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  • TOL: PM's Death Has Little Impact On Election Campaign

    PM'S DEATH HAS LITTLE IMPACT ON ELECTION CAMPAIGN
    by Emil Danielyan

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    EurasiaNet, NY
    March 30 2007

    The late Andranik Markarian may have been too nice to carve out a
    real power base in Armenia's cut-and-thrust political arena. From
    EurasiaNet.

    As Armenians come to grips with the sudden death of Prime Minister
    Andranik Markarian, there are growing indications that his passing
    will not have a major impact on parliamentary elections scheduled
    for 12 May.

    Past experience suggests that that outcome will be decided not so
    much by the electorate, but by actions taken by the country's two
    most powerful men: President Robert Kocharian and Defense Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian. Throughout his nearly seven-year premiership, the
    55-year-old Markarian never seriously challenged their grip on power,
    despite earning acclaim for his unassuming demeanor, conciliatory
    stance toward the opposition, and openness to independent media.

    "The prime minister never played a decisive role in Armenian politics,
    and key decisions were mainly made by Kocharian and Sarkisian,"
    Aghasi Yenokian, a seasoned political analyst, told EurasiaNet. "The
    impact of his death on the election results will therefore be very
    small." Some analysts say Markarian, who at the time of his death
    also served as chairman of the governing Republican Party of Armenia
    (RPA), was widely expected to resign following the upcoming polls.

    Sarkisian's brother Levon, a career diplomat, appeared to confirm
    that Markarian's influence was limited. Speaking with journalists
    during Markarian's state funeral on 28 March, Levon Sarkisian said
    that the former prime minister's death "won't have a great impact [on
    political processes] because, thank God, we have been an independent
    state with functioning mechanisms for 15 years."

    Serzh Sarkisian is now tipped to be appointed prime minister by
    Kocharian. Media reports citing government sources have said the
    appointment will be announced in the coming days. Kocharian's
    office and leaders of his loyal majority in parliament, who held
    urgent consultations on the matter on 26 March, have not officially
    confirmed this yet. Majority leaders have said only that the RPA
    will continue to control the post of prime minister at least until
    the parliamentary elections.

    Sarkisian was named the RPA's acting chairman earlier this week.

    Nominally, he was the number two figure in the party hierarchy prior
    to Markarian's death. But Sarkisian was widely considered the party's
    de facto leader even before the prime minister's fatal heart attack.

    Commentators pointed to the fact that the RPA's recently publicized
    electoral list is dominated by Sarkisian's wealthy loyalists, most
    of whom joined Armenia's largest "party of power" together with the
    powerful defense minister last July.

    That development marked the start of Sarkisian's apparent preparations
    for the presidential election due early in 2008. He is expected to
    heavily rely on the RPA's control of most central and local government
    bodies, extensive patronage networks, and a strong presence on
    election commissions. The use of "administrative resources" proved
    decisive in the party's victory in the 2003 parliamentary elections,
    which were marred by reports of widespread fraud. Patronage power
    and other forms of influence remain the RPA's trump cards ahead of
    the forthcoming parliamentary voting, which experts say will play a
    determining role in the outcome of the 2008 presidential election.

    The massive outpouring of sympathy expressed by ordinary Armenians
    for the late premier - thousands attended his funeral - showed that
    Markarian enjoyed a level of popular support that Sarkisian and other
    top Republicans do not necessarily have. "Voters will now associate
    the RPA with Serzh Sarkisian, rather than Andranik Markarian,"
    Hovannes Galajian, a veteran columnist, commented in his newspaper
    Iskakan Iravunk.

    This, according to some observers, could damage the party's popularity,
    prompting it to rely on its administrative resources to ensure
    the desired result in the 12 May balloting. "The number of the
    party's sincere supporters will shrink," predicted Aram Abrahamian,
    editor of the Aravot daily. "There will mainly remain employees of
    government agencies whose corrupt bosses depend on authorities, and
    force [subordinates] to vote and even falsify elections in favor of
    the Republicans."

    "The RPA will have to resort to much more vote-rigging than was
    planned," agreed Hayk, another paper that is often critical of the
    government.

    Widespread vote-rigging would increase the likelihood of post-election
    unrest in Armenia. Markarian played a major role in easing bitter
    standoffs between the government and the opposition in the past. He
    was among the few top members of the government camp who seemed
    reluctant to attack opposition leaders, and who privately communicated
    with even the bitterest foes of the Kocharian-Sarkisian team. This
    explains why virtually all prominent opposition members lavished
    praise on Markarian in the days following his 25 March death from
    heart failure. As opposition lawmaker Stepan Zakarian put it, "Nobody
    in Armenia hated him. Both the opposition and pro-government forces
    maintained good relationships with the prime minister."

    Aram Sarkisian (no relation to the defense minister), the leader
    of the most radical opposition party, Republic, believes that
    dialogue between the government and the opposition will suffer due
    to Markarian's absence. "Unfortunately, there are very few people in
    the government pyramid who have humane skills such [as] the ability
    to listen and to forgive," he told RFE/RL.

    A lot depends on how Kocharian will behave in this situation. He is
    believed to be planning to hand over power to Sarkisian and remain
    in government in some capacity after completing his second and final
    term in office in less than a year from now. To that end, Kocharian
    is reportedly sponsoring another election frontrunner, the populist
    Prosperous Armenia Party of businessman Gagik Tsarukian, both as his
    new support base and as a counterweight to the RPA. The Armenian
    press has for months been speculating about a possible electoral
    clash between the two political groups.

    But analyst Yenokian is among those who see little prospect for such
    confrontation. "Everything continues to be decided by Kocharian and,
    to a lesser extent, Sarkisian, and a serious conflict between these
    two individuals is, therefore, extremely unlikely," he said.

    Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and political analyst.

    This is a partner post from EurasiaNet.
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