SARGSYAN STOLE THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION FROM ME
http://hetq.am/eng/news/24480/sargsyan-stole-the-presidential-election-from-me.html
13:54, March 15, 2013
By Raffi Hovannisian
Exactly 25 years ago, from this little square called Liberty,
a movement began that would topple the greatest empire of modern
history. Of course, nobody knew that at the time. Few people believed
in this ancient people - subjugated, massacred and finally landlocked
into the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic.
But I believed. On the other side of the globe, in a Los Angeles
skyscraper, I packed my briefcase for the last time. That night, I
kissed my wife and son goodbye. Then I boarded a plane. I was going
to the other side of the globe, to the land my grandfathers had once
told me about. I was going to Liberty Square.
It was an extraordinary time. A video camera on my shoulder, I pressed
through the vast chanting crowds on Liberty Square, watching the
eyes of my people inflamed with the rage and the hope of a coming
independence. I knew then that my life, and the life of my people,
was about to change. The following year, together with my family,
I moved to Armenia for good.
In 1991, Armenia declared its independence from the Soviet Union, and
I had the honor of serving as the country's first foreign minister. I
raised Armenia's flag at the United Nations headquarters in New York.
I raised it in memory of my grandfathers who survived the Armenian
genocide of 1915 and lived in exile in California. He dreamed of
returning to an independent homeland.
I had realized their dream.
But not everything was as it seemed. Very soon the dream began to
disintegrate because of the war with Azerbaijan and a closed border
with Turkey. The lights went out. The water was turned off. The
government was filled with corruption, and the oligarchs came to
rule over an impoverished nation. Opposition political leaders were
imprisoned and assassinated. Elections were rigged.
And the exodus began. Millions of Armenians fled the very homeland
they had spent generations praying for.
Within a year of my appointment as foreign minister, I had already
submitted my resignation. But I knew I could never leave Armenia. In
fact, I gave up my U.S. citizenship once and for all. And once again,
I went to Liberty Square where I joined a new generation of protesters,
no longer against foreign enemies but against the tyrannies of our
own government.
It was in Liberty Square in January that I started my campaign for
the presidency of Armenia. The election was held Feb. 18.
People said it was a mistake that I ran against the incumbent,
President Serzh Sargsyan. The most I would get was 5 percent, they
said, or 10 percent if I was lucky. The incumbent's expected rivals,
one a former president and the other a billionaire businessman, refused
even to compete. There was no chance to challenge an incumbent who
would run these elections as all previous elections had been run.
The elections were filled with voter intimidation and ballot-stuffing.
All across the country, government buildings were turned overnight
into offices of the incumbent's campaign. Especially in rural areas,
mayors kept villagers in total fear. All state resources - ministries,
schools, the police and the army - were deployed to carry out another
systematic forgery of the national will.
I don't know if what happened during the Armenian election campaign
will ever be written about. I ran against fear and hopelessness with a
modest $200,000 campaign fund and 20 minibuses that were packed with
young volunteers. They traveled across Armenia, delivering to every
last village a vision of hope, a plan of action and a modest slogan:
"It's possible."
I myself did not stop working for those 27 days of campaigning. For
the most part, I worked alone. I walked into farms and flea markets
and met hundreds of Armenians who lived in poverty, who had no jobs
and who dreamed of leaving their homeland. I shook their hands and
shared their glance, and I said, quite simply, "Hello." And they
responded in kind: "Hello."
That was our secret covenant.
Then on election day, the miracle happened. The government machine
failed in almost every major city. Even according to official results
Sargsyan lost by large margins. In Gyumri, Armenia's second-largest
city, I received 70 percent of the vote against the incumbent's
27 percent.
Given these losses, for Sargsyan to win on paper, he had to manipulate
votes in rural areas where more than 100 percent of voters supposedly
turned out to vote unanimously for him. According to the official
results, I received 36 percent of the vote, and the incumbent 58
percent.
But the people were not fooled by those numbers anymore. Everybody
knew what had happened. The Armenians had begun to believe again. They
had defeated the fear, cowardice and cynicism that lives inside each
of us. They had elected, against all odds, a new president.
Today the people have gathered at Liberty Square again. I am here,
too. Except now, I no longer have the video camera on my shoulder. The
video cameras are aimed at me. I have declared, here at Liberty
Square, a hunger strike against the fear, corruption and cowardice
of our government.
And now, 25 years later, I must look into the eyes of these people,
and I must tell them it's not over. Our independence is just
beginning. Twenty-five years later, democracy has finally arrived
in Yerevan.
This time, however, we shall not squander our victory. We shall stay
here to the very end of this unprecedented movement until the will of
the Armenian people is recognized, once and for all, at Liberty Square.
