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Hovannisian Mulls Election Bloc With Pro-Western Oppositionists

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  • Hovannisian Mulls Election Bloc With Pro-Western Oppositionists

    HOVANNISIAN MULLS ELECTION BLOC WITH PRO-WESTERN OPPOSITIONISTS
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    June 19 2006

    Armenia's U.S.-born former Foreign Minister Raffi Hovannisian is
    negotiating with leaders of three pro-Western opposition parties on the
    possibility of forming an alliance ahead of next year's parliamentary
    election, an aide confirmed on Saturday.

    Vartan Khachatrian, a senior member of Hovannisian's Zharangutyun
    (Heritage) party, said the ongoing talks are involving former
    parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian's Orinats Yerkir party, Aram
    Sarkisian's Hanrapetutyun as well as a smaller group called the
    Liberal Progressive Party.

    All three opposition forces favor Armenia's eventual withdrawal from
    the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization and accession
    to NATO. Baghdasarian revealed his pro-Western orientation in an April
    interview with a leading German newspaper which precipitated Orinats
    Yerkir's removal from President Robert Kocharian's governing coalition.

    The new opposition alliance would lead to a significant realignment
    in the Armenian political arena and would be a major player in the
    2007 election. Baghdasarian's resignation as parliament speaker
    and his pullout from the governing coalition was welcomed by both
    Zharangutyun and Hanrapetutyun. The latter is the most radical of
    Armenian parties opposed to Kocharian, and it remains to be seen if
    the extremely cautious ex-speaker will agree to join forces with it.

    "We have always been ready to unite the [opposition] field to give
    hope to the Armenian people," said Khachatrian.

    But Khachatrian made it clear that Zharangutyun may well contest the
    parliamentary polls on its own, arguing that Hovannisian is popular
    enough to earn his party seats in the National Assembly. He said a
    recent U.S.-funded opinion poll found that 74 percent of Armenians
    think well of the former foreign minister.

    Khachatrian also presented Zharangutyun's controversial ouster from
    its government-owned offices in Yerevan as an indication that the
    Armenian authorities see a serious threat to their hold on power
    emanating from Hovannisian. His supporters believe that this was also
    the reason why he had been controversially barred from standing in
    the last presidential election.

    (Photolur photo: Raffi Hovannisian.)
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