University of California to open a center of Armenian studies

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 20 2018

The University of California is going to open a center of Armenian studies in the near future, Dr. Eric Esrailian, famous American physician, co-manager of the Medical College after David Gefen at the University of California, said at a meeting with Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan.

To note, Esrailian, who is also the co-producer of The Promise film, which tells the story of the Armenian Genocide, was received by the PM along with the UCLA Chancellor, biologist, Academician Gene Block.

Welcoming the guests, the Premier hailed the development of cooperation between Armenian higher educational institutions and the University of California, Los Angeles, which in turn may contribute to the deepening of Armenian-American educational ties.

The Prime Minister stressed that education is one of the cornerstones of democratic development and economic progress, and considering Armenia’s huge innovational and IT potential, the Government of Armenia seeks to convert Armenia into a technological country.

Eric Esrailian and Gene Block wished the Government every success on the way to implementing its reform agenda, including the educational reform. They expressed readiness to support this process through the development of entrepreneurship, technology, engineering, exchange of experience and academic programs. 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/18/2018

                                        Tuesday, 

Major Ally Rebukes, Warns Pashinian


Armenia - Aram Sarkisian speaks at the founding congress of the Yelk alliance 
in Yerevan, 21 January 2017.

The leader of a party represented in Armenia’s current government has deplored 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s harsh attacks on alleged 
“counterrevolutionary” elements in the country, saying that he is alienating 
political groups that helped him come to power.

Aram Sarkisian warned that they could no longer back Pashinian’s plans to force 
snap parliamentary elections in the coming months.

Pashinian launched the verbal attacks following the start of campaigning for 
the September 23 municipal elections in Yerevan which his Civil Contract party 
hopes to win by a landslide. Speaking at a campaign rally last week, he claimed 
that “political forces portraying themselves as guardians of the revolution” 
are secretly collaborating with the former ruling Republican Party (HHK) in a 
bid to get more votes in the polls.

Pashinian, who led last spring a protest movement that brought down Armenia’s 
previous HHK-controlled government, did not name those forces. Observers 
believe that he referred to at least some of the other parties that are 
represented in his cabinet. Those are Gagik Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia 
(BHK), Dashnaktsutyun as well as the Republic and Bright Armenia parties.

The latter make up, together with Civil Contract, the Yelk alliance that 
finished third in the last parliamentary elections held in April 2017. Republic 
and Bright Armenia refused to back Pashinian when he launched the 
anti-government mass protests in April.

Despite the rift, Pashinian gave his Yelk partners two ministerial posts in his 
cabinet formed in May. Still, the three parties subsequently failed to agree on 
a single mayoral candidate in Yerevan. Bright Armenia and Republic fielded 
their own candidate, Justice Minister Artak Zeynalian, who is now challenging 
Civil Contract’s Hayk Marutian.


Armenia - Leaders of the opposition Yelk alliance hold an anti-government rally 
in Yerevan, 19Jan2018.

The Republic leader, Aram Sarkisian, described as “nonsensical” suggestions 
that his party is secretly collaborating with the HHK when he campaigned for 
Zeynalian late on Monday. He also emphasized the fact that parliament deputies 
from Republic, Bright Armenia, the BHK and Dashnaktsutyun helped Pashinian 
become prime minister on May 8. “How can you say such things about the team 
that has worked with you?” he said, appealing to the premier.

“If you want to form a government only with those who marched with you, to 
reckon only with them and to build [a new] Armenia only with them, I have 
nothing to say to you,” Sarkisian went on. “But you must think about how you 
will be going about holding pre-term [parliamentary] elections.

“The two parties listed by me and the four other members of our [Yelk] 
parliamentary faction have stood with you and said that they support fresh 
elections. I can now see these people wondering whether they should keep up 
that support.”

“These people, who helped you once, may not help you this time around,” warned 
the veteran politician.

Sarkisian said that ordinary Armenians also do not like what he sees as 
Pashinian’s divisive and inflammatory rhetoric.“I am deeply convinced that our 
people … are sick and tired of fighting against each other,” he said.




Armenian Ex-Presidents Invited To Government Events

        • Sisak Gabrielian

Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and his predecessor Robert Kocharian 
visit Gyumri, 7 December 2008.

The government said on Tuesday that it will invite the three former presidents 
of Armenia to attend this week’s official celebrations of the country’s 
Independence Day.

The September 21 events will mark the 27th anniversary of a referendum in which 
the vast majority of Armenians voted for secession from the disintegrating 
Soviet Union. They include an official reception that will be held at the 
former presidential palace in Yerevan where Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and 
most of his staff currently work.

“All three presidents will be invited to the Independence Day events,” said 
Eduard Aghajanian, the chief of Pashinian’s staff.

Pashinian swept to power in May after weeks of nationwide mass protests that 
forced Armenia’s longtime leader, Serzh Sarkisian, to resign. Sarkisian served 
as president of the republic for the past ten years. He tried unsuccessfully to 
extend his rule by becoming prime minister following the country’s transition 
to a parliamentary system of government.

Sarkisian’s predecessor, Robert Kocharian, was controversially arrested in July 
on coup charges stemming from a 2008 post-election crackdown on opposition 
protesters in Yerevan. An Armenian appeals court freed him from custody more 
than two weeks later.

Kocharian denies the charges as politically motivated. Immediately after his 
release he announced his return to active politics.

Pashinian has repeatedly defended Kocharian’s prosecution, while denying 
issuing any pressure on law-enforcement bodies investigating the 2008 violence. 
In a September 11 speech, he branded the ex-president a “criminal” and 
“traitor.”

The 43-year-old premier has also had an uneasy relationship with Armenia’s 
first president, Levon Ter-Petrosian. He played a prominent role in 
Ter-Petrosian’s opposition movement that was targeted by Kocharian in 2008. 
Pashinian subsequently spent about two years in prison on charges stemming from 
that crackdown.

Pashinian fell out with Ter-Petrosian after being released from prison in 2011. 
The two men met in July for the first time in years.




11 Charged With Vote Buying In Yerevan

        • Anush Muradian

Armenia - Mayor Taron Markarian votes in municipal elections in Yerevan, 
14May2017.

Eleven persons, including a senior local government official, have been charged 
with buying votes for the Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) in last year’s 
municipal elections in Yerevan, it emerged on Tuesday.

The criminal case stems from irregularities that were reported by the 
opposition Yelk alliance on eve of the May 2017 elections won by the HHK and 
its top candidate, Yerevan’s incumbent Mayor Taron Markarian.

Yelk representatives found scandalous documents in a trash bin outside an HHK 
campaign office in the city’s Arabkir district. Most of them purportedly 
detailed vote buying operations by government loyalists, including sums of 
money and guidelines on how to buy votes.

Armenia’s Special Investigative Service (SIS) claimed to have conducted an 
inquiry. It closed the criminal case in August 2017, citing a lack of evidence.

The SIS launched a fresh probe shortly after one of Yelk’s leaders, Nikol 
Pashinian, swept to power in a wave of mass protests that brought down 
Armenia’s HHK-led government in May.

According to a senior official from the law-enforcement agency, Davit 
Kostandian, SIS investigators have found compelling evidence of vote buying in 
favor of the HHK. Kostandian said that the illegal operation was led by Hrayr 
Antonian, the head of a department at Yerevan’s municipal administration, and 
Stepan Sahakian, the executive director of a supermarket chain owned by an 
HHK-linked businessman.

The SIS official claimed that Arabkir residents were paid 10,000 drams ($21) 
each for pledging to vote for the HHK and Mayor Markarian. He did not specify 
how many votes were bought in this fashion, saying only that Antonian and 
Sahakian claim to have spent 48 million drams and 15 million drams respectively 
on vote bribes.

