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‘No To Plunder’ Announces Public Rally, Says They May Block Baghramyan Avenue Again (Video)

July 13, 2015 By administrator

no-to-plunderYEREVAN (ArmInfo)—The rule of President Serzh Sarkissian and Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan will be considered “inappropriate” if the three demands of the No To Plunder movement are not met, the youth group announced on Monday. A public march and rally to the Armenian Prosecutor General’s office to take place on Tuesday, July 14, was also announced.

No To Plunder did not say if it would call for Sarkissian’s and Abrahamyan’s resignation, but continued to reiterate their three demands and said that if those demands were not met, the current government’s rule would be considered “inappropriate”.

The demands of the youth group include the reversal of the decision by the Public Services Regulatory Commission to raise electricity tariffs by 6.93 drams (over 16%), to reconsider the current tariff rates and lower them, and to punish the police officers who used excessive force to disperse and arrest protesters and journalists during the police crackdown on the sit-in on Marshal Baghramyan Avenue on June 23. The members said that any other demands reported by the press are false.

On Tuesday, July 14, the group plans to hold a march to the Prosecutor General’s Office and a subsequent rally, demanding that police officers who used excessive force in the early morning of June 23 be punished. City authorities have been notified of the planned march.

“We are glad that the relevant bodies are investigating the violence against journalists but we think that everyone who used violence against protesters must be punished. All detained protesters were subjected to violence and badmouthed but none of the officials standing there interfered,” said Maxim Sargsyan, an organizer of the No To Plunder movement.

Armenian Police Chief Vladimir Gasparyan apologized to reporters earlier for the actions of police officers on June 23, stating that “an official investigation will soon shed light on what happened.”

“There have obviously been some omissions which I noticed in work, especially with regard to mass media representatives. I apologize for that. I ordered an official investigation and we will deal with the matter. I know that technical equipment was damaged. The police will reimburse the reporters for material damage,” said Gasparyan.

One police officer has since been demoted and eight others have been reprimanded for their role in the crackdown on June 23. An internal inquiry by the Yerevan police is still underway.

Members of the No To Plunder movement also dismissed reports about the alleged break-up of the movement.

“We are all together. There are people who are affiliated with political parties but it does not matter, we are all citizens of Armenia.  Simply, certain people have problems with time and cannot always be on our side,” said Artush Chibukhchyan.

The group has not decided whether it will participate in the audit in the Electric Networks of Armenia (ENA). According to one member of the initiative, Sofia Hovsepyan, No To Plunder has set up its own commission to examine the issue after the audit of the ENA was announced.

“Every year, they conduct a financial audit in the company, but every year the electricity tariffs are raised. Everything will be meaningless unless they conduct a technical audit. We shall decide on our involvement after they say what kind of audit they are going to conduct,” said Hovsepyan.

In response to a question about the group’s decision to leave Marshal Baghramyan Avenue before their demands were met, Maxim Sargsyan said that, “whatever happened, happened. When we unblocked Baghramyan we continued the protest at Liberty Square. We did not go home, this is a wrong opinion.”

Sargsyan added that they are likely to block Baghramyan and Mashtots Avenues again if authorities ignore their demands. The group is coordinating with its members and continues to meet with citizens in other provinces, according to Rima Sargsyan.

“If we act within the law, it does not mean we abandoned the struggle and the idea of rallies. Nothing of the kind,” said Chibukchyan.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Block Baghramyan, electric yerevan, No To Plunder

Small Electric Yerevan Spark — A Big Challenge for the Armenian Government

July 13, 2015 By administrator

By Hasmik Grigoryan,

photo by gagrule

photo by gagrule

Analyst at the Analytical Centre on Globalization and Regional Cooperation and member of the Leaders of Tomorrow community

The freedom of speech and freedom of assembly are fundamental rights in a democracy. These rights are also enshrined in the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia.

