
Published on November 24, 2008
STRASBOURG OFFICIAL SAYS ARMENIA COMING SHORT OF PACE EXPECTATIONS
- Armenia has thus far mostly failed to comply with the repeated demands of the Council of Europe in its current handling of the post-election crisis, said Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of Europe's commissioner for human rights, who ended his three-day fact-finding visit to Armenia at the weekend. The Strasbourg official specifically said that his criticism concerned the lack of progress in exposing those responsible for the post-election violence on March 1 as well as the continuing criminal investigations and trials of opposition activists in connection with those events. At a press conference in Yerevan on Saturday, Hammarberg said in a report he is going to submit to the Council of Europe soon he will mention as the only positive development the fact that a fact-finding group has been set up in Armenia to conduct an additional probe into the March 1 unrest at an expert level. At the same time, the commissioner said he will have to critically assess the general lack of progress in his report. “We are bound to be critical when it comes to developments or lack of developments,” Hammarberg emphasized to reporters. In particular, Hammarberg criticized Armenian prosecutors and judicial authorities for the continuing case against several oppositionists, which he said lacked a strong ground to be initiated in the first place. “I am critical about some of the trials that have already been concluded and about the preparation of the major case against the seven prisoners,” Hammarberg said in reference to the case of seven leading opposition members, including Alexander Arzumanian, Armenia's ex-foreign minister and leading supporter of opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian in last February's presidential election, as well as three members of parliament who have been jailed since March for their alleged roles in the post-election developments. All are charged under Article 300 of Armenia's Criminal Code (“usurpation of state power”) and part 2 of Article 225 (“instigating and organizing mass disturbances”). The Strasbourg official said he would express his final opinion on the case of the oppositionists after the indictment in the case was ready. But he expressed doubts that there was “a sufficient ground even to start the trial against those seven.” “I have not so far seen any strong evidence which would make it possible for an independent court to sentence these seven for attempting to change power in this country with violence,” Hammarberg said. He also called it unacceptable that the scripts of wiretapped phone conversations of the defendants in the case had been published in the press, which, he said, is an unacceptable phenomenon in a law-abiding state, since it invades privacy and violates personal data protection rights. “These methods are unacceptable for a society guided by human rights protection,” Hammarberg underscored. The Council of Europe's commissioner said he had received reports about pressures put on witnesses during trials. He also called it admissible that charges and verdicts in a number of cases and trials examining clashes between police and protesters had been based solely on police testimony, in which case, according to him, additional evidence is required. Before leaving Yerevan, Hammarberg said he was disappointed about the pieces of information he had learned while on the visit. The Council of Europe's commissioner is due to submit his report to the plenary session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) in January. The session, in particular, is expected to discuss Armenia's compliance with its resolutions 1609 and 1620. “I believe that what I testify to them would have some importance for their conclusion when it comes to the possible sanction, which would mean that the parliamentary delegation from Armenia would be deprived of their right to vote,” Hammarberg said. “The fact that other things happened, such as the Georgia war, the Karabakh discussion, Turkey, etcetera, does not change the fact that this is seen as a serious matter in the Council of Europe. We need to protect the standards that we have agreed upon.” (PHOTOLUR photo, Thomas Hammarberg)

- By Karine Kalantarian
Headlines for November 24, 2008
ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN TURKEY SEEKING TO NORMALIZE RELATIONS
(dpa)
Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian arrived in Istanbul on Monday where he will hold talks with his Turkish counterpart Ali Babacan aimed at normalizing relations between the historic foes, the ...ARMENIA SET TO START POWER SUPPLY TO TURKEY
By Ruben Meloyan
In what is seen as the first step towards establishing direct trade links between Yerevan and Ankara, a senior Armenian government official has announced his side's readiness to start supplying electricity ...STRASBOURG OFFICIAL SAYS ARMENIA COMING SHORT OF PACE EXPECTATIONS
By Karine Kalantarian
Armenia has thus far mostly failed to comply with the repeated demands of the Council of Europe in its current handling of the post-election crisis, said Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of Europe's commissioner ...
Most read news (last 7 days)
PARLIAMENT OPPOSITION SET TO ATTEND ‘KARABAKH DISCUSSION’
By Ruzanna StepanianARMENIA SET TO START POWER SUPPLY TO TURKEY
By Ruben MeloyanPROSECUTOR SEEKS FOREIGN EXPERTISE IN ARMENIAN UNREST PROBE
By Karine KalantarianOPPOSITION DEFENDS SKIPPING SARKISIAN-HOSTED ‘KARABAKH CONSULTATIONS’
By Anush Martirosian
ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN TURKEY SEEKING TO NORMALIZE RELATIONS
(dpa)SARKISIAN DISCUSSES KARABAKH WITH ARMENIAN POLITICAL PARTIES
By Ruzanna StepanianINVESTIGATIVE JOURNALIST ATTACKED IN YEREVAN
By Astghik BedevianSARKISIAN INVITES OPPOSITION TO ‘KARABAKH DEBATE’
By Ruzanna StepanianLEADING OPPOSITION MEMBER SENTENCED TO JAIL TERM
By Karine KalantarianCOUNCIL OF EUROPE OFFICIAL STARTS ARMENIA VISIT
By Anush Martirosian
© AUA
Today in Armenian history- 1895 Birth of Hrachia Nerssissyan (actor). He died in 1961.
- 1913 Death of H.F.B. Lynch in London of Irish parentage. Besides his study of law, he became noted as a writer, a geographer, a politician, and a traveller, with a keen interest in Armenia. His two-volume book on his Armenia travels is a classic and describes life in Armenia at the end of the 19th century. In 1906, he was elected to serve as a member of the British Parliament. (He was born on 1862 04 18).
- 1920 The Tashnak government of Armenia falls. Simon Vratsian forms a new government.
- 1927 Death of Shooshanik Kiurghinyan (poetess) in Yerevan. She was born in 1876.
- 1940 Ceremonial inauguration of Lenin's monument, at Lenin Square in Yerevan.
- 1940 Yerevan's Zoological Garden is created.
- 1980 Opening of the meeting (in Yerevan) of Diasporan Armenian representatives.
- 1996 Robert Kocharian is re-elected for a second term as President of Artsakh. International observers witness the election.
Forum most active discussions
ARMENIAN NEWS
INTERACTIVE NEWS
INFORMATION
MY ARMTOWN

How to quit smoking?
How to write in Armenian on Windows XP?

