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Armenian opposition considers supporting constitutional reform

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  • Armenian opposition considers supporting constitutional reform

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    The Jamestown Foundation
    July 28 2005

    ARMENIAN OPPOSITION CONSIDERS SUPPORTING CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM

    By Emil Danielyan

    Thursday, July 28, 2005


    The Armenian authorities have been given a major boost in their
    standoff with the opposition with the Council of Europe's effective
    endorsement of their draft amendments to Armenia's controversial
    post-Soviet constitution. Experts from the Venice Commission have
    declared that the amendments' passage at a referendum expected this
    November would contribute significantly to the country's
    democratization and advance its European integration.

    The move created a serious dilemma for the Armenian opposition, which
    had hoped to use the vote for another attempt to depose President
    Robert Kocharian. It also caused a rift between moderate and more
    radical opposition groups -- another welcome development for the
    ruling regime.

    Reform of the constitution, criticized for giving the president of
    the republic disproportionate powers, was one of the conditions for
    Armenia's accession to the Council of Europe in January 2001.
    Kocharian's first attempt to expedite it ended in failure when his
    package of amendments did not win sufficient popular support at a
    referendum in May 2003. Kocharian and his three-party governing
    coalition have since been revising that package to make it more
    acceptable to the domestic public and the Council of Europe.

    They avoided making major changes in the constitutional draft until
    facing strong criticism and warnings from the Venice Commission as
    well as the Parliamentary Assembly of the Strasbourg-based
    pan-European body in June. Armenian officials pledged to further
    curtail the sweeping presidential powers before sending a revised
    draft to Strasbourg on July 7. The Venice Commission said in a July
    22 report that Yerevan has honored those commitments, concluding that
    the final version of the proposed constitutional changes constitutes
    "a good basis for ensuring the compliance of the Armenian
    Constitution with the European standards in the fields of respect for
    human rights, democracy, and the rule of law." The commission
    expressed hope that the opposition will be "mature" enough to help
    the authorities enact those changes.

    But Armenia's largest opposition group, the Artarutiun (Justice)
    alliance, is clearly unhappy with the latest draft and is demanding
    additional changes. The first and foremost of them relates to the
    formation of the government. The authorities have agreed to strip the
    Armenian president of his discretionary right to sack the prime
    minister and his cabinet. Only the parliament would have such
    authority in the future. But opposition leaders say this change would
    be nullified by another draft amendment that empowers the president
    to dissolve the National Assembly if it twice rejects his prime
    ministerial nominees.

    Artarutiun also wants serious limitations on the presidential
    authority to appoint and sack virtually all judges as well as a
    constitutional provision mandating direct elections of Yerevan's
    mayor, who is currently named by Kocharian. The latter is only
    prepared to allow the mayor's appointment by an elected municipal
    council.

    The opposition demands have already been dismissed as "ridiculous" by
    Tigran Torosian, the deputy parliament speaker and a senior
    representative of the ruling coalition. Torosian warned on July 22
    that Artarutiun will commit "political suicide" if it campaigns
    against the reform. Indeed, the opposition bloc now risks finding
    itself at loggerheads with the Council of Europe and perhaps major
    European governments that hold sway in the organization.

    Hanrapetutiun (Republic), the most radical of nine parties aligned in
    Artarutiun, has made it clear that it will not support the reform
    under any circumstances.. The party, led by the firebrand former
    prime minister Aram Sarkisian, has publicly attacked its opposition
    allies for taking a more conciliatory approach.

    There is clearly little the opposition can gain in return from
    endorsing the reform and somehow legitimizing a regime repeatedly
    criticized by the West for falsifying elections and abusing human
    rights. An amended constitution is unlikely to have any bearing on
    the root cause of Armenia's problems: chronic vote rigging. The
    Council of Europe, however, continues to put the emphasis on the
    passage of new laws rather than the enforcement of the existing ones
    that already provide for free and fair elections. No wonder that
    Armenia is now hardly more democratic than it was before joining the
    organization.

    Opposition support is essential for the success of the constitutional
    reform. To pass, the constitutional amendments have to be approved by
    a majority of referendum participants that make up at least one-third
    of Armenia's 2.4 million eligible voters. Clearing that threshold
    requires a high degree of political consensus that is currently
    absent. Besides, many Armenians seem apathetic to the issue. A recent
    opinion poll found that less than one-third of Yerevan residents
    would likely take part in the constitutional referendum if it were
    held now.

    Some local observers believe that the only way for the authorities to
    ensure a desired outcome of the referendum is to falsify its results.
    And this is what opposition leaders seem to be banking on as they
    prepare for another bid to bring the recent wave of ex-Soviet
    revolutions to Armenia. Their previous campaign of anti-Kocharian
    demonstrations last year failed to attract strong public support and
    was easily suppressed by security forces.

    Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian, Kocharian's most likely successor,
    indicated on July 24 that the regime is ready to go as far as to
    order troops into the streets of Yerevan to hold off another
    opposition challenge. "Who is their Hercules who will come and crack
    my head and sit in my chair?" he asked members of a pro-government
    youth organization. "How do they imagine cracking Kocharian's head
    and occupying his post?"

    (Report by a Venice Commission working group on Armenia, July 22;
    Haykakan Zhamanak, July 26; Aravot, July 26; RFE/RL Armenia Report,
    July 4, 22)
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