Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia: Government Coalition Parties Duke It Out Over Yerevan Vote

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

  • Armenia: Government Coalition Parties Duke It Out Over Yerevan Vote

    ARMENIA: GOVERNMENT COALITION PARTIES DUKE IT OUT OVER YEREVAN VOTE
    Marianna Grigoryan

    Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org
    May 22, 2009

    With the election for Yerevan's City Council 10 days away, the campaign
    is becoming bruising. But it's not jockeying between the government
    and opposition that has emerged as the chief source of rancor. Instead,
    the campaign has opened a window on a simmering power struggle within
    the governing coalition.

    In terms of political pull, organization and financial resources,
    the governing Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) and its partner, the
    Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP), are the heavyweights in the country's
    three-party coalition government. The third coalition party, Rule
    of Law, is widely seen as a lightweight without the political heft
    needed to fight on its own.

    The April 27 departure of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation from
    Armenia's ruling coalition cleared the way for both the RPA and
    PAP to jostle for additional influence, observers say. Prosperous
    Armenia holds the government portfolios for labor and social welfare,
    but several deputy ministerial posts remain up for grabs.

    Both parties are striving to secure one of the country's most
    influential political posts -- Yerevan mayor.

    That is why party leaders and their respective supporters are taking
    the campaign very seriously. The outcome of the May 31 City Council
    voting will largely determine the mayoral race, as the city's chief
    executive will be elected by the new council members.

    The budding rivalry is by no means limited to a war of words. The
    two sides have also gotten physical. The first headline-grabbing
    fight between RPA and PAP activists took place in Yerevan on May 12,
    followed by some minor incidents. The latest scrap took place on May
    18 in Yerevan's Ajapnyak District. Gunfire, as well as fistfights
    and verbal insults, marked the occasion, local media reported. Seven
    individuals from both parties were detained, according to police. [For
    details, see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    One opposition daily newspaper, Haykakan Zhamanak, reported that
    Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian and General Prosecutor
    Aghvan Hovsepian, accompanied by motorcades, had arrived on the
    scene to mediate a "ceasefire" during the Ajapnyak scuffle, but had
    failed to end the confrontation. Prosperous Armenia has denied the
    report. The claim could not be independently verified.

    Police spokesperson Sayat Shirinian stated that the seven
    detainees asserted that they had just been carrying on "a political
    discussion with loud voices." But political analysts and opposition
    politicians object that more than a taste for robust political
    debates characterizes relations between the Republican Party and
    Prosperous Armenia.

    "There's a struggle for leverage and authority in the
    government. Everyone wants to fight to keep his stake," independent
    analyst Andranik Tevanian said. "Both the RPA and PAP do their best
    to get as many votes as possible to strengthen their positions."

    Anahit Bakhshian, a senior member of the opposition Heritage Party,
    agrees. "What I see is an arduous desire to come to power at any cost,"
    Bakhshian said. "I also see that there are controversies going on
    within the government" about the city elections and the division of
    roles within parliament, she continued.

    The RPA and PAP leaderships are trying their best to dampen talk of a
    rivalry. Naira Zohrabian, a parliamentarian for Prosperous Armenia and
    the campaign manager for the party's Yerevan City Council campaign,
    adamantly dismissed the notion of a power struggle. "There are no
    problems inside the coalition at all," Zohrabian asserted. "But one
    should understand that we have various interests, and we can't avoid
    this kind of situation." Party members have been ordered "not to give
    in" to "provocations," she added.

    Republican Party spokesperson Eduard Sharmazanov also cited
    "interests," but asserted that "there are no problems inside the
    coalition."

    "Disturbances during the campaign may be the result of a clash of
    interests, be that of a social or other nature. There is no need to
    politicize all that," Sharmazanov said. "A couple of incidents can't
    interfere with . . . the campaign."

    Brawls characterized relations between the Republicans and Prosperous
    Armenia also during the 2007 parliamentary election campaign. Following
    the March 2008 crackdown on opposition protestors, the Republican
    Party formed a coalition with Prosperous Armenia, Rule of Law
    and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation to restore political
    "stability." [For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The persistence of brawls only indicates that both the Republicans and
    Prosperous Armenia believe that there is still room for maneuver, noted
    independent political analyst Yervand Bozoian. "Developments like these
    are unavoidable in a country like Armenia, where the political system
    is not quite formed yet," Bozoian said. "The struggle becomes visible
    when the forces are almost equal, as is the case with the RPA and PAP."

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based
    in Yerevan.
Working...
X