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  • Karabakh Poll Exposes Lack Of Opposition

    KARABAKH POLL EXPOSES LACK OF OPPOSITION
    Lusine Musaelyan

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR - No. 545, UK
    June 1 2010

    Politicians opposed to government have struggled to form organised
    opposition, perhaps because they don't wish to appear disloyal to
    Karabakh.

    Elections in Nagorny Karabakh ended without a single opponent of the
    government in parliament, leaving analysts to predict deputies will
    be sidelined in the political process.

    The communist party, which called itself opposition-minded although its
    leader Hrant Melkumyan had been an adviser to the prime minister until
    the start of the campaign, won just 4.8 per cent of the vote in the May
    23 poll - below the six per cent threshold needed to enter parliament.

    "There will be no opposition or dissident deputies, since not one
    of the political forces represented in parliament has ever held an
    opposition position, either inside or outside parliament," Melkumyan
    said.

    Nagorny Karabakh's status is unresolved. Its self-declared independence
    is not recognised internationally, and Baku claims it as part of its
    territory. Locals opposed to President Bako Sahakyan's government
    have struggled to form an organised opposition movement, perhaps
    because they do not wish to appear disloyal to the entity.

    Sahakyan himself said he did not regret the lack of an opposition in
    parliament. "In recent years, we have not tried to create an artificial
    opposition. If we were to take such steps, that would be the crudest
    violation of democratic principles," he said.

    The election was won by Free Homeland (Azat hayrenik in
    Armenian), which supports Sahakyan and is headed by Prime
    Minister Ara Harutyunyan, with 46.4 per cent of the votes. Two
    other pro-presidential parties - the Artsakh Democratic Party and
    Dashnaktsutyun - won 28.6 and 20.2 per cent respectively.

    Another 16 candidates, nine of whom were already deputies, won in
    single-member constituencies.

    Not only were the parties' policies similar, but also their campaign
    styles had a lot in common. Their slogans - "Choose the son of
    the people", "Only he who was raised by the people can understand
    the people's pain", "Trust the People's Candidate" - were largely
    interchangeable.

    For the first time, candidates made use of large advertising hoardings
    to spread their message, and posters spread across buildings, buses,
    doors, hairdressers' and elsewhere. The candidates' photographs all
    looked strangely similar, since they were all taken by Areg Balayan -
    one of Karabakh's few professional photographers.

    Balayan, perhaps influenced by his high-level contacts, said he had
    voted for the first time this year. "Before I was very indifferent,
    but this year I kind of had a feeling and understood how important it
    is to vote and how important it is to have elections in our country,"
    he said.

    Political analysts did not share his opinion, however.

    "Parliament will not play an important political role, since there
    have been almost no changes in the list of deputies. The decisive
    figure in the country will remain the president, therefore I do not
    expect decisive actions from this parliament," Davit Karabekyan,
    a professor at the Artsakh State University, said.

    But the elections still angered Azerbaijan, which lost control of
    Nagorny Karabakh in a war that started with the collapse of the Soviet
    Union and ended with a ceasefire in 1994.

    Mazahir Panahov, head of Azerbaijan's Central Electoral Commission,
    said that the elections were illegal under Azerbaijan's law, while
    Turkey - Azerbaijan's key ally - also reacted negatively.

    "These 'elections', which we consider to be part of a unilateral effort
    to legitimise the de facto unlawful situation in Nagorno Karabakh,
    constitute a clear breach of international law," a Turkish foreign
    ministry statement said.

    "Turkey, while deploring this act which violates Azerbaijan's political
    unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity, will not recognise the
    results of these illegal elections which are certainly null and void
    in terms of international law."

    Although other powers were less negative, the elections were not
    welcomed in the international community. All the same, some 66,771
    voters went to the polls - a turn-out of 67.8 per cent - and treated
    the day as a public holiday. Women and men went to the elections in
    their best clothes.

    Polling stations attended by the president or other top officials
    organised small concerts of Armenian folk music, while other sites
    had loudspeakers.

    Svetlana Mirzoyan, a 63-year-old coming out of a Stepanakert polling
    station, said she hoped the elections would improve her life.

    "I believe that the new parliament will think of the people, will pay
    attention to rising prices and make them cheaper. I do not know why,
    but I believe that something will change for the better," she said.

    But not everyone shared her high opinion of the process. Mikael
    Grigoryan, 28, was one of many who did not bother voting.

    "Who could I vote for? There was no choice. In the years that these
    parties have been active nothing has changed for the better," he said.

    His opinion is not widely expressed, however, and has very few
    high-profile supporters. One of the only significant public figures
    to speak out against the poll was Karen Ohanjanyan, head of Helsinki
    Initiative-92, a human rights group.

    "Since the government used its administrative resources, so a party
    headed by the prime minister would win at the election, the people
    should demand from the president that the parliament and the head of
    the electoral commission resign, since they falsified the results of
    the election," she said.

    Lusine Musaelyan is a correspondent for Radio Liberty.




    From: A. Papazian
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