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BEIRUT: Interview With MP Of The Tashnag Party: Hagop Pakradounian

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  • BEIRUT: Interview With MP Of The Tashnag Party: Hagop Pakradounian

    MP OF THE TASHNAG PARTY: HAGOP PAKRADOUNIAN

    Monday Morning
    Aug 20 2007
    Lebanon

    Since the Metn by-election, MP Hagop Pakradounian, unknown to most
    Lebanese until the election, has become a focus of media attention as
    a staunch defender of his Tashnag Party. A graduate of the Collège
    Khanamirian, then of the American University of Beirut, where he
    studied political science, graduating in 1980, he became a member
    of the Tashnag Party in 1978. He successively held the posts of
    head of the party's students' service, then of its youth service,
    of the information department, eventually becoming a member of the
    Central Committee, before standing as a candidate in the parliamentary
    elections in 2000 and winning a seat in the polls of 2005. He has
    recollections of meeting a number of senior Lebanese politicians,
    notably Pierre Gemayel, founder of the Kataeb Party, and sometime
    Prime Minister Sami Solh. "I was five years old when I met Sami Solh
    at a luncheon at the Armenian Orthodox Patriarchate in Antelias",
    he told us. "I still remember him talking about Krikor Zohrab,
    an eminent lawyer who was killed by the Ottomans in 1915. He held
    a chair at the University of Istanbul and Sami Solh was one of his
    students. We were living in Riad Solh Street, and the Solh family
    marked my childhood. The leaders of those days, like Takieddin Solh
    and Rashid Solh, and others, used to frequent coffee houses and smoke
    narguiles, and they would visit people. Nowadays, if you want to talk
    to a politician, you have to make an appointment. For my part, being
    an MP hasn't changed my way of living. I still do the shopping at
    the supermarket and cultivate the garden at our summer home in Bikfaya.

    Years ago my father owned a shop in the Gemmayze neighborhood where
    he sold electronic equipment and also icons. He would go to church
    every Sunday, rising at six in the morning. He was a very devout man.

    He arrived in Lebanon in 1922 at the age of nine with his mother and
    sister, after they had crossed the deserts of Anatolia. I never saw
    my grandmother wear anything but black since she had lost her whole
    family in the genocide. My grandfather was the principal of a school
    in Diyarbekir. One day the Ottoman police arrived to question him.

    They took him away, and his family never saw him again. In the
    winter we lived on Riad Solh Square, and we spent the summers in
    Bikfaya. My family always voted in Beirut and we always supported
    the Kataeb list. A historic alliance was sealed between the Kataeb
    and the Tashnag. I used to have a personal relationship with Sheikh
    Pierre Gemayel, the founder of the party. He was a man of modest and
    affable demeanor. I still recall, when he was driving up to Bikfaya
    in his car, how he would wave to people. And we kids would sometimes
    be hitchhiking, and he'd come along and give us a lift. This happened
    to me several times", he recalled.

    So why wasn't this relationship followed up with the sons of Sheikh
    Pierre?

    You can't say it wasn't followed up. In 1975, at the beginning of the
    war, the Armenian parties decided they weren't going to take part in
    the conflict since we knew from experience that nothing can be settled
    except through dialogue. For our parties it was a matter of "positive
    neutrality". I personally considered it "committed neutrality", since
    we committed ourselves to respect determined rules and principles.

    Who was advising you at that time? Was it the Armenian community in
    the United States?

    We lived through the experience of 1958 and that of the axes - those
    of the Soviet Union and the United States. At the end of the day we
    realized that we as a community had paid the price and had been unable
    to be reconciled as Armenians. For us the 1975-90 war was going to
    lead to our destruction and to that of Lebanon.

    Is that the reason for your disagreement with the Gemayels?

    We can't speak of a disagreement, but at the beginning they couldn't
    understand our position. Kamal Jumblatt once wrote, "When the
    Armenians came to Lebanon, the Christians thought their numbers would
    be increased. For them it was natural to see the Armenians standing
    beside them during the war".

