Armenian CC`s decision fraught with undermining for constitutional order - Hrayr Tovmasyan
ArmInfo.No composition of the Constitutional Court has the authority to "devour" the Declaration of Independence of Armenia at any time. Meanwhile, ignoring the normative nature of the Declaration of Independence of the Republic of Armenia may jeopardize the legitimacy of the independence process.
This is stated in the special opinion of the judge of the Constitutional Court, former head of the Constitutional Court and former Minister of Justice of the Republic of Armenia Hrayr Tovmasyan, published on October 7 on the official website of the Constitutional Court.
On September 26, the Constitutional Court ruled that the obligations enshrined in the regulations , signed on August 30, 2024, comply with the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia (RKS-1749).
In it, the Constitutional Court, in particular, notes that if the provisions of the Declaration of Independence are recognized as having constitutional legal force, there will be a threat of , and the Declaration itself will turn into . It is noted that this conclusion does not apply only to the theses of the declaration on Armenia, which are also contained in the Constitution. The Declaration, as is known, mentions the reunification of the , which is why Baku has been demanding that Yerevan change the basic law all these months. The Court came to the conclusion that the provision in the preamble to the Constitution does not refer to any principle or goal enshrined outside the Constitution>. The text of the Constitutional Court decision states that this conclusion now eliminates the need for further consideration of the provision contained in the Declaration that independence is proclaimed on the basis of the joint resolution of the Supreme Council of the Armenian SSR and the National Council of Nagorno-Karabakh of December 1, 1989 .
As stated in Tovmasyan's special opinion, the Constitutional Court did not have the authority to consider this application, and therefore, to make a decision based on this application. In addition, the regulations were not subject to ratification by the National Assembly, and therefore could not be the subject of an investigation by the Constitutional Court.
, and in the future may and may further undermine the constitutional order.
The Constitutional Court, first of all, limited itself exclusively to considering the issue of constitutionality within the framework of the preamble to the Constitution, which is a gross violation of the Constitution and the Constitutional Law . In this way, the Constitutional Court, in essence, avoided checking the constitutionality of the duties provided for by the Regulation, which is its direct responsibility, according to Part 1 of Article 167, Clause 3 of Article 168 of the Constitution and .
The Constitutional Court did not consider the issue of the constitutionality of the establishment and activities of the commissions on border delimitation and border security issues, since this issue predetermines the legality of the results of the commissions' activities and the compliance of the duties stipulated by the Regulations. Completely bypassing this issue simply means a rejection of constitutional justice, the actual abolition of the constitutional function of the Constitutional Court in this case, " Tovmasyan noted.
According to him, the commission created by the decision of the Prime Minister could only be an advisory body that would submit advisory documents for consideration by the Prime Minister or the government, as well as, possibly, draft legal acts on issues within their jurisdiction. In addition, according to Part 1 of Article 6 of the Constitution, state and local government bodies and officials are authorized to perform only those actions for which they are authorized by the Constitution or laws. Thus, only those bodies provided for by the Constitution, whose powers will be determined by the Constitution and (or) law, can be vested with public powers. No organ may be vested with public powers by any international treaty, by-law or individual legal act. This is a violation of the fundamental constitutional principle of legality.
Thus, as the Constitutional Court judge pointed out, the commission in question is a body not provided for by the Constitution, but illegally vested with specific public-authority powers, the activities and results of which, therefore, are completely unconstitutional, contradict the immutable Article 2 and Part 1 of Article 6 of the Constitution, therefore the duties provided for by the Rules of Procedure, related to the public-legal powers of the commissions, are also unconstitutional. The Constitutional Court, Tovmasyan is convinced, also completely ignored the issue of the constitutionality of the delimitation of certain sections of the state border of the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Azerbaijan as a result of the activities of these commissions, that is, it did not assess the legal practice, and this is in the case when the delimitation was carried out on the Armenian side not only by a body not provided for by the Constitution and not having such powers either under the Constitution or under any law.
In addition, the Constitutional Court has clearly bypassed substantive issues of fundamental importance from the point of view of the Constitution, by means of an unconstitutional and arbitrary trick, limiting itself to assessing the obligations enshrined in the regulations from the point of view of the preamble of the Constitution, primarily the Declaration of Independence of Armenia, ignoring a number of key normative provisions of the Constitution.
In order to clarify the meaning of the Declaration of Independence of Armenia, the Constitutional Court used a trick that goes beyond all logic. It compared individual provisions of the Declaration with the provisions of the Constitution and, having discovered , disqualified the normative nature of the Declaration.
The Constitution does not call the Declaration a full-fledged document, but by reference conveys the constitutional and normative content to the fundamental principles of Armenian statehood and the national goals established in the Declaration of Independence of Armenia.
In this regard, it should be noted that the Declaration is one of the reasons for the adoption of the current Constitution, and as the basis for the adoption of the Constitution, it is included in the preamble of the Constitution.
Therefore, comparing the Constitution of 1995, 2005 or the current version with the Declaration is a gross methodological and logical error, since it does not claim to replace the Constitution.
"I believe that ignoring the normative nature of the Declaration of Independence of Armenia may jeopardize the legitimacy of the independence process and lead to an increase in ontological dangers for the current Republic of Armenia," he noted.
The position of the Constitutional Court, by which it exempts itself from the binding force of one of the previous decisions of the Constitutional Court, i.e., in fact, cancels the legal force of this decision, without preserving it according to the constitutional law, should be assessed as clearly contradicting the Constitution and the Constitutional Law , Tovmasyan added.
Thus, in paragraph 3 4.1 of the RCC-1749 decision, the Constitutional Court refers to the RCC-850 decision of January 12, 2010, in which the Constitutional Court clearly emphasized that . The above, the judge noted, means that back in 2010, the Constitutional Court clarified the meaning of the provisions of the Preamble of the Constitution and the Declaration on the Interpretation of the Constitution, not allowing either the legislator or legal practice to deviate from the duty of the Republic of Armenia regarding the international recognition of the recorded Armenian Genocide.
Meanwhile, the decisions of the Constitutional Court are binding for the CC, including from the point of view of eliminating arbitrariness, ensuring equality of applicants and ensuring the authority of the Constitutional Court. If the Constitutional Court is from the binding nature of any of its decisions without the procedure established by law, then this is, first of all, arbitrariness, in addition, it is an abuse of power, as well as discrediting the power of constitutional justice.
, namely, if an international treaty significantly affects the sovereign rights of the Republic of Armenia, then the final part of the decision of the Constitutional Court must contain a corresponding note about this, which was also not done.
Taking into account the above, I disagree with the reasoning behind the decision, I believe that the Regulations were not subject to review by the Constitutional Court, and the obligations provided for by the Regulations contradict the Constitution in their content.
Postscript:
The majority in the Constitutional Court sees a threat of in connection with the Declaration of Independence of Armenia and believes that this will turn the Declaration into .
I believe that the use of such formulations is not typical for decisions of the Constitutional Court.
If this is the approach adopted in the RCC-1749 decision, then my response in this style is as follows: No composition of the Constitutional Court is entitled to the Declaration of Independence of Armenia> at any time, - says the dissenting opinion submitted by Tovmasyan.