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Radical Oppositionist Blasts Ex-Allies

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  • Radical Oppositionist Blasts Ex-Allies

    RADICAL OPPOSITIONIST BLASTS EX-ALLIES
    By Astghik Bedevian, Ruzanna Khachatrian, and Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 30 2007

    The leader of the radical Hanrapetutyun (Republic) party, Aram
    Sarkisian, launched a blistering attack on two other prominent
    opposition figures on Monday, saying that their personal ambitions
    thwarted his attempts to unite the Armenian opposition.

    Campaigning in the eastern Gegharkunik region, he said Stepan
    Demirchian and Artashes Geghamian, President Robert Kocharian's main
    challengers in the last presidential election, are not committed to
    regime change and would settle for a handful of seats in the next
    Armenian parliament.

    "They are taking care of their 5 percent objectives. All they want is
    to enter parliament," Sarkisian told more than two hundred supporters
    in Vartenis, a small town near the eastern coast of Lake Sevan. He
    was referring to the minimum percentage of votes needed by parties to
    win parliament seats under the system of proportional representation.

    The Hanrapetutyun leader has until now avoided naming politicians who
    he believes are responsible for the failure of his attempts earlier
    this year to form a broad-based opposition bloc. He was particularly
    critical of Geghamian.

    "When you say, 'Guys, let's unite and draft a single proportional
    list,' Geghamian says, 'No, going together is not good,'" said
    Sarkisian. "Why? Because he is solving the issue of 5 percent to keep
    going to Strasbourg and coming here and saying, 'People, I've saved
    your honor.'"

    "If you, Stepan Demirchian and Artashes Geghamian, can't figure out
    who should be the first and second [on a single proportional list,]
    toss a coin and close the issue," he added to rapturous applause from
    the crowd.

    Sarkisian, Demirchian and Geghamian had already joined forces in a
    bid to unseat Kocharian with a campaign of street protests in Yerevan
    three years ago. The two-month campaign ended in failure.

    Sarkisian, who had briefly served as Armenia's prime minister following
    the October 1999 assassination of his brother and predecessor Vazgen,
    again made no secret of his party's plans to use May 12 elections for
    another attempt at "democratic revolution." "May 12 will be followed by
    May 13. On that day I will await [in Yerevan] the people of Vartenis
    as well." he said at the rally held in front of the local office of
    the governing Republican Party of Armenia (HHK).

    Demirchian, meanwhile, campaigned for his People's Party of Armenia
    (HZhK) in other towns and villages of Gegharkunik. His meetings
    there were attended by smaller number of people partly because of
    heavy rain and hail. The HZhK campaign so far has been a far cry from
    enthusiastic receptions which Demirchian enjoyed across the country
    in the run-up to the 2003 presidential election.

    Demirchian exposed his frustration with widespread voter cynicism as
    he addressed a small crowd in the lakeside village of Lchashen.

    "People don't want to go to elections, saying that their votes will
    be stolen anyway," he said. "Wherever I go, the meeting begins with
    the same complaint, 'We elect you but they steal our vote and they
    will steal it again.'"

    Demirchian went on to accuse the HHK and other pro-Kocharian parties
    of large-scale vote buying. "They spend a fraction of unpaid taxes
    on handing out humiliating vote bribes," he said. "But I believe that
    the vast majority of our people will not sell their dignity."

    The confusing abundance of opposition parties contesting the elections
    on their own is seen as another reason for increased apathy among
    Armenians unhappy with the government. Raffi Hovannisian, another
    prominent oppositionist, saw first-hand evidence of their frustration
    as he took his Zharangutyun (Heritage) party's election campaign to
    the southern Ararat region on Monday.

    "Whom to elect? We don't know," a man in the local village of
    Surenavan told Hovannisian. "Why don't you unite?" angrily shouted
    another local resident.

    "Any alliance is welcome because it's a luxury for our small country
    to have 50, 60 or 70 parties," responded Hovannisian. "I accept this
    complaint. I think that a consolidation process will begin after
    these elections."

    Zharangutyun negotiated earlier this year with Hanrapetutyun and
    two other opposition parties over the possibility of forming an
    electoral alliance. The talks collapsed for reasons that are still
    not fully clear.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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