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Armenia: Governing Party Prepares For Presidential Election

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  • Armenia: Governing Party Prepares For Presidential Election

    ARMENIA: GOVERNING PARTY PREPARES FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
    Haroutiun Khachatrian

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Nov 12 2007

    Armenia's dominant political party is not taking the upcoming
    presidential election lightly. At its recent party congress, the
    Republican Party of Armenia nominated Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian
    to be its presidential candidate in the February 19 election. Party
    leaders also opened a rhetorical offensive against Sarkisian's main
    challenger, former president Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    The congress, held November 10, was designed to reinforce in the
    minds of voters an aura of the Republican Party's invincibility. Held
    in an indoor sports arena, the speaker's podium at the congress
    was flanked by giant television screens, infusing the event with
    Western-style glitziness heretofore unseen in Armenia. Delegates,
    as widely expected, anointed Prime Minister Sarkisian as President
    Robert Kocharian's would-be successor. First, Sarkisian was elected
    as party president, a position that has been vacant since the death
    of his predecessor Andranik Margarian. Then, delegates unanimously
    backed Sarkisian's presidential candidacy.

    In an attempt to cement the front-runner image in the minds of the
    electorate, party leaders emphasized the fact that its membership
    now stands at 135,000, up from roughly 25,000 as recently as 2005.

    According to a report presented by Tigran Torosian, a party vice
    president and chairman of the National Assembly, the Republican Party
    enjoys a hammer-lock on local political power, with 65 percent of local
    administrative posts being held by its members. On the national level,
    the party has an outright majority in parliament. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Sarkisian, speaking at the conference, cast himself as the guardian of
    continuity, and the candidate best able to defend Armenia's interests
    in the international arena. Referring to the ongoing negotiations on
    a Nagorno-Karabakh peace settlement, one of the country's top foreign
    policy priorities, Sarkisian said that, if elected, his administration
    will "never allow Azerbaijan and Turkey to impose their will on us."

    Despite enjoying preponderance of influence over Armenia's political
    process, party leaders are evidently concerned about Ter-Petrosian's
    entry into the race. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. Torosian devoted a considerable portion of his report to
    bashing Ter-Petrosian, warning about the danger of "revanchism."

    Sarkisian followed up with a blistering attack on Ter-Petrosian's
    leadership during the early and mid 1990s. Ter-Petrosian, according to
    Sarkisian, left "people on the brink of despair, a ruined economy, a
    mood of defeatism." The prime minister also insisted that Ter-Petrosian
    apologize for his political "errors."

    When he declared his own candidacy in late October, Ter-Petrosian
    said his intention was to dismantle the "pyramid of corruption"
    over which Sarkisian and Kocharian allegedly presided. In response,
    Sarkisian shot back November 10 that Ter-Petrosian was seeking to
    "dismantle the pyramid of our statehood."

    Outside of the party congress, the machinery of state under the
    control of the Republican Party of Armenia appears to be gearing
    up for a campaign against Ter-Petrosian. Media observers note,
    for example, that news reports about Ter-Petrosian have virtually
    disappeared from state-controlled outlets. Tax inspectors have also
    moved against businesses owned by one of Ter-Petrosian's most important
    financial backers, Khachatur Sukiasian, himself an independent member
    of parliament.

    In comments published November 7 in the Aravot daily, Sukiasian accused
    the government of instructing various state agencies to investigate
    his businesses in retribution for his political activities. "I take
    all this quietly. My business[es] [are] absolutely clean," Sukiasian
    insisted. He added that he would resist the government pressure using
    all legal means at his disposal, including an appeal to the European
    Court of Human Rights.

    Ter-Petrosian, meanwhile, continues to campaign. At a November 3
    appearance, Ter-Petrosian said that, if elected, he would seek to
    cooperate with the current, Republican Party-dominated parliamentary
    majority, adding that he would work with any prime minister than the
    legislature nominates, except "the current one."

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