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Armenia Opposition Leader To Contest Capital Vote

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  • Armenia Opposition Leader To Contest Capital Vote

    ARMENIA OPPOSITION LEADER TO CONTEST CAPITAL VOTE

    Kyiv Post
    http://www.kyivpost.com/world/37545
    March 16 2009
    Ukraine

    YEREVAN, March 16 (Reuters) - Armenia's opposition said on Monday
    it would use May mayoral polls in the capital Yerevan to challenge
    the national power of the president it says rigged his election to
    office last year.

    Opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosyan is standing for mayor in what
    his Armenian National Congress (ANC) says amounts to a second round
    of the polls won by President Serzh Sarksyan.

    More than 10,000 opposition supporters rallied in the capital of the
    impoverished former Soviet republic on March 1 to mark the anniversary
    of the election and commemorate 10 opposition activists who died in
    subsequent protests.

    "Yerevan has a significant weight in the political and economic life
    of our country, and therefore the election of the mayor of the capital
    should be seen as a key stage of the restoration of the constitutional
    order," said the ANC in a statement on its website.

    Armenia's leaders, who maintain close links with Moscow while pursuing
    ties with NATO, say they want to build a European-style democracy
    and have won Western praise for allowing contested elections.

    STRUGGLE

    ANC's central coordinator Levon Zurabyan presented Ter-Petrosyan's
    campaign for mayor of Yerevan as a first step to unseating
    Sarksyan. "It will be .. a struggle against the monolithic system of
    criminals and oligarchs," Zurabyan said.

    Ter-Petrosyan became Armenia's first president with the 1991 collapse
    of the Soviet Union. He stepped down in 1998 over concession he had
    backed in an attempt to end a dispute with neighbouring Azerbaijan
    over the enclave of Nagorno Karabakh.

    Ethnic Armenian separatists backed by Yerevan fought a war to take
    control of the mountainous region that left 30,000 dead by the time
    of a 1994 ceasefire.

    On Feb. 25 the New York-based Human Rights Watch accused Armenia of
    conducting "politically motivated" trials while ignoring evidence of
    excessive use of force and ill-treatment of detainees.

    Armenia has been hard hit by the global economic slowdown and its
    disputes with Azerbaijan and larger neighbour Turkey. (Reporting by
    Hasmik Lazarian; writing by Conor Sweeney; Editing by Ralph Boulton)
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