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Armenian Students Protest Conscription Drive

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  • Armenian Students Protest Conscription Drive

    ARMENIAN STUDENTS PROTEST CONSCRIPTION DRIVE
    Hasmik Hambardzumian

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR
    June 15 2010
    UK

    Postgraduates no longer automatically let off serving in the military.

    Students in Armenia are furious about a cut in the number of
    post-graduate places that secure an exemption from military
    conscription, saying the government is wrong to favour the army
    over academia.

    Under the conscription system, all males between 18 and 27 have to
    serve two years in the army, but until now, people studying for a
    master's degree or the higher "aspirantura" qualification have been
    exempted and allowed to continue their studies uninterrupted.

    The Armenian army is, however, suffering a shortage of men. The current
    generation of conscripts was born in the years immediately following
    the end of the Soviet Union, when the birth rate fell dramatically.

    Students say the reduction in post-graduate places is intended solely
    to swell the ranks of the army.

    "Before this ruling, I could have calmly gone on to do a master's
    degree. Last year, there were 13 places available for Spanish language,
    but this year there won't be any," said Sos Avetisyan, a student
    in his fourth year at Yerevan State University. "The government's
    decision violates my rights, and there are many others like me."

    For the academic year starting this September, there will be 1,543
    master's degree places funded by the state. That number is unchanged
    from last year, but now 1,193 of these places will not exempt the
    holders from doing military service. As for the aspirantura - a
    qualification above a master's but not as high as a western doctorate -
    there will be just 122 funded places, down from 134 this year.

    Avetik Ishkhanyan, a rights activist from and head of the Helsinki
    Committee of Armenia, said the government was violating students'
    rights and ignoring the law.

    "The public always needs to know the rules of the game. They
    are changing the rules in the middle of the game, when people had
    already made their plans. Changing the rules mid-game is completely
    unacceptable. Such actions will increase distrust of the state,"
    he said.

    Government officials insist the changes are well-thought-out reforms
    intended to modernise the education system, and deny that a spell in
    the army would do postgraduate students any harm.

    "Neither education nor the sciences will suffer any harm from these
    changes," said Robert Sukiasyan, head of the education ministry's
    department for higher education. "Anyone who wants to continue their
    studies can resume them on returning from the army no matter how much
    time has elapsed, whether two or four years."

    In May, several dozen students staged a protest against the changes
    outside Yerevan State University. Among them was physics student
    Daniel Ioannisyan, who said the government had not taken account of
    the damage the changes would do to education.

    "Students who are for example completing a BA in the physics faculty
    and have the potential to become good physicists will not go on to
    do a master's. They'll be dispersed around military bases, where at
    best they'll peel potatoes or stand guard holding guns. That's a very
    poorly-conceived use of resources," said Ioannisyan.

    "I don't see how someone will continue in the basic sciences and
    achieve valuable things after a spell in the army," he said, adding
    that neither the prime minister nor the education minister had served
    in the army.

    Armenian officials note that the country has yet to sign a peace
    deal with Azerbaijan to end the currently dormant conflict over
    Nagorny-Karabakh.

    Vagharshak Harutyunyan, a former defence minister, says the government
    needs to do more to ensure the armed forces are in a fit state to
    defend the country for the eventuality that the conflict flares
    up again.

    "I think people have to serve in the army, especially in our country
    given that the conflict hasn't even ended," he said.

    Harutyunyan said young men should go into the military straight after
    school, with no postponement. "That's the age when they are most
    receptive and physically ready for it. [In Georgia] the army did not
    survive because they said students wouldn't be conscripted. Our army
    survived because we conscripted everyone without exception."

    Demands made by students go beyond the conscription issue, and
    include calls for examination results to be made public, so as to
    end corrupt practices in the admissions process for post-graduate
    courses. This demand went unheeded as the lists for 2010 admissions
    closed in early June.

    "Our goal today is to continue the fight for another 360 days so we
    can influence the number of places next year," said Ioannisyan.




    From: A. Papazian
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