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  • Social Media In The Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict

    SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN CONFLICT

    Transitions Online, Czech Rep
    April 17 2013

    By Onnik Krikorian, Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso

    Social media have become one of the few places where young people from
    Armenia and Azerbaijan can meet. Yet, not without risks

    While it might be nearly 19 years since a May 1994 ceasefire put the
    conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed territory of
    Nagorno Karabakh on hold, analysts are increasingly viewing the
    situation on the Line of Contact (LOC) with alarm. Over 20,000 died in
    the war waged in the early 1990s and a million were forced to flee
    their homes. Frontline skirmishes and sniper incidents remain common
    withThe Economist recently putting the number of dead since the
    armistice at over 3,000. More significantly, new generations are
    brought up unable to remember the time when both Armenians and
    Azerbaijanis lived side by side together in peace.

    Given concerns that a new war might break, with attempts to reach a
    negotiated settlement through the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) so far unsuccessful, militaristic
    rhetoric continues to define much of the domestic political discourse
    in Armenia and Azerbaijan, especially with a new cycle of presidential
    elections this year. The media plays its role too, as a paper from the
    Caucasus Research Resource Centers (CRRC) opined. "Without more
    accurate and unbiased information [...] free of negative rhetoric and
    stereotypes, Armenians and Azerbaijanis will continue to see
    themselves as enemies without any common ground," the 2008 report
    read.

    And recent statistics also from CRRC highlight the problem further. In
    its 2009 household survey, 70 percent of respondents in Armenia said
    they were against forming friendships with Azerbaijanis while 97
    percent of Azerbaijanis were opposed to friendship with Armenians. "My
    background is with the Israelis and Palestinians," Elizabeth Metraux,
    Program Director of a U.S. State Department program designed to bring
    Armenian and Azerbaijani teenagers together, told this author in 2009
    . "There were times when it just gets explosive and there really were
    those moments were I just thought I had underestimated the intensity
    of the conflict."

    The project, undertaken through Project Harmony, was one of the first
    to use online tools in combination with offline meetings, albeit only
    using blogs. Because of the sensitivities of being seen to connect
    with the other side in the conflict, the Armenian and Azerbaijani
    teenagers chose not to use Facebook to remain in contact once they
    were back home. Such a situation was not surprising given the
    intensity of the information war conducted online and the monitoring
    of activity by security services. The same year, for example, Adnan
    Hajizade and Emin Milli, two online activists in Azerbaijan, were
    arrested, albeit for criticizing their government.

    "The reason why the KGB wants you to join Facebook is because it
    allows them to, first of all, learn more about you from afar," Evgeny
    Morozov, author of The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet
    Freedom, told Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) in a 2011
    interview , arguing that the Internet is just as important a tool for
    governments to engage in mass surveillance and political repression as
    well as for nationalists to spread extremist propaganda. "They don't
    have to [...] interrogate you, and obviously you disclose quite a bit.

    It allows them to identify certain social graphs and social
    connections between activists."

    Nevertheless, even if using social networking sites to bridge the
    divide was unthinkable for some, others were not so hesitant despite
    the inherent risks involved.

    Indeed, on 1 March 2011, online Azerbaijani news site Qaynar.Info
    published the names of prominent activists and journalists in the
    country who had Armenian 'friends' on Facebook in an attempt to
    discredit them and to further engage in a campaign to warn citizens of
    the danger of social networking sites. "It is possible that secret
    agents sit in social networks trying to lure people to cooperate," one
    parliamentary deputy even told journalists, suggesting that this
    perceived threat should be legislated against. "In my opinion, one
    cannot exclude that the intelligence services of various countries can
    also lead Azerbaijani nationals to secret cooperation through social
    networks."

    Despite the negative publicity, however, hundreds of Armenians and
    Azerbaijanis continued to use Facebook, and to a lesser extent
    Twitter, to make contact and communicate online.

    However, notes Global Voices co-founder and MIT Center for Civic Media
    Director Ethan Zuckerman, this might have led to what he terms
    'imaginary cosmopolitanism,' something that one American-Armenian
    journalist also considers. "Because social media allows you to connect
    to people within the same overlapping circles and ideologies, you know
    that the people you're befriending think the way you do in the sense
    that they're curious about you too," Liana Aghajanian told
    Osservatorio. "In person or by other means, you'd have to second guess
    to make sure that person wouldn't have animosity towards you, for
    example."

    Nevertheless, she adds, social media still has an important role to
    play in preparing the ground for peace, something that Yelena Osipova,
    an Armenian citizen now studying abroad also notes. "Social media can
    potentially be a great tool for the initial stages of conflict
    resolution," she says. "It helps to establish and maintain direct
    people-to-people communication without in-person contact. This
    distance can help mitigate the potential hostility and induce more
    civil conversations. Equally important is the fact that social media
    can help put a face on a faceless and evil 'enemy' whose image has
    been constructed and implanted in the minds of those involved."

    Osipova also notes that there is an inherent danger with social media,
    and not least from nationalists on both sides who might attempt to
    hijack the communication or intimidate and threaten those engaged in
    cross-border communication. Others such as Nigar Hajizade, an
    Azerbaijani now living in Turkey, are also cautious. "I support and
    appreciate peace or conflict-resolution efforts that stem from or are
    supported by social media, but I'm not very optimistic in terms of
    their overall impact given how large and powerful all the
    counter-initiatives are, starting with state institutions themselves,
    lobbying groups, and the media," she says.

    "When looking at the role of public diplomacy and communications in
    conflict resolution, it is no longer possible to ignore online
    communications," Sarah Crozier, Press and Public Information Officer
    for the OSCE Secretariat told Osservatorio. "When an ever greater
    number of people can make their voices heard online, and information -
    or misinformation - can quickly spread, it is important that those
    involved in conflict prevention, conflict resolution and post-conflict
    rehabilitation can get beyond casually used terms like 'e-diplomacy'
    and 'Twitter revolutions' and have a clear understanding of what the
    real potential of online communications is in this area."

    Meanwhile, with no other way for like-minded Armenians and
    Azerbaijanis to connect, Hajizade ends on a more optimistic note. "Two
    more friends are always better than two more enemies."

    This post is written by Onnik Krikorian and reprinted from
    Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso under a Creative Commons license.

    Preparing for Peace: Communications in Conflict Resolution , an OSCE
    report, which also includes a section on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
    by Onnik Krikorian, is available for download
    athttp://www.osce.org/secretariat/98116?download=true . Photo
    flickr/mkhmarketing

    http://netprophet.tol.org/2013/04/17/social-media-in-the-armenia-azerbaijan-conflict/

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