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Hovhannissian Challenges Sarkissian

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  • Hovhannissian Challenges Sarkissian

    HOVHANNISSIAN CHALLENGES SARKISSIAN

    Ahram Online, Egypt
    Feb 26 2013

    While Serge Sarkissian won last week's Armenian presidential elections,
    rival Raffi Hovhannissian still considers himself to be the new
    president, writes Nora Koloyan-Keuhnelian

    The sixth presidential elections to take place in Armenia since the
    country's independence in 1991 took place on 18 February, with seven
    candidates including president of Armenia Serge Sarkissian taking part
    in the race. When the results were declared, Sarkissian, representing
    the ruling Republican Party, was re-elected with 58.64 per cent of
    the vote, while Raffi Hovhannissian, leader of the Heritage Party
    and the country's first foreign minister after the collapse of the
    former Soviet Union, came second with 36.75 per cent.

    Some 2.5 million Armenians were eligible to vote in the elections,
    according to the country's Central Electoral Commission. More than
    60 per cent of those on the electoral rolls took part.

    The result was predictable, commentators say, and even before
    the elections it was clear that the main struggle would be between
    Sarkissian and Hovhannissian. However, while international observers
    said that the conduct of the elections was an improvement over the
    2008 elections, Hovhannissian has refused to recognise the results,
    describing the elections as "fraudulent" and refusing to leave Freedom
    Square in the capital Yerevan.

    Hovhannissian has told his supporters that he was elected president
    of Armenia, and his campaign headquarters made allegations of bribery,
    forging votes, multiple voting and other practices in several regions
    even before the elections started, claiming that it had proof of
    these abuses.

    When the results were announced, Hovhannissian held a press conference
    declaring his victory on behalf of the Armenian people. "The Republic
    of Armenia and its citizens have decided to take their destiny, our
    destiny, into their hands by voting for a presidency that recognises
    the rule of law, pursues the sovereignty of the Armenian Republic,
    and understands the national interest," he said.

    "On the eve of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and
    of the great national dispossession for which we demand justice from
    Turkey and from the international community, we seek justice for the
    Mountainous Karabakh Republic and recognition of its independence
    and territorial integrity."

    "These things will happen, as they did in Kosovo or South Sudan
    or East Timor. At the same time, we demand the rule of law for
    our citizens. For the first time in 20 years, the citizens have
    said yes to the constitution, yes to the rule of law, and yes to
    democracy. It is not about Raffi and Serge, not about the Heritage and
    Republican Parties, it's about the future of the Republic of Armenia,"
    Hovhannissian said.

    Thousands of Hovhannissian's supporters gathered in Freedom Square to
    back his demands, challenging the re-elected president to come to the
    Square in person. The following day, and after Sarkissian failed to
    show up in the Square, Hovhannissian led thousands of his supporters
    on a march to the presidential palace, asking to meet the president.

    When Hovhannissian left the building after the meeting, his supporters
    were still in front of the palace chanting "Hayasdan-Hayasdan," or
    "Armenia-Armenia". Addressing the crowd, Hovhannissian declared
    that "we are the masters of our constitution, our rights and our
    presidency," adding that he would reveal the details of his meeting
    with the re-elected president the following day.

    The next day, thousands of Hovhannissian's supporters again gathered
    in a rally in Freedom Square, waiting for the man they call the new
    president of the country to reveal the results of his meeting with the
    re-elected president. One of the compromises offered to Sarkissian
    was to repeat the second round of the elections, it was reported,
    something that Sarkissian refused.

    According to Hovhannissian, the other proposal had been to call snap
    parliamentary elections, which, he said, would return power to the
    people. However, Sarkissian refused this offer too. "This struggle
    will not die down. We will achieve victory," Hovhannissian said to
    the tens of thousands in the crowds, adding that he would continue
    his campaign of peaceful demonstrations.

    During last weekend, Hovhannissian went to the regions he won in the
    elections, Vanatsor and Gyumri, in which he received 70 per cent of
    the vote according to the official results. Despite the snowy weather,
    a huge crowd awaited him, and while the police tried to scare people
    away and closed the roads by force, tens of thousands of people
    nevertheless attended Hovhannissian's rallies.

    After the visit, Hovhannissian and his supporters headed back
    to Freedom Square to continue the rallies, defying the police
    who described them as "unauthorised." "We are the masters of our
    constitution, our rights, and our presidency," Hovhannissian declared.

