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ICG: Armenia: An Opportunity For Statesmanship

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  • ICG: Armenia: An Opportunity For Statesmanship

    ARMENIA: AN OPPORTUNITY FOR STATESMANSHIP

    International Crisis Group
    http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/publication-type/media-releases/2012/europe/armenia-an-opportunity-for-statesmanship.aspx
    June 25 2012

    Unless Armenia's next presidential election is fair and gives its
    winner a strong political mandate, the government will lack the
    legitimacy needed to implement comprehensive reforms, tackle corruption
    and negotiate a peaceful end to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Armenia: An Opportunity for Statesmanship, the latest report from the
    International Crisis Group, examines the challenges before a pivotal
    presidential vote early next year that will determine whether the
    country has shed its more than a decade and a half of fraud-tainted
    electoral history. Whoever is elected must accelerate implementation of
    much-needed governance and economic reforms and help restore momentum
    to diplomatic efforts to tackle the long-running territorial conflict
    with Azerbaijan that poses a danger to regional stability.

    "Another election perceived as seriously flawed would further distract
    from peace talks and severe economic problems", says Lawrence Sheets,
    Crisis Group's Caucasus Project Director. "The likely consequences
    would then be even more citizens opting out of democratic politics,
    as well as increased emigration".

    May's competitive parliamentary elections produced positive signs,
    with more balanced media coverage and widely respected rights of free
    assembly, expression and movement. They also exposed longstanding
    issues. Widespread abuse of administrative resources; inflated voters
    lists; vote-buying; lack of sufficient redress for election violations;
    and reports of multiple voting have damaged trust in government
    bodies and institutions. It is crucial that the February 2013 vote,
    in which President Serzh Sargsyan will likely seek a second term,
    becomes "the cleanest elections in Armenian history", as he had
    already promised the 2012 polls would be.

    Though the president initially took bold steps, most noteworthy
    among them an attempt to normalise relations with Turkey, broader
    change has been slow. Political courage is needed to overhaul a deeply
    entrenched system in which big business and politics are intertwined,
    and transparency is lacking.

    The economy remains unhealthily reliant on financial remittances from
    Armenians abroad. Rates of emigration and seasonal migration out of
    the country are alarmingly high. There have been few serious efforts
    to combat high-level corruption. The executive branch still enjoys
    overwhelming, virtually unchecked, powers. The judicial system is
    perceived as neither independent nor competent, and mechanisms to
    hold authorities accountable are largely ineffective. Media freedom
    is inadequate, with a glaring lack of diversity in television, from
    which most Armenians get their news.

    To address these shortcomings and establish the basis for a free and
    fair election, the president should take the lead in encouraging
    authorities to pass a new criminal code, hold officials involved
    in corruption and elections abuses to account and increase civilian
    control of the police and independence of the judiciary. International
    partners should provide technical and financial assistance and hold
    the government accountable for any backsliding in reform.

    "President Sargsyan has a window of opportunity, in advance of the
    2013 elections, to demonstrate statesmanship and make Armenia a
    better place to live", says Sabine Freizer, Crisis Group's Europe
    Program Director. "A failure to embrace both immediate and long-term
    structural reforms would neither capitalise on Armenia's strengths
    nor make for a good presidential campaign strategy".

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