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Breakup of Armenian ruling coalition will dissolve the OY

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  • Breakup of Armenian ruling coalition will dissolve the OY

    Vigen Hakobyan: Breakup of Armenian ruling coalition will dissolve the
    Speaker's party

    _www.regnum.ru/english/638873.html_
    (http://www.regnum.ru/english/638873.html)
    18:35 05/13/2006

    After all, the ruling coalition in Armenia has failed and collapsed
    before the 2007 parliamentary elections. The most important in the
    situation is that Robert Kocharian's promise to preserve the alliance
    was broken. Last December, the Armenian President said: `The coalition
    that is a political agreement of the four subjects, namely the three
    parties and the President, is created for the four-year period. It
    could be modified one way or another, but we are going to carry the
    obligations and the responsibility before ourselves and before the
    people.' The fact that the Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law, OY) party
    headed by the Parliament Chairman Artur Bagdasarian has left the
    coalition means the breakup of the ruling alliance, which in its turn
    means breaking the political agreement and the failure of political
    parties and the President himself to live up to their promises. Who is
    to blame for the failure?

    Before we approach to answering the question, we should point to the
    circumstances that prepared the ground for the disintegration. The
    Orinats Yerkir party was the first to pronounce its intent to exit the
    coalition after a series of scandals caused by the statements the
    Speaker made on topics of domestic and international Armenian
    policy. Bagdasarian repeatedly accused his colleagues in the coalition
    (who had chosen him a Chairman) with electoral fraud.

    On top of these charges, he shocked the crowd by presenting his vision
    of Armenian international priorities and the formula of `Russian
    impediment on Armenia's way to joining NATO.'

    The last move had the least influence on Bagdasarian's political
    career since it fit the multi-vector orientation of Armenian
    international policy. But the Speaker's doubts on the integrity and
    transparency of the past parliamentary elections accompanied by his
    massive correspondence with the Prosecutor General of Armenia appeared
    to be quite contradictory to the very logic of political cooperation
    between Orinats Yerkir, on the one hand, and Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (Dashnaktsutsiun) and Republican Party of Armenia, on the
    other, within the alliance.

    The latter two political bodies who consistently implemented the
    Speaker's social projects, including the main one to return funds
    accumulated on resident saver accounts to the public, were clearly
    determined to preserve the existing political format before the
    parliamentary elections. The Orinats Yerkir party, however, proved to
    be an extremely uncooperative partner. It stuck to its uncompromising
    policy on several delicate issues, including the issue of
    denationalization. By doing this, Orinats Yerkir hurt interests of the
    Republican Party best represented in the ruling alliance.

    >From the point of view of Orinats Yerkir's philosophy, the pre-term
    exiting the coalition was, in its essence, an end in itself. The party
    needed to define its own political course and, so to speak, to show
    its face to the public.

    Association with the RPA and Dashnaktsutsiun stripped the party of any
    chance to develop its own policy. Such policy, according to Orinats
    Yerkir functionaries, could yield substantial results at the
    parliamentary elections and create a basis for running a presidential
    campaign. Besides, close alliance with the ruling parties narrowed
    Orinats Yerkir's choices in its looking for international
    investors. The latter justly identified the party as a political
    reserve of the acting President, whereas Bagdasarian's rhetorical
    demarches ` as a tactical move of dubious openness.

    2005 and the beginning of 2006 became for Orinats Yerkir a tough
    period of molding its political identity. It switched from the image
    of the new opposition locomotive force to the stance of self-reliant
    alternative organization capable to alter the course of the
    game. This, however, did not change the essence of the party's
    character. It remained a new ` and, frankly speaking, a hastily
    knocked together ` party that, quite unexpectedly, made its way to the
    parliament. Its leader was almost an only eminent figure in its
    ranks. The public could feel the absence of both ideological and
    resource background behind the party scene. The most conspicuous was
    the young age and the unhampered ambitions of Orinats Yerkir
    leader. They obviously broke the rules of the harsh Armenian political
    game.

    The situation was quite commonplace. After the conflict of the
    Speaker's party with colleagues inside the coalition and the President
    became obvious, the process of intended demolition of Orinats Yerkir
    was launched. The organization was charged with breaking the
    `political consensus' and failing to meet its `obligations before the
    people.' One after another, the most important party members including
    the so-called oligarchs, started to leave the party.

    That was not surprising: their integrity did not prevent them from
    caring more about their businesses than about the party fate. After
    all, they had joined it merely to create better conditions for their
    businesses. And security and success of large businesses in Armenia
    are only possible if they do not openly conflict with the
    government. That makes the oligarchs' motives clear.

    Exiting the ruling coalition is leading Orinats Yerkir to join the
    other block, the opposition one. The prospect is quite dubious for the
    Speaker's party, taking in account the current situation of the
    opposition block. Opposition' s failure to change regime in 2003-2004
    has lead to its virtual impotence, to its fractionalization and
    marginalization. Orinats Yerkir's joining the opposition ranks will
    hardly be appreciated, since it will be a forced and unnatural
    move. Another option for the party is to act on its own. This will
    also force Orinats Yerkir to join the opposition since the party has
    lost its economic ground. Its leaders will have to appeal to the
    oppositional clichés, such as `Say `no' to the President, Long
    live Democracy.' These slogans proved to be ineffective in Armenia
    whose population is busy looking for the stability and peace.

    As far as the authorities are concerned, they will find a political
    substitute for Orinats Yerkir in the near future. A probable candidate
    for the role of `centrist liberals' once assigned for the Orinats
    Yerkir party could be another new party. Like Prospering Armenia that
    is being hurriedly created under the auspices of oligarch Gagik
    Tsarukian. It will accumulate a great number of businessmen and
    relatives of acting politicians. A pre-term sacking of the parliament
    is also possible. This will leave no chance for Orinats Yerkir to
    regroup and consolidate before the ultimate fight.

    Vigen Hakobyan is Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the REGNUM News Agency
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