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President's heir seeks top job in Armenia vote

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  • President's heir seeks top job in Armenia vote

    Reuters UK,
    Feb 15 2008


    President's heir seeks top job in Armenia vote
    Fri Feb 15, 2008 12:00am GMT

    YEREVAN (Reuters) - Armenia votes next week in a presidential
    election that is likely to transfer power from outgoing President
    Robert Kocharyan to his trusted ally and prime minister Serzh
    Sarksyan.

    Opposition parties already allege the campaign is unfair, setting up
    Tuesday's election to be a test for stability in a country that has
    only in the last few years recovered from a period of political
    convulsions.

    Nestled high in the Caucasus mountains, Armenia is in a region that
    is emerging as a vital transit route for oil exports from the Caspian
    Sea to energy-hungry world markets, though it has no pipelines of its
    own.

    The energy flows could be threatened, analysts warn, if an unresolved
    conflict with neighbouring Azerbaijan flares again into fighting. A
    dispute between Armenia and its other neighbour, Turkey, complicates
    Ankara's relations with the West.

    Opinion polls give Sarksyan, 53, a lead over the rest of the field,
    including former speaker of parliament Artur Baghdasaryan and Levon
    Ter-Petrosyan, the previous president who was forced to resign in
    1998 but is now seeking a comeback.

    Most observers predict that if Sarksyan is elected, his rule will be,
    in most aspects, a continuation of Kocharyan's 10 years in office
    that have been marked by economic growth and firm stands toward
    Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    "Our candidate is the only one with an exceptional chance to win in
    the first round," said Armen Ashotyan, a lawmaker with Sarksyan's
    Republican Party. "If he wins, naturally a continuation of the policy
    direction will be ensured."

    Sarksyan's victory though is not guaranteed. "There is serious
    competition going on," said analyst Alexander Iskanderyan.

    LONG PARTNERSHIP

    Close associates for over 20 years, both Kocharyan and Sarksyan are
    from Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of oil-producing Azerbaijan whose
    ethnic Armenian population broke away in a 1990s war.

    They worked side by side to lead the separatist forces, then
    transferred their partnership to the Armenian capital.

    Kocharyan, also 53, is constitutionally barred from serving a third
    consecutive term. He is expected to remain influential, but he has
    refused to disclose what role he will take until his replacement is
    inaugurated.

    Some commentators have predicted Kocharyan could become prime
    minister, mimicking the arrangement in nearby Russia where outgoing
    President Vladimir Putin has said he may serve as prime minister if
    his protege Dmitry Medvedev wins the presidency.

    "The intrigue of the election in Armenia is where Kocharyan will go
    and who will be the prime minister," Gevorg Pogosyan, an independent
    analyst, told Reuters.

    Voters credit Kocharyan -- and by association Sarksyan -- with
    overseeing strong economic growth. Gross domestic product grew last
    year by 13.7 percent. Once blighted by power blackouts, capital
    Yerevan is now enjoying a construction boom.

    Sarksyan's election chances are boosted by the fact the opposition
    has failed to unite around a single candidate.

    Previous votes in Armenia have been followed by mass opposition
    protests alleging ballot fraud, and observers say more are possible
    after Tuesday's vote.

    Armenia is Moscow's only firm ally in a region where Russia and the
    West are competing for influence. It is home to a Russian military
    base and Russian firms control a significant chunk of the Armenian
    economy.

    Relations with Turkey are fraught in part because Ankara refuses to
    recognise as genocide the killings of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey in
    the early part of the last century.

    (Writing by Margarita Antidze; Editing by Charles Dick)
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