ArmInfo. The Armenian authorities want to settle the issue related to the alienation of property that had public status in the Soviet era. At the session on February 26, the RA National Assembly Committee issued a positive conclusion in the second reading on the amendments to the RA Civil Code submitted by NA deputies from the ruling Civil Contract faction Sisak Gabrielyan and Vladimir Vardanyan.
As Sisak Gabrielyan noted in his speech, back in 1991, the Armenian parliament adopted a law according to which the property of all public organizations, including creative unions, was recognized as the property of the Republic of Armenia. However, after gaining independence, as a result of gaps in the legislation, a number of objects that had public status (stadiums, cultural facilities and other state buildings) became the property of legal entities. As a result, about 80% of these objects were privatized and either new buildings were built in their place or they remained idle. Gabrielyan, referring to the data of the Cadastre Committee, reported that we are talking about 27 thousand real estate objects that allegedly became the property of non-governmental organizations, but in fact their real owners became high-ranking officials or members of their families.
According to legislative amendments, it is envisaged to send written appeals to the prosecutor's office in each specific case, and based on the results of the investigation, to return this property to those legal entities that are directly related to it. For example, the building of the Union of Artists must serve the artist and cannot be privatized. 2-3 claims have already been sent to the courts on this issue.
As for buildings and structures that have not yet been privatized, as the main speaker noted, their alienation must be with the consent of 2/3 of the members of the supreme governing body of the legal entity.
Gabrielyan assured that the presented document does not set the task of depriving anyone of property rights. Its main goal is to ensure that cultural and sports facilities serve their intended purpose.
In turn, Deputy Minister of Justice of the Republic of Armenia Tigran Dadunts noted that the government of the country has no objections to the presented document. He said that all public organizations of the republic, including creative unions, are required to provide data on the number of members of these organizations in their reports. The absence of this data entails administrative liability.