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  • Local election, national politics

    Local election, national politics

    Municipal elections took place in Yerevan on 31 May, "a local election
    driven by a national agenda". Amidst claims of widespread fraud and
    intimidation, opposition leader and former president Levon Ter-Petrosyan
    called for protests

    17.06.2009 From Yerevan, Onnik Krikorian

    As the first significant election to be held since last year's bitterly
    disputed and highly controversial presidential vote, the conduct of the
    poll to determine Yerevan's mayor should have provided the authorities
    with the sorely-needed opportunity to improve Armenia's democratic
    credentials in the international arena. However, while a small team of
    European observers considered the municipal election to be `largely
    conducted in compliance with European standards," local observers and
    analysts were not impressed.

    Speaking to Osservatorio, Armenian National and International Studies
    (ACNIS) Director Richard Giragosian is one of many critical of the vote.
    `It was outrageous and yet another example of the systemic abuse and
    misuse of administrative resources, the power of incumbency in this
    country, and yet another lost opportunity for Armenia to actually turn
    the page after the 1 March fiasco. However, the real hypocrisy comes not
    from the Armenian government, but from the European observers who once
    again endorsed a fragrantly abusive election.'

    Despite such opinions, however, one diplomatic source in Yerevan urges
    caution when considering the opinion of the observers from the Council
    of Europe's Congress of Local and Regional Authorities by suggesting
    that critics wait until the final report is published.

    Regardless, the stakes in the election were always going to be high.
    Although ostensibly a local election, the importance of the vote to
    determine who controls the economic and political heart of the country
    had already been heightened by the candidacy of Levon Ter-Petrosyan,
    Armenia's first president and leader of the main extra-parliamentary
    opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC). The coalition of over a
    dozen minor political parties supporting him considered the vote to be a
    `second-round' of last year's presidential election.

    Ter-Petrosyan came in second during that vote to the current president,
    Serzh Sargsyan, amidst claims of widespread fraud and intimidation. A
    tense post-election standoff ended only when a state of emergency was
    declared following bloody clashes between opposition supporters and
    security forces which left 10 dead. Hundreds of Ter-Petrosyan's closest
    supporters and allies were detained, some still remain in custody or
    prison, and a few remain on the run, location unknown.

    Considering that, claims from the local affiliate of Transparency
    International that the municipal vote was the `most illegal, amoral and
    cynical elections in all the history of Armenia' might be considered
    somewhat of an exaggeration, but the larger concerns about
    democratization in the country certainly continue to ring true. From the
    outset, reports indicated that vote-buying was rampant among an
    electorate which remains apathetic and unconvinced that it has the
    ability to determine its own representatives and leaders.

    Turnout was only 52 percent, despite probable ballot-box stuffing and
    reports of bussing in of voters by the ruling governmental Republican
    Party (RPA). Final results showed that the RPA won with 47.39 percent of
    the vote, while Ter-Petrosyan's ANC came in a distant third with just 17
    percent, leading some in the parliamentary opposition Heritage party to
    criticize the former president. Two of its MPs, Armen Martirosyan and
    Zaruhi Postanjyan, said that the ANC's poor showing indicated that it
    was `not a mature political force yet.'

    Giragosian agrees, but also says the vote highlighted other shortcomings
    in Armenia's fledgling democratic system. Rather than focus on local
    issues of concern, much of Ter-Petrosyan's campaign rhetoric instead
    centered more on accusing the authorities of `selling-out' national
    issues during efforts to improve relations with Turkey and reported
    momentum in negotiations to resolve the long-running conflict with
    Azerbaijan over the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabakh.

    `One of my fundamental criticisms across the board is that we had a
    local election driven by a national agenda where this wasn't about trash
    collection, road repairs or local issues of concern to Yerevan's
    residents,' he says. `This is a reflection on the sad state of local
    politics in Armenia where discourse is already fundamentally limited
    within certain nationalist parameters. However, this was a
    miscalculation because it failed and is rooted in the bigger problem of
    politics driven by personality rather than by policy alternatives.'

    Moreover, argues Giragosian, while the two main governmental parties
    could be faulted for resorting to falsification, so too can the
    extra-parliamentary opposition be for preparing for what it hoped would
    be huge post-election rallies on the scale of those following last
    year's presidential vote. Instead, the day after the 31 May election,
    the opposition only managed to gather just a few thousand, with many of
    those attending looking depressed and disillusioned. A new strategy was
    only revealed last Friday at another rally attended by just 4-5,000 people.

    Typically, the first three main points from the opposition's 12-point
    platform focuses on Armenia-Turkey relations and the Nagorno Karabakh
    conflict, highlighting the fact that political forces on all sides
    consider such issues as the only way to mobilize support.

    But, if falling attendances at opposition rallies and low support at the
    polls might also represent the gradual demise of the extra-parliamentary
    opposition, Giragosian argues that last month's mayoral election instead
    indicates that there could be a new re-drawing of the political
    landscape, but perhaps in unexpected ways. With clashes reported between
    the RPA and another ruling party, Prosperous Armenia, the real changes
    might occur away from the opposition and in the government camp itself.

    `The only difference from previous elections is that within the monolith
    of the ruling coalition we saw new fractures and fissures appearing with
    members from the two parties literally assaulting and getting into fist
    fights with each other. The election demonstrated yet again that there
    is the lack of true political parties in this country and the lack of
    any grassroots bottom-up driven policy or ideology-driven forces,' he says.

    `It was strict confirmation that things are still unacceptably bad and
    we're going in the wrong direction. Armenia is approaching a crossroads
    where it might become even more authoritarian by following a Belarus
    model. However, the real determinant here is not politics, but
    economics. The political stalemate and polarization can sustain the
    system, and it can be managed, but an economic crisis would be the
    tipping point. If the government can't handle that, then this will pose
    more serious challenges.'

    ---
    http://www.osservatoriobalcani.o rg/article/articleview/11471/1/404
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