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Pro-Govm't Youth Group Relies On Dirty Tricks To Fight Corruption

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  • Pro-Govm't Youth Group Relies On Dirty Tricks To Fight Corruption

    PRO-GOVERNMENT YOUTH GROUP RELIES ON DIRTY TRICKS TO FIGHT CORRUPTION
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav032409a.shtml

    Gayane Abrahamyan
    March 24 2009


    A photo campaign launched by the pro-government youth group Miasin
    (Together) has touched off a debate in Armenia about the nature of
    justice. Heightening passions on both sides of the question is the
    fact that the debate revolves around one of the country's most
    pervasive social ills -- corruption.

    Yerevan residents on March 12 were surprised to see large, color
    photos of some 30 well-known professors hung on Yerevan State
    University buildings, near metro stations and at other busy
    gathering-places around the city. The photos all featured a blazing
    caption: "Bribe Takers."

    Some passers-by studied the faces with curiosity; others tore down the
    photos and called their appearance "shameful."

    "This reminds me of the Stalin regime of 1937. Those were times when
    people were charged without any grounds," said an angry Yerevan State
    University Rector Aram Simonian at a news conference the same day.
    Few Armenians argue publicly with the group's intent to battle
    corruption. But many are questioning Miasin's methods.

    No proof of wrongdoing has been produced against those depicted in the
    photos. Critics have also been quick to point out that some of those
    targeted in the anti-corruption campaign have been falsely
    accused. The most glaring example is Armenia's ambassador to Egypt,
    Hrachya Poladian, who is among those who made the photo line-up. In a
    March 13 statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that
    Poladian had never worked as a professor and urged Miasin to "be brave
    enough to ask publicly for the diplomat's pardon."

    Miasin's 24-year-old leader, Hakob Hakobian, described the incident as
    "a simple mix-up" which the group plans to correct. "We are not the
    prosecutor's office. We are just a youth movement that aimed to simply
    [call attention to] the problem and we will continue to [do] it," he
    said.

    One opposition member, however, counters that the group is, in fact,
    acting as the prosecutor's office. "Taking bribes is a criminal charge
    that needs to be proved before a person's portrait is hung in a public
    place, and you call the person a bribe taker, or those responsible
    have to be punished for libel," said Vardan Khachatrian, a member of
    parliament for the opposition Heritage Party and a theology lecturer
    at Yerevan State University.

    Miasin claims that it came up with the list of professors based on an
    anonymous survey held at Yerevan State University, Yerevan State
    Pedagogical University, Yerevan State Economics University, and the
    Medical Institute. In an interview with EurasiaNet, however, Hakobian
    could not recall key survey details, such as how many people
    participated in the survey.

    Amalia Kostanian, executive director of the Yerevan office of
    anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International, described
    Miasin's actions as "a dark story lacking any transparency."

    "They [Miasin activists] first should have made public the results and
    the methodology used in the survey," Kostanian said in reference to
    the photo displays. "It's unacceptable in the way and with the
    inaccuracy it was done."

    Yerevan State University Rector Simonian argued that cracking down on
    corrupt professors should be left to the university itself. "We took
    and we will take all measures to fight corruption and anticipate
    getting constructive support," he said. Ten instructors have been
    fired from the university since 2007 for taking bribes "and serious
    disciplinary offenses."

    Simonian put the blame for the corruption problem, in part, on low
    salaries. "A professor at Yerevan State University gets 160,000 drams
    ($430) [per month], whereas [many of] his students come to classes in
    cars that cost half a million of dollars," he fumed. "These people may
    have weak points and, seeing the students want just grades, not
    knowledge, they may take a step amounting to a crime. But I assure you
    there are very few who do that."

    At first, some Yerevan State University students suspected a political
    motivation to the photo campaign. "Many of us thought at first that
    there is some political underpinning here, that the professors are
    pro-opposition, if the [campaign] organizer is Miasin," recounted
    Hasmik Muradian, a 20-year-old sociology student. "But then, we found
    pictures of those who used to threaten to expel us from the
    university, or not allow us to take exams, if we went to the
    opposition's rallies."

    Although Miasin's anti-corruption efforts may not have been
    coordinated with the government, available evidence supports the
    impression that top officials were aware of Miasin's intent to wage an
    aggressive campaign.

    The youth movement first appeared last spring, as a counterbalance to
    the pro-opposition group Hima (Now), which organized demonstrations
    after the disputed 2008 presidential election. [For background, see
    the Eurasia Insight archive]. In a clear show of support, President
    Serzh Sargsyan turned up at Miasin's one-year anniversary celebration
    on February 21.

    In November of 2008, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan expressed public
    support for Miasin and its plan "to disclose all corruption cases in
    universities with the help of university students, and to make public
    the names of all corrupt professors, other university employees and
    students."

    Yerevan Police Chief Nerses Nazarian told reporters that although
    Miasin's choice of tactics "is not very nice," police would not be
    taking action to prevent the posting of the photo displays because
    such action "took place late at night."

    For now, most professors featured in Miasin's photo line-ups remain
    silent. In an interview with EurasiaNet, one of the accused, Yerevan
    State University Law Faculty Dean Gagik Ghazinian, said he has no
    plans to sue for libel. "The first reason is that I don't want
    speculation about my name again. I don't want to become a participant
    in that show again, and, secondly, I am not sure the court will be
    unbiased," Ghazinian said. "Obviously, this movement has serious
    leverage."

    Political scientist Karen Simonian seconds that observation. Simonian,
    who is not related to Yerevan State University Rector Aram Simonian,
    attributes the silence of the accused professors down to shock. "The
    blow came from such an unexpected direction that they don't know how
    powerful the force is standing behind it and how far it can go,"
    Simonian said.

    Editor's Note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a reporter for the ArmeniaNow.com
    weekly in Yerevan.
    Posted March 24, 2009 © Eurasianet
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