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Court Refuses To Reinstate 'Anti-Government' Academic

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  • Court Refuses To Reinstate 'Anti-Government' Academic

    COURT REFUSES TO REINSTATE 'ANTI-GOVERNMENT' ACADEMIC
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    July 18 2007

    An Armenian appeals court on Wednesday refused to reinstate a young
    university professor who was fired earlier this year for criticizing
    the government during his lectures.

    Sasun Saribekian, who taught political and economic geography at
    Yerevan State University (YSU), was dismissed last March following
    a written complaint singed by some of his students.

    In their joint letter to the YSU rector Aram Simonian, the 30
    signatories said Saribekian used his classes to "discredit" the
    government and the university management and to instill in them
    "pessimism about the country's future." They also claimed that the
    33-year-old lecturer tricked them into attending a meeting with a
    radical opposition leader.

    Saribekian has strongly denied the claims, saying that the students
    were forced to sign the letter by Simonian, who he claims fired
    him at the behest of the Armenian authorities and the National
    Security Service (NSS) in particular. "They want to show that those
    who will try to tell the truth about the situation in the country,
    the processes going on in the university will be punished," he told
    RFE/RL on Wednesday.

    Saribekian claimed that he only he made an "objective assessment of
    the political and economic situation in the country" and never forced
    any of his students to listen to Aram Karapetian, the leader of the
    opposition Nor Zhamanakner party.

    However, Simonian, who is a senior member of the governing Republican
    Party of Armenia (HHK), insisted that Saribekian lost his job because
    of committing a serious violation of YSU rules, and not for political
    reasons. "We not persecuting anyone for their political activities,"
    the YSU rector told RFE/RL. "We don't have the right to do that."

    Simonian went on to accuse his former employee of urging students to
    emigrate from the country. "I remember one young man saying that he
    did not want to live here after Saribekian's lectures," he said.

    An extensive report on the affair that appeared in the ArmeniaNow.com
    online publication last week said that some of the letter's signatories
    admitted that they never attended Saribekian's lecturers.

    It also quoted several other students as saying that they disagreed
    with the allegations contained in the letter but chose to sign it
    out of "solidarity" with their class.

    The report also quoted two senior YSU professors saying that the
    NSS may have indeed been instrumental in Saribekian's ouster. The
    Armenian successor to the KGB is widely believed to continue the
    Soviet-era practice of assigning so-called "curators" to YSU and
    other state universities. Human rights groups say their function is
    to monitor and suppress anti-government activity among students and
    their professors critical of the regime.

    Saribekian sued the YSU management later in the spring, demanding
    that his dismissal be deemed null and void. However, a Yerevan court
    of first instance rejected the demand last month.

    The higher Court of Appeals effectively declared the dismissal
    unsubstantiated, brushing aside YSU claims that Saribekian violated
    students' "constitutional right to education." But citing a clause
    in Armenia's Labor Code, the court ruled at the same time that he
    can not be reinstated because of his "strained relationship" with
    the YSU management.
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