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The Armenian Weekly; August 9, 2008; Commentary and Analysis

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  • The Armenian Weekly; August 9, 2008; Commentary and Analysis

    The Armenian Weekly On-Line
    80 Bigelow Avenue
    Watertown MA 02472 USA
    (617) 926-3974
    [email protected]

    http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

    The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 31; August 9, 2008

    Commentary and Analysis:


    1. Armenia's Next Step: Revolution or Vigilance?
    By Christian Garbis

    2. Treating Turkey Tamely
    By Garen Yegparian

    3. When Does Extradition Become Extra-Rendition?
    Roma Criminality Is in the Eye of the Beholder
    By Andy Turpin

    ***


    1. Armenia's Next Step: Revolution or Vigilance?
    By Christian Garbis

    YEREVAN (A.W.)-A mood of discontent still circulates in this city, which is
    noticeable only when people seem comfortable enough to discuss their
    disappointment. Many don't dare to share their opinions in public for fear
    of oppression, but when public rallies are organized by the anti-government
    leadership they attend in large numbers, no matter how daunting the
    significant police presence may appear.

    The opposition has held two rallies since the tragic events of March 1 that
    left 10 people dead, among them protesters and policemen. The first rally
    was held on June 20 and a follow-up rally took place on July 4 in front of
    the Madenataran manuscript archive repository in support of the opposition
    movement led by former president Levon Ter-Petrossian. Both rallies were
    declared illegal but were allowed to be held anyway without public unrest or
    resistance from police.

    On July 4, although thousands of men and women attendees seemed to be
    middle-aged, a significant youth presence was evident at the public
    "meetings" (as they are commonly referred to), which was spearheaded by
    Now!, the youth organization of Ter-Petrossian's Pan-Armenian National
    Movement.

    Among the speakers was political activist Aram Sargsyan, brother of slain
    military commander and prime minister Vasken Sargsyan. During his speech, he
    directed the crowd to reflect on the situation regarding the
    Nagorno-Karabagh conflict, something not often spoken about by
    pro-government politicians these days, especially at a time when primarily
    Western powers struggle with persuading both Azerbaijan and Armenia to
    finally resolve the conflict peacefully. Intermittently the crowd chanted in
    support of Ter-Petrossian, and for the current president, Serge Sarkisian,
    to "go away"-both familiar lines exclaimed at past rallies.

    At both events, Ter-Petrossian recited the same message he had been giving
    for months-that new elections must be held, that Sarkisian's presidency is
    illegitimate because he falsified the final vote tally to ensure victory.
    The opposition continues to focus on a lack of democracy and a failed
    judicial system as their main gripes against the state.

    By late afternoon, police officers lined the entire perimeter of the block
    on which the Opera House is located, preventing anyone from entering Liberty
    Square. Despite the heavy presence of authority, officers were anything but
    serious in their undertakings, munching sunflower seeds, chatting on their
    mobile phones, and sitting along cafe walls smoking cigarettes. Some
    resorted to banging on their shields with their fists or batons to suppress
    their boredom. Most cafes were closed in Opera Park, although some were
    serving guests who apparently had connections to pass through police
    barricades.

    After the rally concluded at mid-evening, the crowd marched to the site of
    the March 1 attacks near Yerevan City Hall then progressed to Republic
    Square. By 11 p.m. some protesters, all of whom had been peacefully
    demonstrating, assembled at the top of the newly constructed Northern
    Boulevard adjacent from the Opera House. People collected in small groups
    there to talk politics while in the background supporters of Now! shouted
    "free and independent Armenia" and "struggle, struggle until the end," while
    waiving the Armenian tricolor flag. Some of Armenia's "red beret" military
    regiment as well as other rank-and-file soldiers mingled with the crowd.

    That assembly on Northern Boulevard immediately transformed into an ongoing
    24-hour sit-in protest. Peaceful protesters flanked by waving national flags
    continued to demand the immediate release of perceived political prisoners
    as well as the prosecution of the players in the March 1 melee, citing
    general prosecutor Aghvan Hovsepyan and former president Robert Kocharian as
    the main culprits, among others. Informational posters about various
    detainees and placards with political demands written on them were erected
    on the site.

    Another rally, held on Aug. 1, also declared forbidden by the authorities,
    was rumored to be staging a "revolution"-if jailed oppositionists considered
    political prisoners were not set free. At the rally, the formation of the
    Armenian National Congress-a union of opposition parties that have joined
    forces with Ter-Petrossian in his anti-government campaign-was announced.