News about the social movement that started in Armenia in June 2015 instantly spread around the world and was covered by world-famous TV channels, newspapers, and web portals. Demonstrations in Yerevan sparked after the decision by Armenia’s Public Services Regulatory Commission (PSRC) to raise the prices of electricity by 16.7%, effective from the beginning of August. The protests became known as “Electric Yerevan” and went viral in the social media. The Electric Networks of Armenia is a monopoly owned by Russia.

Thousands of people gathered in Freedom Square on 19 June led by the “No to Plunder” social movement in order to protest the government’s decision. The march in the city unexpectedly grew into a mass sit-in in the center of Baghramyan Avenue – about 100 meters away from the Residence of the President. The protests were dispersed early in the morning of 23 June, when over 200 peaceful protesters were detained. The dispersion triggered a larger wave of demonstrations: people stayed in the central street day and night.

One cannot imagine the 21st century without social movements. Social movements happen when people have disagreement in the political, social, economic, or other fields. They are a part of healthy democracy and help the government to reverse its decisions when they are against the interest of the people. In November and December 2010, a series of demonstrations broke out in the United Kingdom. These were student-led protests against an increase in tuition fees by the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government. One could witness the demonstration in Germany, which is one of the strongest economies in Europe. The protests took place in July 2010, against the decision on flight taxes.

Social movements play a huge role in new democracies, as well, in countries in transition towards a democracy, or in authoritarian regimes. In some cases, civil movements transform into political ones and grow into revolutions (for example, the Maidan in Ukraine), and in others, they remain civil, but make an impact. Different theories describe social movements in a different way. Political Sociology for the 21st Century (Research in Political Sociology), Volume 12 (2003) gives different descriptions of social movements. It notes, for instance, that Charles Tilly considers movements as challengers who don’t have permanent access to decision makers. And once succeeded, they gain access to them.

Electric Yerevan became a big challenge for the Government of Armenia. It started in small numbers and grew, becoming a huge SOS to the Government. On the one hand, the Russia owned company and the Armenian government are in a difficult situation, and on the other, people who occupied the central street of Yerevan posed a very specific social demand–the demand to cancel the decision.

What is specific to Electric Yerevan is that the protests were not led by any political leader, from either the ruling or opposition parties. It was a purely social movement led by young people and joined by the senior generation. The majority of people did not have any affiliation with the government, business, or political parties. Another important feature was that, during the protests and tense situations, when the police were about to disperse the protests, a “live wall” was “erected” by civil society leaders and some members of parliament. People did not leave the central street for 19 days.

A new culture has now been created in Armenia and in the post-Soviet area, a culture of exclusively social movements, “live walls” serving as a deterrent, and this way, the police and the government are afraid to engage in violence against the demonstrators. The President of Armenia had to announce that an international audit will be conducted, and in the meantime, the burden of the price hike will be born by the government. This is a concession by the Armenian government. However, although not in the central street, but now, this time in Freedom square, people continue protesting, as they consider that what will be paid by the government will still be the money of the Armenian citizens.

The Government of Armenia faced a challenge. It has resolved the situation temporarily, but central Baghramyan Avenue can be occupied by protesters at any time again, if the mistake is repeated. The social movement that started from a small number and grew to 20,000, gaining extensive international coverage, put a challenge in front of the government.

It is time for the Armenian government to rethink its internal and external policy; otherwise, the scenario will repeat, possibly growing larger or transforming into a political movement.

This post was written in the light of the topic “Proudly Small” debated at the 45th St. Gallen Symposium held on May 6-8, 2015.

Published on huffingtonpost

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: big chalange, electric yerevan

Armenia: The power of Electric Yerevan

July 6, 2015 By administrator

Karena Avedissian 6 July 2015
armenia sizedStrong-arm tactics and cynical compromises are yet to send Yerevan’s protesters home. Is this the beginning of the end for the politics of old in Armenia?  published on opendemocracy

On 22 June, roughly 2,000 protesters gathered in front of the Opera House at Yerevan’s Freedom Square to protest planned hikes in electricity tariffs. From Freedom Square, they marched towards the presidential residence at 26 Baghramyan Avenue to voice their demands, but were blocked by police. In response, the protesters sat down where they were and remained through the night. The next morning, police forcibly dispersed the protest with water cannons, and detained around 250 people.

