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'Oligarchic' Party Again Accused Of Vote-Buying

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  • 'Oligarchic' Party Again Accused Of Vote-Buying

    'OLIGARCHIC' PARTY AGAIN ACCUSED OF VOTE-BUYING
    By Irina Hovannisian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 12 2007

    The Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), a key election contender, faced
    more opposition accusations of vote-buying on Monday after lavish
    dinner parties thrown by its millionaire leader Gagik Tsarukian for
    many women across the country.

    Tsarukian's Kentron television and another major Armenian TV channel
    aired over the weekend a 30-minute "special report" on celebrations
    of International Women's Day that were organized by the tycoon in
    Yerevan and dozens of small towns. Viewers were shown scores of women
    marking the March 8 holiday in restaurants and receiving flowers on
    the occasion. The largest of the parties involved live performances
    by some of Armenia's most popular pop singers.

    It was the latest in a series of "benevolent actions" that are
    thought to have earned Tsarukian's party a considerable following
    over the past year. Representatives of opposition parties were quick
    to denounce it as another manifestation of wholesale vote-buying.

    "That is no benevolence," said Suren Sureniants of the Hanrapetutyun
    party. "That is a process of bribing and humiliating people. A
    benefactor is not supposed to pursue political goals."

    A BHK spokesman, Baghdasar Mherian, rejected the accusations. "Can
    the people who claim that our benevolence is political propaganda
    cite one example of a woman being told to vote for Prosperous Armenia
    after being handed flowers?" he said. Mherian also argued that the
    tycoon close to President Robert Kocharian has engaged in charitable
    work since 1992, comparing him to Diaspora Armenian philanthropists
    like Kirk Kerkorian and Charles Aznavour.

    Armenian law forbids politicians and political parties running for
    office from providing any goods and services to people in the hope
    of securing their votes. Officially, Tsarukian's stated benevolence
    is done through a charity named after himself, meaning that his party
    technically does not violate this restriction.

    Tsarukian raised eyebrows last autumn by financing a large-scale
    distribution of agricultural relief and provision of free medical
    aid and other public services to tens of thousands of impoverished
    people. BHK representatives say that the assistance has no connection
    with the May 12 parliamentary elections, a claim dismissed by
    opposition leaders and some representatives of the governing Republican
    and Dashnaktsutyun parties.

    The BHK claims to have recruited 370,000 members, or more than
    all other Armenian parties taken together. The party, widely
    regarded as Kocharian's new power base, is expected to do well in
    the forthcoming elections. But whether or not its real popularity
    matches the staggering membership figure remains unknown due to a
    lack of credible opinion polls in Armenia.
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