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Old Rival Dismayed By Unrepentant Ter-Petrosian

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  • Old Rival Dismayed By Unrepentant Ter-Petrosian

    OLD RIVAL DISMAYED BY UNREPENTANT TER-PETROSIAN
    By Karine Kalantarian and Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 25 2007

    Opposition leader Vazgen Manukian expressed on Tuesday dismay at
    Levon Ter-Petrosian's first public speech in a decade, saying that
    the former president failed to admit his responsibility for serious
    political and economic problems facing Armenia today.

    Addressing hundreds of supporters on Friday, Ter-Petrosian referred
    to the Armenian government as an "institutionalized mafia-style regime
    which has plunged us into the ranks of third world counties."

    He accused the administration of President Robert Kocharian of
    rigging elections, violating laws, engaging in corrupt practices and
    restricting civil liberties.

    "To be honest, I am disappointed because Levon Ter-Petrosian faced
    the same accusations, made in stronger or softer terms, during his
    presidency," Manukian told RFE/RL. "He should have structured his
    speech in a different way. He should have shown the roots [of those
    problems,] he should have given explanations."

    "It can be inferred [from his speech] that what is wrong today was
    right in the past," he said. "It turned out that nothing has changed in
    [Ter-Petrosian's] team in ten years."

    Ter-Petrosian critics believe in particular that Armenia's culture of
    electoral fraud emerged during his eight-year rule. They specifically
    point to the conduct of the disputed September 1996 presidential
    election criticized as deeply flawed by Western observers.

    Ter-Petrosian sent tanks to the streets of Yerevan to quell violent
    opposition protests against the official vote results which showed
    him narrowly defeating Manukian, the then main opposition candidate.

    Manukian still claims to be the rightful winner of the vote.

    The bitter standoff was the culmination of mutual antipathy that
    Ter-Petrosian and Manukian developed during the first years of
    Armenia's independence. The two former scholars became the top leaders
    of the 1988 movement for Armenia's unification with Nagorno-Karabakh
    before jointly heading the country's first post-Communist government
    in 1990.

    Manukian, who is also highly critical of Kocharian, may have extended
    an olive branch to Ter-Petrosian early this year when he agreed in
    principle to make his National Democratic Union (AZhM) part of an
    opposition electoral alliance comprising the former ruling Armenian
    Pan-National Movement (HHSH). Talks over the formation of such a bloc
    collapsed for reasons unrelated to the past rivalry between the AZhM
    and the HHSh.

    Manukian, who intends to contest next year's presidential election,
    claimed that Ter-Petrosian's possible participation in the vote would
    make it easier for the authorities to legitimize a planned transfer
    of power from Kocharian to Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian.

    Ter-Petrosian loyalists make similar claims about Manukian, saying
    that his presidential run would further split the opposition vote
    and thereby benefit Sarkisian.

    Vahagn Khachatrian, a Ter-Petrosian associate who leads the opposition
    Aylentrank (Alternative) movement, said on Tuesday that the former
    president will act with a "totally new team" if he decides to join
    the presidential race. He said that team will include not only the
    HHSh, Aylentrank and the radical opposition Hanrapetutyun (Republic)
    party but also the People's Party of Stepan Demirchian, Kocharian's
    main challenger in the last presidential election.

    Ter-Petrosian said on Friday that he has still not decided whether
    to run for president. He argued that pervasive government control of
    electronic media would make it very hard for him to get his message
    across.

    Victor Dallakian, a veteran opposition parliamentarian, predicted
    on Tuesday that the 62-year-old ex-president will after all enter
    the fray. "Common sense suggests that after such tough evaluations
    of the situation in the country the first president of the republic
    should run," he told reporters.
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