Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Nagorno-Karabakh: Legislative Polls Trigger Political Tensions

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

  • Nagorno-Karabakh: Legislative Polls Trigger Political Tensions

    Nagorno-Karabakh: Legislative Polls Trigger Political Tensions
    By Jean-Christophe Peuch

    Voting in Nagorno-Karabakh on 19 June

    The Nagorno-Karabakh region on 19 June held its fourth parliamentary
    election since it seceded from Soviet Azerbaijan in 1988. Early
    results show forces loyal to the ruling administration set to hold an
    overwhelming majority of seats. Tension in the separatist enclave is
    brewing as the opposition is threatening to boycott the new parliament
    amid accusations of ballot fraud.


    Prague, 22 June 2005 (RFE/RL) -- According to the Central Election
    Commission's latest returns today, President Arkadii Ghukasian's
    DemocraticParty of Artsakh -- as Nagorno-Karabakh is known in Armenian
    -- will have 12 of the separatist region's 33 parliamentary seats.

    An allied party, Free Motherland (Azat Hayrenik), took 10
    seats. Another eight went to candidates not affiliated with any
    political grouping, but thought to be loyal to Ghukasian.

    That left Ghukasian's foes with just three seats. It was a
    surprisingly poor performance, especially since many in Karabakh
    expected the front-runner tobe the opposition alliance made of the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation, or Dashnaktsutiun, and the Movement
    88 alliance.

    Movement 88 Deputy Chairman Gegham Baghdasarian on 20 June struck an
    ironic note while accusing the authorities of vote-rigging. `In my
    view, there were fair and transparent irregularities,' he said.

    Baghdasarian yesterday indicated that the opposition might boycott the
    new parliament. He also alleged that authorities had ordered a
    physical assaulton one Dashnaktsutiun candidate.

    Dashnaktsutiun's Armen Sargsian, whose party had eight seats in
    theprevious legislature, also claimed vote fraud. He pledged to fight
    Ghukasian's government through constitutional means, but said
    the opposition would not take to the streets to challenge the election
    outcome. `Legislative polls in Karabakh -- like the rest of the
    domestic political arena -- are absolutely unable to influence the
    negotiation process because Nagorno-Karabakh is not part of the peace
    talks." - Fatullayev


    `Our election bloc will continue to defend its program and do its
    utmost so that stability in the country is maintained,' Sargsian said.

    A former education minister, Sargsian was sacked last December. His
    dismissal put a formal end to the cooperation between Dashnaktsutiun
    and the Ghukasian administration.

    The government denies any foul play in the 19 June vote.

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which
    does not recognize the existence of the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh,
    did not monitor the vote. However, a number of private organizations
    and Western rights groups sent election observers. Also present to
    monitor the polls was a group of deputies from the lower house of
    Russia's parliament, the State Duma.


    President Arkadii Ghukasian voting in 2002 presidential election (EPA)
    Addressing reporters in Stepanakert on 20 June, Russian Duma Deputy
    Konstantin Zatulin said the polls were fair and
    transparent. Individual Western observers also described the elections
    as generally fair.

    Armenia's Foreign Ministry on 20 June hailed the polls, describing
    them as ` an important step toward reinforcing democratic institutions
    and traditionsin Nagorno-Karabakh.'

    Yet, not everyone outside Armenia and the separatist region agrees
    with this assessment. Eynulla Fatullayev, the editor in chief of the
    Baku-based `Real Azerbaijan' electronic newspaper, told our
    correspondent he did notexpect the 19 June vote to end with such a
    massive defeat for the opposition.

    `To be honest, I'm quite surprised by these results. After meeting
    with the leaders of the opposition and studying public opinion in
    Karabakh, I had predicted that the opposition would make a much better
    performance. I had the impression that the Movement 88 and
    Dashnaktsutiun parties -- especially Movement 88 -- would grab if not
    an overwhelming majority of parliamentary seats, at least a
    significant number of deputy mandates. But unfortunately -- or
    fortunately, I don't know -- my prediction proved incorrect. I don't
    have very much information yet, but from what I already know there
    were serious violationsand irregularities in a number of
    constituencies,' Fatullayev said.

    Fatullayev in February traveled to Karabakh and the Azerbaijani
    territories ethnic Armenian troops have been occupying for the past 12
    years. He was the first Azerbaijani reporter to visit some of these
    areas since the 1994 truce that formally ended the war between Baku
    and Yerevan over Karabakh.

    In the Karabakh capital of Stepanakert, Fatullayev met with civil
    rights activists and representatives of both the separatist leadership
    and the opposition. After that, he said, he came to believe the
    political situationin the enclave had dramatically changed since his
    previous visit five years earlier and that the separatist regime had
    seriously improved its democratic credentials.

    As evidence to his claims, Fatullayev cited the August 2004 municipal
    polls that were won by the opposition and saw Movement 88 leader
    Eduard Aghabekian win the Stepanakert mayoralty over the well-funded
    government candidate.

    Fatullayev admits that a number of factors -- such as disunity among
    the opposition -- may have to some degree influenced the outcome of
    the 19 Junepolls. However, he believes vote-rigging and the control
    exerted by the Ghukasian administration over the enclave's
    administrative resources are mainly responsible for the defeat of
    antigovernment parties.

    `In all likelihood the outcome of the political struggle was [most]
    influenced by falsifications. The opposition is more popular in
    Karabakh and the population trusts it more than it trusts the existing
    administration. Despite the important successes achieved by the
    current authorities in transforming the authoritarian and military
    regime that existed previously, the population is expecting more
    changes, more reforms,' Fatullayev said.

    Baku has described the Karabakh polls as illegitimate. Yesterday, it
    said they were likely to undermine the OSCE-sponsored peace talks with
    Armenia over Karabakh.

    But Fatullayev disagrees with this assessment. `Legislative polls in
    Karabakh -- like the rest of the domestic political arena -- are
    absolutely unable to influence the negotiation process because
    Nagorno-Karabakh is not part of the peace talks," he said. "Therefore
    I believe [the 19 June] polls will have no effect, neither positive,
    nor negative.'

    Fatullayev, however, argues that the only significant change that
    could have occurred with the Karabakh opposition's coming to power
    would have concerned the relationship between Stepanakert and
    Yerevan. He believes Movement 88 and Dashnaktsutiun would have sought
    to moderate Armenia's influence onthe enclave through the
    establishment of what he describes as `horizontal' ties with Yerevan
    in place of the existing `vertical' ones.

    Meanwhile, the outcome of the elections has put Armenia's
    Dashnaktsutiun in an awkward position. The party, which is a member of
    Armenia's ruling coalition, has so far refrained from backing the
    fraud claims made by its Karabakh counterpart. Despite the party's
    loose organization, its Armenian leaders may find themselves in an
    even deeper quandary if a political crisis breaks out in Karabakh.

    (Ruzanna Khachatrian of RFE/RL's Armenian Service contributed to this
    report.)
Working...
X