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  • The Decision-Making Machine

    The Decision-Making Machine

    HAKOB BADALYAN

    Story from Lragir.am News:
    http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments26338.html

    Published: 10:55:34 - 28/05/2012


    The Public Television of Armenia aired on May 26 the final of
    Eurovision Song Contest held in Baku. As we know, Armenia was obliged
    to broadcast the show and to pay the fine for nto participating in the
    contest.

    The contest caused controversies about Baku. On the one hand, Aliyev
    tried to show off the blossom of his Khanate. On the other hand, BBC
    and other European and international NGOs disclosed the brutality and
    misery of the Khanate.

    The Armenian Public TV actively covered the revelations by its
    European partners but the European Union of Broadcasters forced us to
    show the fiesta organized by Aliyev. The Public TV showed it, and the
    nationalists kept silent. Those who are ready to fight any
    `anti-national' phenomena and qualify any suggestion regarding
    freedom, human rights and the rule of law in Armenia as `pouring grist
    to the enemy's mill', did not utter a single word.

    Discussions whether to go or not to go to Baku lasted rather long in
    Armenia, which seemed to be unnecessary because it was not an economic
    or political meeting, but a party at a European level and affiliation
    to it could not fit at least the moral framework since Azerbaijan
    still keeps and tortures Armenian hostages.

    It would be something different if the Armenian singer went to Baku
    and instead of singing spoke from the stage about the Azerbaijani
    threats, soldiers killed by Azeri snipers, attacks, kidnapping and
    torturing of peaceful people from the border villages.

    But this option was not discussed in Armenia. Meanwhile, Armenia had
    to refuse participation right on the day when it became known that
    Azerbaijan would host the contest, bringing a number of grounded
    reasons and showing Europe that it was wrong to hold a peaceful song
    contest in a country which continues to kill the citizens of its
    neighboring countries and promotes it at the state level.

    Instead, Armenia was forced to broadcast the contest to avoid
    sanctions by the European partners. This is not a big problem but the
    question is who will pay the European fine. Are the taxpayers going to
    pay for the inadequate behavior of the Armenian Public TV?

    The bigger problem is the inadequacy of Armenia. This issue was
    certainly a matter of a high-level decision, and the cause of this
    problem is a higher-level inadequacy rather than the inadequacy of the
    Public TV.

    Moreover, even the decision to participate could have been more
    adequate than the long hesitation, the inability of Armenia to assume
    a dignified position and being obliged to advertise Baku through
    Eurovision.

    The inadequacy is the biggest worry because the decision to go or not
    to go to Baku was not the most difficult one. Meanwhile the story of
    Eurovision revealed the status of the decision-making machine in
    Armenia.

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