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Sarkisian Denies Rift With Kocharian

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  • Sarkisian Denies Rift With Kocharian

    SARKISIAN DENIES RIFT WITH KOCHARIAN
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    May 4 2007

    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian has dismissed talk of his growing rift
    with President Robert Kocharian, insisting that their relationship
    emains "excellent" and will not be undermined by rivalry between
    political parties sponsored by Armenia's two top leaders.

    In an extensive interview with the French-Armenian magazine "Nouvelles
    d'Armenie," Sarkisian said he and Kocharian have worked together too
    long to fall out now.

    "If I insist that our relations are excellent, one may not believe
    me," he said. "But those who have been able to observe our relations
    are surprised by these rumors. We have known each other for a long
    time and have worked together for 26 years. Our present rapport is
    one of two persons who have gone down the same path for 26 years."

    "And that path has not always been political: we have lived for six
    or seven years in very difficult conditions of war, and, thank God,
    have never had an occasion to part company," he added, referring to
    their joint leadership of Nagorno-Karabakh during the early 1990s.

    Having stood by Kocharian during his nearly decade-long presidency,
    Sarkisian is now believed to be intent on becoming Armenia's next
    president. Kocharian does not seem to mind being succeeded by his
    influential associate. But the Armenian leader has indicated that he
    wants to remain in government in some other capacity, possibly as a
    prime minister, after completing his second and final term in office
    early next year. Some local observers say these putative plans do not
    sit well with Sarkisian and his Republican Party of Armenia (HHK),
    the top contender of next week's parliamentary elections.

    The Armenian press has been rife with speculation about a possible
    confrontation between the HHK millionaire businessman Gagik Tsarukian's
    Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), another election frontrunner widely
    seen as Kocharian's new support base. Both parties have set themselves
    the task of winning the elections.

    "As regards the Prosperous Armenia Party, it can in no case be an
    obstacle to our relations," insisted Sarkisian, arguing that its
    program and ideology is "very close" to the HHK's. "And all those
    who expect a struggle between us will be disappointed," he said.

    Kocharian has likewise left no indications so far that he is worried
    about the prospect of the HHK retaining the largest caucus in the
    National Assembly. Meeting with university students last week, he
    expressed hope that the new assembly will be controlled by the HHK,
    the BHK and two other pro-presidential parties.

    The two Karabakh-born men made a rare joint public appearance on
    Friday when they visited the grave of the former Prime Minister
    Andranik Markarian, who died of heart failure on March 25. There
    were no visible signs of tension between them as they shook hands
    and spoke for several minutes at the national Pantheon in Yerevan.

    In the magazine interview given during his recent visit to Paris,
    Sarkisian also said that he will stand in the 2008 presidential
    election if the Republicans win "sufficient votes" in the upcoming
    legislative polls. "If the Republican Party wins 25 percent of the
    vote, I will reckon that we have done a good job," he said.

    Other top Republicans have set far more ambitious targets, saying
    that they may well win an absolute majority of parliament seats.

    Opposition leaders, which refused to accept the legitimacy of the
    HHK's victory in the previous elections, claim that this can only be
    achieved as a result of massive vote rigging.

    Sarkisian, who is denunced by his political opponents as one of the
    architects of Armenia's culture of electoral fraud, again stated that
    his party is committed to ensuring the freedom and fairness of the
    May 12 vote. He also denied that Western observers questioned the
    legitimacy of Armenia's last presidential and parliamentary elections.

    "Of course, they reported irregularities, but those did not affect
    the final result," said Sarkisian. "If they had really considered
    the elections falsified, they would have never recognized the current
    [Armenian] authorities."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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