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Armenia: A Coalition Government Amidst Conflict

ARMENIA: A COALITION GOVERNMENT AMIDST CONFLICT
Gayane Abrahamyan

EurasiaNet, NY
June 7 2007

Nearly one month after Armenia’s parliamentary vote, a coalition
agreement between the Republican Party of Armenia and Prosperous
Armenia Party has sealed a much-anticipated power pact between the
country’s two largest political parties. The agreement comes amidst
what some analysts describe as an attempt by the Republican Party to
stamp out election-related violence ahead of next year’s presidential
elections.

After concluding the June 6 agreement, the two parties also signed a
memorandum on cooperation with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation,
a member of the former coalition government with 16 seats in the new
parliament. The Republican Party and Prosperous Armenia hold 64 and
24 seats, respectively.

Talks with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation about joining the
coalition eventually fell apart over the party’s refusal to back a
joint candidate for president in 2008, party representatives announced
at a June 6 press conference.

On June 7, Armenia’s newly elected parliament held its first session,
with former Parliamentary Speaker Tigran Torosian reelected to his
post. The Heritage Party and the Country of Law Party, the only two
opposition parties present in parliament, have declined to take their
seats until the outcome of a case before the Constitutional Court
challenging the official election results.

Meanwhile, an outbreak of violence in Armenia’s second largest
city, Gyumri, has raised questions about the new government’s likely
response. Although such post-election incidents are relatively common
in Armenia, police this time are taking strong steps to respond.

Gyumri is renowned among Armenians for what many term "Sicilian-style"
street violence. Some residents, who decline to be named, lay blame for
the violence on the town’s mayor, Vardan Ghukasian, a senior member
of the Republican Party who was the target of a highway shooting in
early April that left three people dead.

Participants in the clashes have never been prosecuted or sentenced.

That situation now looks likely to change with a May 20 shooting in
downtown Gyumrii between the sons of Mayor Ghukasian and of Prosperous
Armenia Party Gyumri regional office coordinator Artashes Sarkisian.

Reasons for the shoot-out are unknown. Some locals put the brawl
down to an attempt to settle scores between the Republican Party of
Armenia and Prosperous Armenia, a popular speculation among voters
also during the parliamentary campaign. Other residents put it down
to a criminal brawl; both Ghukasian and Sarkisian are thought to own
many if not most of the town’s businesses.

For several days following the shooting, masked officers from the
prosecutor’s special detachment squad searched the apartments of
Mayor Ghukasian and Prosperous Armenia Party coordinator Sarkisian,
as well as those of Sarkisian’s sons and Ghukasian’s brother.

Restaurants associated with both men were also searched. Seventy
people were brought in for questioning.

Some observers believe that the show of force indicates that Republican
Party head Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, fresh from victory at the
May 12 parliamentary polls, wants an end to the sporadic violence
that hit some small towns in the run-up to the vote.

Independent political analyst Nikolai Mikayelian argues that
Ghukasian’s track record is now being considered "in the higher
echelons" of the Republican Party. Mikayelian believes that if
Ghukasian’s son is prosecuted for the shooting, the party will have
signaled that they can dispense with the Gyumri mayor’s support. If
he is not prosecuted, Ghukasian will be expected to deliver votes
for Prime Minister Sarkisian’s expected 2008 presidential bid,
he projected.

Both Ghukasian and Prosperous Armenia Party coordinator Sarkisian
have stated that their sons will turn themselves into the police and
"serve the sentence they deserve." Police are still searching for
both individuals.

Observer Levon Barseghian, chairman of the Asparez journalists’ club
in Gyumri, contends, though, that the police action is a "muscle show"
that won’t lead to any results. Concern has also been raised by the
case of one opposition candidate in the nearby town of Alaverdi whose
apartment caught fire after she filed complaints about election code
violations, reportedly related to campaign violence in the town.

In Gyumri, many locals believe that the mayor is already taking out
an insurance policy for his political future. In a May 24 interview
with Shant TV, Ghukasian qualified the police scrutiny of his son as
improper. "The [April 2007] assassination attempt did not cause as
much noise as that little brawl," he said of the shoot-out involving
his son.

Ghukasian warned that if another attempt is made to kill him, he has
"several hundred" audio recordings of people living in and outside
of Armenia who can speak to the identity of those behind the attack

"The perpetrators have a party affiliation," Ghukasian claimed. "It’s
the same force that tried to kill me before the election, to have the
Republican Party lose in Gyumri." The mayor went on to claim that
he alone had brought in 35,000 votes for the party in the recent
parliamentary elections.

Republican Party spokesperson Eduard Sharmazanov told EurasiaNet
that the party has always appreciated Ghukasian’s voter mobilization
efforts. Sharmazanov refrained from further comment about the Gyumri
shooting until the case is brought to trial.

Editor’s Note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a reporter for the online
ArmeniaNow weekly in Yerevan.

Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS
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