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Tsarukian Again Absent As Party Campaigns In Southern Armenia

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  • Tsarukian Again Absent As Party Campaigns In Southern Armenia

    TSARUKIAN AGAIN ABSENT AS PARTY CAMPAIGNS IN SOUTHERN ARMENIA
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 19 2007

    The Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), one of the presumed favorites to
    win the May 12 parliamentary elections, campaigned in the southern
    Ararat region on Thursday in the mysterious absence of its leader,
    businessman Gagik Tsarukian.

    Senior BHK members gave conflicting explanations for Tsarukian's
    failure to attend this and other the pre-election events organized
    by the party over the past week.

    "He is absent because he is ill and lying in bed," Vartan Bostanjian, a
    member of the party's ruling council, told RFE/RL as he toured the area
    along with several other BHK election candidates. "It's not serious. He
    just caught a cold. I also have a cold. Didn't you notice that?"

    "We had events yesterday as well and he wasn't able to attend them,"
    said Bostanjian. "I'm sure he will recuperate in the coming days."

    The remarks contradicted what Gohar Yenokian, another senior BHK
    figure, told more than 200 hundred supporters in the town of Ararat
    moments before. "He is so confident that Ararat will elect him that he
    decided to campaign in other places," she said, explaining Tsarukian's
    conspicuous absence from the event.

    For his part, the party's spokesman, Baghdasar Mherian, claimed
    that the influential tycoon is too busy to attend all BHK meetings
    with voters. "He has a very tight schedule and can not attend all
    meetings," Mherian told RFE/RL, denying Yenokian's claim that Tsarukian
    is campaigning elsewhere in Armenia.

    Tsarukian kicked off the BHK campaign with a series of rallies held
    Yerevan and nearby towns on April 10-11. He left for Moscow for talks
    with Russian government officials and lawmakers on April 12 just
    hours after mysterious explosions outside two BHK offices in Yerevan.

    He visited those offices on his return from Moscow two days later
    and has not been seen in public since then.

    The blasts were strongly condemned by President Robert Kocharian and
    virtually all major Armenian parties. Kocharian, who is believed to
    sponsor the party, ordered law-enforcement authorities to quickly
    identify and prosecute the attackers. Nobody has been arrested so far.

    The BHK campaign in Ararat and other regional towns failed to generate
    the kind of enthusiasm among voters that characterized Tsarukian's
    public appearances last week. Its meetings there were held indoors
    and were mainly attended by party members.

    In his speeches, Bostanjian touted the BHK as "the most accepted
    party" in the country and denied any connection between Tsarukian's
    controversial "benevolent actions" and the upcoming elections. "Mr.

    Tsarukian has strictly instructed us not to give people material
    incentives to vote for us," he said.

    Bostanjian, who is a senior professor of economics at Yerevan State
    University, also urged local residents not to sell their votes to
    other parties. Speaking to RFE/RL separately, he said the BHK's
    main difference from those parties is that "we are not thieves or
    mobsters." The jibe appeared to be primarily directed at the governing
    Republican Party of Armenia (HHK).

    Ernest Soghomonian, another top BHK candidate whose son Victor is
    Kocharian's press secretary, apparently had the HHK in mind when he
    told supporters in the town of Vedi, "Once a political force becomes
    too big and powerful it gets in trouble." "The BHK has awakened other
    parties," added Soghomonian. "They are now far more attentive to the
    people. We have created an environment of political competition."

    Many of the people who attended the meeting in Ararat work at the
    town's big cement plant owned by Tsarukian. Some praised the tycoon
    for breathing a new life into the Soviet-era enterprise which struggled
    to remain afloat before being controversially privatized by his Multi
    Group five years ago.

    "He gives us work, and we can support our families," said Gevorg
    Balian, who works there as a senior engineer. "He cares not only
    about the plant but local people. How can you not respect him?"

    The plant's director general, Levon Hambartsumian, joined the BHK
    visitors in urging local people to vote for the party. "No normal
    person can fail to join the party after reading its program,"
    he declared. "Armenia will flourish thanks to Gagik Tsarukian and
    his party."

    Not everyone in the audience was convinced, though. A young woman who
    claimed to have been forced to quit the company last year said she
    will vote for the party only if Hambartsumian and other top executives
    promise to "listen to your workers once in a while and talk to them
    in an understandable language."

    "People believe in our party," insisted Mkhitar Manukian, who heads
    the BHK chapter in the nearby village of Norakert. He claimed that
    at least 50 percent of the villagers will vote for Tsarukian's party.

    But there was little anecdotal evidence of massive popular support
    for the party which claims to be by the largest in Armenia. "I'm
    still undecided," said one man in Vedi.

    "I don't know who Tsarukian is," grumbled another, older local
    resident. "So many politicians have come here and given false
    promises. Everything is false."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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