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BAKU: What Do "Golden Antelope" And Armenia's Current Rulers Have In

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  • BAKU: What Do "Golden Antelope" And Armenia's Current Rulers Have In

    WHAT DO "GOLDEN ANTELOPE" AND ARMENIA'S CURRENT RULERS HAVE IN COMMON?

    Today
    http://www.today.az/news/analytics/ 68418.html
    May 21 2010
    Azerbaijan

    A classic cartoon based on Indian stories titled "The Golden Antelope"
    was shot in the Soviet Union in 1954. The protagonist is an antelope
    that is capable of making gold coins by kicking its feet. In the
    cartoon, the antelope becomes prey to a greedy raja, who forces it
    to kick gold coins. But the raja fails to stop the antelope in time
    and gets buried in the gold instead. He dies, and the gold turns
    into stone.

    I wonder whether Armenia's current rulers, officials and deputies have
    watched this cartoon. The answer is more likely no than yes. The vast
    majority of them resemble the greedy raja. They try to grab their
    neighbors' lands, and a striking example is Nagorno-Karabakh. Not
    satisfied with Karabakh alone, Armenia's so-called patriots
    and neo-nationalists have decided to advance claims against
    Samtskhe-Javakheti, a Georgian province densely populated by Armenians.

    Javakh, as Armenians call the region, is the new fictional idea for
    Yerevan. Since the 1990s, all sorts of provocations, confrontations
    and protests have been organized in the province. Some Armenians in
    Samtskhe-Javakheti claim that they are harassed. This was followed by
    proposals to break away from Georgia and establish an independent
    Javakh. Thank God that the Georgian authorities took all the
    necessary measures to prevent provocations based on sad experience
    of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Later, local Armenian nationalists began to set up clandestine
    organizations, funded directly by Yerevan, in an attempt to destabilize
    the situation. But all their campaigns were in vain. Most of the
    Armenian population in Georgia stayed out of the provocations.

    This once again proves that the great majority of Armenians want to
    live in peace and harmony with their neighbors.

    But the nationalists did not stop. They are openly continuing their
    destructive activities. Not too long ago, Union of Georgian Armenians
    Chairman, Armenian MP Tachat Vardapetyan said "Javakhk should serve
    as a 'guest room' for Armenia and Georgia." It is clear why the
    territory might serve as a "guest room" for Armenia, but it is odd
    that the region should act as a such for its rightful owners.

    Perhaps, Vardapetyan is still not familiar with housing legislation,
    and he simply does not know that you cannot claim even a millimeter
    of your neighbor's apartment. People like Vardapetyan must be treated
    with understanding and condescension. He probably never saw the cartoon
    about the golden antelope, or he surely would have known what happens
    to greedy rajas.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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