Neither man could be reached for comment on Tuesday. Kostandian said they and 
the nine other suspects have pleaded guilty to the accusations. Markarian, who 
resigned as Yerevan mayor under government pressure in July, has not yet been 
questioned by the SIS, added the official.

Another document found by Yelk in 2017 contained the names of police officers 
who pledged to earn the HHK a particular number of votes. The document was 
allegedly faxed from a telephone number belonging to the Armenian police.

Kostandian said that all of those policemen have been questioned by SIS 
investigators. But he declined to elaborate.

Vote buying was widespread in just about every major election held in Armenia 
in the last two decades. The HHK, which is headed by former President Serzh 
Sarkisian, was accused by its opponents and media of heavily relying on the 
practice in the last parliamentary polls held in April 2017.Observers from the 
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said that they were marred 
by “many credible reports” of vote buying.

The new Pashinian-led government has pledged to prevent vote buying in the snap 
mayoral elections that will be held in the Armenian capital on Sunday. Earlier 
this month it pushed through the parliament legal amendments that significantly 
toughened punishment for the illegal practice.



Press Review



“Zhamanak” seeks to rationalize mounting political tensions in Armenia 
resulting from the ongoing mayoral race in Yerevan. “Political struggle is 
quite brutal in practically all countries,” writes the paper. “And 
paradoxically, that brutal and tough character often reflects the fact that a 
particular election is really competitive. That is to say that nothing is 
predetermined in advance.”

“Haykakan Zhamanak” dismisses critics’ allegations that Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian is increasingly showing authoritarian tendencies and needs to be held 
in check by strong opposition. The pro-Pashinian paper acknowledges that these 
claims are now also backed by individuals and groups who “honestly” want the 
current government to be accountable. “The executive branch, namely Pashinian’s 
team, has no influence on the judicial system,” it says. “In fact, the judicial 
system is engaged in an overt sabotage against the prime minister’s team and 
pursues concrete goals: to discredit the ongoing fight against corruption and 
abuses.” The paper argues that the Armenian parliament is also not controlled 
by Pashinian.

“Hraparak” expresses concern over Monday’s police raid against an Armenian 
media outlet that circulated leaked phone calls between the heads of the 
National Security Service (NSS) and the Special Investigative Service (SIS). 
The paper argues that other news organizations also publicized the scandalous 
recordings last week. It suggests that the Yerevan.today publication was raided 
because of its alleged ties to former President Robert Kocharian. The 
authorities, it says, may have tried to bully the publication or keep up public 
support for their declared anti-corruption efforts.

Interviewed by “168 Zham,” a Russian political commentator, Stanislav Tarasov, 
sees a renewed risk of a major escalation of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. 
“Armenia’s recently elected Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has made differing 
and at times contradictory statements and moves on the conflict’s resolution,” 
says Tarasov. “At the start of his tenure Pashinian said that Nagorno-Karabakh 
is a party to the conflict and must be involved in the negotiation process. But 
further processes followed the previous logic.” He suggests that Pashinian is 
still undecided about his national security strategy.

(Tigran Avetisian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/08/2018

                                        Saturday, 

Armenia, Russia Plan Joint Humanitarian Program In Syria

        • Aza Babayan

Russia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with Russian-Armenian 
businessmen in Moscow, 8 Sep, 2018

Armenia and Russia will soon implement a joint humanitarian program in Syria, 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said after meeting with Russian 
President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on September 8.

Talking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am), the head of the Armenian 
government stressed that the program will be a completely humanitarian one and 
will not contain any military component. Pashinian gave no details of the 
program.

The Armenian prime minister also said that during his talks with the Russian 
leader they did not address Azerbaijan’s possible accession to the Collective 
Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), an issue that became a topic for 
discussions in Armenia in the wake of a relevant statement by a pro-government 
Azerbaijani lawmaker.

Ali Huseynli said in late August that Baku should “seriously consider” applying 
for membership in the CSTO, saying that would increase chances of a 
Nagorno-Karabakh settlement favorable to his country. He also said that the 
CSTO gives its member states major military and economic benefits.

If official Baku wishes to do so, “it will be clear what Armenia’s position 
will be,” said Pashinian.

Late last month acting Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Anna Naghdalian 
said that “if Azerbaijan moves to become a member of the CSTO Armenia will use 
its veto power [to block its entry].”

As for military-technical cooperation with Russia, the Armenian prime minister 
said that “relevant departments will talk about concrete programs.”

Pashinian described the state of Armenian-Russian relations as “brilliant” 
after his meeting with Putin. “There are no problems in our relations in any 
direction,” he said in a Facebook post shortly after the end of the talks.

The Armenian prime minister repeated that statement at a meeting with dozens of 
ethnic Armenian businessmen in Moscow during which he urged them to make 
investments in Armenia.




Ex-Armenian PM Charged With Abuse of Power, Illegal Enterprise

        • Karine Simonian

Former Prime Minister of Armenia Hovik Abrahamian

Former Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian has been charged with 
“exceeding official authorities” and “Illegally participating in 
entrepreneurial activity” as part of a criminal probe into a claim by an 
entrepreneur that his business was snatched from him a decade ago.

The Special Investigation Service told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) 
on Saturday that Abrahamian was not taken into custody after pledging not to 
leave the country pending investigation.

The Investigation Committee of Armenia earlier said that Abrahamian is 
suspected of abusing his powers in 2008 by allegedly forcing a businessman to 
give up a majority stake in a mining company that later went to other people, 
including the former prime minister’s brother Henrikh Abrahamian.

Witnesses in the case, according to the report, among the people involved in 
the alleged abuse also named former police chief and current lawmaker Alik 
Sargsian, who is linked with the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia.

Today’s official information makes no mention of Abrahamian’s connection to the 
2008 post-election events.

On August 9, law-enforcement authorities launched a probe into Abrahamian’s 
possible involvement in the breakup of opposition protests staged in Yerevan 
following a disputed presidential election a decade ago.

The National Security Service then arrested Abrahamian’s brother Henrik after 
raiding a former industrial plant effectively owned by Hovik Abrahamian. It 
claimed to have found a weapons cache there and said the arsenal would be 
verified on its possible use against opposition protesters on March 1-2, 2008.

In a separate statement, the security agency said it arrested Henrik Abrahamian 
and the property’s formal owner, Ambik Gevorgian, on suspicion of illegal arms 
possession.

In a Facebook post on September 8 the former prime minister denounced his 
prosecution describing it as a manhunt. Abrahamian said that no illegal items 
were found by law-enforcement bodies during searches at the legal address where 
he is registered and in the home where he actually lives. He claimed he did not 
have anything to do with the property where security officials found the 
weapons. “First, they publicly tried to connect that place with me and then the 
weapons found there with the March 1-2, 2008 events. It is clear that I was the 
target of this series of distortions,” he claimed.

Abrahamian linked the charges brought against him with his September 4 
interview to a local news website in which, he said, he criticized the actions 
of the authorities. “Immediately after that they pressed ungrounded charges 
against me… with the purpose of silencing any dissidence,” he claimed.

“The manhunt and pressure on free speech and dissidence that are being carried 
out by the Armenian authorities will not lead to any good place,” Abrahamian 
warned.

Abrahamian’s case is the latest in a series of prosecutions against former 
government officials launched by Armenian law-enforcement authorities in the 
wake of the April-May change of power in the South Caucasus country.

