Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Government 'Lacking Mandate' To Mend Ties With Turkey

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

  • Armenian Government 'Lacking Mandate' To Mend Ties With Turkey

    ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT 'LACKING MANDATE' TO MEND TIES WITH TURKEY
    Ruben Meloyan

    RFE/RL
    28.04.2009

    Levon Zurabian, a leader of the opposition Armenian National Congress.

    Armenia's government will fail to sell any ground-breaking agreements
    with Turkey to the domestic public as long as it holds dozens of
    "political prisoners" and refuses to engage in dialogue with its
    political opponents, the main opposition Armenian National Congress
    (HAK) said on Tuesday.

    "It is impossible to carry out a process of Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation, which requires serious public support, without
    a process of internal Armenian reconciliation," said Levon
    Zurabian, a top HAK representative. "Today any consideration of the
    Turkish-Armenian roadmap is meaningless. One must first consider a
    roadmap for internal national reconciliation."

    Zurabian referred to the April 22 statement by the Armenian and Turkish
    foreign ministries on a gradual normalization of strained relations
    between the two neighboring states. Both the HAK and another major
    opposition force, the Zharangutyun party, have demanded the immediate
    disclosure of the "roadmap" announced by the two ministries. The
    Armenian authorities have so far refused to do that.

    According to Zurabian, although the HAK does not trust government
    assurances that the announced framework is good for Armenia, it will
    reserve final judgment on the deal u ntil it is made public. In
    any case, he said, the authorities lack the popular mandate to
    normalize ties with Turkey and accept a compromise solution to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict because of their continuing crackdown on
    the opposition stemming from the troubled presidential election of
    February 2008.

    Zurabian pointed to the continuing imprisonment of 55 opposition
    members arrested in the wake of the vote and "police repressions"
    against other HAK activists. "The authorities do not realize that
    until the domestic political crisis is resolved progress in any
    process fateful for the Armenian people will not be possible," he
    told journalists.

    Echoing statements by the HAK's top leader, former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian, Zurabian suggested that the authorities are exploiting
    the ongoing rapprochement with Turkey and the Karabakh peace process to
    get the West to "turn a blind eye" to their poor human rights record.

    "We have serious reason to suspect that the processes of
    Turkish-Armenian reconciliation and Karabakh settlement are used by
    Serzh Sarkisian for securing the international community's support
    or consent for crushing the opposition," he said.

    The Turkish-Armenian dialogue and Karabakh talks were on the agenda
    of Zurabian's meeting late on Monday with the visiting U.S. Deputy
    Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza and Marie Yovanovitch,
    the U.S. ambassador to Armenia. Yovanovitch held a separate meeting
    with Ter-Petrosian on April 22, in a further sign that Washington finds
    opposition support important for the success of the Turkish-Armenian
    and Armenian-Azerbaijani talks.

    "It's a time when Armenia needs unity," Bryza told RFE/RL on Monday. "I
    hope that the entire country will remain unified or will become unified
    in supporting an agreement that will improve everyone's life," he said.

    Chances of such unity decreased further on Monday as the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) announced its decision
    to leave Armenia's governing coalition in protest against President
    Sarkisian's conciliatory policy on Turkey. Leaders of the nationalist
    party believe that the year-long dialogue with Ankara has produced
    no tangible results for Yerevan and has only complicated greater
    international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide.

    Zurabian described Dashnaktsutyun's exit as a "first sign that this
    regime is not viable" and will show deeper cracks in the coming months.

    He said the HAK will be ready to cooperate with Dashnaktsutyun only
    if it acts like "real opposition." "They need to earn the right to
    be a real opposition," he said.

    Dashnaktsutyun leaders, who had been in strong opposition to the
    Ter-Petrosian administration in 1991-1998, have sounded even more
    skeptical about chances of such cooperation . The influential party
    unequivocally endorsed the government crackdown on the opposition
    and, in particular, the bloody suppression of Ter-Petrosian's massive
    post-election demonstrations in Yerevan.
Working...
X