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PREVIEW-Armenia's Would-Be Leader Limbers Up In Parl't Vote

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  • PREVIEW-Armenia's Would-Be Leader Limbers Up In Parl't Vote

    PREVIEW-ARMENIA'S WOULD-BE LEADER LIMBERS UP IN PARL'T VOTE
    By Hasmik Lazarian

    Reuters, UK
    May 10 2007

    YEREVAN, May 10 (Reuters) - Armenia votes in a parliamentary election
    on Saturday that should set the stage for President Robert Kocharyan
    to hand over the country's leadership to his most trusted lieutenant
    next year.

    The Republican party -- led by Serzh Sarksyan, the acting prime
    minister and Kocharyan's friend and favoured successor -- is expected
    to easily defeat the opposition when the 2.3 million voters in
    ex-Soviet Armenia go to the polls.

    But simmering tensions burst to the surface last month when gunmen
    tried to kill a senior member of Sarksyan's party and two blasts
    ripped through the offices of a rival pro-presidential party,
    Prosperous Armenia.

    The violence has revived memories of a 1999 shootout in parliament
    that killed the speaker and the prime minister.

    Armenia, in the Caucasus mountains, is in a region emerging as a vital
    transit route for oil exports from the Caspian Sea to energy-hungry
    world markets, though has no pipelines of its own.

    Armenia fought a still-unresolved war with neighbouring Azerbaijan in
    the early 1990s. It also has fraught relations with neighbour Turkey,
    in part because Ankara will not accept as genocide the killing of
    1.5 million Armenians in Ottoman Turkey.

    Armenia has refused entry visas to eight Turkish nationals who were to
    be part of a 400-strong election observer mission from the Organisation
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

    PRESIDENT'S ALTER EGO

    Sarksyan, 52, has been the clear focus of his party's election
    campaign. "I ask for your vote of confidence" has been his slogan at
    campaign rallies.

    Kocharyan is required by the constitution to step down next year
    when his second term ends. Sarksyan -- widely seen as Kocharyan's
    alter ego -- is strong favourite to win the presidential election
    that will follow.

    Their relationship goes back 20 years. Both from Nagorno-Karabakh,
    the mainly Armenian region of Azerbaijan that was the focus of the
    1990s war, they worked together in the separatist movement, then
    restored their partnership in Yerevan.

    A trim man with a shock of grey hair, Sarksyan became prime minister
    when incumbent Andranik Margaryan died in March.

    "Serzh Sarksyan has a real chance of becoming president," analyst
    Gevorg Poghosyan said.

    Voters on Saturday are expected to credit Kocharyan's allies for
    the years of strong economic growth he has overseen. The opposition
    is divided and its members say they are not given fair treatment on
    tightly controlled television.

    Opinion polls suggest the chief challenger to the Republican party
    is its pro-presidential stablemate, Prosperous Armenia, set up by
    wealthy businessman Gagik Tsarukyan.

    Its rivalry with Sarksyan's party seems to have become the focus for
    a turf war inside Armenia's ruling elite.

    "The main intrigue of the elections is the fight between the two
    government parties," Poghosyan said. "There is a battle going on not
    over ideas but ... for power."

    Analysts predict the strongest opposition force will be the Orinats
    Yerkir (Country of Laws) party led by estranged Kocharyan ally Artur
    Baghdasaryan. Smaller opposition groups may also win seats.

    After past elections, opposition supporters alleging ballot-rigging
    have clashed with police. Riot police on Wednesday used tear gas
    against a group of opposition activists.
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