Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Prosecutor's Brother Moves To Become Yerevan District Chief

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Prosecutor's Brother Moves To Become Yerevan District Chief

    PROSECUTOR'S BROTHER MOVES TO BECOME YEREVAN DISTRICT CHIEF
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 4 2006

    Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian has moved to retain his de facto
    control of Yerevan's western Ajapnyak district by having his younger
    brother stand in the local mayoral election slated for October 29.

    Ruben Hovsepian's participation and likely victory in the poll should
    also avert a new clash between two mutually antagonistic clans that
    hold sway in the area.

    Artsrun Khachatrian, Ajapnyak's incumbent mayor who has governed
    the district for the last six years, represents one of those
    clans. Khachatrian is a prominent member of a broader faction led by
    the influential prosecutor. It mainly consists of prominent natives
    of the Aparan district in central Armenia.

    The rival camp is headed by senior lawmaker Galust Sahakian and
    his brother-in-law Ashot Aghababian. Both men are senior members of
    the governing Republican Party (HHK) and longtime associates of its
    official leader, Prime Minister Andranik Markarian. Sahakian's son
    Arman was narrowly defeated by Khachatrian in 2003 and planned to
    again try to unseat the latter in the upcoming election. The previous
    local polls were marred by violence and accusations of vote rigging,
    and many observers expected more trouble this time around.

    However, Arman Sahakian was effectively forced to pull out of the
    race after the HHK's governing board refused to back his candidacy in
    August at the apparent behest of Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian. The
    unexpected move fueled speculation about a deal cut by Sarkisian
    and Hovsepian.

    Samvel Yeranian, chairman of the Ajapnyak election commission, told
    RFE/RL that Khachatrian is not among four men who have applied for
    registration as election candidates before Wednesday's deadline. It
    turned out that all of them, including Hovsepian's brother, are
    members of the prosecutor's Nig-Aparan organization. One of the
    hopefuls, Gagik Sargsian, is at the same time affiliated with the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), the HHK's junior
    coalition partner that has an uneasy rapport with Hovsepian.

    In a newspaper interview published on Wednesday, Khachatrian
    claimed that he was not pressurized into quitting the race. "I
    made that decision [not to contest the vote] for the sake of the
    people of Ajapnyak because I don't want the community to turn into
    a battlefield," he told the "Haykakan Zhamanak" daily.

    The Sahakians, for their part, have said they draw comfort from the
    fact that Khachatrian will no longer run the area increasingly seen
    as Hovsepian's stronghold. Ajapnyak is home to several businesses
    that are reportedly owned by the prosecutor.

    Hovsepian underscored his far-reaching political ambitions last month
    as he presided over the founding conference of a coalition of so-called
    "compatriots' unions" that unite prominent natives of various regions
    of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. Nig-Aparan is expected to play a
    leading role in the grouping.

    Nig-Aparan is also the driving force behind a recently formed
    political party which intends to make a strong showing in next year's
    parliamentary elections. Leaders of the party, called Association for
    Armenia, have not ruled out the possibility of forming an electoral
    alliance with the HHK.
Working...
X