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Armenian Speaker Ousted From Ruling Coalition

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  • Armenian Speaker Ousted From Ruling Coalition

    ARMENIAN SPEAKER OUSTED FROM RULING COALITION
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    May 17 2006

    Armenia's President Robert Kocharian has banished one of the three
    political parties represented in his government after it appeared to
    threaten his reported plans to hand over power to a staunch loyalist in
    2008. The Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law) party officially announced
    its withdrawal from the ruling coalition on May 12. Its ambitious
    leader, Artur Baghdasarian, also resigned as speaker of the Armenian
    parliament.

    The move followed mass defections of lawmakers affiliated with
    Orinats Yerkir, an exodus widely believed to have been engineered
    by the presidential administration. Baghdasarian's party boasted the
    second-largest faction in the National Assembly as recently as last
    month, controlling 20 of its 131 seats. It shrank by almost half in
    a matter of one week.

    The official reasons for the party's ouster are its socioeconomic
    and foreign policy differences with Kocharian and the two other
    coalition partners. Both sides have been reluctant to elaborate on
    those differences. The coalition has been beset by internal squabbles
    ever since its formation in June 2003. Much of the bickering has
    been caused by Orinats Yerkir's periodic public criticism of the
    government, a tactic that has been particularly galling for Prime
    Minister Andranik Markarian and his Republican Party of Armenia
    (HHK). The latter has also had an uneasy rapport with the third
    governing party, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (HHD).

    Kocharian has repeatedly intervened to salvage the three-party marriage
    of convenience that has enabled him to deflect popular disaffection
    with the government and somehow mitigate his lack of legitimacy. As
    recently as February 6, the HHK, the HHD, and Orinats Yerkir vowed
    (apparently under pressure from Kocharian) to continue to stick
    together "at least" until next year's parliamentary election. In a
    joint statement, they also agreed to show "mutual respect for each
    other and each other's positions."

    However, the truce did not prove long lasting, with Orinats Yerkir
    lashing out at the Armenian government (in which it was represented
    with three ministers) on April 11 over its shady privatization policies
    (see EDM, April 19). The attack drew an angry rebuttal from Markarian
    and his loyalists. Baghdasarian further raised eyebrows in Yerevan with
    an April 19 interview with a leading German newspaper, Frankfurter
    Allgemeine Zeitung, in which he contradicted the official line by
    calling for Armenia's eventual accession to NATO. More importantly,
    he also implied that Kocharian's hotly disputed reelection in 2003
    was fraudulent.

    The extraordinary confession (or a slip of the tongue) seems to have
    been the final straw for Kocharian, who was reportedly behind the
    devastating defections from the Orinats Yerkir faction in parliament
    that began on May 5. The defectors, all of them wealthy businessmen
    dependent on government connections, offered no clear explanation
    for their actions. But newspaper reports citing coalition leaders
    said the exodus was masterminded by Kocharian with the aim of forcing
    Orinats Yerkir out of the government.

    Hayots Ashkhar, a pro-Kocharian daily, indicated on May 15 that
    the Armenian president has lost patience with Orinats Yerkir's
    notorious populism, widely attributed to its strong showing in
    the last parliamentary polls. "It is more than weird to be part
    of the government; have a number of government members, a myriad
    of various-caliber officials, protected and reliable businesses;
    and play the old tune," the paper wrote. "This is a violation of the
    rules of the game. One deserves to be severely punished for that."

    Interestingly, it was Kocharian who went to great lengths in June
    2003 to get parliament to elect Baghdasarian as its speaker, fuelling
    speculation that the then 34-year-old politician was being groomed
    to become Armenia's next president. However, it has since become
    evident that Kocharian's preferred successor is his most trusted and
    powerful lieutenant, Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian. Some local
    commentators suggest that the two men were incensed not so much
    by Baghdasarian's enduring populism as his far-reaching political
    ambitions that could interfere with their anticipated handover of
    power in 2008. The outgoing Armenian speaker has already attracted
    Western interest in his personality with his pro-democracy statements
    and stated strong commitment to Armenia's "integration into Europe
    and the Euro-Atlantic family."

    "Artur Baghdasarian has felt like Robert Kocharian's successor and
    begun his pre-election campaign of late," the independent newspaper
    168 Zham wrote on May 11. "In the process, he was doing everything
    to distance himself from the current authorities thanks to whom he
    had become the number two official in the Republic of Armenia in 2003."

    Announcing his resignation on May 12, the Orinats Yerkir leader
    was anxious not to blame Kocharian for the dramatic collapse of
    his parliamentary faction, saying vaguely that the Orinats Yerkir
    defectors faced pressure "from all sides." His claims that Orinats
    Yerkir is "becoming an opposition force" are therefore unlikely to
    be taken at face value by leaders of Armenia's main opposition parties.

    Some of them have made it clear that Baghdasarian cannot join the
    opposition camp unless he publicly "repents" his association with
    Kocharian.

    Baghdasarian has owed his strong electoral performances to a canny
    combination of opposition-style rhetoric with covert cooperation from
    the ruling regime and wealthy businessmen hungry for political power.

    Their defections and his subsequent ouster from the government mean
    that Orinats Yerkir will have to operate in a more hostile environment
    and with far fewer financial resources.

    (Aravot, May 13; Hayots Ashkhar, May 12; 168 Zham, May 11; RFE/RL
    Armenia Report, February 6)
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