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Leader Of Karabakh War Veterans Struggles With Hobson's Choice

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  • Leader Of Karabakh War Veterans Struggles With Hobson's Choice

    LEADER OF KARABAKH WAR VETERANS STRUGGLES WITH HOBSON'S CHOICE
    Gayane Abrahamyan

    EurasiaNet
    June 16 2008
    NY

    His name was a recurring chant at opposition rallies following
    Armenia's disputed February 19 presidential vote. Opposition leaders
    believed that support from former deputy defense minister and Manvel
    Grigorian, head of the country's largest group of Nagorno-Karabakh
    war veterans, would be critical in catapulting them to victory. But
    the much-touted support never came. And now, nearly four months after
    Armenia's presidential election, the question lingers on: who exactly
    do Grigorian and his coalition of Karabakh war veterans support?

    With ties still strained to the breaking point between the Armenian
    government and opposition, the query is far from academic.

    Grigorian's 30,000-strong Yerkrapah [Custodian of the Land] Volunteers
    Union is a veterans' assistance group often termed "a state within
    a state." With a national network of members, many in key government
    posts, Yerkrapah has exercised considerable political influence since
    its 1993 formation. "[T]heir statement before every election about
    whom they support has been important," commented Vardan Abrahamian,
    a professor of political science at Yerevan State University.

    Recognizing that importance, opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian
    repeatedly told supporters in late February that the general and
    fellow Deputy Defense Minister General Gagik Melkonian had signed
    on to support his call for fresh elections. But neither Grigorian
    nor Melkonian ever publicly expressed his own view. In early May,
    Grigorian, who was fired from his post as deputy defense minister on
    April 2, declared that his organization "has never been and will not
    be engaged in politics and no one can speculate with its name."

    At Yerevan's Yerablur cemetery of soldiers who fought in the
    1988-1994 Karabakh war with Azerbaijan, though, the question of
    Yerkrapah's allegiances has a clear-cut answer. For the past three
    weeks, a group of over 100 individuals have been on a hunger strike
    both in the capital and in the northern town of Gyumri to protest the
    imprisonment of war veterans and the March 1 crackdown on opposition
    protestors. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    To these Yerkrapah members, Grigorian's apparently passive stance
    on Armenia's political divide is unacceptable. "[I]f he had stood by
    the people's side, the authorities would not have had the courage to
    use troops against the people," hunger striker Hayk Asatrian said in
    reference to the March 1 crackdown on Ter-Petrosian supporters.

    Grigorian could not be reached for comment.

    One associate, however, indicates that Ter-Petrosian has not been
    the only political figure courting the 52-year-old general. The
    associate, who asked not to be named, told EurasiaNet that for the
    past few weeks representatives of both President Serzh Sarkisian and
    ex-President Robert Kocharian have been visiting Grigorian at his
    home in Etchmiadzin, not far from Yerevan.

    "Each tries to draw him to his own side," the associate said,
    expressing the widely held view that Kocharian is allegedly still
    attempting to exercise political influence.

    The associate could not state the status of Grigorian's current
    relations with Ter-Petrosian. The general himself has never publicly
    addressed the ex-president's claims about his support; the Defense
    Ministry has vigorously denied them.

    Many Ter-Petrosian supporters, however, believe that the large number
    of arrests among Yerkrapah members following March 1 was designed to
    weaken the union and to neutralize any potential political threat to
    the government it may pose.

    According to the state prosecutor's office, 25 of the 52 individuals
    still in jail are Yerkrapah members. Their number includes Yerkrapah
    deputy director and parliamentarian Myasnik Malkhasian; five Yerkrapah
    members have already been sentenced to prison, while an additional
    four are on a wanted list. "Authorities understand very well that
    [the Union] is powerful and realized after the February election that
    they are losing control [over the group] because most of its members
    supported the former president," commented ex-deputy defense minister
    Vahan Shirkhanian, who served under President Kocharian from 1999
    to 2000.

    The governing Republican Party of Armenia, however, dismisses that
    opinion as groundless. Party spokesperson Eduard Sharmazanov says
    that all members of Yerkrapah "deserve the highest esteem" as heroes.

    "[T]hey are in prison not because they are Yerkrapah members, but
    because they are charged with crimes," Sharmazanov asserted.

    Government officials have so far kept mum about the general. On March
    13, then President-Elect Serzh Sarkisian, who fought with Grigorian
    in Karabakh, told television viewers in reference to Grigorian that
    he found it "very sad and painful that he, for reasons unknown to me,
    tried to go into politics and made an attempt to disobey the Supreme
    Commander-in-Chief."

    Grigorian had served as deputy defense minister since 1999, following
    outspoken Yerkrapah criticism of the government's handling of the
    1999 parliamentary shootings that left eight people dead.

    Within Grigorian's circle, though, the government is seen to be still
    holding a sizeable stick over the general. On April 6, Grigorian and
    an aide were charged with having allegedly threatened to murder an
    employee of airline Armavia and his family. A spokesperson for the
    general prosecutor's office declined to elaborate on the charge. "The
    case will remain open unless Manvel expresses readiness to cooperate
    with them [members of the Sarkisian administration]," Grigorian's
    associate speculated.

    Meanwhile, Grigorian is keeping a low profile. On May 8, a memorial
    day for veterans, Grigorian visited the Yerablur cemetery alone
    to commemorate the war dead rather than with his usual Yerkrapah
    coterie. A traditional Victory Day concert also did not take place,
    Yerkrapah veterans say.

    Following the general's April 2 dismissal from the Defense Ministry
    and disappearance from public life, many opposition supporters claimed
    that he had been placed under house arrest. But Yerkrapah spokesperson
    Hakob Hakobian now denies the claim, saying that Grigorian is at
    home in Etchmiadzin and is "very glad to have more time to spend on
    organizing Yerkrapah's activities."

    For one senior Ter-Petrosian supporter, that news comes as no
    surprise. Both the government and the opposition, noted Suren
    Sureniants, a member of the opposition Republic Party's political
    council, "expected more from Manvel Grigorian than he could give."
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