Nikol Pashinian, who came to power as prime minister in the wake of large-scale 
anti-government protests led by him, has vowed to stamp out corruption, 
monopolies and to deal with other crimes that he believes have not been 
detected under the previous governments.

As part of a reopened criminal probe into 2008 post-election violence that left 
10 people dead Armenia’s then president Robert Kocharian and several other 
former officials have already been charged with “overthrowing the 
constitutional order.”

Several members of the extended family of Serzh Sarkisian, who succeeded 
Kocharian in 2008 but was forced by the Pashinian-led movement to resign 
earlier this year, are also under investigation in connection with different 
crimes, including an attempted murder and illegal enrichment.

Abrahamian, 60, held high-ranking state posts and developed extensive business 
interests during Kocharian’s and Sarkisian’s tenures. He managed Sarkisian’s 
2008 and 2013 presidential election campaigns before being appointed as 
Armenia’s prime minister in April 2014.

Abrahamian, who also served as Armenia’s parliament speaker in 2008-2011 and 
2012-2014, fell out with Sarkisian a few months after being sacked by the 
latter as head of the government in September 2016. He left Sarkisian’s 
Republican Party of Armenia in January 2017 and has kept a low profile since 
then.




Two Armenian Children Go Into Hiding To Avoid Deportation From Netherlands


NETHERLANDS -- Two Armenian teens, Howick (right), 13, and Lili, 12, pose in 
The Hague, August 13, 2018

(RFE/RL) - Two Armenian children who were scheduled to be deported from the 
Netherlands have gone into hiding, a Dutch government spokesman said.

Justice Ministry spokesman Maarten Molenbeek said on September 8 that the 
minors, who have only been identified as Lili and Howick, went missing from the 
foster home where they were staying during the night, hours after an Amsterdam 
court rejected their final bid to stop their deportation.

The children, aged 12 and 13, came to the Netherlands with their mother in 2008.

Their asylum claim was rejected by Dutch courts that ruled Armenia is a safe 
country.

The children's mother, Armina Hambartsjumian, was deported to Armenia in 2017.

The case has attracted mass public attention, with the children appearing on 
national television to plead their case.

The children have never been to Armenia and do not speak Armenian.

Their lawyers argued unsuccessfully that their mother was unable to care for 
them properly.

Based on reporting by AFP and AP




Putin, Pashinian Meet In Moscow


Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian in Moscow, Russia, 8 Sept. 2018

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
praised the current level of relations between the two countries as they met 
for talks in Moscow on Saturday.

The Kremlin said the negotiations between the two leaders focused on “key 
questions of developing allied Russian-Armenian relations as well as 
cooperation in Eurasian territory, in particular, within the Eurasian Economic 
Union and the Collective Security Treaty Organization.”

In his remarks before the meeting Putin said that relations between Moscow and 
Yerevan “develop steadily in all directions.”

“This concerns the sphere of political relations, the military sphere, issues 
of security and economic cooperation,” the Russian leader said.

Putin singled out Russian energy supplies to Armenia, stressing that Yerevan 
receives Russian natural gas “at the lowest prices Gazprom sells gas in the 
world – $150 per 1,000 cubic meters.”

Pashinian, for his part, stressed the fact that he was having his third meeting 
with Putin within a space of just four months. “I think that such frequency 
emphasizes the special nature of relations between our countries, let me say 
also the special nature of our personal relations,” the Armenian leader said.

“Despite certain pessimism that is present both in the Armenian and Russian 
press and in social media, I think that our relations develop in a fairly 
dynamic way, very naturally. And I think our top objective is to try to use the 
whole potential in developing our relations.”

Still, Pashinian acknowledged the existence of ‘some questions’ that need to be 
discussed by the two countries. “God save us from a situation where we would 
have no questions in our relations, because that would mean we have no 
relations at all. I can say with certainty that we have no issues in our 
relations that can’t be solved, and today, of course, we are going to discuss a 
wide range of issues,” he said.

“I am sure that these issues will be solved, and we will be guided by respect 
of interests in our allied relations, respect for the interests of our 
countries, respect for the sovereignty of our countries and the principle of 
non-interference in each other’s internal affairs,” Pashinian underscored.

After the end of his meeting with Putin Pashinian wrote in a Facebook post: 
“We’ve had a productive conversation as a result of which we can state that 
Armenian-Russian relations are brilliant. There are no problems in our 
relations in any direction.”

The Armenian prime minister’s talks in Moscow come after a strong Russian 
reaction to Yerevan’s prosecution of a number of former government officials, 
including ex-President Robert Kocharian and ex-deputy Defense Minister Yuri 
Khachaturov, who currently chairs the Collective Security Treaty Organization 
(CSTO), a Russian-led defense pact of six former Soviet countries, including 
Armenia.

Both Kocharian and Khachaturov are accused of breaching the constitutional 
order during a deadly postelection crackdown in 2008. After charging 
Khachaturov Armenia also initiated a procedure to recall him from the top CSTO 
post.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov twice publicly denounced the 
prosecutions of former officials in Yerevan, arguing that they ran counter to 
the new Armenian leadership’s earlier pledges not to “persecute its 
predecessors for political reasons.”

And on August 31, the Kremlin reported a phone conversation between Putin and 
Kocharian during which the Russian leader congratulated the former Armenian 
president on his birthday – a rare event in state diplomacy that some analysts 
took as a sign of Moscow’s backing for Kocharian, who recently announced his 
return to active politics.

In his public statements Pashinian downplayed the significance of political 
implications behind Putin’s congratulations to Kocharian.




Press Review



The editor of “Aravot” expects that two issues are going to feature prominently 
during the Moscow talks between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian – the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and the 
relations between the two countries after the revolution in Armenia: “Russia 
should understand that it is pointless to talk about serious discussions [on 
Nagorno-Karabakh] until Pashinian gets a majority in parliament. As for the 
second issue, I think that the Armenian prime minister will speak from the 
positions of [Russian] non-interference in our internal affairs. This is, of 
course, a correct position. Furthermore, this is the only position that a 
leader enjoying the support of a majority of Armenians can have. But there are 
diplomatic subtleties that may have a great importance. For example, Armenia 
could have recalled Yuri Khachaturov from the post of secretary-general of the 
[Russian-dominated] Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and 
suggested another candidate before prosecuting the general. It seems to be a 
little thing, but not paying attention to such little things may prove damaging 
to the cause.”

“Zoghovurd” presents opinions from an article from the EADaily (Eurasian News) 
website headlined “Three Friendly Pieces of Advice To Pashinian Ahead of His 
Visit to Russia.” The article suggests that Putin has chosen to bet on former 
Armenian President Robert Kocharian [to return to power] and refuses to see 
Pashinian as Armenia’s leader in the long run. “Tensions in [Yerevan’s] 
relations with Moscow are strictly counter-indicative,” the article says, 
noting that in Moscow “no one wants to tolerate the mistakes of the new 
Armenian government for a long time.” In this sense the publication advises 
that Pashinian be “careful in taking any step that immediately has to do with 
Russian interests, as well as Russian interests within the CSTO and the 
Eurasian Economic Union.”

(Tatev Danielian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


President of Armenia meets his Karabakh counterpart Bako Sahakyan

AYSOR, Armenia
Sept 2 2018
Read Aysor.am inTelegram

Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian who departed for Nagorno Karabakh to participate in the festivities dedicated to the 27th anniversary of Artsakh’s Independence met today with President of Artsakh Bako Sahakyan.

Issues relating to development of cooperation between the two republics have been discussed during the meeting.

The two presidents stressed the importance of expanding and deepening bilateral ties.

