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Levon Ter-Petrosyan burns bridges not: weekly review

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  • Levon Ter-Petrosyan burns bridges not: weekly review

    news.am, Armenia
    Nov 14 2009


    Levon Ter-Petrosyan burns bridges not: weekly review

    11:30 / 11/14/2009Domestic policy

    This week, after an interval, the Opposition Leader, Chairman of the
    Armenian National Congress (ANC) Levon Ter-Petrosyan has appeared in
    public. He made a speech at a closed meeting of the ANC active
    members, but the text of his speech was sent out to mass media.
    Without going into details, we would like to speak of the general
    impression produced by Ter-Petrosyan's statements. It is obvious that
    Ter-Petrosyan and his supporters have no intention to hold actions of
    protest against the Armenian-Turkish protocols. Moreover, the
    Opposition leader kept his promise: after the authorities rejected the
    repeated appeals for releasing all the arrested Opposition members, he
    left the authorities `face to face' with the external pressure in
    connection with the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, without holding
    rallies of protest. On November 11, however, Ter-Petrosyan did not
    burn all the bridges behind him, leaving a chance of cooperation with
    the authorities. The idea of releasing the 17 Opposition members ran
    all through the ANC Chairman's speech. Ter-Petrosyan addressed another
    `cooperation message' to the authorities ` with cooperation in dealing
    with national problems possible provided the Opposition members are
    released.

    The developments involving by-elections to the RA Parliament in
    election District #10 are getting more and more interesting. The most
    intriguing is the registration of Nikol Pashinyan, Editor-in-Chief of
    the Haykakan Zhamanak newspaper, who is on trial. Hardly anyone had
    any doubts that the authorities would do their best to refuse
    registration. One more conclusion can be drawn from the authorities'
    actions: they are acting in the `best' traditions of fighting the
    Opposition. Only the `brave' law-enforcers of Armenia could issue a
    certificate informing that Nikol Pashinyan was absent from Armenia
    from February 26, 2008, to July 7, 2009, considering the fact that
    late last February Pashinyan was at the head of massive opposition
    rallies in Liberty Square and is now charged with having organized
    riots on March 1, 2008, the time when he was allegedly absent from
    Armenia. If the authorities made a political decision to prevent the
    oppositionist from participating in the by-elections, they might have
    invented less absurd reasons than denying him a document confirming
    his presence in Armenia during a certain period and, at the same time,
    demonstrating a video record with his active participation in the
    protest rallies in Yerevan on March 1, 2008. The Armenian
    law-enforcement agencies must be unable to understand their own
    actions and possible consequences. As regards the Armenian
    authorities, they are most likely to fight `until the last gun is
    fired' to prevent Pashinyan's participation in the by-elections, which
    will only add political dividends to the Opposition. Besides the
    `epic' about Pashinyan's nomination, another intrigue is that the
    businessman Eduard Madatyan, who intends to run for Parliament in the
    by-elections, was denied a certificate confirming his presence in
    Armenia over the last few years. Madatyan is trying to pose as a
    `secret' nominee of the ruling coalition. He was denied the
    certificate in conformity with the law: after he was charged with an
    attempted crime against Armenian top-officials in 2004, he was on the
    list of wanteds and lived in Russia for a long period. The question
    is: who will lay hands on the `fatty' constituency if neither
    Pashinyan nor Madatyan is finally registered as a candidate. Did the
    Armenian authorities decide to back the political scientist Hamayak
    Hovhannisyan, who, under the circumstances, is the only acceptable
    parliamentary candidate? Since Armenia gained independence, Hamayak
    Hovhannisyan has managed to join and leave several political parties,
    and is now highly critical of the authorities. It seems absurd, but
    everything is possible in Armenia's political life.

    The Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP) led by the oligarch Gagik
    Tsarukyan, which is part of the ruling coalition, disproved the rumors
    about possible resignation of RA Minister of Labor Social Security
    Gevorg Petrosyan. The PAP representative Aram Safaryan said that the
    rumors are `somebody's order.' `We are satisfied with our Minister's
    work, and the party has not discussed the issue of his resignation,'
    Safaryan told NEWS.am. Some media outlets have reported this week that
    PAP intends to replace Gevorgyan.

    Nagorno-Karabakh peace process and region

    The major developments in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process have
    taken place under the sign of an Armenian-Azerbaijani presidential
    meeting scheduled for late November. The negotiation process seriously
    intensified after the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs' recent visit to the
    region. A number of facts confirm this, the international mediators'
    visit to the region scheduled for mid-November being one of them.

    In this context, interesting statements were made in Baku. The main
    aim behind the stock phrases is preparing the Azerbaijani society for
    inevitable concessions after many years of militant rhetoric, as the
    conflict is impossible to settle otherwise. Convinced of the futile
    attempts to get new concessions from the Armenian side, official Baku,
    pressured by international mediators, had to think of what Azerbaijan
    has to propose in exchange for the most substantial, and painful,
    concessions outlined by the Armenian authorities.

