Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Dashnak Leader Slams Ter-Petrosian Speech

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Dashnak Leader Slams Ter-Petrosian Speech

    DASHNAK LEADER SLAMS TER-PETROSIAN SPEECH
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 30 2007

    A top leader of the governing Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    (Dashnaktsutyun) criticized on Tuesday former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian's latest public speech, saying that it was too radical
    and lacked self-criticism.

    Hrant Markarian, the de facto head of the nationalist party's worldwide
    governing body, also insisted that Ter-Petrosian stands no chance
    of winning next year's presidential election. He said Armenians are
    unhappy with their current and former rulers and only trust third
    forces like Dashnaktsutyun.

    Dashnaktsutyun has pointedly refused to endorse Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian's presidential bid and will nominate its own candidate
    instead, despite being represented in his coalition cabinet.

    "I very much want Levon Ter-Petrosian to stand in the elections,"
    Markarian told RFE/RL in an interview. "If the past 17 years have not
    been enough to make him a realist, then let him run and find his real
    place in this society."

    Ter-Petrosian announced his decision to run for president on Friday
    in a 90-minute speech at a Yerevan rally attended by more than
    20,000 people. He reiterated his harsh criticism of Armenia's current
    leadership, describing it as a "kleptocracy" which is disinterested in
    rule of law and controls the most lucrative forms of economic activity.

    Markarian stressed that while his party agrees that the Armenian
    government's "policy of economic monopolization has reached its
    climax" it believes that the root causes of this and other fundamental
    problems facing the country date back to Ter-Petrosian's 1991-1998
    presidency. "That speech could have been somewhat convincing if he
    had started it by evaluating his years [in power,]" he said.

    Dashnaktsutyun was bitterly opposed to Ter-Petrosian throughout that
    period, resenting his liberal economic policies and what it saw as
    a soft line on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and relations with Turkey.

    Ter-Petrosian controversially banned the party in 1994, accusing it
    violating Armenia's laws and running a secret death squad. The ban
    was lifted shortly after his dramatic resignation in 1998.

    Dashnaktsutyun has since been among the most loyal allies of his
    successor, Robert Kocharian.

    Markarian, who was among Dashnaktsutyun leaders jailed by the
    Ter-Petrosian administration, claimed that the ex-president suggested
    no remedies to right the wrongs mentioned in his speech. "His speech
    contained [words like] destroy, break up, eliminate," he said. "But
    there was nothing on what to create."

    "Only a person detached from reality for ten years could make such
    a speech. You can't change anything in this country by means of
    extremism," he added.

    The Dashnaktsutyun leader went on to condemn Ter-Petrosian for
    effectively implicating Kocharian in the organization of the October
    1999 terrorist attack on the Armenian parliament and the resulting
    assassination of then Prime Minister Vazgen Sarkisian and parliamentary
    speaker Karen Demirchian.

    "October 27 was the tragedy and even the shame of our nation," he
    said. "But it must not be a subject of political exploitation. Only
    an unsavory person can use October 27 for furthering his career and
    winning [political] dividends."

    Ter-Petrosian said that the parliament killings enabled Kocharian
    to assert his supremacy in the country's leadership and tighten his
    grip on power. He charged that the Armenian president only deepened
    lingering suspicions about his involvement in the shock attack by
    "scuttling" the search for its possible masterminds.

    Markarian argued, however, that the criminal investigation into the
    killings was initially led by "members of Vazgen's team" who never
    came up with compelling evidence of Kocharian's possible involvement.
Working...
X