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Armenia's Ter-Petrosian Sets Stage For Tense Presidential Vote

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  • Armenia's Ter-Petrosian Sets Stage For Tense Presidential Vote

    ARMENIA'S TER-PETROSIAN SETS STAGE FOR TENSE PRESIDENTIAL VOTE
    by Emil Danielyan

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Oct 29 2007

    Photos by Karen Minasyan

    After nearly a decade of self-imposed political retirement, Armenia's
    former President Levon Ter-Petrosian is seeking a return to power. His
    decision, anticipated for months, renders the outcome of an upcoming
    presidential election unpredictable. During the biggest opposition
    rally held in years, Ter-Petrosian urged Armenians on October 26
    to help him thwart what he portrayed as the handover of power from
    President Robert Kocharian to Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian. He
    accused the two men of leading a "gangster state" that stifles dissent
    and free enterprise. The development is a further indication that the
    62-year-old scholar, who led Armenia to independence from the Soviet
    Union and earned accolades in the West for his conciliatory line on
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, will be Sarkisian's main election
    challenger. The latter's victory in the presidential ballot, due
    next February or March, was seen by many as a foregone conclusion
    after his governing Republican Party won last May's parliamentary
    elections by a landslide. [For details, see EurasiaNet's Armenia: Vote
    2007]. "From now on, I declare myself a candidate for the presidency
    of the Republic of Armenia," Ter-Petrosian told about 20,000 people who
    gathered in Yerevan's Liberty Square. His 90-minute speech, repeatedly
    interrupted by "Levon! Levon!" chants, offered a damning indictment
    of the Kocharian administration's policies and track record. A large
    part of it was devoted to what Ter-Petrosian called the "relentless
    plunder" of the population by Kocharian, Sarkisian and their political
    associates. "In the last five years, the criminal regime has stolen at
    least $3 billion to $4 billion from the people," Ter-Petrosian alleged,
    without offering specifics to substantiate the claim. He indicated that
    officials enjoy a de facto monopoly over the most lucrative economic
    sectors, and receive informal payments from businessmen with close ties
    to the government. Ter-Petrosian went on to dismiss as grossly inflated
    the double-digit rates of economic growth reported by the Armenian
    authorities in recent years. He reaffirmed his belief that Armenia's
    sustainable economic development is impossible without a solution
    to the Karabakh conflict. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. And he again alleged that the Kocharian administration
    prefers the Karabakh status quo to cutting a compromise peace deal
    with Azerbaijan. Ter-Petrosian resigned in 1998 under pressure from
    his key cabinet members, including then Prime Minister Kocharian and
    Interior Minister Sarkisian, who resented his strong support for an
    international peace plan that called for a gradual settlement of the
    conflict, rather than for a package peace plan. The ex-president
    pointed to the government's overall acceptance of peace proposals
    that resemble his earlier ideas as a sign that his position was
    correct. Other sensitive areas were also raised. The Yerevan rally
    was held the day before Armenia marked the eighth anniversary of the
    1999 armed attack on parliament that resulted in the deaths of former
    parliament speaker Karen Demirchian, former prime minister Vazgen
    Sarkisian (no relation to Serzh), and six other officials. Many
    Armenians think that the five gunmen had powerful sponsors; some
    suspect Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian of masterminding the shootings.

    [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Ter-Petrosian
    likewise pointed the finger at Kocharian, blaming the latter for
    the bungled criminal investigation into the parliament attack. "The
    October [1999] massacre was the main milestone that cleared the
    broad way to the formation and development of Kocharian's regime,"
    he said. Neither Kocharian, nor Sarkisian immediately commented
    on the allegations. Speaking to journalists several hours before
    the Ter-Petrosian rally, the Armenian president shrugged off his
    predecessor's presidential ambitions. "The first president, at least
    according to the latest surveys, is not the main opposition candidate
    and there are at least two or three opposition figures with higher
    approval ratings," he said in televised remarks. "I am convinced that
    our people will not want to return to 1995-1996," Kocharian added,
    accusing Ter-Petrosian of "ruining" the Armenian economy during his
    rule. Armenia's Gross Domestic Product shrank by more than half in
    1992-1993 following the Soviet collapse and the onset of the war in
    Karabakh, leaving the country largely cut off from the rest of the
    world and paralyzed by a severe energy crisis. While Ter-Petrosian
    is still widely associated with the resulting hardship, the strong
    attendance at the October 26 rally suggests that many disaffected
    Armenians are now ready to at least listen to their former leader.

    His harsh attacks on the current government, voiced in a
    characteristically academic manner, appeared to impress many undecided
    rally participants. "Before the speech I was dithering, but am now
    astonished," said one young man. "I've never heard such a speech
    before. He spoke with the precision of a machine." Vasil Khanaghian,
    a disabled Karabakh war veteran from a village in southern Armenia,
    made up his mind before the rally. "I won the war under the leadership
    of Levon, and not those rascals," he explained, referring to President
    Kocharian and Prime Minister Sarkisian. But not everyone in the crowd
    was convinced. One elderly man, who did not want to give his name,
    was unhappy with Ter-Petrosian's failure to talk about controversial
    episodes from his own presidency such as the flight of his "thieving"
    former Interior Minister Vano Siradeghian, who left Armenia in 2000
    to avoid prosecution for murder.

    Ter-Petrosian loyalists, meanwhile, are increasingly buoyed by their
    leader's return to active politics. "If this momentum is maintained
    during the election campaign, his victory will become inevitable,"
    Aghasi Yenokian, a local pundit sympathetic to the ex-president, told
    EurasiaNet. Opposition leaders, many of whom have been in talks with
    Ter-Petrosian for months about his return to politics, argue that
    the government is increasingly ill at ease with the prospect. On
    October 23, police detained a dozen pro-Ter-Petrosian activists,
    among them two newspaper editors, who were publicizing the planned
    demonstration in downtown Yerevan. They were released the next morning
    after four-hour negotiations between Ter-Petrosian and senior police
    officers. The activists had decided to take to the streets after
    none of Armenia's leading TV stations loyal to Kocharian agreed to
    broadcast paid rally advertisements. One regional TV channel, which
    aired a September speech by Ter-Petrosian that was his first in a
    decade, now claims to be harassed by security and tax officials.

    Transportation was also reportedly restricted between Yerevan and other
    parts of the country hours before the landmark rally. In an October
    25 editorial, the pro-opposition Yerevan daily Aravot argued that the
    Armenian authorities were far more tolerant of dissent in the run-up
    to the May parliamentary elections than in the current presidential
    campaign. "They either find the upcoming elections more important,
    or are scared of Levon," it said. Editor's Note: Emil Danielyan is a
    freelance journalist based in Yerevan.

    Karen Minasyan is a freelance photographer, also in Yerevan
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