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  • Fight Over Presidency Goes to Court

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    March 4 2013


    Armenia: Fight Over Presidency Goes to Court

    March 4, 2013 - 8:49am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Armenian presidential candidate Raffi Hovhannisian, who argues that a
    rigged February 18 presidential election deprived "the people" of
    "victory" against incumbent President Serzh Sargsyan, has said that he
    will demand today that the country's Constitutional Court throw out
    the official election results.

    The Court has said that it will consider the appeal in ten days,
    Aysor.am reported. The March 4 move will open a legal front in
    Hovhannisian's battle for the presidency, which, so far, has mostly
    unfolded in the form of street protests and campaigning. The US-born
    leader of the tiny opposition Heritage Party ambitiously has described
    his fight as the `Hello Revolution,' or "Barevolution."

    But the chances remain slim that Hovhannisian, a onetime foreign
    minister, will get a favorable court decision or a critical mass of
    popular support for greeting his arrival in the presidential
    residence. His rival Sargsyan has already been welcomed back into the
    presidents' club by world leaders such as US President Barack Obama
    and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Sargsyan also commands influence
    with Armenia's state institutions and the Constitutional Court is no
    exception, local commentators say.

    Armenia's handling of the voting process scarcely passed muster with
    international observers, who noted `implausibly high' support for the
    incumbent in several precincts, but the election monitors did not say
    that the irregularities warranted reconsidering the outcome of the
    national vote. Local observers have dismissed such findings as wide of
    the mark.

    Hovhannisian, however, has on his side a significant number of
    disenchanted and irked voters, many of whom have been beguiled by the
    relatively mild-mannered Hovhannisian and his handshaking campaign
    with ordinary Armenians, and are angered by what they call Sargsyan's
    ham-handed efforts to force five more years of himself on Armenia.
    Remembering the bloodshed that occurred the last time Armenia had a
    disputed presidential vote, Sargsyan tried to come to terms with
    Hovhannisian, but the talks failed, and Hovhannisian is now looking
    for allies.

    On March 2, he met the satin-shirt-inclined, mega-millionaire leader
    of the Prosperous Armenia Party, Gagik Tsarukian. Tsarukian has not
    yet said if he may consider throwing his weight behind the
    "Barevolution." Meanwhile, Hovhannisian is planning another large
    rally/ game-plan announcement tomorrow in downtown Yerevan; permission
    already has been secured for protests through March 25.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66633



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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