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Baghdasarian Poised To Resign, Quit Armenian Coalition

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  • Baghdasarian Poised To Resign, Quit Armenian Coalition

    BAGHDASARIAN POISED TO RESIGN, QUIT ARMENIAN COALITION
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian and Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 11 2006

    Artur Baghdasarian signaled on Thursday his intention to resign as
    speaker of Armenia's parliament and pull his Orinats Yerkir party out
    of the governing coalition as its parliamentary faction continued to
    shrink under apparent government pressure.

    Three more wealthy lawmakers defected from Orinats Yerkir late
    Wednesday and early Thursday, reducing to 11 the number of parliament
    seats controlled by Baghdasarian. His party had 20 seats as recently
    as last month, boasting the second largest faction in the 131-member
    National Assembly.

    The wave of defections, which began last week, is reportedly part
    of President Robert Kocharian's efforts to force Orinats Yerkir out
    of the ruling coalition. Government sources have said Kocharian has
    lost patience with its 37-year-old leader's regular and embarrassing
    attacks on his cabinet.

    According to Heghine Bisharian, a senior Orinats Yerkir lawmaker
    who remains loyal to Baghdasarian, the party's continued presence in
    government is becoming meaningless in such circumstances. "I personally
    am in favor of his resignation and our departure from the coalition,"
    she told a news conference.

    "The entire Orinats Yerkir Party is of the same opinion," said
    Bisharian. Asked whether Baghdasarian shares that opinion, she replied:
    "I think he will."

    Baghdasarian, who has been seen in the past as one of Kocharian's
    possible handpicked successors, has declined to publicly comment on
    the situation.

    Bisharian found it "a bit too early to speculate" about the possibility
    of Orinats Yerkir joining the opposition ranks but made no secret of
    its critical assessment of the state of affairs in Armenia. "Go to
    the regions, enter villages and look at their plight.

    You'll see whether the [government] policies of the last 10-15 years
    have changed anything in our life," she said, echoing statements
    regularly made by opposition leaders.

    Bisharian also downplayed the damage inflicted on her party by the
    defections. "Orinats Yerkir has more than 62,000 members and I think
    the departure of a dozen of them won't make any difference for the
    party," she claimed.

    All of the defectors are wealthy businessmen with close government
    connections, a necessary condition for engaging in large-scale
    economic activity in Armenia. Yet another Orinats Yerkir deputy,
    Tigran Yeganian, was expected to follow their example later on
    Thursday. Yeganian, 28, is the youngest member of the National
    Assembly. His father is the owner of a big and expensive restaurant
    near Yerevan which is popular with senior government officials.

    Bisharian stopped short of explicitly blaming the defections on
    Kocharian. But she did deplore the strong dependence of Armenian
    businessmen on the government. "Regardless of whether a businessman
    is a member of Orinats Yerkir, a Republican or a Dashnak, they are
    facing this danger [of losing their assets]," she said. "This could
    happen to any political force and businessman."

    (Photolur photo: Oritanst Yerkir deputies attending a parliament
    session.)
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