
ArmInfo.In Armenia, the use of information technology to sell drugs may be considered a criminal offense with an aggravated circumstance. On April 14, the National Assembly will debate amendments to the Criminal Code put forth by Hayk Sargsyan, a member of parliament from the ruling Civil Contract faction.
The deputy proposed significantly toughening penalties for drug trafficking. Sargsyan noted that in 2023, Armenian law enforcement agencies identified 5,070 drug-related cases. In 2022, this figure was 2,266. Of these, more than 2,800 cases in 2023 were related to the illegal sale of drugs. In this regard, he proposed, in particular, considering the use of information technology in drug trafficking as an aggravating circumstance.
Furthermore, the parliamentarian proposed increasing the penalty for the illegal trafficking of narcotics, psychotropic substances, and their analogues from 3-6 years to 5-8 years. For the same act committed by a group of individuals through prior conspiracy, for mercenary motives, on a large scale, in entertainment establishments, in places of detention or in a penal institution, in a military unit or other place of service, in an educational institution or on adjacent territory, using information technology, the parliamentarian proposed a penalty of 8 to 12 years, rather than the current 4 to 8. For the same act committed by a criminal organization involving a minor, on an especially large scale, the punishment will be from 14 years to life imprisonment, instead of the current 6-12 years.
In turn, Deputy Justice Minister Gevork Kocharyan noted that the government supports the amendments to the law regarding new aggravating circumstances, namely, the involvement of minors and the use of information technology. However, increasing sentences alone will not solve the issue.