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Armenia's Yezidis Split Over Elections

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  • Armenia's Yezidis Split Over Elections

    ARMENIA'S YEZIDIS SPLIT OVER ELECTIONS
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 22 2007

    The approaching elections seem to be deepening divisions within
    Armenia's sizable Yezidi community whose often competing leaders have
    pledged allegiance to three different parties running for parliament.

    The country's largest ethnic minority, which numbers an estimated
    40,000 members, has been increasingly courted by some Armenian
    parties in recent years. Three of them are particularly active in
    doing that, having included prominent Yezidis on the lists of their
    election candidates.

    A newspaper report last month said that Samvel Babayan, the former
    military leader of Nagorno-Karabakh, has been named an honorary member
    of a Yerevan-based organization that claims to represent Yezidis
    scattered around the world. Its chairman, Aziz Tamoyan, confirmed the
    report on Thursday, but insisted that the World Yezidi Union did not
    thereby endorse Babayan and his Dashink (Alliance) party for the May
    12 parliamentary elections.

    "If I make an endorsement of a particular political leader, I will
    spread feud within our community," Tamoyan said. He said he knows
    which party most Armenian Yezidis, some of whom consider themselves
    non-Muslim Kurds, will vote for but will refrain from naming it.

    However, the fact that Tamoyan's son, Surik Hajoyan, is 13th on
    Dashink's electoral list is hardly accidental. Also, a community
    newspaper edited by Tamoyan recently ran a front-page article about
    Babayan that cast the retired Karabakh Armenian general in a highly
    positive light.

    Another Yezidi leader, Yerevan's former Deputy Chief Prosecutor Tital
    Jndoyan, is running for the National Assembly on the ticket of the
    Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), one of the election frontrunners
    supporting President Robert Kocharian. "I think that most members
    of our Yezidi community will vote for the Prosperous Armenia Party,"
    Jndoyan told RFE/RL.

    Two other Yezidis, one of them also a community leader, are high on
    the proportional representation list of another populist party led
    by Tigran Karapetian, the owner and top host of the ALM television
    station. Karapetian often invites Yezidi children and youths to sing on
    his live folk shows that are popular with rural residents of Armenia.

    Tamoyan admitted that he and many other Yezidis hold the ALM boss in
    great esteem. But he said this does not mean they will necessarily
    vote for Karapetian's People's Party in large numbers.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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