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Armenian Parliament Opposition Under Fire After Key Vote

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  • Armenian Parliament Opposition Under Fire After Key Vote

    ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT OPPOSITION UNDER FIRE AFTER KEY VOTE
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Tuesday, September 18, 2007

    The two opposition parties represented in the Armenian parliament
    are facing embarrassing accusations of secret collaboration with the
    government after effectively acquiescing to the reappointment of the
    country's top prosecutor. The National Assembly overwhelmingly voted
    on September 13 to endorse President Robert Kocharian's decision to
    extend Prosecutor General Aghvan Hovsepian's tenure for six more years.

    Only three members of the 131-strong legislature voted against his
    candidacy, raising fresh questions about the opposition credentials
    of the Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law) and Heritage parties led by
    former parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian and the U.S.-born former
    foreign minister Raffi Hovannisian respectively. Orinats Yerkir
    and Heritage were the only opposition parties that cleared the 5%
    threshold for winning parliament seats in the last general elections
    held in May. The main political allies of Kocharian and Prime Minister
    Serge Sarkisian won the polls by a landslide.

    Two-day parliamentary debates on Hovsepian's reappointment were a
    mere formality as Sarkisian's Republican Party of Armenia (HHK),
    which controls most parliament seats, made it clear right from the
    beginning that he will back Kocharian's decision. A figure close to the
    president, Hovsepian, 54, has been more than a senior law-enforcement
    official since being first named prosecutor-general in 1998. He was
    forced to step down in the wake of the October 1999 terrorist attack
    on the Armenian parliament but was reinstated by Kocharian in the
    job five years later.

    Kocharian needed a parliamentary approval of Hovsepian's continued
    tenure in accordance with the 2005 reform of the Armenian constitution.

    Over the past decade, Hovsepian has developed extensive business
    interests, being widely linked with a number of lucrative companies. He
    has also displayed growing political ambitions, so much so that at one
    point he was viewed as one of Kocharian's potential successors. He
    became even more visible after getting, with strong government
    assistance, hundreds of thousands of people to collectively perform
    a traditional Armenian circle dance around the country's highest
    mountain in May 2005.

    The soft-spoken and bespectacled prosecutor has furthered his political
    agenda through an ostensibly apolitical organization uniting prominent
    natives of Aparan, a mountainous district in central Armenia where he
    was born and grew up. The so-called compatriots' union transformed
    itself into a political party last year and was expected to be a
    major contender in the May elections. However, Hovsepian decided not
    to enter the fray shortly before the vote as a result of an apparent
    behind-the-scenes deal with Sarkisian. The latter was anxious to
    make sure that the Aparan clan does not stand in the HHK's way and to
    ensure its support for his presidential bid. Sarkisian has clearly been
    willing to give it something in return, as evidenced by Hovsepian's
    reappointment and the earlier appointment one of his deputies, Gevorg
    Danielian, as justice minister.

    Hovsepian will thus remain one of the leaders of Armenia's vicious
    and corrupt law-enforcement system that continues to operate in
    utter disregard of human rights. Mistreatment of criminal suspects
    and witnesses remains the norm, despite being illegal and running
    counter to Yerevan's international obligations. The most recent torture
    scandal relates to the ongoing criminal investigation into the August
    26 murder of the chief prosecutor of Lori region, Albert Ghazarian. The
    investigation is being led by the Office of the Prosecutor General.

    One of the theories circulating is that the crime was masterminded
    by Samvel Darpinian, the mayor of the regional capital Vanadzor,
    who was at loggerheads with Ghazarian. Several employees of a local
    restaurant owned by an arrested nephew of Darpinian claim that they
    were beaten by investigators to extract false testimony implicating
    the mayor's extended family in the shooting. Hovsepian pledged to
    investigate the torture claims in the face of a mounting opposition
    and media outcry. Few believe that any law-enforcement official will
    be punished as a result, though.

    Ghazarian's assassination was the latest high-profile killing, which
    occur regularly in Armenia. Most of them have yet to be solved. In
    addition, law-enforcement authorities have been under fire this year
    over the prosecution and imprisonment of several prominent government
    critics on dubious charges.

    Opposition lawmakers asked Hovsepian tough questions before the
    September 13 parliament vote. But in the end, most of them chose
    not to oppose his confirmation, leading more radical opposition
    politicians and commentators to wonder whether Orinats Yerkir and
    Heritage are really in opposition to the ruling regime. "In essence,
    the parliamentary opposition complied with the majority's decision,"
    the Haykakan Zhamanak daily editorialized on September 15.

    "This type of opposition is ready to fight as long as it is not up
    against a representative of the regime," scoffed another pro-opposition
    paper, Chorrord Ishkhanutyun.

    Ex-speaker Baghdasarian was already mistrusted by many other opposition
    forces and civil society members, despite attracting considerable
    interest from the United States and European governments with his
    pro-Western statements. Heritage's Hovannisian risked facing similar
    mistrust even before the parliament vote due to his ambiguous and
    contradictory actions.

    Hovannisian, for example, charged after the May elections that his
    party had won three times more votes than were shown by the Central
    Election Commission (CEC). However, the party's representative to the
    government-controlled body, Zoya Tadevosian subsequently voted for the
    reelection of Garegin Azarian as CEC chairman. Furthermore, Tadevosian,
    endorsed the official results of an August 26 repeat parliamentary
    election in a central Armenian constituency, which was denounced as
    "fundamentally unfree and unfair" by Hovannisian. The latter contested
    the vote to try to win Heritage an extra parliament seat. He won less
    than 4% of the vote, according to the official results.

    A Heritage legislator insisted that the vote was deeply flawed during
    the Armenian government's September 12 question-and-answer session
    in parliament. "The CEC received no complaints, your representative
    accepted everything, and the chairman of your party filed no appeals
    in connection with that," countered Sarkisian. "I can't understand
    what the matter is. Should I once declare that you lost?"

    (Haykakan Zhamanak, Chorrord Ishkhanutyun, September 15; Aravot,
    September 13)
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