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Armenia: The Opposition Takes A Break From Yerevan Protests

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  • Armenia: The Opposition Takes A Break From Yerevan Protests

    ARMENIA: THE OPPOSITION TAKES A BREAK FROM YEREVAN PROTESTS
    Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet
    Tuesday, October 21, 2008
    NY

    EURASIA INSIGHT

    Nearly eight months after Armenia's presidential election, Yerevan cars
    may still fly the national tricolor to show support for ex-President
    Levon Ter-Petrosian, but the opposition's recent decision to call
    a temporary halt to rallies suggests that its appeal is sagging,
    some observers believe.

    At an October 17 rally in downtown Yerevan, Ter-Petrosian cited the
    need to support the government in talks with Azerbaijan over the
    disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh as the reason for the decision
    to stop the protests, ongoing since Armenia's February presidential
    vote. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    "The suspension of the rallies and the marches does not mean that the
    movement gives up its political struggle and the demands made with it,"
    Ter-Petrosian told demonstrators.

    One independent political analyst, however, argued that a
    better-organized and mobilized opposition would not have needed to take
    a break. "In this situation, when the authorities are taking active
    steps in the foreign policy domain and making the opposition weaker,
    it is important what stance the opposition leaders will have," said
    Yervand Bozoian. "Had the opposition had clear programs, I think it
    would not have to take a break. I think they made wrong calculations
    and the statement that they're taking a break for awhile because of
    foreign tensions is not that convincing."

    The "clear action plan" promised by Ter-Petrosian a few days after the
    February 19 election has not yet surfaced, leaving some to wonder if
    the opposition is fragmented, or just cannot come up with concrete
    policy proposals. More than 120 opposition activists and supporters
    still remain in jail after the March 2008 crackdown on protestors,
    while police remain on watch at Yerevan's Liberty Square, the
    opposition's traditional gathering place.

    Nikol Pashinian, the editor-in-chief of the largest and best-selling
    opposition daily, Haykakan Zhamanak, and, along with Ter-Petrosian,
    a driving force behind the opposition rallies, has gone into hiding
    abroad. He now encourages supporters via a series of articles and
    editorials.

    With the start of construction on an underground parking garage for
    Liberty Square, though, some supporters believe that the government
    has gotten a permanent jump on Ter-Petrosian's movement and its
    rallies. The construction will last two years; the city government
    has denied, however, that the project is intended to block protests.

    For many Armenians, the opposition's rallies have failed to produce
    results. "To be frank, I don't understand why so many people lost
    their lives. What is this struggle for?" asked one Yerevan cab driver
    about the eight people who died in the March 2008 clash between
    protestors and police. "People had such great expectations, but the
    victory promised by the opposition appears to have remained only an
    unfulfilled promise."

    Yerevan engineer Mkrtich Hakobian counters that eight months is too
    short a time period to realize any of those expectations. "Society
    wants a power change very quickly, but politicians are there
    for providing realistic solutions to emerging problems based on
    pragmatism," said Hakobian, who took part in the October 17 rally.

    Meanwhile, President Serzh Sargsyan's administration has exhibited
    policy pragmatism designed to prevent the opposition from gaining
    traction. For example, reforms have been launched in customs and tax
    administration, while Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian (no relation
    to Serzh Sargsyan) declared an official campaign against corruption,
    leading to the firing of several senior officials.

    In foreign policy, the unprecedented invitation to Turkish President
    Abdullah Gul to visit Yerevan in September is seen as another display
    of Sargsyan's pragmatism. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    Yet that pragmatism has its limits. No dialogue between the opposition
    and the government has yet taken place, and the general level of
    democracy in Armenia, according to international organizations,
    remains questionable.

    Senior Ter-Petrosian supporter Suren Sureniants argues that a strong
    public desire for democratic change does, in fact, exist; it all
    comes down to tactics, he adds. "Tactics need to be developed on a
    day-to-day basis, hour by hour, and this is being done. In the coming
    months, I think, we will witness the opposition's materialization."

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for ArmeniaNow.com
    in Yerevan.
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