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BAKU: Armenian People Oppose Armenian Government - Zeyno Baran

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  • BAKU: Armenian People Oppose Armenian Government - Zeyno Baran

    ARMENIAN PEOPLE OPPOSE ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT - ZEYNO BARAN

    Trend News Agency
    March 5 2008
    Azerbaijan

    Azerbaijan, Baku, 4 March /Trend News corr A. Gasimova, Z. Novosvitski/
    There is no outside influence of destabilization of the situation in
    Armenia after the presidential elections. "The way I see it, it is
    the Armenian people against the Armenian government. I do not believe
    there is any outside influence," the American expert Zeyno Baran said.

    On the morning of 2 March, President Robert Kocheryan declared an
    emergency situation in Armenia until 20 March. This was caused by
    continuous demonstrations by supporters of the presidential candidate
    Levon Ter-Petrosian, who accused the authorities of gerrymandering
    during the elections. The dispersal of the demonstration by the police
    resulted in confrontation. According to the Armenian Health Ministry,
    the number of the victims of the riots which took place in Yerevan
    on 1 March totalled 131, and eight of them died from gunshot wounds.

    "The majority of Armenian people seem to be fed up with Armenia being
    isolated; they want to join the community of democratic countries,
    have good relations with Russia, but also the West," Ms Maran,
    Director of the Eurasian Research Centre at the Washington-based
    Hudson Institute, told Trend News via e-mail.

    According to Ms Baran, if Sargsyan takes office as President without
    reaching a satisfactory compromise with the opposition, fears of his
    legitimacy will be in question and he will not be able to resolve any
    of the tough issues, including Karabakh. "Some say this is similar
    to what happened recently in Georgia, but there is a huge difference
    and that is the upcoming parliamentary elections in Georgia, which
    will give the opposition another chance, whereas there are no such
    elections planned in Armenia," she said.

    "I am not sure if we can call what is going on there the beginning
    of a colour revolution because the Armenian government has already
    shown it will use force against the people," Ms Baran said.

    The destabilization of the situation in Armenia is attributed to the
    fact that the people more concerned about the social situation in the
    country rather than the achievement of foreign policy goals. "It is
    predetermined by the absence of resources for foreign mobilization,
    that is Armenia lacks mobilization because of foreign challenges and
    there too many big social problems concerning the Armenian population,"
    Aleksandr Paliy, the expert of the Foreign Policy Institute of the
    Diplomatic Academy at the Foreign Ministry of Ukraine said.

    According to the expert, now it is difficult to convince that the
    settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and relations with Turkey
    should be priorities in the presence of unsolved social problems. The
    expert said that there are conditions in Armenia for 'social explosion'
    that can lead the ongoing process of the formation of a contra-elite.

    According to Paliy, the government can solve the situation. "The
    government will have to make very serous concessions. Sooner or later,
    a similar 'explosion' will end up with the victory and government
    structures supporting it. The development of events in this manner
    is not ruled out either," he said.

    Since 20 February, Yerevan has been facing demonstrations,
    rally-marches, as well as student sit down protests organized by
    the opposition. The organizers and participants are protesting
    against the results of the elections. After violent suppression of
    the demonstration, many oppositionists were arrested, and their fate
    is still unknown. After the emergency situation was announced in the
    country, the mass media was put under censorship control.

    On 19 February, Armenia held presidential elections. According to
    the final results by the Armenian Central Election Commission, Serzh
    Sargsyan, the head of the Republican Party, won the elections with
    52.82% of votes (862,369). The ex-President Levon Ter-Petrosian took
    second place (21.5%).
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