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The Time Of Reckoning: Thoughts On The Yerevan Municipal Elections

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  • The Time Of Reckoning: Thoughts On The Yerevan Municipal Elections

    THE TIME OF RECKONING: THOUGHTS ON THE YEREVAN MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS

    http://asbarez.com/109820/the-time-of-reckoning%E2%80%A8thoughts-on-the-yerevan-municipal-elections/
    Monday, May 6th, 2013

    BY MARIA TITIZIAN

    It's time to take away the levers of their perceived power. It is
    time to eradicate the uneducated, morally bankrupt, economically
    powerful, groveling, sniveling mob of young men and boys and silly,
    vacuous girls who think they will determine the destiny of my country.

    I'm done with being politically and socially correct. I'm done with
    the dim-witted and brainless little boys dressed in black who hang
    out on street corners with their thick necks and shaved and empty
    heads bullying and terrorizing everybody from residents to the police
    force. I'm done with thinking that democracy is a process which we
    must go through to get to where we want to end up because nobody
    knows the end game.

    I'm done with your cheap fireworks and even cheaper dress code.

    I'm done with your chalaghaj and your khorovadz and your
    stomach-churning oghi. I'm done with your bravado and threatening
    words against those who you perceive to be weaker than you. I'm also
    done with those who have left and those who now, more than ever want
    to leave.

    Yesterday I had to bear witness, yet again to a process that brought
    shame on me as a human being, as a mother and as an Armenian woman. I
    always keep naively hoping that with each election cycle we are moving
    closer to democracy and yet with each election we seem to be slipping
    further and further into the "mud."

    I was a proxy at two different electoral precincts, 4/28 and 4/30
    both in the Arabkir district of Yerevan where I live for the Yerevan
    city elections. Before taking on that duty, I went to cast my vote.

    When I arrived at my polling station there was a long line-up of
    people waiting to vote. That might have been a normal occurrence
    however it was the group of young men hanging outside the building
    that annoyed me. I had woken up in a fighting mood anyway and seeing
    them standing there with their cigarettes dangling out of the corner
    of their mouths, their iPhones in hand, slumping over each other,
    acting like silly little brats and watching people as they entered
    and left certainly set the mood for the rest of my day.

    At the first polling station (4/28) where I was a proxy there were
    long line-ups of voters pushing and shoving their way in. At times
    it was chaotic and for the three hours I was there until my next
    posting it was a constant flow of people being led by Republican party
    apparatchiks who were there acting as a commission member, proxy and
    observer not to mention the Republican thugs who were congregated
    outside in groups. The air inside was stifling as the number of
    voters kept swelling. I went outside to see what was going on and
    was confronted with an incredible amount of cars and vans. There were
    several police officers on hand purportedly to ensure that everything
    was going smoothly. I approached one of the police officers and asked
    him if there was another polling station in the vicinity because it
    didn't make sense to have all this traffic for one station. As I was
    asking, another more senior police officer went on the defensive and
    demanded to know why I was even asking the question. I told him the
    number of vehicles didn't make sense when the polling station was
    in the middle of a cluster of buildings where all voters needed to
    do was walk and he said, "Do you not think we are doing our job? We
    know what our job is." I said you clearly know your job because you
    are not doing anything to prevent this circus from taking place and
    stormed back into the polling station.

    Two specific incidents at 4/28 are worth mentioning. The first was
    a young man, not more than twenty, who tried to vote with a passport
    which stated he was born in 1959. One of the commission members was
    astute enough to notice and quickly called the rest of us over at
    which time the alleged 54 year old attempted to exit the polling
    station. His passport details were recorded and a complaint was filed.

    Another incident was with another young man who apparently had three
    grandmothers (he kept escorting one elderly woman after another
    claiming they were his "dadiks.") He too was escorted out of the
    station and another complaint against him was filed. These are only
    two cases of a continual attempt all day long at all polling stations
    to use any lever possible to swell Republican Party votes.

    When I arrived at precinct 4/30 it was comparatively calm. However,
    ten minutes before the polls closed all mayhem broke loose as a group
    of about 25-30 men stormed the polling station and began to create a
    ruckus over an elderly woman who was demanding to be photographed and
    who was obviously sent in a few minutes earlier as a decoy so that
    they could stuff the ballot box. Some of us proxies and observers
    tried to protect the box while filming the idiocy unfolding before
    us. The chair of the commission lost all control of the situation
    until another man (with a very thick neck) stormed in demanding to
    know what was going on.

    Who that man was remains a mystery. In the middle of the commotion
    was the Republican and Prosperous Armenia party proxies - it wasn't
    clear to me whether they were further instigating the mob or trying to
    contain it. Once calm was restored and the doors locked with us inside,
    it took the chair and secretary of the commission a whole hour to go
    through the process of preparing everything for the ballot box to be
    opened. Once opened and the counting begun, several destroyed ballots
    were brought out which created yet another storm of controversy among
    the Republican Party proxy and the Prosperous Armenia observer to
    determine what constituted a destroyed ballot. A fist fight almost
    broke out with chairs being whipped across the room. And then calm
    was suddenly restored again.

    At this point, my nerves and patience were very quickly disintegrating
    and I thought I was going to have a stroke. The RPA proxy had managed
    to be drinking throughout the day and approached me stinking of alcohol
    wanting to see the video footage I had taken of his dismal behavior
    earlier when he was about to break another man's jaw over a destroyed
    ballot. When I refused he kept finding an excuse to approach me as the
    ballots were being counted, asking my name, where I was from until I
    told him to be careful because he didn't know who he was dealing with
    and there would be irreversible consequences for him if he continued
    trying to engage me. He walked away with his tail between his legs
    and left me alone.

    For all my own bravado, I was literally shaking.

    Once the ballots were finally counted with the RPA getting about 60
    percent of the vote in my precinct, I asked the commission chair to
    unlock the door so that I could get out. I was done. I walked out into
    the clear night trying to breathe in some air only to be confronted
    by gangs of Republican Party bullies who had been hanging around the
    polling station waiting for their victory to be heralded.

    My husband quickly pulled up, picked me up and drove me home. On the
    drive I couldn't talk, I was heartbroken, disgusted, disillusioned
    and felt dirty. And then the fireworks began all over the city...they
    couldn't wait to celebrate their deepening grip on power.

    After 12 years of believing, hoping, praying that we would be able to
    embark on the road toward democracy, I have come to the conclusion
    that while trying to stay the course, you sometimes need to fight
    like a bulldog, unyielding and be prepared to struggle till the end
    of your last breath.

    Of one thing I am sure, those small-minded, power-hungry thugs with
    their minions who conduct themselves with disgrace will answer to
    all of us when we refuse to do their bidding, there just needs to be
    more of us to shift the balance of power away from the darkness and
    toward the light. I believe that this regime will collapse only when
    the rest of us can come to our senses by taking away their power.




    From: A. Papazian
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