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Armenia: How Welcoming Will Be The EU's Embrace?

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  • Armenia: How Welcoming Will Be The EU's Embrace?

    ARMENIA: HOW WELCOMING WILL BE THE EU'S EMBRACE?

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    June 21 2013

    June 21, 2013 - 1:23pm, by Marianna Grigoryan

    The European Union is indicating a willingness to explore an
    Association Agreement with Armenia. But even as it raises the
    possibility of closer ties with this cash-poor South Caucasus state,
    Brussels appears eager to stem the westward flow of illegal Armenian
    migrants.

    Official data, which many Armenians view skeptically, reports that
    49,660 citizens left Armenia permanently in 2012, and that number shows
    little change from 2011. From 2005-2012, 204,000 people left Armenia
    for good, according to the National Statistical Service. The number
    accounts for just under 10 percent of the country's 2012 population
    of 2.97 million people. Observers believe the actual number of emigres
    to be much higher than the official figure.

    With a large ethnic Armenian community, EU member-state France, in
    particular, attracts many migrants. A 2012 report by UNHCR, the United
    Nations refugee agency, reported that the number of Armenians applying
    for a French residence permit increased by 8 percent between 2010 and
    2011 to 52,100 claims. Armenia ranks third overall for such requests,
    after Russia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The report linked
    the increase to a more than two-fold rise in the number of Armenians
    requesting political asylum.

    The number of Armenians moving to fellow EU states Austria, Germany
    and Poland also has increased.

    While receptive to legal immigration, the EU, already struggling
    to accommodate its roster of 27 member-countries, is not taking a
    laissez-faire attitude toward all forms of migration. An aggressive
    crackdown launched by EU border forces resulted in a 49-percent
    reduction in illegal migration over the past two years, according to
    official data.

    Keeping those numbers down involves encouraging potential migrants
    to stay put, and showing potential high-volume source countries how
    to avoid the negative impacts of migration.

    In Armenia, the EU currently spends over 9.71 million euros
    (roughly $12.85 million) on seven migration programs, ranging from a
    1-million-euro (roughly $1.3 million) project via the United Nations
    Children's Fund to focus on "social problems faced by migrants,"
    to support for the Armenian State Migration Board for "strengthening
    migration management."

    But whether such programs are having the desired impact is unclear.

    Among 12 former Soviet republics recently surveyed by the Gallup
    International Association, Armenians ranked as the most eager to
    migrate; some 40 percent of some 40,000 respondents interviewed said
    they would like to move to another country.

    Many Armenian migrants who, by hook or by crook, found work within
    the EU say they have no intention of returning home. "Why would I go
    back to Armenia? ... There are no jobs and no hope there," commented
    the father of a two-child family who settled five years ago in a small
    town in France. "Here, at least, I know that my children are safe and
    the state will support us when necessary. We don't feel neglected here,
    and we are aware of what is going on in Armenia now."

    Improved living conditions, hopes for a better future for their
    children and a desire for a stronger defense of their civil rights
    were among the key reasons for emigration cited by respondents in
    the Gallup poll.

    To many would-be emigres, deception justifies achieving those goals.

    After being denied a residence permit in Austria, the family above
    invented new names and moved to France, where they managed to trick
    officials into believing that their lives were at risk in Armenia. In
    a common dodge, they alleged that the family's mother is an ethnic
    Azeri who risks being abused for the 25-year conflict with Azerbaijan
    over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    To avoid such situations, some specialists emphasize the need to
    tie potential migrants to their home communities. An EU-financed
    UNICEF program, launched in April, seeks to do that by "provision
    of tailored social services and the best use of migrants' financial
    and intellectual resources in the development of their communities
    of origin" in four regions - Lori, Tavoush, Gegharkunik and Shirak.

    Further details were not available.

    Some Armenian analysts, though, do not believe such programs will
    work. Armenian Center for National and Strategic Studies Research
    Director Manvel Sarksian commented that "it is hard to say how
    efficient these programs will prove, given the people's mood."

    "These programs are like minor patches that do not solve any problems,"
    argued independent political analyst Yerevand Bozoian. "If the
    EU wants to have real changes, it should help Armenia change the
    social and political situation." That "situation" erupted after
    this February's presidential elections, when hundreds of people,
    angry at perceived election corruption and hard-pressed for cash,
    took to the streets to protest the results.

    At a March 18 meeting with media, President Serzh Sargsyan blamed
    the problem of emigration on Armenians' alleged refusal to recognize
    their successes. He criticized media outlets for "talking about the
    very worst [things]" and "only blackening the picture."

    Galust Sahakian, head of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia's
    parliamentary faction, agreed, claiming that the complaints are tied
    to election-year politics, and "create a deceptive atmosphere."

    The government insists it is aware of the scope of the problem. In
    2013, it allocated 13 million drams ($31,159) for a migration study,
    said Gagik Yeganian, head of the Migration and Refugees Department. An
    assessment, expected by the end of the year, will focus on population
    movement since 2008, the reasons for migration and the countries of
    destination, he said.

    Ethnographer Hranush Kharatian, a former government official now
    critical of the Sargsyan administration, insists that people often
    emigrate for the simple reason that they do not sense their futures
    in Armenia are secure.

    "People will stay in Armenia if they get the chance to manage their
    own activities, and if they have faith they will be able to do so,"
    said Kharatian.

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

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67158

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