Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Journalist Explains Why Published Recording Of Conversation With Nat

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Journalist Explains Why Published Recording Of Conversation With Nat

    JOURNALIST EXPLAINS WHY PUBLISHED RECORDING OF CONVERSATION WITH NATIONAL SECURITY SERVICE EMPLOYEE

    07.07.2014 14:46 epress.am

    Heritage Party board member, Araratnews.am journalist Hrayr Manukyan
    explained on his personal Facebook page why he published the audio
    recording of his conversation with an employee of Armenia's National
    Security Service (NSS) who tried to recruit him then issued threats
    against him.

    "Why did I publish the recording?

    "1. For my security. There was no guarantee that the threats issued
    were completely empty. There was [the threat of] subsequently passing
    me off at the very least as a KGB agent (at the end he said that
    people won't know what decision I actually made, what conversation took
    place). After publishing [the recording], they can neither call me a
    'KGB agent' nor harm those close to me; on the contrary, they will
    protect [us], so that no one suddenly harms [us], to put the blame
    on them.

    "2. The NSS has no right to have an informer in the supreme leadership
    of a parliamentary party, and our country's NSS no less, which
    definitely conveys this information to the ruling administration. This
    violates one of the extremely important principles of democracy: equal
    political competition, thus becoming an anti-state activity. The
    NSS should engage in reconnaissance (in other countries) and
    counterintelligence (against foreign agents in Armenia).

    "They don't understand this simple thing, those who remain communist in
    their hearts, who say that I shouldn't have discredited an important
    structure such as the NSS in the eyes of the public. But I was
    obliged to publish [the recording] (even without the need for personal
    protection), as a journalist, as a board member, and even just as a
    citizen, for the reason that to show the public with proof the NSS's
    anti-state activities and for it finally to be recorded that the NSS
    shouldn't stick its nose in the leadership of [political] parties.

    "3. For those who have yet to receive an offer. My example shows
    that saying 'no' to the NSS, especially when we're not dealing with
    reconnaissance and counterintelligence, is not only possible, but also
    necessary, no matter how threatening they are or what compromise they
    offer. Remember: there is nothing more compromising or humiliating
    in our country than being a 'KGB informer'.

    "4. For the very same NSS. Due to the published recording, they
    will be forced to slightly revise their criminal methods (recruiting
    people through threats and intimidation), having a complete picture
    of people's psychological and intellectual characteristics prior to
    approaching them. A well-known KGB agent wrote that if the recruiter
    had done his homework well and the compromise was collected in advance,
    there wouldn't be a result like this. Another famous KGB agent also
    spoke about some compromises, the revelation of which, supposedly,
    frighten me so much that I wouldn't want my parents to know.

    "This shows that these people, after all this, continue to remain
    neanderthals: they think they can have such a compromise with which
    they can force me to do something. After following [me], reading all
    [my] statuses [on Facebook], was it so difficult to understand that
    you can't get me to compromise, or that for me there is nothing more
    heinous than being a snitch for the KGB that actually serves Russia?

    "[...] Do you think that since you turned 100 people before me
    into informers with similar methods that you'll turn everyone [into
    informers] so easily? Or do you think that all the young people of
    this country are empty, self-seeking, and cowardly like you? Was it
    so hard to see that the convictions and outlook of a 27-year-old 10-15
    years ago are very different than the outlook of a 27-year-old today?

    "In any case, I hope that the NSS will gradually understand these
    simple things and will change a little."

    http://www.epress.am/en/2014/07/07/journalist-explains-why-published-recording-of-conversation-with-national-security-service-employee.html


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X