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Discontent drives Armenia's campaign to oust Kocharian

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  • Discontent drives Armenia's campaign to oust Kocharian

    Discontent drives Armenia's campaign to oust Kocharian

    BY CHRISTIAN LOWE

    AFP YEREVAN
    April 15, 2004


    Samvel Gasparian is a 56-year-old grandfather who used to support his
    family by farming a smallholding in the Ashtarak region, north of
    Armenia's capital.

    But his fields are lying fallow because, he says, he cannot afford to
    pay for the water to irrigate his land.

    "If my relatives who are living in Russia did not help me out we would
    not be able to survive," he said, choking back tears. "Some people
    cannot even afford to buy a loaf of bread."

    Gasparian's story is typical of many of the three million people in
    this poverty-stricken former Soviet republic in the Caucasus
    mountains.

    Anger over the country's low living standards -- and the widespread
    feeling that the government is indifferent -- has been helping drive
    an opposition campaign calling for the resignation of President Robert
    Kocharian.

    Comparisons have been drawn between Armenia's opposition movement and
    last year's "rose revolution" in neighbouring Georgia, when that
    country's former president Eduard Shevardnadze was ousted in a popular
    uprising.

    Thousands of Armenians have rallied in the capital, Yerevan, this
    month to push their demand for Kocharian's resignation.

    A sit-in protest by opposition activists early Tuesday morning outside
    Kocharian's residence was broken up by riot police using water cannon
    and truncheons. Dozens of people were hurt and several opposition
    leaders were arrested.

    But the opposition is not giving up. It has announced plans for
    another mass protest in the capital this Friday.

    "The people want this," Stepan Demirchian, head of the opposition
    Justice bloc and a leader of the protests, told AFP. "They have not
    been broken. If before they did not like this president, now they like
    him even less."

    On some measures, Kocharian has done a decent job of handling the
    economy in Armenia, which was the world's first state to adopt
    Christianity.

    Economic growth has been in double digits for the past few years, in
    spite of a crippling economic blockade by two of Armenia's neighbours,
    Turkey and Azerbaijan.

    The blockade is linked to pogroms against Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    in the early 20th century, and an Armenian-Azeri conflict over the
    separatist territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    But that growth is translating only slowly into a better life for
    ordinary people.

    The average monthly wage is less than 50 dollars (40 euros) and
    unemployment is sky high. As much as a third of the population has
    left to seek work abroad, mostly to Russia. Whole villages now stand
    deserted.

    For many Armenians, Kocharian is to blame. They believe a cabal of
    wealthy businessmen close to the president is being allowed to enrich
    itself at the expense of the poor.

    Kocharian's opponents had hoped to oust him in a presidential
    election, but they were left frustrated in March last year when he won
    after a second round run-off against Demirchian.

    Election observers said the vote "fell short of international
    standards for democratic elections." Kocharian's opponents said he
    stole the election.

    Kocharian, a 50-year-old former factory worker and veteran of
    Armenia's war with Azerbaijan over Karabakh, has stood firm in the
    face of the recent opposition protests.

    He has the support of the army and police, and large sections of the
    population, who fear the opposition is dragging the country into
    political turmoil.

    But Gasparian said he would be in Yerevan on Friday afternoon for the
    planned demonstration.

    "I will be there, even if it costs me my life," he said. "People do
    not believe in their rulers any more because they have been deceived
    so many times."
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