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  • Rich arm-wrestler accused of buying votes

    Independent Online, South Africa
    May 11 2007


    Rich arm-wrestler accused of buying votes

    May 11 2007 at 07:32AM

    Yerevan - Armenia's ruling elite have unleashed a powerful weapon on
    voters ahead of parliamentary elections here on Saturday: Gagik
    Tsarukian, the former arm wrestling champion of the world.

    After winning his title, Tsarukian founded a multi-million-dollar
    petrol station and vodka empire and it is this wealth, not his
    muscles, that the small ex-Soviet republic's political elite appears
    to be counting on.

    Critics accuse Tsarukian of openly buying votes for his Prosperous
    Armenia party, which was formed last year with the support of
    President Robert Kocharian - allegedly to siphon votes from true
    opposition parties.

    Tsarukian acknowledges that he supports the president, but insists he
    has a genuine interest in governing.

    Whatever the methods, Tsarukian, 50, is becoming popular.

    Polls show Prosperous Armenia winning 20-25 percent of the vote on
    Saturday, only five to 10 percent behind the ruling Republican Party
    of Armenia (HKK).

    At a recent rally in the capital Yerevan, even Tsarukian's
    thick-necked bodyguards could not keep supporters from mobbing the
    candidate.

    They broke through security to swarm around Tsarukian, shaking his
    beefy hand or handing him letters and notes pleading for his help.

    But media have reported that Prosperous Armenia is offering
    supporters more than promises in this election campaign.

    Reports say that voters are being given 20 000 Armenian drams (about
    R393) in exchange for agreeing to vote for the party and that
    Tsarukian has personally financed local reconstruction projects to
    win support.

    Tsarukian's fans insist their support is genuine.

    "He's a real man, a great sportsman and a smart businessman. He's
    exactly what Armenia needs," construction worker Artur Gukasian said
    after shaking Tsarukian's hand at a rally.

    "And if he wants to help people out sometimes, why not?"

    Yerevan political analyst Alexander Iskandarian said Prosperous
    Armenia's popularity showed that Armenia's democracy was still far
    from perfect.

    "Unfortunately, the main issue for many voters is how to best sell
    their votes," he said.

    But given Armenia's history of ballot stuffing and voter fraud,
    vote-selling may actually reflect some progress in Armenia's
    democratic development, he added.

    "If some parties are trying to buy people's votes, at least that
    means their votes matter to the outcome of the election," he said.

    Saturday's election is being watched closely by the international
    community as a test of this small ex-Soviet country's commitment to
    democratic reform.

    Armenia has not held an election judged free and fair by Western
    observers since gaining its independence with the collapse of the
    Soviet Union.
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