The Moscow Times; March 14, 2013
http://hetq.am/eng/news/24480/sargsyan-stole-the-presidential-election-from-me.html
13:54, March 15, 2013
By Raffi Hovannisian
Exactly 25 years ago, from this little square called Liberty,
a movement began that would topple the greatest empire of modern
history. Of course, nobody knew that at the time. Few people believed
in this ancient people - subjugated, massacred and finally landlocked
into the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic.
But I believed. On the other side of the globe, in a Los Angeles
skyscraper, I packed my briefcase for the last time. That night, I
kissed my wife and son goodbye. Then I boarded a plane. I was going
to the other side of the globe, to the land my grandfathers had once
told me about. I was going to Liberty Square.
It was an extraordinary time. A video camera on my shoulder, I pressed
through the vast chanting crowds on Liberty Square, watching the
eyes of my people inflamed with the rage and the hope of a coming
independence. I knew then that my life, and the life of my people,
was about to change. The following year, together with my family,
I moved to Armenia for good.
In 1991, Armenia declared its independence from the Soviet Union, and
I had the honor of serving as the country's first foreign minister. I
raised Armenia's flag at the United Nations headquarters in New York.
I raised it in memory of my grandfathers who survived the Armenian
genocide of 1915 and lived in exile in California. He dreamed of
returning to an independent homeland.
I had realized their dream.
But not everything was as it seemed. Very soon the dream began to
disintegrate because of the war with Azerbaijan and a closed border
with Turkey. The lights went out. The water was turned off. The
government was filled with corruption, and the oligarchs came to
rule over an impoverished nation. Opposition political leaders were
imprisoned and assassinated. Elections were rigged.
And the exodus began. Millions of Armenians fled the very homeland
they had spent generations praying for.
Within a year of my appointment as foreign minister, I had already
submitted my resignation. But I knew I could never leave Armenia. In
fact, I gave up my U.S. citizenship once and for all. And once again,
I went to Liberty Square where I joined a new generation of protesters,
no longer against foreign enemies but against the tyrannies of our
own government.
It was in Liberty Square in January that I started my campaign for
the presidency of Armenia. The election was held Feb. 18.
People said it was a mistake that I ran against the incumbent,
President Serzh Sargsyan. The most I would get was 5 percent, they
said, or 10 percent if I was lucky. The incumbent's expected rivals,
one a former president and the other a billionaire businessman, refused
even to compete. There was no chance to challenge an incumbent who
would run these elections as all previous elections had been run.
The elections were filled with voter intimidation and ballot-stuffing.
All across the country, government buildings were turned overnight
into offices of the incumbent's campaign. Especially in rural areas,
mayors kept villagers in total fear. All state resources - ministries,
schools, the police and the army - were deployed to carry out another
systematic forgery of the national will.
I don't know if what happened during the Armenian election campaign
will ever be written about. I ran against fear and hopelessness with a
modest $200,000 campaign fund and 20 minibuses that were packed with
young volunteers. They traveled across Armenia, delivering to every
last village a vision of hope, a plan of action and a modest slogan:
"It's possible."
I myself did not stop working for those 27 days of campaigning. For
the most part, I worked alone. I walked into farms and flea markets
and met hundreds of Armenians who lived in poverty, who had no jobs
and who dreamed of leaving their homeland. I shook their hands and
shared their glance, and I said, quite simply, "Hello." And they
responded in kind: "Hello."
That was our secret covenant.
Then on election day, the miracle happened. The government machine
failed in almost every major city. Even according to official results
Sargsyan lost by large margins. In Gyumri, Armenia's second-largest
city, I received 70 percent of the vote against the incumbent's
27 percent.
Given these losses, for Sargsyan to win on paper, he had to manipulate
votes in rural areas where more than 100 percent of voters supposedly
turned out to vote unanimously for him. According to the official
results, I received 36 percent of the vote, and the incumbent 58
percent.
But the people were not fooled by those numbers anymore. Everybody
knew what had happened. The Armenians had begun to believe again. They
had defeated the fear, cowardice and cynicism that lives inside each
of us. They had elected, against all odds, a new president.
Today the people have gathered at Liberty Square again. I am here,
too. Except now, I no longer have the video camera on my shoulder. The
video cameras are aimed at me. I have declared, here at Liberty
Square, a hunger strike against the fear, corruption and cowardice
of our government.
And now, 25 years later, I must look into the eyes of these people,
and I must tell them it's not over. Our independence is just
beginning. Twenty-five years later, democracy has finally arrived
in Yerevan.
This time, however, we shall not squander our victory. We shall stay
here to the very end of this unprecedented movement until the will of
the Armenian people is recognized, once and for all, at Liberty Square.
The Moscow Times; March 14, 2013