Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Economist: Troubling News From The Caucasus

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Economist: Troubling News From The Caucasus

    TROUBLING NEWS FROM THE CAUCASUS

    Economist
    http://www.economist.com/world /europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10809006
    March 6 2008
    UK

    Bloodshed in Armenia worries both Russia and the West

    THE day after Dmitry Medvedev's presidential victory, Moscow's leading
    papers turned their attention away from the long-predicted result
    to the unexpected bloodshed in Armenia. At least eight people were
    killed in clashes between security forces and opposition supporters
    protesting against alleged fraud in the country's presidential
    elections. "An election won with some blood", ran the headline in
    Kommersant, a leading business daily.

    Small, complicated and with names that are hard to spell, Armenia has
    long been out of the mainstream of world news. Yet what happens in
    this country has implications not only for the whole of the Caucasus,
    a region vital for Europe's energy security, but also for Russia. The
    story of rigged elections, corrupt officials and dead protesters is
    particularly unnerving for Russia, a country that prides itself on
    its stability.

    On February 19th Armenia held presidential elections. The incumbent
    prime minister, Serzh Sarkisian, assisted by a biased media and
    occasional stuffing of the ballot boxes, won 53% of the vote. If the
    election had been conducted fairly, there is a good chance he would
    have faced a second round and a possible defeat. But Mr Sarkisian
    had the backing of Robert Kocharian, the current president, which
    swung the result. (Mr Kocharian, it is said, fancies the job of prime
    minister-not unlike his Russian counterpart.)

    International observers did not cover themselves in glory. The
    Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe pointed out many
    shortcomings, yet said in an initial statement that the ballot was
    "mostly in line with the country's international commitments".

    The opposition, led by Levon Ter-Petrosian, an academic and Armenia's
    first president, demanded a re-run of the election. His supporters
    took to the streets. Mr Ter-Petrosian is no democratic angel. In 1996
    he is widely believed to have rigged the presidential election in
    his favour. Still, those who voted for him this time did so largely
    in protest against the local mafia, corruption and unemployment now
    associated with Mr Kocharian.

    For 11 days the government put up with the peaceful protest. But
    on March 1st, the police moved in on the pretext that protesters
    were carrying firearms, which some observers say were planted. Mr
    Ter-Petrosian was placed under de facto house arrest and the crowd
    was dispersed. Predictably it regrouped and gathered in front of the
    French embassy in Yerevan. Mr Kocharian sent in the army, and the
    area was soon lit up with tracer fire.

    Eight people were killed, cars were torched and shops were looted.

    Many protesters were armed with stones and metal poles. But the
    responsibility ultimately lies with the government which allowed
    the situation to deteriorate into chaos. The state of emergency now
    imposed by Mr Kocharian for 20 days, including a media blackout and the
    arrest of opposition figures, may temporarily suppress the protests,
    but it is unlikely to resolve the underlying problems.

    These include corruption, low living standards and an economic
    blockade by Azerbaijan and Turkey because of Nagorno-Karabakh,
    the Armenian-populated enclave inside Azerbaijan that was conquered
    by Armenia in 1994. This conflict has long been frozen. But three
    days after the violence in Yerevan, Armenian and Azerbaijani forces
    were involved in their worst firefight in a decade. Both Armenia and
    Azerbaijan accuse each other of starting the skirmish, which caused
    a disputed number of deaths on both sides.

    Claiming that Kosovo's declaration of independence last month has
    emboldened Armenian separatists, Azerbaijan's president, Ilham Aliev,
    has given warning that he is buying weapons to retake Nagorno-Karabakh
    by force, if necessary. A renewed war could destabilise the region
    and jeopardise a strategic oil pipeline to Turkey that runs only 15
    kilometres (ten miles) from the ceasefire line.

    Nagorno-Karabakh remains an open sore. Mr Ter-Petrosian's downfall
    in 1998 was mainly caused by his hints of a more flexible approach
    to a peace settlement with Azerbaijan. Both Mr Kocharian and Mr
    Sarkisian are from Nagorno-Karabakh and fought in the war, but they
    have done little to move towards peace. In a recent commentary in
    the Washington Post, Mr Ter-Petrosian dismissed the notion that only
    hardliners from Nagorno-Karabakh can solve the conflict. Indeed, he
    argues that Mr Sarkisian, whose presidency is now marred by bloodshed
    and incompetence, will be even less able to govern.

    Russia and the West have an interest in Armenia's stability, and
    they need to work to maintain it. This could be Mr Medvedev's first
    foreign test as president.
Working...
X