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Armenian Tycoon Eyes Record-High Number Of Votes

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  • Armenian Tycoon Eyes Record-High Number Of Votes

    ARMENIAN TYCOON EYES RECORD-HIGH NUMBER OF VOTES
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 22 2007

    A leading member of he Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) of businessman
    Gagik Tsarukian predicted Thursday that it will garner at least
    370,000 votes in the upcoming parliamentary elections, which is almost
    certainly enough to win them by a landslide.

    The minimum figure cited by Vartan Bostanjian, a member of the BHK's
    governing board, equals the number of members the party claims to have,
    making it by far the largest political organization in the country.

    Asked by RFE/RL whether all of those members will go to the polls and
    vote for the BHK on May 12, Bostanjian said, "I think so." "In the
    event of free, fair and transparent elections, the figure should be
    even higher," he added, arguing that not only BHK members but their
    friends and relatives will vote for Tsarukian's party.

    By comparison, the governing Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), the
    official winner of the last parliamentary elections, won only 290,000
    votes. That made up 23.7 percent of some 1.22 million Armenians
    who took part in the ballot, according to the Central Election
    Commission. The Armenian opposition and even some pro-government
    parties said at the time that both the number of the HHK votes and
    the official voter turnout of 51 percent are grossly inflated.

    The BHK, which is widely regarded as President Robert Kocharian's new
    power base, claims to have recruited hundreds of thousands of members
    across Armenia in the course of last year. It has clearly capitalized
    on Tsarukian's populist appeal and large-scale "benevolent" actions
    which many established parties consider a wholesale vote-buying.

    Parliament speaker Tigran Torosian, who is affiliated with the HHK,
    openly challenged the credibility of the BHK's membership claims last
    week. "If this is the case, then all parties must altogether disband
    themselves before the elections," Torosian told reporters. "Because
    if we add to the 370,000 [members] a certain number of other voters,
    who are relatives of BHK members, we'll get a huge figure."

    "In my view, no Armenian party can poll that many votes, unless,
    of course, Armenia one day again becomes a Communist country," he said.

    Speaking at a news conference, Bostanjian refused to comment on
    Torosian's remarks. He also denied media allegations that many
    Armenians are being forced or paid to join the Kocharian-connected
    tycoon's party.

    "We have not used forcible or any other illicit methods," said
    Bostanjian. "People themselves ask to join the party. We are a proud
    party that does not want artificial votes."

    Although many observers consider the BHK and the HHK the frontrunners
    in the race, it is not clear just how popular Tsarukian's party is.

    Credible opinion polls are still a rarity in Armenia. Opposition
    leaders fear that the BHK's spectacular membership claims will be
    used for legitimizing possible vote rigging.

    Bostanjian, who is a senior economics professor at Yerevan State
    University, further dismissed speculation that Tsarukian evades taxes
    and gets away with that owing to his close ties with Kocharian. "I am
    convinced that he pays taxes [in full,]" he said. "Relevant authorities
    have not brought any [tax evasion] cases against the leader of our
    party. Isn't that sufficient proof [of his innocence?]"

    Despite Tsarukian's reputation as a Armenia's wealthiest "oligarch,"
    the amount of taxes paid by his businesses is quite modest. The
    largest of those businesses, a chain of liquefied and compressed
    gas stations, was only 84th in the latest rankings of the country's
    top corporate taxpayers compiled by the State Tax Service (STS). The
    company, Multi-Leon, paid only about 500 million drams ($1.4 million)
    in various taxes last year.
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