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Armenian Parties Wrap Up Election Campaign

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  • Armenian Parties Wrap Up Election Campaign

    ARMENIAN PARTIES WRAP UP ELECTION CAMPAIGN
    By Hovannes Shoghikian, Karine Kalantarian, Ruzanna Khachatrian, and Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    May 10 2007

    The month-long campaigning for Armenia's parliamentary elections
    officially drew to a close on Thursday, with the main contenders
    making final appeals to voters and getting ready for what promises
    to be a tense balloting.

    The governing Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), the presumed election
    frontrunner, ended its campaign with a rally in central Yerevan
    attended by thousands of people. Many of them were civil servants,
    schoolteachers, other public sector employees, and students bused
    to the city's Liberty Square for the occasion. As was the case with
    other HHK rallies, the event began with a concert by local pop stars.

    The HHK leader, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, then delivered an
    uncharacteristically emotional speech. "Dear people of Yerevan, I am
    happy that after long and difficult years hope is again flying high
    in this square," he said.

    Sarkisian sounded satisfied with the results of the HHK's election
    campaign, saying that his party is "stronger than ever before." "I
    believe in providence," he said. "The 15th anniversary of our
    independence, the 15 anniversary of our army, the 15th anniversary
    of our victory [marked this year,] and the [HHK's] number 15 spot on
    the ballot."

    The Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) of Gagik Tsarukian, the HHK's most
    likely partner in a would-be coalition government, spent the last
    day of the campaigning touring the town of Abovian and nearby villages.

    The area north of Yerevan is widely regarded as Tsarukian's exclusive
    zone of political and economic influence. He continued to make
    election-related donations to local residents despite a law that
    bans election candidates from distributing any goods or services to
    the voters.

    "We don't buy votes. But Gagik Tsarukian is a generous man and has
    not come here empty-handed," a BHK activist said, opening a campaign
    rally in Garni, a big local village. He pointed to a new bus parked
    nearby which will cater for local youths studying in Yerevan.

    Addressing hundreds of villagers, Tsarukian described the gift as
    proof of his commitment to improving their plight. He urged them
    to vote for his party, saying that its promises of quick economic
    betterment are not unfounded. "I'm not telling fairy tales today to
    be ashamed of looking you in the eyes tomorrow," he said.

    Local residents welcomed the donation but used the opportunity to
    convey other grievances to the influential tycoon close to President
    Robert Kocharian. They complained in particular that they have running
    water for only a few hours a day. Ashot Vartanian, the Garni mayor
    affiliated with the BHK, the cash-strapped village administration can
    not afford to spend at least 5 million drams ($14,000) a year which
    he said is needed for ensuring 12-hour supplies of drinking water to
    more than a thousand local households.

    "I'll give you that five million, man," replied Tsarukian. "Don't
    worry about that." He also instructed the mayor to address other
    complaints voiced by the locals.

    Garni was until recently considered a stronghold of the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), which is represented in
    Kocharian's current cabinet and is keen to enhance that presence.

    Dashnaktsutyun held its final campaign rally in Yerevan's Zeytun
    district on Thursday. Later in the day its leadership held a meeting
    with the party's representatives to various-level election commissions
    and proxies. One of the Dashnaktsutyun leaders, Vahan Hovannisian,
    urged them on Wednesday to "stand firm" and resist any attempts to
    rig Saturday's elections.

    Armenia's divided opposition camp also finalized its preparations for
    the vote. The People's Party of Armenia (HZhK), whose leader Stepan
    Demirchian was Kocharian's main challenger in the 2003 presidential
    election, rallied about a thousand supporters in Yerevan. "We will
    keep fighting until power is returned to the people," Demirchian said,
    warning the authorities against fresh vote rigging.

    Attendance at the rally was a far cry from Demirchian's 2003 campaign
    rallies that attracted tens of thousands people. His campaign meetings
    in other parts of the country were also poorly attended this time
    around, raising questions about its ability to win at least 5 percent
    of the vote needed for winning parliament seats under the system of
    proportional representation. Demirchian has dismissed talk of a steep
    decline in his and his party's popularity ratings.

    Analysts believe that Orinats Yerkir, another major opposition party
    led by former parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian, should have
    no problem retaining its presence in the National Assembly, having
    conducted a far more lively and dynamic campaign. Baghdasarian summed
    up its results at a news conference on Thursday. He also complained
    about what he called unequal campaigning opportunities that were put
    in place for the pro-government and opposition forces.

    "Our election campaign has practically not been covered by a number
    of TV companies, whereas the airwaves were flooded with campaign ads
    of the Republican and Prosperous Armenia parties," Baghdasarian said.

    "If the elections are held properly we will welcome them. If the
    elections are bad, we will revolt and struggle for people's rights,"
    he warned.

    But Baghdasarian would not specify whether Orinats Yerkir is ready to
    join other, more radical opposition groups that are already gearing
    up for post-election protests. "If the Armenian elections are rigged,
    Orinats Yerkir and myself will be at the forefront of the struggle.

    Anyone can join us in struggling against injustice," he said.

    Another opposition heavyweight, Raffi Hovannisian, concluded the
    first-ever election campaign of his Zharangutyun (Heritage) party
    with an indoor meeting attended by hundreds of party activists and
    supporters. He again claimed that Heritage will win the elections.

    The audience burst into "Yes" chants when asked by Hovannisian,
    "Are we the masters of our national heritage? Are we the masters of
    our republic?"
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