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Economist: Protest voters; Armenia

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  • Economist: Protest voters; Armenia

    The Economist
    May 8, 2004
    U.S. Edition

    Protest voters; Armenia

    A strong president stays in charge


    The chances of change in Armenia remain small

    UNTIL recently, Armenia was quieter than its neighbours. Armenians
    seemed to have little to complain of. The economy has racked up ten
    years of growth, inflation is low, the currency stable. President
    Robert Kocharian's government has largely ensured access to light,
    heat and other basics. Yet the opposition has been staging
    increasingly noisy protests calling for the departure of Mr
    Kocharian, whose March 2003 re-election was widely seen as
    fraudulent. As a minimum, the opposition wants a referendum to test
    support for the government, a compromise recommended by Armenia's
    constitutional court. Mr Kocharian has given dark warnings to
    participants in "illegal" protest rallies, and arrested ringleaders.
    Vehicles driving into Yerevan have been forced back, for fear they
    might carry demonstrators. One 6,000-strong protest was greeted by
    water cannons.

    Armenia lacks some necessary ingredients for a Georgian "rose
    revolution". Corruption is rampant, and few people outside Yerevan
    enjoy the fruits of growth. But Mr Kocharian is less widely hated
    than was Edward Shevardnadze. Generous foreign aid—Armenia is one of
    the biggest per-head recipients in the world—has obscured government
    thievery. Mr Kocharian keeps a steely grip on the local airwaves, in
    contrast to the thriving independent media of Georgia. Russia is
    still a strong supporter. And the Americans, who helped to push out
    Mr Shevardnadze, seem more concerned with stability than
    democracy—though American presence in Armenia is quietly increasing.
    The opposition is led by Stepan Demirchian, who lacks the charisma of
    Georgia's Mikhail Saakashvili. Many local observers fear that he and
    Artashes Geghamian, another opposition leader, are more interested in
    a turn at the trough than in real change. The marked absence of young
    people at most protest rallies reflects a deep cynicism about
    politics.

    Meanwhile, the ten-year ceasefire in the war over the disputed
    enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh is under strain. Azerbaijan's president,
    Ilham Aliev, has been sabre-rattling to drum up support. At a recent
    World Economic Forum meeting in Warsaw, where the three Caucasian
    presidents met, Mr Aliev dismissed any talk of freeing up trade until
    Armenia stopped occupying part of his country. The blockade of
    Armenia's borders by Azerbaijan and Turkey looks like continuing. And
    prospects for change in Armenia remain bleak.
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