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Election 2013: Popular movement aims for "velvet revolution" in Arme

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  • Election 2013: Popular movement aims for "velvet revolution" in Arme

    Global Insight
    March 7, 2013


    Election 2013: Popular movement aims for "velvet revolution" in Armenia

    by Lilit Gevorgyan



    The anti-government movement showed growing strength as thousands took
    part in a demonstration on 28 February led by the runner-up in the 18
    February presidential election, Raffi Hovannisian, who is refusing to
    concede defeat to re-elected president Serzh Sargsyan.


    On 25 February, the incumbent Serzh Sargsyan was declared by Armenia's
    Central Elections Commission as the official winner of the
    presidential vote held on 18 February. According to the final results
    the winner has secured 58.64% of the vote, while Raffi Hovannisian,
    the leader of a relatively small Heritage party, came in the second
    place with 36.75%. None of the other candidates took more than 3% of
    the vote. Hovannisian has disputed the results as falsified. He has
    admitted that initially the campaign was relatively free with
    candidates able to express their views. But a few days before the
    vote, after the government realised that the opposition candidate was
    quickly gaining anti-government protest votes, Hovannisian said that
    Sargsyan's government had resorted to bribery and vote-rigging. Prior
    to the vote. Hovannisian demanded that President Sargsyan be
    disqualified from the race for abuse of administrative resources, but
    his call was ignored.


    To Hovannisian's and his supporters' dissatisfaction, the election
    monitors from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
    (OSCE), the main Western election watchdog, did not deliver a harsh
    verdict on the election results, although the final conclusions gave
    enough ammunition to challenge the vote results. The OSCE monitors
    agreed that there were some instances of electrical procedural
    violations, including "carousel" voting, allowing multiple voting.
    This was done with the help of vanishing ink in the passports, as
    reported by the OSCE. More importantly, they pointed at the lack of
    real competition during the election campaign. This was due to the
    pullout from the election process of the three major opposition
    parties: Armenian National Congress (ANC, led by former president
    Levon Ter-Petrossian); the Prosperous Armenia party of millionaire
    politician Gagik Tsarukyan; and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    (ARF).

    "Barevolution"

    The popular anti-government movement that emerged in the wake of 18
    February has been dubbed "Barevolution", a play on the Armenian word
    "barev" (hello). Barev is not just a greeting word in Armenian; it
    also implies kindness and hope, two key messages that Hovannisian has
    chosen that describes his approach to change. Effectively, he is
    calling for a velvet revolution that will require both the protestors
    and the government to be tolerant and ready for a compromise.

    His insistence on tolerance and respect for everyone, including the
    policemen, represented heavily in all protests, and is something new
    for a post-Soviet popular movement leader. Much like in other former
    Soviet states, Armenian voters are accustomed to more aggressive and
    divisive speeches by opposition politicians aiming for zero-sum
    solutions and certainly not showing respect for authorities.
    Hovannisian's message, being very idealistic, has found a strong
    resonance among many voters, who oppose violent clashes such as those
    seen on 1 March 2008, shortly after Sargsyan's first election. In
    those clashes 10 people were killed, tainting not only Sargsyan's
    presidency but also the opposition leaders; particularly, the first
    Armenian president of the third republic, Levon Ter-Petrossian, who
    led the failed uprising in 2008.

    On 28 February, Hovannisian held another rally in Yerevan's iconic
    Liberty Square, the birthplace of the independence movement, in which
    thousands of protesters took part. It was to discuss the final results
    of the 18 February presidential election and also update the
    participants on the progress of the opposition talks with the
    authorities on the opposition's agenda, which increasingly looks like
    a blueprint for a "velvet revolution".

    This blueprint has emerged almost on the hoof after the protests broke
    out. It is a roadmap towards turning Armenia into a parliamentary
    democracy from the current highly centralised presidential system. The
    protest leaders demand fresh parliamentary elections, which were last
    held only in May 2012; constitutional changes to pave the way for a
    parliamentary republic; bringing to justice all state officials
    potentially involved in vote rigging; and finally calling fresh
    presidential elections.

    Hovannisian has held talks with the authorities but thus far all his
    proposals have been turned down. A parliamentary motion by some of the
    opposition deputies to call in an extraordinary session has also been
    declined by the pro-government majority. The government has offered a
    few cabinet positions to Hovannisian's Heritage party deputies, a weak
    move of compromise which was expectedly declined by Heritage.

    In early March Armenia's Constitutional Court rejected Hovannisian's
    appeal to annual Sargsyan's election as president, arguing that he
    used administrative resources for his election campaign. The decision
    was not unexpected, but Hovannisian decided to appeal to adhere to the
    legal course of action. However, the upcoming Council of Elders
    elections in May is a serious opportunity for the opposition's roadmap
    of incremental change of power. The leaders of the popular movement
    have already said that they will focus on taking control of this
    important council in the upcoming poll.

