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Armenia: Regime Parties Dominate Poll

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  • Armenia: Regime Parties Dominate Poll

    ARMENIA: REGIME PARTIES DOMINATE POLL
    By Rita Karapetian in Yerevan

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    May 3 2007

    Two pro-government parties in uneasy truce ahead of crucial
    parliamentary election.

    Two contrasting parties linked to the governing elite are dominating
    Armenia's parliamentary elections, with much of the drama being
    provided by the awkward rivalry between them. The polls are widely
    being seen as a dress rehearsal for next year's presidential election.

    "On May 12 the main fight will be between political forces within the
    system of power," said Samvel Nikoyan, a parliamentary deputy from the
    Republican Party - one of the two parties dominating the pre-election
    period. He dismissed the chances of the opposition wining a majority
    in parliament.

    The Republican Party currently comprises the main group in parliament
    and is led by Serzh Sarkisian, who recently became prime minister
    after many years serving as defence minister. Sarkisian is also the
    favourite to succeed Robert Kocharian when his second and final term
    as president ends next year.

    The party's main rival is Prosperous Armenia, an electoral movement
    founded by the man frequently said to be the country's richest
    businessman, former champion wrestler Gagik Tsarukian. Prosperous
    Armenia is closely linked to President Kocharian.

    The leaders of the two parties, which get the lion's share of
    television news coverage, do not criticise one another, but observers
    see tensions underneath.

    Of the 131 seats in parliament, 41 will be elected from constituencies
    and 90 proportionally from lists of parties, which collect more than
    five per cent of the overall vote. The battle in the 41 constituencies
    that cover the country will not only between party candidates but
    candidates nominated by groups of voters.

    The two parties' programmes are similar. Tsarukian said that the
    Republican Party had achieved high levels of economic growth, which
    his party wanted to see continue.

    Vardan Bostanjian, one of the leaders of Prosperous Armenia, said
    that he "feels love towards the Republican Party of Armenia which he
    regards not as an enemy but as a rival".

    The parliamentary leader of the Republican Party Galust Sahakian has
    said that he thinks it possible that the two parties will collaborate
    in the next parliament.

    The rivalry between the two parties is mostly hidden from view and
    the subject of rumour and speculation. Two of the Yerevan offices of
    Prosperous Armenia were blown up in explosions in April. According to
    one press report, Republican Party activists were behind the blasts
    while another report blamed Prosperous Armenia itself.

    Following the explosions, Prosperous Armenia issued a call for the
    election campaign to remain a civilised struggle, while the Republican
    Party made a statement saying that certain forces were trying to
    destabilise the situation. Many observers saw these statements by
    the two favourites in the parliamentary poll as being aimed at one
    another - although no names were named.

    Political commentator Vahan Vardanian said that whatever deal had
    been struck at the top, there was no agreement on the division of
    roles amongst second-tier figures after the elections.

    A leading opposition politician, Suren Sureniants, said neither of
    the two should be called proper parties.

    "There is the quasi Republican Party which serves the interests of
    the clan of Serzh Sarkisian and the quasi Prosperous Armenia party
    which serves the interest of the oligarchs who have gathered round
    Robert Kocharian," said Sureniants.

    The friendship and political alliance of Kocharian and Sarkisian, who
    both come from Nagorny Karabakh, dates back more than 20 years. Some
    are predicting that after he steps down, Kocharian will aim to become
    prime minister if Sarkisian becomes president.

    Sarkisian has said he will make his intentions clear on May 13, the day
    after the parliamentary poll. He has already begun making high-profile
    trips around the country and is leading the Republican Party's election
    campaign virtually single-handed, holding meetings with voters and
    appearing on television. He not only appears in the party's electoral
    advertisements, but is seen constantly in television news reports.

    Edvard Antinian, deputy chairman of the Liberal Progressive Party
    of Armenia, said that the appointment of Sarkisian to the post of
    prime minister to succeed Andranik Margarian, who died in March
    unexpectedly of a heart attack, had damaged Sarkisian's chances of
    becoming president.

    "It would have been better for Sarkisian if he had continued to be
    the 'grey cardinal' who ran the government from behind the scenes,"
    Antinian told IWPR, arguing that Sarkisian's presidential ambitions
    had been revealed too early.

    Antinian said that Sarkisian's elevation to head the Republican Party
    had strengthened the position of the military and security faction
    in the party, making it more aggressive towards Prosperous Armenia.

    "Until recently the parties coordinated their actions with one another,
    but that's no longer happening," said Antinian.

    The governing coalition formed after the last parliamentary elections
    in 2003 between the Republican Party, the veteran nationalist party
    Dashnaktsutiun and the Orinats Yerkir party has broken up.

    Dashnaktsutiun is now critical of the government, while Orinats Yerkir
    and its leader, former parliamentary speaker Artur Baghdasarian,
    has gone into open opposition.

    One of the leaders of Dashnaktsutiun, Hrant Margarian, announced that
    they would not be supporting Sarkisian in the presidential election
    but would nominate their own candidate.

    Baghdasarian also has presidential ambitions and has set himself
    up as a leading critic of the governing elite - which has recently
    landed him in trouble.

    The Russian-language newspaper Golos Armenii recently published
    the transcript of a taped conversation that allegedly took place
    in a Yerevan restaurant between Baghdasarian and British diplomat
    Richard Hyde.

    In the conversation, Baghdasarian is heard to argue that international
    observers must come out with a forceful denunciation of the outcome
    of the parliamentary elections.

    President Kocharian called Baghdasarian a traitor. "It's hard to
    imagine that a former speaker could fall so low," he said."Someone
    who has betrayed once is capable of doing it again."

    Baghdasarian said the publication was a "provocation" designed to
    discredit him ahead of the presidential elections, in which he plans
    to stand.

    As well as the Republican Party and Prosperous Armenia and the
    two former members of the governing coalition, observers see two
    other opposition parties as having a good chance of winning seats in
    parliament - National Unity of former Yerevan mayor Artashes Geghamian
    and Heritage of former foreign minister Raffi Hovanissian.

    Rita Karapetian is a correspondent with Noyan Tapan news agency
    in Yerevan.
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