Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia: Opposition Leader Offers Olive Branch To Government

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

  • Armenia: Opposition Leader Offers Olive Branch To Government

    ARMENIA: OPPOSITION LEADER OFFERS OLIVE BRANCH TO GOVERNMENT
    by Mariann Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet.org
    June 1 2011
    NY

    After more than three years of political strife, the Armenian
    government and the country's main opposition coalition, the Armenian
    National Congress, appear ready to bury the hatchet.

    At a May 31 rally in Yerevan, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian,
    leader of the Armenian National Congress (ANC) called "for a formal
    dialogue with authorities." He added that the ANC would select a
    delegation "within the next few days" to conduct political talks with
    government representatives. The ANC is also planning to present a
    "dialogue agenda to authorities" that includes a call for early
    presidential and parliamentary elections, Ter-Petrosian said.

    News of the ANC's conciliatory steps followed the release of opposition
    activists Nikol Pashinian and Sasun Mikaelian. Both were imprisoned
    for their alleged role in the 2008 street violence that followed
    Armenia's last presidential elections.

    In a marked departure from his earlier portrayals of President
    Serzh Sargsyan's administration as having stolen the 2008 election,
    Ter-Petrosian urged his supporters to give the government's views a
    fair hearing. The pending political talks, he declared, do "not mean
    we should not take into consideration the agenda and counter-offers
    put forward by the government, otherwise the parity [between the ANC
    and government] will be violated."

    At a June 1 press briefing, Parliamentary Speaker Hovik Abrahamian
    welcomed Ter-Petrosian's readiness for talks. "When the radical
    opposition addresses such a proposal to authorities, I think the
    president of the republic will take the initiative and organize this
    dialogue, which I believe will favor the interests of the Republic
    of Armenia and the people," Abrahmian said.

    Ter-Petroisian's announcement disappointed some of his followers.

    Forty-three-year-old furniture-maker Vardan Ayvazian described
    himself as "deeply upset" by the decision on "laying down arms,"
    given Armenia's severe problems with unemployment and labor migration.

    "Did we strive for a dialogue in this format after so many years of
    struggle?" asked Ayvazian. "I had far more expectations; I thought
    I was fighting for great changes."

    Local analysts believe the ANC's calls for dialogue and for
    early elections are aimed at maintaining voters' trust. "This is a
    rational approach; Levon Ter-Petrosian understands that he cannot act
    differently," said independent political analyst Yerevand Bozoian,
    noting that Armenians appeared to be increasingly fatigued with
    political rallies.

    Signs of a thaw came fitfully, but consistently in recent months. As
    Ter-Petrosian toned down his anti-government rhetoric, officials
    started to make concessions, including a decision to permit opposition
    rallies in Yerevan's Freedom Square, site of the 2008 clashes between
    police and protesters. Officials also announced a new investigation
    into the 2008 events and declared an amnesty that freed those described
    as political prisoners by the opposition.

    Aiming to reassure his supporters that no back-room political bargain
    has already been fixed between the ANC leadership and the Sargsyan
    administration, Ter-Petrosian stressed that "a dialogue does not at
    all mean loving and hugging each other, or reviewing one's opinion
    about the other party."

    Independent political analyst Suren Surenyants, a former senior
    Ter-Petrosian supporter, expressed hope that the dialogue would make
    Armenia's political dynamic more evenly balanced, and lead, eventually,
    to fair elections. "[T]his dialogue will create a favorable situation
    for both parties in the future," Surenyants claimed. "No changes can
    be expected without mutual concessions."

    But one non-ANC opposition politician, senior Heritage Party MP
    Armen Martirosian, voiced concern that the ANC might still abandon
    its political values in an effort to obtain a share of power.

    "Since the parties are ready to make concessions, they will come
    to an agreement on other issues as well," Martirosian said. Bozoian
    echoed that assessment. "[M]ost likely, the so-called dialogue refers
    not to early elections or to [addressing] people's social problems,
    but rather to sharing power," he asserted.

    Editor's note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
    Yerevan and editor-in-chief of MediaLab.am.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X