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BAKU: Biggest Test For Armenian Diaspora And President Sargsyan Is A

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  • BAKU: Biggest Test For Armenian Diaspora And President Sargsyan Is A

    BIGGEST TEST FOR ARMENIAN DIASPORA AND PRESIDENT SARGSYAN IS AHEAD: EXPERT

    Trend
    Oct 7 2009
    Azerbaijan

    As a whole, it is still too early to speak about duration of
    impact that Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and the world Armenian
    diaspora's confrontation will have, Director of the Armenian Center for
    National and International Studies (ACNIS), Richard Giragosian, said.

    "The real impact will depend on whether the Turkish parliament ratifies
    the protocols.That is the biggest test and it is still to come,"
    Giragosian wrote to Trend News via e-mail.

    Earlier Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan told Trend News
    in an exclusive interview that Turkey and Armenia will sign a deal
    to establish diplomatic ties on Oct. 10.

    During his recent international visit, Armenian President Serzh
    Sargsyan met with representatives of Armenian diasporas in Europe,
    Argentina and the U.S, and many of them expressed their opposition
    to the signing of a Turkish-Armenian agreement.

    The Armenian diaspora holds protests worldwide. Sargsyan faced these
    actions in Paris, New York and Los Angeles. The demonstrators met
    the Armenian president with slogans such as "Traitor!", "No protocols".

    Several opposition parties in Armenia are also against Sargsyan's
    policy. Such meetingsare also held against signing of the protocols.

    On Oct.6, rally was held in Yerevan to protest signing of protocols
    on development of relations with Turkey, Armenia Today said. The
    event was organized by the movement Miasum "(" Unity "). Protesters
    marched to the memorial dedicated to victims of so-called "genocide"
    of Armenians. There they burned copy of protocols in eternal fire,
    as well as a photo of President Serzh Sargsyan.

    "When president Sargsyan was on an international visit, he was faced
    by a reaction from the Armenian diaspora. So what he does in face of
    the reaction of the diaspora is very important. If he can stand firm,
    and if it is the government of Armenia and not the Armenian diasporas
    that is determining policy in Armenia, then I think that we can move
    forward. As far as we're concerned there is no problem. But it is up
    to the government in Armenia," Erdogan said in an interview to The
    Wall Street Journal, Ria Novost reported.

    According to Giragosian, the Armenian government has been largely
    driven by "desperation" for a foreign policy success, in order
    to distract attention away from its own domestic problems and
    deficiencies that arose in the wake of the country's unresolved
    post-election crisis.

    But with the recent "tour" of the Armenian diapsora, President Sargsyan
    seems much more confident and ambitious in taking on the opponents
    to normalizing relations with Turkey.

    "In this sense, Sargsyan is confronting the diaspora head-on and, so
    far, he seems to be succeeding in deflecting the criticism.Interesting,
    this is also resulting in a broad division between the diaspora
    and the Armenian government, which only seems to please Turkey,"
    the director added.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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