    Despite the tremendous support for Ter-Petrossian displayed at such public
    gatherings, some believe that the movement for change has surpassed the
    opposition leader.

    "Listen, it's not Levon [Ter-Petrossian] who people necessarily support.
    Rather, it's justice," says Sergey Minasian, who was a mechanical engineer
    by profession but went into the farming business 12 years ago. He now owns
    over 10 hectares of land on the Ararat plains while growing crops for owners
    of adjacent plots that he once leased from the state. Minasian would
    regularly encounter obstacles placed by officials who attempted to extort
    money by, among other tactics, cutting off his power supply, thereby
    preventing him from irrigating his land as he relies upon water pumped out
    from an artesian well that he himself drilled.

    "I hate Levon and there are many others attending the rallies who feel the
    same way," Minasian says. "But people demand justice because the judicial
    system doesn't work in this country. There is no law and order, which is
    what people expect to be enforced. Those are the reasons why they support
    the opposition-because their government is failing them."

    As a result of the post-election chaos, over 100 people were arrested on
    largely trumped-up charges; over 70 are considered to be political prisoners
    by the opposition. Some oppositionists have been sentenced, including two
    loyalists of Ter-Petrossian who revealed the identities of two undercover
    National Security Service operatives stationed in Liberty Square during the
    post-election protests.

    Various theories have been circulating by word of mouth and even suggested
    in the press that weapons were planted at the site of the sit-in protest at
    Liberty Square in the early hours on March 1 to legitimize the necessity for
    a sweeping crackdown. Eyewitnesses at the site of the clash between
    protesters and police during the evening hours claim that petty criminals
    with no connection to the demonstration were onsite to instigate the
    violence.

    Government officials, including President Sarkisian himself, have had no
    choice but to justify the attacks made on civilians to save face, no matter
    how unpopular the outcome of the clashes with citizens was. Nevertheless,
    the president has been taking steps to distance himself from those believed
    to have been linked to the events by firing them from their posts, namely
    the head of the national police, Hayk Harutiunian, and the national interior
    troops commander, Grigor Grigorian. Critics, however, believe that the
    president is simply "cleaning house" by assigning loyalists to such
    positions.

    Although several people associated with the opposition leadership have been
    released from jail, the ruling Republican Party headed by Sarkisian
    continues to justify the arrests, insisting that those who remain detained
    are anything but political prisoners. But the party's pro-government
    coalition partner, the ARF-Dashnaktsutiun, on July 28 called for the release
    of detained oppositionists, contradicting the hard-line stance fostered by
    the government.

    Despite recent peaceful calls for justice, some protesters continue to be
    dealt blows from those representing the powers that be. On July 2, people
    who were peacefully protesting on the Northern Boulevard were suddenly
    attacked by several young men despite the presence of police officers on
    site. Several women were subsequently beaten with little explanation as to
    the motive since antagonism on their part was not a factor.

    The crackdown on the opposition has been harshly criticized by the United
    States as well as the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE), which
    passed a resolution in June calling for Armenia to release all political
    prisoners and restore democracy. On July 24, the president of PACE, Lluis
    Maria de Puig, who was visiting Yerevan declared that Armenia would face a
    "scandalous situation" if proof was not demonstrated that the Armenian
    government would be able to meet the demands of PACE by Sept. 11 of this
    year. The Millennium Challenge Corporation has already temporarily suspended
    its $235 million in allocated funding for projects meant to rebuild
    irrigation networks and roadways in rural parts of Armenia as a result of
    the U.S. State Department's perceived lack of democracy in the country.

    Despite an initial crackdown on corruption with the sacking of the chief of
    the State Customs Committee, Armen Avetisian, in April and the July
    dismissal of Alvina Zakarian, the commander of the police-controlled
    Department of Passports and Visas (OVIR)-both notoriously corrupt state
    institutions known for their ruthless bribe extortion-some citizens remain
    skeptical, with statements like "This is not a country" and "This is not a
    government" still fresh on people's lips. Yet, tangible results from the
    opposition are not necessarily anticipated any time soon.

