Many Canadian Armenians are watching with baited breath as a non-violent
grassroots protest movement in Armenia is about to complete the transfer of
power from the governing party to the leader of the opposition whose
unprecedented campaign of civil disobedience forced the resignation of the
country’s prime minister and former president.
Armenia’s parliament is scheduled to vote for a new prime minister on
Tuesday, eight days after former Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan, who ruled
Armenia for 10 years, stepped down following 11 days of mass and largely
peaceful protests against his continued rule in the former Soviet republic.
Sargsyan, who had already served two terms as the country’s president,
changed the constitution in 2015 to turn Armenia from a presidential republic
where the executive power was held by the president, into a parliamentary
republic where the executive power is held by the prime minister and the
president plays a largely ceremonial role.
Sargsyan was forced to resign after tens of thousands of people flooded the
streets in the capital of Yerevan and other cities and towns to protest his
political maneuvering to cling to power despite repeated promises not to run for
the position of the prime minister.
Nikol Pashinyan, the leader of the opposition Yelq (Exit) movement who has
accused Sargsyan and his ruling Republican Party of mass election fraud and vote
buying, is demanding that the Republican-controlled parliament elect him as
interim prime minister so he can organize free and fair elections in
Armenia.
Protests in support of Pashinyan have been held all across Armenia and
Armenian Diaspora communities scattered around the world, including a protest on
Sunday in front of the Armenian embassy in Canada.
Vadz Ghazaryan, an IT professional who immigrated to Canada from Armenia in
2014, said the protests have transformed the political landscape in his
homeland, giving people hope that the corrupt political system led by the
Republican Party can finally be reformed.
(click to listen to the interview with Vadz Ghazaryan)