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Yerevan Vote 2013: Opposition Groups See No Chance Of RPA Winning Su

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  • Yerevan Vote 2013: Opposition Groups See No Chance Of RPA Winning Su

    YEREVAN VOTE 2013: OPPOSITION GROUPS SEE NO CHANCE OF RPA WINNING SUNDAY POLLS

    POLITICS | 02.05.13 | 11:01

    Photolure

    By NAIRA HAYRUMYAN
    ArmeniaNow correspondent

    Major opposition forces participating in the May 5 elections to
    Yerevan's Council of Elders rule out the possibility of the current
    ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) and its mayor Taron Margaryan
    retaining power in the Armenian capital.

    Enlarge Photo

    Enlarge Photo

    Under the election law that pertains to the Yerevan municipal vote,
    a political party, or a bloc of parties, that manages to receive more
    than 40 percent of the vote will automatically have its top candidate
    installed as mayor. If neither party or bloc can get that majority, the
    decision will be collectively upon the newly elected Council of Elders.

    Earlier this week the opposition Armenian National Congress Party (ANC)
    turned to the Prosecutor-General's Office, asking it to inquire into
    the legality of the wealth officially declared by 35-year-old mayor
    Margaryan and worth several million dollars. The ANC wants prosecutors
    to find out whether the incumbent mayor used any levers of power in
    the acquisition of the property that he officially declared to be
    the owner of.

    Speaking at an ANC rally on April 30 the opposition party's leader
    Levon Ter-Petrosyan claimed that attempts to have a candidate like
    Margaryan reelected show that [President] Serzh Sargsyan "does not
    give a damn about public opinion."

    Representatives of the RPA have dismissed such statements by the
    opposition leader, insisting that Margaryan has been one of the most,
    if not the most, popular mayor of Yerevan ever and has deserved
    reelection due to his hard work praised by many residents of the
    capital. They also consider it normal that Margaryan, the son of
    late Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan and former popular prefect
    of the administrative district of Avan, should be in possession of
    such property.

    Meanwhile, at the rally, Ter-Petrosyan described the upcoming elections
    in Yerevan as 'politically crucial for the regime'. At the same time,
    he addressed a friendly call to all political forces and civil society
    organizations to put aside their differences and give "a decisive
    battle to the regime on May 5 to recover Yerevan from its claws."

    "Unfortunately, the authorities realize the gravity of the moment
    better than many of the [other] parties. This is evidenced by their
    reverting to violence, terror, provocations, especially against ANC
    and Prosperous Armenia Party activists," said Ter-Petrosyan.

    Several incidents have occurred during the current election campaign.

    In one of them an ANC activist was assaulted presumably by RPA
    loyalists while canvassing for his party in a Yerevan suburb. In
    another major incident a reporter with a pro-opposition paper covering
    an RPA campaign meeting was assaulted by one of the candidates of
    the ruling party.

    In Ter-Petrosyan's opinion, an opposition bloc can be formed after
    the elections to prevent the RPA from reinstalling its mayor. But
    before that the opposition claims the RPA will try to rig the vote
    to secure the number of seats in the 65-member body required for the
    automatic election of the mayor. In particular, one of the allegations
    is that non-residents of Yerevan will be brought to the capital on
    Election Day to vote. Under law, citizens who are not registered in
    Yerevan but live in the capital for at least three years can also
    take part in the vote. Some experts believe the authorities may try
    to benefit from this legal provision by having loyalists from the
    regions participating in the vote.

    At a rally on May 1, Raffi Hovannisian, a former presidential candidate
    and leader of another opposition party, Heritage, which is contesting
    the May 5 elections as part of the Hello Yerevan bloc, said that a
    new situation will emerge in the country after next Sunday's elections
    and that this situation will be unimaginable without Hello Yerevan.

    Hovannisian, whose finish with 37 percent of the vote in last
    February's presidential election came as a surprise to a great
    many political observers, spoke of another surprise in store for
    the government on May 5. "The government will not last for another
    5 years... and after May 5, Taron Margaryan, the son of Andranik
    Margaryan, with all due respect to him, will not be the mayor of the
    capital," said the opposition leader.

    Meanwhile, the Prosperous Armenia Party, which calls itself
    an 'alternative' rather than opposition yet, continues an active
    campaign, confident of the outright victory of its top candidate,
    former Minister of Foreign Affairs Vartan Oskanian. While many experts
    still see a possibility of PAP leader Gagik Tsarukyan striking another
    coalition deal with President Sargsyan after the Yerevan elections,
    several representatives of PAP have ruled out the possibility of the
    party's returning to the RPA-dominated government.

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