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Sarkisian Stresses Security, Prosperity On Campaign Trail

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  • Sarkisian Stresses Security, Prosperity On Campaign Trail

    SARKISIAN STRESSES SECURITY, PROSPERITY ON CAMPAIGN TRAIL
    By Astghik Bedevian and Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 24 2008

    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian campaigned in the southeastern Syunik
    region on Thursday, again promising economic betterment and saying
    that he would safeguard Armenia's national security better than any
    of his eight election challengers.

    "The war [with Azerbaijan] made be a realist, I want to become
    president of the republic," Sarkisian told hundreds of people attending
    his campaign rally in the regional capital Kapan. His ten-minute
    speech there was preceded and followed by a free concert of Armenian
    pop starts traveling with the prime minister.

    "I want to become president of the republic so that our cities are
    not bombarded anymore, so that lights are always on in our homes in
    the evening, so that we can turn the victory achieved at the cost of
    your sacrifices and heroic acts by your sons and our comrades into a
    document," he said in a town that endured cross-border shelling from
    nearby Azerbaijani army positions during the 1992-1994 war.

    Syunik is the second Armenian province visited by Sarkisian since
    the official start of campaigning for the February 19 presidential
    election on Monday. He started the campaign in the neighboring Vayots
    Dzor region, promising to double household incomes in the country
    within five years if he becomes president. This was also a key theme
    of his speeches in Kapan and other regional towns.

    "I will ensure that none of those who have backed me feels embarrassed
    for electing me," the prime minister declared in the main Kapan
    square adorned with his massive campaign billboard. "We have all
    the possibilities of living at least twice as better in five years
    from now."

    As was the case during similar rallies staged by Sarkisian's Republican
    Party (HHK) ahead of the May 2007 parliamentary elections, many in
    the crowd were teachers of public schools and their students.

    Schoolchildren interviewed by RFE/RL claimed that they were ordered
    by their teachers to come to the rally after their classes.

    Meanwhile, more than 300 kilometers to the north, in the southern
    Ararat region, the Sarkisian campaign faced allegations of vote buying
    from local residents attending campaign gatherings organized by Artur
    Baghdasarian, one of the opposition presidential candidates.

    "Serzh Sarkisian said yesterday that those who hand out cash [to
    voters] are traitors," a woman, who identified herself as Lena,
    told Baghdasarian in the local town of Vedi. "Maybe the presidential
    candidate doesn't know that people are collecting [voters'] passports
    on his behalf."

    "They go from village to village, from house to house and hand out
    cash," she claimed without naming names.

    Vote buying has grown widespread in Armenia over the past decade. The
    HHK and other pro-government parties were accused by their opponents of
    heavily relying to the illegal practice during the 2007 parliamentary
    polls. They both strongly denied such accusations.

    "I must say that all those village mayors and other individuals who
    commit electoral crimes will be strictly punished by law," Baghdasarian
    told voters in Vedi. He also deplored what he called an atmosphere
    of fear reigning in Ararat.

    Much of the fruit-growing region is widely regarded as the de facto
    fiefdom of the influential Deputy Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian,
    who is also Sarkisian's campaign manager.
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