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Vartan Oskanian Speaks About "The Greatest Challenge Facing Us"

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  • Vartan Oskanian Speaks About "The Greatest Challenge Facing Us"

    -- PRESS RELEASE
    The Civilitas Foundation
    One Northern Ave. Suite 30
    Yerevan, Armenia
    Telephones: +37494.800754; +37410.500119
    email: [email protected]
    web: www.civilitasfoundation.org <http://www.civilitasfoundation.org/>


    Vart an Oskanian Speaks About "The Greatest Challenge Facing Us"


    Founder of the Civilitas Foundation, former foreign minister of Armenia,
    Vartan Oskanian spoke in Toronto and Los Angeles at two community
    gatherings.

    In Toronto on October 24, Mr. Oskanian was the guest of the Canada Armenia
    Business Council. He received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the
    organization.

    In Los Angeles, on October 25, Mr. Oskanian was named Professional of the
    Year by the Armenian Professional Society which is celebrating its 50th
    anniversary.

    In his remarks, he addressed Armenia¹s international and domestic
    challenges, but also what he characterized to be ³the most important issue
    facing us, the issue of identity for our young people, in Armenia and in the
    Diaspora.² Below is the text of his speech.

    Dear Friends,

    This is my first public appearance since I left the office of foreign
    minister.

    As I was gathering my thoughts about what to say, I realized that we've come
    a long long way these 17 years.

    If I was still in office, I would tell you about Armenia's successes and
    challenges. Today, as a private citizen, I am going to do the same. But the
    reason I wanted to be a private citizen, is to be more outspoken about and
    to work for all that still needs to be done. I believe that my
    responsibility, our responsibility together, to Armenia and its future is
    the same whether one is in government or not.

    My commitment to Armenia and its future did not begin when I became foreign
    minister. It will not cease now that I am no longer foreign minister.

    I have been here since the inception and I've seen the ups and downs. I
    served as foreign minister since the beginning of President Kocharian's
    term. I served as deputy minister and first deputy minister under President
    Ter Petrossian. In other words, I have served not a man, but a people and a
    country. Just as it is not in my nature to follow blindly, it is also not in
    my nature to be in bitter opposition. I believe in carrying out the
    responsibilities I have undertaken. I believe I have done so these 10 years,
    sometimes before the TV cameras but more often behind the scenes.

    My responsibility now is to speak and act honestly and openly. That is both
    commitment and responsibility.

    The Civilitas Foundation which I have created believes in the concept of a
    citizen's responsibility to society. We, in Armenia and the Diaspora,
    professionals, committed Armenians of all generations, across the world,
    together, make up Armenian society. Around the world, we have attained a
    level of professionalism, integration and wealth that our grandparents could
    never have imagined and that obligates us to give back to our community -
    here and in Armenia.

    But you already know that. Your organizations, by their existence,
    understand the inextricable links between Armenia and Diaspora.

    I have often spoken of the Armenia - Diaspora interdependence. I don't think
    it is any longer a question as to whether one needs the other. I think the
    only question is how one can build on and benefit from the capacities of the
    other.

    All of us in our consciousness, in our minds, in our dreams, we imagine our
    own Armenia, and we strive to reach it. But in order to see the real
    Armenia, to perceive it correctly, I think we must find the right
    correlation, the right balance between our expectations of Armenia and
    Armenia's capacity.

    It is not easy to build a state. It's true that one can have expectations,
    but they must also be realistic expectations.

    Let's look at what we have. We have built a state that is stable, and
    advancing economically. Today, if we compare Armenia to other similar
    countries, we see that despite our limited potential, despite the war,
    despite the blockade - and in fact we even forget about these sometimes - we
    are competitive with our neighbors.

