Chicago Tribune, IL
May 6 2012
Armenia hopes for calm election, democratic result
Margarita Antidze and Hasmik Lazarian
Reuters
1:48 a.m. CDT, May 6, 2012
YEREVAN (Reuters) - Armenian voters headed to the polls on Sunday for
a parliamentary election its leaders hope will bolster stability and
be free of the fraud and violence that marred the South Caucasus
country's last national election.
The biggest parties in the coalition government, President Serzh
Sarksyan's Republican Party and Prosperous Armenia led by businessman
Gagik Tsarukyan, are expected to remain the strongest in the former
Soviet republic of 3.3 million.
"All I want is a calm election...I voted for the Republicans, because
I want the government and the president to continue reforms," Susana
Arakelyan, a 73-year-old pensioner, told Reuters after casting her
ballot at a polling station in central Yerevan.
Voting will last until 8.00 p.m. (4.00 p.m. GMT).
Sarksyan has promised a fair election, portraying the vote as a break
from the past in a country that hankers for stability in order to
boost the economy, devastated by a war with neighboring Azerbaijan in
the 1990s and then hit by the 2008-09 global financial crisis.
"We have managed to turn the political fight into a fair competition,"
he told supporters during campaigning in the mountainous and
landlocked country which has found prosperity elusive since winning
independence from the Soviet Union.
The poll will be monitored by more than 300 international observers
from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE),
which said the last parliamentary election in 2007 fell short of
international standards.
A blast at a campaign rally injured about 150 people on Friday,
raising fears of a repeat of the violence that killed 10 people after
the 2008 presidential election, but emergency officials said it was
caused by gas-filled balloons exploding.
The violence in 2008, when eight opposition protesters and two police
officers were killed in clashes, dealt a severe blow to the country's
democratic credentials.
Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Centre in
Yerevan, said Sunday's election was a test of the credibility of the
president and government and "an opportunity for the Armenian
president to move beyond the legacy of March 2008 once and for all."
OIL AND GAS TRANSIT ROUTE
Armenia nestles high in the mountains of a region that is emerging as
an important transit route for oil and gas exports from the Caspian
Sea to energy-hungry world markets, although it has no pipelines of
its own.
Although a ceasefire was reached in 1994, its conflict with Azerbaijan
over the tiny Nagorno-Karabakh region remains unresolved and a threat
to stability.
Relations with another of its neighbors, Turkey, are also fraught
because Ankara does not recognize the killing of Armenians in Ottoman
Turkey during World War One as genocide.
Armenians hope a peaceful election will help speed the country's
recovery after its economy contracted by 14.2 percent in 2009.
The economy grew by 4.6 percent in 2011 and the International Monetary
Fund expects 3.8 percent growth in 2012. Inflation fell to 4.7 percent
in 2011 from 9.4 percent the year before.
Eight parties and one party bloc are running for seats in parliament
and 155 candidates are registered in 41 single-mandate constituencies.
The ruling coalition previously included two other parties, but one
pulled out in 2009, citing differences over foreign policy. The other
coalition partner, Country of Law, may struggle to cross the five
percent of votes threshold to enter parliament.
Analysts say the Armenian National Congress, a coalition of opposition
groups led by former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, could make it into
parliament after leading street protests since losing the 2008
presidential poll to Sarksyan.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-armenia-electionbre84501x-20120505,0,4282787.story
May 6 2012
Armenia hopes for calm election, democratic result
Margarita Antidze and Hasmik Lazarian
Reuters
1:48 a.m. CDT, May 6, 2012
YEREVAN (Reuters) - Armenian voters headed to the polls on Sunday for
a parliamentary election its leaders hope will bolster stability and
be free of the fraud and violence that marred the South Caucasus
country's last national election.
The biggest parties in the coalition government, President Serzh
Sarksyan's Republican Party and Prosperous Armenia led by businessman
Gagik Tsarukyan, are expected to remain the strongest in the former
Soviet republic of 3.3 million.
"All I want is a calm election...I voted for the Republicans, because
I want the government and the president to continue reforms," Susana
Arakelyan, a 73-year-old pensioner, told Reuters after casting her
ballot at a polling station in central Yerevan.
Voting will last until 8.00 p.m. (4.00 p.m. GMT).
Sarksyan has promised a fair election, portraying the vote as a break
from the past in a country that hankers for stability in order to
boost the economy, devastated by a war with neighboring Azerbaijan in
the 1990s and then hit by the 2008-09 global financial crisis.
"We have managed to turn the political fight into a fair competition,"
he told supporters during campaigning in the mountainous and
landlocked country which has found prosperity elusive since winning
independence from the Soviet Union.
The poll will be monitored by more than 300 international observers
from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE),
which said the last parliamentary election in 2007 fell short of
international standards.
A blast at a campaign rally injured about 150 people on Friday,
raising fears of a repeat of the violence that killed 10 people after
the 2008 presidential election, but emergency officials said it was
caused by gas-filled balloons exploding.
The violence in 2008, when eight opposition protesters and two police
officers were killed in clashes, dealt a severe blow to the country's
democratic credentials.
Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Centre in
Yerevan, said Sunday's election was a test of the credibility of the
president and government and "an opportunity for the Armenian
president to move beyond the legacy of March 2008 once and for all."
OIL AND GAS TRANSIT ROUTE
Armenia nestles high in the mountains of a region that is emerging as
an important transit route for oil and gas exports from the Caspian
Sea to energy-hungry world markets, although it has no pipelines of
its own.
Although a ceasefire was reached in 1994, its conflict with Azerbaijan
over the tiny Nagorno-Karabakh region remains unresolved and a threat
to stability.
Relations with another of its neighbors, Turkey, are also fraught
because Ankara does not recognize the killing of Armenians in Ottoman
Turkey during World War One as genocide.
Armenians hope a peaceful election will help speed the country's
recovery after its economy contracted by 14.2 percent in 2009.
The economy grew by 4.6 percent in 2011 and the International Monetary
Fund expects 3.8 percent growth in 2012. Inflation fell to 4.7 percent
in 2011 from 9.4 percent the year before.
Eight parties and one party bloc are running for seats in parliament
and 155 candidates are registered in 41 single-mandate constituencies.
The ruling coalition previously included two other parties, but one
pulled out in 2009, citing differences over foreign policy. The other
coalition partner, Country of Law, may struggle to cross the five
percent of votes threshold to enter parliament.
Analysts say the Armenian National Congress, a coalition of opposition
groups led by former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, could make it into
parliament after leading street protests since losing the 2008
presidential poll to Sarksyan.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-armenia-electionbre84501x-20120505,0,4282787.story