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  • Ankara: Analyst Giragosian: Level Of Discontent Not Understood By Ar

    ANALYST GIRAGOSIAN: LEVEL OF DISCONTENT NOT UNDERSTOOD BY ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT

    Today's Zaman
    Feb 24 2013
    Turkey

    The recent re-election of Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan has seen
    large protests in the South Caucasus country, and this week's guest
    for Monday Talk says the opposition to Sarksyan is growing.

    "The official election results are challenged by many, but more
    importantly, the current political struggle is less about the specific
    results, and more about the opposition to the current government,"
    said Richard Giragosian, founding director of the Regional Studies
    Center (RSC), an independent think tank located in Armenia's capital
    of Yerevan.

    Last Friday, thousands of people protested in Yerevan against the
    re-election of Sarksyan, asserting that the opposition party leader,
    Raffi Hovhannisian, was the real winner.

    Answering our questions, Giragosian elaborated on the issue.

    First of all, I'd like to hear your comments in regards to Armenia's
    presidential election. International observers are saying it was an
    improvement on recent elections but was not genuinely competitive. Do
    you agree?

    Despite another lost opportunity for significantly better, improved
    and freer and fair elections, Armenia's incumbent president, Serzh
    Sarksyan, was re-elected. According to the official results, which are
    disputed and criticized by many in Armenia, Sarksyan reportedly secured
    58.6 percent of the vote, with his main challenger, Raffi Hovhannisian
    garnering 36.7 percent of the vote. Most significantly, Hovhannisian
    won a decisive 70 percent of the vote in the country's second-largest
    city, Gyumri, and also won in Vanadzor, the third-largest city,
    as well as in significant sections of the capital Yerevan.

    But in many ways, for the Armenian president, his re-election may be
    the easier part, especially as the opposition is now uniting behind
    Hovhannisian and as protests mount. Over the longer term as well,
    for the next Armenian president, no matter who it is, the real
    challenge now is to address the pressing policy challenges that
    continue to hinder the country. Although these issues were missing
    from the presidential campaign, the combination of economic crisis
    and insufficient political reform present serious challenges. And
    although many expected President Sarksyan to be re-elected, that
    prediction does not infer support, and the government needs to regain
    public trust and restore confidence.

    What was the reason behind his re-election if he has been losing
    public trust? Do you think Mr. Sarksyan has a plan to regain public's
    confidence?

    Sarksyan's victory was due in large part to two main factors. First,
    through the campaign, an open division between prominent opposition
    figures, whose inability to unite, prevented the opposition from
    coalescing and uniting behind any one personality or consensus
    candidate. In this way, the division of the opposition only helped
    Sarksyan. Nevertheless, more interestingly, the opposition is now
    uniting behind Hovhannisian and, although it is a belated post-election
    move, it does reflect a new trend of momentum among the anti-Sarksyan
    camp, now transforming into a dynamic opposition movement standing
    behind Hovhannisian.

    The second reason for the outcome was the factor of incumbency. More
    specifically, Sarksyan benefited from both the natural advantage
    of incumbency, whereby the president could rely on the trappings of
    office and leverage his position and obvious name recognition, and by
    the unnatural advantage of incumbency, involving the use of so-called
    "administrative resources," with pressure on teachers, civil servants
    and others to support him. At the same time, the now well-documented
    behavior of local and regional officials, who generally know no better
    than to "fix" or "rig" an election by intimidating voters, interfered
    in the vote and, as in the cases of past elections, engaged in voting
    irregularities and violations.

    'One-third of the Armenian population lives in poverty' The
    proportion of people living below the poverty line has been growing
    in Armenia. How would you describe Armenia's current economic
    situation? Why have serious economic and political reforms been
    delayed?