    But we didn't do that. All the Armenian parties chose neutrality
    in 1958. Subsequently we stood beside Camille Chamoun since he
    represented legality, while the other two Armenian parties, the
    Henchak and Ramgavar, took the side of Kamal Jumblatt. Finally, when
    an agreement was reached, they dropped us, and we acquired nothing in
    terms of political gains. At that time we weren't even represented
    in the cabinet. The first person to represent the Armenians in the
    cabinet was Khachig Babikian, who joined the government in 1961 as
    minister of reform, in the time of President Fuad Shehab. In 1975 the
    Lebanese Front didn't understand our position, but later, in 1978-79,
    Bashir Gemayel was more understanding, and after 1979 there were no
    more problems between us. On the contrary, in Bourj Hammoud we acted as
    a buffer zone against the Palestinians, Nabaa, the National Movement
    and the Christian forces. We even helped the people of Nabaa to leave
    the area. Of course there were problems between us and the people of
    Nabaa, the Palestinians, the National Movement and the Kataeb.

    Have you ever regretted your neutrality?

    No. In the final analysis, the Lebanese came round to the conviction
    that we had always had. In Lebanon the solution can only be through
    dialogue, and for that, there was Taef.

    The problem with Amin Gemayel So what is the problem with former
    President Amin Gemayel?

    We were allied with the Kataeb until 2000, and even later, until 2005,
    with the candidacy of Sheikh Pierre, the son of Amin Gemayel.

    We voted for him on the basis of an agreement on the exchange of
    votes. In 2005 the Kataeb formed a rival list and chose another
    Armenian candidate, Rafi Madayan, while on our list a place was
    reserved for Sheikh Pierre, whom I knew personally. He was my
    neighbor. I live in Antelias and he lived up the road. He was a
    straightforward and sincere young man.

    We were therefore on the list of General Michel Aoun and Michel Murr,
    and we won.

    In Beirut in 2005, we boycotted the elections. Since 2000 we've been
    marginalized in Beirut and no Christian voice was raised to decry
    this fact. In 2005 all the Christians raised their voices, from the
    North to the South, to protest against their marginalization. When
    the government was being formed, Prime Minister Saniora refused to let
    the Tashnag be represented in it on the pretext that we were not part
    of the March 14 Forces, even though Hezballah and the Amal Movement
    were represented. From then on we were part of the opposition. In the
    by-election of 2007, we were no longer in the same camp as the Kataeb,
    politically speaking.

    That doesn't mean we didn't make a great effort to promote an
    understanding between President Gemayel and General Aoun. We informed
    President Gemayel that if there was no understanding, we would be
    with General Aoun. In 2005 there was the same situation: President
    Gemayel told us: "This time we can't be together; we'll see what
    happens in 2009".

    Mr. Gemayel failed because of Armenian votes, but also because of
    the votes of others, so why are the Armenians being singled out
    for blame? Maronites also voted for Dr. Camille Khoury, and so did
    Orthodox and Greek Catholics.

    President Gemayel got 2,000 Armenian votes, while Sheikh Pierre got
    1,600. We were surprised by President Gemayel's stance. For me it
    was a complete surprise; I couldn't believe my ears.

    How can contact be reestablished between the Tashnag and the Kataeb?

    President Gemayel took a positive step when he visited our patriarch,
    Catholicos Aram I. We hope that through other initiatives, we can
    settle this problem. President Gemayel knows the way to our hearts.

    Our aim is to calm people's minds; we don't want to deepen the
    disagreement among Christians and add to our internal problems.

    What about the disagreement with Gabriel Murr?

    We'll let the lawsuit take its course. What he said was racist.

    Why the marginalization?

    What is the reason for the marginalization of the Armenians and
    the Christians?

    On the legal level, it's because of the electoral law. In 2000 the
    whole list that we were a part of failed in Beirut, where a number
    of eminent local figures were also defeated, such as Salim Hoss,
    Tammam Salam, etc. At that time the marginalization was caused by
    the fact that Prime Minister Hariri wouldn't have anything to do
    with the bloc of Armenian MPs because, in his opinion, it was a
    confessional grouping.

    We agreed to support his bloc in regard to anything having to do
    with the rebuilding of the capital and the country, but in regard to
    political matters, we wanted to keep an independent decision.

    So by not allying yourselves with the March 14 Forces you have been
    marginalized?

    We reproach them for not raising their voices against this
    marginalization.

    Why?

    The problem lies in the electoral law. When a candidate is elected
    by votes belonging to a specific political current, he no longer has
    any freedom to act.

    In favor of the small constituency What kind of constituency are you
    in favor of?

    The small constituency, with three to five MPs on each list.

    What was it that most annoyed you in the statements made about the
    Tashnag Party?

    The tone. It wasn't normal. We felt it was aggressive, and President
    Gemayel said at the end of his speech. "We'll hold them responsible".

