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Top General Expects Flawed Election

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  • Top General Expects Flawed Election

    TOP GENERAL EXPECTS FLAWED ELECTION
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 5 2007

    A top army general who leads the largest association of Armenian
    veterans of the Nagorno-Karabakh war predicted on Monday that the
    upcoming parliamentary elections will be deeply flawed.

    Lieutenant-General Manvel Grigorian, chairman of the influential
    Yerkrapah Union, saw a "100 percent" chance of large-scale vote rigging
    as he answered questions from RFE/RL. "There are lots of [vote rigging]
    professionals around," he said. "So I guess there will be [fraud.]"

    The comments will hardly please Armenia's leaders and Defense Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian in particular. They are at pains to dismiss opposition
    concerns about a repeat of serious fraud that defined just about
    every Armenian election held over the past decade.

    Grigorian, who is also a deputy minister of defense, said his
    organization will work hard to ensure that voting and counting
    of ballots is relatively clean in individual constituencies where
    Yerkrapah members are running for parliament. "We will make every
    effort to minimize falsifications in places where there are Yerkrapahs
    in the running," he said.

    Asked how Yerkrapah plans to do that, Grigorian replied in a typically
    blunt manner: "In any case, we won't beat, we won't kill.

    We'll just say polite things."

    Among the several prominent Yerkrapah figures running in single-mandate
    constituencies is Seyran Saroyan, another top army general and a
    close friend of Grigorian's who was discharged from the armed forces
    to join the race last month. Yerkrapah candidates can also be found
    on the electoral slates of the governing Republican Party and several
    other parties.

    According to Grigorian, the union wants all of them to get elected.

    "It doesn't matter if they are with the Dashnaks, the Republicans or
    anybody else," he said. "We will support them."

    The mustachioed general also ruled out his own involvement in the
    election campaign. "I don't participate in any elections," he said.

    "If necessary, I instruct others to participate, but don't do that
    myself."

    The Yerkrapah Union was particularly influential on the Armenian
    political scene in the late 1990s when it was used by the authorities
    against their political opponents protesting at electoral fraud.

    Yerkrapah's political clout has declined considerably since the
    October 1999 assassination of its founder, Vazgen Sarkisian.

    Incidentally, March 5 marked the 48th birth anniversary of Sarkisian.

    Grigorian was among top military officials and prominent politicians
    who visited the Yerablur military cemetery in Yerevan and laid flowers
    at Sarkisian's grave on the occasion.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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