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Winds of Change in Armenian Politics

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  • Winds of Change in Armenian Politics

    Institute for War & Peace Reporting, UK
    CAUCASUS REPORTING SERVICE, No. 593
    May 30, 2011


    WINDS OF CHANGE IN ARMENIAN POLITICS

    Bitter stand-off between main opposition group and governing elite
    seems to be ending.

    By Armen Poghosyan

    Armenia could be on the brink of a major political re-alignment,
    according to analysts who see signs that the government and the main
    opposition movement are burying their differences.

    On May 26, the Armenian parliament approved an amnesty for around 400
    prisoners to mark the 20th anniversary of the country's independence.
    The amnesty is expected to include people jailed after engaging in
    political activity.

    `This is of humanitarian as well as political significance. I am sure
    it will have a positive effect on domestic politics,' speaker Hovik
    Abrahamyan said. `Our country cannot allow enmity within society, or
    between opposing political forces. We must create a culture of
    civilised dialogue.'

    The opposition Armenian National Congress, ANC, has demanded fresh
    elections ever since the disputed presidential polls of 2008, which
    its leader Levon Ter-Petrosyan lost to Serzh Sargsyan. Mass opposition
    protests were broken up by police, and about ten people died in the
    crackdown.

    Much of the current tension in Armenia stems from that violent time.

    Under the prison release, one of six opposition figures still in jail
    for calling for revolution has been freed, and another will definitely
    be released. The fate of the other four remains unclear.

    The amnesty followed weeks of media speculation about an apparent
    rapprochement between the government and the ANC, and the implications
    if that happened.

    `The state we dream of is one where society and state engage in open,
    public, extended dialogue. This must not finish; the dialogue must be
    permanent,' Ter-Petrosyan said in an interview to Radio Liberty.
    `There is a dialogue under way. We have openly presented our demands,
    obligations and plans to the authorities and to society, and the
    authorities are openly replying to them.'

    Experts say the authorities in Armenia are concerned by the wave of
    protests that have rocked Arab countries this year, and fear that the
    opposition might stage something similar. The three main
    pro-government parties - the Republican Party, Prosperous Armenia and
    Rule of Law - signed a coalition deal to support Sargsyan in the next
    presidential election, in what analysts said was a sign of nervousness
    since the ballot is still two years away.

    More impetus to make concessions to the opposition may have come from
    an interview which US ambassador Marie Yovanovitch gave to Radio
    Liberty in March, in which she said that Armenian politics needed to
    change significantly.

    `It is important to build a society, to build a government that is
    open, that is transparent, that is listening to people, that is
    accountable to the people, and where the people can participate, where
    there's a give and take. And we believe those governments in countries
    are the strongest and make the best partners for the United States,'
    she said.

    Arman Hakobyan, an expert from the Centre for Political Studies, said
    it was noteworthy that Yovanovitch's remarks coincided with
    Ter-Petrosyan's presentation of his demands.

    When Ter-Petrosyan first submitted a list of 15 key demands on March
    1, they included the release of all political prisoners, the creation
    of an international commission to investigate the 2008 crackdown, and
    the dismissal of Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan and other top
    officials.

    At a protest rally on March 17, however, he significantly softened
    this position, removing the demand that senior officials be sacked,
    and insisting only on freedom for political prisoners, permission to
    hold demonstrations, and a new investigation into the 2008 protests.

    On April 20, the authorities announced that such an investigation
    would take place, and six days later the ANC was allowed to hold a
    protest on Freedom Square in central Yerevan, for the first time in
    three years.

    These moves have led other political parties to suspect that
    authorities and the ANC are close to a deal, although neither has
    confirmed that.

    `The ANC and the government have a deal on holding an early
    parliamentary election. Right now, an early election would be very
    useful to the ANC,' Ruben Hakobyan, deputy head of the opposition
    Heritage Party, said.

    Vahan Hovhannisyan, who leads the opposition Dashnaktsutyun party in
    parliament, said ANC's three demands could easily be met.

    `It looks like the ANC formulated demands that would make the
    government's job easier,' he said. `The authorities have entered into
    dialogue with the ANC, but not publicly.'

    At the end of April, Prosperous Armenia, one of the parties in the
    governing coalition, said it would run separately in the next
    parliamentary election. Robert Kocharyan, the country's former
    president, who is closely linked in the media to Prosperous Armenia
    but rarely makes statements, gave an interview which seemed to reflect
    concerns that the party might lose its place at the top table.

    `If the dialogue relates to establishing civilised rules for the
    political contest and refraining from radicalising it, then of course
    I take a positive view of it,' Kocharyan told the Mediamax news
    agency. `If the dialogue is just about the parameters for a pretend
    contest for political office, and for the rewards of that, then it
    looks more like collusion behind voters' backs.'

    Analysts say Kocharyan's remarks suggest that current political
    alignments are about to be shaken up.

    `Sargsyan's and Ter-Petrosyan's teams are taking steps towards each
    other. There's no deal, there's no dialogue, but it is obvious that
    the actions of these two teams are in harmony,' political commentator
    Souren Sourenyants said. `It's clear that in this environment, all the
    other political groups are trying to display their independence. If
    the ANC and the authorities find a common language, then a bipolar
    political system will be created, and the role of other parties will
    be minimal.'

    Armen Poghosyan is a freelance journalist in Armenia.

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