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Armenia Buries Prime Minister

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  • Armenia Buries Prime Minister

    ARMENIA BURIES PRIME MINISTER
    Story by Onnik Krikorian

    EurasiaNet, NY
    March 28 2007

    Armenia said farewell March 28 to the longest serving prime minister
    in its short history as an independent, post-Soviet state. Andranik
    Markarian died on March 25 from a heart attack less than two months
    before pivotal parliamentary elections.

    Although the 55-year-old prime minister was known to be in poor health
    and was a frequent visitor overseas for heart disease treatments,
    his death nonetheless came as a shock to many. The event might well
    prove one of the most significant political developments before
    the May parliamentary vote, which is being framed as an important
    democratization test for the South Caucasus state. [For details,
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The political ramifications of Markarian's death are so far unknown,
    but any speculation on how it will affect the ruling Republican Party,
    of which he was chairman, was lost on the hundreds of Armenian citizens
    who converged on his home to pay their respects at a March 27 wake
    intended for relatives, friends and political associates.

    Hundreds waited for as long as two hours to get their chance to enter
    his modest apartment, situated in a typical Soviet era block on the
    outskirts of the capital, Yerevan.

    That affinity for the ordinary may be how many people, including his
    political opponents, many of whom attended the wake, will remember
    Markarian. He had served as Armenia's prime minister since 2000.

    Although many Armenian officials are renowned for their lavish
    lifestyles, the late prime minister was generally considered a more
    modest man, known for treating political rivals and citizens alike
    as his equals.

    Delegations from the United States, Russia, Greece, the North Atlantic
    Treaty Organization, the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe and fellow members of the Commonwealth of Independent
    States were among those attending the funeral at the State Academic
    Opera & Ballet Theater in central Yerevan. Turkey, which, along with
    Azerbaijan, has no diplomatic relations with Armenia, sent its Georgian
    ambassador to the ceremony.

    Editor's Note: Onnik Krikorian is a freelance journalist and
    photographer from the United Kingdom based in the Republic of Armenia.
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