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  • TOL: Soviet Armenia

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    March 7 2008


    Soviet Armenia

    by TOL
    7 March 2008

    By muzzling the press and dissenters, the regime in Yerevan fails
    another test of democracy.

    It's a familiar refrain. The government-run media lavish attention on
    the heir-apparent and ignore opposition candidates. Public employees
    are given not-so-subtle reminders before election day of who butters
    their bread. The political elite dismiss outside criticism. And to no
    one's surprise, the anointed successor walks away with the
    presidency.

    It sounds like Russia, which held its sham presidential election on
    Sunday. But it also describes Armenia, a former Soviet republic that
    still has close ties to Moscow. The difference is that the aftermath
    of yet another faulty Armenian election was marked by a deadly
    crackdown on demonstrators and an assault on human rights.

    Armenians are all too familiar with tragedy and dictatorship. The
    feisty nation endured invasions, genocide and 70 years of communism
    imposed on it by outsiders. But the years since independence in 1991
    have been marked chiefly by problems of Armenia's own making. The
    country is still paying the price for its costly turf war with
    Azerbaijan in the early 1990s. Its belligerent relationship with
    Turkey damages its economic potential. And despite huge investments
    from its well-connected diaspora and do-good aid programs, it is
    still a nation sabotaged by corrupt, clannish, and sometimes violent
    politics.


    Robert Kocharian
    It all starts at the top, where President Robert Kocharian is about
    to hand power to his longtime ally, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian.
    In the 19 February presidential contest, the prime minister defeated
    his main challenger, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, by a
    30-point margin. Ter-Petrosian's supporters immediately declared the
    election a fraud and took to the streets.

    International election monitors reported that hopes for a clean
    contest were marred by bias in the government media, evidence that
    public employees were compelled to vote for the ruling Republican
    Party, and incidents of violence. The Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe reported several attacks on campaign workers
    and the offices of Ter-Petrosian just days before the election. The
    OSCE said the attacks contributed to `the increasingly tense
    pre-election environment.'

    OMINOUS WARNING

    It was an ominous warning of things to come. After days of
    demonstrations, security forces attacked protesters in central
    Yerevan last weekend. In the ensuing chaos, as many as eight people
    were killed and dozens of others - including police officers - were
    wounded. Human Rights Watch, along with other monitors, called on the
    government to investigate what several eyewitnesses said was
    excessive use of force. A glance at the websites of media and
    bloggers intrepid enough to report the incidents, such as the
    Armenian investigative journalism site HETQ Online, ArmeniaNow, and
    TOL's Armenian Patchwork blog, shows menacing security forces, badly
    beaten victims, the hulks of burned-out police vehicles, and streets
    littered with debris.

    Kocharian declared a 20-day state of emergency on 1 March, banning
    the right of assembly and muzzling all but `official information.' In
    a speech to the nation that harkened back to Soviet crackdowns on
    dissent, he accused protesters of `illegal activities' and
    challenging `stability' and `constitutional order.' This week, the
    Sarkisian-controlled parliament waived immunity from prosecution for
    four opposition lawmakers accused of fomenting unrest.

    The government has a duty to maintain order, and in a country like
    Armenia that is too often given to Wild West politics, it is no easy
    task. But people in democracies have a right to be informed, to
    express themselves, to assemble, to complain about their government,
    and to demonstrate against their public servants. Strong democracies
    can withstand criticism and dissent, but strong democracies are not
    built from the top down.

    TOP HEAVY AND UNACCOUNTABLE

    Armenia's constitution - which vests inordinate power at the top - is
    partly to blame for the country's current crisis. Its political
    culture is another. Stephan H. Astourian, who heads the Armenian
    studies program at the University of California at Berkeley, has
    described the party system in Armenia as one of `a limited geographic
    scope, ideological fuzziness, and weak institutionalization. These
    are essentially personalistic organizations, instruments for the
    ambitions of a more or less well-known individual and his clientele.'


    Serzh Sarkisian
    Donors also contribute to the crisis. They tend to chart Armenia's
    economic gains as a sign of overall progress without demanding more
    accountability. A 2005 report from the U.S. Agency for International
    Development suggests there isn't much to show for the millions of
    dollars Washington pumps into democracy-building and anti-corruption
    programs each year:

    `Although Armenia has been independent for almost fifteen years,
    autocratic mentalities and practices remain embedded. The government
    is dominated by the executive branch and is without meaningful checks
    and balances. The judiciary is not independent, and rulings are
    politically biased. A symbiotic relationship between political and
    business elites has bred endemic corruption and severely hampers the
    ability of opposition parties to raise funds or access the electronic
    media.'

    The opposition, such as it is, has offered little as an alternative.
    Ter-Petrosian himself was accused of cronyism during the economic
    privatizations in the early years of the republic, and of rigging his
    1996 re-election as president. Two years later he was forced to cede
    power to his prime minister, Kocharian, but returned from political
    obscurity a decade later determined to reclaim his old office. He
    denies inciting his supporters, but he was back in court this week
    challenging the official results rather than seeking an end to the
    crisis.

    The president's job would not be easy for any leader in an isolated,
    bitterly divided society where too much blood has been spilled
    already. If he is to succeed where Kocharian and Ter-Petrosian both
    failed, Sarkisian will have to make peace with neighboring nations,
    heal the domestic wounds, create a public-service ethic, and
    decentralize his own authority.

    The president-elect should start by demanding that Kocharian lift the
    emergency decree and remove the shackles from the media. Times of
    crisis are when people most need information, not government-imposed
    silence.
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