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Karabakh Issue Colours Armenia Poll

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  • Karabakh Issue Colours Armenia Poll

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    Feb 14 2008


    Karabakh Issue Colours Armenia Poll

    Return of former president breaks political consensus on resolving
    the conflict.

    By Tatul Hakopian in Yerevan (CRS No. 431 14-Feb-08)

    The future of Nagorny Karabakh has not previously been a contentious
    issue in the domestic politics of Armenia in recent years, but now it
    is being bitterly debated in the presidential election campaign,
    thanks to the return of the stage of former president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian.

    On the campaign trail, supporters of Ter-Petrosian and his rival, the
    official candidate Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, are trading
    accusations of `sell-outs' in their respective negotiations with
    Azerbaijan to resolve the disputed territory's status.

    Former president Ter-Petrosyan stepped down in 1998 after coming
    under pressure from a group of ministers including his successor as
    president, Robert Kocharian, and Sarkisian, who opposed his tactics
    for resolving the conflict with Azerbaijan.

    There is normally an almost full consensus on the Karabakh issue in
    Armenian politics, and election campaigns focus instead on domestic
    issues such as the economy and corruption.

    This campaign has proved to be the exception.

    Vahan Hovannisian, who is running as a candidate for the nationalist
    Dashnaktsutiun party, diverges from the other eight contenders by
    asserting that there can be no negotiations with Azerbaijan until it
    signs a non-aggression pact with Armenia .

    The main difference between the others is that Ter-Petrosian says
    that time is working against Armenia in the Karabakh dispute and
    settling it needs to be a priority.

    Kocharian and Sarkisian have accused Ter-Petrosian of wanting to
    `surrender' Karabakh in 1998. These allegations have not been
    precisely worded, but the implication is that Ter-Petrosian was
    willing to compromise on the sovereignty claimed by Nagorny Karabakh.

    Opposition member of parliament Shavarsh Kocharian (no relation of
    the president), a critic of Ter-Petrosian, said the former
    president's return to the political scene had rekindled the debate on
    Karabakh.

    `The defeatist attitudes which were characteristic of the previous
    governing regime and which were the reason why it left office in 1998
    have led to the issue of conflict resolution coming to the fore
    again, as this same administration is rearing its head again and is
    has not changed its position on Karabakh,' he said.

    Ter-Petrosian's supporters would vigorously deny that he has a
    `defeatist' attitude. At one rally, the candidate spoke in detail
    about the need to make a deal with Azerbaijan and change the status
    quo. He has said that time is not on Armenia's side in the dispute.

    Political analyst Aghasi Yenokian said, `It's natural that with the
    return [of Ter-Petrosian] to politics, the issue is being raised
    again. It's only Ter-Petrosian who expresses a real readiness to
    settle the Karabakh conflict. All the other candidates would, if
    elected, continue the current policy and postpone a resolution.'

    On February 9, Ter-Petrosian raised the stakes with his opponents by
    directly linking the Karabakh issue with the most traumatic event in
    recent domestic political history, the murder of eight prominent
    politicians in parliament in October 1999.

    At a rally on Yerevan's Freedom Square, Ter-Petrosian claimed that in
    autumn 1999, Kocharian, Sarkisian and current foreign minister Vardan
    Oskanian had been ready to sign a deal to exchange the southern
    Meghri region of Armenia for Nagorny Karabakh and the adjoining
    Lachin district.

    Meghri stands between Azerbaijan to its exclave territory
    Nakhichevan, while Lachin connects Armenia and Karabakh. The idea of
    a swap has been dubbed the `Goble Plan' after the American scholar
    Paul Goble who first suggested it.

    On the same day, the Haikakan Zhamanak newspaper which is supporting
    Ter-Petrosian's election bid published the text of an unofficial
    document produced by the American, French and Russian co-chairs of
    the Minsk Group - the mediators in the dispute - in autumn 1999, in
    which the first point states that Meghri should be exchanged for
    Lachin.

    `I am making public a fact that has been hidden for ten years - a
    great conspiracy against Armenia - which Kocharian, Sarkisian and
    Oskanian have always denied,' Ter-Petrosian told the crowd which
    listened in absolute silence. `This is the question of exchanging of
    Meghri for Lachin, through which Armenia would have lost its
    35-kilometre border with Iran. Today this conspiracy has been
    exposed.'

    The candidate then went on to make an even more explosive allegation,
    linking this plan with the attack of October 27, 1999, in which eight
    leading politicians including the then prime minister Vazgen
    Sarkisian and speaker of parliament Karen Demirchian, were killed.

    `This document will be the most important clue to solving the October
    27 [murders],' said Ter-Petrosian.

    `This conspiracy failed thanks to two people - Karen Demirchian and
    Vazgen Sarkisian, who exposed the plot at a session of the security
    council, and paid the highest price for it, their lives.'

    The Kocharian administration moved quickly to dismiss Ter-Petrosian's
    allegations, with presidential press secretary Viktor Soghomonian
    calling the claims `an electoral gambit'.

    `The radical opposition, having exhausted all attempts to discredit
    the authorities, has begun talking about this alleged peace plan,'
    said Soghomonian. `This started in 2002. In actual fact we are
    talking about the so-called `Goble Plan' which was never a topic for
    discussion in the negotiations over Karabakh. It's obvious that
    today's publication has the aim of heading off a new discussion about
    the very peculiar approach that ex-president Levon Ter-Petrosian took
    to resolving the conflict.'

    Following the shootings in parliament, Kocharian said he had rejected
    the idea of a territorial exchange. Speaking on television in
    February 2000, he said there had indeed been a plan to exchange land
    but `this was not accepted by me'.

    Foreign minister Oskanian angrily rejected Ter-Petrosian's statements
    on the Karabakh issue.

    `What Ter-Petrosyan is doing is a cheap pre-election trick, this is
    immoral. And when he tries to relate his statements to the terrorist
    act in the Armenian parliament, it becomes clear to me that
    Ter-Petrosyan will stop at nothing,' said the minister.

    Tatul Hakopian is a commentator on Public Radio in Armenia and
    correspondent for the New York newspaper The Armenian Reporter.
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