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Election In Iran Revealed That "Very Serious Domestic Contradiction

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  • Election In Iran Revealed That "Very Serious Domestic Contradiction

    ELECTION IN IRAN REVEALED THAT "VERY SERIOUS DOMESTIC CONTRADICTIONS

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/
    25.06.2009 21:24 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Center for National and International
    Studies (ACNIS) convened a roundtable discussion today, entitled
    "Crisis in Iran: Lessons for Armenia," assessing the recent
    post-election crisis in Iran and examining the lessons for Armenia,
    the ACNIS press office reported.

    ACNIS Director Richard Giragosian then presented an assessment of
    recent developments in Armenia's southern neighbor Iran, which has
    been gripped by a powerful, and at times, even violent post-election
    crisis that has seen the largest anti-government demonstrations since
    the 1979 Iranian revolution, with hundreds of thousands of Iranian
    citizens protesting a disputed presidential election. He argued
    that the "post-election unrest poses the most serious challenge to
    the Iranian authorities since they came to power in the wake of the
    Iranian revolution twenty years ago." In addition, he noted that "the
    current wave of unrest is largely directed against the ruling elite,
    although it is not, at least yet, targeting the system itself."

    After providing a focused analysis of the Iranian crisis, Giragosian
    also presented several important lessons for Armenia, including the
    fact that "Iran is now facing its own March 1st post-election crisis,
    similar to the events in Armenia last year" and, in both cases,
    "led to the tragic deaths of civilian demonstrators after the use,
    and misuse, of force, with police and security forces applying an
    excessive and repressive response to the demonstrations." He went on to
    say that "in Armenia's case, the March 2008 crisis remains unresolved,
    as the authorities have been unable or unwilling to fully and fairly
    investigate the events of March 2008" and warned that "Armenia, like
    Iran, is plagued by a failure to adequately resolve the underlying
    tension and demands emanating from that crisis."

    Giragosian explained that another lesson for Armenia from the
    current crisis in Iran was the fact that the election revealed that
    "very serious domestic contradictions quickly developed into a highly
    volatile and explosive internal situation that no ideology, no mater
    how powerful, could contain." And, "for the Armenian authorities, this
    lesson also includes a warning: that there can be no political panacea
    or substitute for not addressing concrete socio-economic problems. And
    with Iran, it is also clear that the recent crisis has shown that no
    country in this modern world can remain truly isolated," he added.

    He concluded by noting that the third lesson from Iran, the "economics
    of change" as a driving force behind this tension that was even more
    worrisome for Armenia. In both cases, he argued, "young Iranians and
    Armenians share the same hopes, for a brighter future, for economic
    opportunities, and for a voice in how their country is governed." He
    then warned that "for both countries, there is no return to the
    pre-crisis status quo, as the political and economic demands for
    change remain unmet, and to continue to ignore these basic demands and
    natural expectations, sparks a real risk of only prolonging the crisis,
    and most dangerously, of merely fueling the fire of discontent."

    In closing, Giragosian stated that "in terms of the outlook
    for Armenian-Iranian relations, there are both inherent limits,
    such as the Russian pressure on Armenia over the size of the gas
    pipeline to prevent the re-export of gas beyond Armenia, and inherent
    opportunities," arguing that "Armenia can play a role as a strategic
    bridge to Iran, and as a platform for Russia, the EU and the US to
    engage Iran."
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