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Kocharian 'Will Become Prime Minister After Resignation'

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  • Kocharian 'Will Become Prime Minister After Resignation'

    KOCHARIAN 'WILL BECOME PRIME MINISTER AFTER RESIGNATION'
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 17 2006

    President Robert Kocharian will be replaced by Defense Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian and become prime minister after completing his second
    five-year term in office in 2008, a controversial lawmaker reputedly
    linked to the Armenian authorities claimed on Wednesday.

    Hmayak Hovannisian presented to journalists what he called a scenario
    drawn up by Armenia's two most powerful men for the approaching
    parliamentary and presidential elections. Under that scenario, he said,
    Sarkisian will contest and secure victory in both polls, due in 2007
    and 2008 respectively, on the ticket of the governing Republican Party
    of Armenia (HHK) led by the current prime minister, Andranik Markarian.

    "After the parliamentary elections Serzh Sarkisian will become prime
    minister and Andranik Markarian speaker of the National Assembly,"
    Hovannisian said. "What will Robert Kocharian do? Who else is to occupy
    the post of prime minister when Serzh Sarkisian becomes president of
    the republic?"

    The Armenian constitution bars incumbent presidents from holding
    the post for a third consecutive term and Kocharian has so far left
    no indication that he will try find a legal loophole for contesting
    the 2008 presidential ballot. But meeting with university students in
    Yerevan last November, Kocharian admitted that he will not be averse
    to continuing to run government affairs in a different capacity. "Who
    is better than I in terms of knowledge, experience, hard work and
    resilience?" he declared.

    Some local analysts and politicians have speculated over the past
    year that Kocharian is aiming for the post of prime minister, which he
    had occupied for about a year before being catapulted to the Armenian
    presidency in March 1998.

    In Hovannisian's words, helping Kocharian become prime minister is
    the main mission of the ambitious Prosperous Armenia party that was
    set up recently by Gagik Tsarukian, an influential "oligarch" close
    to the ruling regime. He claimed that the authorities will ensure that
    Prosperous Armenia, the HHK and another pro-establishment party linked
    to Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian have an absolute majority in
    the next parliament. Parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian and his
    Orinats Yerkir party have been forced out of the ruling coalition
    because their far-reaching political ambitions endangered realization
    of that scenario, said Hovannisian.

    The Kocharian administration has assured the West that the upcoming
    elections will be more democratic than the ones held until now. Such
    assurances are brushed aside by opposition leaders who maintain that
    Armenia's post-Soviet history of electoral fraud will continue as long
    as the Kocharian-Sarkisian duo remains in power. Some oppositionists
    have threatened to boycott next year's legislative vote, saying that
    the authorities may have already predetermined its outcome.

    They will likely take Hovannisian's predictions seriously. The
    ostensibly independent parliamentarian has a history of scandalous
    defections from political parties opposed to successive Armenian
    governments. He was elected to the current National Assembly from
    the electoral list of the opposition National Unity Party (AMK)
    in May 2003 but quit it a year later for still uncertain reasons.

    AMK leader Artashes Geghamian has repeatedly accused Hovannisian
    of secretly collaborating with Sarkisian, a view shared by other
    politicians and journalists. Hovannisian, however, has flatly denied
    this.
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