    As a result, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov made a
    plain statement on the intensification of negotiations. Singing the
    same old song about Azerbaijan's demands ' `the earliest possible
    withdrawal of Armenian troops from Azerbaijani territories' ` the
    top-ranking official `explained the point' of negotiations. After a
    long talk about the need for returning the territories round
    Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijan, Mamedyarov dwelt on the status of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Although he once again stated Azerbaijan's readiness
    to grant Nagorno-Karabakh the highest degree of autonomy within
    Azerbaijan's borders, Minister Mamedyarov admitted the fact that it is
    a central issue of the negotiations. Speaking of the highest status of
    Nagorno-Karabakh is utterly absurd, as a referendum on independence
    was held in the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR), and the overwhelming
    majority of the population supported the idea.

    It is obvious that the negotiators are currently disputing over the
    terms and form of referendum on Nagorno-Karabakh's status, which is
    provided for by the Madrid Principles referred to by the Armenian and
    Azerbaijani authorities, as well as by the international mediators. In
    this context, Minister Mamedyarov's latest statements are clear: being
    well aware of their inevitable consent to the referendum (which is a
    necessary condition for the withdrawal of Armenian troops from the
    security zone round Nagorno-Karabakh), the Azeri authorities are
    trying to `play false' by focusing attention on official Yerevan's
    concessions and doing their best to delay the plebiscite.

    Incidentally, the political scientist Rasim Musabekov, who is close to
    the Aliyev clan, has admitted the fact that Nagorno-Karabakh's status
    is a central issue of the negotiation process. He proved even franker
    than Mamedyarov by actually urging the Azerbaijani public to focus its
    attention on the first stage of the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process,
    namely, a phased return of the regions round the NKR, which scenario
    is ruled out unless an agreement on the terms and form of referendum
    on Nagorno-Karabakh's status is reached.

    As regards the Armenian-Turkish protocols and their ratification by
    the two Parliaments, no changes have taken place `on the front.' Both
    in Ankara and in Yerevan, the documents `got stuck' at the stage of
    what is known as `interagency endorsement.' In Armenia, the protocols
    have not yet reached the Constitutional Court, which is to confirm
    their constitutionality, whereupon they can be submitted to the RA
    Parliament for ratification. A similar situation has developed in
    Turkey: the protocols at held up at the Foreign Affairs Committee.
    When the documents will be submitted to the Turkish Parliament for
    ratification is unknown. The sides seem to be waiting for something¦

    In any case, they have so far held a pompous and `thrilling' signing
    ceremony of the protocols, with no actual steps to put them into
    practice being taken.

    Despite the `relative stagnation' in the Armenia-Turkey normalization
    process, which is the result of official Ankara's unwillingness to
    `turn a stone deaf ear' to the howl in Baku, irreversible processes
    seem to be going on inside Turkish society. A poll conducted by the
    NTV Company showed that most that most Turks want Hayko Cepkin, a
    Turkish musician of Armenian descent, to represent Turkey at
    Eurovision-2010 ' 16% of the 10,000 respondents spoke in his favor.

    Economy and social life

    This week the Armenian society has been shocked by reports on swine
    flu cases in the country. The real number of patients must be much
    higher, but the RA Ministry of Health provides information `in scraps'
    to prevent panic. In any case, the fact is that the contradictory
    statements on the vaccine made by officials and specialists may only
    add to the population's concern.

    The RA Government has approved a concept of digitizing the
    broadcasting. At its sitting the cabinet instructed the interagency
    commission to work out a schedule of public discussions and submit it
    to the Government within a month. The Government also approved a plan
    of developing an anti-hail system in 2010-2011. The anti-hail systems
    will first of all be installed in Aragatsotn, Ararat, Armavir, Kotayk,
    Lori and Shirak. RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan stated that about
    1bn AMD (U.S. $2.6m dollars) will be allocated for this purpose.

    The water level of Lake Sevan, which is currently 1,899 meters is
    expected to rise by 4.6 meters by 2013. Chairman of the Commission for
    Lake Sevan Vladimir Movsisyan said that over 40% of the lake's water
    reserves have been used for irrigation and energy generation since
    1993, and steps to preserve the ecosystem are being made now. `The
    water level had risen by 45 cm by January 1, 2009, as compared with
    the corresponding date last year. By January 1, 2010, it is expected
    to rise by 31 cm,' Movsisyan said. He also reported that cleaning work
    on 499 hectares of the coastal zone has been carried out this year.
    Movsisyan also pointed out the negative consequences of the raising of
    water level. By preliminary estimates, 1,697 water-front constructions
    ` with only 481 of them being legal ' will be inundated. Also, the
    water will cover four pumping stations and 15km of roads. Eighteen
    kilometer-long power transmission lines, 19km of gas pipelines and
    about 2,800 hectares of forests will be flooded as well.

    Seven old people's homes ` four government-financed and three
    privately-owned ones ` are working in Armenia, Anahit Gevorgyan of the
    RA Ministry of Labor and Social Security told NEWS.am.

    She reported that 1,100 old people are currently in charge of the
    institutions, with 1,010 of them in government-financed and only 90 in
    privately-owned ones in Vanadzor, Gyumri and Abovyan. The daily
    allowance for one person is 2,860 AMD (less than U.S. $8), with 1,160
    AMD of this amount provided for food. The situation is a little
    `better" at the Vanadzor mental home ` 5,000 AMD per patient.

    Gevorgyan said that the `charges'' relatives can hardly help them.
    Rather, it is grave social conditions that force people to send their
    old parents to nursing homes. Gevorgyan said not a single instance of
    children taking their parents back home has been registered over the
    last 20 years.
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