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Sarkisian Says Coalition Talks In Progress

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  • Sarkisian Says Coalition Talks In Progress

    SARKISIAN SAYS COALITION TALKS IN PROGRESS
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Feb 27 2008

    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian said on Wednesday that his offer to
    form a new, more broad-based coalition government has met with a
    positive response from some of the Armenian opposition leaders who
    challenged him in last week's presidential election.

    In a speech at a Tuesday rally in Yerevan, Sarkisian said he is
    ready to defuse rising political tensions in Armenia by cutting a
    power-sharing deal with those "constructive" opposition forces that
    will recognize his victory in the disputed vote.

    "There has already been reaction, readiness to cooperate from the
    opposition," he told lawmakers the next day. "We began working on
    that today."

    In a separate conversation with journalists, Sarkisian declined
    to specify which opposition leaders have expressed readiness to
    cooperate with him. "It's not one candidate," he said. "There a few
    of them. They'll talk about that."

    In his speech, Sarkisian did not say whether the offer applies to
    former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, his main election challenger who
    has refused to concede defeat and is demanding a repeat presidential
    election. The president-elect accused Ter-Petrosian and his "aggressive
    grouping" of ignoring "the majority's opinion" and seeking to seize
    power by illegal means.

    Both Ter-Petrosian and his top allies were quick to rule out any deals
    with Armenia's current leadership. "Either Serzhik or the people
    will leave this country," the former president told supporters on
    Wednesday. "There can be no other way out."

    Sarkisian will find it easier to negotiate a power-sharing agreement
    with Artur Baghdasarian, another major opposition candidate who
    finished third in the presidential race. Baghdasarian said on Tuesday
    that the election was marred by serious violations but stopped short
    of rejecting Sarkisian's victory as illegitimate. He promised to
    deliver his final election verdict by Thursday.

    Baghdasarian's Orinats Yerkir Party was already part of Armenia's
    governing coalition from 2003-2006.

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), another major
    party that contested the vote, is already represented in Sarkisian's
    cabinet by three ministers. Dashnaktsutyun leaders said this week
    that they are ready in principle to stay in government.
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