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Armenia: Civil Society Proponents Mull Ways To Energize Democratizat

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  • Armenia: Civil Society Proponents Mull Ways To Energize Democratizat

    ARMENIA: CIVIL SOCIETY PROPONENTS MULL WAYS TO ENERGIZE DEMOCRATIZATION PROCESS
    by Marianna Grigoryan

    AzeriReport
    Oct 14 2011

    With political jockeying already underway in advance of Armenia's
    parliamentary vote next spring, civil society activists are pondering
    ways to use the Internet to promote electoral transparency.

    Since the last parliamentary vote in 2008, Internet access has
    boomed in Armenia, experiencing 700-percent growth from 2009 to 2010
    alone, according to data compiled by the Public Services Regulatory
    Commission. At present, roughly half the population is now able
    to obtain news and information via online outlets. Activists are
    hopeful that the Internet's popularity can help address one of the
    most problematic areas of past elections, not only in Armenia but in
    most post-Soviet states - the manipulation of media outlets to favor
    selected candidates.

    Not only can the Internet contribute to a more lively civic debate
    during the campaign, facilitating the broad dissemination of a
    variety of viewpoints, it can be utilized as a means to improve media
    monitoring, suggested Varuzhan Hoktanian, the executive director of
    the Yerevan office of the international watchdog group, Transparency
    International.

    Hoktanian and other leading civil society activists participated
    in a conference, held October 6-8 in Yerevan, that considered ways
    to catalyze democratization in Armenia. The conference, titled What
    Future for Democracy and Civil Society, was co-sponsored by the Open
    Society Foundations-Armenia (OSFA) and Counterpart International
    Armenia. [Editor's note: EurasiaNet.org operates under the auspices
    of the New York-based Open Society Foundations, which, like OSFA,
    is part of the Soros Foundations Network].

    According to Larisa Minasyan, the executive director of OSFA, the
    conference sought to create "a platform for new ideas and forward
    thinking, and promote an open, public debate" on democratization
    issues. Minasyan voiced hope that the ideas arising out of
    the conference could inject a measure of clarity into what she
    characterized as an "inconclusive picture for the future of democratic
    governance" in Armenia.

    Civil society activists have high hopes that the Internet can help
    encourage the opening of society, providing a vital tool for watchdogs
    to spread their messages. Some participants noted the success of
    a grassroots group called We Won't Stay Quiet (Chenk Lrelu), run
    by a team of four 20-somethings. The group's online video reports,
    distributed via YouTube, have highlighted an array of social issues,
    including the hazing of military conscripts and faulty historical
    preservation projects. Public outrage generated by the reports,
    in some instances, prompted government action to address flaws.

    Such groups could help promote transparency during the election
    season, noted a conference participant, Ashot Melikian, chair of
    the Committee to Protect Freedom of Expression. Internet watchdogs
    could play a particularly important role during the early phase of
    the campaign by calling attention to media-based dirty tricks and
    slanted reporting. "Taking into consideration Internet access and
    the use of different technologies which will help record [election]
    violations and distribute the information through the Internet,
    I think the authorities should make every effort to ensure fair and
    transparent elections," Melikian said.

    While the Internet may prove a valuable tool for activists, it can't
    serve as a guarantor of a free-and-fair election process, stressed
    Transparency International's Hoktanian. While "there are more tools
    to point out violations [of election laws], ... those who count the
    votes still remain the same," Hoktanian noted.

    Hermine Harutiunian, the chief spokesperson for Central Election
    Commission, sought to reassure conference participants that the
    electoral results in 2012 would be an open and accurate reflection
    of voter preferences. The modernization of "the computer network"
    and other technical equipment will enable to posting of regular
    online updates of election returns, thus promoting transparency,
    Harutiunian said.

    The conference also spent time considering the state of Armenia's
    judiciary, specifically the perception that Armenian judges are
    subordinate to the executive branch. Participants noted that following
    election-related violence in 2008, the courts were widely perceived
    to be used by President Serzh Sargsyan's administration as a tool to
    punish government critics. Arevhat Grigorian, a media expert at the
    Yerevan Press Club, also pointed out that the judicial system went
    along with a government move to silence online media outlets that
    attempted "to publish anything other than government statements"
    during the immediate aftermath of the 2008 clashes.

    In contrast to the media environment, not much has changed since
    2008 when it comes to judicial independence: the government retains
    a far-reaching ability to influence judicial decisions, said Hrayr
    Ghukasian, a law professor at Yerevan State University.

    "The Justice Council of Armenia, which has several powers like the
    approval of the judge list, appointment of judges, disciplinary
    punishment of judges, is not, in fact, an independent judicial body
    because it is the president of Armenia who makes the final decision
    on all these issues," Ghukasian told conference participants.

    Sargsyan is on record as being committed to holding a free-and-fair
    vote next spring. In a June 22 speech to the Parliamentary Assembly of
    the Council of Europe, Sargsyan stated that "free and fair elections
    are not enough. ... It is also necessary that the elections be
    perceived as such by the public."

    Conference participants expressed concern that past electoral
    irregularities - combined with the government's inability to
    aggressively address pressing economic and social issues, and the
    opposition's difficulties in offering tangible alternatives - has
    alienated Armenia's electorate. Apathy could translate into low voter
    turnout in the spring.

    Fifty-five percent of the 1,650 voters polled recently by sociologist
    Aharon Adibekian expressed interest in the parliamentary vote;
    30 percent expressed no interest. "I am surprised," Adibekian told
    EurasiaNet.org. "I was expecting a worse result."

    A major challenge for civil society groups will be to find ways to get
    citizens engaged with the political process. "Democratic development"
    is "a process of growth, setbacks, lessons learned, improvements and
    the ability to be self-critical." Alex Sardar, chief of party for
    Counterpart International Armenia.

    Editor's note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
    Yerevan and editor of MediaLab.am.

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