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Armenian Opposition Backs Away From Further Confrontation With Gover

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  • Armenian Opposition Backs Away From Further Confrontation With Gover

    ARMENIAN OPPOSITION BACKS AWAY FROM FURTHER CONFRONTATION WITH GOVERNMENT
    Emil Danielyan

    Jamestown Foundation
    http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cac he=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=34656&tx_ttnew s%5BbackPid%5D=7&cHash=38155a5cf4
    March 4 2009

    Armenian protesters in Yerevan following the controversial 2008
    presidential election (Photo: NYTimes) Armenia has marked the first
    anniversary of its worst political violence ever amid signs of easing
    tension between its leadership and the main opposition forces. The
    top opposition leader, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, has
    made it clear that he will no longer seek to topple the government
    with the kind of street protests that nearly catapulted him back to
    power following the disputed presidential election of February 2008.

    The protests ended on March 1, 2008, in vicious clashes between
    security forces and opposition protesters who barricaded themselves in
    central Yerevan. Ten people were killed and more than 200 injured in
    what the Armenian authorities call an attempt to "usurp state power
    by force" but what the opposition regards as a bloody suppression of
    a popular revolt against the alleged falsification of election results.

    Thousands of opposition supporters rallied in the Armenian capital
    on the first anniversary of the unrest. It was the first opposition
    demonstration since a moratorium on antigovernment protests declared by
    Ter-Petrosian last October. At the time, Ter-Petrosian cited the need
    not to weaken President Serzh Sarkisian in the ongoing peace talks
    with Azerbaijan, which he said would soon result in the resolution
    of the Karabakh conflict.

    The charismatic opposition leader made no mention of Karabakh as he
    addressed more than 10,000 people who gathered in downtown Yerevan
    on March 1. Many of them hoped that the rally would mark the start
    of renewed "decisive actions" promised by Ter-Petrosian's Armenian
    National Congress (HAK) alliance in the summer and early fall of
    2008. Ter-Petrosian stated, however, that he would not seek to stage an
    antigovernment "revolution" but made a case for a "prolonged struggle"
    against the ruling regime "through solely constitutional means." "The
    old-fashioned ideas of revolution or uprising must finally be driven
    out of our country's political agenda," he said. "As long as that
    hasn't happened, Armenia can have no chance of becoming a rule-of-law
    and democratic state. History knows virtually no revolutions that
    have engendered democracy and welfare" (witnessed by Jamestown).

    Ter-Petrosian went on to denounce unnamed opposition elements
    advocating radical actions, saying that some of them "usually flee
    the scene at decisive moments" while others might be government
    "provocateurs." He also claimed that the Armenian authorities "will
    destroy themselves" in a matter of months because of the growing
    fallout from the global economic recession, which he said would thrust
    Armenia into a "humanitarian crisis." "I am deeply convinced that the
    country is simply descending into an abyss," he stated, predicting
    a plethora of catastrophic economic consequences. "The calmer we
    stay, the more we save our nerves, the quicker [the authorities]
    will collapse," added Ter-Petrosian.

    The 45-minute speech clearly failed to live up to the expectations
    of many diehard opposition supporters. Some of the ensuing opposition
    press commentaries reflected their disappointment. The pro-opposition
    daily Hraparak openly blasted Ter-Petrosian in a March 3 editorial,
    saying that he gave the impression of a "weak, unconfident, and tired
    person." "Rejecting a revolt or a revolution is a sign of weakness and
    indecision, rather than a commitment to civilized methods of struggle,"
    it said.

    "In any case, the authorities have no reason to worry about the
    opposition at the moment," wrote a commentator for another, more
    neutral newspaper, 168 Zham. Indeed, a spokesman for Sarkisian's
    Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), Eduard Sharmazanov, reacted to
    Ter-Petrosian's speech saying that the opposition movement was now
    "in decline." "I appreciate that the first president has at last
    accepted the view, repeatedly expressed by the authorities, that a
    revolt or a revolution is not the way to go for Armenia," Sharmazanov
    said (Iravunk, March 3).

    For his part, Razmik Zohrabian, an HHK deputy chairman, said that
    Ter-Petrosian had increased the chances for the release of more than
    50 oppositionists who were arrested in the wake of the 2008 election
    and remain in prison. Zohrabian said that Sarkisian could grant them
    amnesty "in the near future" (RFE/RL Armenia Report, March 2). The
    release of all "political prisoners" remains the Armenian opposition's
    main precondition for engaging in a dialogue with the authorities. The
    latter implicitly pledged to free at least some of these prisoners as
    they managed to avoid embarrassing sanctions by the Council of Europe
    Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) in January. The Strasbourg-based body
    is due to reexamine the issue at its next session in late April.

    Incidentally, the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition scheduled
    its next rally for May 1. The announced change in its tactic
    should give the authorities a further incentive to comply with
    PACE resolutions demanding the liberation of all members of the
    opposition arrested on "seemingly artificial or politically motivated
    charges." Ter-Petrosian's March 1 speech was also an indication that
    his HAK alliance is gearing up for the May 31 first-ever elections
    of a municipal assembly, which will choose a new mayor of Yerevan
    (Yerevan mayors until now have been appointed by the president of
    the republic). A strong showing in the polls would give the HAK some
    stake in the country's existing political order and push it further
    away from street politics. Conversely, blatant vote rigging could
    reignite the year-long standoff between the authorities and the
    opposition that seems to be subsiding now.
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