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You Could Cut It With A Knife: Heated debates, multiple vetoes, walkouts and lonewolf Mr. Galust Sahakyan’s idle-mode series

November 16, 2018 By administrator

The last session of a regular four-day sitting of parliament saw some quite heated debates today.

A number of government-submitted bills were voted down, including bills that were adopted at first reading earlier.

The parliament even failed to ensure quorum initially, with only 48 lawmakers in the 105-seat legislative showing up, prompting Speaker Ara Babloyan recommending waiting.

He then requested faction leaders to summon their lawmakers to the session. After about half an hour, a few Members of Parliament arrived. After some time the parliament finally ensured quorum and the sitting began.

The Speaker called for a vote for the previously debated bill on amending the “Law On State Administration System Bodies”. Only 51 lawmakers voted in favor and 1 abstained, others didn’t take part. The bill failed to be adopted since it required a minimum of 53 participating MPs. After the vote the Speaker asked HHK faction MP Galust Sahakyan, a former Speaker, whether he wasn’t voting. Sahakyan confirmed he isn’t participating.

Then, the Speaker called for a vote for the bill on amending the Law On Subsoil. Again, 51 voted in favor and 1 abstained, failing the adoption.

The next bill in line was the bill on amending the Law on Insurance and Insurance Activities. Deputy Speaker Michael Melkumyan requested the floor and addressed the lawmakers, saying: “Dear colleagues, I am urging you all to participate in the vote in order not to fail the important bills of the government. I call on you to participate for important decisions to be adopted”. But again, only 51 voted in favor, and 1 abstained.

Yelk faction MP Hrachya Hakobyan’s bill on amending the Law on Advertisement was next. He requested the floor and addressed Galust Sahakyan, asking him to participate in the vote this time. “I believe this bill is urgent, because you can see to what extent the advertisements of these [bookmakers] are suffocating everyone,” Hakobyan said, referring to the activities of bookmaking companies – a recently debated issue. However, only 52 lawmakers voted in favor, and the bill again failed to be adopted. The Speaker announced that 1 MP did not vote. “But I guess the MP didn’t vote as a matter of principle,” he said.

Deputy Speaker Melkumyan called for a re-vote, but the Speaker disagreed.

The other Deputy Speaker, Eduard Sharmazanov, intervened and addressed his colleagues. “First of all I ask you to respect one another, we are all equal here. If no one has said that the button didn’t work and he was unable to vote, then there is no need for a re-vote. I myself voted in favor, I don’t know about others,” he said.

Melkumyan insisted to vote again. “I suggest us all to realize that this is a very important law that we must adopt,” he said. Nevertheless, a 2nd vote didn’t take place.

 

MP Edmon Marukyan’s bill on amending the Criminal Code was next. Tsarukyan faction MP Vahe Enfiajyan took the floor and expressed his concern over the situation. He said that the situation in parliament is inadmissible and unclear, “come, sit and disrupt the normal function”.

Marukyan asked the lawmakers to support his bill, because it concerns human rights protection and respect. “I attach great importance for it to be adopted, because it doesn’t have any political goal, it doesn’t have anything political, it is simply of humanitarian nature, and I am asking for us together to adopt it,” he said.

Tsarukyan faction MP Naira Zohrabyan joined Marukyan in the call. “I urge everyone to vote in favor of this bill and not fail it,” she said.

Sharmazanov, in turn, called for lawmakers to respect each other’s voting. “We are all Members of Parliament and are entitled to vote or not vote,” he said. At the same time, he expressed support for Marukyan’s bill. Despite numerous calls, the bill was voted down. Only 48 MPs voted in favor.

The parliament also rejected the bill of several Republicans who recommended amending the freedom of assembly law and banning rallies in territories of churches. Only 43 MPs voted in favor, again failing to adopt it.

The bill on granting the Catholicos of the Armenian Church state security detail was also rejected.

Republican lawmaker Hayk Babukhanyan urged his colleagues to adopt the bill. Yelk faction leader Lena Nazaryan, in turn, told the parliament that the government has already reassured that in the event of the Catholicos requiring security measures, the government will take appropriate actions, and that there is no need to have a separate law on this issue. Sharmazanov, on the other hand, called for the adoption of the bill, citing the “exclusive rights” of the church under the Constitution. The ARF also expressed support for the bill.

Only 28 MPs voted in favor, 10 abstained. The bill failed to be adopted.