    With roughly one-third of the Armenian population now living
    in poverty, widening disparities in wealth and income and with
    little progress in terms of job creation, the main challenge for
    any government will be in managing the mounting economic pressure,
    which is only exacerbated by the entrenched power and position of the
    country's so-called "oligarchs." Moreover, the Armenian government will
    be hard pressed to overcome the structural impediments of corruption
    and the low level of tax collection. And as the imperative for
    second-generation reforms mounts, Armenia will have to both deepen and
    accelerate economic reforms, thereby tackling and taking on powerful
    vested interests. But the inherent promise of Armenia's ongoing
    negotiations with the European Union over a Deep and Comprehensive
    Free Trade Agreement [DCFTA] offers a new opportunity to overcome the
    peril of economic stagnation and isolation. Yet, the danger for Armenia
    is that its potential only continues to far outweigh its real success.

    The attempted assassination of one candidate and another's hunger
    strike dominated news from Armenia before the election? What should
    we read from all this? What does it reflect about politics in Armenia?

    The shooting of Armenian presidential candidate Paruyr Hayrikyan
    obviously disrupted the course and the discourse of the campaign,
    demonstrated by a shift in both public attention and political
    debate away from policy issues to an intense focus on speculation
    and conspiracy theories related to the assault. As the campaign
    was already flawed by a pronounced absence of more serious policy
    issues or real political debate, the impact of the shooting was only
    a further erosion of the content of the campaign.

    Despite the impact on the campaign, the shooting actually had no
    real impact on the election itself. In political terms, although the
    shooting of the candidate triggered a natural surge in media coverage,
    Hayrikyan remained a marginal candidate, as the greater public
    attention did not translate into any larger political standing. But
    the incident also tended to embarrass the government, even though it
    is now seen as an isolated and a more personal than political act.

    Mr. Hovhannisian came a distant second place in the election. And
    he called himself the real winner and called on Sarksyan to concede
    defeat. What do you think about Hovhannisian's claim?

    The level of discontent has not been understood by the Armenian
    government, and the level of political activism is increasing, as
    much of the country's various opposition forces are now standing
    behind Hovhannisian. But they are more significantly uniting against
    the government.

    Are the election results certain now?

    The official election results are challenged by many, but more
    importantly, the current political struggle is less about the specific
    results and more about the opposition to the current government. In
    this way, the campaign is continuing, even beyond the election itself.

    Has Hovhannisian announced any plans about what he will do if Sarksyan
    ignores his ultimatum?

    The opposition to Sarksyan is only growing, with both a more dynamic
    scale and an expanding scope, which means that it is too soon to
    assess strategy as events remain too fluid, at least at this point.

    But yes, there is a general, and perhaps dangerous, lack of clear
    or coherent strategy behind this newfound momentum of opposition to
    the government. But in order to succeed, there must be a strategic
    articulation of more concrete demands and more precise political goals.

    'Ter-Petrosyan now seems to be leaning toward Hovhannisian' Why did
    Sarksyan's most serious potential rivals -- former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosyan and Prosperous Armenia party leader Gagik Tsarukyan
    -- announce in December that they would not participate in the
    election? Have they commented on the results?

    Ironically, this election was also defined by who chose not to
    run. In December 2012, millionaire businessman Gagik Tsarukyan, the
    leader of the country's second-largest Prosperous Armenia political
    party, disappointed many of his supporters by deciding not to stand
    as a candidate, explaining that his party would neither field nor
    support a candidate. That decision, only days after a rare meeting
    with President Sarksyan, ended months of speculation over what was
    perceived as the most serious challenge to the incumbent president.

    Although stemming from the fact that Prosperous Armenia was never able
    to fully present itself as a true opposition party after serving as
    such an integral part of the first Sarksyan administration, the move
    also reflects the decline of the power and standing of the party, which
    never seemed able to recover from a disappointing, less-than-expected
    performance in the May 2012 parliamentary elections.

    Only weeks after the decision by the Prosperous Armenia Party to
    withhold its participation in the election, Armenia's first president,
    68-year-old Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the leader of the opposition ANC
    (Armenian National Congress) and the 2008 challenger to Sarksyan,
    also announced that he would not stand for the presidency. For its
    part, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) also failed to
    field a candidate, breaking with the party's past practice of nearly
    always putting forward a presidential candidate, no matter how weak
    or marginal the candidate.

    More importantly, through this new post-election political crisis,
    the Prosperous Armenia Party is predictably silent, as they are a
    declining, and even questionable or dubious "opposition." But more
    surprisingly, former President Ter-Petrosyan now seems to be leaning
    toward Hovhannisian.

