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"Clan Fight": Analysts See PAP-RPA Standoff As Oligarchic Showdown

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  • "Clan Fight": Analysts See PAP-RPA Standoff As Oligarchic Showdown

    "CLAN FIGHT": ANALYSTS SEE PAP-RPA STANDOFF AS OLIGARCHIC SHOWDOWN
    By Gayane Abrahamyan

    ArmeniaNow
    Politics | 07.12.12 | 16:52

    The confrontation between Armenia's two major political forces has
    shifted to mutual accusations baring the existing contradictions and
    implying that Gagik Tsarukyan's nomination for presidential candidacy
    is an almost unavoidable prospect. Experts say, however, that this
    is rather a "clan war" than a political battle and the outcome will
    be dictated by external forces.

    Prosperous Armenia party (PAP) leader Tsarukyan's European "adventures"
    have heightened the tensions springing from what's becoming fierce
    domestic political fight.

    Tsarukyan's visit to Brussels where he voiced sharp criticism against
    president Serzh Sargsyan's administration, saying there should be
    no expectation of curtailing corruption in Armenia so long as the
    country itself was led by corrupt authorities, coincided with one of
    the European Parliament's major political forces, European People's
    Party (EPP) leaders' summit in Yerevan.

    PAP was not represented at the summit, as exactly a year ago EPP
    admitted three Armenian parties - the ruling Republicans (RPA), Rule
    of Law (Orinats Yerkir) and oppositional Heritage, but rejected PAP's
    membership request.

    Mostly known for his pro-Russian positions, Tsarukyan's visit
    to Brussels was a demarche against this very summit. The visit
    has deepened the split between RPA and PAP so much that Republican
    speaker Eduard Sharmazanov not only qualified Tsarukyan's comments as
    "shameful", but called PAP "an artificial force", "populist", reminded
    him of the risks and accused of ambitions "to usurp the power".

    "PAP, according to our European counterparts, is not leading a battle
    on ideological grounds or platforms, but one that is aimed at usurping
    the power," Sharmazanov said in his interview to RFL/RE.

    It is exactly with charges of "attempts to usurp power" that the
    defendants in the Case of Seven - leading oppositional figures former
    MP Sasun Mikayelyan, former foreign minister Alexander Arzumanyan
    and others - got convicted in 2008.

    This seemingly superficial use of the same term, most probably done
    as a reminder, might become crucial in RPA-PAP negotiations which,
    as Edgar Vardanyan, expert at Armenian Center for National and
    International Studies (ACNIS) says, are more like a "clan showdown".

    Vardanyan says political terminology is alien to the domestic political
    field of Armenia, and gangland terminology is more befitting, because
    the main political parties here are "clans" rather than parties.

    "To apply the term 'political party' in reference to our main ruling
    forces, means to legitimize clans, because they serve the interests
    of certain clans. Hence we are not dealing with a political fight,
    but inter-clan showdown," he told ArmeniaNow.

    According to the expert, one of the "clans" of the oligarchic
    regime is formed "around Serzh Sargsyan or he is viewed as its
    formal representative, and the other one is around Tsarukyan, who
    is its official representative. We all know that there is another -
    informal - representative [Robert Kocharyan]."

    Vardanyan believes that the procrastination in this "showdown" aimed at
    centralizing the resources, suggests interference of external forces.

    "If the two clans were functioning on their own, there won't be
    any serious, grounded reason not to come to an agreement and this
    time-dragging that is past any logical deadlines clearly points to
    pressure from the outside," he said.

    "It is quite possible that Russia doesn't fully trust the incumbent
    president, and unwilling to put all its eggs in one basket, intends to
    strengthen the second oligarchic team, so that both are most interested
    in serving the Kremlin to solicit its support," says Vardanyan.

    The idea of external pressure is shared also by Armen Badalyan,
    expert in political technologies, who believes that "the outcome of
    these elections will not be determined inside Armenia".

    Following this logic the issue of Tsarukyan's candidacy for presidency
    becomes irrelevant, because, as political analyst Vardanyan says,
    "whatever decision is made it will be after acquiring certain
    agreements".

    "If until now the existing conflict has not been an imitation, the
    further fight will be 'coordinated', since it is impossible to hold
    elections without prior agreement with the other powerful clan, and in
    a clan-ruled environment it is impossible to be an opposition and at
    the same time preserve all the resources and stay part of oligarchy,"
    he says.

    And while European structures welcome the competition between the
    major forces in the election process, the true picture behind it,
    as Vardanyan says, contains "not a single element of democratization,
    just as no state interest can be detected in the activities of various
    mafia groupings."

    http://armenianow.com/news/politics/41794/gagik_tsarukyan_serzh_sargsyan_pap_rpa

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