Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia: A New Era For A New Opposition?

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

  • Armenia: A New Era For A New Opposition?

    ARMENIA: A NEW ERA FOR A NEW OPPOSITION?
    By Haroutiun Khachatrian

    EurasiaNet, NY
    May 16 2007

    The May 12 parliamentary elections marked a sizeable setback for three
    of Armenia's best known opposition parties, the People's Party of
    Armenia, the National Unity Party and the Republic Party. Two prominent
    opposition members argue that their defeat signals that the time has
    come for the country's opposition to abandon the tactics of the past.

    Based on the Central Election Commission's preliminary results, the
    Country of Law Party and Heritage Party were the only two opposition
    parties to clear the 5 percent of the vote barrier to take seats
    in parliament. The National Unity Party of Artashes Geghamian, a
    prime force behind the 2004 opposition protests against President
    Robert Kocharian, registered a mere 3.59 percent of the vote. The
    People's Party of Armenia, led by former presidential candidate
    Stepan Demirchian, and the Republic Party of former Prime Minister
    Aram Sarkisian fared even worse, with 1.70 percent and 1.63 percent
    of the vote, respectively

    "These elections were not the victory of the ruling party," commented
    one veteran opposition member of parliament. "They were the defeat
    of the opposition."

    As a result, many Armenian observers believe that the time has come
    for a new opposition.

    "The era of political scarecrows has passed. Those people who are
    already involved in other spheres are entering politics," stated
    sociologist Aharon Adibekian at a May 14 briefing. "We have entered
    a new stage in the development of [our] political culture."

    Coming up with fresh ideas that resonate with average voters, rather
    than relying on the name recognition of past political celebrities, is
    widely thought to be the most difficult task now facing the opposition.

    Stepan Demirichian and Aram Sarkisian both became politicians following
    the 1999 assassination of their father (Parliamentary Speaker
    Karen Demirchian) and brother (Prime Minister Vazgen Sarkisian),
    respectively. Since entering the National Assembly in 2003, neither
    presented any "serious legislative initiative," argued political
    scientist Styopa Safrarian, director of the Armenian Center of
    National and International studies, run by Heritage Party leader
    Raffi Hovannisian.

    The time both have spent boycotting parliament to protest President
    Kocharian's rule as "illegal" led to the impression among voters
    that neither party was in a position to attend to the needs of their
    supporters, Safrarian said.

    The boycott of the 2005 constitutional referendum was a further
    opportunity lost, and one which affected mainstream opposition parties'
    chances at the 2007 polls, added Shavarsh Kocharian, the leader of
    the relatively small oppositional National Democratic Party, which
    did not boycott the vote. Kocharian entered parliament in 2003 as a
    member of Demirchian's Justice bloc of opposition parties.

    "[W]hen the authorities, under pressure from both the opposition
    and European organizations, introduced such changes in the form of
    constitutional reform, the opposition parties decided to boycott
    the referendum, instead of declaring it as their own victory,"
    Kocharian said.

    An inability to define themselves apart from their opposition to the
    government continues to plague both parties, and cost them votes,
    he continued. "They lacked their own ideas, and adopted the rules of
    the game as dictated by the authorities; in fact they were confusing
    the goal with the means to reach it," said Kocharian, who himself lost
    the parliament seat he has held since 1990. "They presented entering
    the parliament as their goal without presenting reasons for why they
    need to be in parliament."

    "There are scores of people who are unhappy with the current situation,
    but the opposition parties have been unable to offer any new goal
    for society," continued Kocharian. "I suppose that in the future
    the NGOs [non-governmental organizations] will have a lot to do in
    this respect."

    That failure cost both parties support and respect from the West,
    Kocharian believes - a view echoed by other Armenian observers.

    Meanwhile, the two opposition parties represented in Armenia's new
    parliament are trying to define their own legislation agenda.

    Heritage's Safrarian told EurasiaNet that the main goal for both
    parties will be to push for a more pro-Western foreign policy.

    Heritage also plans to call for the reversal of previous privatizations
    (including telecommunications company ArmenTel, the Yerevan Brandy
    factory and the fifth unit of the Hrazadan TPP thermal plant) plus
    recent controversial land grabs in historical Yerevan neighborhoods,
    said Safrarian, who will hold a seat for the party in the new
    parliament.

    The Country of Law Party has also proposed closer relations with the
    West, but with little elaboration as yet.

    The extent to which any of these ideas will resonate with voters
    remains, of course, unknown.

    But one former high-ranking official under ex-President Levon
    Ter-Petrossian (1991-1998), who asked not to be named, calls these
    changes an opportunity, another step away from Armenia's post-Soviet
    political heritage. Armenia is now undergoing a "transformation
    process," he said -- a time of political evolution, not revolution.

    Editor's Note: Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer
    specializing in economic and political affairs.
Working...
X