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This Armenian Offers a Potato in Every Pot

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  • This Armenian Offers a Potato in Every Pot

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    Jan 29 2007

    This Armenian Offers a Potato in Every Pot
    By Matthew Collin

    These are high times for the man they call Dodi Gago. He's rumored to
    be the richest person in Armenia, his political party is riding high
    in the opinion polls ahead of parliamentary elections later this
    year, and he's been voted the most popular man in Armenia in two
    separate opinion polls.

    His real name is Gagik Tsarukyan, although many Armenians know him
    better by his nickname. He's a former arm-wrestling champion, the
    winner of the world title in 1998; a hunk of beef and muscle who,
    despite the fact that he's now over 50, can still get away with
    flaunting it in a skin-tight T-shirt. He got his start in what's
    known as animal husbandry, then set up a string of businesses in
    Armenia that have brought him fabulous wealth and the kind of
    palatial hilltop villa that are the dream of wannabe post-Soviet
    oligarchs.

    His business empire has continued to expand rapidly, and it probably
    seemed logical to set up a political party to consolidate his
    position. Prosperous Armenia, it's called, although its main support
    comes from those who are far from prosperous. Tsarukyan came up with
    a winning strategy to get the public on his side: hand out free
    potatoes in poor rural villages.

    OK, so it's not exactly high-level political discourse, but it seemed
    to work, if the party's own claims are to be believed. Although it
    was only founded last year, Prosperous Armenia says it now has more
    members than any other political group in the country. A recent poll
    asked people which prominent Armenian, current or historical, would
    be the most suitable national hero or leader today. A dead man topped
    the poll, but Tsurukyan led the pack of the living.


    Uncharitable critics, of course, have denigrated Dodi Gago's
    philanthropic benevolence, saying that the millions he's spent on
    potatoes, wheat and free medical care for the poor amount to nothing
    more than vote buying on a massive scale -- even describing it as
    "potato democracy." As Tsurukyan himself put it: "They are just
    condemning a person who is getting things done." There have also been
    accusations that his pro-government party is just a lightly disguised
    vehicle to boost the power of his ally, President Robert Kocharyan,
    and to help Kocharyan maintain his influence after he leaves office
    in 2008.

    Others have suggested that the fact that Armenians can't seem to
    resist the charm of a super-rich strongman carrying a sack full of
    free potatoes says something about the state of Armenian democracy.
    How many of them would dare say it to the musclebound tycoon's face,
    however, is a different matter.


    Matthew Collin is a journalist in Tbilisi.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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