Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Parliamentary Elections Yet Another Test for Democracy in Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Parliamentary Elections Yet Another Test for Democracy in Armenia

    Parliamentary Elections Yet Another Test for Democracy in Armenia
    by Onnik Krikorian | March 15th, 2012

    With parliamentary elections in Armenia scheduled for 6 May, Onnik
    Krikorian interviews American-Armenian analyst Richard Giragosian on the
    political situation in the country as the vote draws closer.

    ---

    As Armenia prepares to hold its next parliamentary elections on May 6,
    2012, at stake are not only the 131 seats to be contested in the National
    Assembly, but also the country's reputation worldwide. While the last
    parliamentary elections held in May 2007 were a step forward according to
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Office for
    Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), the international body
    also noted that `the stated intention by the Armenian authorities to
    conduct an election in line with OSCE commitments and international
    standards was not fully realized.'

    Indeed, as in past elections, the ruling party of power swept the floor
    amid allegations from the opposition and civil society organizations of
    vote-buying and outright falsification. However the landslide was attained,
    it meant that the Republican Party, led by then Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian, held 64 seats in the National Assembly. Its closest rival, the
    Prosperous Armenia party of MP businessman Gagik Tsarukian, managed just
    18. Other governmental loyalists, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation -
    Dashnaktsutyun (ARF-D) and Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law), received just
    16 and 9 respectively.

    More significantly, perhaps, the opposition led by those sympathetic to
    Armenia's first president, Levon Ter-Petrossian, was nowhere in sight,
    leaving only Heritage's seven seats as a genuine check on a massive and
    effectively pro-governmental parliamentary majority. Turnout was just under
    60 percent of those eligible to vote, but even if the elections were
    considered a modest step forward, clashes following the presidential
    election the following year, described as `significantly worse' in a U.S.
    Embassy Cable released by Wikileaks, have since raised difficult questions
    over Armenia's democratic direction.

    Ten people died in the post-election unrest and a controversial Emergency
    Rule Law passed on March 1, 2012, four years to the day since the bloody
    clashes, has only raised more concerns. Certainly, given the internal
    political situation in the country since then, it is unlikely that the
    government can afford any repeat of similar post-election protests.

    `There is a new reality in Armenia,' says American-Armenian analyst Richard
    Giragosian, Director of the Yerevan-based Regional Studies Center (RSC).
    `Society has changed with people no longer content to witness yet another
    round of flawed and fixed elections. While frustration over the February
    19, 2008 presidential election simmered, the real outrage erupted once the
    Armenian authorities decided to forcibly disperse the unarmed demonstrators
    who had gathered for several weeks in a peaceful and generally
    well-organized public protest.'

    Since the 2007 and 2008 vote, however, many other things have changed in
    the political life of the country with the coalition government comprising
    the Republican Party, Prosperous Armenia, Orinats Yerkir, and the ARF-D,
    minus the latter, following its disagreement with its partners over
    attempts to normalize relations with Turkey. Tensions between the two main
    governmental forces, the Republican Party and Prosperous Armenia, are also
    considered to be on the rise with its leader, Gagik Tsarukian, so far
    silent on whether he will back the incumbent president for re-election next
    year.

    Tsarukian, a former world arm wrestling champion believed to be the richest
    of Armenia's oligarchs, is also considered close to Sarkisian's predecessor
    as president, Robert Kocharian. Moreover, even if no party enjoys
    widespread support, his party represents the strongest challenge to the
    ruling Republicans - for now at least. Indeed, adding to existing
    speculation about the party's chances, former Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian joined Prosperous Armenia last month, but Giragosian is
    unimpressed.

    `Although Oskanian's decision to enter or re-enter politics may stem from
    his stated goals of seeking political change from within, many see the move
    as related to his close relationship with former President Kocharian,' he
    says. `In that context, some see Oskanian as moving to strengthen the
    pro-Kocharian Prosperous Armenia party. Either way, although his possible
    role as a parliamentarian would help to raise the level of debate and
    discourse, I do think that this move weakens him politically as it means
    that he can no longer present himself as an independent third force in
    politics.'

