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Armenian Security Services Suspected Of Spying On Opposition Leader

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  • Armenian Security Services Suspected Of Spying On Opposition Leader

    ARMENIAN SECURITY SERVICES SUSPECTED OF SPYING ON OPPOSITION LEADER
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    May 1 2007

    Armenia's intensifying parliamentary election campaign has been
    jolted by a scandal over the secret recording of a recent confidential
    meeting between a top opposition leader and a Yerevan-based Western
    diplomat. Details of that conversation have been controversially
    disclosed by a pro-establishment newspaper, in what is widely seen
    as a government effort to discredit Artur Baghdasarian, the former
    parliament speaker whose Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law) party is a
    major opposition contender in the May 12 elections.

    Baghdasarian's meeting with the number two figure at the British
    Embassy in Armenia, held at a popular Yerevan restaurant last
    February, reportedly focused on the authorities' handling of the
    upcoming vote. The Russian-language paper, Golos Armenii, claims to
    have received audio of that conversation from unknown individuals,
    publishing much of its purported transcript on April 21 and April 26.

    The disclosed content of the conversation was hardly sensational,
    with Baghdasarian reportedly urging the European Union to express
    serious concern at what he described as government plans to rig the
    elections. He reportedly stated that they can already be considered
    fraudulent because the government is seriously restricting opposition
    access to the electronic media and intimidating and bribing voters.

    The diplomat was quoted as responding that the EU is unlikely to do
    that at the moment because the Armenian leadership is very careful
    and canny in trying to retain control over the country's next
    parliament. "I suppose that they are smarter and wiser than we are ...

    There has to be some blatant violation in order for the EU to come
    up with such a statement," he said, according to Golos Armenii. The
    diplomat was also said to have complained that of all major EU states
    having diplomatic missions in Yerevan, only Britain and Germany
    seriously care about Armenia's democratization.

    Orinats Yerkir and its leader swiftly denounced the secret recording,
    illegal under Armenian law, saying that it is part of a "well-prepared
    smear campaign" waged by the ruling regime against the party. They
    argued that the newspaper report did not expose anything new or
    extraordinary as Baghdasarian has repeatedly stressed in his public
    pronouncements the need for Armenia to finally have an election
    recognized as free and fair by the West. The British Embassy also
    condemned the recording as "dishonest and deplorable." In an April
    26 statement, the embassy said British diplomats regularly meet with
    a wide range of Armenian politicians in order to have "as complete
    and objective a view as possible of the political process."

    That is a "normal and accepted practice of any embassy anywhere in
    the world," it said. Both the embassy and Baghdasarian charged that
    the content of the conversation in question was distorted but did
    not elaborate.

    Golos Armenii and other supporters of President Robert Kocharian
    directed their fury at Baghdasarian, saying that he behaved dishonestly
    and unpatriotically by seeking EU criticism of his country months
    before election day. Kocharian went further, accusing his former
    protege of committing high treason on April 27. "For me, this is a
    real manifestation of treason," he told students at Yerevan State
    University. "That manifestation is all the more ugly given that
    it was done at his own initiative." Baghdasarian's response to the
    attack was equally strongly worded. "The traitors," he told reporters,
    "are those who rig elections and disgrace the fatherland."

    The bitter exchange was quite a change from the relationship that
    existed between the two men before Orinats Yerkir was forced to
    quit Armenia's governing coalition one year ago. Kocharian had
    gone to great lengths to ensure that Baghdasarian would be elected
    parliament speaker after Orinats Yerkir finished second in the last
    general elections, held in May 2003. That fuelled speculation that
    Kocharian could handpick Baghdasarian, now 38, as his successor after
    completing his second and final term in office in early 2008. Their
    personal rapport subsequently deteriorated due to Orinats Yerkir's
    growing criticism of the government (in which it was represented)
    and conciliatory line on the Armenian opposition.

    The populist party, which has a pro-Western foreign policy agenda,
    is now thought to be one of the country's most popular opposition
    groups. The latest attempt to discredit it suggests that Kocharian and
    Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian are worried about its possible strong
    showing in next week's polls. Yet the disclosure of Baghdasarian's
    meeting with the British diplomat is unlikely to seriously affect
    the ambitious ex-speaker's popularity rating, not least because
    few Armenians buy into state propaganda. Instead, it increases the
    possibility of Orinats Yerkir's involvement in post-election street
    protests planned by other, more radical opposition forces.

    The scandal has also cast a fresh spotlight on the role of the
    National Security Service (NSS), the Armenian successor to the KGB,
    in political processes in the country. The feared security agency
    marks the anniversaries of the establishment of Bolshevik Russia's
    VChK secret police as a professional holiday, and its function of
    political policing has been increasingly obvious in recent years.

    Kocharian's office, for example, revealed last December the
    existence of a hitherto unknown NSS division charged with protecting
    "constitutional order." Many Armenian politicians, journalists and
    other government critics have long suspected that their phones
    are illegally wiretapped by the NSS. Few of them doubt that NSS
    agents secretly recorded Baghdasarian's meeting. Kocharian sought to
    disprove this dominant view, saying that another opposition leader,
    Aram Karapetian, got hold of audio of the conversation before Golos
    Armenii. The radical oppositionist, who was interrogated by the NSS
    on April 25, believes that the ex-KGB deliberately sent the recording
    to his office to deflect suspicions about its involvement.

    In any case, the whole affair is a serious cause for concern for
    local commentators, human rights activists and probably Yerevan-based
    Western diplomats. As the pro-opposition newspaper Zhamanak Yerevan
    editorialized on April 26, "Nobody can now be sure that there are no
    'bugs' planted in their apartment, that their phone conversations
    are not wire-tapped, that their every step is not watched."

    (Haykakan Zhamanak, April 28; RFE/RL Armenia Report, April 27, April
    23; Golos Armenii, April 21, April 26; Statement by the British
    embassy, April 26; Zhamanak Yerevan, April 26)
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