ACNIS reView #17, 2018. Weekly Update: May 5-12

 

Weekly Update

 

Bloomberg writes,
that “Armenian opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan was elected prime minister by
the country’s parliament, completing a remarkable rise to power backed by
massive street protests that he’s termed a “velvet revolution.”

Lawmakers voted
by 59 to 42 on Tuesday to name Pashinyan as premier, a week after the ruling
Republican Party, which holds a majority of seats, had refused to back his
candidacy. This time, 13 Republicans voted with minority parties in favor of
Pashinyan, who led the protests that ousted Armenia’s longtime ruler Serzh
Sargsyan.”

The Guardian in
their article about the situation in Armenia, write the following: “In an
interview with the Guardian during the protests, Pashinyan said dark political
forces had been trying to derail Armenia’s peaceful revolution. His aides said
Karen Karapetyan, the prime minister from September 2016 until last month, and
who is close to Russia, had sought backroom deals to derail a vote last week
for Pashinyan to become PM, which he lost.

“Some forces
are trying to engage us into political bargaining and propose me to become
prime minister but ensure and guarantee the continuation of the existing
system,” Pashinyan said. “And for me, my goal isn’t to become prime minister.
My goal is bring real changes to Armenia.”

The newspaper,
writing that “there is a touch of populist in Pashinyan”, quotes Ararat
Mirzoyan, a fellow member of Civil Contract, who was arrested with Pashinyan
last month: “He is not a populist. He is popular.”

In his article
for the New York Times Neil
MacFarquhar, writing about his encounter with Nikol Pashinyan and his
biography, says that “velvet revolution” was “the most sweeping change in this
small, landlocked country of about 2.8 million people in the southern Caucasus
since it declared independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.” He further
continues: “If many Armenians find it nothing short of miraculous that their
country seems transformed overnight, Mr. Pashinyan described it as the
culmination of a journey that began some 20 years ago.”

Sepaking about
the bloody clashes that resulted in the deaths of 10 people in 2008 and being
on the lam for 16 months and the following arrest in 2009, Pashinyan said: “I
am proud that I experienced it and was able to stay true to myself in that
strange environment under all different kinds of pressure.” 

Pashinyan also
spoke about the preparation of the protests: “I understood that the best way to
prevent violence is to be nonviolent,” he said. The author writes, that
“drawing inspiration from Nelson Mandela and from Gandhi’s famous 1930 walk
across India to protest British taxation, Mr. Pashinyan decided to walk around
120 miles across Armenia from Gyumri, the second-largest city, to Yerevan.”

In his
concluding remarks, MacFarquhar writes, that Nikol Pashinyan “brushes aside
fears that he has set expectations so high that he is bound to disappoint.”

“I am in a
working mood, there is no sense of euphoria, just work to do,” Mr. Pashinyan
said. “If we were able to do the impossible, that means we will be able to do
the difficult.”

 

Prepared by Marina Muradyan