    At the same time, and despite the demonstrations after the 2008
    presidential vote, momentum behind Ter-Petrossian's Armenian National
    Congress (ANC) has since faltered and divisions within the
    extra-parliamentary opposition alliance have already seen one splinter
    group, the Free Democrats, emerge. Last week, another four parties
    announced their departure from the ANC because of disagreements with
    Ter-Petrossian, but more significantly perhaps, this strong competition
    between the Republican Party and Prosperous Armenia still seems most likely
    to determine the conduct of the coming elections.

    `Clearly there is a serious rivalry between the parties, and the deepening
    and intensifying conflict within the ruling coalition continues to define
    the country's pre-election period,' says Giragosian. `In line with
    developments throughout 2011, the most significant political issue
    continues to be the significant clash within the pro-government coalition
    itself, replacing the more traditional past political conflict between the
    opposition and the government. As the pre-election period intensifies, this
    conflict between the Republican and Prosperous Armenia parties can only be
    expected to escalate.'

    One example of this rivalry recently became apparent when Radio Free Europe
    (RFE) reported that Vartan Ghalumian, the Prosperous Armenia-affiliated
    Mayor of Ijevan, accused his Republican Party predecessor of using party
    loyalists to paralyze the legislative body for the administrative center of
    Armenia's North Eastern Tavoush region by boycotting sessions. Days earlier
    on International Women's Day, in what many saw as an election gimmick, both
    the Prosperous Armenia and Republican Party competed for attention by
    distributing free gifts and flowers in local schools and kindergartens.

    Yet, compared to previous elections, that pales into insignificance
    compared to what could transpire if bitter rivalry surfaces and remains
    unchecked. In the 2007 parliamentary vote, for example, two Prosperous
    Armenia election campaign offices in Yerevan were bombed. There were no
    casualties, but fingers were pointed at the Republican Party even though
    they denied responsibility.

    Regardless, such rivalry does not bode well for the coming vote, some
    opine, with 37 percent of Armenians already believing national politics is
    heading in the wrong direction and only 18 percent believing otherwise
    according to a 2010 household survey conducted by the Caucasus Resource
    Research Centers (CRRC). Although CRRC's data for 2011 has yet to be
    released, it has already been suggested by those who have seen it that
    little has changed. Moreover, as with past votes in Armenia, it remains to
    be seen whether policies and issues will finally win out over personalities.

    For now, Giragosian says the extent of apathy among the population is not
    as noticeable as before with a small but active environmental protest
    movement and concerns over deaths in the military adding to already
    existing disgruntlement about financial hardship and unemployment. `This
    economic undercurrent of discontent is only increasing, especially as the
    Armenian authorities are now facing the onset of the effects from the
    global financial and economic crisis,' Giragosian says. `Moreover, widening
    disparities in wealth and income have led to a serious socioeconomic divide.

    According to the analyst, this division is especially pronounced in terms
    of the inequality between the capital, Yerevan, and the regions, with the
    situation further exacerbated by inadequate essential public services such
    as health, education and other social services. `Most clearly the Armenian
    government must now learn to govern - not just rule - the country,' he
    says. `But if the Armenian government fails to fully overcome these
    challenges, we may expect a seriously explosive situation.'

    Therefore, as the first national elections since the 2008 unrest, all eyes
    are on the presidency. `I trust that you, Mr. President, will continue to
    pursue reforms to strengthen democratic institutions, to enhance the
    independence of the judiciary, to encourage political pluralism and media
    freedom, and the protection of fundamental freedoms,' European Commission
    President Jose Manuel Barroso was quoted as saying to Sarkisian in Brussels
    on March 12. `[In this context] the conduct of free and fair elections is
    of pivotal importance,' Sarkisian responded.

    Giragosian remains unconvinced. `The timing of this election does offer an
    important opportunity for the Armenian government to overcome the legacy of
    mistrust and the pronounced lack of legitimacy from the post-election
    crisis that has hindered the Sarkisian Administration ever since it took
    office,' he says, `but there is serious concern as neither recent local
    elections nor any moves by the Armenian government have demonstrated that
    the government realizes that this election will be crucial.'

    ---
    http://araratmagazine.org/2012/03/parliamentary-elections-2012/

Working...
X