Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Is Russia Seeking To "Neutralize" Armenian Civil Society?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Is Russia Seeking To "Neutralize" Armenian Civil Society?

    IS RUSSIA SEEKING TO "NEUTRALIZE" ARMENIAN CIVIL SOCIETY?

    EurasiaNet.org
    May 9 2014

    May 9, 2014 - 2:05pm, by Marianna Grigoryan

    Russian Ambassador Ivan Volinkin's recent call "to neutralize"
    Western-funded non-governmental organizations in Armenia is stoking
    fears among Armenian activists that the country's pending membership
    in the Moscow-led Customs Union will prompt a rollback of civil rights.

    In an interview published in the May 1-15 edition of the Moscow-based,
    Armenian newspaper Noyev Kovcheg, Volinkin called for an information
    campaign "and other methods" to respond to alleged attempts by local
    non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to "drive a wedge" between
    Armenia and Russia. As an example of such "methods," he cited Russia's
    own 2013 law, which requires NGOs that receive international financing
    to register as "foreign agents." He also proposed that Russia be more
    active in asserting itself in Armenian media.

    The comments sent waves of concern through Armenia's relatively
    active civil society sector, one of the few consistent advocates
    for democratic reforms. Concerns long have existed in Armenia that
    Yerevan's planned June accession to a customs union led by Russia
    will mean kowtowing to Moscow's political desires.

    The fact that officials in Yerevan have not yet responded publicly to
    Amabassador Volinkin's comments has fed those fears. Rights activist
    Artur Sakunts, head of the Helsinki Civil Assembly's Vanadzor office,
    asserted that Volkinin's comments -- as well as similar, previous
    utterances - reflected a KGB mindset and illustrated Moscow's distrust
    of Yerevan.

    At the April 12 Annual Conference of Russian Compatriots in Yerevan,
    Volinkin announced that Moscow would prevent "any aggressive [outside,
    non-Russian] intervention in the internal affairs of its neighboring
    counties" that it deemed was meant to promote "ideas that are alien
    to our minds and hearts."

    Armenian rights activists bristle at the Soviet-era notion of a union
    of minds and hearts among Armenians and Russians. "Russia is trying
    to silence independent voices in Armenia -- the moderate, but strong
    civil society, which they have failed to conquer," said Sakunts. "This
    is a problem which has ceased to exist in Belarus and Kazakhstan,
    but it does exist in Armenia."

    In contrast to the three current members of the Customs Union, Armenia
    is deemed "partly free" by the Washington,DC-based civil-rights
    watchdog Freedom House.

    The call for a crackdown on international NGOs in Armenia from
    a foreign ambassador must be addressed, Armenian civil-society
    organizations and opposition members believe. "If Armenian authorities
    agree to these instructions, then they will destroy our country's
    future with their own hands," warned Styopa Safarian, secretary of
    the Heritage Party's parliamentary faction.

    On May 7, more than two dozen Armenian NGOs demanded Ambassador
    Volkinin's recall to Moscow, or an official apology from Moscow's
    envoy, as well as an "adequate" response from Armenian President
    Serzh Sargsyan's administration.

    "We declare that there aren't any nongovernmental organizations
    working against Armenian-Russian friendship and we advise Ambassador
    Volinkin to organize such witch hunts outside Armenia's borders,"
    reads the joint statement. [Editor's Note: The Open Society
    Foundation-Armenia, an entity in the Soros foundations network, is
    among the signatories. EurasiaNet.org operates under the auspices
    of the Open Society Foundation-New York City, a separate part of
    the network].

    Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Tigran Balaian told journalists
    that the government has responded to Ambassador Volinkin, but did not
    elaborate. "I don't think any nongovernmental group is able to drive
    a wedge between Armenia and Russia, the centuries-long friendship of
    the two peoples and the time-tested partner relations," Balaian told
    RFE/RL's Armenian service.

    For opposition parliamentarian Safarian, however, the ambassador's
    comment has less to do with "friendly relations" with Yerevan than
    "about democracy in Armenia."

    The governing Republican Party of Armenia does not seem particularly
    concerned right now. Members could not be reached for comment.

    There's little doubt that Sargsyan administration's ties to Russia
    are solid. For the first time since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet
    Union, a joint military parade with Russian troops took place on May 9,
    Victory Day, in the northern city of Gyumri. The city hosts a Russian
    military base.

    Political scientist Ruben Mehrabian from Yerevan's non-profit Center
    for Political and International Studies sees nothing surprising
    about the government's efforts to please Moscow while trying to
    uphold Armenian sovereignty at the same time. "What is happening
    right now fits the existing format of Russian-Armenian relations,"
    said Mehrabian. "This is the miserable state we are in."

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

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/68361

Working...
X