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Armenia: Between A State Of Emergency And A Presidential Inauguratio

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  • Armenia: Between A State Of Emergency And A Presidential Inauguratio

    ARMENIA: BETWEEN A STATE OF EMERGENCY AND A PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURATION
    By Haroutiun Khachatrian

    Caucaz.com
    April 7 2008
    Georgia

    The February 19 elections and the March 1 tragedy have revealed a deep
    split in Armenian society. Public debate in the country is focused on
    finding a way out of the crisis. While a new governmental coalition
    is taking shape prior to the official presidential inauguration on
    April 9, the opposition continues to make its views known, despite
    restrictions. Rumours have also circulated about possible negotiations
    between official election winner Serzh Sarkisian and opposition leader
    Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    The tragedy was the March 1 clashes that left eight dead and more
    injured. The 20-day state of emergency imposed on Yerevan that evening
    held without any apparent violation, due largely to supporters loyal
    to former president Levon Ter-Petrosian who respected the leader's
    call for respect of the emergency rule.

    Ter-Petrosian had run for presidency in the February 19 elections,
    pulling in 22 percent of the vote, according to official results.

    With more than 52 percent of the official vote, Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian was declared winner of the contest, despite claims by
    Ter-Petrosian and his supporters that the vote was rigged and that
    Ter-Petrosian was the actual winner.

    The events of February 19 and March 1 reveal a schism in Armenian
    society. While Sarkisian certainly has his supporters, many Armenians
    are severely critical of the ruling authorities and have taken
    great risks to demonstrate their opposition. This activism prompted
    Ter-Petrosian to declare "I woke up society. It is probably the most
    important deal of my life."

    State of emergency

    During the state of emergency, Sarkisian and his supporters scored a
    number of key victories. First, on March 8 the Constitutional Court
    rejected Ter-Petrosian's appeal to nullify the February 19 vote.

    Instead, the court confirmed Sarkisian's election as the next
    president. Second, more than a hundred people were arrested on
    charges of organising or participating in the violent actions
    of March 1. Among the detained are three members of the National
    Assembly. One of them, Sasun Mikaelian, was reported to possess
    illegal weapons. A number of people, including Khachatur Sukiasian,
    another MP, are in hiding. Third, the authorities amended a law on
    public demonstrations to allow the government to deny permission to
    hold rallies, provided the police have information that demonstration
    may cause disorder. Subsequent requests for pro-Ter-Petrosian rallies
    have been rejected.

    All of these changes took place in the presence of visiting political
    delegations from the Council of Europe, the European Union and the
    United States. Most of the foreign groups arrived with the goal of
    helping the government and Ter-Petrosian establish dialogue to mediate
    the situation. The Council of Europe and the OSCE Office of Democratic
    Institutions and Human Rights criticised the restrictions on public
    demonstrations. In return the Armenian authorities spoke of their
    "possible revision" in the near future. The international delegates
    also called on the authorities to stop human rights violations,
    particularly politically-motivated arrests and detentions. While the
    authorities claim that only those involved in violent actions are being
    detained, Ter-Petrosian has said that his supporters and activists,
    including some who were not in Yerevan on March 1, are being targeted.

    A new coalition

    On March 21, the state of emergency was lifted. Troops controlling
    central Yerevan were pulled out and restrictions on mass media,
    including blocks on national and international websites, were lifted.

    A four-party coalition government agreement was also signed. Led
    by Sarkisian's Republican party and its previous coalition partner,
    Bargavach Hayastan (Prosperous Armenia), the coalition also contains
    the ARF Dashnaktsutiun party. That party's inclusion is somewhat
    surprising, given that its presidential candidate, Vahan Hovhannesian,
    had resigned following the news that he received only six percent
    of the vote and the party had hinted that it might withdraw from the
    government in protest of the elections' poor organisation.

    By far, however, the most unexpected coalition member is the Orinats
    Yerkir (Country of Law) opposition party. That party's leader Artur
    Baghdasarian garnered 17 percent of the February 19 vote after running
    on a radical opposition platform. Many expected him to join forces
    with Ter-Petrosian, but claiming to be acting "for the sake of the
    country" on February 29 Baghdasarian announced a 180 turn to join
    Sarkisian in the government. Although no agreement on the distribution
    of ministerial portfolios has been reported, Artur Baghdasian is
    expected to take the post of Secretary of the Security Council.

    With the formation of the coalition, the overwhelming majority of the
    National Assembly's 131 members support the future government. Only
    seven members of the Zharangutiun (Heritage) party and four other
    deputies, three of them detained and one in hiding, stand in opposition
    of the Sarkisian administration.

    Continued opposition

    Apart from one trip to the Constitutional Court, Ter-Petrosian has
    reportedly not left his residence since March 1. Since the tragic
    events that Saturday he has made only one public appearance,
    an interview, the content of which, due to media restrictions,
    local media did not report. He said that given the fact that the
    Constitutional Court's verdict came during a state of emergency,
    Sarkisian's legitimacy is doubtful, He also said he was ready to
    co-operate with authorities according to the conditions suggested
    by the EU, which call for the release of political detainees and the
    carrying out of an independent international investigation into the
    events of March 1.

    Because all the public events have been banned, Ter-Petrosian's
    supporters have organised nightly "political walks" through downtown
    Yerevan. Co-ordinated over the internet, up to one thousand people
    with otherwise nothing in common, have been walking through the city
    streets carrying candles and portraits of those who died on March 1.

    Each day police have arrested several of the walkers, but in all
    cases they have been released later the same day.

    Unconfirmed reports suggest that the political teams of Sarkisian
    and Ter-Petrosian are holding negotiations. The nature of relations
    between the two political heavyweights will likely come into focus
    only after Sarkisian is inaugurated on April 9.
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