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  • Opposition party still under lock and key

    EurasiaNet
    July 28, 2006


    OPPOSITION PARTY STILL UNDER LOCK AND KEY


    Marianna Grigoryan 7/28/06



    Armenia's opposition Heritage Party has been blocked from entering
    its rented offices as part of an ongoing property dispute that party
    sympathizers say is politically motivated.

    Party representatives were blocked on July 21 from reentering their
    office in Yerevan's Paronian Theater of Musical Comedy after a
    three-and-a-half month court battle that had appeared to end in their
    favor. The theater's management had sealed the door in early March as
    allegedly part of the transfer of the theater to state ownership.
    Since then, the party's documents, seal, all computer equipment, and
    telephones have remained under lock and key.

    A June 26 court ruling that found the closure illegal prompted Party
    members to believe they could return to their office. But marshals
    from the Ministry of Justice's Service for Execution of Mandatory
    Acts (SEMA) resealed the office last week after saying that the
    ruling did not specify that the party could begin work again in the
    space. The officials stated that they planned to take the office
    contents to SEMA in the meantime.

    Party lawyers are disputing the interpretation of the ruling, while
    party members and political analysts consider that what happened is
    more than a property dispute.

    The Heritage Party was founded in 2003 by Raffi Hovannisian, foreign
    minister from 1991 to 1992, and the only Diaspora figure in the
    Armenian opposition. (Hovannisian was born in Fresno, California.)
    The party claims to have more than 5,000 members.

    In an earlier interview with EurasiaNet this year, Hovannisian said
    that he is convinced that Armenian President Robert Kocharian had
    ordered that his party's office be shut. The offices of
    Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian and Police Chief Hayk Harutiunian
    have affirmed that no crime was committed by closing Heritage's
    office, although an investigation is ongoing into the confiscation of
    the party's computer databases.

    Some analysts say that Hovannisian's popularity rating is high enough
    to pose a real threat to the authorities in the next parliamentary
    and presidential elections.

    "In recent years, there have been many cases when the authorities
    interfered with opposition parties, confiscated their property,
    created numerous problems for them [by] disorganizing their
    activities," said parliamentarian and National Democratic Party
    Chairman Arshak Sadoyan. "The authorities' handwriting . . . is well
    known to everyone. This way, the authorities are trying either to
    subdue the opposition or clear the way, or to frighten others so that
    they stop making active efforts."

    According to Suren Sureniants, a political analyst and board member
    of the opposition Hanrapetutiun (Republic) Party, the government
    began to view Heritage's activities with concern after Hovannisian
    "publicly caused certain unpleasant things for Kocharian and his
    entourage."

    Before the November 2005 constitutional referendum, Hovannisian
    called on voters to protest the vote in Yerevan's Freedom Square.
    Upon leaving the country later that month, he was reportedly searched
    by national security service workers who explained that they were
    looking for documents that contained state secrets.

    Associates contend that the pressure on Hoyannisian increased
    considerably after the party leader read out 21 questions for
    President Kocharian at a November 9, 2005 opposition rally. The
    document, titled "A Civil Request for a Public Account" quizzed
    "acting" President Kocharian on whether he had killed a man during
    the 1988-1994 war with Azerbaijan over the disputed enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, and on the details of his relatives' property
    holdings, among other topics.

    The presidential administration responded that the questionnaire was
    not worth a response, but in the months following, pro-government
    media outlets began to circulate discrediting reports that accused
    Hovannisian of espionage. Public television also took aim at
    Hovannisian's wife, alleging that that funds raised in the United
    States for a local chapter of the non-profit youth education
    organization Junior Achievement, run by his wife, had been used to
    fund the political activities of her husband and the organization of
    public rallies.

    Sympathizers maintain that the tussle over the Heritage Party's
    office space is just the latest installment in the government's
    campaign against Hovannisian.

    Theater Director Karapet Shahbazian, however, has ruled out any
    political motives for closing the Party's office. "I told them I must
    hand over the property to the state, but they refused to leave, and I
    put on the second lock," Shahbazian said. Hovannisian had a five-year
    lease with the theater, signed in 2002.

    Meanwhile, the party leader maintains that he will fight on. "All I
    need in this country is a small tent," he commented to EurasiaNet.
    "But recent experience shows that even a tent causes fear."


    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the
    Armenianow.com weekly in Yerevan.
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