
ArmInfo.Armenia is attempting to resolve issues related to missing military personnel and volunteers at the legislative level. At its March 2 session, the RA National Assembly Committee on Defense and Security approved the second and final reading of the draft law "On Persons Missing as a Result of Military Actions" and a package of related laws submitted by the RA government.
According to RA Minister of Justice Srbuhi Galyan, several proposals were received after the first reading, most of which were technical in nature and were accepted by the drafters. Currently, relations related to missing persons are not regulated at the legislative level. They are partially regulated by the Civil Code, the Law "On Military Service and the Status of a Serviceman," the Law "On Compensation for Damage Caused to the Life or Health of a Serviceman During the Defense of the Republic of Armenia," government decrees, and an order of the Minister of Defense. Overall, the aforementioned legal norms only superficially address the legal relations under consideration. Moreover, various provisions of the aforementioned legal acts primarily determine the eligibility of family members of missing persons for certain social support.
Galyan noted that while various legal acts contain references to missing persons and their family members, these provisions are incomplete, often containing only references to other laws. Furthermore, given the incompleteness of existing regulations, it is often difficult for potential beneficiaries to even obtain information about a particular social guarantee or benefit, as well as the procedures for its provision. Therefore, the need arose to develop a separate legal act.
Specifically, it is proposed to consider a military service member or volunteer, regardless of citizenship, missing in action during military operations, or while on combat duty, or while performing special tasks along the line of contact with the enemy, or during a declared ceasefire, or during a six-month period following military operations in peacetime. A missing person report must be submitted within 72 hours of receiving the last information about them. Family members of a missing person will be considered to be their husband, wife, child, parent, grandparent, grandchild, brother, or sister. Based on the submitted report, search operations are initiated, with information about the missing person reported to the authorized body every 15 days. The document provides for not only financial assistance to family members of the missing person but also moral and psychological support.
The bill also provides for the creation of a unified electronic registry of missing persons, which will contain all information. The applicant will be considered the person who filed a search request for a missing person whose fate and whereabouts are unknown. The beneficiary of social support will be the person entitled to compensation and state assistance. The National Security Service will be the authorized agency for searching for missing persons.