Prime Minister Pashinyan has repeatedly and clearly stated that violence has no place in our life. Today, however, after several attempts to interrupt MP Edmon Marukyan’s speech in Armenia’s Parliament, My Step faction MP Sassoon Mikayelyan exerted violence on Marukyan, after which an all-out brawl began on the Parliament floor. The culture of dignified and civilized parliamentarism, still in its making, thus suffered a heavy blow. The disgraceful traditions of the criminal parliamentary anticulture that had emerged during the period of state capture turned out not only to have not disappeared, but also to be lingering.

It is with regret that we note that, had the new Parliament had the courage to make a political assessment of the disgraceful past record of state governance, this incident exemplifying the criminal anticulture would perhaps not have occurred today.

Categorically denouncing violence altogether and any manifestation thereof in social relationships and in the government system, we demand that National Assembly leadership make an effort to completely rule out from the parliamentary process any violence or other unethical behavior that is ill-suited for a democracy conforming to the values of the rule of law, and to work rigorously towards eliminating the violence culture from public life. We deem the parliamentary majority to be primarily responsible for what happened, having received from the public and currently enjoying a sufficient and legitimate mandate to root out the violence culture.

Armenia must once and forever put an end to the faulty practice of resorting to violence as a means of dealing with differences. The harshest sanctions must be prescribed for hooliganic and violent responses to what may be even the most acute criticism.

Each and every member of the National Assembly elected via free and fair elections must prove with his or her everyday behavior, demeanor, and speech that they deserve to represent Armenia’s citizens—the very citizens that carried out a velvet revolution through exceptionally non-violence mass protests of civil disobedience and demonstrated their ability to resolve any issue without resorting to violence.

  • We therefore propose, in light of the aforementioned circumstances, to urgently form an Ethics Commission to carry out an immediate inquiry into what happened, and to put in the place the legal grounds needed for such Ethics Commission to operate on a permanent footing.
  • We demand the Parliament and the individual factions to make a proper assessment of what happened, to punish the ones who were guilty, and to consider even the possibility of some MPs resigning their parliamentary mandate.

No one shall be privileged in the Republic of Armenia.

The following must be completely rooted out from the floor of the state’s highest political body—the National Assembly, and from the vocabulary of the politicians: anyone who directly or indirectly uses, or offers innuendo related to, words such as dumb, scoundrel, political rag, I will slit your throat, bastard, upstart, weary, dog-like, bashi-bazouk, psycho, I will crack you open, or any other words or language containing other personal insults or threats targeting anyone whatsoever; anyone who provokes, encourages, or engages in fist fighting on the floor; any labeling or name-calling or vulgarity and obscenity, bluster, and violence.

The country’s top podium must serve as nothing but an example of civilized political and ideological debate.

We demand from the Parliament that received an exceptional vote of confidence from the Armenia people, and especially from the parliamentary majority, to be accountable for their undertakings to the people, to not replicate the cynical style and empty substance of the forces that had captured the state and were removed from government through the velvet revolution, and to exert all efforts to solve the systemic problems for Armenia to become a civilized and democratic state governed by the rule of law.

Others are free to join this statement.

  1. Asparez Club of Journalists
  2. Helsinki Citizens Assembly Vanadzor Office
  3. Open Society Foundations-Armenia
  4. Public Journalism Club
  5. Transparency International Anti-Corruption Center
  6. Artak Kyurumyan, expert
  7. Karen Tumanyan, lawyer
  8. Analytical Centre on Globalization and Regional Cooperation
  9. Direct Democracy NGO
  10. Protection of Rights Without Borders NGO
  11. Youth for Change NGO
  12. Women's Rights House NGO
  13. Society Without Violence NGO
  14. Human Rights Power NGO
  15. Yezidi Center for Human Rights NGO
  16. Centre for community mobilization and support
  17. «Progress of Gyumri» NGO - Civil Society Development Center
  18. ANI Center
  19. Tatevik NGO
  20. ALT TV Company
  21. Logos Human Rights Defence NGO
  22. Armenian Progressive Youth
  23. Influential Citizen NGO
  24. Women's Resource Center
  25. Nikol Margaryan
  26. Lusine Karamyan
  27. Samvel Grigoryan
  28. Sose Women's Issues NGO
  29. Khoran Ard Intellectual NGO
  30. Spitak Helsinki Group NGO
  31. Pink Armenia NGO
  32. Peace Dialogue NGO
  33. Martuni Women's Community Council NGO
  34. For Equal Rights NGO
  35. ''Arevamanuk'' psychosocial support foundation
  36. Human Rights House Yerevan
  37. Armenian Non-Governmental organization of Tax-Payers and Businessmens' Rights Protection
  38. Veles Human Rights NGO
  39. Artak Arakelyan, activits