    That really bothered me, and the party too. Such statements cannot
    be uttered among friends and partners in the same country. There is
    no account to be settled between us and the Kataeb. But when matters
    got aggravated, Armenians, Christians, were spoken of as if they
    were intruders.

    At the moment Christians think of us as second-class citizens.

    Especially when Gabriel Murr said, "The Army should put these people
    in Bourj Hammoud, these supporters of Tashnag, in their place", etc.

    Or when others say, "Let them stay neutral and not take part in
    elections", etc. But today a new page is opening, and that's the most
    important thing.

    You opted for neutrality. Why then in 1988-89 did you decide to back
    General Aoun?

    On the contrary, the general was very annoyed by our stand during the
    war of liberation and during the one against the Lebanese Forces. We
    were against the Army or the Lebanese Forces coming into Bourj Hammoud
    to prevent confrontations between the two sides in that region.

    But you were close to the general.

    Yes, because he wanted to liberate the country. But our position as
    Armenian parties was that of neutrality. After the Taef Agreement,
    once the war was over, one could no longer remain neutral in political
    life. There were the elections of 1992 which the Kataeb boycotted. We
    took part with Nassib Lahoud in 1996 and with the Kataeb in 2000. There
    was an exchange of votes between us and in 2005, although we were on
    two rival lists.

    No presidential election would mean the end of Lebanon Is General
    Aoun your candidate for president?

    Yes. The Presidency is the most important post for the Christians
    of Lebanon and the Middle East. If we lose it, we lose Lebanon. A
    Lebanon without a Christian president is no longer the same. That's
    why I always say that we want a strong and wise president. So our
    candidate is General Aoun, unless he decides not to run for this high
    office. But if he maintains his candidacy, we'll support him.

    If there is no presidential election, what might happen?

    It would be the end of Lebanon.

    Would it mean partition?

    I don't know.

    Will there be an election?

    A lot of effort will have to be made if one is to happen. We still have
    time. In my opinion, we have to do all we can to elect a new president.

    Michel Murr has said he will continue to support the general until
    October 15. If by then there is still no agreement on his candidacy,
    he would be in favor of General Michel Sleiman, the commander-in-chief
    of the Army. What is your view?

    In the final analysis, we have to examine the possibilities. If General
    Aoun withdraws his candidacy, we would envisage other alternatives.

    Does that mean you have other candidates in mind?

    The Tashnag Party has no other candidates.

    The Bloc of Reform and Change?

    Even if that bloc took some kind of decision, I'll stick to the
    decision of my own party.

    Former Minister Sleiman Franjie and the Lebanese Forces have spoken
    against any amendment to the Constitution promoting the election of
    General Sleiman or of Riad Salame, governor of the central bank...

    In principle, we would prefer that there should be no constitutional
    amendment, unless failure to enact one would risk making the situation
    still more grave.

    What about the question of the presidential election and the formation
    of a cabinet of national unity?

    We're in favor of a parallel solution according to the formula
    proposed by Speaker Nabih Berri. I believe there will be a government
    of national unity.

    How do you see the situation of the Armenians?

    After the Taef Agreement, there was a halt to emigration; some
    Armenians even returned to Lebanon. There are nearly 140,000 Armenians
    in this country.

    What is it that gives the Tashnag Party its strength?

    For each Armenian, the Tashnag is the party that has been able to
    preserve the rights and traditions, the one which has been able to
    defend the Armenian cause. The Tashnag Party was founded in 1904,
    which makes it the oldest party in Lebanon. It emerged from the people,
    and it works with them, ensuring a decent life, schools, etc.

    We have no leader or president; responsibilities change hands through
    democratic elections.

    The Tashnag is present everywhere in the world: in the United States
    from New Jersey to California; in Canada, Argentina, France, Armenia,
    Greece, Iran... But each central committee reaches its decisions in
    a totally independent way. In all modesty, I think I can say that
    our party is the strongest in the world and enjoys enormous good
    will everywhere.

    Democracy is sacred for us. We have no "political families". The
    people give responsibility to deputies, who change continually in
    elections. We have no hereditary leadership.

    What do you think of something General Aoun once said, namely that
    if President Gemayel wanted to act in a truly democratic way, he
    would resign?

    In the West that's what happens in general, but in Lebanon things
    are different. No leader or senior official has ever been known to
    resign of his own accord as the result of errors he has made.

    --Boundary_(ID_Z3uFNck5EOojHzmVQg6evA)--
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