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Armenian Law On Emergency Rule Passed


Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Republican Party attend a parliament session, Yerevan, 09Feb2012.
Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Republican Party attend a parliament session, Yerevan, 09Feb2012.
The Armenian parliament approved in the final reading on Wednesday a controversial government bill which opposition politicians say will make it easier for the authorities to use the army for suppressing street protests.

The bill is supposed to regulate the declaration and enforcement of a state of emergency in Armenia. It stipulates that the president of the republic can declare emergency rule if there is an “immediate danger to constitutional order,” including attempts to forcibly seize power, terrorism and “mass disturbances.”

The bill allows the head of state to turn to the armed forces if police and other security forces are unable to enforce emergency rule. In that case, military personnel will be allowed to use riot equipment and live ammunition in accordance with an Armenian law on the police.

The opposition minority in the National Assembly and the extraparliamentary Armenian National Congress (HAK) expressed serious concern about the bill immediately after it was circulated earlier this year. They claimed that the authorities are preparing ground for future use of the armed forces against political dissent.

In response to the opposition objections, the government modified the draft law before the National Assembly approved it in the first reading on March 1. Opposition leaders dismissed the changes as cosmetic.

The parliament leadership on Wednesday postponed a second-reading vote on the bill by 20 minutes at the request of the opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun). “I just hope that deputies from the ruling parties will get tired, leave the auditorium and the law will not pass,” Vahan Hovannisian, Dashnaktsutyun’s parliamentary leader, explained to RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am).

Nevertheless, 68 deputies of the 131-member assembly voted for the bill after the break. Opponents of the bill, among them some deputies from the pro-government Prosperous Armenia Party, did not take part in the vote.

Government officials and leaders of the parliament’s pro-government majority have denied any connection between the new law and the May 6 parliamentary elections.
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