Ending a two-week anti-Serzh Sargsyan march that kicked off in Gyumri that wound its way throughout various towns in Armenia, Civil Contract political party head Nikol Pashinyan and supporters reached Yerevan on April 13.
The “Im Kayl” (My Step) march, an amalgam of citizens opposed to ex-Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s likely election as the country’s next prime minister, ended in Yerevan’s Liberty Square where several thousand people were waiting to hear what the movement’s leadership would propose in terms of a specific strategy.
Pashinyan had told reporters that the plan was to bring Yerevan life to a halt, blocking traffic and staging sit-downs in strategic locations.
Before reaching Liberty Square, the marchers headed for Yerevan State University, demanding a face-to-face meeting with Rector Aram Simonyan.
They wanted to confront Simonyan and charge him with turning the university into a tool used by Serzh Sargsyan and the ruling Republican Party of Armenia to “enslave students entering into adulthood”.
In Pashinyan’s words, the university had become a “den of the Republican Party Mafiosi”.
The marchers pushed their way in, demanding to see Simonyan, but the rector never appeared. The joke appearing in the social media was that the rector had hid under a desk.
Pashinyan and the activists left the university and proceeded to Liberty Square.
Taking the impromptu installed stage on the steps of the Opera House, Pashinyan told the crowd that the movement’s number one priority would be to prevent Sargsyan’s election as prime minister and forever remove him from a position of government power.
Pashinyan began a rhetorical critique of Sargsyan’s last ten years as president of Armenia, citing the lack of any progress in tackling systematic corruption, halting emigration from the country, and the poor preparedness of the country’s military.
The firebrand parliamentary deputy, who leads the Yelk Alliance Faction in the National Assembly, then called out Sargsyan for breaking an earlier promise not to seek the office of prime minister, describing Sargsyan’s argument that ensuring Armenia’s continued security was the main reason he couldn’t just walk away and retire from politics.
Pashinyan shot this justification full of holes, reminding the crowd that the army, under Sargsyan’s tenure as both defense minister, prime minister and president had fallen woefully behind Azerbaijan when it comes to procuring modern military equipment.
Pashinyan noted that Armenian soldiers on the frontline, in Artsakh and along Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan are equipped with secondhand military equipment dating back to the 1980s and that families of the soldiers are forced to send them clothes and other basic items.
He also declared that if enough people show up in support, the movement planned to encircle the National Assembly to prevent deputies from staging an election on April 17 to select the country’s next prime minister, a position with expanded powers under the new constitution that sets the stage for Armenia to transition into a parliamentary form of government.
When the speeches en...
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