Armenak Dovlatyan. `Ukraine is fighting not only for it but for all of us.'
January 25 2014
Sergey Nigoyan's death deceased in Maidan, in Kiev, is twice painful
for Armenak Dovlatyan, President of `Green (social and ecological)
Party of Armenia', as he personally knew him, and was in touch with
this young man. `A month ago, we were wandering around in Euromaidan,
in Kiev, with the Armenian flag: local Armenians, Ukrainian citizens,
were approaching us in excitement and talking to us. One of them was
Samvel-Sergey Nigoyan, said Mr. Dovlatyan, today, in `Noah's Ark'
club, adding that after the murder, Sergey's friends told that he had
a kind of spirit in him, and was directly involved in the maintenance
of order in Maidan that everything is organized, with clear actions.
Armenak Dovlatyan is sure that those standing on foot for the same of
change of power in Ukraine, are fighting not only for themselves but
also for the future of other post-Soviet states. `We are not talking
about confrontations of primitive Russian-Western hegemony, there are
deeper issues. People are just tired of living in such a condition,
they do not want to have a plundering government and a dependent
country; they want to have a free and independent country where they
decide their country's future. The matter is even not about the fact
of either the Customs Union, or EU, rather than the existence of an
independent country. Ukraine is a country with great potentials, and
these people want to live with the potentials of their country,' noted
the leader of Green Party who thinks that there cannot be a civil war
in Ukraine, but if confrontation with the government continues, it
will turn into a war between the government and the people. Mr.
Dovlatyan, stressing that Russia should be definitely separated from
the Russian authorities' brutal imperialistic policy, noted that as a
result of this policy, many post-Soviet people are strained against
Russia. `We are allies, we have hundreds years of relationship, but
breaking this relationship and forcedly compelling people to do things
causes natural resistance,' said the speaker. Drawing parallels
between the events of March 1 and Maidan, Armenak Dovlatyan found
similarities in inadequate operations of our and Ukrainian law
enforcement. `It seems that illegal, criminal activities are
encouraged by the authorities. I do not want to say primitive things
that they are guided by Moscow, but it seems to have the same style,
the same school, and the same handwriting.'
Melania BARSEGHYAN
Read more at: http://en.aravot.am/2014/01/25/163508/
January 25 2014
Sergey Nigoyan's death deceased in Maidan, in Kiev, is twice painful
for Armenak Dovlatyan, President of `Green (social and ecological)
Party of Armenia', as he personally knew him, and was in touch with
this young man. `A month ago, we were wandering around in Euromaidan,
in Kiev, with the Armenian flag: local Armenians, Ukrainian citizens,
were approaching us in excitement and talking to us. One of them was
Samvel-Sergey Nigoyan, said Mr. Dovlatyan, today, in `Noah's Ark'
club, adding that after the murder, Sergey's friends told that he had
a kind of spirit in him, and was directly involved in the maintenance
of order in Maidan that everything is organized, with clear actions.
Armenak Dovlatyan is sure that those standing on foot for the same of
change of power in Ukraine, are fighting not only for themselves but
also for the future of other post-Soviet states. `We are not talking
about confrontations of primitive Russian-Western hegemony, there are
deeper issues. People are just tired of living in such a condition,
they do not want to have a plundering government and a dependent
country; they want to have a free and independent country where they
decide their country's future. The matter is even not about the fact
of either the Customs Union, or EU, rather than the existence of an
independent country. Ukraine is a country with great potentials, and
these people want to live with the potentials of their country,' noted
the leader of Green Party who thinks that there cannot be a civil war
in Ukraine, but if confrontation with the government continues, it
will turn into a war between the government and the people. Mr.
Dovlatyan, stressing that Russia should be definitely separated from
the Russian authorities' brutal imperialistic policy, noted that as a
result of this policy, many post-Soviet people are strained against
Russia. `We are allies, we have hundreds years of relationship, but
breaking this relationship and forcedly compelling people to do things
causes natural resistance,' said the speaker. Drawing parallels
between the events of March 1 and Maidan, Armenak Dovlatyan found
similarities in inadequate operations of our and Ukrainian law
enforcement. `It seems that illegal, criminal activities are
encouraged by the authorities. I do not want to say primitive things
that they are guided by Moscow, but it seems to have the same style,
the same school, and the same handwriting.'
Melania BARSEGHYAN
Read more at: http://en.aravot.am/2014/01/25/163508/