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TOL: More Than A Mayoralty

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  • TOL: More Than A Mayoralty

    MORE THAN A MAYORALTY
    by Marianna Grigoryan

    Transitions On Line
    http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLang uage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=321&NrS ection=1&NrArticle=20571
    May 13 2009
    Czech Republic

    The campaign to run Yerevan City Hall is being waged in the long
    shadow of last year's violent election season. From EurasiaNet.

    YEREVAN | Rarely has a city council election attracted such
    notice. Yerevan's 31 May municipal election marks not only the first
    time voters can play a role in choosing their own mayor, but, for
    Armenia's largest opposition movement, a chance to make up for the
    loss of last year's presidential election.

    The vote's national implications can be seen in the banners
    promoting ex-President Levon Ter-Petrosian as a candidate for the
    city council. "Let's change Armenia. Let's start with Yerevan!" they
    read. If Ter-Petrosian's Armenian National Congress wins one vote
    over 40 percent of the council's 65 seats, the 64-year-old former
    Armenian leader would be named Yerevan's new mayor. The president
    previously appointed the four-year post.

    At a 1 May rally, Ter-Petrosian embraced claims that his candidacy
    has politicized the city council race.

    Voters should "only be grateful to the Armenian National Congress for
    politicizing the . . .election," he told onlookers. " For [the ANC]
    will try to prevent the criminalization of the election by doing so."

    Six parties aside from the Armenian National Congress alliance
    have registered for the race, according to the Central Election
    Commission. Some 771,353 registered voters are eligible to take part.

    Former Armenian President and mayoral candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    Ter-Petrosian supporters affirm that the vote is a chance to get back
    their own after the 2008 presidential vote, an election they assert
    was rigged against the ex-president.

    "We will win!" proclaimed one voter, using Ter-Petrosian's presidential
    campaign slogan while dancing at a 4 May rally in Yerevan's Arabkir
    district. "And there are hopes for justice!"

    But many voters just want a return to calm. Recollections of the brutal
    1 March 2008 police crackdown on opposition activists protesting the
    presidential election results still linger.

    "We are sick and tired of shocks and want stability," said 57-year-old
    Mariam Galstian, who supports Yerevan's incumbent pro-government mayor,
    Gagik Beglarian. "It's not the time for radical changes. It's only
    the people who suffer the consequences. Let it stay as it is."

    One candidate has already capitalized on that need for nurture. At a
    6 May meeting with voters in Yerevan's Davitashen district, Heghine
    Bisharian, the lead candidate for the Country of Law Party, a member
    of Armenia's ruling coalition, declared that the Armenian capital
    is in need of a woman's care. Greater displays of kindness should be
    among voters' chief concerns, Bisharian affirmed.

    Amid a downpour, Bisharian took that theme one step further and
    compared herself to the Biblical character Noah, who saved the earth's
    animals from a flood. (Legend names the alleged great-great-grandson
    of Noah, Hayk, as the founder of Armenia.)

    "Noah today is Heghine Bisharian," Bisharian proclaimed.

    Other candidates are wheeling out more conventional themes to win
    voters' support.

    Health Minister Harutiun Kushkian, who heads the list of candidates
    for the Prosperous Armenia Party, another government coalition member,
    relies on "We keep our promises!" A touch of celebrity is added,
    too. Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian, a flamboyant
    oligarch and one-time world arm wrestling champion, has promised to
    attend Kushkian's meetings with voters.

    Incumbent Mayor Beglarian, a member of the ruling Republican Party of
    Armenia, tries to cast himself as a man of action who will accomplish
    what was not done in Yerevan during Soviet times - improving
    streets and water lines, among other tasks. "I say no high-flown
    words!" he pledged, in an apparent allusion to the emotional oratory
    of Ter-Petrosian.

    Independent political analyst Yervand Bozoian commented that the 27-day
    campaign "will be quite intense," but, so far, there is little sign
    that that intensity will mark candidates' campaign platforms. Routine
    problems of garbage collection, improved roads, water supplies,
    and social welfare services are the focus.

    The lack of detailed proposals, however, does not appear to have
    deterred Yerevan voters. A recent survey run by the Sociometer center
    found that only 30 percent of 1,650 voting-age respondents said that
    they would stay away from the polls on May 31.

    "Two factors can affect the conduct and the result of the election -
    its politicization and the economic crisis," said the center's head,
    Aharon Adibekian. Both factors are likely to spark interest in the
    vote, he added.

    Party campaign staff interviewed by EurasiaNet indicated no problems to
    date with intimidation, ad restrictions, or other forms of interference
    with their campaigns. The Council of Europe's Congress of Local and
    Regional Authorities, however, has a different take.

    "The Congress delegation understood that there were threats to the
    proper conduct of these elections, in particular with respect to
    the registration and mobilization of voters, the counting of votes,
    and media objectivity in the campaign," read a statement released by
    the Council of Europe's information office in Yerevan.

    The "real needs of the citizens of Yerevan could be brushed aside
    because of ... confrontation" between the opposition and governing
    coalition in the city council vote, said delegation member Fabio
    Pellegrini.

    While Ter-Petrosian insists that such political jostling is a plus,
    Republican Party spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov vows that politics will
    not botch the election.

    "All the necessary conditions for democratic elections have been
    created," Sharmazanov said.
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