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Armenia Opposition Abandons Talk Of Revolution

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  • Armenia Opposition Abandons Talk Of Revolution

    ARMENIA OPPOSITION ABANDONS TALK OF REVOLUTION
    By Rita Karapetian in Yerevan

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    March 6 2009
    UK

    As Ter-Petrosian distances himself from earlier radical rhetoric -
    now talk of coalition government in the air.

    When of thousands of Armenians crowded into the centre of Yerevan on
    March 1 for a rally commemorating last year's bloodshed, they may
    well have expected to hear fighting talk. If so, they were in for
    a disappointment.

    Instead, at a meeting held to commemorate the ten people killed last
    year in a police charge, the leader of the Armenian National Congress,
    ANC, signalled a change of stance.

    Levon Ter-Petrosian urged his assembled supporters to abandon all
    thought of bringing about political change through street protests and
    concentrate on a long struggle waged through exclusively constitutional
    methods.

    "The vocabulary of the ANC has never contained words like 'storm',
    'rebellion' or 'revolution' and it never will," the country's first
    president from 1991 to 1998 told the crowd.

    Ter-Petrosian said the guiding principle of the ANC was to avoid any
    actions that might undermine the interests of the state, its security
    and the welfare of its people.

    Given the current fragile situation in the country, it would be unwise
    to stage permanent street protests, marches and pickets, he continued.

    The opposition leader said there was a chance the authorities might
    offer to form a coalition government - and, significantly, he did
    not rule out the option.

    Instead, if the offer were made, it would be up to ANC supporters to
    decide whether this was a good idea.

    Anything between 20,000 and 60,000 people had gathered near
    Matenadaran, the ancient manuscripts museum, in central Yerevan,
    to listen to Ter-Petrosian.

    The city authorities initially wanted them to hold the meeting outside
    Yerevan, but, after negotiations, police allowed the rally to take
    place in the centre.

    After Ter-Petrosian ended his speech, they marched towards Myasnikian
    square, scene of last year's carnage. Armed police followed them
    all the way to the square, where flowers were laid in memory of
    the victims.

    The ANC described the meeting as a victory - and as proof that a
    strong and unbending opposition had emerged in Armenia against a
    backdrop of repression and harassment.

    But Ter-Petrosian's pacific tone left some people wondering whether
    the opposition had concluded that it might gain more from constructive
    dialogue with the authorities than from confrontation.

    The government has been signalling for some time that it is ready to
    extend its rivals an olive branch.

    Naira Zohrabian, from the Prosperous Armenia Party, a member of the
    ruling coalition, said dialogue might indeed be possible if a national
    accord was what the opposition wanted.

    "I am sure the president's proposal to establish a dialogue with the
    opposition remains in force," she said. President Serzh Sargsian raised
    the possibilities of negotiation when meeting diaspora representatives
    in Moscow last June.

    "I am ready to negotiate and work with any political group, taking
    into considerations the interests of Armenia," he said, while also
    accusing the opposition of destabilising the country.

    But some opposition members were clearly caught off guard at the
    recent rally, insisting their leader's words were misunderstood.

    Levon Zurabian, ANC coordinator, insisted dialogue with the government
    remained impossible so long as the March 1 detainees, seen by them
    as political prisoners, remained in jail.

    The violence that erupted on March 1, 2008, was the culmination
    of two weeks of large-scale opposition protests that followed the
    presidential election won by Sargsian, then prime minister and leader
    of the ruling Republican Party.

    Ten people were killed when riot police were sent in to break up the
    rally. No one was convicted over those deaths. Moreover, dozens of
    opposition supporters were detained, tried and handed jail sentences.

    A case involving seven members of the ANC, including a former foreign
    minister and three parliamentarians, all charged with attempting to
    overthrow the government, is still pending.

    Following the March 2008 clashes, Ter-Petrosian urged all the
    opposition forces to unite and 18 parties heeded the call, now forming
    part of his ANC.

    The most significant are Stepan Demirchain's Popular Party and the
    Republic Party of former prime minister Aram Sarkisian.

    Currently, the only opposition force represented in parliament is the
    Heritage Party, headed by ex-foreign minister Raffi Hovhannissian,
    which is not part of the ANC.

    The March 2008 events led the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
    Europe, or PACE, of which Armenia is a member, to consider imposing
    sanctions, including depriving Armenia's delegates of the right
    to vote.

    Finally, the organisation merely urged Armenia to improve its human
    rights record and free opposition detainees.

    Speculation is growing that the government, which seems to have
    interpreted Ter-Petrosian's address as a call for dialogue, may now
    amnesty the jailed men as a signal of its own readiness to negotiate.

    The vice-chair of the Republican Party, Razmik Zohrabian, told Radio
    Freedom, "The opposition's decision to take the constitutional road
    is laudable. I think one of the issues that might be negotiated is
    an amnesty."

    But another reason why the opposition may feel its move to abandon
    radical tactics is timely is because it believes economic trends are
    undermining the government.

    In his address, Ter-Petrosian noted that as the global economic
    crisis continued to spread, it would not be long before the government
    revealed its ineffectiveness and "crumbled".

    Certainly, the global downturn is increasingly being felt in
    Armenia. People have been warned they will have to pay higher utility
    bills from April, for example.

    The rise in energy prices will probably also result in more expensive
    public transport and higher prices for food, all of which observers
    believe have the potential to trigger public anger.

    Harutiun Khachatrian, an economics commentator for the Noayn Topan
    news agency, said popular protests were almost inevitable.

    "We already have the staff of one of the capital's largest clothing
    markets on strike and this is only the start," he said.

    The same expert said the scale of the protests would depend on a
    number of factors, including how many Armenian labour migrants had
    to return home from Russia and other countries.

    Khachatrian said the date of the next opposition rally, May Day,
    had not been set by accident, as the economic situation was widely
    expected to have become graver by then.

    Other observers link the May date to the forthcoming May elections
    for a new mayor of Yerevan.

    As around a third of the country's population lives in the capital,
    the party whose candidate wins this key contest stands to benefit
    greatly in national influence.

    Moreover, the ANC and Heritage have said they may team up for the
    election and propose a joint candidate.

    At the same time, however, each of the opposition parties ideally wants
    to see its own candidate leading the list, so this may prove difficult.

    Some media reported that the ANC will put Demirchain forward as their
    mayoral candidate, while Heritage may nominate Hovhanessian.

    A Heritage spokesman, Hovsep Khurshudianm, told IWPR that negotiations
    with the ANC would be "intensive", adding, "Anyway, we have already
    started drawing up our own list."
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