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  • Dashnaks Demand Greater Say In Government

    DASHNAKS DEMAND GREATER SAY IN GOVERNMENT
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 29 2007

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) will join Prime
    Minister Serzh Sarkisian's new cabinet only if it is given a greater
    say in how Armenia should be governed, a leader of the influential
    party said on Tuesday.

    Hrant Markarian, the top member of Dashnaktsutyun's worldwide
    governing Bureau, said it does not want to be an "appendage" of
    Sarkisian's and Republican Party (HHK) and will not be by "bribed"
    by several ministerial posts. Markarian also made it clear that his
    party will not necessarily endorse Sarkisian's presidential bid even
    if it chooses to stay in government.

    Sarkisian appears to be ready to cut a power-sharing agreement
    with Dashnaktsutyun and other political groups loyal to President
    Robert Kocharian despite the HHK's landslide victory in the May 12
    parliamentary elections. Negotiations between those parties were still
    going on as of Tuesday, with no agreements officially announced so far.

    Markarian denied media reports that Dashnaktsutyun has already
    agreed to take up three ministerial portfolios in Armenia's new
    governing coalition. "There is no such agreement," he told RFE/RL
    in an interview. "The negotiations are taking longer than expected
    not because of haggling over portfolios or other posts. Negotiations
    center on more important issues."

    "You may join a government for different reasons," continued the
    Iranian-born politician. "You may simply be bribed by a few portfolios
    to join that government as an appendage."

    "You may also join it as a partner after ascertaining policies,
    rights, and responsibilities. We are in favor of the latter approach.

    This is why [the negotiations] are dragging on," he said. The
    nationalist party specifically wants Sarkisian to incorporate some of
    the Dashnaktsutyun-backed policies into his cabinet's plan of actions.

    Markarian also denied that control over the Armenian Ministry of
    Defense Ministry is another necessary condition for Dashnaktsutyun's
    continued presence in government. He and other Dashnaktsutyun leaders
    openly laid claim to the post in the run-up to the elections.

    Newspaper reports last week said the current non-partisan defense
    minister, Mikael Harutiunian, will keep his job.

    Dashnaktsutyun, which is represented in Armenia's outgoing government
    by four ministers, won about 13 percent of the vote and will control
    16 of the 131 seats in the newly elected National Assembly. Although
    this is an improvement over its performance in the previous legislative
    polls, the party is hardly in a position to dictate terms to the HHK,
    which got at least 64 parliament seats and is assured of the backing
    of several nominally independent lawmakers.

    Markarian further indicated that Dashnaktsutyun is reluctant to
    commit itself to supporting Sarkisian in the presidential election
    due early next year. "We are an independent party guided by our own
    decisions," he said. "We cannot sacrifice that independence for the
    sake of some agreements."

    Asked whether the party still intends to have its own presidential
    candidate, Markarian said: "Everything is possible."

    Observers believe that the 2008 election is a major reason why
    Sarkisian is prepared, in principle, for coalition rule.
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