Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Opposition Leader Still Silent On Party Turmoil

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Opposition Leader Still Silent On Party Turmoil

    OPPOSITION LEADER STILL SILENT ON PARTY TURMOIL
    Tatevik Lazarian

    Armenialiberty.org
    Sept 14 2009

    Armenia -- Raffi Hovannisian, leader of the opposition Zharangutyun
    party.

    Opposition leader Raffi Hovannisian continued to avoid on Monday
    any public statements on bitter infighting within his Zharangutyun
    (Heritage) party that flared up a week ago following his mysterious
    decision to resign his parliament seat.

    Three senior Zharangutyun figures were expelled from the party ranks
    on Wednesday after they accused the party's nominal chairman, Armen
    Martirosian, of foul play and secret collaboration with the Armenian
    authorities. Martirosian and his allies, which dominate Zharangutyun's
    decision-making board, have rejected the accusations. They also claim
    that the dissidents acted on orders issued by both the government
    and the country's largest opposition alliance led by former President
    Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    The turmoil broke out two days after the announcement of Hovannisian's
    decision to quit the National Assembly. Neither he, nor other party
    officials have given a clear explanation for the surprise move yet. A
    party spokesman said on September 7 that the Zharangutyun leader will
    explain his motives in the coming days.

    Hovannisian did not return to Armenia from a trip abroad as of Monday
    evening, according to some individuals close to him. Just when he
    will be available for comment remained unclear.

    It emerged over the weekend that Hovannisian sent on Wednesday a
    letter to the board members in which he is said to have expressed
    dismay at the deepening rift within his party. The two rival camps
    made conflicting claims about further details of the letter.

    According to Zoya Tadevosian, one of the expelled board members,
    the U.S.-born popular politician wrote that he is "tendering the
    last resignation of my political life and leaving the party." But
    Hovsep Khurshudian, the Zharangutyun spokesman allied to Martirosian,
    described that as "disinformation."

    "Raffi Hovannisian remains a member of Zharangutyun," Khurshudian
    told RFE/RL. He at the same time refused to disclose the content of
    the letter, saying that it was meant for the party leadership and is
    therefore "not subject to publication."

    Hovannisian, 50, relocated to Armenia from California with his family
    in 1990 and served as the newly independent country's first foreign
    minister in 1992. He founded Zharangutyun in 2002 and remains its
    de facto top leader despite holding no formal positions in the party
    leadership at present.

    Tadevosian said Hovannisian's letter has made her and other expelled
    members reconsider their initial decision to collect signatures in
    support of an emergency congress of the party. She said they will
    now urge supporters to leave Zharangutyun "en masse."

    Tadevosian, who makes no secret of her warm rapport with
    Ter-Petrosian's Armenian National Congress (HAK), also reiterated
    on Monday that she will not step down as a member of the Central
    Election Commission (CEC) representing Zharangutyun. Under Armenian
    law, the party is entitled to naming one member of the CEC and all
    other lower-level electoral bodies by virtue of being represented in
    the National Assembly. However, it can not recall and replace those
    election officials at will.

    "Those who will sit on district election commissions are my friends,"
    claimed Tadevosian. "They are not going to obey the party called
    Zharangutyun."

    Khurshudian insisted, however, that most of those commission members
    are loyal to the current party leadership. Stepan Safarian, another
    party figure close Martirosian, said Zharangutyun will initiate legal
    amendments that would enable it to sack Tadevosian.

    The infighting is also likely to lose Zharangutyun two of its seven
    seats in the 131-member parliament. One of the ousted dissidents,
    Vartan Khachatrian, is a parliament deputy, while another, Movses
    Aristakesian, is next in line for taking up the seat left vacant
    by Hovannisian.
Working...
X