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Ter-Petrosian Reaches Out To 'Enslaved' Oligarchs

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  • Ter-Petrosian Reaches Out To 'Enslaved' Oligarchs

    TER-PETROSIAN REACHES OUT TO 'ENSLAVED' OLIGARCHS
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Dec 10 2007

    Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian appealed to Armenia's leading
    businessmen to defy the government and back his presidential bid as
    he again rallied thousands of opposition supporters in Yerevan at
    the weekend.

    In another wide-ranging speech, Ter-Petrosian also sought to reach
    out to other, much bigger segments of the population, condemning
    government plans to raise taxes levied from small business and
    describing Armenian farmers as the country's "unacknowledged" heroes.

    He also angrily hit back at continuing government claims that he
    "wrecked" the Armenian economy while in office.

    Ter-Petrosian spent a considerable part of the 90-minute speech
    providing, in a characteristic academic manner, a detailed description
    of the politico-economic system of the medieval Mongol Empire which he
    said bears a striking resemblance to that of modern-day Armenia. He
    claimed that even the wealthiest Armenians are essentially at the
    mercy of President Robert Kocharian and Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian,
    comparing the two men to Mongol khans who wielded unlimited power over
    their subjects. Mentioning Armenia's leading government-connected
    "oligarchs" by name, he described them as "slaves" and said they
    will run the constant risk of losing their assets as long as
    Kocharian-Sarkisian duo remains in power.

    "Until when will you put up with that humiliation?" Ter-Petrosian
    asked, addressing about 20,000 people who gathered in the city's
    Liberty Square. "Until when will you put up with your slave-like
    status? Don't you understand that with your servility you prop up the
    foundations of the khanate and condemn our entire nation, including
    your own children, to slavery?

    "What keeps you from closing ranks and toppling the khan yoke loathed
    by everyone, including yourself? ... How do you sleep at night? Can
    you look your wives and children in the eyes?"

    "If you continue to dishonorably serve the current authorities, they
    will be able to destroy you one by one at any moment," he continued.

    "But if you jointly oppose them, they won't last even for one day."

    So far only one of the "oligarchs," who made their fortunes thanks to
    their government connections, has lent support to Ter-Petrosian's bid
    to return to power. Khachatur Sukiasian, a parliament deputy and the
    main owner of SIL Group, pledged last week to stand by the ex-president
    "until our victory" despite an ongoing government crackdown on his
    businesses.

    Virtually all other tycoons remain loyal to Armenia's top leaders.

    They have financed Kocharian's and his allies' election campaigns
    and are expected to render similar assistance to Sarkisian in the
    upcoming presidential election. Sukiasian has claimed that many them
    privately sympathize with Ter-Petrosian but are too scared to revolt
    against the authorities.

    But one tycoon, who is believed to be close to Sarkisian, insisted
    on Monday he did not and will not get involved in politics. "I did
    very well even in 1996-1997, when Levon Ter-Petrosian was in power,"
    said Mikhail Baghdasarian, whose business interests range from fuel
    imports to civil aviation. "Incidentally, I came here [from Russia]
    at his initiative."

    "I do business not for Levon Ter-Petrosian or Robert Kocharian but
    for Armenia, for those people who work for me," said the Russian
    citizen of Armenian descent.

    In his speech, Ter-Petrosian disputed the widely held belief that the
    "oligarchs" are allowed to grossly evade taxes in return for their
    political and economic support for the ruling regime. He alleged that
    most of the taxes paid by them end up in the pockets of "jackals"
    running the country -- his most bitter personal attack on Sarkisian
    and Kocharian yet. "In fact, you have fulfilled your tax obligations
    but your payments have gone not to the state budget but to a totally
    different place," he said.

    Ter-Petrosian also sought to win over tens of thousands of Armenians
    owning small businesses. Many of them have until now paid only a
    so-called "simplified tax" and have been exempted from other, heftier
    duties. Citing the need to combat tax evasion, the Armenian government
    pushed through parliament earlier this year a legal amendment that
    will make it much harder for small firms to qualify for simplified tax.

    Ter-Petrosian condemned the measure, which will take effect on
    January 1, and reiterated his claims that the Armenian economy is
    being increasingly monopolized by the government-linked super rich.

    "The majority of entrepreneurs representing the middle class, having
    long lost their independence, are trapped in the net of monopolist
    companies involved in wholesale trade," he said.

    Responding to such allegations, Kocharian has said that Ter-Petrosian
    has no moral right to speak about economics because he "wrecked"
    Armenia's Soviet-era industry and made the nation one of the poorest
    in the world during the turbulent first years of its independence.

    Armenia's GDP shrunk by more than half amid a sever energy crisis
    in 1992-1993. Kocharian has downplayed the impact of the war in
    Nagorno-Karabakh and the Azerbaijani and Turkish economic blockades
    on the economic collapse.

    Ter-Petrosian insisted that Soviet-era manufacturing industries were
    too backward to adapt to the free market and went into decline in
    all former Communist states. He said the decline was much steeper in
    Armenia because of the Karabakh war, the economic blockades, turmoil in
    neighboring Georgia, the presence of hundreds of thousands of Armenian
    refugees from Azerbaijan as well as devastating consequences of the
    1988 earthquake. "If you put any other state in those conditions,
    you would see the same results," he said.

    Ter-Petrosian further declared that the fact that Armenia managed to
    defeat Azerbaijan against the odds while registering modest economic
    growth in 1994 makes his time in office one of the most glorious
    periods in Armenian history. "It is hard not to agree that it was
    a feat that has no precedent in the modern history of the Armenian
    people," he said.
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