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Serzh Sargsyan And Raffi Hovhannisian Become Political Pen Pals

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  • Serzh Sargsyan And Raffi Hovhannisian Become Political Pen Pals

    ARMENIA: SERZH SARGSYAN AND RAFFI HOVHANNISIAN BECOME POLITICAL PEN PALS

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    March 27 2013

    March 27, 2013 - 11:58am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Armenia's post-election standoff has moved into the direction of
    an epistolary novel as President Serzh Sargsyan and his challenger,
    Raffi Hovhannisian, work their way to a truce through correspondence
    that is cc'd to the rest of the nation.

    In his latest letter, President Sargsyan kindly asked his
    hunger-striking rival to have a bite of something, cut the dramatics
    and sit down to talk. "Please stop the hunger strike, take a day
    or two to recover and then we will do some serious work, without
    the theatrics," the president wrote to Hovhannisian, who claims
    that Sargsyan stole the presidency from him in Armenia's February
    18 election.

    Both sides, though, combine the careful courtesy with pointed barbs.

    Sargsyan, for instance, agreed to entertain Hovhannisian's ideas for
    crisis resolution -- "half-baked" and "anti-constitutional" though
    they may be.

    The ideas, laid out in an earlier missive from Hovhannisian,
    center on a request to hold a repeat presidential election or a
    parliamentary election preceded by an overhaul of the electoral
    system. And the prerogative to appoint some key officials such as
    the general prosecutor and the foreign minister, among others.

    Hovhannisian, in turn, has agreed to consider Sargsyan's proposal to
    meet, thanked his political pen pal for his concern about his health,
    but assured him that there is no reason to be worried.

    If Yerevan's Liberty Square, Hovhannisian's new open-air residence,
    is not the most convenient of places for a rendez-vous, another spot
    could be chosen, wrote the Heritage Party leader, with all the fluidity
    of a social secretary.

    Even now, Sargsyan might be penning a response, and Armenians are
    likely to be spammed with more negotiation letters between the feuding
    leaders. The spirit of the correspondence may suggest some hope for
    an eventual resolution of the stalemate, but, given Armenia's recent
    political past, will the pen, in fact, prove mightier than the sword?

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66746

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