HAK representatives also voiced strong opposition to any PACE
    involvement in the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks mediated by the
    United States, Russia and France under the OSCE aegis. "We consider the
    existing format the most optimal one, and any alternative discussion
    would only distract the conflicting parties from negotiations and
    enable them to engage in propaganda," said Zurabian.

    Whether President Sarkisian and his Republican Party of Armenia
    (HHK) agree with this view was not immediately clear. An official
    press release on Sarkisian's Wednesday meeting with Cavusoglu made
    no mention of Karabakh.

    Speaking at the news conference, Cavusoglu insisted that the decision
    to resume discussions on the conflict was made by the PACE leaders
    months before he was elected to run the assembly. He also argued that
    the subcommittee in question was formed in 2005 in accordance with
    a PACE resolution on Karabakh.

    "All the member countries of the Assembly have to abide by the Assembly
    resolutions," Cavusoglu said. "But we are also pragmatic.

    Especially when there are different opinions on an issue." He added
    that he will take the Armenian concerns into account even if he does
    not agree with them.

    Cavusoglu was also unrepentant about his decision not to visit the
    Armenian genocide memorial in Yerevan, which led another major party,
    the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), to cancel
    a planned meeting with him. "I respect your opinions, but everybody
    has to respect my decision," he said.
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