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Hovannisian Opts For Election Neutrality

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  • Hovannisian Opts For Election Neutrality

    HOVANNISIAN OPTS FOR ELECTION NEUTRALITY
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 21 2008

    Opposition leader Raffi Hovannisian indicated over the weekend that he
    and his Zharangutyun (Heritage) party will not endorse any of Prime
    Minister Serzh Sarkisian's four main election challengers before the
    first round of voting slated for February 19.

    In a statement issued on Saturday, the party's governing board said it
    will decide whom to support "later on" if at least one of them fails
    to drop out of the presidential race in favor of another opposition
    candidate. It said none of the four candidates, among them former
    President Levon Ter-Petrosian, stands a chance of defeating Sarkisian
    on his own.

    "If participation in the presidential race is an end in itself, rather
    than a chance to win for those political forces, maybe we should
    wait for the [run-up to the] second round and see who the public
    supports the most," the Zharangutyun spokesman, Hovsep Khurshudian,
    told RFE/RL. "We will naturally support that force."

    "There has to be a consolidation of forces. The mistakes made during
    the parliamentary elections must not be repeated," Khurshudian said,
    referring to the Armenian opposition's failure to set up major
    alliances in the run-up to the May 2007 vote. The Zharangutyun
    statement went further, saying that "appropriate lessons have not
    been learned" by the opposition.

    Hovannisian himself was accused by some opposition politicians
    at the time of scuttling the formation of one such alliance that
    would have comprised Zharangutyun, two pro-Ter-Petrosian parties
    and the National Democratic Union (AZhM) of Vazgen Manukian, another
    presidential candidate. Hovannisian and his allies insist, however,
    that they were not to blame for the last-minute collapse of talks
    between those opposition groups.

    Zharangutyun is one of only two opposition parties represented in
    Armenia's parliament, putting its popular leader, who is not eligible
    to run for president, in a position to influence the outcome of the
    upcoming election. Ter-Petrosian and Vahan Hovannisian (no relation
    to Raffi), the candidate of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    (Dashnaktsutyun), have been particularly active in courting the
    U.S.-born politician.

    Hovannisian said last month that his choice will depend on candidates'
    answers to his 22 written questions that challenged them to not only
    elaborate on their campaign platforms but also to list their "main
    merits and shortcomings" and disclose their assets. The presidential
    hopefuls were also told to specify if they had ever jailed innocent
    people, benefited from vote rigging or committed other "deeds
    punishable by criminal law."

    The Zharangutyun statement complained that "in essence" none of them
    has filled out the highly unusual questionnaire. It said Hovannisian
    only received a "letter of courtesy" from Ter-Petrosian and "general
    reaction" from another opposition contender, Artur Baghdasarian.

    Reports in the Armenian press have said that some members of the
    Zharangutyun board have been pressing Hovannisian, who returned
    to Yerevan last week after spending nearly a month in the United
    States, to throw his weight behind Ter-Petrosian. At least three of
    Zharangutyun's seven parliament deputies are known to support the
    ex-president's candidacy.

    "I wouldn't say that those reports are wide of the mark," said
    Khurshudian. "Some sections of the board and the party as a whole
    do gravitate towards the candidate mentioned by you. But there are
    also quite serious sections of the party who support other opposition
    candidates."

    As a parliamentary force, Zharangutyun is entitled to controlling one
    of the eight seats in each of about 2,000 various-level commissions
    that will be conducting the February 19 election. According to
    Khurshudian, only about 1,000 party members and supporters are
    available to sit on those commissions. He said Zharangutyun will
    therefore ask other opposition parties to fill the remaining vacancies
    with experienced activists.
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