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Opposition To Boycott Election Of New Armenian Speaker

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  • Opposition To Boycott Election Of New Armenian Speaker

    OPPOSITION TO BOYCOTT ELECTION OF NEW ARMENIAN SPEAKER

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
    May 18 2006

    Armenia's two main opposition groups said on Thursday that they will
    boycott the upcoming election of the new speaker and the chairmen
    of two standing committees of parliament, dismissing it as an
    "illegitimate" body.

    The Artarutyun alliance and the National Unity Party (AMK) said the
    move is in line with their three-year politically motivated boycott
    of most parliament sessions. Both opposition forces had refused to
    participate in the formation of the National Assembly's leadership
    following the disputed parliamentary election in May 2003.

    "The elections of the National Assembly took place [in May 2003] with
    serious violations and did not correspond to the people's choice," an
    Artarutyun spokeswoman said after a meeting of the bloc's governing
    council. "Therefore, the Artarutyun alliance is not going to take
    part in those intra-government games."

    "We will only take part in debates and express our position," clarified
    Victor Dallakian, a senior Artarutyun lawmaker.

    "We have neither a desire nor an intention to join the coalition
    games," Aghasi Arshakian, a parliament deputy from the AMK, told
    RFE/RL.

    The Armenian parliament will have to pick a new leader after
    its outgoing speaker, Artur Baghdasarian, formally ceases to
    perform his duties at the end of this month. The chairmen of the
    parliament committees on security and social affairs affiliated with
    Baghdasarian's Orinats Yerkir party have also stepped down as a result
    of the party's withdrawal from the governing coalition.

    The vacant posts will likely go to two other pro-establishment parties
    that remain represented in President Robert Kocharian's government. The
    opposition minority in the National Assembly does not have enough
    seats to seriously affect results of the planned parliament vote.

    Artarutyun's decision to boycott the process was not unanimous,
    with at least one of its leaders, Arshak Sadoyan, insisting that the
    opposition should field a candidate for the post of speaker.

    In a related development, opposition leaders denied a newspaper
    report that Baghdasarian, who now claims to be in opposition to
    Kocharian, has asked them to relinquish their parliament seats in
    protest against the ruling regime. Dallakian said he is against the
    idea in the first place.

    "It is those deputies who got their mandates by illegal means who must
    hand in mandates," he said. "The Artarutyun deputies rightly earned
    their mandates, and if the elections had not been rigged Artarutyun
    would have had a majority in parliament."

    Another leader of the bloc, Vazgen Manukian, did not rule out the
    possibility of the opposition's cooperation with Orinats Yerkir. "For
    all its shortcomings and its participation in many bad things, there
    are people in that party with whom we can cooperate," he told RFE/RL.
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