Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ally Downplays Lack Of Dashnak Support For Sarkisian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ally Downplays Lack Of Dashnak Support For Sarkisian

    ALLY DOWNPLAYS LACK OF DASHNAK SUPPORT FOR SARKISIAN
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug 27 2007

    The refusal by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun)
    to endorse Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian will not reflect negatively
    on his chances of winning the approaching presidential election,
    one of his top allies said on Monday.

    Dashnaktsutyun leaders have repeatedly made it clear that they will
    nominate their own presidential candidate despite being represented
    in Sarkisian's coalition cabinet formed as a result of the May 12
    parliamentary elections.

    Sarkisian reportedly tried hard to convince them to back his
    presidential bid, mindful of the pro-establishment party's political
    clout and close ties with the worldwide Armenian Diaspora. Local
    observers believe that Dashnaktsutyun's stance will make it more
    difficult for him to win the election, due in February or March,
    outright and avoid a risky run-off with an opposition challenger.

    However, Karen Karapetian, who leads the parliament faction of
    Sarkisian's Republican Party (HHK), insisted that the Armenian premier
    is strong and popular enough to become the country's next president
    without Dashnaktsutyun's backing.

    "It would be very desirable for coalition forces to act with a
    single candidate," Karapetian told RFE/RL in an interview. "But even
    if Dashnaktsutyun fields its own candidate, there will be nothing
    extraordinary. Let the party, which has a lot of experience, try
    its luck."

    "We consider our forces to be totally sufficient," he said.

    The HHK swept to a landslide victory in the May elections owing to
    his vast financial resources and control of many government bodies.

    Sarkisian is expected to again heavily rely the so-called
    "administrative resources" during the presidential ballot.

    Karapetian was confident that Sarkisian will be endorsed by the
    Prosperous Armenia Party (HHK), the HHK's second, more influential
    coalition partner, and "many other parties and non-governmental
    organizations." He said the HHK's power-sharing agreement with the
    BHK stipulates that the two political groups must field a common
    presidential candidate.

    The BHK is officially led by millionaire businessman Gagik Tsarukian
    and widely regarded as President Robert Kocharian's new power base.

    Kocharian has yet to publicly throw his weight behind Sarkisian's
    presidential ambitions.

    Karapetian denied in that regard persistent speculation about friction
    between Armenia's two most powerful men. He refused to be drawn on
    what the HHK think Kocharian should do after completing his second
    and final term in office.

    "It's up to them to decide," Karapetian said when asked whether
    Sarkisian will appoint Kocharian as prime minister if even becomes
    president.
Working...
X