Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The first post-election [rally]:they were waiting for critical mass

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

  • The first post-election [rally]:they were waiting for critical mass

    Golos Armenii, Armenia
    Feb. 21, 2008

    The first post-election [rally]:they were waiting for critical mass

    by Marina Lazarian and Aleksandr Tovmasyan



    The election was completed in one round. The leader of the Republican
    Party of Armenia, [Prime Minister] SerzhSargsyan, won with a wide
    margin. We will leave it till later to analyze the components of this
    resounding victory andthe reasons for the defeat of the other
    candidates, since according to the traditional post-election
    scenario, it is thelosers who speak in the days following the poll.

    [Passage omitted: an opinion poll predicted result accurately]

    Despite the previously announced starting time of 1500 [1100 gmt],
    backers of Levon Ter-Petrosyan called for theirsupporters to come to
    the Matenadaran [museum in central Yerevan] for midday. By 1200,
    those who the day before had beensavouring in advance Levon's victory
    in the first round were standing around in groups. They stood
    listening touplifting music. Every half-hour the leader of the New
    Times party [Aram] Karapetyan declared the readiness
    ofTer-Petrosyan's supporters to go all the way. The demonstrators
    chanted Struggle, struggle to the end.

    [Passage omitted: rally resembled post-election rallies in 2003]

    Musheg Sagatelyan is ready to go unarmed...

    Yesterday's rally and procession could be characterized as letting
    off steam. The boldest participants riskedtrampling election banners
    of Serzh Sargsyan underfoot. The remainder limited themselves to
    hissing and whistling inapproval.

    Musheg Sagatelyan - a member of the Test of Spirit public
    organization [of Karabakh war veterans] who in the yearswhen the
    Armenian Pan-National Movement [led by Ter-Petrosyan] was in power
    was famed for beating leading oppositionactivists and participants in
    the 1996 protest rallies [following a controversial presidential
    election, in whichTer-Petrosyan won a second term] in Interior
    Ministry remand centres, for which he was nicknamed bonebreaker -
    spoke (ina heartfelt manner) at yesterday's meeting about...
    [ellipsis as published] democracy and human rights. Addressing the
    Yerkrapah [a pro-Sargsyan organization of Karabakh war veterans], he
    recalled those who pledged to fight to thedeath, and declared his
    readiness to lay down his life in the struggle against the regime. I
    will go unarmed and amready to die, he said with tears in his voice,
    without specifying where he would go and how he would be killed.

    [Passage omitted: more in this vein]

    Between the orators' speeches, the crowd was chanting Levon! Levon!,
    while some particularly loud old women werescreaming Levon for king.
    In a word, the protest crowd, half of which was made up of village
    residents and youths,actively let off steam, chewed sunflower seeds
    and screamed Levon! and Victory!. They greeted the appearance of
    theiridol at the microphone with rejoicing.

    Levon criticizes the oligarchs

    Ter-Petrosyan started by stating that nothing special happened on 19
    February - there was a usual election with theuse of brute force
    against the people. This is the rule of bandits, the criminal
    underworld, the intertwining of theauthorities and criminality...
    [ellipsis as published]

    [Passage omitted: Ter-Petrosyan named businessmen and political
    figures with reputed criminal background]

    Ter-Petrosyan forgot to add that more than half those on this list
    entered politics exclusively thanks to theArmenian Pan-National
    Movement and to him personally.

    In a word, the former president blamed his election defeat on the
    efforts of oligarchs, not forgetting to insist thatalongside the
    criminals and oligarchs, the other eight presidential candidates bore
    equal responsibility for thisshameful election. Remember how at his
    first rally (after his return to politics [in September 2007]),
    Ter-Petrosyanspoke rather favourably of the oligarchs and even urged
    people not to call them that and to consider them all butvictims of
    the current regime. Yesterday, he said that the oligarchs had removed
    their masks and showed their trueface.
Working...
X