Document #1277510
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Information on the treatment of Armenians in Ukraine could not be found among the sources consulted by the Research Directorate. However, the following information may be relevant.
Various sources place the size of the ethnic Armenian community in Ukraine at between 57,000 (Joshua Project n.d.) and 60,000 persons (Ethnic Groups Worldwide 1998, 92; Professor, n.d.), most of home reside in Kyiv City and eastern and southern cities (ibid.). More recent population estimates of the Armenian population in Ukraine could not be found among the sources consulted by the Research Directorate.
On 18 May 2003, several prominent Armenians including singer Charles Aznavour, as well as Ukrainian president Leonid Kravchuk, attended the re-consecration of an Armenian cathedral in Lviv (The Ukrainian Weekly 8 June 2003). After 50 years in government hands, the cathedral was given back to the Armenian community, and approximately 1,000 people walked in a procession through city streets to celebrate the event (ibid.).
According to an Itar-Tass article quoting Ukrainian premier Viktor Yanukovich during a 60th anniversary commemoration of the forcible deportation of Tatars, Armenians, Bulgarians, Greeks and Germans from Crimea, Ukraine, "there has been not a single acute ethnic conflict in Ukraine throughout its existence as an independent state..." (Itar-Tass 17 May 2004). However, this statement could not be corroborated by any other source consulted by the Research Directorate (ibid.).
This Response was prepared after researching publicly accessible information currently available to the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim for refugee protection. Please find below the list of additional sources consulted in researching this Information Request.
References
Ethnic Groups Worldwide: A Ready
Reference Handbook. 1998. David Levinson. "Europe - Ukraine."
Phoenix: Oryx Press.
Itar-Tass [Moscow]. 17 May
2004. Lev Ryabchikov. "Ukraine: Prime Minister Says No Room for
Ethnic Strife at Tatar Remembrance Meeting." (Dialog)
Joshua Project. n.d. "Armenian of
Ukraine." http://www.joshuaproject.net/peopctry.php
[Accessed 22 June 2004]
Professor Volodymyr Yevtoukh. Centre for
Ethnosociological and Ethnopolitical Studies. n.d. "National
Minorities in Ukraine: Status, Rights, Prospects." http://www.znak.com.pl/eurodialog/ed/ftp/yevtoukh.pdf+armenians+ukraine&h1=en
(Google cache) [Accessed 22 June 2004]
The Ukrainian Weekly
[Parsippany, NJ]. 8 June 2003. No. 23, Vol. 71. "Armenian Cathedral
in Lviv is Reconsecrated." http://www.ukrweekly.com/Archive/2003/230305.shtml
[Accessed 22 June 2004]
Additional Sources Consulted
A professor at the Armenian Studies
Program of California State University in Fresno did not provide
information within time constraints.
Unsuccessful attempts to contact the
Armenian Studies Program at the University of Michigan, Embassy of
Armenia in Kyiv, and the Union of Armenians in Ukraine.
Internet sites, including:
Amnesty International (AI), The Economist, Embassy of
Armenia in Ottawa, Ethnologue, Freedom House, European Country of
Origin Information Netowrk (ECOI), Human Rights Watch (HRW),
Netarménie.com, United Kingdom Home Office Country
Information (IND), United States Department of State, World News
Connections (WNC).
Publications: World Directory
of Minorities.
Treatment of Armenians in Ukraine and availability of state protection [UKR42792.E] (Response, French)