Sharmazanov blasted the vote as “the most embarrassing vote in the history of independent Armenia”, and left the hall. Other HHK lawmakers left the hall soon after Sharmazanov.

The Speaker told everyone to remain in place since another bill must be voted for. “Each bill has its importance, this can’t go on like this,” he said.

The next bill was Tigran Urikhanyan’s proposed amendments to the Law on Education, which again was voted down. Only 32 MPs voted in favor. The required minimum number of participating MPs was 53. The bill was proposing to introduce more convenient conditions for students paying tuition fees.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, Heated debates, Parliament

Armenian Parliament to convene extraordinary sitting on August 28

August 23, 2018 By administrator

The government proposes the Speaker of the Parliament to convene an extraordinary sitting on August 28, at 11:00, reports Armenpress.

The respective decision was adopted during today’s government session.

The agenda includes the draft on making amendments in the law on Approving the annual and complex action plan for restoration, reproduction and use of eco system of Lake Sevan.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Parliament

Bulgarian Parliament ratifies new Armenia-EU deal

June 18, 2018 By administrator

The Bulgarian Parliament has ratified the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between the EU and Yerevan, Armenia‘s embassy in Sofia said in a Facebook post.

Bulgaria, which currently chairs the Council of the European Union, has become one of the first EU member-states to approve the agreement.

Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania ratified the CEPA earlier, while the Armenian parliament approved the deal for good on April 11.

The negotiations on the new EU-Armenia partnership agreement were launched in 2015 and concluded in 2017. It was then signed by both sides in November 2017. The final agreement marks a deeper EU-Armenia political dialogue, broadens the scope of economic cooperation and provides new opportunities for closer ties on energy, transport, infrastructure, environment, trade, education and other sectors.

As reported earlier, an urgent draft resolution encouraging the ratification by European Union member states of a new agreement signed between the bloc and Armenia will be introduced at a plenary session of Euronest Parliamentary Assembly on June 26

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Bulgarian, Parliament, ratifies EU-Armenia

Breaking News: Armenian parliament fails to elect Prime Minister in first round of voting after 9-hour debates

May 1, 2018 By administrator

Armenian parliament fails to elect Prime  Minister

Armenian parliament fails to elect Prime Minister

YEREVAN, MAY 1, ARMENPRESS. After nearly 9 hours of debates on electing a Prime Minister, with opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan being the sole candidate, the Armenian parliament failed to make the election as 55 lawmakers voted against and 45 lawmakers voted in favor.

The only nominated candidate for Prime Minister was opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan, who spearheaded the latest protest campaigns which prompted the resignation of Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan on April 23.

Pashinyan was nominated by the opposition Yelk faction.

Two other factions – Tsarukyan and the ARF – have endorsed the opposition MPs candidacy.

Pashinyan needed at least 53 votes to be elected Prime Minister.

There are 4 factions in the Armenian parliament. The Republican Party (HHK) faction, the ruling party of Armenia, has 58 seats in the 105-seat unicameral parliament of Armenia – known as the National Assembly.  The ARF faction – (Armenian Revolutionary Federation aka Dashnaktsutyun), has 7 seats. The Tsarukyan alliance has 31 seats, and the Yelk faction has 9 seats.

According to the Constitution, in case of failure to elect a Prime Minister in the parliament, a second round of election is held seven days later. In the second round, candidates nominated by at least one third of the total number of MPs are entitled to participate in the election. If a Prime Minister isn’t elected in the second round also, the parliament is dissolved by virtue of law.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, elect Prime Minister, fails, Parliament

Armenia’s parliament sets date for prime minister vote

April 26, 2018 By administrator

Opposition protest leader Nikol Pashinian has said he wants to become prime minister. It’s unclear if he will get support from parliament where the Republican Party has a majority.

Armenia’s parliament will vote for a new prime minister on May 1, its speaker Ara Bablayan said Thursday.

Opposition protest leader Nikol Pashinian has said he is prepared to be a candidate.

Serzh Sarksyan quit as prime minister on Monday following two weeks of street protests over alleged corruption and cronyism.

Sarksyan moved to the premier position earlier this month after 10 years as president. Protesters accuse him of attempting a power grab under a new parliamentary system of government.

Pashinian and his supporters are demanding that parliament choose a “people’s candidate” who is not from the ruling Republican Party for the role of prime minister. Pashinian wants to hold new elections, reform the electoral code and carry out wide reforms of the political system.

