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Dashnak Party Picks Presidential Candidate

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  • Dashnak Party Picks Presidential Candidate

    DASHNAK PARTY PICKS PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Nov 30 2007

    A traditional political party standing close to Armenia's authorities
    has announced its candidate that it hopes will successfully contest
    presidency in elections due early next year.

    At an extraordinary congress on Friday, delegates of the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation - Dashnaktsutyun (ARF) voted overwhelmingly to
    choose Deputy Parliament Speaker Vahan Hovannisian as their candidate
    in the February 19 vote. Another senior representative of the party,
    Armen Rustamian, who had been nominated along with Hovannisian in
    the first ever party primaries in the history of Armenian politics,
    had withdrawn his candidacy shortly before the vote.

    Despite his withdrawal, which was not foreseen by the procedure,
    Rustamian received 16 votes, another three delegates voted for both
    nominees. Hovannisian was endorsed by the votes of 60 delegates.

    The final nomination of the Dashnak candidate followed a five-day
    nonbinding poll conducted among the Armenian public to gauge popular
    support for the nominees.

    When announcing his withdrawal, Rustamian said the public opinion
    expressed by several hundred thousand people in the improvised
    plebiscite should be taken into account and urged the party delegates
    to support Hovannisian.

    In his acceptance speech Hovannisian raised problems existing in
    the system, but said solutions must not be expected from the former
    authorities that have been showing signs of activity lately.

    "We know them well and we haven't forgotten anything. Having been
    in cooperation with the current authorities, we still feel we have
    enough experience and are ready to carry out these system changes
    ourselves," Hovannisian said. "Why should the choice be made between
    the past and the president? We choose the future."

    In his speech Hovannisian also criticized the government for failing
    to develop the order of receiving dual citizenship. He hinted that
    perhaps Dashnaktsutyun's high rating abroad is one of the reasons
    why the process has been slow.

    "It turns out they did the good things in this country and bad things
    are ascribed to the rest," Prime Minister and leader of the ruling
    Republican Party Serzh Sarkisian commented during the dinner break,
    but added: "Everything is normal, it is a political struggle."

    National-Democratic Union (AZhM) leader Vazgen Manukian, who was
    also among those attending, said addressing Dashnaktsutyun: "The most
    importance thing is a free man. If there is no free man, we will lose
    everything. I urge Dashnaktsutyun to go shoulder to shoulder and try
    to make changes in the country so that our people feel proud."

    "Old friends must reunite," he concluded.

    Last week a pro-opposition Armenian newspaper alleged that
    Dashnaktsutyun had offered Vazgen Manukian the post of the prime
    minister in return for his endorsement of its presidential candidate.

    The paper claimed that Manukian would become prime minister -- the
    post he held in the early 1990s -- in the event of Dashnaktsutyun's
    victory in the February 19 election.

    Manukian, who was unanimously nominated by his party as a presidential
    candidate earlier this week, flatly denied the report, but said that
    he and the Dashnaktsutyun candidate could well endorse each other
    only if one of them made it to the possible runoff. Vahan Hovannisian
    then found such a development to be "within the bonds of logic,"
    saying that his party had already supported the AZhM leader in the
    1996 presidential election.
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