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Undecided Ter-Petrosian Ends Silence, Blasts 'Criminal Regime'

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  • Undecided Ter-Petrosian Ends Silence, Blasts 'Criminal Regime'

    UNDECIDED TER-PETROSIAN ENDS SILENCE, BLASTS 'CRIMINAL REGIME'
    By Emil Danielyan and Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Sept 24 2007

    Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian broke his nearly decade-long
    silence Friday with an unusually harsh attack on the current
    authorities in Yerevan which he branded "criminal and corrupt" and
    accused of turning Armenia into a "third world country."

    Making his first public speech since his dramatic resignation in 1998,
    Ter-Petrosian said he has still not decided whether or not participate
    in the upcoming presidential election. He also reiterated his belief
    that Armenia's sustainable development is impossible without a
    resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and the opening of its
    borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    "I have not made a decision yet," Ter-Petrosian told hundreds of
    admiring and expectant loyalists who gathered at a Yerevan hotel to
    celebrate the 16th anniversary of Armenia's independence. "I am still
    examining, weighing up, considering things. My approach is purely
    political. I can't be guided by emotions. Adventurism is alien to
    my character."

    "Until I know the effectiveness of my would-be steps, I won't take
    steps. Of course, there is a change of atmosphere, a change of mood but
    in my view, but it has not yet, so to speak, come to a boil," he said.

    The remarks will reinforce the widely held belief that Ter-Petrosian
    is not sure that he is popular enough to mount a serious challenge to
    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, the reputed election favorite. Many
    Armenians apparently continue to associate their 62-year-old former
    leader with severe hardship they had suffered following the Soviet
    collapse and the outbreak of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia's
    current leadership has exploited that sentiment to keep Ter-Petrosian
    and his allies on the political sidelines ever since forcing them
    out of power in February 1998.

    Ter-Petrosian, who has been touring the country to gauge popular
    support for his comeback for the past several weeks, said that he
    would have trouble getting his message across. He emphasized the fact
    that all major Armenian TV stations are controlled by or loyal to
    the Kocharian-Sarkisian duo. "We must find ways of overcoming that,"
    he said.

    Ter-Petrosian indicated that he also needs to build broad-based
    opposition support for his presidential bid and does not think
    that his traditional support base, mainly made up of his Armenian
    Pan-National Movement (HHSh) party, alone can help him make a strong
    election showing. "The only way to get rid of these authorities is
    the consolidation of all sound political, public, intellectual and
    spiritual forces around a single [presidential] candidate," he said.

    The Ter-Petrosian camp also comprises several HHSh splinter groups as
    well as Armenia's most radical opposition party, Hanrapetutyun. None
    of the other major opposition parties has publicly voiced support
    for the reclusive ex-president's return to power.

    Echoing the Hanrapetutyun leaders' discourse, Ter-Petrosian
    described regime change as the chief national priority. "We have
    an institutionalized mafia-style regime which has plunged us into
    the ranks of third world counties," he charged. "Survival of this
    government gives us no chance of ever getting out of this situation."

    Ter-Petrosian added that he thinks the "greatest crime" committed
    by Kocharian and Sarkisian was their failure to resolve the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. He said Azerbaijan is less and less prepared
    to make concessions to the Armenian side because of its mounting oil
    revenues. "From now on they will not agree to any concessions. I don't
    know what needs to be done to get out of this situation," he said.

    Ter-Petrosian was forced to step down by his key ministers, including
    Kocharian and Sarkisian, after publicly advocating an internationally
    drafted peace plan that called for a gradual settlement of the
    Karabakh conflict indefinitely delaying agreement on the disputed
    territory's status. His hard-line opponents rejected the proposed
    plan as "defeatist," demanding that the international mediators come
    up with a package peace deal that would uphold Karabakh's secession
    from Azerbaijan. But this did not prevent them from embracing the
    mediators' existing proposals that have a lot in common with the ones
    advocated by Ter-Petrosian.

    Ter-Petrosian complained that many Armenians still do not think that
    their and their country's prosperity is contingent on Karabakh peace.

    "Unless there is such understanding, I think nothing should be done
    and we should sit in our homes and see Armenia into a third world
    country whose sole capital is export of labor," he said.

    Ter-Petrosian further accused the Kocharian administration of rigging
    elections, trampling on laws, extorting bribes from businessmen,
    illegally influencing courts and restricting press freedom.

    Critics of the former Armenian leadership will counter that Armenia
    lacked rule of law and independent courts and broadcast media
    even before Kocharian came to power. They believe that the culture
    of electoral fraud emerged in the country during Ter-Petrosian's
    eight-year rule.

    None of the elections held in Armenia at the time were judged free
    and fair by international observers. In fact, Ter-Petrosian sent
    troops to the streets of Yerevan in September 1996 to quell violent
    opposition protests against the official results of a reputedly rigged
    presidential election that gave victory to the incumbent.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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