The Critical Corner – 08/27/2018

A History of Armenian Critical Thought... (Part 3)

Armenian News Network / Armenian News


By Eddie Arnavoudian


Part V: The Radical Democrats

Let us open with a taster of the tradition we inherit from the Armenian
mid-19th century.

Stepan Oskanian (1825-1901)

    'It is time that our common people came to realise that they are as
    capable of great things as any other people and that they can be as good
    as any other people in arming themselves against foreign or domestic
    tyrants.'

    'The Armenian masses are treated as game by Ottoman officials... We
    miserable Armenians, we need gunpowder yet we dispense incense.'

Krikor Chilingirian (1833-1923)

    `We live in an age when the rights of man are found at the tip of the
    sword. Where there is no sword rights will be trampled upon.'

Haroutyoun Sevajian (1831-1874)

    `It is not an external hand that tortures us. We suffer and are tortured
    by our own. For their profit and wealth the rich sacrifice us. They will
    sell us for their profit.'

Mikael Nalpantian (1823-1869)

    'We have not devoted our life and our pen to the rich. Behind their
    barricades of wealth they are protected even from the worst tyranny. But
    that poor Armenian, that exploited, naked, hungry and pitiable Armenian
    who is oppressed not just by foreigners, but by his own elite, his own
    clergy and his own ill-educated intelligentsia, that is the Armenian who
    deserves and demands our attention.'

Matteos Mamourian (1830-1901)

    `It is idiocy to believe that foreign liberators will arrive to free us
    of our shackles. The sole liberator of a wretched and enslaved people is
    themselves, their work, their labour, their inner strength, unity and
    will.'

Rooted in Armenian life but in part also inspired by revolutionary democracy
sweeping Europe in 1848, young Armenian firebrands took upon themselves the
unfinished business of the 18th century bourgeois democrats. The bourgeois
democrats had failed to dislodge the feudal Church-secular elite that so
disastrously ruled over Armenian communities in Ottoman and Tsarist occupied
Armenia. So by the mid-1850s as the radical democrats entered the fray the
Armenian nation was in perilous crisis. All-devouring elites that
collaborated with imperial states and often acted as their agents of control
were driving Armenian communities in historic Armenia to an irreversibly
bleak future.

So the 19th century radical democrats undertook an overhaul of strategic
thinking. As a guide to their action they redefined the concept of the
nation. National development and national emancipation remained their
ambition. But they refused to recognise the nation's wealthy elites as its
representatives or as the driving force for its development. The common
people, the majority, were the nation. The poor, the hungry, illiterate and
uneducated masses living in their historic homelands were the foundation and
the future of the nation. Such was to be the basis for the radicals'
programme of action.

Among the cluster of radicals, often inconsistent and backpedalling, Mikael
Nalpantian and Haroutyoun Sevajian were summits in a broader democratic
challenge to ossified elites. They were to become close collaborators. Born
in 1831 to a poor family in Istanbul, from 1856 to 1872 Sevajian edited and
wrote prolifically for `The Bee'. Nalpantian said of `The Bee' that `it was
the clean voice of youth and of the living people'. Besides being a
journalist Sevajian was an activist on the ground and helped launch an
amazing educational movement that recruited hundreds in a major voluntary
adult literacy drive. Sevajian and Nalpantian collaborated in underground
work and Sevajian also contributed to preparations for the defensive battles
of semi-autonomous Zeitun in 1862.

Equally prolific, Nalpantian also born in the Diaspora in 1821, in what is
now Rostov-on-Don, made outstanding intellectual contributions on political,
educational, linguistic, aesthetic, philosophic, literary and economic
questions. He is most popularly known as the author of the poem `On
Liberty. Tsarist authorities made it a criminal offence for anyone to
possess a photo of Nalpantian. Also a restless activist besides working with
Sevajian in Istanbul Nalpantian maintained links with activists in London,
Paris and Moscow and with revolutionaries such as Herzen and Bakunin.

In the persona of these two we can celebrate the full richness of the 19th
century Armenian radical tradition from which there is a great deal to
appropriate.


I. A perilous future - national crisis and disintegration

From the late 18th into the 19th century a historically evolving dual
process that had been shaping and dividing Armenian national life underwent
further accentuation - while the Armenian Diaspora prospered hugely,
historic Armenian homelands declined catastrophically.

The Armenian Diaspora, in Istanbul, Smyrna, Tbilisi, Moscow and Petrograd
experienced exponential growth. A new class of merchants often dealing in
European manufactured goods built fortunes that nourished a Diaspora which
lived something of a national cultural revival. Istanbul, with an Armenian
population ranging from 250-300,000, emerged as a predominant Armenian urban
centre concentrating vast wealth within as well as a substantial middle
class and a budding intelligentsia. By the 1850s Armenian-Istanbul had 25
printing presses. It had 42 Armenian schools with 4376 male and 1155 female
students. It also had growing social, welfare, cultural, theatrical and
literary organisations among them the `National Society', the `Studies
Society', the `Renaissance Society', and the `Armenian Museum' (HG392, 434
See Note 1).

Falsifiers of Armenian history frequently refer to the flourish of
Armenian-Istanbul and of Smyrna too as evidence that the Ottoman Empire was
a paradise for Armenians. The truth of Armenian life under the Ottoman heel
however was evident not so much in the Ottoman Diaspora as in Ottoman
occupied historic Armenia, still home to the vast majority of Armenians. The
truth was indeed also evident in the lower echelons of Armenian-Istanbul
where tens of thousands of impoverished migrants crammed into hovels and
slums as they fled the poverty and oppression they and their families were
subjected to in their historic homelands (HG422-429; MN445-447 See Note 2).

As the Diaspora flourished, in historic Armenian all the political, economic
and demographic pillars of Armenian life and nationhood were being uprooted
and destroyed through a ferocious Ottoman state and Turkish nationalist
offensive.

From the early 19th century on an Ottoman campaign to subjugate centrifugal
forces within the empire also targeted semi-autonomous Armenian Zeitun in
1862 (HG65-78) and Armenian Sassoun in 1864. Both could have emerged as
military and political bases for Armenian nation formation but were now
being systematically reduced. In 1864 for the first time in centuries
autonomous Sassoun at the core of historic Armenia suffered the presence of
Turkish military forces on its territory (HG67-68). The offensive to destroy
both regions was to continue up to the 1915 Genocide.

This Ottoman offensive coincided with the equally damaging Tsarist
dismantling of autonomous Armenian principalities in Garabagh that had been
the 18th century focus for the liberation movement. Thus two hostile Empires
uprooted powerful centres of Armenian politico-military organisation.

These military-political blows were followed in Ottoman occupied Armenia by
the bludgeon of a nascent Turkish nationalist capitalist class. Refusing to
countenance Armenian economic development in historic Armenia that they
intended to expropriate for themselves Turkish bourgeois nationalists
fearful of a formidable competitor resorted to arson and pillage. These
reached a notorious peak in the 1876 burning out of Armenian merchants and
artisans in Van (HG300-301- 323, 324). The systematic destruction of
Armenian economic life was to be a feature of the 1895-6 Ottoman slaughter
of 300,000 Armenians and of the 1910 Adana massacres in Cilicia.

Ottoman-Turkish blows to an Armenian national economy were compounded, as
both Sevajian and Nalpantian among others noted, by the penetration of cheap
European manufactures into the Ottoman Empire (HS133). Ironically many of
the importers of European goods were Diaspora-based Armenian merchants
(HG305 and Ashot Hovannissian `Mikael Nalpantian and His Times' Volume 1,
1955, Yerevan, p402).

