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Stalin's Man Mikoyan To Get Statue In Yerevan

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  • Stalin's Man Mikoyan To Get Statue In Yerevan

    STALIN'S MAN MIKOYAN TO GET STATUE IN YEREVAN

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #736
    May 29 2014

    Critics of the monument recall Stalinist purges of the 1930s.

    By Yekaterina Poghosyan - Caucasus

    Anastas Mikoyan may have been Armenia's most famous Soviet-era
    politician, but plans to put up a statue to him in central Yerevan
    have taken many people aback.

    As a loyal servant to Joseph Stalin, Mikoyan is seen as complicit in
    the deaths of many of his own countrymen.

    Yerevan city council approved plans for the statue on April 30,
    saying that Mikoyan should be honoured for his contribution to the
    history of Armenia.

    Fans of Mikoyan point to his political longevity. He served under every
    Soviet leader from Vladimir Lenin to Leonid Brezhnev, and acted as
    envoy to the United States during the toughest years of the Cold War.

    "The descendants and relatives of Mikoyan asked the city to accede to
    their wish to erect a monument to him in Yerevan, which is what we've
    done," said Naira Nahapetyan, a city councillor from President Serzh
    Sargsyan's Republican Party. "We also took into account Mikoyan's
    major contribution to developing industry in the country, and towards
    resolving the [Cuban missile] crisis.

    "We should leave debatable details in his biography to the historians."

    Others, however, say Mikoyan's record under Stalin is more than a
    matter of detail. In 1937, Stalin dispatched him to Yerevan to purge
    the local Communist Party.

    Amatuni Virabyan, director of Armenia's National Archive, told IWPR
    that Mikoyan's personal role in the 1937 purge was documented.

    He said Russian archives contained a telegram which Mikoyan sent to
    Stalin's secret police chief Nikolai Yezhov saying that 500 arrests in
    Armenia were not enough, and asking for another 700 names to be added
    to the list. Yezhov then wrote to Stalin suggesting an extra 1,500.

    "I'm personally opposed to this statue, as I think that the people
    who went through 1937 should be left in peace," Virabyan said. "Let
    a future generation decide whether there should be a monument or not."

    Other critics of the planned statue warn that honouring a hard-line
    authoritarian politician may reflect a worrying trend in modern
    Armenian politics. Last year, the government reversed plans to sign
    an association agreement with the European Union and committed itself
    instead to the Moscow-led Customs Union bloc.

    "Given the kind of policies that Armenia is currently pursuing,
    it's logical to erect a monument to this kind of man," said Armen
    Martirosyan, an opposition politician on Yerevan city council. "It
    forms part of the ideology and policy being followed here, and it is
    testimony to the Armenian government's abandonment of our sovereignty."

    Husik Ara, a writer and columnist, agreed that the symbolism was
    significant.

    "One has to ask why the idea of erecting a statue of such a man has
    come up at the precise moment when Armenia intends to join the Customs
    Union," he said. "Why erect a monument to a man who in Moscow was a
    symbol of brute force?"

    Ara said the authorities should conduct a poll of Yerevan's residents
    before imposing the monument on them.

    At a May 8 meeting of the city council's culture, education and social
    affairs committee, council chair Tamara Poghosyan said the decision
    could not be reversed as it had been passed by members, but hinted
    that it might not be acted on.

    "In the plan which the municipality proposed to the city council,
    there wasn't a single word about the repressions," Poghosyan, a member
    of the Prosperous Armenia party. "As members of the city council,
    we approved the erection of a monument, but this doesn't mean it will
    be put up tomorrow. The government will decide that."

    Hrach Poghosyan, an architect and a former city councillor, warned
    that if the statue was put up, it might not last long.

    "Don't forget the fate of statues of Lenin and Stalin. We've had bitter
    experience of these statues," he said. "Statues of people like that
    have been taken down as public opinion and circumstances change."

    Yekaterina Poghosyan is a reporter for the Mediamax news agency
    in Armenia.

    http://iwpr.net/report-news/stalins-man-mikoyan-get-statue-yerevan

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