    People versus politicians

    The demonstrations are mainly aimed at the political establishment,
    which has not changed significantly since the election of
    Ter-Petrossian as president after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
    Although Ter-Petrossian stepped down in 1998 under domestic pressure
    he had hand-picked his successor, Robert Kocharian, who similarly
    passed on his power to the incumbent. Hence the disenchantment of
    voters is directed at a political system that incorporates previous
    and current administrations. Lack of economic freedom, heavy
    oligarchic structure of the economy, weak courts, and corruption are
    lingering issues that the demonstrators see are directly linked to the
    fact that the political elite has never been overhauled regardless of
    a series of elections, approved as acceptable by Western election
    monitors over the past 15 years, but never enough to improve both the
    political and economic situation. The state of the economy has forced
    more than 700,000 Armenian citizens to leave the country in the last
    two decades, a concerning figure for a country with current population
    of just 3.5 million.

    Over the years, despite some differences, the same political-business
    elite ultimately controls the political power and economy in Armenia,
    supported by oligarchs linked to these power structures..Moreover,
    some of the opposition parties, including ANC and Prosperous Armenia,
    are also seen by many voters as part of the ruling elite: incapable of
    and uninterested in changing the current system.

    The recent wave of protests does not show signs of subsiding despite
    the disunity amongst the opposition parties. The rift is mainly for
    two reasons.

    Firstly, prior to the launch of the presidential campaign, major
    opposition parties decided to opt out from the race, arguing that this
    would deprive Sargsyan's election of legitimacy. However, Hovannisian
    chose to remain in the race, saying that the government would field
    quasi-opposition candidates to validate Sargsyan's election.

    This created a rift among the opposition players. Furthermore, the
    larger opposition parties claim that the Heritage leader, whose party
    has only five seats in 131-mandate Armenian parliament, managed to
    garner the protest vote which is not necessarily supporting
    Hovannisian's vision. Hence, ANC's charismatic leader Ter-Petrossian
    threw his support behind the popular movement but reserved it for
    Hovannisian, arguing that the latter has yet to prove himself.

    Secondly, the popular movement has revealed the new leanings of some
    of the opposition politicians and their parties. Particularly,
    Tsarukyan and his Prosperous Armenia party have been reserved in their
    support for the movement and vocal in their opposition to fresh
    parliamentary elections. Tsarukyan, who was widely tipped to challenge
    Sargsyan in the 18 February election, has not made any public
    appearance since the protests began. Another presidential candidate,
    veteran Soviet-era dissident Paryur Hayrikyan, running against
    Sargsyan in the latest race, has also decided not to back Hovannisian.
    Hayrikyan, who was mysteriously shot in the shoulder days before the
    vote, has since lost his already limited political currency with the
    popular movement. ARF is the only party that thus far has joined
    Hovannisian, although the support initially was more half-hearted than
    the demonstrators in the squares would like to see.

    Waiting game

    The people's movement needs to swell in numbers and galvanise the
    regions to force the authorities to abandon their tactics of waiting.
    The popular leaders, including some of the well-respected
    intellectuals, need to create a grand coalition with ANC and
    Prosperous Armenia. The latter is unlikely to join considering
    Tsarukyan's political ambitions and business interests that can become
    exposed if he directly challenges the authorities.

    Hovannisian could expect some support from the vast Armenian diaspora
    across the world, which outnumbers Armenia's current population. There
    have already been protests abroad demanding a change to the current
    system, which many believe will lead to Armenia's slow demise. It is
    the first time that diaspora Armenians have actively participated in
    Armenia's domestic affairs by staging protests and openly challenging
    Sargsyan. This is because the diaspora' makeup is also changing. Two
    decades ago the diaspora mainly comprised descendants of the survivors
    of the 1915 massacres by Turks, recognised by Armenia and a number of
    other European countries as genocide. However, since the collapse of
    the Soviet Union many Armenians have also joined these communities,
    including a number of Armenian citizens, who since the mid-2000s have
    been deprived of their voting rights abroad due to changes to the
    Armenian election law.

    Outlook and implications

    Both the West and Russia are united in their indifference with regards
    to the popular movement in Armenia. Sargsyan has proven to be a
    flexible partner both for the West and Russia. In terms of helping
    Armenia's democratisation process, the West is limited in its
    willingness to throw support behind the opposition as Armenia
    geopolitically is unlikely to take a fully pro-Western course under
    any government due to its problems with Azerbaijan and Turkey. Moscow
    is also aware that Armenia's security and economic woes will keep the
    country in Russia's geopolitical orbit in years to come. Russian
    authorities have also been muted, as Hovannisian has insisted that he
    sees Moscow as a key ally, implying that there will be limited changes
    in terms of Armenia's foreign policy should the government changes in
    Yerevan. If anything Hovannisian, born in California and a graduate of
    Berkeley, Tufts and Georgetown universities, could be less flexible on
    a number of Western plans, including restarting the failed
    Armenian-Turkish normalisation process based on 2010 protocols.

    Hovannisian's Gandhi-style movement is perhaps the only way to avoid
    violence. However, repeated reports by the opposition members of
    provocations to start violence by unknown men reportedly linked to the
    state security agencies is worrying. Keeping calm and increasing the
    numbers of protesters is the main task of the opposition leaders to
    force Sargsyan to start talks in the coming weeks.

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