
Published on November 27, 2006
Armenian Bill On Property Confiscation Passed Amid Protests
- Ignoring vehement protests from the opposition and scores of displaced Yerevan residents, the Armenian government pushed through parliament on Monday a highly controversial bill that empowers it to confiscate private property practically at will. The bill was passed in the third and final reading over the objections of the National Assembly’s opposition minority that branded it unjust and unconstitutional. The development came after weeks of heated debates on the issue among the country’s leading political parties and civil society representatives. The adopted law is meant to regulate continuing demolitions of old parts of central Yerevan which has been the scene of a massive redevelopment in recent years. They have sparked angry protests by hundreds of families who have been evicted from their now demolished homes and claim to have not been properly compensated by the state. The Armenian constitution stipulates that private property can be taken away by the state “only in exceptional cases involving overriding public interests, in a manner defined by law, and with a prior commensurate compensation.” The process has until now been regulated only by government directives, however. Armenia’s Constitutional Court effectively declared it illegal in April, but stopped short of ordering the authorities to return the increasingly expensive land to their former owners. The bill in question was drafted in response to the court ruling. Its adoption means that the authorities can continue to tear down old houses in the capital and other parts of the country by simply invoking “needs of the public and the state.” The law has been condemned by many displaced families and opposition lawmakers, even though it entitles the owner of a confiscated property to a financial compensation equal to its market value. The opposition succeeded in late September in thwarting the government’s first attempt to push it through the parliament dominated by President Robert Kocharian’s supporters. But the bill was re-introduced by the government and approved in the first reading last month. “This law is unconstitutional,” Grigor Harutiunian of the opposition Artarutyun (Justice) alliance, said, appealing to his pro-government colleagues before the vote. Representatives of the two other opposition factions in the parliament, National Unity and Orinats Yerkir, also spoke out against the bill. However, the opposition calls went unheeded, with 70 members of the 131-strong assembly voting for its final passage. Many of them were confronted and jeered earlier in the day by dozens of angry displaced residents that protested outside the parliament in a further desperate attempt to clinch heftier sums for their lost homes. The protesters, who claim to be victims of government corruption, chanted “Shame! Shame!” as members of the parliament majority made their way into the parliament building. (Photolur photo)

- By Astghik Bedevian and Shakeh Avoyan
Headlines for November 27, 2006
Armenian Bill On Property Confiscation Passed Amid Protests
By Astghik Bedevian and Shakeh Avoyan
Ignoring vehement protests from the opposition and scores of displaced Yerevan residents, the Armenian government pushed through parliament on Monday a highly controversial bill that empowers it to confiscate ...Oskanian Reaches Out To Turkey On Genocide Recognition
By Haro Chakmakjian, AFP
Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian is reaching out to historical foe Turkey to normalize ties as the key step toward a political settlement on the ultra-sensitive issue of genocide recognition. ...Opposition Leaders Launch ‘Pro-Democracy Movement’
By Astghik Bedevian
Two prominent opposition leaders launched over the weekend what they described as a broad-based civic movement that will strive to transform Armenia into a democratic and rule-of-law state. Vazgen Manukian, ...
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Today in Armenian history- 1920 Lenin chairs a meeting of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party on the political question of Armenia and Georgia.
- 1991 The USSR Constitutional Oversight Committee deems unconstitutional the Supreme Soviets decision to create a Republic Organizational Committee in Soviet Azerbaijan headed by Viktor Polianichko (on 1990 01 15) in Artsakh as well as the 1991 11 23 decision by Azerbaijani President Mutalibov to dissolve the Nagorno Gharabagh Autonomous Region. It also revoked the reunification decision taken by Armenia and Artsakh on 1989 12 01. It does not annul the decision (1991 09 02) of the Nagorno Karabagh District Councils (including the Shahumian district) on the establishment of the Republic of Nagorno Karabagh. That decision was deemed in compliance with the then existing law of 1990 04 03 on the Procedure of Secession of a Soviet Republic from the USSR.
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