Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Stamp Out Corruption, U.S. Rock Star Tells Armenian Authorities

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

  • Stamp Out Corruption, U.S. Rock Star Tells Armenian Authorities

    Scroll down 3/4 of the way on the website:

    Source: http://www.rferl.org/reports/caucasus-report/2004/05/1 9-140504.asp

    STAMP OUT CORRUPTION, U.S. ROCK STAR TELLS ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES

    Serj Tankian, the lead singer of System of a Down, the world's most
    famous ethnic Armenian rock band, has added his voice to long-standing
    calls for the eradication of widespread government corruption in
    Armenia, singling it out as the most serious obstacle to the country's
    development. In an interview with RFE/RL, Tankian said bribery and
    other corrupt practices are the main reason why fellow diasporans
    in the United States and elsewhere in the world avoid large-scale
    investments in their historic homeland.

    "Corruption must be eliminated," the U.S. rock star of Armenian descent
    said from Los Angeles. "Like the Jews, Armenians have quite a strong
    diaspora, which is always ready to help the homeland. But every time
    diaspora Armenians work with businessmen in Armenia they encounter
    many difficulties because of corruption, mafia, and various problems
    with the government. Things must be more open because the country
    needs investments."

    "The most important thing is that we return to the roots which the
    Armenian people had before the Soviet times," he added in fluent
    Armenian. "That means we must put an end to political corruption,
    the corrupt system and think about our people."

    Those comments revealed a new message in the political discourse
    of the California-based band better-known for its advocacy of
    international recognition of the 1915 Armenian Genocide and other,
    more global causes. A vocal critic of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq,
    Tankian teamed up with other American rock musicians in 2002 to form
    Axis of Justice, a group fighting against corruption and standing up
    for workers' rights.

    System of a Down's commitment to genocide recognition found a new
    outlet in a benefit show which the progressive-metal quartet staged
    in a sold-out Los Angeles hall on 24 April, the day of the annual
    remembrance of some 1.5 million Armenians killed in Ottoman Turkey. The
    Souls Benefit concert aimed to raise U.S. rock fans' awareness of the
    tragedy. Proceeds from the concert have been donated to the Armenian
    National Committee of America and other diaspora groups which have
    been lobbying the U.S. Congress to officially recognize the mass
    killings as genocide.

    Tankian described the show as a big success. "Not only the concert but
    media coverage of it have had a quite powerful impact," he said. "We
    have raised the issue of genocide recognition from the day of the
    band's creation [in 1995]."

    Tankian revealed that he is aware of the political crisis in Armenia,
    saying he hopes it will be sorted out by "democratic and political
    means." "I think it's very important for people to stand up for their
    rights," he said in an apparent reference to the recent antigovernment
    demonstrations in Yerevan.

    Tankian said he visited Armenia on a private trip two year ago and
    would like to go there again with System of a Down's three other ethnic
    Armenian members. "We would like to come and we would like to throw a
    very good concert and maybe even record a live DVD album. But we have
    not yet planned the details and it is still not clear when," he said,
    adding that "one or two years" is the most realistic time frame.

    In the meantime, System of a Down will work on its new album which
    is due be released by the end of this year. Its new hits, according
    to Tankian, will maintain the blend of traditional Armenian tunes
    and modern rhythms. "Armenian music is part of our identity," the
    singer said. "We don't need to spend time on a particular kind of
    music because whatever we do, Armenian music will be in it." (Anna
    Saghabalian)
Working...
X