European Experts Meet Armenian Leaders On Constitutional Reform

Leading legal experts from the Council of Europe met senior officials in
Yerevan on Thursday to discuss their serious concerns regarding draft amendments
to the Armenian constitution put forward by President Robert Kocharian and his
governing coalition.



Gianni Buquicchio, the secretary of the organization’s Venice Commission, and
members of its working group assessing the ongoing constitutional reform in
Armenia stood by a strongly-worded statement issued by them last Friday. “In
terms of preparing a good draft, the ball is on the Armenian authorities’
court,” Buquicchio told reporters after talks with the leadership of the
Armenian parliament.



The statement criticized the Armenian authorities for failing to embrace key
Venice Commission recommendations that would give more powers to the Armenian
parliament, limit Kocharian’s authority to appoint judges and make the mayor of
Yerevan an elected official. It warned that failure to accept those
recommendations would seriously hamper Yerevan’s efforts at European
integration.



Armenian coalition leaders have reacted negatively to the strong criticism. Some
of them accused the Council of Europe of unjustly penalizing Armenia to
counterbalance its anticipated criticism of human rights abuses in neighboring
Azerbaijan.



But Buquicchio denied any political motives behind the Venice Commission
statement. “I don’t agree with that at all,” he said. “It was a technical, legal
statement.”



The Italian official described his delegation’s talks with speaker Artur
Baghdasarian and other leaders of the Armenian parliament majority as
productive. He said they agreed that Kocharian’s constitutional package will
undergo another discussion with Venice Commission experts before being approved
by the National Assembly in the final reading and put to a referendum.



The authorities have so far sent conflicting signals about their willingness to
comply with the constitutional changes sought by the Venice Commission and
endorsed by the Armenian opposition. “We are not rejecting what is presented by
the Venice Commission,” Galust Sahakian, the parliamentary leader of the
governing Republican Party, told RFE/RL. But he said those recommendations must
be “adapted” to Armenian realities.



Asked how the commission will react if the existing constitutional package does
not undergo serious changes, Buquicchio said, “We will again be disappointed and
we will make a new statement.”



Buquicchio also hinted that October is the most like date for the planned
constitutional referendum. “My dream is to see before the end of this year,
possibly in October, a new constitution which is approved by all Armenian
citizens regardless of their political beliefs,” he said.



“We also very much hope that all the political forces will participate and agree
on this new constitution for Armenia,” he added in an apparent reference to the
Armenian opposition’s boycott of parliament sessions and constitutional debates
in particular.



The opposition urged on Tuesday Armenians to vote against Kocharian’s
amendments, saying that they would “preserve the country’s autocratic system.”

By Armen Zakarian