Hrant Gadarigian
Watching President Serzh Sargsyan’s deadpan and monotone speech the other night regarding the two-week standoff between the armed Sasna Dzrer
group and what passes as “law enforcement” in Armenia, I wonder if the
Armenian head of state realizes that a sizeable majority of citizens
just don’t trust him and that most despise him and the regime he
symbolizes.
Maybe Sargsyan just doesn’t care what people think of him. It could
also be that he and his cronies live in a world so far removed from the
trials and tribulations of the common-folk, that they really can’t see
beyond their villas and the walls of the presidential palace.
From now on we will allow no one to take our country hostage.
We will allow no one to undermine the foundation of our state.
Problems in Armenia will not be solved through violence or arms.
We will allow no one to undermine the foundation of our state.
Problems in Armenia will not be solved through violence or arms.
Is Sargsyan for real? Does he realize just how hollow and hypocritical he sounds by mouthing such declarations?
Such smoke and mirrors; truly a shining example of doublespeak that even Orwell would have been proud of.
The “country,” far from being held hostage by a band of Artsakh War
vets and disgruntled citizens who “were mad as hell and couldn’t take it
anymore,” was actually held hostage for two weeks by the regime’s law
enforcement arm and the thugs they payroll to quash any political
dissent.
When cops and special forces rampage through residential
neighborhoods detaining protestors left and right and see fit to beat
journalists and citizens exercising their constitutional rights of
freedom of expression and assembly, whose “country” is actually being
held hostage?
If Sargsyan were to come clean, he would have proclaimed: “We will
not allow anyone to undermine the foundation of our power and
authority.”
If, as Sargsyan states, “Problems in Armenia will not be solved
through violence or arms,” the logical question arises – “What
alternatives do you suggest, Mr. President?”
When Sargsyan makes superficial reference to the civil war in Syria,
stating that such a development is ruled out in Armenia, the president
really needs to do his homework. It’s actually because Assad failed to
provide viable options to those Syrians who opposed his authoritarian
regime that the civil war there spiraled out of control. Sargsyan would
do well to learn some lessons from the mistakes made by Assad who
countered public protest with increasing violence and a clampdown on
dissent.
Further along in his speech, Sargsyan says:
In Armenia a simple truth, which it seems could not be debatable
in the first place, has prevailed. That truth lives in our system of
values, in our mentality, in our kind, and is about our heritage. Anyone
can dislike the authorities, or the government, or the President, can
be categorically against our policies. However, dislike cannot be a
reason for glorifying those who attempt to solve problems with arms.
Such rhetoric turns the issues that gave rise to Sasna Dzrer and the simmering public discontent in Armenia on their head.
Nowhere, in his speech does the president say what measures he and
the government will take to alleviate the root causes of the underlying
problems facing society today in Armenia. It’s as if he shares none of
the responsibility and that all his pronouncements over the past seven
years since he “seized” control of the country to initiate real reforms –
throughout all sectors of society – have been mere window dressing.
These hollow utterances were more to appease the international
community than to address the festering disillusionment and despondency
of average citizens.
Does anyone actually take Sargsyan at his word when he stated the following?
Yes, it is true that the Armenian authorities are not perfect.
Yes, it is true that there are many problems and complex issues in
Armenia. Our goal is to give them a speedy resolution…At this stage our
goal is also to form the authorities of national accord, in which issues
will be solved under a wide consensus.
Not perfect? Who is asking for perfection? People want to see a
sustainable process of real change. Most don’t see such a process.
Repeated election fraud, economic monopolization, a judiciary in the
pocket of the authorities, lack of engagement between citizens and civil
administration, exploitation of the country’s natural resources by a
privileged few…the list goes on and on.
Speedy resolution? National accord? Is Sargsyan living on the same planet as the rest of Armenia’s citizens.
What’s Sargsyan’s concept of a “speedy resolution” to the ills
holding Armenia back for realizing its true potential. Other than
platitudes, what’s his, and by extension, the master plan of the ruling
Republican Party. I shudder at the thought. Maybe he refers to his
overnight decision to join the Russian-backed Eurasian Economic Union
rather than greater political and economic ties to the EU.
National accord? The country, under his “leadership,” is becoming
increasingly polarized, not the other way round. Doesn’t Sargsyan
realize that the seeds for the civil war he ostensibly seeks to avoid
have already been sown? It will pit the haves against the have-nots, the
powerful against the powerless.
The regime may see fit to cut the budding stalks of the civil war to come, but the seeds underground will keep flowering.
Can Sargsyan, or whoever the figurehead of the ruling powers that be
in Armenia, push through the necessary changes to avoid such a clash of
interests in the future? I truly have my doubts.
Nor can I say, with any degree of conviction, who or what political
force has the vision and ability to get Armenia back on the right
track.
All I can say for sure is that the man who currently presides at 26
Baghramyan Avenue in Yerevan has become the proverbial Hans Christian
Andersen emperor stripped of his clothes and credibility.
The sooner people, in Armenia and overseas, see Sargsyan for what he
really is, a man who rules through coercion rather than consent, the
sooner we can agree that he and the powers he represents need to go.
"Hetq," August 2, 2016 (hetq.am/eng/news/69686/armenias-president-sargsyan-the-emperor-has-no-clothes.html/)
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