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Serzh Sarkisian: ex-army commander to lead Armenia

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  • Serzh Sarkisian: ex-army commander to lead Armenia

    Agence France Presse -- English
    February 20, 2008 Wednesday 11:23 AM GMT


    Serzh Sarkisian: ex-army commander to lead Armenia

    by Michael Mainville
    YEREVAN, Feb 20 2008


    A former military commander in Azerbaijan's breakaway Nagorny
    Karabakh region, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian rose to the top of
    Armenia's leadership after turning his talent for strategy to
    politics.

    Official results on Wednesday showed Sarkisian, 53, winning this
    ex-Soviet nation's presidential election in the first round, beating
    former president Levon Ter-Petrosian by a wide margin.

    His victory caps a long rise from rebel soldier to political
    heavyweight and seals the dominance of the Karabakh clan over
    Armenian politics.

    Outgoing President Robert Kocharian, who served 10 years, is also
    >From Karabakh and handpicked Sarkisian as his successor.

    Born in the Karabakh capital Stepanakert, Sarkisian started his
    political career as an official in the Komsomol, the youth branch of
    the Soviet Union's Communist Party.

    In the late 1980s he became involved in the movement to transfer
    Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave in Soviet-era Azerbaijan, to
    Armenian control. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and war
    broke out over the region, Sarkisian became a rebel fighter and
    eventually commander of the separatist forces.

    The bloody conflict, which lasted until a 1994 ceasefire, left
    thousands dead and forced nearly a million people on both sides from
    their homes. The two countries remain officially at war over the
    region, which is now controlled by the separatists but not recognized
    internationally as a country.

    During the war, Sarkisian formed a close relationship with Kocharian,
    another rebel leader. He would later become the future president's
    most trusted ally.

    In 1993 he became Armenia's defence minister under Ter-Petrosian,
    starting a long career in a series of key security positions. He was
    head of the national security ministry from 1995 to 1999, but
    resigned after armed gunmen stormed the Armenian parliament and
    killed seven high-ranking officials, including the prime minister.

    He returned as chief of the defence ministry in 2000 and held the
    position until the death last March of Prime Minister Andranik
    Markarian, when he was appointed prime minister.

    A year earlier Sarkisian had become chairman of the ruling Republican
    Party, fuelling rumours that he was in line to replace Kocharian
    after his second five-year term expired.

    Sarkisian scored a major victory last May when the Republican Party
    swept parliamentary elections and foreign observers declared the vote
    largely in accordance with international standards.

    He campaigned vigorously ahead of Tuesday's election, holding mass
    rallies with tens of thousands of voters. He played up the
    government's economic credentials, pointing to four years of
    unprecedented growth and rising living standards.

    Analysts predict Sarkisian will follow in Kocharian's footsteps,
    pursuing close ties with Moscow and a hawkish stance in relations
    with Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    The two countries have cut diplomatic ties and sealed their borders
    with Armenia over its support for the Karabakh separatists.

    Ankara has also been angered by Yerevan's campaign to have the World
    War I-era mass killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire recognised
    as genocide.

    In an interview with AFP before the vote, Sarkisian said a peace deal
    with Azerbaijan was close, despite more than a decade of stalled
    talks.

    He also blamed Turkey for the impasse in restoring diplomatic ties,
    saying it was unconscionable for the country to demand Armenia stop
    pressing for genocide recognition.

    He said he had no doubts about following Kocharian's example.

    "Kocharian's policy is very simple -- to make economic growth
    sustainable, to become a member of the European family of nations, to
    normalise relations with our neighbours and to peacefully resolve the
    problem of Nagorny Karabakh. Do you see anything bad in this?" he
    said.
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