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Ter-Petrosian Unveils Election Manifesto

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  • Ter-Petrosian Unveils Election Manifesto

    TER-PETROSIAN UNVEILS ELECTION MANIFESTO
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 7 2008

    Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian made public his election campaign
    manifesto on Monday, pledging to turn Armenia into a "normal" state
    where governments are formed as a result of free elections and respect
    laws, human rights and free enterprise.

    The 16-page document also reiterates his bitter critique of the
    country's current leadership. It claims that Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian's victory in next month's presidential election would be
    "tantamount to a national disaster."

    The manifesto, titled "Pre-Election Program or Serene Musings," was
    unveiled just over a week after the formation of Ter-Petrosian's
    national campaign headquarters to be managed by former Foreign
    Minister Aleksandr Arzumanian. Its coordinating council, which
    comprises representatives of some of the opposition parties allied
    to Ter-Petrosian, held its first meeting and appointed the heads of
    its territorial branches in Yerevan on December 29.

    It was decided that the Ter-Petrosian campaign in Yerevan will be
    run by Khachatur Sukiasian, a wealthy parliamentarian who has been
    facing a government crackdown on his businesses ever since backing
    the ex-president's political comeback last September. Sukiasian will
    oversee the work of Ter-Petrosian campaign offices in each of the
    city's ten administrative districts. Among the heads of those offices
    are former Interior Minister Suren Abrahamian and Pargev Ohanian,
    a prominent judge who was controversially dismissed by President
    Robert Kocharian last fall.

    Ter-Petrosian's pre-election discourse so far has focused on the
    analysis of controversial episodes from his 1991-1998 presidency as
    well as the current Armenian government's track record. His already
    known evaluations, coupled with a retrospective look at the last few
    decades of Armenian history, make up a large part of the published
    manifesto. The ex-president, who will turn 63 on Wednesday, again
    denounces the Kocharian administration as a corrupt and criminal
    regime that tolerates no dissent and is motivated by self-enrichment
    at the expense of a downtrodden population.

    The document also lays out his vision for Armenia's future. It says
    that, if elected, Ter-Petrosian will strive for the "dismantling of the
    existing kpletrocratic system" and the establishment of "full-fledged
    democracy" anchored in free elections, protection of human rights and
    judicial independence. Also, law-enforcement bodies and the military
    would no longer be used as tools for government repression.

    These pledges will ring hollow to Ter-Petrosian's longtime critics
    who see few fundamental differences between Armenia's current and
    former rulers. They point, among other things, to the Ter-Petrosian
    government's failure to hold a single election recognized as free
    and fair by the international community.

    Ter-Petrosian's unveiled socioeconomic agenda is based on three
    key principles of market-based economics which he believes are
    absent in Armenia: a level playing field for all businesspeople,
    fair economic competition, and absolute protection of private
    property. While pledging to retrieve what he says are huge amounts
    of money "stolen from the people" by wealthy government-connected
    businessmen, Ter-Petrosian says that he would not seek a massive
    "re-distribution of property" once in power.

    Ter-Petrosian further commits himself to launching a crackdown on
    widespread tax evasion which he says should primarily target large
    corporate taxpayers that are believed to grossly underreport their
    earnings thanks to government patronage. "According to foreign experts,
    only 22 percent of the state budget's tax revenues is currently paid
    by large entrepreneurs, whereas [that proportion] should have stood
    at 75 percent" reads his campaign platform.

    In that regard, the document reaffirms Ter-Petrosian's pledge to help
    abolish a government-drafted law, effective from January 1, that will
    make it much harder for small Armenian firms to qualify for so-called
    "simplified tax." Payment of that tax has exempted them from other,
    heftier duties.

    According to Ter-Petrosian, these and other economic measures contained
    in his platform would double Armenia's Gross Domestic Product and
    triple its state budget in the next five years. "Needless to say
    that in the event of the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
    the lifting of the economic blockades [of Armenia,] and the opening
    of the Turkish-Armenian border, much more impressive results could
    be expected," reads the platform.

    Responding to Ter-Petrosian's grave allegations, Kocharian and
    Sarkisian have been particularly scathing about his handling of the
    first years of Armenia's painful transition to the free market. The
    Armenian economy shrunk by half in 1992-1993 following the break-up of
    the Soviet Union and the outbreak of wars in Karabakh and elsewhere
    in the South Caucasus. Kocharian has charged that the Ter-Petrosian
    administration was primarily responsible for turning Armenia into
    "one of the poorest countries" of the world.

    In his manifesto, Ter-Petrosian stands by his belief that the collapse
    of the Soviet economy was inevitable and that it was more drastic in
    Armenia than in other former Soviet republics because of the Karabakh
    war, the crippling blockades imposed by Azerbaijan and Turkey as well
    as turmoil in Georgia. But he admits that many Armenians do not and
    will not accept this explanation. "When a person is worse off today
    than he was yesterday, no logical explanation can satisfy him,"
    he says.

    The document is far less specific on foreign policy matters, with
    Ter-Petrosian saying only that he would strengthen Armenia's relations
    with Russia, Georgia and Iran and promising "constructive efforts"
    to normalize ties with Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    On the Karabakh conflict, the manifesto says Ter-Petrosian would
    show the "political will" to achieve a compromise peace deal with
    Azerbaijan that would enable the Karabakh Armenians to exercise their
    "right to self-determination." It does not specify Ter-Petrosian's
    position on international mediators' existing peace proposals that
    are similar to a Karabakh settlement which he was ready to accept
    before his resignation in 1998.
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