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Armenian Opposition: Possibility Of Tactical Alliance - 1

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  • Armenian Opposition: Possibility Of Tactical Alliance - 1

    ARMENIAN OPPOSITION: POSSIBILITY OF TACTICAL ALLIANCE - 1

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    July 15 2013

    15 July 2013 - 11:27am
    Susanna Petrosyan, Yerevan, exclusively to VK

    Recently, the system of the Armenian authorities has been galvanized
    by a row concerning the registration of the company in an offshore
    zone in Cyprus in the name of Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, as
    well as facts relating to the disclosure of abuse by the government,
    which is reflected in a report by the Control Chamber. (See "Armenia:
    the principle of the "weak link"). These events have caused great
    public interest and could not help affecting the processes within the
    government. It can be seen that behind the outward calm and unity of
    the government there is tension that takes both explicit (in the form
    of a statement by speaker Hovik Abrahamian, who accused the government
    of robbery) and latent forms. In particular, some members of the ruling
    Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) are now dissatisfied with the fact
    that an utterly discredited prime minister remains in the government,
    weakening the regime.

    At the same time, the opposition feels quite confident. If we examine
    the parliamentary activities of representatives of parties like the
    ARF, the "Prosperous Armenia Party" (PAP) and the "Armenian National
    Congress" (ANC) during the last year, we can see that these forces
    acted with common positions on critical issues such as the government's
    program, the draft state budget and setting up a temporary committee
    of the National Assembly on the events of March 1, 2003. MPs from the
    three factions showed rare unanimity on the need for the provision
    by the parliament as a political body of a political, not a legal,
    assessment of the events of March 1. Such a level of parliamentary
    cooperation between the opposition forces of Armenia was seen only
    in the first half of the 1990s.

    Against the backdrop of the deteriorating socio-economic status,
    the complete inactivity of the authorities and the impoverishment
    of the masses and migration, in Armenia the opposition is ready to
    cooperate in implementing the most important political, economic and
    legal reforms, and most importantly - is ready to cooperate in the
    issue of a change of power.

    The ANC, PA and ARF are not satisfied with the policy of the
    authorities for various reasons, but there is one important fact -
    the interests of these forces are identical on the question related
    to prompting the internal order in the country, especially the radical
    political reforms that would make Armenia politically and economically
    freer. Opposition members are aware that monopoly and corruption
    stifle the country's economy, and to change the situation for the
    better real reforms are needed, but their implementation under the
    current regime, which only declares the need for reform, is impossible.

    We should note that the ANC and ARF, with great controversy in the
    past amounting to hostility, have managed to develop cooperation for
    the sake of change.

    The question of a possible merger of the opposition is still relevant.

    Some Republicans, as well as state-controlled experts, are trying to
    speculate about the fact that the opposition parties did not combine
    into a single unit in the parliamentary elections of 2012. This fact
    is being represented as a sign of the weakness and failure of the
    Armenian opposition.

    To understand whether a united opposition is possible, we should
    consider the following fact: there will never be a full merger
    between them, because the ANC, PAP and ARF represent different
    political niches. In particular, the ARF is a socialist party, and
    the ideology of the ANC is social liberalism. The PAP does not have
    any clearly-defined ideology, but judging by the applications made
    by the party functionaries, it can be assumed that the PAP expects
    serious internal party reform, and the party will be ideological and,
    most likely, left-wing, because the representatives of the PAP focus
    on social issues.

    To be continued

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/politics/42636.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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