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Can A Woman's Robe Undermine Armenia Strategic Partnership With Russ

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  • Can A Woman's Robe Undermine Armenia Strategic Partnership With Russ

    CAN A WOMAN'S ROBE UNDERMINE ARMENIA STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP WITH RUSSIA?

    ValueWalk
    July 24 2013

    July 24, 2013
    By EurasiaNet

    At first glance, the connection between a fatal July 13 traffic
    accident outside Moscow and Armenia's strategic partnership with
    Russia may not be obvious. But, to many Armenians, a link exists, and
    it comes in the form of a woman's yellow-and-pink flowered bathrobe.

    Armenia

    The robe, worn in court by 46-year-old Armenian truck driver, Hrachya
    Harutiunian, who is charged with causing the crash that killed 18
    people and injured 30, has sparked a massive outpouring of anger
    in Armenia at what is seen as a deliberate humiliation by Russia,
    long touted as the country's "closest friend."

    Russian officials claimed that Harutiunian was dressed in the robe
    (and bedroom slippers) only because his own clothes had been ruined
    in the crash. But the explanation fell on largely deaf ears.

    With his head buried in his hands, the weeping Harutiunian, a veteran
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh war with Azerbaijan, quickly became a symbol
    of other alleged recent affronts by Russia - in particular, Moscow's
    $1 billion arms deal with diehard Armenian foe, Azerbaijan. Photos of
    the bedraggled Harutiunian and a video report by Russia's state-run
    RTR TV that described him as a "mooing Armenian murderer" fueled
    protests on July 16 and 17 outside the Russian embassy in Yerevan
    and consulate in the northwestern town of Gyumri.

    In Armenia, as elsewhere in the South Caucasus, perceived public
    affronts to a man's dignity can quickly spell trouble. A response to
    defend that dignity is considered obligatory. In this case, though,
    protesters and others saw the "humiliating, belittling" insult
    as directed not only toward the Armenian defendant, but Armenians
    in general.

    Discontent has been growing for months against Russia for supposedly
    not treating Armenia as an equal, and, in this macho, conservative
    society, the sight of an Armenian veteran dressed in a woman's robe
    proved the last straw for many.

    The anger with Moscow began brewing in Armenian political circles last
    month, when it became known that Russia, which holds a 49-year lease
    on an army base in Gyumri, had sold $1 billion worth of armaments
    to Azerbaijan, including 18 powerful BM-30 Smersh multiple-rocket
    launchers.

    Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev characterized
    the deal as "purely commercial," but some Armenian analysts call it
    purely treacherous. "This is an important expression of Russia's
    cynical policy, demonstrating . . . that the complementary policy
    [of building close ties with both Russia and the West] is no longer
    acceptable" to the Kremlin, commented Stepan Grigorian, director of
    Yerevan's Analytical Center of Globalization and Regional Cooperation.

    Armenian-Russian relations undergo periodic strains, but the publicity
    about the arms deal with Azerbaijan appeared "a deliberate calculation
    to let Armenia know that it should no longer rely on them," argued
    political analyst Aghasi Yenokian, director of the Armenian Center
    for National and International Studies.

    Analysts link that alleged shift in attitude to Armenia's pending
    Association Agreement with the European Union, scheduled for signature
    this fall. Yerevan has dodged joining the Russia-led Eurasian Customs
    Union, a sort of post-Soviet alternative to the EU, and Moscow has
    not hidden its irritation. On July 11, Konstantin Zatulin, director
    of the Commonwealth of Independent States Institute, warned that
    "Yerevan should not forget that Russia is Armenia's security guarantee,
    not the European Union."

    But many Armenians would like to forget just that. Russia's hold on
    Armenia's economy - via energy, railway, telecommunications and as a
    market for Armenian labor migrants - doubles as a noose, some say. The
    recent increase in prices for Russian gas, on which Armenia depends,
    and subsequent protests over higher transportation fares in Yerevan,
    only underlined that dependence.

    Against that backdrop, Russia's behavior toward Harutiunian and
    offhand attitude toward arms sales to Azerbaijan have delivered
    the message that "'I own you and will do whatever I want to," argued
    parliamentarian Lyudmila Sarksian, a member of the opposition Armenian
    National Congress faction.

    Opposition leader Raffi Hovhannisian, the former presidential
    candidate, agrees. "If Russia, our strategic partner, is supplying
    a billion dollars' worth of weaponry to a country that wants to
    erase Armenia and Karabakh from the world map, what kind of strategic
    partnership is that?" he asked reporters on July 17. The treatment of
    truck driver Harutiunian should serve as a further "alert," he added.

    Sociologist Aharon Adibekian, head of the Sociometer Research Center,
    believes, though, that, ultimately, the truck-driver scandal will
    have only a "temporary" impact on ties between Armenia and Russia.

    "There have been similar cases when passions flared up, but public
    revolts such as this do not have a tangible impact on global politics,"
    Adibekian said. "This is a merely emotional upheaval, and public
    memory is short."

    Hovhannes Sahakian, secretary of the ruling Republican Party
    of Armenia's parliamentary faction, concurs. The outcry over
    Haruitiunian's court appearance "has such a resonance just because
    its timing coincided with the arms deal with Azerbaijan, but they
    shouldn't be connected to each other"

    Nonetheless, sensing themselves on the defensive for Armenia's policies
    toward Russia, pro-government politicians such as Parliamentary
    Speaker Hovik Abrahamian have condemned the treatment of Harutiunian
    as "unacceptable and inhumane" and called for those responsible to
    be held accountable.

    Statements by the Russian embassy in Yerevan and Ministry of Foreign
    Affairs indicate, however, that Moscow sees Armenians' anger more as
    an attempt "by certain people" to try and "manipulate the tragedy"
    of the traffic accident and "ignite anti-Russian passions."

    Some Armenian observers have echoed those allegations, claiming that
    either "certain Western elements" or Russia itself, in a supposed
    bid "to get rid of their commitments to Armenia," stand behind the
    protests and criticism.

    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin has stressed that
    investigation of the accident will be fair. Harutiunian, who faces
    seven years in prison, currently is undergoing psychiatric treatment
    in Moscow.

    Editor's note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a freelance reporter and editor
    in Yerevan.

    http://www.valuewalk.com/2013/07/armenia-russia-bathrobe/

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