The dramatic images of the dispersal and video clips showing plainclothes officers harassing and attacking journalists galvanised the city. Personal anecdotes from protesters on social media describing the use of excessive force were widely circulated. One account in particular was shared widely online and on the street: a girl, around 17 years old, spoke of how she had been attacked by a plainclothes officer. Later, the girl lost consciousness after hitting her head on the asphalt. She ended up in hospital.

The next evening, around twice as many protesters showed up at Baghramyan.

#ElectricYerevan

A few days later, the numbers of protesters peaked at around 20,000. Although the numbers of protesters have abated since then, the barricades on Baghramyan Avenue remain.

The protests have now entered the next stage. Organisers are now trying to implement better management, disseminating protester guidelines (no alcohol, mutual respect, tidiness), and organising a general assembly with broad representation from civic initiatives and thematic working groups open to the public for discussing issues related to the protests.

Although it is predominantly young people that pull all-nighters on Baghramyan Avenue, central Yerevan sees a much broader representation of society at night. This fact, as well as protests in the cities of Gyumri and Vanadzor, further demonstrate Armenian society’s wider support for the movement.

Russian Connection

Little covered by international media, evidence of corruption in and gross mismanagement of Armenia’s energy monopoly, the Electric Networks of Armenia (ENA), owned by Russian Energy Company Inter RAO UES, has been a key grievance of protesters.

ENA has accumulated debt by habitually overpaying suppliers and contractors, as well as renting luxury cars and apartments. Director of the ENA, Yevgeny Bibin, who has publicly admitted his mismanagement of the company, was invited to a meeting by the Armenian Regulatory Commission to explain the proposed tariff hikes and to defend himself against allegations of corruption. The fact that Bibin did not even show up to the meeting only added to people’s feelings of injustice and resentment toward the proposed hikes.

The corruption and mismanagement of ENA reflect wider problems of governance and the political environment in Russia. When Russian state-owned companies (in which theft is not the exception but the norm) take over infrastructure in neighbouring countries, this is, in effect, ‘exporting corruption’.

This process strengthens Russia’s hand in the region, where the local elite see Moscow both as an administrative model to emulate and the power that guarantees their personal political survival (as long as they are malleable to Russian interests).

Although the Electric Yerevan protests are not anti-Russian in nature, against the backdrop of these geopolitical realities, these demonstrations are nevertheless a display of citizens’ dissatisfaction with their leaders’ lack of accountability.

Deals offered to Armenia by Russia in quick succession over the past few days belie Moscow’s stake in the matter. In the course of just a few days, Russia offered to hand over Russian soldier Valery Permyakov (who murdered a family of seven in Gyumri earlier this year), to extradite Armenian truck driver Hrachya Harutyunyan (currently serving out a prison sentence in Russia for a traffic accident), and $200 million in arms. If any appeasement was expected for these overtures, it did not happen.

Furthermore, information and analysis coming from Kremlin-aligned information sources demonstrate that Moscow is incapable of understanding civil society in Armenia. Viewed through a Kremlin lens, the Armenian citizenry cannot attempt to hold its own government accountable for corruption and abuses without a hidden hand or greater conspiracy being involved.

Russian state media has largely framed of Electric Yerevan as stemming from ‘outside influence’. This response has only further insulted Armenians, denying them their agency and discounting the legitimacy of their grievances.

Anatomy of protest

Electric Yerevan is the latest manifestation of a tradition of dissent and contention against government abuses, which include successful protests against mining projects in Armenia’s north and planned transport fare hikes for Yerevan.

The informal activist networks, established through face-to-face interaction and routines that resulted in solidarity building during those contentious actions, set the stage for Electric Yerevan.

Taking into account this history of contention, as well as the non-democratic nature of the Armenian context, it becomes clear why Electric Yerevan is structured in such a loose, informal way. In non-democratic states such as Armenia, NGOs and social movement organisations seldom constitute the most salient component of civil society when it mobilises. Rather, loose and horizontally structured networks of people forming a more informally organised movement emerge as more significant.

