Armen Harutyunyan

Armen Harutyunyan (Armenian: Արմեն Հարությունյան; born 1964) is the former ombudsman of Armenia and Regional Representative of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Central Asia. He took office in February 2011. In 2015, he was elected Judge at the European Court of Human Rights and is a judge since 17 December 2015. Armen Harutyunyan is the author of more than 70 scientific works. He is married and has two children.

Armen Harutyunyan
Judge at the European Court of Human Rights
Assumed office
17 September 2015
Regional Representative of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Central Asia
In office
2011–2015
Personal details
Born1964
Yerevan, Armenia
NationalityArmenian
Alma materYerevan State University
ProfessionLawyer
[1]

Harutyunyan was born in 1964 in Yerevan. He holds law degrees from Yerevan State University, the Institute of State and Law of the Academy of USSR and the Academy of Public Administration of the Russian Federation. In 1989-2002 he lectured in law at Yerevan State University; From 1993 to 1997 studied Doctoral Studies at the Academy of Public Administration, adjunct to the President of Russian Federation and obtained the degree of Doctor of Law (equivalent to Senior Juris Doctor). Starting from 1997 he continued his education at European universities Central European University, Paris 12 University, University of Nottingham (School of Law, Human Rights Law Center) as well as at the European Court of Human Rights with main focuses on Constitutional Law, European Law and Human Rights. From 1989 till now Armen Harutyunyan has been lecturing at the Law Department of Yerevan State University. From 1997-2005 he was working as a legal advisor at the Constitutional Court of RA. Also from 1997 he was legal advisor at the Constitutional Court, and in the constitutional reform of 2005 he was a representative of former President Robert Kocharian.[2] In 2002-06 he was rector of the Public Administration Academy. In 2000 he became a member of the Commission established to assess the compatibility of the Armenian Legislation with the requirements of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) during the process of Armenia's joining the Council of Europe.

From 2002 to present Armen Harutyunyan was the Deputy Representative of Armenia in the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission Member States of Venice Commission) Representative from Armenia is Gagik Harutyunyan. He is a member of the Association of European Law of Armenia.

Ombudsman

On 17 February 2006, Harutyunyan was elected for a six-year term as the Human Rights Defender (ombudsman) of Armenia, with more than 3/5 of the votes of deputies in the National Assembly. He was the first elected holder of the post in accordance with 83.1 article of Constitution, succeeding Larisa Alaverdyan who had been appointed to the office by presidential decree in 2004.

In an extensive report in April 2008, Harutyunyan cast doubt on the credibility of the official (government) theory on the use of lethal force against thousands of supporters of opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian who barricaded themselves outside the Yerevan mayor’s office hours after the break-up of their 10-day sit-in in the city’s Liberty Square on March 1.[2]

On July 7, 2008, Harutyunyan asked the National Security Service (NSS) to assign armed bodyguards to him and members of his family.[2] He was succeeded as ombudsman by Karen Andreasyan, who was elected by the National Assembly in March 2011.

In 2008 Armen Harutyunyan joined the Association of French-Speaking Ombudsmen and Mediators. In 2009 he became a Board Member of the European Ombudsman Institute.

gollark: I'm not sure how nitpicky about standards compliance dnspython is.
gollark: If you directly talk to the resolver you *might* be able to get around it?
gollark: *Why* exactly did you not have <#457999277311131649> muted?
gollark: PLEASE cease citronizing, citrons.
gollark: Hmm, apparently not.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.