The common people in their native lands, the peasantry and the urban
artisans suffered an unimaginable deterioration in their lives and
communities. The pace of land grabbing, of plunder and brigandage against
Armenian villages, of arbitrary violence and forced religious conversions
was ruining entire Armenian communities. Already living at the mercy of
savagely warring Kurdish elites that dominated historic Armenia, the
post-1830s state centralisation aggravated the disaster. Ottoman state
compromises to reign in Kurdish principalities gave their now more strongly
consolidated landowning class license to plunder the local population
without limit only on condition they paid taxes to the central government
and supported the central state during any crisis.

The national collapse was seen at its clearest in outward flow of the
impoverished and the hungry (HS288). Noting how `day on day the masses are
leaving their homeland' Mikael Nalpantian felt `unable to describe' the
phenomenon because its `awfulness causes me terror (MN445).' In moving
detail Ghazaryan describes a veritable process of desertification of
historic Armenia (HG341-355; 412-436). `During the 1860s and 1870s not only
did the number of emigrants not fall they multiplied at the least (HG415)'.

    `It was not just the peasantry that migrated. People from all social
    classes and groups left their homelands. Western Armenia was being
    reduced or emptied. Previously dense and prospering Armenian centres
    were now semi-ruins and were being populated...  (by non-Armenians)
    (HG420).'

Together with the massive emigration that had accompanied the 1828-30
Russo-Turkish war and almost emptied Erzerum and other urban centres of its
Armenian population (HG145) these processes were destroying the demographic,
economic and social grounds for Armenian national development. Sevajian was
indubitably right:

    `Little thought or foresight is required to grasp that our wretched and
    semi-ruined nation is on the edge of the precipice (HS396 See Note 3).'

So the radical democrats made action to save the Armenian people in their
homelands their prime business. `Our vision' Sevajian insisted `must not be
limited to Istanbul'. Armenians there `form only the smallest part of the
nation...' `Our homeland is in the east where the majority of our
compatriots live (HS240).' `Our strength is our brethren in Armenia...
without them we have nothing to be proud of before the world (HS330).
`Aside from Armenia everywhere else will be a burial ground for the Armenian
nation (HS397).'



II. Redefining the nation

Living in an age of nation formation the radicals grasped that for their
survival as a free people Armenians were also propelled to organise as a
national force in their native lands. Indeed in the Ottoman Empire it was
Turkish nationalism that drove Armenians and other oppressed nations to
resort to the national struggle. With Turkish nationalism targeting the
wealth, the land and the resources of Ottoman oppressed peoples Armenians
had no choice but strive for national liberation as the only then available
path for survival (See Note 4). But Nalpantian and Sevajian offered a new
radical vision of national development and the national struggle that put
the common people and not the elites at the centre.

The Madras Troika had identified the nation with its elites - with a class
of wealthy merchants and traders, as well as with what they deemed to be
progressive sections of the Church and secular elites of the semi-autonomous
principalities of Garabagh. In the Troika's plans these forces were assigned
the leadership role in the national movement with Garabagh and to a lesser
extent Sassoun considered as nucleus for independent statehood in the
future. The radical democrats cast aside such templates.

With Garabagh, Zeitun and Sassoun no more or in decline by the mid-19th
century, the radical democrats put the question of independent statehood on
the backburner and redefined the concept of the nation to present a new
strategy for struggle and emancipation.

The nation was the common people not its elites. The common people not the
elites were to be the driving force of national development and liberation.
The elites did not and could not represent or lead the nation.

    `It is necessary to understand that in the form they exist today our
    authorities, our rulers are not the nation and their interests have
    nothing to do with the national interest... By the term nation we
    understand the common people and not those few families who have
    enriched themselves with the blood and sweat of the common people
    (MN416).'

A programme of national development and resistance had not only to be based
in the homeland it had also to be framed by the demands of the common
people. The nation and its independence are to be cherished, but only if
they secure the 'real and essential' (MN) interests of the common
people. Any judgement about the nation and the national interest had to have
the needs of the common people centre stage. To serve the nation was to
serve the common people. Abuse of patriotic sentiments about national
freedom, national history, language or culture just to rope the majority
into the service of the rich, was not to be tolerated. To this end the
concepts of nation and patriotism and of freedom and justice too were
infused with concerns for social and economic equality.

There were substantial social and political grounds for such radical
formulations. Within Armenian communities social, economic class
relationships and divisions were pitting the established elites into sharper
opposition to the mass of people. `Today' Haroutyoun Sevajian rages `the
nation has many enemies, external ones and internal ones, enemies of both of
progress and enlightenment (HS154).' Reminding us of our own 1% today he
also put the point about `internal enemies' bluntly:

    `The Armenian nation seems to be formed by a very small number of rich
    people and a few members of the clergy, with the people existing solely
    as servants. The people have been denied all their rights. Today,
    finding a bag of gold in the street, or, and we fear not saying so
    stealing it, the Armenian thus enriched has rapidly become a tyrant over
    the nation (HS132)

Sevajian continues passionately.

    `(The Bee) notes the people's hardship at the hands of the Armenian rich
    who have been assigned power in the provinces...The Bee notes how every
    burden, every pain, every misery weighs heavily upon the people while
    all goodness, all lightness, all well being sucked from the blood of the
    people goes to fatten the rich."

Nalpantian too acts with the opposed interests of a selfish elite and the
vast majority in mind:

    'We have not devoted our life and our pen to the rich. Behind their
    barricades of wealth they are protected even from the worst tyranny. But
    that poor Armenian, that exploited, naked, hungry and pitiable Armenian
    who is oppressed not just by foreigners but by his own elite, his own
    clergy and his own ill-educated intelligentsia, that is the Armenian who
    deserves and demands our attention.'

`Pity the nation... that up till now has been sacrificed to the profit of
private individuals' exclaims Sevajian (HS269). Integrated into imperial
structures collaborationist and prospering Diaspora elites had no interest
in developing and were incapable of stemming the steady collapse of Armenian
life at its core. Sevajian and Nalpantian ridiculed any idea that a Diaspora
economy and its elite prosperity was testimony to Armenian national revival.
`Even if as a result of' their `trade hundreds are enriched, hundreds
receive a European education the state of the Armenian nation will remain
paralysed and static' declared Nalpantian. Sevajian noted similarly that
`all the wealth of our numerous rich will not enhance the nation or make it
wealthier and happier.'


III. Striking down internal enemies

With their dedication to the common people the radicals shifted attention
away from the Diaspora to historic Armenia where the majority of Armenians
lived. There they brought into focus three critical questions - battle
against Armenian elites that were a barrier to the progress of the national
movement, independent Armenian economic development for all and struggle for
democratic Armenian community governance.

Before any direct challenge to Ottoman and Tsarist power, an Armenian
democratic national movement had first to strike down its `internal
enemies', the Church and secular elite, those `types who without conscience
sacrifice the nation to their own private interest (HS269)'. These `internal
enemies' were the main obstacle holding back, debilitating and sabotaging
the building of a movement for national resistance and emancipation. As the
first stage of national emancipation the radicals urged struggle against
these internal elites.