    The situation in our region today is changing very quickly. The challenges
    are not the same today as they were 10 years ago, five years ago, or even
    one or two years ago. And they are many. The Baku-Tbilisi-Çeyhan pipeline is
    operational and prospects are improving for the construction of the
    Trans-Caspian pipeline. These will seriously enhance Azerbaijan's influence
    and leverage over Europe and the US. Those countries in our region facing
    self-determination issues have united and created a common front. The
    punitive posturing towards Iran, our strategically important neighbor, is
    growing. The likelihood of the creation of divisive lines in our region is
    also increasing, and nothing demonstrated that better than the conflict, in
    August, between Russia and Georgia. Finally, the Turkey-Azerbaijan
    relationship is becoming deeper and broader, with Turkey more openly and
    overtly assisting Azerbaijan militarily, politically and economically. Every
    day, we see new manifestations of Turkey's state policy of denial and
    non-recognition of the Genocide. Add to that their hesitation to make the
    only move that will have any meaningful impact on the region - opening
    borders - and you can see that our foreign policy challenges are serious.

    Actually, I believe that many of these will be with us in some form or
    another, for a long time. Our neighborhood is not going to change.

    But our domestic challenges - these are the ones that are in our hands to
    fix, once and for all.

    Many of our domestic problems are economic. The hopes of Armenia's aspiring
    young men and women rest on a fair, open, economic system. This means
    respecting civil liberties, believing in democracy, actually allowing a rule
    of law. Only then can will the individual citizen be unafraid to risk and
    venture, and only then will we harness the energy of our society -
    economically and politically.

    Only then will be able to create jobs so that they see their future in
    Armenia, and they see Armenia's future in themselves.

    Only then will we manage to eradicate poverty so that all our people begin
    to believe that living in a country that is ours is better than living in
    someone else's empire.

    Only then will we succeed in identifying corruption as the evil that limits
    options, suffocates innovation, restricts enterprise and slams the door on
    opportunity

    Only then will we do away with nepotism so that it is what you know not who
    you know that counts.

    Only then will our government institutions be more effective because the law
    makes each citizen powerful, and it is not the powerful who make their own
    laws.

    In other words, the stories of today's rising generation must be stories of
    prospects and convictions and successes, not stories of frustration,
    discontent and disillusionment.

    But we will not be able to tackle today's ills if we do not heal our
    political environment and change the psycho-social and moral environment in
    which we live.

    Our elections were not the cause of the damage to our spirit. They were the
    consequence of our inability to bring civility to our society, to bring
    civil society to our political stage, and to transform our political arena
    into a competition of ideas and programs, not a battleground for defending
    power and wealth/resources.

    This failure is not just Armenia's but also the Diaspora's. The challenge
    then is also not just for Armenia, but for Karabakh and the Diaspora, too.
    In this, as in all things, we are together. There is no Armenia without
    Diaspora, no Karabakh without Armenia, there are no divisions. We all belong
    to one nation, have one identity, one past.

    The most important challenge facing all of us is our young people's issue of
    identity. You in the Diaspora think this is just a Diaspora worry. But it is
    not. This is as real a question for those who are growing up today in
    Armenia and Karabakh. To what do they link their identity? To a divided and
    injured society? To apathy and hopelessness? To endless cycles of poverty?
    To third world villages? To homelessness and earthquake? To the mentality of
    a warrior -- victorious but always under siege? To the economy of a petty
    merchant?

    Or to an Armenia that has a knowledge-based economy, where education is
    valuable for the windows that it opens, where villagers like villagers
    everywhere feel protected? To an Armenia with an economic and political
    independence that is secure, to a prosperous Armenia, to an Armenia that is
    fair and just.

    Our young people - in Yerevan and here in Diaspora, too - want to believe in
    Armenia. But that Armenia must be the Armenia of their imagination, the one
    they have heard about from their grandfathers, the Armenia their parents
    have dreamt about. If we can't give this generation that Armenia, then in
    the years to come, we will lose them to other dreams.

    But if we can? If Armenia, the Diaspora and Karabakh join hands and use our
    know-how and our dedication, see what miracles we will work.

    The 21st century - the century of social and professional networks, of
    globalization and of knowledge-based economies - is a century that will see
    new countries and new diasporas. Our diaspora was created by the forces of
    history. Ironically, so was our country.

    Now we cannot leave them to the forces of history again.

    It is that diaspora and that country that will define us as a nation in the
    21st century. We must write that definition ourselves.
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