    "Our generation won't make a revolution, it is the next generation that
    will," said software engineer Hovik Mosoyan, 52. "We made our revolution
    nearly 20 years ago when we voted for the first time."
    -------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------- -

    2. Treating Turkey Tamely
    By Garen Yegparian

    Not a bad year for Turkey, this 2008. Hrant Dink is all but forgotten by the
    outside world. A train derailment and a factory fire garnered sympathy for
    them. Similarly, the case of a Turk in Saudi Arabia facing the possibility
    of a death sentence for "using God's name in vain," its very absurdity
    inspires pity for this man away from his home. There's also the news of
    Turkey's supreme court (more on this institution's wisdom later) finding in
    favor of Alevis' children not being obliged to study a different brand of
    Islam. Couple these with Turkey's role in Israel-Syria negotiations and
    well-spun data about Turkey's developing economy and its sociological
    impacts and you've got a great sense of what image the average reader of the
    LA Times forms of the fairly well-disguised dictatorship. Of course, it
    would be a crime to omit the editorial cheerleading about a possible thaw in
    Armenia-Turkey relations based on Gul congratulating Sarkisian's election as
    president. Please note, this ink was spilt on April 25, long before
    Sarkisian's ghastly gaffe in Russia, using the occasion of genocide
    commemoration as the lead-in for the paper's argument.

    Bad news? Well of course there was some. Protests against U.S. policy when
    Cheney visited were reported, as was the whole scarf-ban-rescission fiasco.
    Of course the recent bombings could not be glossed over, but hey, Turkish
    law enforcement (the same Keystone Kops who couldn't follow up on leads that
    might have prevented Dink's assassination) conveniently pinned the blame on
    those "terrorist" Kurds, almost overnight. You know how awful it is to be
    like the "terrorist" Minutemen of 230 years ago (not the border-addled
    clowns of today). But Turkey's three and a half decade occupation of
    northern Cyprus never rises to the level of relevance.

    What's most interesting and relevant is the suit brought against Turkey's
    ruling AK Party (labeled as Islamist) for its attempt to undo the
    Ataturk-inspired headscarf ban. The "secularists," those whom you might
    think would be more enlightened, tried through legalistic means to shut down
    the party that had less than a year earlier increased its parliamentary
    majority. The guys are such Ataturk worshipping chauvinists that anything
    even remotely impinging on his deific presence in Turkey generates virulent
    reactions. So, the "enlightened" approach is to ban a popular party through
    the courts.

    Meanwhile, soap opera-ishly, the government arrested 86 coup plotters who
    have various levels of connectedness to Turkey's military
    establishment-another nest of Ataturk idolaters. These people were also out
    to get the AKP.

    So now, you had a crisscross tug-of-war going between the chauvinists and
    Islamists. One sector of Turkish society is out to ban the other while the
    second is delegitimizing the first by arresting its less savory elements.
    The country was in the throes of what can only de described as a major
    constitutional crisis. Of course the Supreme Court, which could have banned
    the AKP, did not. Rather, they partially defunded it. How much more blatant
    a threat to a legal party could Turkey's "deep state" have given? The only
    reason the ban didn't happen is, to my mind, the concern that it would be
    too brazen a challenge, too sharp a slap, to the Europeans who hold Turkey's
    economic future in their hands. Go figure, party-banning is just uncool to
    the Euros.

    Did anybody at the LA Times notice this and comment? Nope, of course not!
    Turkey is an important ally. It "generously" allows transit of supplies to
    U.S. troops in Iraq. We can't go around risking that! Remember, that's the
    cover story many of Steve Cohen's (we'll visit him next week) ilk in
    Congress used to work against H.Res.106.

    Even if this pathetic brownnosing is understandable from the paper that
    brought us Doug Frantz, how can we explain Armenia's position? In the midst
    of a crisis that could have toppled the sitting government of or led to a
    coup in Turkey, Serge Sarkisian threw a lifeline to the AKP and Gul. Instead
    of using every diplomatic trick in the book to create more maneuvering room
    for Armenia, at least vis-à-vis Turkey, a cowering rapprochement was
    initiated by Armenia. Was there a quiet deal cut in advance of the public
    theatrics? Under the circumstances, it seems unlikely. So why not hammer
    away at Turkey to extract concessions? I don't understand.

