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Armenia: Is Yerevan Doing The Kremlin's Bidding To 'Neutralize' NGOs

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  • Armenia: Is Yerevan Doing The Kremlin's Bidding To 'Neutralize' NGOs

    ARMENIA: IS YEREVAN DOING THE KREMLIN'S BIDDING TO 'NEUTRALIZE' NGOS?

    The Moscow Times, Russian Federation
    March 9 2015

    By Marianna Grigoryan

    Activists in Armenia are worrying that new government-proposed
    requirements for nongovernmental organizations will undermine Armenia's
    relatively freely functioning civil-society sector. Some believe that
    the Armenian government, in mulling upending the status quo, is seeking
    to please the country's economic and strategic overlord -- Russia.

    In 2014, the Washington, D.C.-based watchdog group Freedom House
    lauded Armenia's civil society as "active, diverse and independent."

    The proposed amendments threaten to throw Armenia's civil-society
    sector into reverse gear.

    Under amendments to Armenia's law on nongovernmental organizations,
    drafted last November, NGOs would need to provide officials with
    detailed, annual financial reports, as well as be subjected to a
    yearly audit. The government would be able to petition a court to
    annul the registration of any NGO that fails twice to comply with
    these requirements. Justice Ministry officials also would be able to
    attend NGO board meetings.

    A vote on the amendments has not yet been scheduled in the Armenian
    parliament.

    Under current regulations, Armenian NGOs need only to file an annual
    tax return. Many activists view the proposed added requirements as
    onerous, and designed to stifle NGO activity, especially that which
    seeks to hold the government accountable for its actions.

    The introduction of the amendments, some believe, is an outgrowth of
    Armenia's move in January to join the Kremlin-led Eurasian Economic
    Union. The EEU is seen in some circles in Yerevan as a vehicle for
    the expansion of Moscow's already broad influence over the tiny,
    economically underdeveloped South Caucasus nation.

    Last May, in an interview with the Moscow-based Noyan Tapan news
    agency, Russia's ambassador to Armenia, Ivan Volinkin, called
    for "neutralization" of those NGOs that "create obstacles" for
    Armenian-Russian relations. Supporters of the Armenian government
    subsequently warned that no NGO can drive a wedge into its relations
    with Russia.

    In recent weeks, Russia has renewed its pressure on Armenia to roll
    back NGO liberties. On Feb. 26, a prominent Russian legislator,
    Konstantin Kosachev, claimed that the activity of "around 350" NGOs
    is undermining Armenia's ties with Russia by encouraging Armenians
    to embrace European values.

    "We do not see their [NGOs'] work as correct because we do not see
    it as correct to put the question in the form of an either-or --
    you are either with us or with them," said Kosachev, according to
    the state-run RIA Novosti news agency. "This position has already or
    almost destroyed Ukraine and might destroy any other country if the
    question is asked persistently and head-on."

    Armenian officials insist they are motivated only by a desire to
    introduce greater transparency and public accountability into the work
    of NGOs. The issue is not about control, stressed Norayr Balayan,
    head of the Ministry of Justice's Legal Department, the agency that
    drafted the proposed amendments.

    After receiving input from NGO representatives, "certain changes" now
    are being made to the draft amendments, Balayan told EurasiaNet.org.

    He declined to elaborate on any modifications, pending the release
    of the "final version" of the amendments.

    Despite Balayan's assurances, NGO representatives worry that the new
    regulations, if adopted, could be used against them -- particularly
    if Russia increases pressure on Armenian officials to do so.

    "To the government, transparency and accountability are completely
    different things" than they are to nongovernmental organizations,
    argued Boris Navasardian, president of the Yerevan Press Club. "If
    the matter is about accountability to state officials, it will lead
    to nothing good. ... Hints coming from Russia saying that the field
    must become more controlled do not stem from our country's interests."

    Ashot Melikyan, chair of the nongovernmental Committee to Protect
    Freedom of Expression, agreed, adding that the amendments, if enacted
    as presently worded, "will lead to nothing good."

    The need to comply with additional regulations will eat into
    nongovernmental organizations' time and money, and potentially create
    a significant burden, especially among those NGOs with a small staff.

    "In order to present reports in such volume, NGOs [would have to]
    employ separate staff," said Stepan Grigoryan, director of the
    nongovernmental Analytical Center on Globalization and Regional
    Cooperation.

    Human rights activist Artur Sakunts shared critics' concerns about
    the proposed new regulations, but noted that discussions continue
    about the amendments.

    "Our suggestions are also considered," said Sakunts, who runs the
    Vanadzor office of the Helsinki Citizens' Assembly. "But there are
    still questions that are under discussion and it is not yet clear
    what the solutions will be."

    [Editor's Note: Both the Analytical Center on Globalization and
    Regional Cooperation and the Helsinki Citizens' Assembly receive
    funding from the Open Society Foundations -- Armenia, part of the Soros
    foundations network. EurasiaNet.org operates under the auspices of
    the Open Society Foundations, a separate entity in the Soros network.]

    Boris Navasardian, the press club head, lamented that the amendments
    could undo years of hard work in an instant. "If Russia's experience
    is applied, naturally enough, all our accumulated experience and
    achievements will disappear. Both the society and the state will lose
    as a result," he said.

    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/armenia-is-yerevan-doing-the-kremlin-s-bidding-to-neutralize-ngos/517167.html

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