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Prosecutor's Brother Elected Yerevan District Chief

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  • Prosecutor's Brother Elected Yerevan District Chief

    PROSECUTOR'S BROTHER ELECTED YEREVAN DISTRICT CHIEF
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 30 2006

    A brother of Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian swept to a predictable
    victory in a weekend election in Yerevan's western Ajapnyak district
    that has long been considered his de facto fiefdom.

    According to preliminary results of the election released on Monday,
    Ruben Hovsepian won 76 percent of the vote. His main challenger,
    Gagik Sargsian of the governing Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    (Dashnaktsutyun), came in a distant second with 13 percent, followed
    by a third candidate who got 10 percent, official figures showed.

    Only 25 percent of Ajapnyak's 73,000 or so eligible voters cast their
    ballots, underscoring a widespread sense that the outcome of the vote
    was always a forgone conclusion. Incidentally, all three candidates are
    affiliated with Aghvan Hovsepian's supposedly apolitical Nig-Aparan
    organization that unites prominent natives of a region in central
    Armenia.

    Sargsian was quick to concede defeat. "It can be said that the
    elections took place without violations," he told RFE/RL. "There were
    a couple of minor violations that did not affect the election results."

    The Dashnaktsutyun activist said at the same time that Sunday's vote
    was not fair, alleging that local voters were bullied and bused to
    polling station in droves by Hovsepian's loyalists. He said he stood
    no chance of countering his rival's "huge administrative leverage."

    The chairman of the district election commission, Samvel Yeranian,
    said he has received no written protests from election officials
    or candidate proxies as of Monday afternoon. He said no violence or
    other serious incidents were reported on voting day.

    Ajapnyak has long been the scene of a bitter rivalry between two local
    clans that flared up into violence during elections held there in the
    past. Artsrun Khachatrian, Ajapnyak's previous mayor representing
    Hovsepian's faction, has ruled the district for the past six years
    and was preparing for another showdown with Arman Sahakian, a young
    leader of the rival clan linked with the governing Republican Party
    of Armenia (HHK).

    Sahakian was effectively forced to pull out of the race after the
    HHK's governing board refused to back his candidacy in August at the
    apparent behest of Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian. The unexpected
    move fueled speculation about a deal cut by Sarkisian and Hovsepian.

    The incumbent Ajapnyak mayor decided not to seek reelection and to cede
    the post to the influential prosecutor's brother shortly afterwards.

    The election outcome will solidify Ajapnyak's status as a key
    stronghold of Aghvan Hovsepian. The latter reportedly controls several
    lucrative businesses in the area and is thought to have far-reaching
    political ambitions. His Nig-Aparan group is the driving force behind
    a recently formed political party which intends to make a strong
    showing in next year's parliamentary elections. Leaders of the party,
    called Association for Armenia, have not ruled out the possibility
    of forming an electoral alliance with the HHK.
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