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Steady State Archive

Mariam Sukhudyan: still speaking for the trees

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

An update for readers on Mariam Sukhudyan, the Armenian enviro who was charged with slander last year for publicly alleging abuse of students at a Yerevan school for disabled children at which Sukhudyan volunteered. As Onnik Krikorian reported in December for TOL, Sukhudyan was convinced the charges were retaliation for her campaigning against massive tree-cutting in northeast Armenia’s Teghut forest to make way for a planned copper mine. She was offered plea deals by prosecutors but refused them all.

After meeting Sukhudyan earlier this month at Social Innovation Camp Caucasus in Tbilisi - a two-day event (co-sponsored by TOL) at which teams of techies, activists, bloggers, and others brainstormed media-savvy solutions to social problems - I’m pleased to report that she’s out of the legal woods: all charges arising from her school whistle-blowing were dropped in March.

And, freed from requirements that she remain in Yerevan pending the resolution of her case, she has taken her activism to a new level, hatching an idea for an anti-deforestation web project that won first prize at the SICamp (another disclosure: I was a judge on the panel). She and a multinational team will get $3,000 to realize their plan for Save the Trees, an online platform for Armenians to report on illegal tree cutting in their communities. They hope to expand the idea to neighboring countries.

Meanwhile the campaign to save Teghut suffered a setback 24 March when, for the third time, an Armenian court threw out environmental NGO EcoDar’s suit against the project, ruling the organization was not a party of interest in the matter. EcoDar has said it will take the case to European courts; mining is set to begin in Teghut next year.

EcoDar has produced a video documentary about Teghut, an English-subtitled copy of which Sukhudyan offered me in Tbilisi. You can watch it below.

Teghut: Bread of the Children from Transitions Online on Vimeo.

At the frozen front

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

WIth diplomatic progress on Nagorno-Karabakh still glacial, the BBC has a nice bit of on-the-ground reporting today, balancing the usual mix of cautious optimism and bellicosity from Baku and Yerevan with glimpses of the tense communities, ghost towns and concrete trenches of the disputed territory. Notwithstanding Azerbaijan’s recent military build-up and rumors of Russian arms shipments to Armenia, the Beeb concludes that for now “there appears to be no imminent prospect of war.”

Maybe somebody should get the word to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev, whom Mosnews.com quotes today as declaring his country “is ready to restore its territorial intergrity by military means any time.” Perhaps Baku’s president-for-life isn’t subscribing to the World Service.