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Armenian Communists Mark May Day

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  • Armenian Communists Mark May Day

    ARMENIAN COMMUNISTS MARK MAY DAY
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 1 2007

    The Armenian Communist Party (HKK), once a major political force,
    rallied more than two thousand supporters in Yerevan on Tuesday to
    celebrate May Day and remind voters of its largely unnoticed election
    campaign.

    Waving red Soviet flags and chanting "Long live May 1! Long Live
    the Communist Party!" they marched through the city center to the
    accompaniment of Soviet-era music played by a brass band. Party leaders
    buoyed the crowd with passionate calls and urged curious onlookers to
    help the HKK win back presence in parliament in the May 12 elections.

    "At a time when the whole country is unemployed, when the worker sits
    idly at home, when blood, rather than tears, drop from his eyes, I
    call on all of you to be with the Communist Party on May 12," the HKK
    first secretary, Ruben Tovmasian, declared through a megaphone. "You
    will thereby save our fatherland, the fate of the Armenian people,
    the fate of the younger generations, your grandchildren."

    "If this National Assembly is elected with the disgraceful methods
    that were used in 2003, then Armenia and its people will become
    servants and slaves of foreigners," he said, urging voters to reject
    "oligarchs and other plunderers."

    Tovmasian was referring to the last parliamentary elections in
    which the HKK failed to win any parliament seats for the first time
    since Armenia's independence. Few observers think that the staunchly
    left-wing party, which garnered an average of 10 percent of the vote
    throughout the 1990s, will clear the 5 percent vote barrier to return
    to the National Assembly. The Armenian media is largely ignoring its
    low-key election campaign.

    As the May Day demonstration showed, the Communists mainly appeal to
    the shrinking number of elderly and impoverished Armenians nostalgic
    about their far more prosperous Soviet past. One woman spoke for
    many of them when she said, "I stand for socialism and believe that
    Armenia can become prosperous only by following a socialist path
    of development."

    Quite a few demonstrators were residents of rural regions of
    the country. Some arrived at the protest with their children and
    grandchildren wearing red neckties, an obligatory item of school
    students' attire in the former Soviet Union.

    May 1 is a public holiday in Armenia officially called Labor May. The
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation, a center-left party represented
    in the government, also marked it with a rally held in another part
    of Yerevan.
    From: Baghdasarian
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