    Do you expect conflict in Armenia because of public discontent, similar
    to what was seen in the deadly post-election confrontations in 2008,
    between Ter-Petrosyan supporters and security forces?

    Given the broader situation and underling discontent, the situation
    may be moving toward a more heated and intense conflict, similar
    to 2008, which was never fully resolved. It is simply too early
    to say, however, and depends more on the government's reaction,
    or overreaction, to this mounting crisis.

    'Turkey-Armenia normalization depends on Ankara as Armenia is ready,
    willing'

    As President Sarksyan has won a new five-year term, what should we
    expect in regards to dormant Turkey-Armenia relations especially
    as 2015, the centennial of the events of 1915, is approaching? Some
    observers see it as an opportunity for Turkey to improve Turkey-Armenia
    relations, but others do not agree with this. What is your opinion?

    In terms of foreign policy, a second, final term may also further
    allow President Sarksyan to look for new, bold ideas or initiatives in
    foreign policy, similar to his politically risky but bold initiative in
    Armenian-Turkish normalization, thereby presenting an opportune time
    for crafting a real and lasting legacy. Thus, from this perspective,
    the re-election of Sarksyan to a second term may actually represent
    more of a first term, as a fresh start. And the imperative now is to
    tackle a litany of serious and unresolved strategic challenges that
    have gone largely unaddressed during this presidential campaign.

    Why do you think this issue was not addressed during this presidential
    campaign? Is there now less public support for Turkey-Armenia
    normalization? Do you think the Armenian government is willing to
    get back on track with normalization with Turkey?

    The issue of normalization is now widely and correctly seen as a
    non-issue, until and only when Turkey decides to return. Armenia is
    ready and willing, but Armenian patience is not without limits.

    Do you think the Turkish government is willing to get back on track
    with normalization with Turkey?

    This is a good question but needs to be directed to officials in
    Ankara. But I can say that since the launch of the so-called "football
    diplomacy" over the "normalization" process between Armenia and Turkey,
    official, state-level engagement has been suspended, with the issue
    now a hostage to internal domestic Turkish politics. But there are
    renewed signs of optimism, as several factors are now may drive Turkey
    to re-engage and return to negotiations. First, as Turkey feels under
    mounting pressure over the Armenian genocide, which will only peak
    in 2015, as commemorations mark the 100th anniversary of the 1915
    genocide, Ankara may be motivated to seek a "restart" in efforts to
    normalize relations with Armenia.

    Second, more broadly, in terms of the outlook for Armenian-Turkish
    normalization, however, the situation remains largely dependent on
    Turkey. In this way, the general perception and policy in Armenia is
    one of waiting for Turkey to make the first move. But the danger, in a
    broader context, is that if Turkey does not return to the normalization
    process soon, Armenian patience will lessen, and it may actually make
    the next stage of diplomacy even harder and more difficult.

    Would you elaborate on this idea? What can Armenia do?

    For its part, beyond waiting for Turkey, Armenia can better leverage
    those venues where Armenia and Turkey regularly engage and enjoy
    unofficial diplomatic relations, most notably within the Organization
    of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC), for example, an
    institution where both Armenia and Turkey are founding members.

    PROFILE: Richard Giragosian Giragosian is the founding director of
    the Regional Studies Center (RSC), an independent think tank located
    in Yerevan, Armenia. He also serves as both a visiting professor
    and senior expert at Yerevan State University's Centre for European
    Studies (CES) and is a contributing analyst for Oxford Analytica,
    a London-based global analysis and advisory firm.

    Giragosian was previously a regular contributor to Radio Free
    Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) publications, from 1999-2008, and
    also served as a contributing analyst for the London-based Jane's
    Information Group, covering political, economic and security issues
    in the South Caucasus, Central Asia and the Asia-Pacific region,
    from 2003-2010. For nine years, Giragosian served as a professional
    staff member of the Joint Economic Committee (JEC) of the US Congress.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-307964-analyst-giragosian-level-of-discontent-not-understood-by-armenian-government.html

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