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Armenia: Attack On Mayor Raises Political Tensions

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  • Armenia: Attack On Mayor Raises Political Tensions

    ARMENIA: ATTACK ON MAYOR RAISES POLITICAL TENSIONS

    EurasiaNet, NY
    April 3 2007

    The drive-by shooting of a senior member of Armenia's ruling Republican
    Party is heightening concern about Armenia's upcoming parliamentary
    elections. Many observers fear that the incident is somehow linked
    with the May 12 vote. Government investigators are still scrambling
    to identify a possible motive for the attack, however.

    Vardan Ghukasian, mayor of Armenia's second largest city, Gyumri,
    and his staff came under gunfire late in the evening of April 2 while
    returning to Gyumri from a meeting of the ruling Republican Party
    of Armenia in Yerevan. At the gathering, party leaders made acting
    chairman and Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian their choice to become
    prime minister, replacing Andranik Markarian, who died from a heart
    attack on March 25. [For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive.]

    A car with unidentified license plates sprayed Ghukasian's
    Mercedes-Benz automobile and another car accompanying the mayor with
    automatic gunfire near the town of Ashtarak on the northward-bound
    Yerevan-Gyumri highway. Three security guards died on the spot;
    Ghukasian, Deputy Mayor Gagik Manukian and the mayor's driver were
    badly wounded. The driver subsequently died from his wounds.

    Ghukasian and Manukian were reportedly in serious, but stable
    condition.

    A criminal investigation is underway, according to the General
    Prosecutor's Office. No arrests have yet been made. While investigators
    have not publicly speculated on motives, the shooting is already
    been classified as an assassination attempt against Ghukasian. The
    46-year-old mayor acts as head of Republican Party operations for the
    district of Shirak in northern Armenia, one of the party's largest
    chapters. Ghukasian, known for an occasionally flamboyant temper,
    is also widely reputed to hold a tight rein over business activities
    in Gyumri, a town of about 150,900 in northern Armenia that is also
    home to a Russian military base.

    One opposition leader argues that the shooting is a sign of trouble
    to come in connection with Armenia's upcoming May 12 parliamentary
    vote. "During a press conference this year, I said that blood would be
    shed in Armenia during the elections, and this is only the beginning,"
    commented Democratic Way Party Chairman Manuk Gasparian.

    Like other observers critical of the government, however, he notes
    that it "is not ruled out" that Ghukasian's alleged business interests
    played a role.

    "But it is obvious that this incident will weaken the Republican
    Party," Gasparian continued. "Ghukasian will become more cautious
    and perhaps will refrain from using 'strong-arm tactics' during the
    upcoming elections."

    In Gyumri, city hall officials said they were baffled by the attack.

    "The mayor has no enemies," Artyom Mazmanian, head of the Gyumri city
    administration, commented to EurasiaNet. "We cannot say anything,
    we ourselves were taken by surprise," Mazmanian added. "He has never
    received threats, or been harassed by anyone."

    Another widely disseminated theory contends that Ghukasian was planning
    to drop his Republican Party membership and join the increasingly
    powerful rival Prosperous Armenia Party.

    The Republican Party, however, has flatly denied Ghukasian was
    mulling such a switch. "It is ruled out. This talk is the result of
    fantasizing," Republican Party spokesperson Eduard Sharmazanov said
    during an April 3 press conference in Yerevan.

    In a statement released April 3, the Republican Party demanded
    that "law enforcement bodies solve the crime quickly and strictly
    punish those responsible." The statement concluded, however, with an
    observation that only underlines the worries about possible political
    motives for the attack. "Any encroachment against the stability of
    public life is doomed to failure," the statement said.

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the Armenianow.com
    weekly in Yerevan.
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