Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

TOL: Presidential Ambitions

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

  • TOL: Presidential Ambitions

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    Jan 14 2008


    Presidential Ambitions

    by Haroutiun Khachatrian
    14 January 2008

    A formidable prime minister faces a former president in Armenia's
    upcoming election. From EurasiaNet.

    YEREVAN | With a little more than one month to go before Armenia's
    presidential election, the field of candidates is coming into sharper
    focus. Overall, nine men are expected to battle for the presidency
    when the campaign officially gets underway on 21 January. But most
    experts believe the race quickly will boil down to a contest between
    two men - Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian and former president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian.


    Robert Kocharian
    The presidential vote is slated for 19 February. Sarkisian has long
    been viewed as the favorite to follow departing President Robert
    Kocharian, who is constitutionally barred from running for
    reelection. The benefits of incumbency are clearly on Sarkisian's
    side, as his Republican Party won a landslide victory in the May 2007
    parliamentary elections. Opinion polls have shown Sarkisian to enjoy
    the support of roughly one-third of potential voters, enough to give
    him a commanding lead over the other presidential hopefuls. Artur
    Baghdasarian, the leader of the Orinats Yerkir (Land of Law) Party,
    and Vahan Hovhannisian, Vice Speaker of the National Assembly
    representing Dashnaktsutiun (the Armenian Revolutionary Federation),
    trailed well behind Sarkisian with 13 percent and 6 percent support,
    respectively, in the latest poll. Ter-Petrosian was among the six
    presidential contenders whose polling numbers were running in the low
    single digits.

    Ter-Petrosian served as the first president of post-Soviet Armenia,
    his tenure stretching from 1991 to 1998. In February 1998, he was
    forced to resign amid a severe backlash to his suggestion that
    Armenia make concessions to Azerbaijan in the still-stalemated peace
    talks on Nagorno-Karabakh. Ter-Petrosian's successor, Kocharian, has
    governed since then.


    Levon Ter-Petrosian
    Judging by the numbers, it would seem that Ter-Petrosian poses no
    threat to Sarkisian's electoral chances. Yet it's evident that
    Sarkisian supporters within the government see the former president
    as the most formidable opponent in the field. Ter-Petrosian and his
    aides, for instance, have been denied access to most television
    channels. The one notable exception is Yerkir Media TV, which is
    controlled by the Dashnak Party.

    At the same time, state-controlled media have provided generous
    amounts of air time to longtime political enemies of Ter-Petrosian,
    including Vazgen Manukian, the leader of the National Democratic
    Party, and Artashes Geghamian, the leader of the National Unity
    Party.

    TOUGH TIME FOR EX-PRESIDENT

    Privately operated television stations have generally followed the
    lead of government-controlled channels. Campaign events organized by
    the Ter-Petrosian camp have received scant media coverage, despite
    the fact that several rallies have drawn tens of thousands of
    spectators. The plainly evident media bias prompted two European
    officials - Terry Davis, secretary-general of the Council of Europe,
    and Peter Semneby, the European Union special representative for the
    South Caucasus - to register complaints.

    If anything, Ter-Petrosian has received even rougher treatment from
    some print media. For example, the Hayots Ashkharh daily, an
    independent newspaper with a decidedly pro-governmental outlook,
    splashed two remarkable photomontages across the front pages of two
    editions in late December. In one, Ter-Petrosian is depicted as
    wearing a traditional Turkish fez, a clearly derogatory image given
    Armenia's long-standing hostility with both Turkey and Azerbaijan. In
    the second montage, Ter-Petrosian's Yerevan home is depicted as
    flying a Turkish flag from a pole on its roof. The combined message
    of the two images was unmistakable: a vote to return Ter-Petrosian to
    power would be a vote to capitulate in Armenia's ongoing diplomatic
    struggles with Turkey and Azerbaijan.

    Even in a fairer political environment, Ter-Petrosian's candidacy
    would face substantial challenges. Ter-Petrosian managed to generate
    initial attention for his candidacy with a series of sharp attacks on
    Kocharian's administration. The task now will be to transform the
    disenchantment with the Kocharian administration among a certain
    segment of the electorate into genuine support for his own political
    program.

    Although about two dozen political parties and civic organizations
    have endorsed Ter-Petrosian's candidacy - most of them relatively
    small in numbers and in influence - it remains to be seen if he can
    build an effective organizational network. "He carries the bad
    heritage of the past ... but he is a good speaker and has [lengthy]
    experience," the Azg daily summed up on 25 December.

    One thing that is working in Ter-Petrosian's favor is that he is
    willing to operate within the existing political system, and has not
    been an advocate of revolutionary change. This has enabled him to
    cast himself as a political moderate. "There will be no revolution.
    I'll not allow violence and illegal actions from our side,"
    Ter-Petrosian told the Moscow-based Kommersant daily on 6 December,
    responding to a question about his possible actions in the event of
    vote rigging by authorities.

    Meanwhile, Kocharian's fate after his departure from the presidency
    remains a subject of widespread conjecture. Speculation is focusing
    on the possibility of Kocharian and Sarkisian swapping places, with
    the latter assuming the presidency and the former taking over as
    prime minister. In October, Sarkisian denied such a possibility, but
    an article published 29 December in the Haykakan Zhamanak newspaper,
    citing "reliable sources," said that such an arrangement has indeed
    been agreed upon.

    Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer specializing in
    economic and political affairs. A partner post from EurasiaNet.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X