Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Just a technical problem

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

  • Just a technical problem

    Aravot, Armenia
    Feb 1 2007


    Commentary
    Just a technical problem


    by Aram Abraamyan



    Many people were sceptical when [former National Security Minister]
    David Shakhnazaryan said that an election is not expected in Armenia.
    [The parliamentary election is to be held on 12 May.] But he may be
    right. How can a process whose result is 100-per-cent predictable be
    considered an election? If the political and public atmosphere for
    holding an election is lacking, it does not matter how the
    authorities attain their goal - through vote buying, falsification of
    the results, or in some other way.

    Perhaps the only intrigue in the forthcoming parliamentary election
    would be a possible confrontation between the RPA [Republican Party
    of Armenia] and PAP [Prosperous Armenia Party] as a result of
    economic rivalry among the power clans, but this is hardly likely. It
    is almost certain that the clans will be modest and will manage to
    divide up parliament (the economic levers), avoiding conflicts over
    the first-past-the-post seats and sharing the proportional
    percentages "fairly".

    With just five or ten representatives, the other three or four
    parties, regardless of whether they are in opposition or
    pro-government, will not have any influence in parliament.

    Thus the only problem left for the authorities to resolve before the
    "election" is consolidation of the economic elite around the RPA-PAP
    axis. At present, believing that the National Unity Party and the Law
    Governed Country Party are serious competitors, the authorities have
    concentrated their attention on them.

    But propaganda is useless when there is a subject - a citizen, a
    voter - who can decide which party will suggest more attractive
    programmes in future - the Marxist party or, let us say, the
    Trotskyites. Unfortunately, there is no such subject in Armenia.

    Much the same can be said about training the police to beat people.
    This suggests that the authorities are expecting an attempt at a
    "colour revolution". But there will be no such attempt in Armenia in
    the next two or three years. The main reason for this is that the
    people do not want such a revolution.
Working...
X