    `Against self-proclaimed princes we defended the people; the exploited
    against the exploiters, the weak against the strong, the mass of the
    nation against the few! (HS63)

War to expose the elites and subject them to the democratic will of the
common people was the watchword of the radical democrats. With focus on
homeland, they took aim at the brutish western-Armenia based
establishment. At the end of 1861 Sevajian wrote:

    `The last year has not only halted national progress but thrown it
    back... In every town of every province the Armenian population is
    enslaved to one or two ambitious and profit-greedy individuals and so
    the people find themselves at the edge of despair. The old, women, girls
    and boys who need the care and protection of our national committee cry
    out in intolerable misery (HS236-7)

Following a journey to historical Armenia he reports:

    `I entered deep into the life of the descendants of Hayk, into the
    depths of the monasteries and Churches. I examined and studied and there
    I saw every evil possible... In virtually every town ruthless exploiting
    authorities, leaders and heads of monasteries were tyrannising without
    conscience. Authorities repress and oppress the wretched people. The
    exploited scream out but there are none to listen or help (HS310).'

Siege however must first be laid to the Church clergy that in the homeland
was more powerful, more savage and greedier than the smaller secular segment
of the elite.

    `If the people were to remain... subject... to the authority of the
    Church they will never be free of slavery and every Constitution or law
    would be a deception.'

Sevajian's most combative writing exposes the clergy's `brutality and
savagery'

    `The Bee notes the ignorance of the Church clergy... it notes among them
    a barbaric freedom, that is freedom to be slavish before the men of
    power... But in its relations to the people the clergy's barbaric
    freedom become acts of brutality and savagery."

Shocking clergy crimes against the people ranged from uncontrolled greed,
theft, murder, sexual abuse, plunder of livestock as well as the charging of
exorbitant prices for religious ceremonies to the devout poor (HS293,
321-322, 324-325). This clergy treats the people `as its servants who are
obliged to meet its every need without any recompense whatsoever (HS287).'

Sevajian's revulsion is volcanic. Addressing the Bishop of Vasbourakan, a
province in the very heart of historic Armenia he writes:

    `Even if your letter of self-exoneration is supported with thousands of
    signatures it will never cover up the endless suffering, the thefts, the
    murders and the abductions of women that... Armenian communities have
    been subjected to under your supervision... Will you ever be able to
    make amends for your destruction, your ruin and your pillage, will you
    ever be able to erase the stain of innocent blood... Will your priestly
    robes be able to conceal the dishonor you have subjected innocent and
    saintly women to?'

`Monasteries were filled with useless, lazy, cheating and greedy men' who
were not just `ruining the monasteries but impoverishing the people and
destroying the nation too (HS289).' A power unto itself the Church was:

     `... answerable to no one for whatever it does or plans. The whole
Armenian nation together, four million people... have no right to ask even
one question' of the Church and its use of its resources (HS288).  Without
any democratic authority to scrutinise and monitor them:

    `These men plundered their own people with greater cruelty and
    ruthlessness than did foreign exploiters or tyrants' (HS289).'

So severe was Church oppression that many abandoned their traditional Church
to take refuge in Catholicism.

    `Hundreds of families send pleas for the Roman Catholic Church to accept
    them... Wearied and damaged by (Armenian Church) governance Armenians
    attribute their transfer to Rome solely to miseries and indifference
    suffered at your hands and those of your satellites (HS324)... In
    numerous places people having reached the limit of despair think of
    religious conversion as a refuge (HS328).'

It was time to end the clergy's pillage of what was the property of the
nation, of the people. Church `monasteries and its lands', its wealth and
resources were all `gifts from the nation (HS285)'. The people's tithes,
taxes and donations, as well as their labour and dedication had built the
Church and worked its fields, its cattle and its orchards. This generosity
was not however `intended to provide a home to the lazy or to those too old
to indulge in excess'.  It was in expectation of a return `for a public
service', for the provision of education and welfare (HS285-286).

In what was an effective call for the nationalisation of the Church Sevajian
demands the subordination of its resources and personnel to the democratic
will of the people! The people-nation must have the right to access Church
accounts; it must have the right to sack useless, thuggish, thieving
priests. The people must have the right to `replace the useless donkeys'
that have misappropriated Church property `with men of their own choice
(HS288).'


IV. Democracy and constitution

Grasping the corrupting and exploitative power of wealth and capital in the
hands of `internal enemies' Nalpantian and Sevajian understood that unless
the moneyed class generally and the Church in the homeland particularly was
subjected to effective and vigilant democratic control the nation's, namely
the people's future was bleak. For the Madras Troika democracy was designed
primarily to consolidate the position of Armenian merchants, traders and
businessmen. For the radical democrats it was an instrument to subject the
corrupt and abusive elites, the wealthy and exploiting merchants and the
feudal Church to the will of common people.

Genuine democracy and the secret ballot were necessary to block `those who
terrify the people by means of their wealth, authority and tyranny (HS82).'

So as a first step of a broader strategic vision the radicals advocated a
vigorous form of constitutional democracy. Ending his `Agriculture as the
Way' Nalpantian asks:

    `What remains for us to do? Speak of the economic question, speak of the
    human being, speak of the nation, to the obscurantists speak to
    scandalise them, to the tyrants declare constitutional rule (emphasis in
    the original), and to the common people salvation (MN484).'

For such democratic battles there were ready conditions in the 1860s.
Armenian life at the time was marked by ceaseless demands for democratic
internal Armenian community government through an elected `Armenian National
Assembly' and an `Armenian National Constitution'. Already `the people are
fed up with those who impose authority and rule by means of wealth alone'.
They have had enough of those `who put money above right (HS89-90)'. Albeit
within the ambit of imperial domination the radicals sought to stretch this
national community constitutionalism to its limits. Active popular community
democracy could limit and define the powers of the Patriarch heading the
Armenian Church and subject Church, Clergy and secular elite too to a degree
of popular democratic control.

The formation of democratic assemblies was not however sufficient in itself
to control the moneyed classes. `Everywhere the Armenian tyrant feels or has
heard that the Constitution will be a huge obstacle, even a final sentence
on its bottomless greed (HS310).' So the rich and powerful would `use every
stratagem and spare no effort' to evade democratic control. The clergy in
particular would resist `the new generation's intervening in affairs of the
Church (HS308)'.

    `(The elites) have sworn to undermine every good order, every
    arrangement and every decision that benefits the nation. Destroying and
    annihilating all the good and beneficial they intend to enthrone their
    own will, their opinion, their faith and their profit (HS154)

Endless vigilance was called for. In the absence of sternest control already
`in many places gold has already found its tongue again' and `through the
power of gold self-proclaimed tyrants once more have re-established their
authority (HS373).' So the call for active democracy, for the rigorous
imposition of constitutional law (HS223-234), for a vibrant free press
(HS170) and freedom of speech and debate (HS209), all necessary to stop
democracy and constitutional assemblies becoming rubber stamps for the
reactionary powers (HS144). To secure popular democracy Sevajian protested
vigorously against wealthy Istanbul being offered 160 assembly seats to
represent 100,000 voting Armenians while the 1.9 million impoverished
homeland Armenians were offered only 60 delegates (HS205).

For effective popular participation in democratic life, to allow the people
to seize control of their future popular enlightenment and education was of
central even commanding importance for all trends of the radical and
democratic movement. The urgency with which the radicals regarded this
enlightenment and education of the people was their stubborn and unwavering
battle to replace classical Armenian with a modern written vernacular spoken
and understood by the common people.

Sevajian insisted that as all their writing, as their entire battle was:

    `...primarily for the common people' (I will) use a language that the
    common people understand... the language they speak in their homes.'

With optimistic tongue he adds:

    `Speaking with the people in their family language `The Bee' brought the
    people back from the edge of the abyss to which they had been condemned
    for eternity by the nation's rulers. It raised the people to a
    consciousness of their rights (HS134).'


IV. The `economic question'

In their struggle for an authentic and genuine democratic national
development the radical democrats put the `economic question' at its
centre. `Nationhood is nothing but an empty word without solving the
economic question' proclaimed Sevajian. Nalpantian was as adamant:

    `If the issue of the economy does not feature at the very centre of
    nation-building, then nation-building has no foundation, is based on
    false premises and is bound to collapse.'

