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  • Armenia: Administration, opp take tentative steps towards dialogue

    EurasiaNet, NY
    May 8 2008



    ARMENIA: ADMINISTRATION, OPPOSITION TAKE TENTATIVE STEPS TOWARD
    OPENING DIALOGUE

    Marianna Grigoryan 5/08/08


    They may still hate each other, but political necessity is pressuring
    two arch foes in Armenian politics, President Serzh Sarkisian and
    opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian, to start talking to each
    other. Even so, significant obstacles stand in the way of the start of
    a substantive political dialogue.


    The March 1 violence in Yerevan created a political chasm dividing the
    opposition and government, with each side blaming the other for the
    loss of life. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Since
    then, the international community has pressured the Sarkisian
    administration to open a dialogue with Ter-Petrosian. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive]. More recently, Armenian politicians
    representing varying shades of the political spectrum have started
    pressing for the two to negotiate a political truce.


    An April 17 resolution adopted by the Parliamentary Assembly of the
    Council of Europe (PACE) warned that Armenia faced expulsion from the
    organization if it did not take immediate action to heal the rifts
    created by the March 1 violence. Other organizations have also
    threatened to punish Yerevan, including the Millennium Challenge
    Corporation, which has cautioned that millions of dollars in
    assistance could be lost if Sarkisian's administration does not
    promote national reconciliation. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. Meanwhile, inside the country, growing concern about
    Azerbaijan's intentions regarding the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process
    has played a significant role in generating pressure for political
    unity in Yerevan. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].


    "It is necessary that these two major figures should meet each other
    face-to-face," Raffi Hovannisian, the leader of the Heritage Party
    stated during an April 30 news conference. A few days earlier,
    Hovannisian announced that his attempt to arrange a meeting between
    Sarkisian and Ter-Petrosian had failed.


    On May 2, Ter-Petrosian indicated that he was ready to talk to
    Sarkisian, but the offer was conditioned on the government's
    compliance with the April 17 PACE resolution. "We are ready to begin a
    dialogue with the regime. Such a dialogue, however, cannot be started
    with the purpose of bringing one of the sides to its knees,"
    Ter-Petrosian said.


    The central demand of the PACE resolution is the release of all
    opposition activists in government custody. According to the data
    published by the Prosecutor-General's Office, there are 58 individuals
    in custody in connection with the March 1 events. Officials insist,
    however, that the detainees are not political prisoners. Meanwhile,
    the Ter-Petrosian camp fixes the number of detainees at 92, and
    emphasizes that many of those in custody are high-level opposition
    politicians.


    Sarkisian aides have indicated that the president is ready to talk. At
    the same time, the administration has made no move to release jailed
    opposition leaders. Some opposition leaders contend that arrests of
    Ter-Petrosian supporters have been continuing in the weeks since PACE
    issued its resolution. Administration officials brush off criticism,
    insisting the issue is not political, but a matter of law enforcement.


    "If people broke law they must be punished within the framework of
    law. Law must be equal for all. We have no political prisoners. One
    shouldn't make statements in advance, everything will be cleared up as
    a result of the investigation," MP and spokesman for the governing
    Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) Eduard Sharmazanov told EurasiaNet.


    Sharmazanov hinted that the Ter-Petrosian camp was behaving in a
    politically irresponsible way, putting personal interests above those
    of the nation. "There should be dialogue in democratic countries, but
    obscenities and political nihilism are not part of that," he said. He
    also accused Ter-Petrosian of trying to bully the government, saying;
    "To go for a dialogue with preconditions is no longer dialogue, but an
    ultimatum."


    Not surprisingly, pro-government politicians are backing talks without
    preconditions, while opposition leaders insist that the PACE
    conditions be met. Naira Zohrabian, an MP from the Prosperous Armenia
    Party, suggested that Ter-Petrosian, in embracing the PACE resolution,
    was trying to create a justifiable reason for avoiding talks. "Setting
    forth preconditions is simply an excuse to somehow steer clear of
    dialogue," Zohrabian said.


    Suren Sureniants, a leader of the opposition Hanrapetutyun Party,
    insisted that a dialogue could produce results only if opposition
    activists could trust administration officials. The only way to build
    such trust, he indicated, would be for the government to release
    jailed opposition figures. Sureniants himself spent 52 days in prison
    for his role in the organization of anti-government rallies following
    Armenia's contentious presidential election in February. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. "Speaking figuratively, a
    dialogue cannot take place between the prosecutor and the accused,"
    Sureniants said.


    Richard Giragosian, an independent analyst based in Washington, DC,
    suggested that the emphasis on "political dialogue" was missing the
    main point of Armenia's domestic crisis.


    "What is needed is a `policy debate,' not a political dialogue,"
    Giragosian told EurasiaNet. "Such a policy debate is long overdue, and
    as Armenia remains under blockade by Turkey and Azerbaijan, and under
    threat from an arms race in Azerbaijan, the time has now come for a
    serious re-examination and re-assessment of Armenia's future."


    Even if the opposition and administration do not straighten out their
    differences soon, Ter-Petrosian insisted during his May 2 news
    conference that domestic political divisions would not hamper
    Armenia's response to a foreign policy crisis, especially one
    connected with the Karabakh issue. "Azerbaijan must realize that
    regardless of the political situation in our country, it would meet
    with united resistance of the Armenian people in the event of
    unleashing military aggression against Karabakh," Ter-Petrosian said.



    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the ArmeniaNow.com
    weekly in Yerevan.


    Posted May 8, 2008 © Eurasianet
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