Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Where Have All The Armenians Gone?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Where Have All The Armenians Gone?

    WHERE HAVE ALL THE ARMENIANS GONE?
    Giorgi Lomsadze

    EurasiaNet
    July 22 2011
    NY

    Gone to the West, everyone with brains; gone to Russia, everyone with
    brawn, believes one prominent Armenian intellectual. (Apologies to
    Peter, Paul and Mary.)

    But many others are not going anywhere at all, rejoined President Serzh
    Sargsyan at a July 20 cabinet meeting. While expressing concern about
    migration rates, Sargsyan also called for a cautious interpretation
    of the data. Predictions of a mass exodus only provide grit for the
    enemy's (read, Azerbaijan's) mill, he said.

    "[S]ome say 45,000 people have left Armenia [this year], but had
    someone taken the trouble to look at this rate on a monthly or
    quarterly basis, he would clearly see that in October-November
    period of this year... 40,000 of those who left will come back,"
    the president said.

    Where international data is concerned, though, the numbers don't look
    pretty. The Central Intelligence Agency's 2011 migration ranking puts
    Armenia in 186th place out of 202 countries with a net migration rate
    of - 3.76 per 1,000 people. That's far worse than Azerbaijan (-1.14),
    but a tad better than Georgia (-4.06).

    The United Nations gives a similarly stark long-term view; an estimated
    700,000 to 1.3 million people emigrated from Armenia between 1991
    and 2009, it says.

    For a country with a population of just 3.2 million, those numbers
    spell trouble. To keep the population in place, some critics advise
    that the government put reforms in place for a stronger rule of law
    and a healthier economy.

    The president himself, though, advises keeping an eye on the effect
    such debates about migration will have on Azerbaijan. "[The Azerbaijani
    authorities] keep saying publicly that they will wait for Armenia's
    depopulation and then they will solve their problems [dispute over
    Nagorno-Karabakh enclave] with us," said Sargsyan. He called the notion
    "interesting" and "a little funny."

    For her part, Diaspora Minister Granush Akopian offered this simple
    hope -- that one day, Armenia's migrants to Russia, the bulk of the
    outflow, "absolutely" will come home again.

Working...
X