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Sarkisian Blasts Ter-Petrosian As Election Showdown Looms

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  • Sarkisian Blasts Ter-Petrosian As Election Showdown Looms

    SARKISIAN BLASTS TER-PETROSIAN AS ELECTION SHOWDOWN LOOMS
    By Astghik Bedevian and Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Nov 12 2007

    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian attacked and warned former President
    Levon Ter-Petrosian against attempting to change Armenia's existing
    political system over the weekend as he was formally confirmed as
    the presidential candidate of the ruling Republican Party (HHK).

    The HHK leadership unanimously backed his candidacy in the upcoming
    presidential election at a congress held in Yerevan on Saturday.

    Sarkisian was also elected HHK chairman, completing his takeover of a
    party which controls most government bodies in the country and claims
    to have 135,000 members.

    With Sarkisian long seen as President Robert Kocharian's preferred
    successor, the four-hour congress was expected to be a mere
    formality. As was the case during the previous HHK gatherings, there
    were no discussions on key issues facing Armenia and the party's
    electoral strategy and tactics. The only visible novelty this time
    around was the presence of shapely fashion models who helped 650
    or so delegates find their seats in a sports arena in Yerevan that
    served as the congress venue.

    Sarkisian spent half of his 30-minute acceptance speech responding
    to Ter-Petrosian's harsh criticism of the current Armenian leadership.

    It was a clear sign that he considers the enigmatic ex-president to
    be his main election challenger.

    "They want to break up the state," the influential premier said of
    Ter-Petrosian and his opposition loyalists. "They won't succeed. Any
    [such] attempt will be thwarted."

    Breaking his nearly decade-long silence, Ter-Petrosian has accused
    Kocharian and Sarkisian of turning Armenia into a "gangster state"
    where government corruption and suppression of dissent are the norm.

    He has urged Armenians to help him bring down the ruling "criminal
    regime" in the election scheduled for February 19.

    Kocharian was quick to react to his predecessor's allegations late
    last month, accusing him of mismanaging the Armenian economy during
    his rule. Sarkisian, who had until now avoided publicly attacking
    Ter-Petrosian, echoed Kocharian's assessment of the ex-president's
    dramatic comeback.

    "It is pathetic that Levon Ter-Petrosian has lost a sense of reality
    to such an extent that he ... advises President Robert Kocharian
    and myself to leave the political arena," said Sarkisian. "To avoid
    staying in his debt, let me give him another advice. He had better
    repent and apologize to the Armenian people for, to put it mildly,
    mistakes committed by him."

    "I am sure he won't do that because he is filled with spite and has
    irreversibly fallen behind the course of life," he added.

    Sarkisian apparently referred to the first years of Armenia's
    independence marked by an economic slump, mass unemployment and
    severe electricity shortages. Ter-Petrosian and his loyalists say
    much of the resulting enormous hardship was the result of the wars in
    Nagorno-Karabakh and Georgia that all but cut off Armenia from the
    outside world. Kocharian insisted, however, that the Ter-Petrosian
    administration simply "ruined" the economy.

    Sarkisian, who had help key government positions in Yerevan during
    most of Ter-Petrosian's 1991-1998 presidency, would not say if he
    thinks he too bears responsibility for the alleged misrule. His
    comments were dismissed on Monday by Ararat Zurabian, the nominal
    head of the former ruling Armenian Pan-National Movement (HHSh),
    one of the several opposition parties aligned with Ter-Petrosian.

    Speaking to RFE/RL, Zurabian stressed that neither Kocharian, nor
    Sarkisian have directly commented on concrete accusations leveled
    against them by Ter-Petrosian. The HHSh chairman suggested that
    they try to disprove those accusations in a live televised debate
    with Ter-Petrosian.

    Addressing a big rally in Yerevan on October 26, Ter-Petrosian
    specifically accused Kocharian, Sarkisian and their close associates of
    pocketing billions of dollars in taxes and informal payments allegedly
    extorted from local businesspeople.

    In his Saturday speech, Sarkisian acknowledged that bribery, nepotism
    and other corrupt practices are widespread in Armenia. He indicated
    that if elected president, he will make sure that businessmen and
    other wealthy individuals close to the government do not get away
    with enriching themselves by illegal means.

    "Tax evasion and corruption must be regarded as a disgraceful and
    condemnable phenomenon," said Sarkisian. "We must not take into
    account family ties and friendship and must not regard as friends and
    supporters those people who will avoid paying taxes and tolerate this
    vicious phenomenon."

    The Armenian premier himself has long been accused by his opponents
    of sponsoring government-connected entrepreneurs who enjoy de facto
    monopoly on lucrative forms of economic activity. Most of the so-called
    "oligarchs" are now affiliated with the HHK.
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