Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

As Protests Flag, Armenia's President Seems to Prevail

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • As Protests Flag, Armenia's President Seems to Prevail

    Los Angeles Times
    April 22 2004

    As Protests Flag, Armenia's President Seems to Prevail

    Foes accuse Robert Kocharyan of vote fraud and rights abuses, but he
    cites economic growth.
    By David Holley, Times Staff Writer


    MOSCOW - Armenian President Robert Kocharyan's government appears to
    have won at least a tactical victory in deflating recent protests and
    defending his hold on office after an election last year that his
    opponents claim was rigged.

    A string of demonstrations seeking Kocharyan's ouster began early
    this month, and thousands of protesters gathered again in Yerevan,
    the capital, Wednesday evening to press their demands, Russian news
    agency Interfax reported.

    But what organizers had billed in advance as a "decisive" protest
    early last week ended with a predawn crackdown, as baton-swinging
    police backed by water cannons cleared a crowd from the avenue
    leading to the presidential palace. About 30 people were reported
    injured, and the opposition was incensed. But subsequent rallies had
    less steam rather than more.

    Opposition leaders remained defiant and were trying to turn the
    president's tough tactics against him.

    "We want the world to know that the opposition is very far from being
    subdued and broken," Stepan Demirchyan, who lost to Kocharyan in last
    year's election and is a leader of the protests, said late last week
    in a telephone interview from Yerevan. "We are not flat on our back,
    and we are ready to keep on fighting. And we will make sure we see
    this struggle of ours through to a victorious end."

    Still, things have not been going according to plan for those in
    Armenia who hoped to imitate the success of the opposition in
    neighboring Georgia, where a nonviolent revolution forced President
    Eduard A. Shevardnadze from office in November.

    That uprising has variously been dubbed a "velvet revolution," after
    Czechoslovakia's peaceful overthrow of communism, or the "rose
    revolution," after the single long-stemmed rose that a key protest
    leader - now President Mikheil Saakashvili - carried as demonstrators
    took over Georgia's parliament.

    Kocharyan himself has drawn the comparison and emphasized his
    confidence that the scenario will not be repeated.

    "The Armenian opposition, encouraged by the Georgian 'velvet
    revolution,' has clearly decided that the situation in the country
    will enable them to achieve the same outcome," Kocharyan told Russian
    state television. "But the situation cannot be compared."

    Kocharyan cited strong economic growth in recent years as one reason
    he cannot be pushed out, and said another is that his administration
    is far stronger than was Shevardnadze's.

    He also downplayed the controversy over the April 13 police crackdown
    on protesters.

    "The country has carried on in the past and will continue to do so,"
    he said.

    The opposition's drive against Kocharyan is rooted in complaints he
    failed to win a legitimate victory in the March presidential election
    last year, despite official results showing him taking 67% to
    Demirchyan's 33%. Last April, Armenia's Constitutional Court
    confirmed the vote but suggested a referendum within a year to gauge
    confidence in the nation's leaders.

    Kocharyan's government rejected the idea. The recent protests have
    been timed to the expiration of the one-year period.

    Immediately after last year's election, Peter Eicher, head of the
    observer mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe, said there were "serious problems and irregularities" in the
    vote, but he declined to say whether they were enough to change the
    result. He said there was intimidation, widespread ballot-box
    stuffing and discrepancies at a large number of polling stations.

    David Petrosyan, a commentator with independent news agency Noyan
    Tapan, said there was sufficient anger at the president and his
    policies that Kocharyan had good reason to fear holding a referendum.

    But Alexander Rondeli, president of the Georgian Foundation for
    Strategic and International Studies, a Tbilisi think tank, said there
    did not appear to be "a revolutionary situation" in Armenia.

    "Mr. Kocharyan has more control of his state than Mr. Shevardnadze
    did," Rondeli said. "Mr. Shevardnadze was already aging, he was
    losing control."

    Another factor is Armenia's conflict with Azerbaijan over the
    disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, Rondeli said. "Armenia is at
    war, in reality, and many people there are afraid if political
    destabilization happens it will be disastrous for Armenia," he said.

    But Kocharyan's tough stance on the protests has failed to solve any
    real problems, said Petrosyan, the commentator.

    "Armenia resembles a powder keg today, and whether or when it
    explodes will depend solely on who decides to hold a lighted match to
    it first," he said. "Something is bound to happen one way or another.
    For now, everything is up in the air. Everyone is waiting and getting
    ready for the final showdown."


    Alexei V. Kuznetsov of The Times' Moscow Bureau contributed to this
    report.
Working...
X