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Armenia's Bizarre Campaign Season

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  • Armenia's Bizarre Campaign Season

    The Atlantic
    Feb 16 2013


    Armenia's Bizarre Campaign Season

    By Ruzanna Stepanian and Satenik Vantsian


    Disqualifications, hunger strikes and an assassination attempt have
    made for a very strange presidential contest.

    YEREVAN/GYUMRI, Armenia -- A presidential candidate on a four-week
    hunger strike. Another candidate who declares he will not accept the
    election results -- even if he wins. A murky apparent assassination
    attempt. Up to one-third of eligible voters legally barred from
    casting ballots because they are out of the country. You might think
    this would be more than enough to make a presidential election
    exciting. But if you are talking about the February 18 vote in
    Armenia, you'd be mistaken.

    Despite facing a slate of six challengers, incumbent President Serzh
    Sarkisian, according to all polls, seems set to cruise to a second
    term. Surveys show him winning about 70 percent of the vote, more than
    25 percentage points ahead of his nearest rival.

    But what the campaign has lacked in suspense it has more than made up
    for in strangeness. For instance, candidate Andrias Ghukasian, the
    42-year-old owner of a Yerevan radio station, has been on a hunger
    strike since the campaign began. He is calling for Sarkisian's
    candidacy to be annulled and for international observers to boycott
    the vote. In a sense, he is running against the election itself.

    Likewise, 49-year-old Arman Melikian, a former official in the
    government of the de facto independent Azerbaijani region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, has denounced the election in advance as
    "illegitimate."

    "I will not accept the official results," he said. "Yes, even if I
    win," he added.

    And then there is the story of Paruyr Hairikian, the 63-year-old head
    of the Self-Determination Party. He was shot and wounded outside his
    home on January 31. After considerable flip-flopping, he decided on
    February 10 to ask the Constitutional Court to delay the election for
    two weeks. But the next day he withdrew his request, saying that he
    couldn't bear the thought of prolonging Ghukasian's hunger strike.

    Meanwhile, Armenia security forces have arrested two men who
    reportedly confessed to shooting Hairikian. And presidential candidate
    Vartan Sedrakian, a political neophyte who describes himself as an
    expert in Armenian epic poetry, says he fears he will be arrested
    because he knew the two suspects and that they had even been hired to
    distribute his campaign literature.

    Empty Rhetoric

    There are serious issues facing this South Caucasus country:
    navigating between Russia and the West, tensions with neighboring
    Azerbaijan over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, a
    faltering economy that is dominated by oligarchs and increasingly
    dependent on remittances sent from abroad, among others. But such
    matters have rarely made it into the campaign, which began on January
    21 and has not featured any direct debates among the contenders.
    Instead, it has been a campaign of rhetoric and gestures.

    One exchange between the U.S.-born former foreign minister, Raffi
    Hovannisian, who is Sarkisian's closest rival, and the incumbent was
    typical. Speaking at a rally in Armenia's second-largest city, Gyumri,
    on February 10, Hovannisian presented the choice facing voters in
    Manichean, albeit vague, terms: "This is not a struggle between Raffi
    and Serzh. This is not a battle between our political parties. It is a
    struggle for good, and good will win in the end." This prompted
    Sarkisian to respond at a rally in Yerevan the next day: "Yesterday,
    one of the candidates stated the upcoming election was going to be a
    choice between good and evil. All the candidates had, until that
    moment, been more or less tactful. So have they again begun dividing
    the nation into us and them, into good and evil? When will they
    realize the country is sick and tired of such divisions?"

    A Referendum on Sarkisian

    The field of candidates was weakened from the start after some
    heavyweights decided not to run. Sixty-eight-year-old former President
    Levon Ter-Petrossian, who finished second to Sarkisian in 2008,
    stepped aside in December, citing his age as the main reason. His
    Armenian National Congress is boycotting the election.

    Earlier, millionaire Gagik Tsarukian of the Prosperous Armenia Party,
    the country's second-largest, also said he would not run. Prosperous
    Armenia cooperated with Sarkisian's government in his first term and
    performed poorly in the May 2012 legislative elections. The Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation also decided to sit out this election,
    despite fielding candidates in all of Armenia's previous presidential
    ballots.

    Despite praise from monitors who generally say the campaign
    environment this time has been better than in previous elections,
    opposition figures accuse Sarkisian's Republican Party of using
    "administrative resources" to support the president. In an interview
    in January, Sarkisian said it was not the government's fault that the
    opposition is weak and rejected charges of an uneven playing field.
    "Of course, it is very difficult for them because members of the
    Republican Party today are leaders in more than 70 percent of local
    government bodies across Armenia. And no matter how much they say that
    this is due to the use of government resources, I can never agree with
    that," Sarkisian said. "People there waged a political struggle and
    got into leadership positions. And why shouldn't they use their
    leadership -- I mean, their prestige -- for their political party or
    for ensuring the victory of their party's leader?"

    Will Anyone Vote?

    In addition, opposition activists have criticized a change to the
    Electoral Code that severely restricted voting from abroad, meaning
    that up to 1 million Armenian citizens currently living or traveling
    outside the country will be unable to vote. The government says that
    change was made because of the high cost of arranging out-of-country
    voting, while the opposition charges it was done because voters abroad
    historically cast ballots overwhelmingly for opposition candidates.

    Although the election is not competitive, Sarkisian is under pressure
    to preside over a relatively clean vote. He came to the presidency
    following a 2008 campaign that the opposition alleged was flawed. In
    the weeks between the election and his inauguration, opposition
    protests were violently put down by the authorities and a state of
    emergency was declared.

    In many ways Sarkisian's first term has been devoted to establishing
    his legitimacy, a process that he hopes will be completed with the
    February 18 ballot. But Armenians in general are following the
    election-season antics with a mixture of indifference and cynicism.
    One pensioner in Gyumri said he wasn't sure whether he'll vote or not.
    "There have been a lot of promises. But unfortunately they have never
    been kept," he said.

    http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/02/armenias-bizarre-campaign-season/273233/

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