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  • Armenia: Peace Plan With Turkey Sparks Fresh Protests

    ARMENIA: PEACE PLAN WITH TURKEY SPARKS FRESH PROTESTS
    10/12/09

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav101209a.shtml
    Marianna Grigoryan

    Putting aside decades of hostility, Armenia and Turkey signed a
    framework agreement on October 10 that will pave the way for the
    reopening of their borders and the reestablishment of diplomatic
    ties. But while the Armenian government has promoted the deal as a
    peacemaking tool, popular opposition to the agreement among ordinary
    Armenians shows no sign of dying down.

    The central streets of downtown Yerevan were blocked early on
    the morning of October 11. Some residents took the barricades as
    a sign that the government feared further demonstrations against
    the protocols.

    What are we celebrating when they donÎ"×~Pשt care a fig about the
    peopleÎ"×~Pשs opinion?Î"×~PÂ¥ complained 60-year-old Yerevan cab
    driver Hamazasp Manukian. Î"×~P£Did anybody ever listen to the people
    before signing these protocols?

    The day before the protocol signing ceremony, hundreds of anti-protocol
    demonstrators marched to YerevanÎ"×~Pשs Tsitsernakaberd monument
    to the victims of Ottoman TurkeyÎ"×~Pשs 1915 slaughter of ethnic
    Armenians. At the rally, a leader of the nationalist Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutiun warned that opponents
    will force the government to step down, if need be, to stop the
    protocolsÎ"×~Pש ratification.

    Î"×~P£If they drive us to resort to that measure, we will do
    it,Î"×~PÂ¥ declared Vahan Hovhannisian, a onetime presidential
    candidate. Î"×~P£We want to change the system, the government, the
    National Assembly and the president. If they donÎ"×~Pשt listen to
    the peopleÎ"×~Pשs voice, we wonÎ"×~Pשt demand that someone just
    resigns. We will go for a total change of power.

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation dropped out of the government
    coalition in May to protest President Serzh SargsyanÎ"×~Pשs attempted
    reconciliation with Turkey.

    But even less nationalist opposition members insist that giving
    up now is not an option. The consequences of signing the protocols
    Î"×~P£will be no less severe than the results of March 1 [2008 -
    when ten people were killed in clashes between police and presidential
    election protestors], which resulted in the authorities becoming weak
    and totally vulnerable to outside pressure, Î"×~PÂ¥ predicted Stepan
    Safarian, head of the Heritage PartyÎ"×~Pשs parliamentary faction.

    In a bid to soothe public anger at the protocols, President Sargsyan
    took to the airwaves on October 10 shortly before the Zurich signing
    ceremony.

    Saying that setting up ties with Turkey has Î"×~P£no
    alternative,&#x CE;"×~PÂ¥ Sargsyan acknowledged in reference to the events
    of 1915 that Î"×~P£[t]he genocide wound does not heal.Î"×~PÂ¥ But
    time, he said, dictates that Armenia should move forward.

    Î"×~P£The memory of these victims and our future generations require
    a stable and strong statehood, a powerful and prosperous country,
    a motherland comprising the dreams of all Armenians, Î"×~PÂ¥ Sargsyan
    said.

    consider the establishment of normal ties with all our neighbors,
    including Turkey, an important step on this path.Î"×~PÂ¥

    Many Armenians, however, view the future through the past. Î"×~P£How
    can one believe the Turks and extend a hand to them? Î"×~PÂ¥ asked
    70-year-old Yerevan pensioner Marta Petrosian. Î"×~P£How can one
    forget what happened in the past?

    Those feelings run particularly strong among ArmeniaÎ"×~Pשs
    influenti al Diaspora, many of whom protested President SargsyanÎ"×~Pשs
    visits to Los Angeles and Paris to discuss the protocols with ethnic
    Armenian communities.

    Î"×~P£I&#x CE;"×~Pשm choking with shame,Î"×~PÂ¥ commented Anush Mkrtchian,
    a 31-year-old literature scholar from Los Angeles who joined the
    protests. More time should have been taken for discussions, and,
    potentially, a referendum on the question, she argued. Diaspora
    Armenians now Î"×~P£everywhere accuse those living in Armenia of
    treason,Î"×~PÂ¥ she claimed.

    One French Diaspora member, however, calls the treason charges
    Î"×~P£nonsense.

    Î"×~P£I can understand people getting angry, but if you do not
    live in your motherland you have no moral right to call a person a
    traitor . . . Î"×~PÂ¥ commented Vardan Nersisian, who left Armenia
    for France ten years ago. Î"×~P£Another question is whether the
    authorities are pursuing the right policy or not. I hope they will
    be reasonable enough.Î"×~PÂ¥

    Some Yerevan political analysts caution that the controversy will
    only increase as the protocols go to parliament for ratification.

    Î"×~P£Arm enian-Turkish relations and the genocide issue
    are sore points for our people,Î"×~PÂ¥ said Stepan Grigorian,
    director of the Analytical Center on Globalization and Regional
    Cooperation. Î"×~P£Taking this into consideration, as well as the
    problem of trusting the authorities and other issues, tensions might
    increase.

    Some observers, citing a statement by Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan that reconciliation with Armenia pins on an Armenian
    withdrawal from territories surrounding the disputed region of Nagorno
    Karabakh, contend that Turkey itself may attempt to put pressure
    on Armenia.

    Î"×~P£If Turkey puts forward conditions and starts pressing Armenia,
    an emergency situation may emerge in terms of [a bid to force a] change
    of power,Î"×~PÂ¥ opined independent political analyst Yerevand Bozoian.

    Ruling Republican Party spokesperson Eduard Sharmazanov, a member of
    parliament, discounts the notion. Every marathon must start with a
    first step, he said.

    Î"×~P£We must take this step,Î"×~PÂ¥ Sharmazanov said
    of the governmentÎ"×~Pשs agreement to reconciliation with
    Turkey. Î"×~P£Nobody should say theyÎ"×~Pשre better patriots than
    we are.Î"×~PÂ¥

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based
    in Yerevan.
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