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  • Youth Group Pushes for Change

    EurasiaNet, Civil Society
    Sunday, April 8, 2007

    Youth Group Pushes for Change
    By Onnik Krikorian:

    Youth in newspaper hats stand on street corners and read aloud from
    Armenian dailies. Masked young people march by parliament yelling "Don't
    Eat Too Much!" at deputies. It's election season in Armenia, and with
    the parliamentary vote just over a month away, one unconventional youth
    group is waging weekly war on widespread political apathy.

    Formed in 2003, Sksel a (It's Started) has an uncertain number of
    members, but its youth-oriented events in downtown Yerevan have been
    gaining growing notice. Its target is the 639,950 Armenian voters below
    the age of 30. Its mission is to show young people that public affairs
    have an affect on their lives -- the cry to deputies, for instance, was
    a thinly veiled allusion to allegedly high-levels of government
    corruption.

    The group claims that its purpose is not overtly political, and, at
    first glance, for many passers-by, the February march through town that
    also aimed to "wake up society from its winter slumber" appeared to be
    just a celebration of the traditional Lenten holiday of Barekendan. But
    hidden among the color and noise which define every Sksel a event, a
    political message is becoming more evident as the May 12 vote
    approaches.

    Posters calling for the release of recently detained former Karabakh
    commander, Zhirayr Sefilian, have been on display at recent events, for
    example. The group's most recent demonstration was staged to protest the
    eviction of tenants from their homes in downtown Yerevan to make way for
    new construction, a topic with political overtones.

    Some observers are already trying to make comparisons between Sksel a
    and Georgia's Kmara (Enough) or Ukraine's Pora! (It's Time!), youth
    groups that played key roles in those countries' respective 2003 and
    2004 revolutions.

    One of Sksel a's organizers and founders, 24-year-old Arsen Kharatian,
    understands the motivation for the comparison, but says he is unhappy
    with it. "I don't know if we are or not [similar]," Kharatian said. "We
    mean different things to different people and we will follow our own
    direction."

    Twenty-seven-year-old Mikayel Kazarian, one of the group's most active
    participants, has his own expectations of what he hopes will be
    achieved. "We're part of the process that will bring change," he told
    EurasiaNet. "The authorities should feel that they're being watched by
    the people. When society is passive, the authorities can do everything
    and anything they want, and we need to apply pressure to change that."

    The authorities, however, have not rushed to second that intention.

    Citing previously scheduled outdoor events, Yerevan's city hall has
    refused permission for the group to hold an April 14 open-air rock
    concert, funded, like the February march, by the British Embassy.

    Like other observers, Sksel a organizer Kharatian is concerned that such
    decisions are directly related to the election and attempts by the
    authorities to prevent alternative groups from holding meetings or
    staging rallies.

    If so, Kharatian argues, the decision is misplaced. "I wouldn't say that
    we're directly concerned with the election as we've existed informally
    as a group since 2003, " he commented, "but there's no doubt that the
    country is about to face a major challenge which is why we've become so
    active now."

    The group has applied for an alternative date, but has yet to receive a
    response, he added. A fresh refusal would demonstrate whether or not
    blocking Sksel a events is "official policy," he continued.

    Critics however, contend that many youth are attracted to Sksel a by the
    possibility of attending free concerts or meeting other young people
    with similar interests.

    While supportive of the group, Eleonora Manandian, one of the leaders of
    Armenia's more active student movement during the mid-1990s, comments
    that interest in politics among Armenian youth runs borderline to nil.

    "Young people don't care, especially when it comes to politics. They
    don't think that it is possible for politics to be honest and don't
    believe they can change anything even if they wanted to," Manandian
    said. "And if there are those who are interested in politics, it is only
    for their own personal careers or financial gain."

    Sksel a's Kharatian observes that "[y]outh in Armenia only become active
    if it directly relates to them on a personal level, and that's sad for
    us, and it needs to change."

    Already, some political parties are trying to put that trend to work.
    Prosperous Armenia Party Youth Coordinator Isabella Shirinian admits
    that two buses bearing the party's logo which provide free
    transportation for students to and from Yerevan's Polytechnical
    Institute are designed to target the youth vote. [For details, see the
    Eurasia Insight archive].

    To ride the buses, students hand over their identification cards before
    they are returned some days later. The buses also make unscheduled stops
    en route at party events and meetings. The implication from party
    representatives is that students should vote for Prosperous Armenia at
    the polls, noted one student.

    "Elections don't happen every day, and it shouldn't be surprising that
    students take any opportunity given to them to save several hundred
    drams on travel," said the student, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
    "This happens every election and is the main reason why most young
    people don't take them seriously."

    Opposition parties also indulge in handouts. One recent story on an
    election site run by the media assistance organization Internews
    reported that the Orinats Yerkir Party offered recording assistance to
    an aspiring young musician in exchange for attendance at party events.

    Yet some civil society activists are more optimistic about the
    possibilities for youth to become involved in Armenia's political life.
    The mixture of lighthearted fun and seriousness at Sksel a events,
    opined Jeffrey Tufenkian, president of the local Armenian Forests NGO
    and a veteran American environmental and human rights activist, provides
    a critical opportunity for "positive activism."

    Said Tufenkian: "It is actions and initiatives like this which gives me
    hope for Armenia."



    Editor's Note: Onnik Krikorian is a freelance journalist and
    photographer from the United Kingdom based in the Republic of Armenia.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/in sight/articles/eav040507b.shtml
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