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Patronage And Deep Pockets Become Issues In The Yerevan Mayoral Elec

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  • Patronage And Deep Pockets Become Issues In The Yerevan Mayoral Elec

    PATRONAGE AND DEEP POCKETS BECOME ISSUES IN THE YEREVAN MAYORAL ELECTION
    Marianna Grigoryan

    Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org
    April 8, 2009

    Yerevan's City Council elections may be more than a month and a half
    away, but improvements to the Armenian capital's infrastructure and
    appearance remind residents that the unofficial campaign season is
    well under way.

    In recent weeks, incumbent Mayor Gagik Beglarian, a member of the
    governing Republican Party of Armenia, has promised to build new water
    lines, to landscape parks, to pave thousands of square meters of back
    yards, and to install additional city lights. His reason? "We shall
    succeed together," Beglarian declared on April 1 to journalists in
    one Yerevan district.

    Campaign workers for Healthcare Minister Harutiun Kushkian, the
    mayoral candidate for the Prosperous Armenia Party, have been busy,
    too. Kushkian supporters distributed roses and greeting cards
    to women in Yerevan on April 7, the Armenian Day of Beauty and
    Motherhood. Prosperous Armenia is joined with the Republican Party
    in Armenia's governing coalition on the national level.

    "This is not a pre-election move," said Prosperous Armenia
    parliamentarian Naira Zohrabian who is handling public relations for
    the campaign. "Attention to women is a tradition in our party."

    The handouts and public works are making it harder for an opposition
    party coalition to gain traction with voters. The coalition is
    aiming to capture a big enough share of the vote to make opposition
    leader and former president Levon Ter-Petrosian mayor of the
    Armenian capital. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/in sightb/articles/eav031609i.shtml
    Some of his supporters indicate that their apparent financial
    disadvantage is imposing a significant hurdle to achieving their
    aim. A top representative of People's Party of Armenia, a member of
    Ter-Petrosian's opposition movement, noted that such distributions
    have not occurred in the past. "Unfortunately, the work style is quite
    familiar to us," commented Ruzan Khachatrian, a member of the party's
    political council. "Those efforts will be even bigger this time,
    because the opposition's chances are incomparably bigger as well."

    There are seven contenders for the mayor's post, including
    Ter-Petrosian, whose participation has stimulated media and public
    interest in the May 31 vote. Parties, however, have revealed little
    information about their campaigns. A 60-million-dram (about $161,264)
    spending limit, however, would appear to set certain restraints on
    their activities -- at least by law. But some observers see parties,
    with their handouts and promises, as evading the spirit of the spending
    limit. If that is the case, there is little that can be done to stop
    such practices, election officials say.

    "The Central Electoral Commission has no authority to supervise
    [campaign expenses] before the campaign officially starts," explained
    commission spokesperson Tatev Ohanian.

    Ohanian, however, saw no problem with the distribution of flowers
    in Yerevan to women voters. "The CEC would not oppose it if women
    were also presented with perfumes 365 days a year," he said. "That
    wouldn't be bad."

    People's Party of Armenia official Khachatrian counters that flowers
    are just the start. "Authorities will once again use administrative
    resources. They collect passport data at educational and healthcare
    institutions," she said. Opposition media reports that passport
    data is being collected to assist Mayor Beglarian's reelection bid
    have sparked concerns among both the opposition and members of the
    governing coalition.

    Haykakan Zhamanak daily newspaper reporter Christine Khanumian visited
    Yerevan's School #60 and identified herself as an image consultant
    for Mayor Beglarian. The school principal shared the passport data
    entered into her computer, and showed that they had been recorded on
    a CD and sent to the mayor, Khanumian claimed.

    "The principal boasted that she had personally collected a large amount
    of data [about her subordinates], and told me that everything is going
    very well," Khanumian told EurasiaNet. "As I was leaving, she wished
    success to 'our common cause'." An assistant to the principal later
    denied the allegations, she said.

    The collection of passport data by political parties is a reoccurring
    problem in Armenian election campaigns; the data is used to check
    that individuals vote for a certain candidate as promised.

    Mayoral candidate Artsvik Minasian, a member of the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation Party, told EurasiaNet that he had been
    given such data by a number of sources. "That's not the best way to
    succeed in elections," Minasian said, adding that "the question has
    also been raised by colleagues from the coalition."

    "It's very important not to have administrative leverage used,
    yet it is," he continued. "Only the president can guarantee that
    administrative leverage will not be used. Like in many other matters,
    here as well, it depends on the president's behavior."

    Prosperous Armenia MP Zohrabian also admitted to receiving such data,
    but put the onus for a fair vote on all parties participating in the
    election. "Each [political] group needs to be able to take control
    over the procedure," she said. "Besides, I don't take those lists and
    data seriously. That's a waste of time." Voters can vote as they wish,
    even if they give out their passport details, Zohrabian asserted.

    The governing Republican Party of Armenia asserts that discussions
    about the use of administrative resources are nonsense. Spokesperson
    Eduard Sharmazanov underlined that the party neither needs, nor has
    the desire or opportunity, to use administrative resources. "The
    ancient Romans used to say that nothing spreads as rapidly as a lie,"
    Sharmazanov commented. "Whether it is rain or snow, there are always
    the authorities to blame for this. We will do our best to hold an open,
    transparent and democratic election."
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