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Armenian Model Of Democracy

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  • Armenian Model Of Democracy

    ARMENIAN MODEL OF DEMOCRACY
    VARDAN BARSEGHYAN
    X-X-Sender: [email protected]
    X-Listprocessor -Version: 8.1 -- ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

    Hayots Ashkhar Daily
    June 12, 2008
    Armenia

    As we know, the PACE is to hold a hearing devoted to Armenia in its
    summer session which is going to be convened in a couple of days. Not
    only our country's post-electoral situation but also the situation
    with democracy in general will become a subject of discussion. In
    other words, a discussion will be held around the issue whether
    Armenia can be considered a democratic state.

    Contradictory assessments are being made on the current state of
    the native political system. The radical opposition considers our
    political regime anti-democratic; moreover, it insists that the
    regime existing in our country is tyranny. The activists who are at
    the helm of state or are close to those circles assure us that certain
    national peculiarities in the development of the native statehood do
    not absolutely rule out its general democratic trend.

    On the one hand, it is impossible to deny that our citizens have
    incomparably more rights and liberties than do the residents of
    classical authoritarian states.

    On the other hand, we can't fail to notice the problems related to
    the same rights and liberties, the political rivalry, the separation
    of the branches of power and other issues.

    However, the fact that our country's current political system is not
    by any way democratic (with a "plus" or "minus", depending on the
    viewpoints) cannot give way to doubts for a person who is more or
    less objective.

    One may often hear the opinion that democracy in our reality is
    controllable. In the meantime, it is often forgotten that democracy,
    as a form of state, cannot be uncontrollable at all. What is different
    are the means, styles and methods of governing the democratic processes
    by bureaucracy - the inevitable product of any statehood. Therefore,
    in order to characterize our country's present-day political regime
    in an equivalent manner, it is necessary to concretize the type and
    level of such governance.

    It may seem at first sight, especially in view the existence of the
    coalition, that power in our reality belongs to the political parties.

    However, it does not quite correspond to the reality. As a matter of
    fact, the monopoly of state government belongs to bureaucracy which
    consistently strengthens its own positions. And that happens for
    several reasons:

    First: The feeling of tiredness of the 1990's reforms is still
    maintained in society, and a demand for stability is being
    observed. And the guarantor of stability has always been bureaucracy
    in any place of the world.

    Second: The consolidation of bureaucracy. This condition is of utmost
    importance for overcoming rivalry and establishing monopoly over
    the authorities. The internal conflicts are naturally maintained,
    but they are pushed to the background.

    Third: The weakness and disruption of the liberal political forces (the
    "movement" of the neobolsheviks has nothing in common with the liberal
    movement). And the weaker society's resistance against bureaucracy,
    the more it becomes prevalent.

    As was already mentioned, the existing system of bureaucratic power
    should, nonetheless, be considered as a variety of the democratic
    regime. At least because such bureaucracy is established through the
    expression of the people's will vs. the use of force (regardless the
    fact what the revolutionaries say in that connection).

    We can't say that bureaucracy reflects the radical interests
    of society, but the democratic elite demonstrates an extremely
    sensitive attitude towards the moods existing there. For classical
    authoritarianism our state government system is like a velvet regime
    in which the bureaucratic class strives to safeguard itself against
    instabilities. The aggressive state ideology comes to be replaced by
    the massive psychology of "enrichment and consummation".

    If there's something negative, it is the absence of traditions of
    such political rivalry that does not produce an undermining effect on
    the foundations of the state. Whoever wins in our reality, receives
    everything, and whoever turns out a loser becomes an exile. That's
    why the political struggle begins with "battles without rules" and
    ends with the scenes of the March 1 events.

    So, in order to fill the existing gaps and build a real democratic
    state, we need time. Even the United States which is truly considered
    the lighthouse of democracy had to pass a long way to achieve that. And
    the liberties were formed from the bottom layers of society. Only
    in the 6th decade of the XX century did the human rights movement
    achieve a true equality of rights for the black under the leadership
    of Martin Luther King.

    In other word, democracy is a process, a struggle which requires a
    great patience. There are neither licensed solutions nor prescriptions
    of drugs with a speedy effect.
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