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Trying To Get It Right: Planning The Next Five Years

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  • Trying To Get It Right: Planning The Next Five Years

    TRYING TO GET IT RIGHT: PLANNING THE NEXT FIVE YEARS

    http://asbarez.com/108350/trying-to-get-it-right-planning-the-next-five-years/
    Tuesday, February 19th, 2013

    BY MARIA TITIZIAN

    This will hopefully be my last opinion piece about the presidential
    elections in Armenia. By the time this article is published, we
    will most likely have a new president who is the same president we
    had for the past five years. This should not come as a surprise to
    anyone. A lack of democracy, the absence of free and fair elections,
    an unengaged and disillusioned electorate, and a weak and fragmented
    opposition has made the outcome a foregone conclusion.

    I have been in Armenia now for 12 years. For ten of those years I could
    not vote in national elections because there were certain barriers
    to my receiving dual citizenship. Once those barriers were lifted,
    I received my citizenship and in May 2012 voted for the first time
    ever in the parliamentary elections. I clearly remember the sense
    of fulfillment and the weight of responsibility I felt as I walked
    into the polling station, presented my passport and received my
    ballot. For the first time in my life, I was nervous walking to the
    booth to cast my vote. It symbolized something for me. I had grown
    up in a democratic country, where the rights and responsibilities of
    citizenship were ingrained in me from a young age and voting meant
    exercising an inalienable right. Voting in a country I had chosen to
    come to because I considered it my birthright therefore, carried with
    it not only the weight of responsibility but the weight of history. I
    voted for my parents and grandparents who had lost that birthright and
    for my children who never knew what it was like to grow up without a
    homeland, without an anchor to connect you to a particular identity
    or root you to a piece of land.

    And now I have to make a decision. I have to decide whether or not
    I will even exercise that right on Election Day. Whatever decision
    I eventually make will be mine and so too will the consequences of
    that decision. But this is not about my voting rights. This discourse,
    if you will, is about what we must do so that in the future, citizens
    of Armenia will not be asked to take part in pretend elections.

    This is about what we must do to ensure Armenia becomes a stable
    democracy, protects the rights of all its citizens, ensures freedom
    of expression, establishes rule of law and an independent judiciary,
    exemplifies the political will to reduce corruption significantly,
    designs an economic vision for the country that guarantees a
    competitive market, regulation and oversight that would give everybody
    equal and fair access to live a dignified life and that means access
    to dignified employment, housing, healthcare, education and social
    assistance when necessary.

    There is one major obstacle that we must first address before moving
    in the right direction and that is our behavior within and outside of
    the borders of the Republic of Armenia. For those Armenians who are
    not interested in the political processes in Armenia, you can stop
    reading now, this may not interest you. For those who do, I propose
    the following actions.

    First of all, we must obliterate from our thought process the idea
    that the problem is "too big for me to do anything about it."

    Secondly, we have to stop pointing fingers at one another. Next, we
    must finally admit that while Armenians in Armenia haven't gotten it
    right so far, Armenians in the Diaspora have been talking the talk but
    not walking the walk when it comes to establishing the institutions
    of democracy, social justice and security in our country.

    Before you start writing comments to me, please, let's for a few
    minutes ponder the statement. In 1991 Armenia gained independence
    after seventy years of authoritarian rule, where several generations of
    Armenians grew up isolated from the rest of the world, were educated
    and worked within a system that not only stifled initiative but
    punished you for it, where sense of community and solidarity was formal
    and imposed, and where freedom of independent thinking and expression
    or the intrinsic value of protecting one's rights was non-existent. The
    years immediately following independence are well-documented and we
    all know the extremely difficult challenges that had to be overcome.

    The newly established Republic of Armenia however had several
    advantages compared to the other post-Soviet republics. It was a
    monolithic country, a highly educated one and it had a very influential
    and affluent Diaspora. There were ingredients that could have ensured
    that the country set off on a path toward democracy, development and
    prosperity, yes, even with hostile neighbors and closed borders. It is
    true, we would and probably will not be able to boast being a country
    like Norway or Sweden under the current geopolitical conditions,
    but I'm confident we could have been in a better place than we are now.

    A series of calamitous events occurred, which distorted the country's
    development and instead of enshrining the values of democracy,
    freedom, justice and solidarity, we ended up with deepening corruption,
    impunity and authoritarian rule.

    What happened?

    The new leadership of the new Republic of Armenia, emboldened by their
    new found power and freedom, began to believe that power and freedom
    meant the power to take away the freedom and power of everyone else
    except their own. They said to the Diaspora, send us your money but
    not your advice, we know how to govern ourselves. And the Diaspora?