In Armenia, where a ‘power vertical’ similar to Russia’s exists, there is no straightforward process for movements to make open coalitions with institutions or establish structured channels of interaction with political elites. As the Armenian state is incapable of responding to or channeling dissent in institutionalised ways, repression or cooptation from the state emerge as the main danger to movements.

The loose, horizontal structure of the Electric Yerevan thus presents a significant obstacle to the Armenian state’s capability to attack or dismantle it. This structure is both a strength of the movement and a logical adaptation to the realities of the Armenian political arena.

Challenges, advantages

The demands of the protesters are specific: to repeal the electricity tariff hike, to review the current fare, to hold the police accountable for the excessive use of force on 23 June. Chances for the movement to succeed in its demands depend on several factors.

Two major obstacles to the movement exist. First, there are no major elite conflicts within the halls of power that might prompt officials to look for support outside, potentially allowing challengers such as Electric Yerevan a way into the official political arena.

Second, there are no influential elite allies inside the state apparatus that could offer material and symbolic resources to the movement or pressure for movement goals. The local soap opera celebrities and MPs who attempted to form a ‘human shield’ at the barricades have yet to offer any substantive benefits to the movement beyond a show of moral support. President Serzh Sargsyan’s power vertical, where formal mechanisms of policy making are limited to those in or allied with the ruling Republican Party, has assured the exclusion of outsiders to administrative support. The few oppositional MPs who support the movement are themselves largely marginalised and excluded from power.

On the positive side, Armenia’s relative media freedom is as an important resource for the movement. Although a large part of Armenian media remains under the control of official and semi-official Yerevan, alternative media sources, such as Civilnet and smaller independent publications such as Hetq and Epress, speak to movement participants directly, allowing them to represent themselves.

These channels have provided a powerful counter narrative against mainstream media representations of the movement, which remain predominantly negative.

Social media, and Facebook in particular, has also become an important site for disseminating ideas, coordinating action, and drawing in participants. Rather than threatening to replace bodies-in-the-street action, it augments it, offering an important alternative space where participants can circumvent state-controlled media constraints, disseminate information and counter any misinformation.

Online memes poking fun at the Russian media’s extremely politicised ‘colour revolution’ style coverage and humorous clips of Armenia’s thuggish police chief Vova Gasparyan shouting overlaid on well-known movie scenes have enlivened and confronted serious topics. These practices can transcend activist boundaries, creating common ground with wider audiences.

A second advantage of social media has been the way it has attracted international attention and coverage of the protests. In part due to the post-Soviet sphere’s history of ‘Colour Revolutions’, any confrontation in this part of the world automatically attracts the world’s scrutiny as the ‘next revolution’.

Although much of this attention has encouraged faulty depictions and comparisons of Electric Yerevan to revolutions in Ukraine and elsewhere, it is clear that the international media attention has constrained the ability or willingness of the authorities to crack down.

What next?

While the protest’s stated goals are limited to a narrow set of aims, the movement is about much more. It involves a much wider range of claim making around social and political issues, all falling under the umbrella of transparency and accountability.

It is not a given that the tariffs will be repealed or reviewed, or that the police will be held accountable. But if judged within a broader framework of bringing cultural and social change, then the movement can be a success. The sustained social interaction and the expressing of values and grievances through these protests have reinforced peoples’ identities around values and norms related to contention. This can take the movement through lulls in mobilisation and increase participants’ likelihood of future mobilisation when the time comes.

Electric Yerevan’s protests have provided a chance to tie individual identities to collective ones through contention – a crucial resource of citizen empowerment in a non-democratic state such as Armenia.

Chants of ‘no to plunder’ and ‘we own this country’ heard on Baghramyan speak of common cause: the rejection of exploitative opaque governance and the conscious desire of protesters to reassert their identities as Armenian citizens – with the rights and responsibilities which that entails.

Standfirst image: Electric Yerevan protesters on Baghramyan Avenue. 