The Madras Troika had also put the economic question at the centre and had
taken the common people into account too. But their overriding drive was the
security of Armenian wealth and business. For the radicals however the
resolution of the `economic question' had to be determined by that which
benefited not the `internal enemies' but the common people. With agriculture
then the dominant form of producing social wealth, Nalpantian argued his
views in 'Agriculture as the True Way'.  The principles apply to whatever
the form of wealth production.

The first step in solving `the economic question' was securing an
independent national economy in the homeland. No nation can be free if it is
economically dependent on others.

    'Only when the nation begins to cultivate its own soil (i.e. develop its
    own economy), can one speak of trade (and economy) that is genuinely
    Armenian and national.'

Both Sevajian and Nalpantian were contemptuous of the dependent, comprador
Armenian merchant and trading class. Trade for nations without their own
independent economy:

    'is not national in anyway whatsoever and has absolutely no relation to
    the national interest...  Armenian merchants become servants of European
    interests...  these people calling themselves traders and merchants are
    in reality only intermediaries for European powers. They do not serve
    the needs of the Armenian people.'

`Those we know as merchants' echoed Sevajian `are nothing more than agents
for the sale of European manufactured goods' in the Ottoman Empire (HS252).

But with the conception of the nation as the common people an independent
economy had to be shaped with a collective and egalitarian vision of
development in historic Armenia (HS245, 250-254). After all Nalpantian
exclaims `the people cannot be truly free if material need forces them to
enslave themselves to another, just to obtain bread for their family (MN).'
`Of what use are a few millionaires amidst starving millions' he ask (MN)?

Nalpantian therefore proposes a system of economy which recognises that the
nation's wealth 'belongs to the people as a whole' and that 'every member of
the community has an equal right to enjoy in perpetuity' the fruits of that
wealth. Albeit with less precision Sevajian is also clear that any genuine
national development had to cater centrally for the common people's social
and economic welfare (HS236, 238)

Unless the economic question is solved thus with the nation, that is the
common people as its prime beneficiaries, all talk of nationhood, of
patriotism, of national history and culture is bombast.

    `You say to me let us preserve our nationality, our language, our
    traditions, etc, etc. Well and good... but preserve these for what...
    Abstract nationhood that by and large until now has been preached among
    Armenians cannot answer this question... That type of abstract preaching
    can never sink roots among the people that beyond and over and above the
    abstract are confronted by real, practical needs (MN474).'



VI. The legacy

The radical democrats were persecuted relentlessly. A heroic and tragic
figure, a brilliant critic of a corrupt elite asphyxiating national life
Sevajian remained in significant measure isolated. Many of his erstwhile
comrades made their peace with the establishment whilst his closest
political ally Mikael Nalpantian languished in a prison in Tsarist
Russia. Isolated, impoverished and ill he was destined to die just turned
44.

A similar fate befell Nalpantian. Attacked and persecuted by the Tsarist
state and Armenian reaction he was starved, imprisoned and driven to an
early death at 37. Near the end of his life he wrote:

    'For a long while now I have learnt to suffer. On the pathway of my life
    I have never experienced any budding roses. My heart is a sea of
    blood. Yet I have so much strength than none could read my condition off
    my face.'

A fuller evaluation of their thought would have to touch on important
limits. Sevajian and Nalpantian envisioned Armenian development within the
multi-national territories of Ottoman and Tsarist states that they believed
would be reformed and revolutionised by the joint efforts of the peoples
within these empires. But they are almost silent on the concrete and
practical questions of relations between Armenian, Turks, Assysrians and
Kurds in the territories they jointly inhabited. Not always seeing
eye-to-eye Sevajian in contrast to Nalpantian appears largely indifferent to
European colonial imperialism. Praising its civilisation, unlike in
Nalpantian, we read no denunciation of its slave trade, genocide and global
brigandage.

For all this, their legacy must live! It contains a radical logic touching
on all the central problems of our time. Their pamphleteering and their
journalism is an inspiring reminder of a richer, broader, inclusive variant
of 19th century democratic ambition as it flared in London and Paris and
elsewhere during the days of Chartism and the 1848 revolutions. In an age of
decayed democracy, of growing inequality, of the degradation of the
environment their vision with its insistence on the good of the common
people, their demand for subjecting money to social control still inspires.

In our age of increasingly reactionary, sectarian and chauvinist nationalism
their guide to internationalist, democratic and non-sectarian concepts of
nationhood is urgent. Rejecting `abstract' `nationhood' among Armenians they
also rejected the religious sectarian definition of nationality. Against the
elites' and particularly the Church's insistence on making Armenian
nationality conditional on membership of the established Armenian Church,
Sevajian and Nalpantian argued a secular conception of nationality embracing
all Armenians irrespective of religion. `We are all of one nation, religion
is one thing the nation another...  (HS105).'

The radicals' democratic non-sectarian nationhood was extended to and
indivisible from opposition to imperialism and from the principle of
equality between all nations. Sevajian and Nalpantian opposed all claims of
national and imperial superiority. `We are not at all happy' Nalpantian
wrote `that one nation exploits another and imposes itself by force of
arms.' He vehemently rejected `all blind fanatical nationalism' that `for
the sake of a piece of stake for itself slaughters another nation's cattle
(MN462)'.

Mikael Nalpantian and Haroutyoun Sevajian were at once patriots and
internationalists. Admiringly Sevajian writes of Nalpantian that he `was a
free thinker, a lover of freedom who desired it not just for his own nation
but for the whole of humanity (HS254)'. As they dedicated themselves to
nation-building the two did not regard the nation as an eternal form. A
historically specific stage of social organisation it would eventually be
superseded they asserted by superior international forms (MN462; HS246).

Nalpantian's and Sevajian's legacy throws down the gauntlet to elites in
Armenia that have disgraced democracy and the nation condemning the vast
majority to penury and forcing hundreds of thousands to flee their homeland
for bread and butter to feed their families. Excavating the radical
democratic legacy, using it as the intellectual brickwork for building a
strategy for survival can help contribute to averting Armenia's and indeed
the globe's apparently unstoppable slide into what Paryour Sevak aptly
called 'the new dark-ages'.

NOTES:

Note 1: Haig Ghazaryan `Socio-Economic and Political Conditions of Western
Armenia - 1800-1870', 670pp, 1967, Yerevan. Hereafter referenced as HG
followed by page number thus HG123. This is a hugely valuable resource rich
with data and quotes from sources of the period under study.

Note 2: Mikael Nalpantian `Selected Works', 604pp, 1979, Yerevan. Hereafter
referenced as MN followed by page number thus MN123

Note 3: Haroutyoun Sevajian `Journalism', 555pp, 1960, Yerevan. Hereafter
referenced as HS followed by page number thus HS123

Note 4: Contrary to chauvinist falsifiers of Armenian history, the 19th
century history of the Ottoman Empire provides plenty of evidence that
Ottoman-era Armenian nationalism together with that of other small nations
was a direct defensive reaction to the ruthless drive of Turkish bourgeois
nationalism not the other way round. The tired old claim by these falsifiers
that Armenian nationalism was an imperialist manufactured movement is easily
rebutted.



-
Eddie Arnavoudian holds degrees in history and politics from
Manchester, England, and is Armenian News's commentator-in-residence on
Armenian literature. His works on literary and political issues have
also appeared in Harach in Paris, Nairi in Beirut and Open Letter in
Los Angeles.


