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Today marks 24 years since adopting Armenia's Independence Declarati

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  • Today marks 24 years since adopting Armenia's Independence Declarati

    Today marks 24 years since adopting Armenia's Independence Declaration

    12:20 * 23.08.14


    Being without an independent statehood for over 600 years, Armenia
    adopted a Declaration of Independence 24 years ago today in a move
    initiated by the Supreme Council of the then Soviet republic.

    The document, which reflected the Armenian nation's unanimous will and
    commitment to reinstate historical justice, laid the foundations of
    the Third Republic. The Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic was thus
    renamed the Republic of Armenia.

    Earlier, on December 1 1989, the Supreme Council of Armenia and the
    National Council of Nagorno-Karabakh, adopted a joint decision that
    marked the beginning of the independence process.

    In a nationwide referendum on September 21, 1991, the overwhelming
    majority of Armenia's population (94.99 %) voted in favor of
    independence.

    Armenia thus became a subject of international law, which later
    adopted its own flag, national anthem and coat of arms, and
    established corresponding state bodies to protect the security and
    inviolability of borders and ensure the country's defense. The
    subsequent years saw the newly-independent state create new
    legislation and join different international organizations.

    Under the Constitution, adopted in 1995, the Republic of Armenia was
    defined as a sovereign, democratic, social state governed by the rule
    of law (Article 1).

    Aram Manukyan, a current opposition lawmaker (Armenian National
    Congress), who read out the text of the declaration at the Supreme
    Council in 1990, says he remembers the period as a time of "divine"
    and "miraculous" events.

    "There was an inexplicable enthusiasm both inside and outside the
    [parliament] hall. After the Declaration of Independence was read out
    in parliament that day, thousands gathered in Liberty Square in what
    is now described as a spontaneous campaign," he recalled.

    "It was a fete, a festivity full of love and responsibility, belief
    and humanism; it was quite a different atmosphere, as the document
    came to realize the centuries-old dream."

    Manukyan said he believes that the declaration will remain as a major,
    ideal and realistic keynote document in the annals of the Armenia's
    history.

    Congratulating the Armenians on the remarkable day, the politician
    said he regrets that the sovereign statehood does not now have the
    same volume and reserve of independence as it did at the beginning.
    "Independence is something that requires understanding the existing
    difficulties, risks and challenges. And it also needs love. You cannot
    be the master of independence without loving it; it needs care and
    nourishing," he added.

    Remembering the pre-independence years, Chairman of the Helsinki
    Association's Vanadzor Office Arthur Sakunts said the atmosphere in
    Armenia and the people's expectations were completely different what
    they are today.

    "The prevailing understanding was that the processes were taking place
    in the USSR, which was already in agony, but the people did have the
    feeling of freedom and the aspiration for achieving freedom. In the
    course of time, the sense of liberty comes to imply responsibility as
    well, first of all, without dependence on anyone. But the desire for
    building one's own life and country began to slowly diminish. And we
    now see the solution to major problems being linked to the CSTO
    [Collective Security Treaty Organization] and the Russian Federation,"
    he noted.

    Sakunts said he observed a metamorphosis of the independence concept after 1998.

    "And we again came to face the same problems that we did 24 years ago,
    but in a worse form than then, with desperation and uncertainty all
    around," he said, referring to the problem of political prisoners.

    Paruyr Hayrikyan, long-time champion of independence who now heads the
    National Self-Determination Union, said he thinks that the younger
    generation today realizes its future much better than did the then
    Soviet-time political leaders who were kind of unprepared or unwilling
    to accept the idea of independence.

    "Hence those people [members of the Armenian Pan-National Movement
    which was then a ruling party founded and led by Levon Ter-Petrosyan]
    realized that they were to carry out their duties. But the
    responsibility that lied behind was unfortunately perceived in a
    negative sense," he added.

    Hayrikyan said he thinks that the biggest achievement of the
    independence period was the chance to return to the legal status
    implying self-determination.

    http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/08/23/declaration-of-independence/

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