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Armenian Speaker Scoring More Points With Trademark Populism

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  • Armenian Speaker Scoring More Points With Trademark Populism

    ARMENIAN SPEAKER SCORING MORE POINTS WITH TRADEMARK POPULISM
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Jamestown Foundation
    Oct 6 2005

    Armenia's ambitious parliament speaker, Artur Baghdasarian, has
    solidified his positions this week by exploiting an issue that
    touches a raw nerve in Armenian society and is a major ingredient of
    his populist discourse. Baghdasarian, who is seen as one of President
    Robert Kocharian's potential successors, appears to have succeeded in
    forcing the government to start compensating Armenian citizens whose
    Soviet-era savings bank deposits were wiped out by hyperinflation of
    the early 1990s.

    Local commentators note the fact that he owes the tactical victory to
    Kocharian. Some have even suggested that the 36-year-old politician
    now stands a better chance in the unfolding tussle for the Armenian
    presidency.

    Armenia boasted one of the highest per-capita rates of bank
    savings among the 15 Soviet republics. But what had for decades been
    accumulated by the population effectively evaporated in the economic
    chaos that followed the Soviet collapse. The depreciation of the bank
    deposits made transition to the market economy particularly painful for
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians. Many of them -- especially elderly
    people mired in poverty - remain embittered by the enormous loss.

    And there has been no lack of politicians keen to capitalize on their
    fury. Baghdasarian has been the most successful of them. Compensation
    of the former deposit holders was a key campaign promise of his
    Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law) party in the run-up to Armenia's last
    parliamentary election held in May 2003. The tactic proved highly
    effective, with Orinats Yerkir now having the second-largest faction
    in the National Assembly and three ministers in Prime Minister Andranik
    Markarian's cabinet.

    That Orinats Yerkir's vague promise is unrealistic became evident
    early last year when the party introduced a bill that calls for an
    equivalent of $83 million to be paid to the former deposit holders
    within the next ten years. The sum pales in comparison with billions
    of Soviet rubles that Armenians used to have on their bank accounts.

    It was clear that the proposed compensation would be largely
    symbolic. At the same time $83 million is a lot of money by current
    Armenian standards and is comparable to the cash-strapped Armenian
    government's annual spending on social security or health care.

    The government, backed by the International Monetary Fund and the
    World Bank, was quick to point out that the Orinats Yerkir scheme
    would therefore be a serious waste of scarce public resources. Not
    surprisingly, Markarian's Republican Party (HHK), the biggest
    parliamentary force, blocked the Orinats Yerkir bill. Opposition
    lawmakers added to Baghdasarian's embarrassment last December when they
    forced a high-profile parliament debate on the issue and challenged him
    to honor his pledge. Kocharian had to give the speaker a face-saving
    cop-out the next month, forming an ad hoc commission tasked with
    looking into possibilities of deposit compensation.

    The commission never made public any reports and was thought to have
    buried the matter until an October 1 meeting between Kocharian and
    leaders of Orinats Yerkir, the HHK, and the third party represented in
    his government, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation. The meeting was
    followed by the Orinats Yerkir bill's inclusion on the parliamentary
    agenda. Baghdasarian said on October 4 that the move was part of
    a deal cut by Kocharian and his coalition allies. "I hope that the
    political agreement will be honored by the Republican Party and other
    political forces that joined this initiative," he told reporters.

    What that agreement specifically means is not clear, however. Some HHK
    leaders have hinted that Baghdasarian's bill will not even be debated
    on the parliament floor. Markarian, for his part, announced on October
    5 that his government's draft budget for next year would earmark only
    $2.2 million for compensating the poorest deposit holders. But even
    this meager sum would allow Baghdasarian to claim that he has remained
    true to his word. The Armenian speaker will also tell voters that his
    efforts to achieve a more far-reaching solution were blocked by more
    powerful government factions.

    The key question here is why Kocharian decided to revive the issue
    at this juncture. Some analysts say he is keen to woo impoverished
    voters ahead of the November 27 referendum on his package of amendments
    to the Armenian constitution. Others believe that Kocharian, who is
    obliged to resign after completing his second term in office in 2008,
    made it clear that he continues to view Baghdasarian as one of his
    possible successors. Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian, Kocharian's
    most powerful lieutenant, has been regarded as the top candidate for
    that role until now. But the Armenian press speculates periodically
    that relations between the two Karabakh-born men are not as cordial
    as is widely assumed. The Yerevan daily Haykakan Zhamanak suggested
    that the "drastic change" in the Armenian president's position on
    the Soviet-era savings deposits was "not only in favor of Artur
    Baghdasarian but also against Serge Sarkisian."

    For Kocharian, a good thing about the young speaker is that he is
    arguably the most electable member of the ruling regime. (Sarkisian
    is a far more divisive figure not least because of his grip on
    lucrative sectors of the Armenian economy and involvement in vote
    rigging.) Baghdasarian knows how to make the most of his strongest
    weapon, populism, in a country where civic consciousness has
    experienced a serious decline over the past decade. His party also
    boasts the most effective grassroots structure, cannily targeting
    specific groups of the population such as schoolteachers, doctors,
    and even disabled persons. For many of them, it is tempting to ignore
    the fact that Orinats Yerkir is an increasingly important component
    of Armenia's leadership.

    (Aravot, October 6; Haykakan Zhamanak, October 5; RFE/RL Armenia
    Report, October 3-4; Armenian Public Television, October 2)
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