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Hundreds Cheer Tsarukian In First Campaign Rally

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  • Hundreds Cheer Tsarukian In First Campaign Rally

    HUNDREDS CHEER TSARUKIAN IN FIRST CAMPAIGN RALLY
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 10 2007

    Businessman Gagik Tsarukian was mobbed by supporters on Tuesday as
    his Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), one of the favorites to win the
    upcoming parliamentary elections, officially kicked off its campaign
    with a rally in Yerevan.

    Tsarukian, surrounded by bodyguards, needed about ten minutes to
    move through a crowd of several hundred people and step onto the
    podium in a square in the city's southern Shengavit districts. Many
    of them tried to approach him to shake his hands or hand him letters
    presumably containing personal requests or grievances. The beefy
    tycoon's departure from the scene was similarly slow.

    Tsarukian, who is widely regarded as the country's wealthiest
    government-connected "oligarch," assured residents of the working-class
    area that the BHK will improve their lives if it wins the May 12
    elections. But as always, his speech was short on specifics.

    "I'm doing all this for the people," he said. "I did not create the
    party to get a government post or make money. I've got everything
    and want everyone to live well."

    The BHK, which is believed to be sponsored by President Robert
    Kocharian, claims to have recruited as many as 370,000 over the past
    15 months amid accusations of vote buying voiced by its rivals. Its
    leaders say the party will at least finish second in the polls.

    As he tramped back to his motorcade, shaking supporters' hands,
    Tsarukian was asked by RFE/RL to comment on his election chances. "It
    depends on the voters," he replied. "Ask the people."

    The BHK's election platform was presented to the crowd by Ishkhan
    Zakarian, a friend of Tsarukian's who heads a government department
    on sport affairs. Zakarian claimed that once in power, the party will
    enact 150 laws and help to create thousands of new jobs by reopening
    factories closed following the Soviet collapse.

    Asked by RFE/RL which concrete factories would resume their operations,
    Zakarian said, "Whichever you want."

    Tsarukian and his associates held a similar campaign gathering in
    Masis, a small town 15 kilometers south of Yerevan, later in the day.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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