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No Saturday Night Fever, As Armenia Mulls Eurovision Blackout

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  • No Saturday Night Fever, As Armenia Mulls Eurovision Blackout

    NO SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER, AS ARMENIA MULLS EUROVISION BLACKOUT
    Anna Barseghian

    Radio Free Europe
    May 22, 2012

    Say you find yourself in Armenia on May 26 and you fancy a little
    Saturday-night TV.

    There's "TV Restaurant," a competition between local lounge singers,
    the "Armenians of the World" documentary series, or the comedy show
    "Vitamin Club," which promises to "heal everyone with healthy humor
    and laughter."

    But the one thing that might not be on? The Eurovision Song Contest,
    a once-a-year musical megaspectacle that is expected to draw more
    than 125 million viewers worldwide as it crowns a new country the
    king of frothy, and often forgettable, pop.

    Armenia, which first competed in Eurovision in 2006, has shown little
    enthusiasm for this year's contest, which is being hosted by its
    neighbor and nemesis, Azerbaijan.

    Yerevan in March announced it was pulling out of the competition,
    citing the death of an Armenian soldier in an Azerbaijani sniper
    attack and rising tensions in its dispute with Baku over the disputed
    enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The decision meant an end to the Eurovision dreams of Armenian
    musicians competing for the right to represent their country, including
    the band Dorians with their song "This is Our World:"

    Eurovision officials were quick to penalize Armenia for the pullout,
    saying it was still obligated to pay its full participation fees as
    well as a hefty fine.

    They added that Armenia's H1 public television station, a member of
    the European Broadcasting Union which runs Eurovision, must broadcast
    the May 26 final "live, with no interruptions," or be banned outright
    from next year's Eurovision contest.

    Playing It Cool

    The threat of exclusion from Europe's biggest party might strike fear
    in many countries, but Armenia is playing it cool, saying it has yet
    to decide whether or not it will broadcast the final.

    When speaking to RFE/RL's Armenian Service late last week, the head
    of Armenia's delegation to Eurovision, Gohar Gasparyan, declined to
    comment on when a decision would be made.

    "All I can say is that we'll probably show the contest," she said.

    "I'd like to state once again that there has been no penalty or
    sanction here. These are just points that we are obliged to follow. I
    think the winner [of this year's contest] will be a country that
    won't pose any further problems in terms of our participation."

    Eurovision isn't the only global event that Armenia is taking a
    pass on.

    The country also boycotted the May 20-21 NATO summit in Chicago,
    protesting a declaration adopted by the group's 28 member states that
    Yerevan said was biased in favor of Azerbaijan.

    The declaration, which mentions the breakaway Azerbaijani region
    of Nagorno-Karabakh among other unresolved land disputes, appears
    to endorse the principle of territorial integrity -- a stance that
    suits Azerbaijan.

    Armenia has long argued that the people of Nagorno-Karabakh -- who
    are predominantly ethnic Armenians -- should be given the right to
    self-determination.

    Mixed Emotions

    Armenians, meanwhile, appear torn about a night without Eurovision.

    The Armenian singer Hayko, who represented his country at the 2007
    Eurovision contest in Helsinki, said it would be "weak" of the
    Armenians not to show it.

    "I think that it's worth showing, because regardless of where
    Eurovision is being held, it's still a celebration of music and is
    the best European song contest," he said. "As a musician, I'm very
    interested to see how it will look this year."

    One Yerevan resident agreed, maintaining that he enjoyed watching
    Eurovision and hoped the broadcast would proceed.

    "Yes, I would definitely watch it even if we don't have our own
    person there," he said. "Eurovision is still interesting for me. Who
    will get what? Who will end up in what place? Which country will win
    the contest? That way I know where our participant will go for the
    next Eurovision."

    One Yerevan woman claimed she had no interest in watching any event
    being hosted by Azerbaijan, whether it was broadcast in Armenia or not:

    "Anything that's connected to Azerbaijan has nothing to do with us,"
    she said.

    If some Armenians are surviving without Eurovision, it appears
    Eurovision is surviving without Armenia as well.

    A German DJ performing at an official Eurovision fan club in Baku
    earlier this week was interrupted when he attempted to play Armenian
    music.

    Such music, it was suggested, has no place in a competition that
    Yerevan has so roundly rejected.

    "Armenia unexpectedly refused to participate in Eurovision 2012 without
    apologizing," said Kamran Agasy, a Eurovision spokesman. "What will
    our volunteers think if they suddenly hear Armenian melodies?"

    Written in Prague by Daisy Sindelar, based on reporting in Yerevan
    by Anna Barseghian from RFE/RL's Armenian Service

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