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Armenia Ruling Party, Arm-Wrestler Clash At Polls

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  • Armenia Ruling Party, Arm-Wrestler Clash At Polls

    ARMENIA RULING PARTY, ARM-WRESTLER CLASH AT POLLS
    By Matthew Collin

    The Daily Star
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/International/2012/May-04/172342-armenia-ruling-party-arm-wrestler-clash-at-polls.ashx#axzz1tvmE1qOO
    May 4 2012
    Lebanon

    YEREVAN: Armenians vote in parliamentary polls on Sunday that look
    set to be a battle for supremacy between the governing party and its
    current coalition partner led by a super-rich former arm wrestling
    champion.

    It is the biggest test of the ex-Soviet state's democratic credentials
    since disputed presidential elections in 2008, when mass rallies
    ended in bloody clashes between riot police and opposition supporters
    that left 10 people dead, casting a long shadow over President Serzh
    Sarkisian's administration.

    Opinion polls suggest that Sarkisian's Republican party, which
    currently has a parliamentary majority, is ahead of its ally in the
    outgoing coalition -- the Prosperous Armenia party led by millionaire
    tycoon and former arm-wrestler Gagik Tsarukian -- with opposition
    parties trailing behind.

    The authorities in the mountainous country of 3.3 million people have
    promised an unprecedentedly clean contest for the 131-seat National
    Assembly in the hope of winning an uncontested mandate and avoiding
    further political turmoil.

    "It is our deep inner conviction that we need clear, transparent,
    just and fair elections, because if the authorities want to carry
    out transformational reform, they need to enjoy the support of the
    population," Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian of the Republican party
    told AFP.

    A pre-poll report by OSCE observers did not register systematic
    violations, although there have been allegations some parties have
    been bribing potential voters with satellite dishes, mobile phones,
    food, alcohol and even tractors.

    "Some poorer parts of our electorate wait for elections because they
    think they will get gifts or benefits," sociologist Gevorg Poghosian
    told AFP.

    The Armenian National Congress opposition bloc said the elections were
    being held in an "atmosphere of fear and intimidation" created by an
    "oligarchic regime" that is preparing to rig the vote.

    "Sometimes Armenia looks democratic but this is a facade. We need to
    dismantle this mafia-like regime that has hijacked the state for its
    personal enrichment," the bloc's coordinator, Levon Zurabian, told AFP.

    The bloc will launch protests the day after the polls if there is
    mass fraud, he said.

    Demonstrations have also not been ruled out by Prosperous Armenia,
    whose musclebound populist leader Tsarukian keeps lions at his
    opulent hilltop villa outside Yerevan and is seen by his supporters
    as a benevolent hero for his donations to the poor and financing of
    new churches.

    "If people are disappointed and frustrated again because the
    elections were not conducted in a fair manner and there was fraud and
    irregularities, the past problems will be exacerbated which could
    lead to a period of instability," senior party figure and former
    foreign minister Vartan Oskanian told AFP.

    Issues like poverty, unemployment and emigration have dominated the
    campaign, with politicians on all sides promising job creation and
    improved social welfare.

    The impoverished and landlocked country has suffered economically
    because its borders with neighbors Turkey and Azerbaijan are closed
    due to political disputes.

    No final peace deal has been signed with Azerbaijan since the 1990s
    war over the region of Nagorny Karabakh and gun battles often erupt
    along the frontline.

    Efforts to restore diplomatic relations with Turkey, which could have
    ended decades of enmity over the World War I genocide of Armenians
    under the Ottoman empire, have also been frozen.

    A strong turnout is expected for Sunday's vote but opinion polls
    have suggested that large numbers of voters remain cynical about the
    political process and some analysts say the next government needs to
    undertake fundamental reforms.

    "If we have the best-ever elections, completely free and fair, it
    would be an important precedent," Richard Giragosian of the Regional
    Studies Center told AFP.

    "But it would still not be enough because the oligarchs will still
    be powerful, the parliament will still be inadequate and the rule of
    law will still be the law of the ruler," he said.




    From: A. Papazian
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