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Garbis: Armenian Politics Stagnate While Threat To Statehood Looms

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  • Garbis: Armenian Politics Stagnate While Threat To Statehood Looms

    GARBIS: ARMENIAN POLITICS STAGNATE WHILE THREAT TO STATEHOOD LOOMS
    By Christian Garbis

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/09/23/ garbis-armenian-politics-stagnate-while-threat-to- statehood-looms/
    September 23, 2009

    YEREVAN-On the surface, Armenian citizens seem to be divided into two
    camps-those who enthusiastically support the government and those in
    sheer defiance, regardless of whether those opinions are made public
    or held secret. There are no popular parties per se, with none of them
    actively campaigning for wide public support. The ruling Republican
    Party is no exception, being overwhelmingly endorsed by government
    employees and those with ties to the ruling elite.

    At a time when Armenia has been courting Turkey to jumpstart relations
    under highly controversial conditions against its own favor, the stew
    of Armenian politics should be boiling over. Yet strangely enough,
    concern over the protocols that are meant to forge Turkish-Armenian
    relations once they are ratified in mid-October is faint.

    President Serge Sarkisian's Republican Party has been fervently
    supporting the protocols in partnership with its junior coalition
    parties, Prosperous Armenia and Orinats Yerkir. The government
    leadership insists that the protocols ensure Armenia's economic
    prosperity for all, without revealing specifics about how growth
    is perceived to be gained and what financial sectors are expected
    to expand.

    The ARF-Dashnaktsutiun, which has been in "positive opposition" to
    the government since the end of April, has been stepping up efforts
    to attract attention in its efforts to have several points in the
    highly controversial protocols amended.

    Among the proposed amendments, the party is calling for diplomatic
    relations between Turkey and Armenia to be established without
    preconditions. The party is also opposed to the formation of a
    historical commission that would seek to establish whether the events
    of 1915 constituted genocide.

    About 50 party members are taking part in a sit-in hunger strike
    (the protestors take turns breaking their fast every two days) in
    front of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Republic Square, where
    signatures are also being collected in support of the amendments to
    the protocols that the party has drafted.

    However, the Republican majority leader in parliament, Galust Sahakian,
    was quick to declare the amendments unacceptable. Then, on Sept. 16,
    Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian made it clear in his address to the
    National Assembly that the amendments would be considered only after
    the protocols are signed and sent to parliament for deliberation
    and ratification. This was found to be unacceptable by the ARF,
    as announced by party official Armen Rustamian the following day.

    As the Republican Party holds the majority of parliamentary seats
    and enjoys the backing of its two coalition partners, any proposed
    amendments are sure to be shot down in session moments before the
    protocols' ratification. Consequently, the ARF's true intensions and
    the anticipated results from its protests remain ambiguous before a
    confused public trying to ascertain the party's motives.

    Meanwhile, the oppositional Heritage Party, founded by Raffi
    Hovhannisian, which holds seven seats in parliament, had been
    insisting that a public referendum be held on whether to accept or
    reject the protocols. The initiative was subsequently dismissed by
    the Republican Party.

    Yet, the Heritage Party's firm stance on the rejection of the
    protocols has been overshadowed by the controversial upheaval within
    its ranks. Three members of the party, Movses Aristakesyan, Zoya
    Tadevosyan, and Vardan Khachatryan, were expelled from the ranks,
    having been accused of secretly collaborating with both opposition
    and pro-government parties, the specifics of which remain unclear.

    Just before the party's shakeup, Hovhannisian resigned from his seat
    in the National Assembly under mysterious circumstances while out of
    the country. Rumors were spread by Tadevosyan that Hovhannisian had
    submitted a letter to the party's governing board announcing his
    resignation from the party as well as from political life, while
    Khachatryan claimed that Hovhannisian had been aware of the secret
    negotiations all along. It was not until Sept. 21 that Hovhannisian
    made scathing comments against the compromising actions of his party
    members in a released statement. He is due to give a press conference
    on Oct. 1 to explain his resignation from parliament and give insight
    on the future of the Heritage Party.

    Former president Levon Ter-Petrosian had been highly critical of
    talks between the Turkish and Armenian leaderships-that lead to the
    infamous formation of the "framework," signed in April for developing
    diplomatic relations between the two countries.

    In his address at a rally held on Sept. 18 in Yerevan organized by
    the oppositional Armenian National Congress-a coalition of several
    oppositional parties unofficially led by Ter-Petrosian-that was
    attended by several thousand people, he mainly focused his remarks
    on the Nagorno-Karabagh negotiations. Ter-Petrosian deems the peace
    proposals unacceptable, claiming that they are more conciliatory
    than those that were presented during his presidential term in 1997,
    specifically referring to the exclusion of a point stipulating the
    return of Azeri refugees to their homes. Most of his speech was
    perceived as an academic address to the crowds, with no proposed
    solutions that would be more in Armenia's favor and no calls for
    action delivered to his supporters.

    Ter-Petrosian during the rally failed to comment further on his stance
    regarding the current negotiations between Turkey and Armenia, instead
    insisting that the border would not open anytime soon. On Sept. 2,
    the Armenian National Congress released a statement in reaction to
    the protocols, claiming that "substantial progress" had been made in
    calls for establishing relations between Armenia and Turkey.

    Despite the shroud of uncertainty that has been draped across the
    Armenian masses looking for answers, one thing is for certain: If any
    of the opposition parties are indeed serious about enacting change
    in the way the country is being governed, not to mention protecting
    Armenian foreign policy from inevitable disaster, they need to exploit
    the controversy surrounding the protocols to the hilt, and do it
    quickly. A unified effort is probably unlikely, given the Heritage
    Party's internal turmoil and the aloofness of Ter-Petrosian.

    An all-out aggressive, convincing measure against the protocols will
    be the only way for the parties to rally the public behind them,
    assuming they want to prevent the protocols from being signed. Yet
    all three players-the Armenian National Congress, the Heritage Party,
    and especially the ARF-have yet to step up to the plate.
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