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ANKARA: After Election Pol. Situation in Armenia is still Unclear

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  • ANKARA: After Election Pol. Situation in Armenia is still Unclear

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    Feb. 25, 2008



    After the Election Political Situation in Armenia is still Unclear

    Monday , 25 February 2008


    According to the preliminary data, current Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisyan won the 19 February presidential election in Armenia with
    52.8 percent. His main competitor, former President Levon
    Ter-Petrossian, got 21.5 percent, former Speaker of the Parliament
    Artur Bagdasaryan - 16.66 percent and the Dashnaktsutyun party
    candidate, Vagan Ovannissian, took 6.2 percent.

    The CIS observers recognized that the election was democratic. The
    international observers from OSCE and the European Parliament also
    recognized that, all in all, the election met the international
    standards but said that there was massive electoral fraud. However,
    the campaign teams of the opposition candidates and the observers
    belonging to local human rights organizations brought out many gross
    violations of the election.

    But one should take into account that on February 20 the Presidents
    of France, Russia and some other states congratulated Serzh Sarkisyan
    on his election, which indicates that he was supported by Moscow and
    Europe.

    At the same time the opposition appealed against the election
    returns. In particular, Artur Bagdasaryan obtained the revision of
    the results in more than one hundred polling stations. The position
    of Levon Ter-Petrossian is the most radical. His supporters organized
    the unlimited protest action at Freedom Square insisting that the new
    elections should be called. Ter-Petrossian said that Deputy Minister
    of Defense Manvel Grigoryan, to whom many veterans of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh war report, had sided with him. The Ministry of
    Defense has already denied this information, but there is no exact
    information and this is highly charged with grave clashes.

    One of the questions is what role Robert Kocharyan will play from now
    on? During the election he himself answered that this was the darkest
    secret in Armenia and he should be asked this question on April 9
    when Serzh Sarkisyan will be inaugurated as President. It is entirely
    possible that Kocharyan will become Prime Minister. Especially as
    after the constitutional reforms Armenia's Prime Minister was vested
    with wider powers than before 2005 when Premier was only an adjunct
    to the president.

    According to Serzh Sarkisyan, he is not going to change the Cabinet
    drastically since it was formed only 9 months ago and is efficient.
    Though, may dismiss the persons, who are the most unpopular, to
    please the voters.

    As regards Armenia's foreign policy after the election, a remark
    should be made. There are a lot of assumptions which politicians are
    pro-Russian and which are pro-Western. As a matter of fact, whoever
    comes into power in Armenia, in the major issues he will have to
    follow the existing direction - to create good relations with the
    Russia-USA-EU triangle. Of course, various scenarios are possible,
    but the Yerevan officials are not expected to change their policy
    dramatically, whoever is the President. Serzh Sarkisyan is most
    likely to pursue the same policy Kocharyan did in the latest years.

    February 22, 2008
    Eurasian Home
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