Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ter-Petrosyan: Armenian Government Is Facing A Big Dilemma

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ter-Petrosyan: Armenian Government Is Facing A Big Dilemma

    TER-PETROSYAN: ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT IS FACING A BIG DILEMMA

    POLITICS | 21.07.14 | 13:03
    http://armenianow.com/news/politics/56230/armenia_levon_terpetrosyan_interview_politics

    Opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC) leader Levon Ter-Petrosyan
    criticized the Armenian government for doing little to solve the
    current pressing issues facing the country, while focusing on what
    he described as a premature constitutional reform.

    In an interview with ilur.am, Ter-Petrosyan refrained from commenting
    on the current situation around Nagorno-Karabakh, saying that it
    is the government that has the full information and needs to make
    explanations in this regard. "But corresponding government bodies
    do not provide any clear explanation to the public, which makes the
    situation even more worrisome."

    He described the response of Armenian forces to Azeri ceasefire
    violations as "quite restrained and inadequate". He said that it
    could be explained by the following circumstance: the Armenian side
    is cautious to retaliate, considering that it could lead, if not
    to a large-scale war, then to a more dangerous exacerbation of the
    situation. And this, according to Ter-Petrosyan, makes Azerbaijan
    even more impudent. "Therefore, Armenian authorities are facing a
    big dilemma to solve which requires immense efforts and exclusive
    political resourcefulness," he said.

    "Azerbaijan's aggressive actions are to some extent connected, on the
    one hand, with the distrust that the West shows towards Armenia in
    the wake of the aborted process on Armenia's European association,
    on the other hand with the still uncertain status of Armenia within
    the framework of the Eurasian Union," said Ter-Petrosyan.

    The opposition leader said that in his opinion the delay in Armenia's
    membership in the Russian-led union is not connected with "technical
    matters" that the Armenian side says have long been solved, nor with
    economic considerations. The answer to this question, therefore,
    should be sought in the political sphere.

    "It is clear that a sharp demand was set to Armenia by the founding
    members of the Eurasian Union - to install customs checkpoints on
    the entire perimeter of the Armenia-Karabakh border. The Armenian
    government is now facing the dilemma of whether to meet this demand
    or not... If it fails to meet the demand, Armenia, which has already
    spoiled its relations with the West, will find itself in full political
    and economic vacuum. And if it meets the demand, it will create a
    panicky psychological state of being abandoned in Karabakh, which
    is fraught with serious tensions in the relations between Armenia
    and Karabakh."

    "In short, it is not Russia, Kazakhstan or Belarus that cause the
    delay in [Armenia's] Eurasian Union membership, but Armenia itself,
    as now it has not yet found a key to solving the problem of the issue
    of placing customs checkpoints at the Armenia-Karabakh border."

    Ter-Petrosyan said that if held, a possible new meeting between
    the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan (following French President
    Francois Hollande's initiative) would be a positive development. "Even
    if the Hollande-Aliyev-Sargsyan meeting fails to bring any serious
    progress in the Karabakh settlement, considering the current
    Armenian-Azerbaijani border tensions, the result could as well as
    considered as satisfactory."

    The opposition leader criticized the authorities for failing to
    address these issues, while instead pursuing 'untimely' Constitutional
    reforms. "Instead of putting out a fire that has broke out in Armenia
    and Karabakh, the regime is preoccupied with destroying the foundations
    of the Armenian statehood, a hostile act like that would not occur
    even to Azerbaijan."

    "Even though all serious political forces have pronounced categorically
    against the initiative of constitutional changes, Serzh Sargsyan sees
    the position of the Prosperous Armenia Party as the main obstacle
    on his way to achieving the goal. If until recently he tried to
    overcome this obstacle by a carrot, that is, to win the party over
    by some promises, then now, according to the information we have,
    by employing the entire law-enforcement machine, he is going to use
    the stick against the PAP, that is, threats and blackmail, and the
    other opposition forces and the entire society cannot tolerate it,"
    said Ter-Petrosyan.

    "The issue of constitutional reforms is, therefore, a sort of watershed
    between the dictatorial regime and healthy forces of the society, a
    problem on whose solution the future of Armenia and Karabakh depends,"
    said the opposition leader. "If Serzh Sargsyan continues to persists in
    his attempt to eternalize his power by means of constitutional reforms,
    then under serious political processes that will unfold in autumn, he,
    no doubt, will become the digger of his own 'bandit state' system's
    grave. In a certain sense political forces should be thankful to
    Serzh Sargsyan for providing them with a consolidating weapon like
    the uniting idea of struggle against constitutional changes. Any
    dictator, no matter how strong he is, losing the sense of reality
    in the course of time, eventually makes a fatal mistake. In the case
    with Serzh, this fatal mistake is certain to be the failed initiative
    of constitutional changes."

Working...
X