    The other candidates in the elections were Hrant Pakradian, leader
    of the Freedom Party and a former prime minister of the country,
    and Andreas Ghugassian, the director of Radio Hay and a political
    analyst who went on a one-day hunger strike when the presidential
    elections campaign kicked off, demanding that Sarkissian be removed
    from the ballot.

    There was also Baruyr Hayrigian, a former dissident and the leader
    of the Union for National Determination Party, Vartan Setragian,
    a poet, and Arman Melikian, a candidate in the 2008 elections. Two
    candidates withdrew from the race in December, while Hayrigian was
    shot and injured at the end of last month and asked the courts to
    postpone the elections as a result.

    Hayrigian called on the two leading opposition candidates,
    Havhannissian and Pakradian, to unite around a single candidate,
    but he failed to persuade them and a week before the elections he
    withdrew his request for a postponement.

    The president of Armenia is elected for a five-year term by people
    living in Armenia. The country has a multi-party system in which no
    party is usually able to govern alone, and as a result the parties
    form coalition governments. In the 2008 presidential elections,
    there were nine candidates, with Sarkissian winning with 52.8 per
    cent of the vote and beating Armenia's first independent president,
    Levon Der-Bedrossian, who got only 21.5 per cent of the vote.

    Der-Bedrossian, who served from 1991 to 1998, was forced to step down
    in February 1998, halfway through his second term, after advocating
    a compromise settlement of the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh which
    many Armenians regarded as undermining their security.

    There were several on-line polls before last week's elections
    that showed Hovhannissian's possible win, while exit polls showed
    Sarkissian as the winner. While Hovhannissian has refused to recognise
    the election results, Moscow has approved them. Sergei Lebedev, the
    former director of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service, said that
    some minor irregularities had been noted that could nevertheless not
    have affected the overall results of the elections. Russian president
    Vladimir Putin congratulated Sarkissian on his re-election.

    Three leading non-government parties, the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (ARF), the Armenian National Congress (HAK) and Prosperous
    Armenia, had announced their decisions not to take part in the 2013
    elections, which meant that the campaigns were quieter than usual and
    lacked real debate. However, ARF leader Armen Rusdamian appeared in
    Freedom Square on Friday, joining the rally against the re-elected
    president and announcing that his Party supported Hovhannissian's
    demands.

    Nigol Pashinian, a prominent figure from the opposition HAK, also
    joined the rally and gave a powerful speech. "Starting from today,
    Serge Sarkissian will not have quiet nights," he said, urging the
    other opposition parties to join the post-election protests. Leader
    of the HAK Der-Bedrossian recognised Hovhannissian's victory and said
    "I have no doubt that Raffi is the winning president and that Serge
    was not re-elected."

    59-year-old Sarkissian is a war veteran from the country's 1988-1994
    war with Azerbaijan over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, the
    region where he was born. A keen chess player and head of the Armenian
    Chess Federation, he has sought to maintain positive relations with the
    EU, NATO, Russia and Iran. Sarkissian was appointed Armenia's defense
    minister in 1993, head of the country's State Security Department in
    1995, and finally minister of national security in 1996.

    Hovhannissian, 53, born in Fresno, California, and moving to Armenia in
    1990, was the first foreign minister of the newly independent Republic
    of Armenia, though he chose to resign because of differences with
    the then president Der-Bedrossian. In 2002, Hovhannissian founded
    the Heritage Party, and in 2011 he went on a "fast for freedom"
    hunger strike in Freedom Square in order to force government changes.

    Hovhannissian visited Egypt in March 1992 when he was foreign minister.

    Today, a week after Armenia's sixth presidential elections,
    the Central Election Commission will officially announce the final
    election results at the moment that Hovhannissian has started a new
    campaign called "BAREVolution", an Armenian-English word meaning
    "greetings to the revolution".

    The campaign has spread to the country's universities and students
    of Yerevan State University went on strike earlier this week. In the
    wake of the controversy over the presidential elections, observers
    are asking whether the Arab Spring will now shift to this former
    Soviet country.

    Armenia is a country squeezed between hostile neighbours, and there
    are many historical reasons for the conflicts it has been experiencing.

    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/1584/20/Hovhannissian-challenges-Sarkissian.aspx

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