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How Many Seats Will The Power Give To The ANC?

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  • How Many Seats Will The Power Give To The ANC?

    HOW MANY SEATS WILL THE POWER GIVE TO THE ANC?
    Siranuysh Papyan

    Story from Lragir.am News:
    http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/interview25842.html
    Published: 11:24:01 - 17/04/2012

    Interview with Hranush Kharatyan, ethnographer, on election
    developments

    You have spoken about the deep political marsh and the society's
    disappointment with the elections many times in these four years. What
    do you think about the current election processes?

    There is no surprise and almost not evident competition, sure,
    not taking into account, (I personally don't) the weak, uncertain
    situation around the PAP and ANC talks, let's not call it an agreement,
    but some talks which arouse a feeling of uncertainty and panic. There
    are no election developments besides this phenomenon.

    What panic do you mean?

    Panic has two meanings: it is evident that the ANC has been recently
    losing the possibility, the form and the prospect of being radical
    opposition. For two years, so much uncertainty has been introduced
    into the political field about the ANC that people stopped considering
    the ANC opposition and started guessing whether the power will give
    posts to the ANC or not. If four years ago up to the last autumn,
    I was sure that the ANC would win 10-15 seats on its own and could
    be a serious competitor to the authorities, now, I keep thinking how
    many seats the power will give to the ANC. In these conditions, the
    ANC-PAP union also displays the lack of any intensive and radical
    opposition in Armenia. Prosperous Armenia can't be opposition, it
    pretends to the strengthening of its positions and to the conquering
    of the political field.

    What is the reason of the Congress's failure?

    I think the serious oscillation happened in the period of the
    signing of the Armenian-Turkish protocols. The ANC did not show any
    radical position stating that actually Serzh Sargsyan was right
    to sign the protocols. Here everything started not because ANC
    agreed with the authorities, but because it was about the Armenian
    and Turkish relations, which is a sensitive topic which matured
    during Ter-Petrosyan's tenure. So, here, the ANC agreed with the
    authorities on such an important foreign political issue. Moreover,
    I see that there was the demand on a clear assessment and analyses of
    the activities of the power (I would not like to use the word "crime"
    but it was a criminal act, I mean a well-thought out one against the
    society), but it has never been done, except for the poor statement by
    Hrant Bagratyan which was uncertain. Bagratyan's economic analyses on
    the economic policy of the government are grounded but I have always
    been sure that the roots of the current situation were laid during
    the tenure of the first president.

    But everyone is saying the parliament of that period was different
    from the current one in terms of the quality, intellectual level,
    freedom of speech and so on.

    Sure, before 1996, despite the war, when the conditions in the country
    were objectively hard plus the subjective political conditions,
    all that could be called newly formed economic system, collapsed
    and the understanding of "you are my brother, you are my friend, the
    country is yours, go and reign" was set, which, unfortunately, still
    exists and suffocates the economic initiative. The key issues were set
    during Supreme Council rule which had liberal, democratic and devoted
    parliamentary corps. The members of the first parliament of Armenia
    were people, who knew what they wanted, but they had no experience and
    the situation was uncertain since they didn't know how to work. There
    wasn't the balance between knowing what they want and how to do that
    was not provided either in the second parliament. But this issue
    of knowing what they want is the main direction of activities of
    the next parliaments - I'm a parliamentary member and I come here
    to solve my problems. This feature is clearly seen when reading the
    interviews of parliamentary candidates: they say they know what to
    do, but they could do that out of the parliament too. Why do they
    want to enter the parliament? Do they have a political program and
    a political orientation?

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