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Protests Soar In Armenia As Election Outcome Is Contested

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  • Protests Soar In Armenia As Election Outcome Is Contested

    PROTESTS SOAR IN ARMENIA AS ELECTION OUTCOME IS CONTESTED
    by Natalia Leshchenko

    Global Insight
    February 27, 2008

    Eight days after the presidential election in Armenia, the emotions are
    swelling rather subsiding, a cause for concern for the president-elect,
    Serzh Sargsyan. His election opponent, Armenia's first president Lev
    Ter-Petrossian, who gathered 21.5% of the 19 February presidential
    vote against Sargsyan's 53%, has not only been able to organise mass
    protests contesting the election result, but has also managed to build
    up the opposition momentum and see the number of his supporters soar
    on Tuesday (26 February) and Wednesday (27 February). They occupy the
    Liberty Square in the capital Yerevan, maintaining night vigils. Tens
    of thousands of people are universally reported to be protesting in the
    square. The authorities attempted to retaliate in kind by delivering
    people from the regions to an alternative rally, only to lose a large
    share of participants to Ter-Petrossian. Sargsyan has also extended an
    olive branch to Ter-Petrossian and other election candidates inviting
    them to a new government, but Ter-Petrossian snapped that this was
    too little, too late. In an attempted "carrot and stick" policy,
    the authorities are simultaneously warning that their patience
    is running out and that they may use force to restore "order"
    in the capital. Police have already arrested some Ter-Petrossian
    supporters, accusing them of plotting seizure of the national TV and
    radio stations.

    Significance:International observers from the Organisation for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) watchdog have evaluated the
    presidential poll as "mostly" democratic, and are calling for restraint
    on both sides. At the heart of the matter is the competition between
    the charismatic and populist Ter-Petrossian, who is able to ignite and
    harness the masses, and bureaucratic Serzh Sargsyan who can control
    the business and administrative elites but has problems relating
    to the people directly. Foreign interests play a secondary role in
    the contest as Russia, Armenia's principal investor, has refrained
    from playing an active role in the conflict, while the West is also
    staying away from pronounced involvement in order not to undermine
    Ter-Petrossian by association with their allies but domestically
    perceived enemies of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey. As the tide of
    popular pressure seems to be growing towards Ter-Petrossian, Armenian
    authorities face the dilemma of crushing dissent and maintaining power,
    or appearing democratic and seeing their power seriously challenged
    if not seized from them.

    Paradoxically, less public support for Ter-Petrossian could produce the
    most desired outcome from the point of view of Armenia's democracy, as
    it would induce the government and the opposition into power-sharing
    agreements. A winner-takes-it-all outcome can hardly bring any
    sustainable stability to this small but strategically important
    country.
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