Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kocharian 'Encouraged' By Armenia's Progress

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

  • Kocharian 'Encouraged' By Armenia's Progress

    KOCHARIAN 'ENCOURAGED' BY ARMENIA'S PROGRESS
    Emil Danielyan

    Armenialiberty.org
    http://www.azatutyun .am/content/article/1814213.html
    Sept 3 2009

    Armenia -- President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and his predecessor
    Robert Kocharian attend a ceremony marking the 18th anniversary of
    Nagorno-Karabakh's declaration of independence on September 2, 2009.

    Former President Robert Kocharian signaled his satisfaction with the
    current state of affairs in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh as he made
    a rare public appearance on Wednesday.

    Kocharian reluctantly agreed to talk to journalists as he attended
    official ceremonies in his hometown of Stepanakert marking the 18th
    anniversary of the declaration of Nagorno-Karabakh independence. His
    successor Serzh Sarkisian, also a native of Karabakh, and the disputed
    region's leadership were also in attendance.

    Kocharian, who appears to have had a hair transplant recently, seemed
    in unusually high spirits, joking with reporters and laughing off
    their questions throughout the brief conversation. "I didn't expect
    the free life to be so good," he said, chortling.

    "My mood is good," he added in remarks broadcast by Armenian TV
    channels. "Especially when I see that everything is moving in a quite
    encouraging direction."

    Kocharian refused to elaborate on that. It thus remained unclear
    whether he broadly agrees with Sarkisian's policies and, in
    particular, efforts to resolve the Karabakh conflict and normalize
    Armenia's relations with Turkey. Those efforts have generated a
    lot of controversy in Yerevan, with critics, among them some former
    members of the Kocharian administration, accusing Sarkisian of making
    disproportionate concessions to the country's two arch-foes.

    Kocharian himself indicated his disapproval of the current Armenian
    government's more conciliatory line on Turkey in July last year, three
    months after leaving office. He made clear that unlike Sarkisian,
    he would not have invited Turkish President Abdullah Gul to pay a
    historic visit to Yerevan in September 2008.

    Kocharian has been rumored to be plotting a political comeback ever
    since he completed his second and final five-year term in office in
    April 2008. The Armenian pro-opposition press has been rife with
    speculation that he is keen to replace the Prime Minister Tigran
    Sarkisian and even win back the presidency.

    Kocharian and his aides have repeatedly dismissed the speculation. The
    ex-president admitted on Wednesday that he follows political
    developments in the country. "But not actively," he added.
Working...
X