All photographs courtesy of the author.

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: Armenian, electric yerevan, power

Young people show readiness to be masters of their country – Ruben Babayan #ElectricYerevan

July 5, 2015 By administrator

f55991892164e6_5599189216520.thumbNumerous things need revising in Armenia, which requires system reforms, Ruben Babayan, Director of the Hovhannes Tumanyan Puppet Theater, told Tert.am as he summed up the current stage of protests against an electricity price hike.

“The more the movement contributes to system reforms the more benefit to both the movement and public. The more it focuses on the local problem the sooner it will be less interesting,” he said.

Each phenomenon must follow its own course.

“One does not need to be too wise to understand that the planned rise in electricity prices is not the first case. And it is not this individual case that requires a solution. Rather, we need a solution to prevent such recurrences,” Mr Babayan said.

The young people showed their readiness to be masters of their country.

“I think this is the most important factor.”

Mr Babayan advises against fear of the protests turning into a political movement.

“I think it is senseless fear. If it is a democratic movement, each person can voice his or her opinion.”

As regards the problem of few leaders, he said:

“In any case, it is the people leading the masses that ensure progress by suggesting new ideas. The organizers are somewhat not sure of their own strength because they often hear talks that they will find it difficult to gather again if they break up now. I think each movement has its stages.”

He pointed out different ways of resolving problems. The more ways the sooner the aim can be achieved.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: electric yerevan, masters

Hard-Nosed Armenian Police Chief Draws Mockery, Anger #ElectricYerevan

June 29, 2015 By administrator

By Claire Bigg

June 29, 2015

hard-nose-policUp until two weeks ago, Vladimir Gasparian had rarely, if ever, made headlines outside his home country.

But with downtown Yerevan rocked by one of the most dramatic street protests to date in Armenia, the country’s combative police chief is now finding himself in the limelight.

 

 

Gasparian has been blowing hot and cold on protesters of the so-called “Electric Yerevan” protest movement, who have been in the street since June 19 to denounce the authorities’ decision to raise energy prices.

A former army chief known for his hard-nosed methods, he has been paying almost daily visits to the activists blocking the central Marshal Baghramian Avenue, in turn scolding and seeking to placate them.

“Switch off this microphone! Give it to me!” he ordered the protesters on June 28, menacingly wagging a finger at them and giving them “30 minutes” to clear the scene.

A day earlier, Gasparian had adopted a more conciliatory tone, promising a quick resolution of the energy issue following President Serzh Sarkisian’s move to temporarily suspend the price hike. He went on to suggest that Armenia could soon regain control of its electricity network, which is entirely owned by the Russian energy company Inter-RAO.

The police chief has also lashed out at a lawmaker who came out to support the protesters and at several journalists.

Asked for a comment by a Ukrainian reporter on June 28, Gasparian barked “No!” at the journalist, who was swiftly pushed aside by his security guards.

“Get out of my sight!” he angrily shouted at another journalist. “Do something for this country instead of wagging your tongue!” He stormed away after calling the journalist a “calf.

So far, Gasparian’s gruff tactics have failed to impress the protesters.They have met his scolding with loud booing and continue to demand that Sarkisian revoke the energy price hike. They are also calling for the prosecution of police officers involved in a violent attempt to break up the protest on June 23.

Part of the reason for Gasparian’s mediation fiasco is what is widely seen as the underlying cause of the protest — anger over years of alleged corruption and unaccountability within Armenian authorities, embodied by officials like himself.

Protesters have been quick to mock the police chief on social media.

A spoof video of Chipolino, a Soviet-era cartoon about a population of vegetables oppressed by a ruthless leader called Lord Tomato, is making the rounds online.

The clip features the episode in which Lord Tomato’s police chief reprimands the vegetables for “breathing less” after the government introduced a new tax on air. The video is overlaid with Gasparian’s comments urging protesters to “come to their senses.”

