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Geghamian Joins Presidential Race, Blasts Ter-Petrosian

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  • Geghamian Joins Presidential Race, Blasts Ter-Petrosian

    GEGHAMIAN JOINS PRESIDENTIAL RACE, BLASTS TER-PETROSIAN
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio LIberty, Czech Rep.
    Nov 27 2007

    Opposition leader Artashes Geghamian announced on Tuesday his
    participation in the Armenian presidential election in a move
    which his aides said is aimed at staving off former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian's return to power.

    Geghamian and senior members of his National Accord Party (AMK)
    fiercely attacked Ter-Petrosian as they officially nominated his
    presidential candidacy. The AMK leadership also significantly toned
    down its criticism of the Armenian government.

    Risking more accusations of secret collaboration with the authorities,
    Geghamian revealed that he has meet with President Robert Kocharian
    and Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian recently to discuss the upcoming
    election.

    Geghamian was among a dozen opposition heavyweights whom Ter-Petrosian
    urged earlier this month to withdraw from the presidential race in
    his favor and help him topple the "corrupt and criminal" regime. The
    AMK leader was quick to reject the call and reaffirm his critical
    attitude towards the former president.

    Geghamian said on Tuesday that he is unimpressed by Ter-Petrosian's
    harsh criticism of the government, saying that the latter has
    essentially repeated his own characterizations. He also blasted the
    ex-president for alleging that Kocharian and Sarkisian have turned
    Armenia into a "gangster state."

    "If you have something to say, say it to Robert Kocharian and Serzh
    Sarkisian and [refer to] their policies," he said. "Leave Armenian
    statehood alone."

    Geghamian's closest associates went even further in condemning
    Ter-Petrosian and his discourse. One of them, Sarkis Muradkhanian,
    denounced the ex-president as a "landmine planted not only in the
    opposition field but under the foundations of Armenian statehood."

    The AMK's second deputy chairman, Aleksan Karapetian, charged that
    Ter-Petrosian is surrounded by "thieving businessmen" and "populist
    revanchists." "It must be pointed out that Ter-Petrosian himself bred
    many prominent representatives of today's oligarchy and bureaucracy
    and bears the burden of responsibility for political disasters,
    murders of Armenia's citizens, the cold and dark years, the people's
    impoverishment and manifestations of total plunder," Karapetian told
    a news conference.

    This, according to Karapetian, is the key reason why Geghamian will
    contest the election scheduled for February 19.

    Geghamian was at pains to insist that his and his party's stance does
    not amount to an expression of support for the handover of power from
    Kocharian to Sarkisian. "The AMK equally rejects both the former and
    current authorities," he told reporters.

    Geghamian added that he has held face-to-face talks with Sarkisian and
    Kocharian "for the sake of Armenia's stability." "The key agreement
    reached [at the meetings] is that everything must be done to avert
    a destabilization of the situation in the country and prevent our
    centuries-old enemies, our neighbors from taking advantage of that,"
    he said.

    The remarks were a far cry from Geghamian's trademark anti-government
    rhetoric that helped him finish third in the last presidential
    election held in 2003. He has repeatedly accused Armenia's two most
    powerful men of corruption and mismanagement in the past. Sarkisian,
    widely seen as the election favorite, has been equally scathing in his
    responses to Geghamian, repeatedly declaring that the AMK leader is
    "as empty as a drum."

    With the AMK failing to win a single parliament seat in the May
    elections, Geghamian appears to have lost much of his popularity
    since 2003 and is not regarded by analysts as a major contender of
    the upcoming ballot.
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