Only about 8 percent of seats in parliament are held by the Way Out Alliance tied to Pashinian, who is seeking to gain the support of other opposition groups to become prime minister. The Republican Party holds a majority in parliament.

Pashinian has threatened extended protests, which continued Thursday, if the Republican Party nominates a candidate.

The deepening political crisis in Armenia, an ally of Russia, has sparked concerns over destabilization in the combustible Caucuses region, where there is a decades-long territorial dispute between Armenia with Azerbaijan.

cw/kms (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia’s, Parliament, sets date

Serbia parliament rejects opposition proposal to recognize Armenian Genocide

March 8, 2018 By administrator

The Serbian parliament has rejected the opposition’s proposal to recognize Armenian Genocide.

Even though such motions have been submitted several times in the Serbian legislature over the past decade, they have always been rejected, according to RFE/RL Balkan Service.

This time a resolution recognizing the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire was submitted by Serbia’s former Prime Minister Zoran Živković, who now heads the opposition New Party.

Speaking to the RFE/RL Serbian Service, Živković underscored the need for Belgrade to clarify its position on this matter, and he recalled that both Russia and most of the US states have recognized this greatest tragedy of the 20th century.

According to various estimates, solely up to 300 Armenians live in Serbia which has a population of about 7 million, and which also was part of the Ottoman Empire at the turn of the last century.

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Parliament, Rejects, Serbia

European Parliament condemns Turkey’s crackdown on Afrin critics

February 9, 2018 By administrator

European Parliament condemns Turkey’s

The European Parliament has passed a resolution denouncing the arrests of people who criticized Turkey’s military intervention in Afrin. One MEP told DW that there’s “no respect for human rights” in Turkey.

Turkey’s detention of hundreds of journalists, doctors and regular citizens who have been critical of Ankara’s operation in Syria’s Kurdish-controlled region of Afrin, was condemned by the European Parliament on Thursday.

The European Parliament described the arrests as “an attempt to censor criticism” in their resolution.

Read more: Turkey’s military offensive against Kurdish-held Afrin: What you need to know

“We want to show our solidarity with Turkey’s population that is going through a difficult period, and at the same time remind EU leaders that human rights must remain on the top of EU-Turkey relations,” Kati Piri, a Dutch MEP and the European Parliament’s rapporteur on Turkey, told DW.

Rebecca Harms, a German MEP with the Green party, told DW that the human rights situation is of great concern for Brussels and that EU funds to Turkey must be contingent upon change.

“The rule of law in Turkey, as we knew it, doesn’t actually exist anymore,” Harms said. “The level of violence has been raised and there is no more respect for human rights.”

She added that if the EU’s customs union is to be expanded, “it must be made clear that this can only happen if Turkey returns to the rule of law.”

Thursday’s resolution states that the EU’s aid funds to Turkey “should be conditional on improving its record on human rights.” The resolution also urged Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government to lift the state of emergency that enables authorities to crack down on critics.

Warning about Afrin

The European Parliament also criticized Turkey’s actions in Afrin, saying Ankara’s military intervention raises serious humanitarian concerns.

“[MEPs] are seriously concerned about the humanitarian consequences of the Turkish assault and warn against continuing with these disproportionate actions,” the parliament’s statement said.

Read more: Are Turkey and Russia at odds in northern Syria?

With regards to Turkey’s military operations in Afrin, Piri said the EU parliament “recognizes Turkey’s right to protect its borders,” but warned of the consequences of military action in the region.

The Turkish army has been fighting against the Kurdish militia YPG in its “Olive Branch” offensive since January 20.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Condemns, European, Parliament, Turkey's

Terrorist State of Turkey Parliament adopt a resolution to prohibit the words “Armenian genocide” and “Kurdistan”

July 8, 2017 By administrator

Armenian GenocideThe AKP party and its extreme right-wing allies in the Turkish Parliament agreed to adopt a resolution tabled on Friday that would ban the use of the words “Armenian genocide” and “Kurdistan” by Members of Parliament.

In the draft resolution on parliamentary procedure written by the AKP and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), legislators demand that the use of expressions such as “the provinces of Kurdistan”, “the capital of Kurdistan Amed” Condemned by a fine.

