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Armenian Government Pressed to Rein-In Lawless Oligarchs

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  • Armenian Government Pressed to Rein-In Lawless Oligarchs

    The Jamestown Foundation
    Eurasia Daily Monitor

    ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT PRESSED TO REIN-IN LAWLESS OLIGARCHS
    By Emil Danielyan

    Friday, February 18, 2005

    The Armenian authorities have been under domestic pressure in recent
    weeks to end what many see as the virtual impunity enjoyed by the
    country's tiny class of millionaire businessmen with close government
    ties. The Armenian version of post-Soviet "oligarchs" are widely hated
    -- and feared -- for their utter disregard of laws and conspicuous
    wealth that contrasts with the country's widespread poverty.

    The ruling regime has heavily relied on the oligarchs to manipulate
    elections and bully its political opponents, making it doubtful that
    any serious action will be taken to rein them in.

    Still, the authorities had to do something after a late-night gunfight
    in a Yerevan suburb on February 4 between two criminal groups left at
    least one person dead and several others seriously wounded. It was the
    most massive shootout reported in the Armenian capital in a decade,
    involving, according to newspaper reports, hundreds of gunmen. Some of
    them were said to be personal bodyguards of several of the oligarchs
    who hold seats in parliament.

    The incident reportedly stemmed from a dispute over control of a local
    minibus service, a highly lucrative business activity that is the
    exclusive domain of senior government officials, their cronies, and
    loyal businessmen. It seems to have raised President Robert
    Kocharian's eyebrows, with police making dozens of arrests and
    confiscating large quantities of weapons. Yet the key question of
    whose business interests were behind the mafia-style clash remains
    unanswered.


    Local newspapers were quick to draw grim conclusions. "Much of the
    political power in Armenia is concentrated in the hands of criminal
    business . . . and illegal armed groups belonging to it," the
    pro-opposition daily Aravot wrote on February 9. Golos Armenii, a
    paper that staunchly backed Kocharian during the last presidential
    election two years ago, was even more outspoken: "The
    semi-presidential form of governance in Armenia is coming to an end
    and will be replaced by absolute oligarchy, the rule of a few
    individuals . . . The executive and legislative branches are, in
    essence, already intertwined with the oligarchs and controlled by the
    latter."

    Armenian tycoons are typically individuals with a high school-level
    education who made fast money during the turbulent 1990s and now have
    extensive business interests dependent on government support. For
    example, one of them, Samvel Aleksanian, enjoys a de facto monopoly on
    imports of sugar and flour to Armenia, while Russian citizen Mikhail
    Baghdasarov has the exclusive grip on fuel supplies. Both men are
    believed to operate under the "tutelage" of Defense Minister Serge
    Sarkisian, Kocharian's most trusted lieutenant.

    The oligarchs like to flaunt their wealth, living in ridiculously big
    villas and roaming the streets in motorcades made up of several SUVs
    with almost identical license plates. Many Armenians would agree that
    traffic lights are essentially non-existent for them.

    In fact, just one week before the infamous shootout, one such
    behemoth, the hugely expensive civilian version of the U.S. army's
    Humvee vehicles, crashed into three other cars on a busy street
    intersection near downtown Yerevan at a high speed, killing two
    people, and injuring several others. The police have reported no
    arrests so far and are reluctant to name the Hummer's real owner.
    There are only 11 such cars in Armenia.

    What makes the oligarchs particularly important for the regime is the
    fact that they usually hold sway in a particular area of the country
    through their businesses and local quasi-criminal elements. They are
    able to bribe and intimidate local voters and resort to other election
    falsification techniques. Ballot box stuffing was commonplace during
    the 2003 presidential election, which Western observers described as
    undemocratic. But the criticism did not prevent many tycoons from
    themselves getting "elected" during the equally disputed parliamentary
    polls held a few months later.

    Another common feature of the Armenian super-rich is the burly and
    mostly unarmed "bodyguards" that accompany them at every turn. The
    men's most visible characteristic, a shaven head or a short haircut,
    has brought a new political meaning to the word "skinhead" in Armenia.

    The authorities needed their services last spring when the Armenian
    opposition tried unsuccessfully to force Kocharian to resign with a
    campaign of street protests. Scores of riot police stood by and
    watched as two dozen well-built thugs smashed photojournalists'
    cameras after trying to disrupt an opposition rally in Yerevan on
    April 5, 2004. Opinion differed only on which powerful individual
    employed them.

    Two of the assailants subsequently received a slap on the wrist when a
    Yerevan court fined them after a parody of a trial. One of the
    defendants was also a key participant in the February 4 gunfight,
    according to media reports. This man is now reportedly under arrest
    pending trial. His possible imprisonment would touch only the tip of
    the iceberg, however, as none of the big fish is likely to end up
    behind bars.

    "Everybody is scared," Golos Armenii noted alarmingly. "The oligarchy
    controls everything and as the [next] elections approach it will
    increasingly tighten its stranglehold on political forces in order to
    avoid surprise developments."

    (Golos Armenii, February 12; Haykakan Zhamanak, February 12; Aravot,
    February 9).

    ---
    http://eurasiadaily.org/article.php?article_id=2369283
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