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Armenia: Pro-Russia Activists Attack Diaspora Members For Promoting

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  • Armenia: Pro-Russia Activists Attack Diaspora Members For Promoting

    ARMENIA: PRO-RUSSIA ACTIVISTS ATTACK DIASPORA MEMBERS FOR PROMOTING 'EUROPEAN VALUES'

    EurasiaNet.org
    May 29 2014

    By Gayane Abrahamyan

    Wariness of "European values" within a significant segment of Armenian
    society is providing fuel for a brewing culture war in Armenia.

    The government's push for closer ties with Russia appears to be
    widening a cultural divide in Armenia. The gap was on display during a
    May 9 court hearing concerning a domestic-violence case in the eastern
    region of Gegharkunik, one of Armenia's most socially conservative
    areas. At one point during the proceedings, Robert Aharonian, an
    outspoken, pro-Russian activist who was attending the hearing, lashed
    out at two North American-born women's rights advocates for promoting
    "European values" that condemn physical violence against women.

    "Why have you come to distort Armenia?" said Aharonian, the 45-year-old
    leader of the Armenian-Russian Union and a former presidential
    candidate for the Progressive Socialist Party. A man in Armenia
    "has a right to slap his wife," he claimed, according to local media
    reports. The issue of domestic violence has become a hot topic for
    public debate in recent months. Diaspora Armenians who "don't know
    the local traditions" should leave Armenia, Aharonian continued,
    swearing vividly. "Armenia is for local people, for Armenia-Armenians,
    and the day will come when we will deport you all and shut the border."

    The comments specifically targeted American-Armenian Maro Matossian,
    head of the Yerevan-based Women's Support Center, and Women's Resource
    Center Director Lara Aharonian, a native of Canada and no relation
    of Robert Aharonian. Both women are long-term Armenian residents who
    have been critical of the government's civil-rights record. Both have
    become targets over the past few years for anti-European-integration
    activists. [Editor's note: The Women's Support Center and the
    Women's Resource Center both receive support from the Open Society
    Foundation-Armenia, a part of the Soros foundations network.

    EurasiaNet.org operates under the auspices of the New York-based Open
    Society Foundation, a separate entity in the Soros network].

    Tension between native-born Armenians and members of the diaspora
    is nothing new. But the government's failure to comment on Robert
    Aharonian's verbal attacks, a hot topic on social networks, has raised
    suspicions that officials silently condone them as a way to push back
    against critics; particularly during the run-up to Yerevan's projected
    June-1 sign-on date with the Moscow-led Customs Union with Russia,
    Kazakhstan and Belarus.

    Opposition activist Hranush Kharatian, a former head of the Department
    of National Minorities, suggested that the focus on the family,
    "a very sensitive spot for us Armenians," is intended to isolate as
    "outsiders" and "enemies" those diaspora Armenians "who are not the
    authorities' favorites."

    Anna Safarian, an advisor to government-appointed Human Rights Defender
    Karen Andreasian, condemned Aharonian's words as "harassment" and
    "hate-speech." Meanwhile, Ministry of Diaspora Chief of Staff Firdus
    Zakarian maintained that Robert Aharonian's remarks were beyond the
    mainstream, and thus not worthy of a response.

    "We cannot keep responding to such things," Zakarian said. "It is
    inconceivable for anyone with the slightest common sense that diaspora
    Armenians could be told to leave."

    Diaspora members long have played a key economic role in Armenia.

    According to the National Statistical Service, diaspora money
    accounted for 69 percent of the country's foreign direct investment
    from 1994-2010. Each year, diaspora organizations pour tens of millions
    of dollars into various charitable projects as well.

    These days, Russian-Armenian entities are supplying the bulk of
    diaspora-origin funding for Armenia-based projects. It's worth noting
    that the head of one such entity, Arman Boshian of the Pan-Armenian
    Parents' Committee, has emerged as a hardcore critic of the Women's
    Support Center and Women's Resource Center, the two organizations
    attacked by Robert Aharonian. The Pan-Armenian Parents' Committee
    receives support from Sergei Kurghinian, a Russian-Armenian political
    personality and avid supporter of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    Independent political analyst Armen Badalian asserted that pro-Russian
    groups such as the Parents' Committee were a "natural" outgrowth of a
    "Sovietization" trend in Armenia. "No doubt, European values are in
    the way, the presence of diaspora Armenians is an obstruction, because
    they [the diaspora] are not used to total violations of human rights
    and cannot tolerate them, so these [pro-Russian] movements are aimed
    at eliminating these obstructions," Badalian commented.

    Robert Aharonian's denunciation of diaspora members appears not to
    pertain to Russian-Armenians. Aharonian told EurasiaNet.org he opposes
    all those diaspora Armenians who use grants to operate in Armenia,
    and "advocate European perversion." He defined this "perversion" as
    "not human-rights defense" or "equality," but calls "for wives to sue
    their husbands, turn to the police," which, he asserted, ultimately
    breaks families apart.

    His dislike of foreign grants may sound familiar. Russian
    Ambassador Ivan Volinkin in early May urged Yerevan "to neutralize"
    Western-financed non-governmental organizations because they were
    a potential "wedge" between Russia and Armenia. Matossian and Lara
    Aharonian have called on the government to show "zero-tolerance for
    bigotry." The government's silence should prompt diaspora Armenians
    who have backed Armenian authorities to understand that "they will
    not be welcomed in the homeland of their dreams," Lara Aharonian added.

    Representatives of some organizations representing diaspora
    Armenians, including the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU),
    a New-York-City-based group that has poured about $170 million into
    the country since 1991, are trying to tamp down controversy.

    "Dividing Armenians based on our places of birth and citizenship is
    a very dangerous trend and, therefore, has to be prevented, but this
    [attitude] is not the general trend in Armenia," said Hovig Eordekian,
    deputy director of the AGBU's Yerevan office.

    Gayane Abrahamyan is a freelance reporter and editor in Yerevan.

    http://www.eurasiareview.com/29052014-armenia-pro-russia-activists-attack-diaspora-members-promoting-european-values/

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