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Another Opposition Party Opts For Election Boycott

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  • Another Opposition Party Opts For Election Boycott

    ANOTHER OPPOSITION PARTY OPTS FOR ELECTION BOYCOTT
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 29 2007

    A second Armenian opposition party announced on Thursday its decision
    to boycott the upcoming parliamentary elections, saying that they
    will not be free and fair.

    The leader of the small Liberal Progressive Party (AAK), Hovannes
    Hovannisian, said it will instead concentrate on organizing
    anti-government demonstrations in the wake of the May 12 elections.

    "I believe that the outcome of the May 12 parliamentary elections
    must be decided on the streets," he told RFE/RL. "There will be no
    elections as such."

    Hovannisian admitted that the AAK would fail to win at least 5 percent
    of the vote needed for winning seats in the National Assembly under
    the system of proportional representation. But he claimed that that
    would be the result of vote rigging and not its lack of popularity
    and political clout.

    The former parliamentarian, who was a senior Communist Party member in
    Soviet times but now stands for Armenia's membership in NATO, said the
    upcoming polls will mirror a weekend local election in the southern
    town of Armavir. Its incumbent mayor affiliated with the governing
    Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) won reelection through a heavy
    use of government levers. The mayor's main challenger representing
    another establishment party alleged massive fraud.

    The AAK's boycott follows a similar decision made by another, bigger
    opposition party, the National Democratic Union (AZhM), early this
    month. It resulted from the collapse of the AZhM's talks with three
    other opposition groups over the formation of an electoral alliance.

    The AZhM leader, Vazgen Manukian, argued that opposition parties
    stand no chance of winning a parliament majority by contesting the
    elections on their own. He also said the authorities' have development
    more sophisticated "mechanisms for hiding vote falsifications."

    The other major opposition forces are clearly less pessimistic on this
    score. But at least one of them, the radical Hanrapetutyun (Republic),
    makes no secret of its intention to use the elections for staging a
    campaign of anti-government street protests.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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