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Asbarez: We Have Lost a Patriot and a Revolutionary

Hacob and Mina Shirvanian cut the ribbon to the Shirvanian Youth Center in Gyumri in July 2016

BY ARA KHACHATOURIAN

Perhaps what defined Hacob Shirvanian’s unwavering commitment to the Armenian Cause was his father, Vagharshsk’s prominent role in the defense of Van-Vasbouragan during the Armenian Genocide. That history and the knowledge that persistence and resolve will lead to perseverance made Hacob a true national hero.

Hacob Shirvanian passed away on Thursday, leaving behind a legacy of activism, benevolence and courage. More important, however, was his zealous patriotism, which propelled him to become such a staunch believer in justice for the Armenian people and an advocate for advancing the new generations of Armenians who would carry the torch to further the aspiration of our Nation.

Few years ago, Hacob said that his only wish was for the youth in Armenia to prosper and flourish so our homeland can be strong and filled with brightness and innovation. This was immediately before he announced a generous donation, as a result of which today hundreds of young people in Gyumri call the Shirvanian Youth Center a home away from home and, on a daily basis, are engaged in preserving our culture, heritage, language and our country’s future.

Hacob’s passing truly leaves a void in our community because he touched so many individuals through his drive for advancement, his uncanny ability to elevate those around him and his infectious personality, which made it a delight to be around him.

His imprint on countless Armenian organizations, schools and cultural centers have made it possible for generations to advance and become resilient fighters of a cause, which Hacob believed was just and justified.

Hacob was also a staunch reader and supporter of Asbarez. Every time I would see Hacob he would always bring up an article or a commentary that he had read in the paper. The discussions that would often ensue would always be grounded in our shared conviction of strengthening our homeland and our nation. I welcomed his criticism, because I knew it came from his desire for others to always strive to do better and I became better person—a better editor—for it.

Last December, Hacob lost his soul mate and inspiration—his rock—his wonderful wife, Mina,  herself an advocate, activist and a revolutionary. Together, they inspired and humbled us. Now Hacob has joined his beloved Mina, and together they can rest in peace, leaving us to advance their individual and collective legacies.

On behalf of all of us at Asbarez, we offer our most heartfelt condolences to the Shirvanian family.

Chess: Riga Tech University Open: Armenians on top

by Conrad Schormann
8/18/2018 – The Riga Tech University Open from August 6th to 12th was won by a pair of Armenian grandmasters: Robert Hovhannisyan and Manuel Petrosyan, each scoring 7½ / 9. Hovhannisyan was undefeated with six wins; Petrosyan scored a whopping seven wins, one loss and a draw. Among the trailing pack on 7 / 9 were the young and talented Russian GM Andrey Esipenko, and the German GM Rasmus Svane. | Photos: Tournament page

An impressive phalanx of young, strong grandmasters faced off at the RTU-Open in Latvia, among them the cream of the German crop: Bluebaum, Donchenko, Svane, Schroeder, Kollars — a series of (roughly) 2600s, which testifies that at the top of the German chess the "young savages" are gaining ground. In Riga they could expect both stronger opposition and a threefold higher prize fund (€15,000 euros) than in the German Championship.

Of this group, Svane performed the best with five wins and four draws to reach a tie for 3rd-9th places. The biggest piece of the prize cake was sliced off by two Armenians: Robert Hovhannisyan and Manuel Petrosyan landed in shared first with 7½ / 9, followed by local hero Igor Kovalenko and upcoming Russian star Andrey Esipenko among two of the seven players with 7/9.


The 16-year-old Esipenko is going to be one to watch in the coming years. He has been steadily moving up the ranks of the Top Juniors list — currently at number 18.

In the seventh round, he dismantled IM Cruz Lledo's dubious novelty 9…f5 in the Queen's Gambit Accepted.

Also in the seventh round, Hovhannisyan took down his main rival GM Igor Kovalenko with a killer blow: 

Petrosyan won his last three games to pull into a tie for first place including a fine effort in the last round against local Latvian GM Nikita Meshkovs.

White has been dutifully "playing for two results" and has managed to get his opponent into a position where he has no constructive moves. But 34…h6 proved to be quite destructive after the nice manoeuvre, 35.Nc3 Re5 36.Rxe5 Qxe5 37.Rd5! Qf6 38.Rf5, targeting the f7 pawn. Black is helpless.

For the German delegation, the tournament went pretty well. After two thirds she was closed on the upper ranks to find — with one exception: Matthias Bluebaum started poorly (2/4) and even had to look up to his father Karl-Ernst (Elo 2253) playing on a higher board. 

Alexander Donchenko missed with 5/6 in a superior position the jump to 6/7. He lost first the thread, then the game (see below) and ended finally with 6/9 in the "pocket money" prize group.
Dimitrij Kollars should be even less satisfied, as he scored 5/8 but lost the last round without a fight. He was in good company, however, with the prodigious new GM Praggnanandhaa among those in the 5/9 score group after he "castled" to finish the tournament — an indication of just how strong the RTU Open has become.

Kreisl, from Austria, scored his second GM-norm after pragmatically taking a short draw with white in the ninth round to finish with a performance of 2629.

Armenian troops open fire to retaliate to Azeris’ provocations

ARKA , Armenia
Aug 13 2018

YEREVAN, August 13. /ARKA/. Armenian troops, deployed along its border with Azerbaijan’s exclave Nakhichevan, opened fire in retaliation to Azerbaijani troops’ provocations, a spokesman for Armenian defense ministry Artsrun Hovhannisyan said in his Facebook page. He also said that Azerbaijani troops are likely to have suffered casualties.

During a visit to Moscow late last week Armenian Defense Minister David Tonoyan had a meeting with his Russian opposite number Sergey Shoigu and presented the situation on the line of contact between Armenian troops in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) and along Armenia-Azerbaijan state border.

The Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic is a historic Armenian territory, now an exclave of Azerbaijan. -0-

Yerevan: Azerbaijan does not allow OSCE monitoring in Nakhijevan direction

Arminfo, Armenia
Aug 1 2018
Yerevan: Azerbaijan does not allow OSCE monitoring in Nakhijevan direction

Yerevan July 31

Tatevik Shahunyan. Azerbaijan does not allow organizing OSCE monitoring in Nakhijevan direction, Armenian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Tigran Balayan stated this at a press conference.

At the same time he stressed that the Armenian side attaches importance to conducting OSCE monitoring, including in the Nakhijevan direction, since such monitorings are a deterrent mechanism. Yerevan appealed to the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk with a request to conduct monitoring, but Baku refused to conduct monitoring in the Nakhijevan direction," Balayan said.

Balayan also complained that for more than two weeks Baku has not allowed representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross to meet captured RA citizen Karen Ghazaryan, who suffers from a psychological disorder. "It has been already two weeks there is no information about Karen Ghazaryan, a citizen of Armenia who was captured by Azerbaijani side, Azerbaijan harshly violates the Geneva Conventions, preventing the ICRC representatives from visiting the captive," Balayan said.

Պետական այցով Հայաստան է ժամանել Իտալիայի նախագահը

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Նախագահ Արմեն Սարգսյանի հրավերով երկրօրյա պետական այցով Հայաստանի Հանրապետություն է ժամանել Իտալիայի նախագահ Սերջիո Մատարելան` դստեր Լաուրա Մատարելայի հետ:


Մատարելայի գլխավորած պատվիրակության կազմում են Իտալիայի արտաքին գործերի եւ միջազգային համագործակցության նախարար Էնցո Մոավերո Միլանեսին, պաշտոնատար այլ անձինք: