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Independent Armenia enters the teenage years

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  • Independent Armenia enters the teenage years

    Armenianow.com
    Sept 22, 2004
    Coming of Age: Comments on change, as independent Armenia enters the teenage
    years

    By Aris Ghazinyan
    ArmeniaNow correspondent

    Thirteen years ago this week (September 21), more than 95 percent of the
    electorate voted in favor of Armenia becoming an independent republic.
    It was an easy decision, made in difficult times. The soul of society still
    mourned the death of 30,000 earthquake victims. The heart of society was at
    war over Karabakh. And the psyche of society was challenged by the reality
    of "freedom", after 70 years of reliance on Soviet care-giving.
    "The proclamation of the independence of Armenia took place in extremely
    hard political and economic conditions,'' reminds the head of the Museum of
    History and Archeology in Avan Ara Demirkhanyan. "During the process of
    acquiring sovereignty none of the former republics of USSR was facing such
    hard and urgent problems, which were present in great numbers in Armenia."


    The will to build a nation faced odds created by energy crisis (a result of
    losing USSR power supplies), by transport blockade (by Azerbaijan since 1989
    and Turkey since 1991), and by the influx of 350,000 refugees fleeing
    Azerbaijan.
    ''Of course, the simultaneous coincidence of such serious problems occurring
    on such a small and weak country left an influential psychological impact on
    the public consciousness of the population, who were not ready for such a
    situation,'' says Hayk Manaseryan, of the Academy of Sciences of Armenia.
    "We should not forget that, for instance, unlike the Baltic States, Armenia
    had never stood for secession from the USSR so zealously, but, first of all
    it had always been aiming at the reunification with Karabakh even within the
    framework of Soviet Union."
    Statehood, independence, reunification have been idealistic struggles for
    nearly as long as there has been a modern Armenia.
    "Over thousands of years the Armenian nation has developed a natural
    characteristic of its development, which is statehood," says Doctor of
    Geographic Sciences Hovanes Sahadyan. "By force of historical circumstances
    it lost its political independence at least 10 times but every time it was
    strong enough to find strength and abilities to revive statehood. There are
    few analogous examples in the history of the world. I think this example
    demonstrates something.''
    Karabakh war veteran Hamik Sahadyan believes it was that history of
    political struggle that made the transition to independence less traumatic
    for Armenia than for its neighbors. Some face common difficulties, but none
    have faced the considerable obstacles unique to Armenia.
    ''In the beginning of 1990s each Caucasus republic of USSR was up against
    precisely such strategic missions and it seemed that the positions of
    Tbilisi and Baku looked more preferable,'' Hamik Sahadyan says. "Georgia had
    all-powerful water resources and Azerbaijan had fuel. Besides, both
    republics took incomparably more advantageous geopolitical positions than
    Armenia and had bigger populations. It is important to underline that at the
    moment of the collapse of the USSR, the Kremlin was supporting Georgia and
    Azerbaijan both in territorial disputes and in politico-military aspects.
    However, the question of territorial integrity has never become a unifying
    factor neither in Tbilisi nor in Baku.''
    History proves that Armenia can survive struggle, war, hardship. But can it
    grow to a future of peace and prosperity?
    ''During the process of historical development, Armenian socio-political
    thought has collected sufficiently rich and useful material concerning
    national behavior in war and extreme conditions," says Vardan Mkhitaryan, a
    cartographer. "However, it hasn't developed an agenda for peacetime, when it
    has already become an independent state.''
    For just that reason, Mkhitaryan is among citizens who believe that
    high-ranking officials and the oligarchs who underwrite them - whose only
    understanding of governing is conditioned by a communist past - is no less a
    threat to Armenia's growth than the ill intentions of its neighbors. The
    Parliament assassinations of 1999 were evidence of that condition, he says.
    "Since 1995 the use of rough and rude force for the purpose of achieving
    political goals became an integral attribute of the election campaigns,"
    says Hayk Manaseryan. "Today a majority of deputies of the National Assembly
    of RA are from criminal entities.
    "All of this demonstrates a regression of statehood in Armenia and a sharp
    weakening of positions of precisely political structures. For this reason,
    since the mid-1990s the idea that the Armenian people cannot build a country
    for themselves has been prevalent in Armenia. Nostalgia for the 'Soviet Past'
    has appeared in Armenian society and is why some have suggested the
    necessity for an Armenian membership in the Russia-Byelorussia Union."
    The past 13 years (like preceding centuries for Armenia) have proven that
    independence may be more a goal than a destination.
    Nothing seems to be as hoped. But hope is enhanced by significant signs of
    progress.
    Against considerable odds not found in most Commonwealth of Independent
    States, Armenia has survived, and might even thrive. The well being of the
    average Armenian doesn't differ greatly from the livelihood of those in
    other post-Soviet countries, whose transition has been less challenged.
    "The only factor which can level the wide difference between, for instance,
    the biggest country of Europe, the Ukraine with population of 50 million
    people, and small Armenia is its socialist inheritance," says geographer
    Hovanes Sahadyan.
    And that inheritance, he reminds, was spread over 70 years. It will take
    more than 13 years for that part of Armenia's heritage to pass.
    And while that recent past lingers, reflection on Armenia's entry into the
    teenage years of independence comes with a question:
    If a referendum were held today, would 95 percent of the population vote in
    favor of independence?
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