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Armenia: Youth Group Sparks Debate About Identity In The Facebook Ag

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  • Armenia: Youth Group Sparks Debate About Identity In The Facebook Ag

    ARMENIA: YOUTH GROUP SPARKS DEBATE ABOUT IDENTITY IN THE FACEBOOK AGE
    Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet.org
    Sept 23 2011
    NY

    An online "youth group initiative" set up by four 20-somethings
    in Armenia is illustrating how far Facebook can go in maximizing
    political influence while concealing identity.

    The group, We Won't Stay Quiet (Chenk Lrelu), registered its first
    success in mid-July with a video report that documented the decrepit
    state of the 10th century Sanahin monastery, a UNESCO-registered site
    in northern Armenia. Following an outcry, the government allotted 90
    million drams, more than $240,000, for repairs.

    Another video report followed about an army officer's harassment of
    recruits; the officer was dismissed. Then came the story of a soldier
    (set to the theme music of Schindler's List) who allegedly entered a
    psychiatric hospital after being beaten and threatened with rape by
    army officers. The military prosecutor started a criminal investigation
    on September 6, the same day the video was posted online.

    Success on less dramatic issues also has been made; the Defense
    Ministry on September 19 sent a "special committee" to look into
    reports of alleged army violations of furlough rules after We Won't
    Stay Quiet issued a report about such practices, News.am reported.

    That record of government response is unprecedented for an Armenian
    youth group; particularly one that has no public presence apart from
    the Internet. Pro-government television stations have been quick to
    disseminate its materials as well.

    It is a record that has fueled speculation that the group actually
    functions as a "cat's paw" for the government; posing as a grassroots
    organization, which advances issues for the government to address
    that score emotional points with ordinary Armenians.

    "The group seems to voice urgent issues, but it is a bit strange that
    nobody knows who they really are," commented human rights activist
    Arthur Sakunts, head of the Helsinki Citizens' Assembly's office in
    the northern town of Vanadzor.

    "Otherwise, how come those issues raised by many other groups did
    not attract the same sort of attention?" Sakunts asked.

    The psychiatric hospital soldier offers a case in point, skeptics say.

    Over the course of two months, the Ministry of Defense did not respond
    to human rights organizations' appeals about the soldier, Armenian
    Helsinki Committee Chairperson Avetik Ishkhanian told reporters. The
    ministry did not respond to requests from EurasiaNet.org for comment.

    But, according to one organizer, We Won't Stay Quiet gets a response
    simply because its four organizers, aged 22 to 27 years old, know
    how to make proper use of the Internet's "tools" and "opportunities."

    "Armenians tend to believe various conspiracy theories," said Ashot
    Poghosian, one of the group's founders, in a phone interview with
    EurasiaNet.org. He described allegations that the group is linked to
    the government as "ridiculous."

    "[T]he country is in a shameful situation, and it's not difficult to
    find people suffering from injustices," he added.

    The group's Facebook profile, which boasts 4,226 "likes," declares
    that it is made up of politically independent young people who want
    to "bring the most urgent issues up for public discussion through
    the media." Organizers say they do not publicize their names
    and professions or release photographs of themselves as a safety
    precaution.

    It asserts that its videos "were shot by amateur camera and edited
    with the simplest software," telling subscribers "You can do the same."

    Public relations consultant Armen Badalian dismisses the argument
    that We Won't Stay Quiet is colluding with the government.

    "I see no logic in it; our authorities would hardly talk about problems
    in order to solve them," said Badalian. "Maybe this is a group of
    people who are experts in PR and the Internet, who, contrary to many
    other similar groups, manage to make their voices heard?"

    Internews Armenia Production Manager Harutiun Mansurian shares that
    opinion; he says he shared one of the group's videos on Facebook
    because they had done "a tasteful job." "They try to use the right
    tools properly, and they succeed," Mansurian said.

    The army appears to attract the bulk of the four organizers' interest,
    but Poghosian asserts that it is only because "it causes much debate"
    in the public sphere. A video about a baby who died from medical
    neglect in a regional maternity hospital arguably gained a similarly
    emotional response, and triggered a health ministry investigation.

    But some of the videos appear to parallel neatly with government
    policy interests. Videotaped statements by residents of breakaway
    Nagorno Karabakh about their refusal to recognize the sovereignty of
    Azerbaijan were sent to Western embassies and the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe in Yerevan, for instance. An appeal
    was also released for the Russian city of Sochi to stop the demolition
    of a statue to Armenian General Andranik Ozanian, a World-War-I-era
    national hero who led volunteer fighters against Ottoman Turkey.

    Still, group co-leader Poghosian underlines that it is not fulfilling
    any official commission. "Nobody finances us, but we are ready to
    hear the viewpoints of people who share our concerns and worry about
    their home country," he said.

    Editor's note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
    Yerevan and editor of MediaLab.am.

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