    Well, we became emotional and sentimental, we couldn't believe our
    good fortune, we finally had a free and independent Armenia, it wasn't
    united, but not to worry, we would get that too, sooner or later. We
    made calls for Tebi Yerkir, we said, yes, finally we have a choice
    to live where we want. Most of us chose to stay where we were, and
    that's fine because the Diaspora is critically important, not only
    for its own self-realization but to support the homeland. We said,
    here is our love and our money, you know what to do with it. And a lot
    of Armenians in the homeland knew exactly what to do with it because
    the Armenians from the Diaspora gave it to them without any strings
    attached. We gave without demanding accountability. We gave without
    question. We gave expensive toys that came with no instructions.

    You see my friends, instead of building institutions in the
    homeland, we nurtured dependence, instead of empowering we created
    the expectation of assistance, instead of designing and implementing
    programs that would have helped educate a generation about democratic
    principles and values, about the kind of democracy we wanted, about
    what we meant when we cried out "Freedom" and what the protection of
    human rights envisions we enabled the existing paradigm. We expected
    the Armenians in Armenia to wake up one morning after decades of
    authoritarian rule and figure this all out?

    And certainly, the administration in Armenia and its network didn't
    want institutional assistance, they told the Diaspora to go and well,
    basically, occupy itself with whatever it was that it was doing. The
    first president of the Republic of Armenia, even today, sees the
    Diaspora, not as a partner to development and prosperity but as a cash
    cow that shall generously give money but refrain from giving advice.

    Succeeding regimes were not much better, even though they attempted
    to engage the Diaspora in a deeper and more meaningful way.

    I am not blaming one side or the other, I honestly believe that both
    sides are responsible for this current situation and both sides are
    to blame.

    And because I have been criticized in the past for criticizing the
    current regime, because I have been called the queen of doom and gloom,
    because I have been accused of highlighting the problems without
    offering solutions, and because the editor of this fine publication
    has given me column space, this is what I think we can do.

    If the Diaspora wants engagement with Armenia, which I believe it does,
    then individuals, institutions, organizations and political forces must
    begin to change the way they design that engagement. It is no longer
    good enough to build a shiny, new clinic, hospital, daycare center
    or library with all the fixtures and gift it to an organization in
    Armenia, public or private, without ensuring the necessary training
    and expertise that we have in the Diaspora and that means actually
    sending and paying Diaspora Armenian specialists to come and work,
    train and ensure a smooth transition of management to local staff. And
    most importantly, we need to have in place a clearly defined scheme
    of accountability with all initiated projects.

    Providing democracy education for the new generation must become part
    of our development aid. The knowledge, skills and values that are
    the preconditions of living in a democracy are learnt and nurtured
    throughout life but when these conditions do not exist, a vacuum is
    created - the ability to live together in a democracy does not come
    naturally, it needs to be taught. We have plenty of people in the
    Diaspora who are experts in the social sciences, who teach in some of
    the best universities in the world, we have elected officials from
    around the world, we have people who know how to organize election
    campaigns, we have people who have worked on countless campaigns
    for both Armenian and non-Armenian candidates, we have people who
    understand the value of volunteering because they've been doing it
    their whole lives. Why not find partners in Armenia who engage in
    this kind of activity and provide invaluable Diaspora experience
    and expertise?

    We talk about the importance of getting our youth in the Diaspora to
    become connected with the homeland, and there are several fantastic
    organizations created by Diaspora individuals and organizations that
    facilitate young people to come to Armenia, work, volunteer, live
    and fall in love with their heritage. Why don't we design programs
    for our youth in Armenia to have a chance to go to Washington, L.A.,
    New York, Brussels, Toronto and see how our Armenian communities
    and organizations operate, how they selflessly volunteer, how they
    organize campaigns, how they lobby their government for Hai Tad, how
    they protest for the protection of the environment, how they protest
    Wall Street....What happened to the whole idea of a brain circulation,
    being bridges of knowledge, experience, science and technology?

    Certainly, there are Diaspora initiatives realizing innovative programs
    in Armenia with promising results. But too few of them are doing this
    in the field of democracy education. If we want to see democracy
    and rule of law flourish in Armenia, if we want to see the new
    generation gain the knowledge, tools, inspiration and desire to ensure
    regime change, how to constructively demand for their rights, how to
    effectively lobby and mobilize, how to run an election campaign we need
    to arm them with those tools and not just write comments on Facebook,
    or articles in newspapers and ceaselessly point fingers. And I'm really
    tired of the excuse that "they won't let us." If there is the will,
    the resources and the commitment, there is always a way forward.

    We have five years ahead of us until the next national elections to
    start planting the seeds for the establishment of democratic rule in
    our country. The historical imperative has never been more pressing.

    If we want to struggle to ensure the inalienable right to
    self-determination for the people of Artsakh, for the international
    recognition of the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh, if we want to restore
    the historical rights of the Armenian people and if we want to stop
    the migration hemorrhage, then we must establish a stable, vibrant
    democracy. When we sit around negotiating tables with the world,
    we must speak and act from a position of power and integrity. We
    cannot demand justice when it is absent in our homeland. We need to
    rethink our national agenda and place the establishment of democracy
    and justice in Armenia at the top of that list.

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