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  • BAKU: Interior confrontation in Armenia not to lead to replacement

    Trend, Azerbaijan
    Oct 15 2009


    Interior confrontation in Armenia not to lead to replacement in state power:
    experts

    Azerbaijan, Baku, Oct. 15 / Trend News E.Tariverdiyeva /


    Interior confrontation Armenia caused by the opposition's dissatisfaction
    with the normalization of relations with Turkey will not lead to replacement
    in state power in the country, experts believe.

    "I doubt very much whether the ratification would lead to a change of
    leadership in Armenia.
    The problem is that nobody has enough power to overthrow the present
    government", believes Amanda Akcakoca, European Expert on South Caucasus.

    Despite the ban of Yerevan executive Power, the Dashnaktsutiun party will
    rally on Oct.16 to protest the Armenian-Turkish protocols.

    "[...] our goal is to explain the public and authorities the threat of these
    protocols and to persuade them to retreat from that decision," head of the
    Dashnaktsutsun Revolution Federation Parliamentary Group Vaan Ovannisyan
    said at the news-conference in Yerevan, the Mediamax reported.

    Speaking about the possible demand on the resignation of the Armenian
    President, Ovannisyan noted that the change of power is not an end in
    itself. It can only be a mean to achieve the main goal - the refusal to
    ratify the protocol.

    Turkish and Armenian Foreign Ministers, Ahmet Davudoglu and Edward
    Nalbandian signed the Ankara-Yerevan protocol in Zurich on Oct. 10.

    Armenian-Turkish ties have been severed since 1993 due to Armenia's claims
    to recognize so-called "Armenian genocide" and Armenia's occupation of
    Azerbaijani lands.

    According to observers, the internal situation in Armenia will heat up, but
    will not lead to a change in the leadership of the country.

    The path ahead is full of potholes and will be particularly difficult for
    Armenia,Akcakoca believes.

    "Parliamentary majority of Armenia will face a growing reaction and pressure
    from both the Dashnaks inside the country and externally from the diaspora
    community who are extremely unhappy about a number of elements in the
    Protocol, Expert of the European Policy Centre (Belgium), Akcakoca wrote to
    Trend News by email.

    Although, opposition will do their best to prevent ratification, Sarkisian
    needs to stay strong and bite the bullet. Firstly because his credibility is
    at stake but also because at the end of the day Armenia will be better off
    all round with normalization of relations with Turkey which should bring an
    end to their isolation, the expert said.

    According to the Turkish political scientist Sinan Ogan, despite the fact
    that Armenia's opposition is radical, at the moment it will not take extreme
    measures.

    "I believe no radical changes in the Armenian policy will take place in the
    near future, director of the Turkish Center for International Studies and
    Strategic Analysis Ogan said over the telephone.

    The outlook for any possible "change of leadership" within Armenia depends
    on a very different set of variables, Director of the Armenian Center for
    National and International Studies (ACNIS) Richard Giragosian believes.

    Although the external factors of the normalization effort with Turkey and
    the outcome of the protocols play an important role in determining the
    future of the current Armenian government, these issues serve more as
    secondary pressures, as the real test is strictly internal in nature,
    Giragosian added.

    The Armenian government of President Serzh Sargsyan has largely been driven
    by a need or even a sense of "desperation" for a success in foreign policy,
    to both endow it with a greater sense of legitimacy and to distract scrutiny
    away from domestic deficiencies in democratization, the director wrote to
    Trend News via e-mail.

    This is due to the impact of Armenia's post-election crisis of last year,
    which remains unresolved and that has made this particular Armenian
    government more unpopular and much less legitimate than any previous
    Armenian government.

    "This also means that even in the "best case" scenario, assuming a complete
    "diplomatic victory" by Armenia in terms of forging new relations with
    Turkey, such "success" will do little to solve the underlying problems and
    shortcomings in the lack of democracy and authoritarian rule within
    Armenia," the expert said.

    R.Hafizoglu and V.Zhavoronkova contributed to the article.
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