Amed is an ancient name of the Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, often used by Kurdish nationalist political groups including the HDP Party.

he bill also prohibits terms such as “genocide” in relation to 1915 and the systematic extermination and deportation of the Armenian people by the Ottoman government, or “massacre” in reference to the many military campaigns against the Kurds since the beginning of the 20th century.

In addition to a fine, the Speaker of Parliament could temporarily oust legislators.

Saturday, July 8, 2017,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: adopt, armenian genocide, Parliament, Turkey

Iran’s parliament and Khomeini shrine attacked by gunmen

June 7, 2017 By administrator

Iran’s parliament and Khomeini shrine attacked by gunmenArmed men have opened fire at the Iranian parliament and the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini in the capital, Tehran, causing a number of casualties, the BBC reports.

Heavy gunfire could be heard on an audio recording from inside the parliament chamber, and there are reports that a security guard has died.

Several people were injured at the shrine, dedicated to the founder of the modern Islamic republic.

One attacker blew himself up and there were two or three other gunmen.

Ali Khalili from the mausoleum’s public relations office told IRNA news agency that one of the armed men detonated himself in front of a bank outside the mausoleum.

The Iranian Labour News Agency reported that two attackers had been arrested.

Five people were wounded at the shrine, and one person confirmed dead, it said.

It was unclear whether the attack at the parliament was ongoing.

MP Seyyed Hossein Naqavi-Hosseini told the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) that three gunmen were still in the building, in MPs’ offices.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, Iran, Parliament

Protesters raid Macedonia parliament chamber over Albanian speaker

April 28, 2017 By administrator

Macedonia police fired stun grenades to hold back 200 protesters objecting to the election of an Albanian as parliamentary speaker. Some of the lawmakers were injured.

In the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia several dozen protesters broke through a police cordon on Thursday evening and made their way into the parliamentary lower chamber to protest against the election of a new parliamentary speaker. The protesters – supporting the conservative VMRO-DPMNE party – entered the chamber waving Macedonian flags and singing the national anthem.

Zoran Zaev – leader of the Social Democrats (SDSM) – was hit by a projectile and had a gash in his forehead. Local TV showed at least one masked man inside the building.

Macedonian media quoted hospital sources saying ten people had been injured, including two MPs.

A spokesman for an ethnic Albanian party, Artan Grubi of the Democratic Union for Integration party, said Zaev and at least three other MPs had been injured during the attack.

The skirmishes followed the SDSM and its allies – smaller parties representing the ethnic Albanian minority – voting in a new parliamentary speaker, Talat Xhaferi, an ethnic Albanian. Their aim was to end the political deadlock that has left parliament unable to fill the position for three weeks. Zaev suggested this week that a new speaker could be elected using new procedures but this was rejected by VMRO as “an attempted coup.”

Former prime minister and VMRO leader Nikola Gruevski called later on Thursday evening for calm. “People should not respond to the provocations of the SDSM and those who want to push the state into even deeper crisis,” he wrote on Facebook. Gruevski is being investigated by a special prosecutor on suspicion of illegal wiretapping of thousands of Macedonians.

Still no government

Macedonia has been without a government since last December, when VMRO won elections, but did not gain enough votes to form a government. For a decade until last December, Macedonia had been ruled by the conservative VMRO-DPMNE coalition. At December’s election the party won 51 of 120 seats – two more than the SDSM – but failed to reach a deal with the kingmaking Albanian parties.

Coalition talks broke down in January over ethnic Albanian demands that Albanian be recognized as an official second language.

Zaev later secured the cooperation of one of the main ethnic Albanian parties, giving him 69 seats, but President Gjorge Ivanov refused to grant him a mandate to form a government. The president said he was concerned over demands by Albanian parties that Albanian be made an official second language nationwide.

About a quarter of the two-million people in the country – a former Yugoslav republic that aspires to join both NATO and the EU – are ethnic Albanians.

Albania worried

The protest has caused concern in neighboring Albania. The country’s foreign ministry said it is monitoring “the escalation of the situation in Macedonia with great concern.”

“Such scenes of violence against the elected representatives of the Macedonian people are unacceptable,” the ministry said in a statement issued on Thursday.

International condemnation

The EU and the US have urged President Ivanov to reverse his decision over the formation of a government.

European Union Commissioner Johannes Hahn wrote on Twitter. “The violence marks a sad day for Macedonia,” he wrote.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: albainian, Macedonia, Parliament

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