    What's even less understandable is the maddening absence of
    letters-to-the-editor from Armenians regarding these issues and the slant of
    the coverage given. Doesn't anyone read these things? What are we afraid of?
    Please, make your voice heard, via ink or pixels.
    ------------------------------------------ -----------------------------------------

    3. When Does Extradition Become Extra-Rendition?
    Roma Criminality Is in the Eye of the Beholder
    By Andy Turpin

    On July 31 in Rome, Romanian president Traian Basescu said Romania would
    cooperate with Italy to resolve the problem of Italy's gypsy camps. Speaking
    after a meeting with Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi, Basescu said Romania
    wants to create a "shared plan" to help free gypsies with Romanian
    citizenship living in Italian camps "from the degrading state of poverty in
    which they find themselves," reported ANSA.

    "The Italian government has put into effect simple safety measures to
    protect its citizens-not against Romanian citizens, but against people
    without correct identification papers," Basescu stated

    He warned gypsies that criminal behavior would not be tolerated if they
    chose to return to Romania in the wake of the crackdown by the Italian
    government. "Soon many of you will return to Romania, but the Romanian state
    will not accept criminals. The law must be applied," he said.

    "We realize that we share the problem of the Roma (gypsy) minority, and we
    want to collaborate with the Italian government to resolve the issue, which
    we have been unable to do at home."

    Romanian prime minister Calin Popescu Tariceanu is due to visit Italy in
    October to discuss the issue. The vast majority of the 152,000 Roma living
    in Italy are of Romanian origin, while a small percentage come from the
    Balkans.

    On the surface, the issue of Roma assimilation and/or deportation via Italy
    and Romania seems clear-cut: "Keep the goodies, deport the baddies." But as
    always, the devil is in the details.

    The problem is that the world at large still faces a vast chasm of anti-Roma
    racism-as evidenced by the fact that ANSA still refers to Roma populations
    in article references as "gypsies."

    This is not a direct jab at ANSA because on the contrary, the world is so in
    the dark about Roma history that if ANSA did in fact change all article
    references to the more accurate term "Roma," a majority of readers would be
    confused. So let us not dwell on the legitimate usage and H.L. Menken-isms
    of ANSA.

    The primary issue is that the Roma are an often "off-the-radar" demographic
    in European policy circles and are actively persecuted because of their
    ethnicity and culture-particularly in Romania and Serbia.

    However, from criminology and sociological perspectives, Roma populations,
    like insular populations of Native Americans, Berbers, Uygurs, Kurds, and
    Cossacks are also groups who internally suffer real-life problems of
    incarceration and cycles of abusive behavior.

    Most often, such manifestations are projections of displaced anger at being
    under duress, poverty, and persecution from state authorities in the
    countries they reside for their very ethnic existence or traditions.

    The government of Romania is one of the prime persecutors of Roma
    populations, and the idea of that very government wanting to take a guiding
    hand to solve the problem is terrifying if you are a Roma that left Romania
    for Italy to escape persecution.

    For Romania to say, "We only want the criminals" is a ruse because to a
    majority of Romanians, due to their upbringing for better or worse, all Roma
    are criminals.

    The European Jewish community understands this fact and is lobbying against
    any deportation measures against the Roma in IDP camps to be put in place by
    either the Berlusconi or Basescu administrations, on the grounds that any
    deportees will face unjust harm once in Romania.

    Yet, these measures of altruism and activism on the part of European Jewish
    leaders towards the Roma are being taken lightly by some, specifically since
    Jewish political groups in the 1980's and 90's held the view of Romanian
    Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel that the Roma only warranted a small exhibit,
    if any, in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum for their deaths
    during World War II.

    Roma specialist Isabel Fonseca, author of the Roma history Bury Me Standing,
    noted of this fact that, "It was only after the 1986 resignation of
    president Elie Wiesel, the survivor and Nobel Peace Prize winner who had
    opposed Gypsy representation, that one Gypsy was invited onto the council"
    of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

    Likewise, our own communities know the measures the Turkish government has
    taken over the years to reach swords across seas with their brands of
    recourse to "the Armenian Question."

    Italians, Armenians, and watchdogs the world over must not let smoke get in
    their eyes when it comes to protesting the deportations of Roma or any other
    persecuted minorities. History has shown us all too well that like a
    mathematical equation being reduced to its lowest common denominator, the
    minute a minority starts being referred to by a government as "the ___
    Question" [insert Armenian, Irish, Tutsi, or Falun Gong, respectively],
    sooner or later, that government's answer is inevitably genocide.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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