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Radical Opposition Party 'Funded By Officials, Oligarchs'

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  • Radical Opposition Party 'Funded By Officials, Oligarchs'

    RADICAL OPPOSITION PARTY 'FUNDED BY OFFICIALS, OLIGARCHS'
    By Astghik Bedevian and Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 17 2007

    Armenia's most radical opposition party plotting a post-election
    "democratic revolution" claimed on Tuesday to be secretly financed
    by unnamed government officials and government-connected businessmen.

    "They have asked not to be identified for now," Smbat Ayvazian,
    a leader of the Hanrapetutyun (Republic) party, told RFE/RL. "Maybe
    we will able to disclose their names in 20 days."

    "Realizing that the country is on the wrong track, they are giving us,
    albeit with a lot of fear, some financial assistance so that we can
    run our campaign offices, train our proxies and solve some propaganda
    issues," he said. "Perhaps the fears of those businessmen and officials
    will disappear with the change of the current political atmosphere."

    Hanrapetutyun kicked off its election campaign last Thursday with a
    rally in Yerevan, during which it urged supporters to gear up for a
    campaign of anti-government demonstrations that could follow the May
    12 parliamentary elections. Its chairman Aram Sarkisian and other
    leaders claimed that the vote will almost certainly be rigged.

    Ayvazian repeated their assertions that Hanrapetutyun will not
    content itself with a handful of parliament seats as its key aim is
    regime change. "The opposition has had 25-30 deputies in the current
    [131-member] parliament but failed to solve a single issue," he argued.

    Ayvazian added that the alleged funding by government-linked wealthy
    individuals is essential for the realization of Hanrapetutyun's
    plans. "In case our financial issues are solved, it is evident that
    these authorities will have no chance to keep plundering the country,"
    he said.

    Hanrapetutyun's radical agenda is clearly not shared by other, larger
    opposition parties that believe it is possible to prevent large-scale
    fraud. The Orinats Yerkir Party of former parliament speaker Artur
    Baghdasarian is one of them.

    "I can't claim that there will certainly be mass falsifications,"
    Baghdasarian said on Tuesday. "I will be talk about that in early
    May. The election campaign has only just begun, and we are still in
    the process of analyzing and examining things."

    But Baghdasarian did accuse the authorities of creating "numerous
    obstacles" to Orinats Yerkir's election campaign. He complained in
    particular that the party is unable to place campaign billboards in
    Yerevan and other parts of the country.

    "They say there is no space," he told a news conference. "But you can
    see that the campaign billboards in Yerevan belong to the Republican
    Party, the Prosperous Armenia Party, and Dashnaktsutyun. The governing
    parties do not face any obstacles."

    The ex-speaker also claimed that authorities in small towns across the
    country are obstructing campaign meetings organized by Orinats Yerkir.
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