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It is now up to Armenia to choose which direction it wishes to go

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  • It is now up to Armenia to choose which direction it wishes to go

    CNN: It is now up to Armenia to choose which direction it wishes to
    go: Will it join the West and a community of democracies and liberal
    economies, or will Sargsyan tilt Armenia more toward a Kremlin-led
    community of increasingly autocratic former Soviet states

    ARMINFO
    Saturday, February 16, 17:28

    "On February 18, Armenians will cast their ballots for president.
    Although eight candidates have registered, victory and a new five-year
    term for incumbent Serzh Sargsyan are a foregone conclusion. Still,
    this election is not meaningless", - CNN says in its report about the
    presidential election in Armenia.

    "The conduct of this poll is important, as will be Sargsyan's choices
    after the poll. If the international community gives the election a
    clean bill of health, it will increase Sargsyan's legitimacy. He will
    have the opportunity to enact much needed reforms in order to move
    closer to the West or, perhaps as likely, avoid tough reforms and move
    Armenia " already broadly sympathetic to Russia " further into Moscow.

    Upon first winning the presidency in February 2008, Sargsyan faced a
    legitimacy crisis...This year, Sargsyan faces little resistance.

    Armenia will find no such praise. Its government remains corrupt and
    inefficient. The country was among the worst hit during the 2008-2009
    economic crisis, with GDP shrinking by 14 percent in 2009, according
    to the IMF. Since then, Armenian GDP has grown slowly - at an average
    annual rate of approximately 3.5 percent between 2010-2012. In
    contrast, Georgia grew by an average annual 6.6 percent in the same
    three years. In 2010, according to official statistics, 35.8 percent
    of Armenia's population was living below the poverty line - an
    increase from 27.6 percent in 2008. And, while neighboring Georgia and
    Azerbaijan welcome foreign investors, organized crime keeps most
    foreign investors out of Armenia. The Armenian Diaspora who care
    deeply about Armenia's success have long ago concluded that investing
    in their homeland is a thankless task that will pay dividends neither
    individually nor for Armenia.

    Hundreds of thousands of Armenians now flee the country for better
    prospects. Younger, more educated Armenians head to the West, while
    their older, blue-collar compatriots head north to Russia. The Russian
    government has welcomed these migrants, and has helped place them in
    areas of Russia facing population decline. While Russia might use
    these Armenians to mitigate its own demographic problem, the same
    migration merely exacerbates Armenia's.

    It is now up to Armenia to choose which direction it wishes to go:
    Will it join the West and a community of democracies and liberal
    economies, or will Sargsyan tilt Armenia more toward a Kremlin-led
    community of increasingly autocratic former Soviet states", - CNN
    says.

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