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TOL: The Motherland Beckons

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  • TOL: The Motherland Beckons

    THE MOTHERLAND BECKONS
    by Emil Danielyan

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    Feb 28 2007

    Armenia is about to allow millions of its emigrants and their
    descendants worldwide to gain dual citizenship. From EurasiaNet.

    Armenia's parliament approved a package of amendments 26 February
    that gives millions of ethnic Armenians around the world the chance
    to obtain Armenian citizenship without abandoning their current
    nationality. The vote came after weeks of heated debate that exposed
    major differences on the issue within the country's leadership.

    Prime Minister Andranik Markarian's Republican Party, which boasts the
    largest parliamentary faction, joined opposition parties in voicing
    serious misgivings about the proposed amendments. They particularly
    objected to a clause giving dual citizens a virtually unrestricted
    right to vote in Armenian elections. In the end, Republican Party
    lawmakers reluctantly voted for the government-drafted bill, apparently
    under strong pressure from President Robert Kocharian, who had pledged
    to introduce dual citizenship when he came to power in 1998. The idea
    has also been championed by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    (ARF, also known as the Dashnak Party), another member of Kocharian's
    governing coalition. The nationalist party, which has many chapters and
    adherents in Armenian Diaspora communities, is the only parliamentary
    force that unconditionally backed the legislative package.

    "Allowing dual citizenship means strengthening Armenia," said Hrayr
    Karapetian, an ARF leader, at a 16 February news briefing. "It means
    increasing our population [of 3 million,] reinforcing our army,
    spurring investments in our economy, and, in general, utilizing the
    potential of the entire Armenian nation for the benefit of Armenia."

    Karapetian and other ARF leaders cite the example of Israel, which
    readily grants Israeli citizenship to Jews from around the world.

    Just like the non-Israeli Jews, the Diaspora Armenians, mainly living
    in the United States, Russia, Europe, and the Middle East, greatly
    outnumber the population of their historical homeland. Estimates of
    their total number vary from 5 million to 6 million. Most of them are
    descendants of the survivors of the 1915 mass killings and deportations
    of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey.

    The administration of Armenia's first post-Soviet president, Levon
    Ter-Petrosian, opposed the concept of dual citizenship, prohibiting it
    through an article of the country's post-Soviet constitution adopted
    in 1995. (The ban was repealed as part of constitutional amendments
    enacted by the Kocharian administration in a disputed November 2005
    referendum.) Ter-Petrosian and his allies asserted that Armenia's
    national security and independence would be jeopardized if its
    citizens were allowed to have allegiance to other states. They were
    also believed to have feared that dual nationality would translate
    into a significant increase in the ARF electoral clout. At the time,
    the ARF was at loggerheads with Ter-Petrosian's administration.

    The major opposition parties currently represented in parliament
    likewise see ulterior motives behind the ARF's strong support for the
    politically sensitive idea. They have demanded that a final decision
    on dual citizenship be postponed until after the May parliamentary
    elections and the presidential ballot due early next year. Kocharian,
    however, is expected to sign the bill probably next month.

    ARF leaders have vociferously denied any connection between the bill
    in question and the polls. In particular, they point to one of the
    amendments stipulating that voters would be able to vote in elections
    only within Armenia. This means that there will no longer be polling
    stations at Armenian diplomatic missions abroad.

    Still, the Republican Party appeared to share the opposition's
    concerns; it insisted that residents of Armenia and its future
    citizens living abroad must not enjoy equal political rights. "The
    fate of the Republic of Armenia must be primarily decided by the
    people who are aware of and affected by its problems," Parliamentary
    Speaker Tigran Torosian, a leading member of the governing party,
    told fellow deputies on 22 February.

    Under an opposition-backed amendment proposed by the Republican Party,
    a Diaspora-based dual citizen can vote in an Armenian election only if
    he or she has lived in Armenia during at least one of the preceding
    five years. Justice Minister David Harutiunian, who presented
    the bill on behalf of the government, rejected the amendment as
    unconstitutional. The only restriction the government agreed to place
    on dual citizens is that they cannot run for president and parliament.

    The final version of the bill says that such citizens shall otherwise
    have all the rights and obligations of regular Armenian nationals.

    The most significant of those obligations applies to men. They must
    report for military duty in case of a war or mass mobilization. Those
    dual citizens who are under 28 years old and have not served in the
    armed forces of their native countries for at least 12 months must
    complete a two-year military service in Armenia.

    Whether many foreign nationals of Armenian descent are actually keen
    to get Armenian passports remains to be seen. They have for years
    been eligible for special 10-year residency permits that allow them
    to live, work, and, unlike other foreigners, own land in Armenia.

    Quite a few already have such permits.

    Alex Sardar, an Armenian-American who has lived in Yerevan for almost
    five years, welcomes the legalization of dual citizenship, saying
    that it will give Diaspora Armenians a "very specific and tangible
    connection to their homeland." Asked by EurasiaNet whether he himself
    will apply for Armenian citizenship, Sardar said, "If I were to speak
    emotionally, I would probably say yes. If I am speaking rationally,
    my answer would be that I have to think long and hard about that."

    "I'm quite happy with my 10-year residency visa and don't need Armenian
    citizenship," said another Diaspora Armenian who moved to Armenia
    from the United Kingdom in the late 1990s. "Actually, I am afforded
    more rights here being foreign than I am being an Armenian citizen."

    Having an Armenian passport should seem more attractive to hundreds
    and possibly thousands of ethnic Armenians who have repatriated in
    recent years from neighboring Iran and Arab states like Syria and
    Lebanon. But ultimately, it is natives of Armenia who might emerge
    as the main beneficiaries of dual citizenship. Hundreds of thousands
    emigrated to Russia and other countries following the economic slump
    of the early 1990s. Many have since become citizens of those countries
    without surrendering their Armenian passports. They will now not have
    to hide that from the Armenian authorities anymore.

    Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and political analyst.

    This is a partner post from EurasiaNet.
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