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  • Armenia: Government, Opposition Hold "Open" Dialogue Behind Closed D

    ARMENIA: GOVERNMENT, OPPOSITION HOLD "OPEN" DIALOGUE BEHIND CLOSED DOORS
    by Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet.org
    May 12 2011
    NY

    It's billed as an "open dialogue," but as the weeks drag on, many
    Armenians are wondering what exactly members of President Serzh
    Sargsyan's administration and opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian
    are talking about.

    So far, neither side will say. But, whatever the details, former
    president Ter-Petrosian, head of Armenia's largest opposition
    coalition, the Armenian National Congress (ANC), assured readers last
    week in an interview with RFE/RL that the exchange is "open."

    "We openly present our demands, our problems, our programs to the
    authorities and the public, and the authorities are openly responding,"
    he stated.

    The thaw in relations between the opposition and government began
    early this spring, in the wake of political upheaval in Egypt and
    Tunisia, widespread protests in Yemen and ongoing popular uprisings
    in Libya and Syria. President Serzh Sargsyan commended Ter-Petrosian
    and supporters for "rallies that are not aimed at splitting society,"
    released five opposition activists from prison, and agreed to a broader
    investigation of the March 2008 post-election tumult in Yerevan that
    left at least 10 dead.

    The Yerevan city government followed suit by allowing the opposition
    to hold rallies at Freedom Square for the first time since the 2008
    confrontation there, while pro-government TV channels, long overtly
    critical of the opposition, adopted a friendlier tone to their coverage
    of Ter-Petrosian.

    In recent weeks, as the government has made its overtures,
    Ter-Petrosian's coalition has moved away from publicly lambasting
    the government and issuing calls for early elections. These tentative
    steps toward conciliation may be costing the ANC some of its support,
    however. "Opposition leaders, who have been chastising the authorities
    for years, all of a sudden have become tolerant and have started to
    meet authorities halfway; we have no choice but to think that there
    has been an internal agreement [with the government]," commented one
    opposition supporter who did not want to be named.

    Bones of contention do, however, still exist. Ter-Petrosian, true to
    his deadline-setting style, has set another deadline - May 28 for
    the release of what his side portrays as six remaining "political
    prisoners." He has threatened to stage a massive sit-in protest in
    Freedom Square, if the government fails to meet the deadline.

    The government, for its part, continues to insist that it doesn't hold
    any political prisoners. "The government's moves are not stipulated by
    the demands of the opposition," said Eduard Sharmazanov, a spokesman
    for the Republican Party of Armenia.

    Few Armenians appear to be taking the ex-president at his word on the
    protest threat. Earlier, Ter-Petrosian had set an April 28 deadline
    for the government's fulfillment of the opposition demand to free
    political prisoners from custody. That date came and went without the
    "watershed" moment promised by Ter-Petrosian. "I don't think anything
    will change," 40-year-old Yerevan economist Edik Manukian said,
    referring to the new May 28 deadline.

    The political fashion for "openness" is not limited to the opposition.

    In a May 10 interview with the MediaMax news agency, former President
    Robert Kocharian, who was in office during the 2008 clashes between
    protesters and police, asserted that no one gave an order for police
    to shoot at demonstrators. "In any case, not that I know of," he
    added. Kocharian blamed the deaths on "either a tragic concurrence of
    circumstances, or someone's deliberate actions in order to discredit
    authorities." Ter-Petrosian has not publicly commented on Kocharian's
    interview.

    As a sense of mystery continues to shroud the government-opposition
    "dialogue" some opposition supporters, tapping into the local love
    for conspiracy theories, have begun to fear that the ex-president has
    reached a back-room deal with the government. ANC representatives
    refute these reports. "This is just a propaganda trick that the
    government resorts to in order to demonstrate that their recent
    concessions to the Congress have nothing to do with the government's
    weakness," asserted Armenian National Congress coordinator Levon
    Zurabian.

    Still, some analysts believe officials' moves and statements are
    somehow related to those of the opposition leader. "There is no
    dialogue; there are mutually beneficial steps," suggested political
    scientist Armen Aghaian. "There is a political game, a performance
    where both sides are playing for their own interests, regardless of
    the people's will. ... There is an agreement: You scratch my back
    and I'll scratch yours."

    Some other observers look to "external pressure" as motivating the
    government's pas de deux with the ANC. In April, US Ambassador to
    Armenia Marie L. Yovanovitch said that Armenia would not be eligible
    to apply again for US-financed Millennium Challenge aid monies until it
    meets "good governance" standards. That criticism was followed shortly
    by a report issued by Council of Europe commissioner for human rights,
    Thomas Hammarberg, who targeted the government's investigation into
    the 2008 post-election violence, failure to release jailed opposition
    activists and the country's freedom of the press record.

    Political fatigue might also play a role. Thirty-five-year-old Yerevan
    lawyer Narine Badalian is among many Yerevan residents who say they
    are tired of the political battles. She says she would be happy if
    the opposition and authorities came to an agreement. "I want stability
    in my country," Badalian said.

    Editor's note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance journalist based in
    Yerevan and editor of MediaLab.am.

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