Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

INTERVIEW-Armenian PM Sees Vote As Springboard To Presidency

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • INTERVIEW-Armenian PM Sees Vote As Springboard To Presidency

    INTERVIEW-ARMENIAN PM SEES VOTE AS SPRINGBOARD TO PRESIDENCY
    By Hasmik Lazarian and Margarita Antidze

    Reuters, UK
    May 10 2007

    YEREVAN, May 10 (Reuters) - Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sarskyan
    on Thursday gave his strongest signal yet he will seek his country's
    presidency, two days before a parliamentary vote seen as a dress
    rehearsal for the presidential race.

    Sarksyan, a trusted lieutenant of President Robert Kocharyan, is
    leading the Republican party into Saturday's election to choose a new
    parliament for Armenia, an ancient Christian nation wedged between
    Iran and Turkey.

    "If the Republican party gets enough votes in the ... election and
    my party puts forward my candidacy for the presidential election,
    I will take up this offer with pleasure," Sarksyan told Reuters in
    an interview.

    Kocharyan is to step down early next year when his second term ends,
    triggering a presidential election.

    Speaking in his office with a portrait of Kocharyan on the wall,
    Sarksyan said he expected his party to win "much more" than 25 percent
    in Saturday's vote and to head a coalition government.

    Opinion polls also point to this outcome.

    "The presidential election will be an organic continuation of this
    campaign as I don't think tremendous changes can happen in the space
    of a few months," said the 52-year-old.

    Armenia's last parliamentary election, in 2003, was described by
    Western monitors as falling short of democratic standards. Opposition
    leaders have said they will stage street protests if there is ballot
    fraud in Saturday's vote.

    But Sarskyan said holding a clean vote was a "matter of extreme
    importance" for his ex-Soviet state.

    "Our independent republic is 15 years old and it's time now for the
    international community to recognise Armenia as a democratic country."

    WELDER

    Kocharyan and Sarskyan are both from Nagorno-Karabakh, the mainly
    Armenian region of neighbouring Azerbaijan which fought a separatist
    war in the 1990s.

    A former welder, Sarksyan was at Kocharian's side in the separatist
    administration during the war. For nearly 15 years he has held senior
    posts in Armenia's government including defence minister and national
    security minister.

    The conflict is still unresolved, bringing instability to a South
    Caucasus region that is emerging as a key transit route for oil and
    gas from the Caspian Sea.

    Armenia also has fraught relations with its neighbour Turkey, in part
    because Ankara refuses to recognise as genocide the mass killings of
    Armenians in Ottoman Turkey early in the last century.

    Its closest ties are with Russia -- which has military bases in
    Armenia -- and with Iran to the south.

    "I don't think there will be big shifts in foreign policy," said
    Sarksyan. "We have long-term policies: we are in the European Union
    neighbourhood programme, we have strategic alliances which we are
    not going to abandon."

    But he said Armenia wants its borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey
    re-opened. They were closed during the war over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "We are trying to normalise relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey ...

    We'll try to bring Armenia out of its blockade."
Working...
X