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Is The Karabakh Peace Process Pushing Government-Opposition Dialogue

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  • Is The Karabakh Peace Process Pushing Government-Opposition Dialogue

    IS THE KARABAKH PEACE PROCESS PUSHING GOVERNMENT-OPPOSITION DIALOGUE?
    by Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/63921
    July 20 2011
    NY

    After years of acrimony, the Armenian government and the country's
    largest opposition group sat down recently to open a political
    dialogue. Some analysts in Yerevan believe the discussions stem
    from a government desire to minimize distractions as it considers
    recent Russian proposals to resolve the 23-year-long Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict.

    Just last month, the government backed away from earlier suggestions
    that it would meet with representatives of former president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian's Armenian National Congress (ANC). "Ultimatums are
    unacceptable, and addressing each other with ultimatums is a behavior
    that leads nowhere," President Serzh Sargsyan asserted in a June
    17 statement.

    Presidential spokesperson Armen Arzumanian surprised many Armenians
    on July 9 when he announced that the governing coalition, in fact,
    had formed a working group to meet with ANC representatives. The
    closed-door talks on July 18 went on for nearly two hours at Yerevan's
    downtown Erebuni Plaza Hotel. After wrapping up the meeting, both
    sides pledged to continue discussions on "a wide range of issues." A
    date for their next meeting has not yet been set.

    "The main goal is to pass from absolute confrontation to more
    cooperative work, and this does not at all mean that political
    disagreements between us will be smoothed away," the head of the
    government's delegation, Republican Party of Armenia member David
    Harutiunian, told journalists. "However, such a platform will enable
    us to hear each other's opinion."

    The ANC delegation echoed that position. "We have our solution
    [to the standoff with the government] -- that is, presidential and
    parliamentary elections," said ANC coordinator Levon Zurabian. "But
    at the same time, we have agreed that both parties have equal rights,
    and [the government] also can propose their solutions."

    Independent political analyst Yervand Bozoian sees more than a desire
    for cooperation as the motivation behind the government's about-face
    on the talks. As elsewhere in the Caucasus, July is tends to be quiet
    time for politics, he noted. "The prompt response by Serzh Sargsyan
    saying he is ready to speed up the process made me think that he has
    serious problems on the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh and has to come to
    terms with Levon Ter-Petrosian," Bozoian reasoned. "Only one factor
    can be present here; I suppose it is the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh."

    After lackluster round of Karabakh peace talks on June 24 in the
    Russian city of Kazan, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov visited
    Yerevan on July 8 with fresh proposals for a political settlement. The
    Armenian government's about-face on talks with the opposition came
    a day later.

    Lavrov shuttled off to Baku the same day, and then, on July 11, he
    visited Washington, DC. Yerevan has not yet made an official statement
    concerning the new Russian proposals, but Azerbaijan reportedly
    has provided a written response. Details of that response, however,
    have not been made public.

    Asked whether Karabakh could have influenced the Armenian government's
    decision to engage the opposition, governing Republican Party MP
    Hovhannes Sahakian conceded that "[f]oreign policy dictates domestic
    policy." At the same time, Sahakian underlined that "we cannot say
    that, following the Kazan meeting, the authorities have weakened their
    position and that is why they agreed to meet with the opposition."

    Armenian Center for Political and International Studies political
    analyst Ruben Mehrabian believes that the Karabakh conflict is one of
    the "reasons" for the dialogue, but added that public pressure may
    also have played a role. The government, mindful of the Arab Spring
    example, could not "but pay attention to the voice of society," which
    is expressing increasing anger about unemployment and labor migration,
    among other topics, Mehrabian claimed. He termed the dialogue "a
    manifestation of rationality" by both government and opposition.

    Which side will emerge from the talks as the perceived "winner" is
    anyone's guess. Bozoian contends that the government's decision to
    start negotiations strengthened the ANC's position, but ANC coordinator
    Zurabian noted that no concrete proposal from the government yet has
    been put on the negotiating table.

    Both Mehrabian and Bozoian nonetheless predict that change - in
    whatever form -- is in the wind. "[T]his will happen despite the hot
    weather and the perception that summer is a dead season in terms of
    politics," concluded Mehrabian.

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


    From: Baghdasarian
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