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Armenian ex-president mulls dramatic comeback: analysts

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  • Armenian ex-president mulls dramatic comeback: analysts

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 25, 2007 Thursday 2:04 AM GMT


    Armenian ex-president mulls dramatic comeback: analysts

    by Mariam Harutunian



    A decade after being forced out of office, Armenia's first
    post-Soviet president Levon Ter-Petrosian is mulling a dramatic
    comeback, eyeing a possible run for the presidency in February,
    analysts say.

    An advocate of compromise in Armenia's long-running conflicts with
    Azerbaijan and Turkey over the disputed Nagorny Karabakh region,
    Ter-Petrosian broke nearly 10 years of silence in a late September
    speech.

    He lambasted Armenia's current leadership, saying the landlocked
    ex-Soviet country is now run by "a mafia-style regime that has
    plunged us into the ranks of Third World countries."

    In recent weeks, Ter-Petrosian, 62, has been meeting with opposition
    leaders and undertaken a series of visits to Armenian regions to
    gauge voter support ahead of a presidential election expected to take
    place in February.

    Many expect him to announce his candidacy on Friday at a rally
    planned in the Armenian capital Yerevan.

    "I have no doubt that the former president will stand in the upcoming
    elections and will declare it soon," said Alexander Iskandarian, a
    Yerevan-based political analyst.

    The reclusive ex-president's re-emergence has set Armenia abuzz,
    injecting drama into a political race that was previously seen as a
    cakewalk for President Robert Kocharian's chosen successor, Prime
    Minister Serzh Sarkisian.

    After two terms, Kocharian is constitutionally barred from running
    again.

    Analysts say Kocharian's government is taking the threat of
    Ter-Petrosian's return seriously. On Tuesday, police detained about a
    dozen activists, including the editors of two opposition newspapers,
    as they urged people to attend Friday's rally in central Yerevan. The
    activists were released on Wednesday.

    An academic and historian, Ter-Petrosian led Armenia from its
    independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 to 1998, when he was
    forced to resign by key members of his cabinet, including then-prime
    minister Kocharian.

    They forced him out over his backing of a peace plan for Nagorny
    Karabakh that was seen as giving too much to Azerbaijan.

    Backed by Armenia, the ethnic Armenian enclave broke away from
    Azerbaijan in a war in the early 1990s that left thousands dead and
    forced more than a million people on both sides to flee their homes.

    Drawn-out peace talks have failed to resolve the dispute and Nagorny
    Karabakh now exists in a legal limbo -- with de facto independence
    but not recognised internationally.

    In his speech, Ter-Petrosian signalled he would seek to revive the
    peace process, calling the unresolved dispute over Karabakh "the
    greatest crime" of the current government.

    He said Armenia needs to end its regional isolation by normalising
    relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey, which both closed their borders
    with Armenia and imposed economic embargoes over the Karabakh
    dispute.

    If he does join the race, analysts expect the government will seek to
    undermine Ter-Petrosian by reminding Armenians of the severe economic
    hardships suffered under his rule and allegations that Ter-Petrosian
    rigged elections while in power.

    He controversially sent tanks into the streets of Yerevan in 1996 to
    quell protests after a presidential election widely seen as
    fraudulent.

    "He made many mistakes and many people have still not forgiven him
    for the difficulties they went through," political analyst David
    Petrosian said.

    In his first reaction to Ter-Petrosian's speech, Kocharian said that
    "if the first president enters the political arena ... we will have
    to remind (Armenians) of many things."

    Still, analysts expect that many in Armenia's fractured opposition,
    which was trounced by pro-government parties in parliamentary
    elections earlier this year, will rally behind Ter-Petrosian if he
    announces his candidacy.

    Several opposition leaders have welcomed his re-emergence and
    analysts say at least two parties, the Republic Party and the
    People's Party of Armenia, are preparing to back him.

    Ter-Petrosian has even met with leaders of the pro-government
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), which was banned and saw
    dozens of its members jailed under his rule.

    "Before his appearance there was no strong figure who could have
    united the opposition. Now Ter-Petrosian can be such a figure and
    have a chance at winning," Petrosian said.
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