Online critics have also used Gasparian’s now-famous tirade as a soundtrack for Braveheart, the medieval drama film starring Mel Gibson as the 13th-century Scottish warrior who led the Scots against English troops.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: electric yerevan, hard-nosed, police chief, Protest

Watch Live streaming from Yerevan 1in.am LIVE #ElectricYerevan

June 27, 2015 By administrator

 

 

Electric yerevan 9

Filed Under: News, Videos Tagged With: electric yerevan, Protest

Week Two on Horizon: “#ElectricYerevan” powers on

June 26, 2015 By administrator

Bell-board-Week-two-electric-yerevanA protest against proposed electricity tariff hikes has entered its second week in Yerevan and in some communities outside the Armenian capital. The stand-off has turned into a sit-in that has its epicenter near the Presidential Residence on Baghramyan Avenue, and as momentum seems to be growing, there are expectations and some apprehensions of what the weekend and beyond hold.

Led by the “No to Plunder” civil initiative, the movement has been dubbed “Electric Yerevan” and with crowds of up to 10,000 demonstrators, has gotten the attention of international media – some of whom are making comparisons to incidents that sparked revolution in Ukraine.

In Yerevan, however, leaders of the resistance to the proposed 16 percent hike (effective August 1), insist that their cause is social, and not political, and they simply want to be heard, again, as the voice of the people.

Some media reports have speculated that protest leaders want negotiations with President Serzh Sargsyan, but those leaders say their demands are clear and it is up to the president whether to meet them.

“There are no expectations for a new meeting,” one of the members of the initiative, founding president of amateur bicycle riding and tourism federation Arman Antonyan told ArmeniaNow.

After an early demonstration was met with force (water cannons) and detention of more than 200, police have promised to remain calm so long as the protestors do, too. Both sides kept order, and the result has been growing numbers that opponents of the tariff hike hope to see grow.

“The president was here before leaving for Brussels (to attend a European Peoples Party summit), if he wanted to change something, he would have. Now, maybe, we should press with more numbers of people, because changes take place only with united forces. If we become 60-70,000, our demand will become heard,” Eduard Mkhitaryan, member of No to Plunder civil initiative told ArmeniaNow.

They are not ready to go for any compromise. President Serzh Sargsyan, who returned from Brussels on Thursday, still leaves protestors’ demands unanswered, and the government warns about electricity interruptions, if the tariff is not increased.

Meanwhile representatives of the government wrote on social networks that as a matter of fact the government has nothing to do with increasing or decreasing the tariff, as doing so is the responsibility of the Public Services regulatory Commission (PSRC).
Political analyst Edgar Vardanyan from the Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS) is sure that negotiations with the government might harm the civil movement.

“In non-democratic countries movements that were initiated to reach radical changes and succeeded, de facto negotiations with the government were run only when it became clear that the movement won, however, there was need to record a “soft” victory to avoid unnecessary shocks,” Vardanyan wrote on his Face book account.

“In the beginning of the movement or in the midway negotiating with the authorities almost always harmed civil movements,” he concluded.

But the absence of negotiations has created a wall, and negotiations will be very complicated, although they seem to be easy; economist Ashot Khurshudyan, an expert with the International Center for Human Development said.

“It is complicated, because we should find a solution which will be accepted by the sides.”

“The wall situation is the one when the sides realize that a mutual solution is necessary, and the alternatives are bad for the both of them. In this case, a mutual solution means, for the government – people go home, or at least liberate the Avenue moving to another spot. The protestors want the same, only when their condition is met, when their voice is heard (the meaning of closing the avenue is always the same – “do not ignore our problem”),” Khurshudyan said.

The “wall” grows bigger if the issue is politicized, leaders of the movement say.

“This is solely a civil initiative, and follows only one goal – suspension of electricity tariff increase. The youth has stood up and will go till the end,” initiative leader Arman Antonyan said.

“Now there are MPs with us, both opposition and republican. They come and go, but nobody will make a speech. This movement is self-initiated, no loud announcements will be made,” Mkhitaryan added.

By Sara Khojoyan
ArmeniaNow reporter

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: electric yerevan, week two, Yerevan

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