
ArmInfo. Based on a study conducted as part of a seminar on corruption prevention, the anti-corruption platform AntiCor has identified corruption issues in 17 areas ahead of the June parliamentary elections in Armenia. Lawyer Arsen Babayan announced on May 15 during a Yerevan press conference titled "Corruption in the Pre-election Period."
As in the past, Babayan noted, criminal cases (such as those involving the giving or receiving of electoral bribes—Ed.) rank first, having become the primary instrument of pressure exerted by the Armenian authorities, manifesting itself in the form of political persecution. "The abuse of administrative resources is evident in these cases, creating the impression that the Criminal Code of Armenia is being used by the authorities as a 'heavy club' to intimidate opposition supporters. In this manner, the authorities are attempting to demonstrate that anyone who supports the opposition risks being detained," the lawyer emphasized.
Regarding wiretaps, Babayan expressed his belief that all opposition forces are currently subject to them. He also noted that this is a rather lengthy process, requiring considerable time to process and edit the recordings. However, he added, the authorities are doing everything possible to make them publicly available as quickly as possible. He also noted that the Anti-Corruption Committee, in its recordings, not only informs the public about events, but specifically names the political forces, placing particular emphasis on their titles. "What is interesting is that the ruling party is not subjected to wiretapping. But if they were being wiretapped as well, perhaps the Anti-Corruption Committee of Armenia would not have issued a statement regarding the head of the Talin community, Tavros Sapeyan (a member of the ruling party), who was distributing social assistance on the eve of the elections, and in whose actions the Anti- Corruption Committee of Armenia saw no crime," Babayan stressed.
The lawyer also touched on the legislative initiative introduced by Armenian Parliament Speaker Alen Simonyan and several ruling party MPs to increase penalties for giving and receiving election bribes. Babayan believes that this initiative is specifically targeting the opposition and members of civil society who do not support the current Armenian government. The lawyer expressed his conviction that this is all being done once again with the goal of intimidate dissenting citizens. "It's no coincidence that this is being publicly discussed. For example, ruling party MP Vahagn Aleksanyan, on live television, once again drew attention to the increase in prison terms for giving and receiving election bribes," the lawyer noted. Babayan concluded by stating that the Investigative Committee of Armenia, the Anti-Corruption Committee, law enforcement agencies, and the Prosecutor General's Office have thus become tools of the ruling Civil Contract party's campaign headquarters.
As a reminder, Alen Simonyan, Speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia, previously introduced a legislative initiative to increase the existing penalties for giving or receiving election bribes. According to the Speaker of the Armenian Parliament, the previously stipulated penalty for giving election bribes ( imprisonment for up to 8 years), would be replaced with imprisonment for up to 10 years, and the penalty for receiving an election bribe, which was imprisonment for up to 7 years, would be replaced with imprisonment for up to 9 years.