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Pro-Kocharian Tycoon A 'Hero To Many Armenians'

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  • Pro-Kocharian Tycoon A 'Hero To Many Armenians'

    PRO-KOCHARIAN TYCOON A 'HERO TO MANY ARMENIANS'
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Dec 26 2006

    Gagik Tsarukian, a government-connected millionaire businessman,
    is the most popular and revered individual in modern-day Armenia,
    according to a new U.S.-funded opinion poll released this month.

    The findings of the poll commissioned by the U.S. Agency for
    International Development are the latest indication of the former
    arm-wrestler's growing populist appeal that should make his Prosperous
    Armenia a major contender in next spring's parliamentary elections.

    The survey was designed by the U.S. Gallup Organization and conducted
    by the Armenian Sociological Association across the country from
    November 10-19, with 1,200 randomly chosen people asked to answer a
    long list of questions relating to domestic politics, foreign affairs
    and the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    One of the questions read, "Of the prominent Armenian people and
    characters in Armenian history and folk culture, who is most suitable
    to be a national hero or leader in the present?" The late Prime
    Minister Vazgen Sarkisian was the most frequently named figure, with
    15 percent of those polled describing him as a national hero. He was
    followed by two military leaders of the early 20th century and Karen
    Demirchian, Soviet Armenia's former leader who was assassinated along
    with Sarkisian in the October 1999 terrorist attack on the Armenian
    parliament.

    Of all the living Armenians mentioned by respondents, Tsarukian had
    by far the highest rating: 8 percent. Trailing him were opposition
    leaders Artashes Geghamian (3 percent) and Artur Baghdasarian (2
    percent) as well as President Robert Kocharian (2 percent).

    Tsarukian had 4 percent support in the previous USAID-funded study
    that was conducted in August. The apparent rise in his popularity may
    well be the result of the recent upsurge in his ambitious party's
    election-related activities promoted by the Tsarukian-controlled
    Kentron television and other channels loyal to Kocharian.

    Tsarukian also emerged as the winner of a separate survey that was
    carried out by another Armenian polling group, Vox Populi, among about
    600 residents of Yerevan last week. Vox Populi said 13.5 percent of
    them rated him "man of the year."

    Prosperous Armenia now claims to be by far the largest political party,
    boasting at least 240,000 members and over 400 offices in a country
    of three million. Its publicity stunts have included provision of
    large-scale agricultural aid, free-of-charge medical assistance and
    other public services to low-income people across the country. Critics,
    among them some leaders of Armenia's two main governing parties,
    regard this as a massive vote buying operation.

    Parliament speaker Tigran Torosian, a leading member of the ruling
    Republican Party, complained to a visiting Western ambassador last
    month about the emergence of new parties led by "apolitical figures."

    In an apparent reference to Prosperous Armenia, he said their electoral
    success would deal a "blow to the multi-party system."

    For his part, Vahan Hovannisian, a leader of the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation, suggested on November 24 that many Armenians are now
    ready to sell their votes to the highest bidder.

    "If a voter, who has lived in independent Armenia for 15 years,
    knows everyone, has seen every politician on TV for umpteenth times,
    read party programs ... but has still not made up their mind, then
    they are expecting money," he said.

    Critics also point to a huge disparity between millions of dollars
    spent on Prosperous Armenia's election campaign and modest earnings
    posted by Tsarukian-owned businesses. The largest of them is only
    76th in the government rankings of Armenia's 300 leading corporate
    taxpayers, giving more weight to allegations that the tycoon is
    grossly evading taxes.

    Tsarukian, who is close to Kocharian, rounded on his detractors
    at a meeting with thousands of Prosperous Armenia activists in
    Yerevan's Ajapnyak district late last week. "I would love to know
    what they have contributed from their personal accounts," he said in
    a speech broadcast by several TV stations over the weekend. "Have
    they personally financed any good thing? Let them talk about that,
    instead of hurting the people and slamming things done by others."

    Kocharian publicly defended his reputed protege on December 15,
    saying that it is wrong to attribute Prosperous Armenia's expansion to
    Tsarukian's "benevolent actions." "There is demand in our society for
    a new political force that comes up with a very understandable slogan,
    'We think about the people,'" he said.
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