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Armenia Elects President as Rival Warns of Protests

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  • Armenia Elects President as Rival Warns of Protests

    Bloomberg
    Feb 19 2008



    Armenia Elects President as Rival Warns of Protests (Update1)


    By Mark Bentley

    Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Armenians vote today in a presidential
    election, with the opposition already raising concerns that the vote
    may be rigged.

    Former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan says his supporters will protest
    on the streets of Yerevan, Armenia's capital, if election monitors
    rule that the front-runner, Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan, won
    unfairly. Ter-Petrosyan, 63, is making a return to politics in the
    former Soviet republic after being ousted from power a decade ago.

    ``It's a dangerous situation and unrest cannot be ruled out,'' said
    Larisa Minasyan, director of the Armenia branch of the Open Society
    Institute, a New York-based pro-democracy body founded by billionaire
    investor George Soros. ``I would only hope that the political
    leadership and law enforcers act responsibly.''

    Sargsyan says Armenians should vote for him because of his party's
    economic achievements, which have brought growth of more than 13
    percent for each of the last three years and raised living standards.
    Ter-Petrosyan says the expansion has benefited the richest Armenians
    most and accuses Sargsyan of failing to seek a resolution to disputes
    with neighbors Azerbaijan and Turkey that curb exports from the
    land-locked country.

    Armenia, which lies in the southern Caucasus and became independent
    from the former Soviet Union in 1991, is under pressure from the U.S.
    and the European Union to strengthen its democracy at a time when it
    is receiving hundred of millions of dollars in aid.

    Flawed Elections

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and other
    international observers have described each of the six elections
    since 1995, except last year's parliamentary vote, as flawed.
    Sargsyan, 53, is the nominee of President Robert Kocharyan, who's
    served the maximum two five-year terms.

    The OSCE has almost 400 observers in Armenia, also bordered by
    Georgia and Iran, to monitor balloting by the country's 2.3 million
    voters. That's as many as at the parliamentary election last year.
    Ballot boxes will close at 8 p.m. and initial results will be
    published by the election board early tomorrow.

    An EU strategy paper issued last year said the 27-nation bloc
    ``should make democratic progress, respect of human rights and
    enforcement of the rule of law a priority for future cooperation''
    with Armenia.

    Sargsyan has 51 percent support, according to a poll commissioned by
    state-controlled Armenia Public TV and Radio, which interviewed 1,500
    voters Jan. 20-29. The margin of error was 2.6 percentage points.

    Assessment

    Ter-Petrosyan, who, at 12 percent, was tied for second with former
    parliamentary speaker Artur Baghdasaryan, 39, dismissed the survey as
    ``flawed.''

    The leading candidate must get more than 50 percent to avoid a runoff
    against the nearest challenger in two weeks.

    The OSCE will give its assessment of the election tomorrow.
    Ter-Petrosyan's supporters, a coalition of more than 20 parties and
    civil groups, plan a rally in the capital the same day.

    ``If there is fraud, then we will use our legal right to protest,''
    Ter-Petrosyan told reporters at a news conference in Yerevan Feb. 17.
    ``There will be a struggle and it will be a struggle to the very
    end.''

    ``There is no person in the world more interested than I in an
    election free of vote-rigging,'' Sargsyan said in an interview at his
    office in Yerevan late yesterday. ``In any case, if we were capable
    of altering the outcome then we would be considered among the
    greatest illusionists of all time.''

    `Falsification'

    Ter-Petrosyan, addressing more than 50,000 of his supporters in
    Yerevan's main square Feb. 16, called on Armenians to vote to
    ``reduce chances of falsification.'' A rally organized by Sargsyan's
    Republican Party the next day attracted similar numbers.

    The OSCE, in a report published Feb. 16, said it ``continues to
    receive reports of citizens being concerned about vote-buying schemes
    and anxious regarding the collection of passport data and the secrecy
    of the vote.'' Armenia's media had been ``critical'' of
    Ter-Petrosyan, while ``the other eight candidates were presented in a
    positive or neutral manner.''

    Armenia's constitutional court dismissed a plea by Ter- Petrosyan on
    Feb. 11 to postpone the election by two weeks. Biased media coverage
    made ``further participation in the campaign impossible,'' he argued.


    Ter-Petrosyan's rivalry with Sargsyan dates back to 1998. He was
    forced to step down as president when Sargsyan and Kocharyan, both
    ministers in his government, objected to an OSCE peace plan to end
    the dispute with Azerbaijan over the mountainous region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Both Kocharyan and Sargsyan are from the enclave,
    which is located within Azerbaijan's borders.

    Economic Embargo

    The proclamation of self-rule by ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh
    in 1991 sparked a three-year war between Azerbaijan and Armenia that
    killed thousands. It also prompted an economic embargo on Armenia by
    Azerbaijan and Turkey, crimping the country's exports.

    Ter-Petrosyan says the standoff with Azerbaijan is hindering growth,
    which has come mainly from building and services. The two countries
    remain officially at war. Sargsyan, seeking to stave off criticism
    from Ter-Petrosyan that he is stalling talks on Nagarno-Karabakh,
    said he will seek a swift resumption of negotiations if he becomes
    president.

    ``I'm confident that the talks can resume in March,'' he said. ``I
    can't promise to our people that the issue will be resolved tomorrow,
    but let me say that I am a staunch supporter of the peaceful
    resolution of the conflict.''

    Diaspora Money

    Sargsyan also points to increased investment by the Armenian
    diaspora, which is helping boost construction, as an example of
    renewed confidence in Armenia's political and economic future.

    Yerevan's center, once blighted by power blackouts, is now in a
    building boom, while economic output per capita has more than
    quadrupled in the past eight years to $3,000. The currency, the dram,
    has gained 37 percent against the dollar.

    Still, Sargsyan's failure to agree on a Nagorno-Karabakh settlement
    with Azerbaijan is deterring investment by U.S. and European
    companies, said Gerard Libaridian, professor of modern Armenian
    history at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

    ``The resolution of the Karabakh dispute should be the priority for
    the next president, then everything else will follow,'' Libaridian
    said. ``A solution will open up our borders and create a larger and
    more democratic environment for investors.''

    To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Bentley in Yerevan,
    Armenia at [email protected] .
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