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AAA: Armenia This Week - 05/16/2005

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  • AAA: Armenia This Week - 05/16/2005

    ARMENIA THIS WEEK
    Monday, May 16, 2005
     
    In this issue:

    Karabakh gears up for tightly contested parliamentary election
    No follow-up in Armenian-Turkish relations after letter exchange

    KARABAKH GEARS UP FOR TIGHTLY CONTESTED PARLIAMENTARY POLL
    Pre-election campaigning officially began this week in the Nagorno
    Karabakh Republic, which is set to hold a parliamentary election on
    June 19, its fourth such poll since independence in 1991 and most
    contested to date. Seven political parties and blocs have registered
    to compete for eleven seats to be awarded through proportional
    representation and 127 individual candidates are set to run in 22
    electoral districts. Majoritarian races are expected to be especially
    close in the Karabakh capital of Stepanakert, where 79 individual
    candidates are running in eight constituencies. As in past elections
    international observers are due to monitor the election.

    The Democratic Party of Artsakh (AZhK), which is the main political
    support base for the incumbent President Arkady Ghoukasian, will seek
    to maintain its majority status. AZhK was established following the
    recent merger between the Democratic Artsakh Union and Karabakh's
    Social Democratic Party that gave the new party 20 seats in the
    33-member National Assembly. The party is led by Education Minister
    Ashot Ghoulian and head of the "Democracy" parliamentary faction
    Vahram Atanesian. Interviewed this week, Atanesian praised the
    incumbent government's record, including strong economic growth and
    reforms that have helped harmonize Karabakh's laws with Council of
    Europe recommendations. According to local reports, AZhK is facing
    strong challengers, particularly the Bloc of the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (HHD) and Movement-88, and the Free
    Motherland Party.

    After backing Ghoukasian's re-election in 2002, HHD had a falling out
    with the President over policy and personnel issues, backing one of
    the Movement-88 party leaders, parliamentarian Eduard Aghabekian in
    Stepanakert mayoral elections last August. Aghabekian, who went on to
    win the run-off elections, co-founded Movement-88 in early 2004 as a
    public organization dedicated to reform in the spirit of the Karabakh
    liberation movement launched in February 1988. The HHD-Movement-88's
    pre-election program focuses on the need for Karabakh's more active
    participation in the peace process, increased social spending,
    stronger parliamentary supervision of the government and improved
    business climate.

    The right-of-center Free Motherland Party (AHK) has a four-person
    collective leadership comprised of Professors Arpat Avanesian and
    Artur Tovmasian (former Parliament Speaker and 1997 presidential
    candidate), and businessmen Araik Harutiunian and Rudolf Hiusnunts.
    AHK is seen as a pro-establishment party which could potentially
    create a coalition with AZhK.

    President Ghoukasian stressed in an interview last month that the
    elections must be "honest and free." Speaking at the Council of
    Europe over the weekend, Armenia's President Robert Kocharian urged
    the organization to find a formula for Karabakh's participation in
    the process of European integration as a de-facto established,
    although formally unrecognized, state. In addition to forming a new
    Nagorno Karabakh legislature, the upcoming parliamentary election is
    expected to set the stage for presidential succession in Karabakh, as
    President Ghoukasian completes his second term in office in 2007.
    (Sources: Armenia This Week 1-24; Azat Artsakh 4-15; Regnum.ru 4-16,
    22, 5-16; Kavkaz.memo.ru 5-16; Mediamax 5-16)

    NO PROGRESS IN ARMENIA-TURKEY RELATIONS FOLLOWING EXCHANGE OF LETTERS
    There appeared to be no follow-up on the recent exchange of letters
    between President Robert Kocharian and Turkey's Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan as the widely anticipated meeting between the two
    leaders this week failed to take place. Turkish official sources,
    cited in the press last week, claimed that Erdogan would seek Azeri
    President Ilham Aliyev's permission to meet with Kocharian.

    In an apparent ploy to thwart Genocide affirmation, Erdogan made a
    widely publicized offer to establish a joint commission of historians
    to "study" the Genocide. Kocharian responded with a counter-offer to
    normalize relations without pre-conditions. But Turkish officials,
    while admitting that their efforts to deny the Genocide have not been
    effective, pledged to continue their denial along with the
    anti-Armenian blockade.

    On a visit to Ankara earlier this month, Deputy Assistant Secretary
    of State Laura Kennedy reiterated U.S. support for normalization of
    Armenian-Turkish relations, adding that Kocharian's proposal
    "certainly has merit" and that the exchange of letters was
    "promising" and should be followed-up. Kennedy further denied that
    Armenia has territorial claims against Turkey and that that was the
    reason for the campaign for international affirmation of the Armenian
    Genocide.

    On the same day, speaking at a public event in Washington, DC, former
    Secretary of State Madeline Albright said it would be a "good idea"
    for Turkey to recognize the Armenian Genocide, in order to improve
    its stature in the region and "put the past behind." (Sources:
    Armenia This Week 4-25; Brookings.edu 5-3; U.S. Embassy in Turkey
    5-3; Turkish Daily News 5-5; Zaman 5-13)

    A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
    1140 19th Street, N.W., Suite 600, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202)
    393-3434 FAX (202) 638-4904
    E-Mail  [email protected] WEB  http://www.aaainc.org

    --Boundary_(ID_NFSRUzeTWKc1F7pBtJztuQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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