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Silence On Armenia, By Levon Ter Petrossian

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  • Silence On Armenia, By Levon Ter Petrossian

    SILENCE ON ARMENIA, BY LEVON TER-PETROSSIAN

    Washington Post
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/ article/2008/03/04/AR2008030402329.html
    March 5 2008
    United States

    YEREVAN, Armenia -- In Armenia's presidential election last month,
    I stood as the main opposition candidate against incumbent Prime
    Minister Serzh Sarkissian. The election followed a sadly familiar
    script: The regime harassed the opposition's representatives, bribed
    and intimidated voters, stuffed ballot boxes, and systematically
    miscounted votes. Indeed, the rigging of the outcome did not begin on
    Feb. 19. For the duration of the campaign the country's main medium
    of communication, television, which is tightly controlled by the
    regime, churned out propaganda that would have made Brezhnev-era
    Soviet propagandists blush in shame.

    We in the opposition were angered by all of this but not surprised.

    What surprised and dismayed us was the deafening silence from the
    West. What dismayed us even more was the technical report of the
    observer mission from the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe, which rubber-stamped Sarkissian's farcical claim of victory.

    The people of Armenia, unlike the OSCE monitors, chose to see
    what happened at the polling stations. Naturally, they discounted
    Sarkissian's claim and gathered to demand annulment of the results.

    They staged a continuous protest at Opera Square that became the most
    wonderful celebration of freedom and one that should be studied as
    an example of nonviolent, lawful resistance against illegitimate rule.

    Deeply concerned that the ranks of protesters were swelling by the
    day, the regime decided early Saturday to resort to force. Riot police
    were ordered to disperse the crowd, detain the opposition leaders and
    put me under house arrest. After several hours, citizens reassembled
    at another site, demanding to see their leaders, but instead they
    encountered more riot police, later reinforced by units of the Armenian
    army, which was ordered to crush the protest. At least eight people
    were killed this weekend, and emergency rule has been declared.

    How did we come to this? Why did the regime headed by outgoing
    President Robert Kocharian and "president-elect" Sarkissian think it
    could get away with using force against its own people? Surely the two
    men had their reasons, but the West's signal, even if unintentional,
    that they did not have to worry about a strong international reaction
    was the most important one.

    We in Armenia have been trying to understand the roots of such
    indifference to the rape of our democracy by the Kocharian-Sarkissian
    regime. The available evidence suggests two explanations: First,
    some influential organizations and actors in the West, and in
    Europe in particular, are naively wedded to the notion of positive
    reinforcement. They seem to think that praising small improvements,
    instead of criticizing major flaws, creates an incentive for good
    behavior. Anyone who has studied this regime closely, however,
    understands the absurdity of such an approach.

    Second, and perhaps more important, is the oft-stated claim that
    the only people able to settle Armenia's long-standing conflict over
    the Nagorno-Karabakh region will be leaders who are themselves from
    Nagorno-Karabakh -- as Kocharian and Sarkissian are -- and who are
    perceived domestically as hard-liners. This is analogous to the
    "only Nixon could go to China" logic. The problem is that despite
    being in power for the past 10 years, Kocharian and Sarkissian have
    done little to move the negotiating process forward. More important,
    any leader who must make consequential and difficult choices must have
    the trust of his people. Sarkissian does not have that trust. After
    what he and Kocharian did on March 1, he will not be able to govern
    here, let alone make difficult choices.

    So what should be done? What do the people of Armenia expect from
    the West, and the United States in particular? At the very least,
    we expect a strong and unequivocal condemnation of the violence
    that occurred March 1 and a recognition that the government, not the
    opposition, bears responsibility. This condemnation should accompany
    a stern warning against continued persecution of the opposition and
    its leaders -- mistreatment that is reaching unprecedented levels --
    as well as a demand to lift the restrictions on the media and restore
    the people's rights to free assembly and unbiased information. We
    also expect a reassessment of the conduct of the election. Any serious
    reassessment will inevitably lead to the conclusion that a new election
    must be held.

    If these steps are not taken, Armenians will draw two very undesirable
    conclusions: that peaceful and lawful means of political struggle are
    ineffective and pointless, and that the West cares about democracy
    only when it is politically expedient to do so. The West must do
    everything possible to dissuade Armenia's citizens from reaching
    those conclusions.

    The writer was president of Armenia from 1991 to 1998 and was the main
    opposition candidate for president this year. He is under house arrest.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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