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Armenian Coalition To Mull Proposed Deal With Opposition

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  • Armenian Coalition To Mull Proposed Deal With Opposition

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep
    Jan 24 2005

    Armenian Coalition To Mull Proposed Deal With Opposition



    Leaders of the Armenian parliament's pro-government majority promised
    on Friday to consider an unexpected opposition offer to reach a
    compromise agreement on constitutional amendments put forward by
    President Robert Kocharian.

    Parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian told a senior opposition
    lawmaker, Victor Dallakian, that he will begin `political
    consultations' with fellow majority leaders over three constitutional
    changes demanded by the Artarutyun bloc and the National Unity Party
    (AMK).

    The changes would empower the National Assembly to endorse
    prime-ministerial candidates nominated by the president, seriously
    limit the latter's controversial authority to appoint and sack judges
    as well as make the mayor of Yerevan an elected official. The two
    opposition groups have indicated that they will endorse Kocharian's
    package of draft amendments if their proposals are incorporated into
    it.

    Dallakian told reporters that Baghdasarian promised to finish the
    consultations within ten days. `We put forward a package proposal,'
    he said. `If two coalition parties accept but the other rejects them,
    we will not participate in this process.'

    The opposition has previously rejected Kocharian's constitutional
    amendments as undemocratic and vowed to scuttle his efforts to push
    them through a referendum expected this summer. Leaders of the three
    parties represented in Kocharian's government reacted positively to
    the softening of the opposition stance.

    `We will consider that proposal,' said Gagik Minasian of the
    Republican Party (HHK), the biggest parliamentary force.

    `Most of the [opposition] proposals are quite sound ones,' said Armen
    Rustamian of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun).

    The coalition parties had offered the opposition the right of veto in
    the reform process, in an unsuccessful attempt to stave off a
    campaign of anti-Kocharian street protests last spring. Both Minasian
    and Rustamian told RFE/RL that the offer may no longer be on the
    table.

    `It is strange that they are reacting to that offer now,' said the
    HHK representative.

    `I am glad that our colleagues now accept our offer made at that
    time. But there is a problem of missing the right moment,' said
    Rustamian. `The political situation makes some things possible at one
    point and problematic at another. The situation has changed a bit. So
    has our mood.'
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