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Former Armenian President Joins Race For Presidential Elections In 2

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  • Former Armenian President Joins Race For Presidential Elections In 2

    FORMER ARMENIAN PRESIDENT JOINS RACE FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS IN 2008
    by Grace Annan

    Global Insight
    October 29, 2007

    On 26 October, the former president of Armenia, Lev Ter-Petrossian,
    announced his candidature for the presidential elections in February
    2008. Ter-Petrossian criticised the government's record in the fight
    against corruption, stating that the leadership was corrupt and
    based on a "mafia-style regime" according to Agence France-Presse
    (AFP). He further advocated a more docile stance towards neighbouring
    Azerbaijan, with which relations are strained over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute. The decision to run for the presidency has brought some
    competition into the race, which increasingly looked like a one-sided
    affair in favour of the presidential appointee, the current Prime
    Minister Serzh Sarkisian. Current president Robert Kocharian is taking
    Ter-Petrossian's candidacy seriously, as his reaction shows: Kocharian
    promised a tough fight in which he would remind the electorate of
    Ter-Petrossian's "harsh" economic policy.

    Significance:Armenia currently boasts an economic growth rate of
    10% but its main obstacles, high levels of bureaucracy, wide-scale
    corruption and poor infrastructure, as well as the embargo by
    Turkey and Azerbaijan taint this record somewhat. Ter-Petrossian's
    announcement certainly brings some colour into the choice the
    electorate has on 12 February 2008, and it will certainly annoy the
    current main opposition candidate Artur Baghdasarian (see Armenia: 2
    October 2007: ). Yet, his victory is far from a foregone conclusion
    given the increasingly consolidated power in the hands of the
    president, and the government's capacity to filter election results in
    their favour. Further, Ter-Petrossian had a somewhat mixed presidency
    (1991-1998), and his economic policy and stance on Nagorno-Karabakh
    brought about his downfall and he was succeeded by the then-Prime
    Minister Kocharian. The current spat between Ter-Petrossian and
    Kocharian is therefore a clash of policy-making.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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