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Don't Silence Another 60

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  • Don't Silence Another 60

    Don't Silence Another 60

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/10/13/dont-silence-another-60/
    October 13, 2012

    My next trip to Armenia is in December, but if it were tomorrow, I
    wouldn't be very excited to get on the plane. In fact, right now I
    want to be as far away from Armenia as possible. And in this moment, I
    understand why hundreds of thousands of people have left during the
    last 20 years.

    Currently, Vartan Oskanian, Armenia's former minister of foreign
    affairs, faces charges of money laundering, embezzlement, and who
    knows what else. Many people thought Oskanian a likely challenger to
    Republican incumbent President Serge Sarkisian in February's
    presidential election, unless, of course, Oskanian is tied up in
    court, or worse. Seemingly to correctly prove the hypothesis that the
    charges are politically driven, the ruling Republicans and their de
    facto proxy party voted 64-6 to remove Oskanian's immunity and leave
    him open to charges, which followed a week later. Every political
    party boycotted the vote except, you guessed it, the ruling majority
    and its friends. Interestingly, a party historically loaded with
    parliamentarians sporting shoddy attendance records somehow managed to
    convince 96 percent of its membership to show up and remove Oskanian's
    immunity. Meanwhile, Georgia just completed a legitimate election and
    power transfer, further widening the democratic gap between the two
    neighboring former Soviet states. And yet, this isn't even the
    beginning of my frustration...

    Oskanian is also the founder of the Civilitas Foundation, a think tank
    promoting an active civil society. The money laundering charge stems
    from a charitable donation made to the foundation by U.S. businessman
    Jon Huntsman, Sr. The foundation's roughly 60 employees are
    predominantly young, multilingual Armenians working to improve their
    country by focusing on issues such as women's rights, the rule of law,
    and the environment. Their main vehicle is the news and public affairs
    website, civilnet.am, which started from scratch with a team of
    inexperienced future journalists, and has since developed into a real
    source for independent, analytical news and dialogue. Unfortunately,
    that mission sometimes interferes with the establishment's suppressive
    interests. During my 14 months producing for Civilnet, I learned twice
    as much as I taught about advocacy journalism and became exceedingly
    optimistic about Armenia's future. Civilitas is an oasis for
    free-thinking creativity, safe from the desert of anti-progressive
    thought that sometimes pollutes Yerevan.


    `Civilitas is an oasis for free-thinking creativity, safe from the
    desert of anti-progressive thought that sometimes pollutes Yerevan.'
    This all matters because the Armenians with whom I worked at Civilitas
    are extremely talented and mobile. They've turned down
    full-scholarship opportunities in the U.S. and the U.K., believing
    they could improve their home country if they only stayed in Armenia.
    Even those who have left Civilitas and Armenia, including U.S.
    citizens such as this article's author, have pledged to return and
    make Armenia their long-term home. But now, Civilitas is under fire,
    facing potential interference from the government, which claims it
    wants to `protect' Civilitas. Nobody knows what that means and nobody
    is optimistic about it either. While everyone is still fighting for
    Civilitas' survival, some of my former co-workers and friends are
    second-guessing their desire to remain in Armenia.

    At September's Armenians and Progressive Politics (APP) Conference in
    New York, one attendee astutely described Armenia as an unstable
    balloon that inflates with each repressive event, such as the one
    happening now with Civilitas. But as the balloon expands and seems
    ready to explode, people simply move out of the country, thus
    diffusing the pressure. We've seen it after elections and other events
    that sully the public. It's why today Armenia's population is
    definitively less than 3 million people. So I suspect we'll see more
    frustration and migration with this episode and the upcoming February
    election. And, unfortunately, the educated and mobile will be the ones
    to leave, further exacerbating the brain drain epidemic.

    I will get on that plane in December, and my long-term plan to live in
    Armenia has not changed. I am excited to enjoy the city I love and see
    the friends I left behind a few months ago. I only hope some of them
    will still be there to greet me at the airport.

    Greg Bilazarian is a first year MBA student at the Yale School of
    Management. He was the producer for civilnet.am in Armenia from May
    2011 to July 2012. Bilazarian worked for four years as a television
    news reporter in the U.S. before moving to Armenia. He grew up outside
    of Philadelphia.

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