Former president to run for Yerevan Mayor

Former president to run for Yerevan Mayor

Levon Ter-Petrossian, the first president of independent Armenia, will
participate in the municipal elections of the Armenian capital to be
held on 31 May. Amid fears of election rigging, with both sides
convinced of their own sweeping victory, the opposition hopes to weaken
the legitimacy of president Sargsyan

25.03.2009 Da Yerevan, scrive Onnik Krikorian

The announcement that former president and extra-parliamentary
opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrossian intends to run for Yerevan Mayor
was unexpected, but not surprising. Previous presidents, including
Ter-Petrossian himself, had resisted earlier calls to make the position
an elected one, fearful of the economic and political power such an
official would possess.

In November 2005, however, demands from the Council of Europe forced the
authorities to amend the constitution in order to bring it into line
with European standards. One key provision was to allow residents of the
capital to elect the city head. Over three years later, the necessary
changes to the electoral code and new legislation were introduced and
are now in force.

Although not directly elected by residents, the mayor will be determined
by a new 65-seat council to be elected under a proportional system of
voting on 31 May. Despite its inactivity in recent months, speculation
that Ter-Petrossian’s opposition movement would contest the vote had
been growing since earlier this month when it announced its next rally
would be held on 1 May.

Even so, most residents remained resigned to the likely victory of the
ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) candidate, Gagik Beglarian.
More commonly known as `Chorni (Black) Gago,’ when Beglarian stepped
down as the city’s Kentron district chief on 4 March to replace the
previous mayor, Yervand Zakarian, the move simply confirmed such
speculation.

However, most observers believe that Ter-Petrossian’s participation in
the municipal election now makes the outcome more difficult to predict.
Moreover, some analysts predict, the decision also suggests the start of
renewed efforts to challenge the legitimacy of the authorities following
last year’s bitterly disputed presidential election.

Although Ter-Petrossian lost to the current president, Serge Sargsyan,
in the 19 February 2008 vote, many believe that the incumbent did not
attract enough votes in the first round. As a result, nearly two weeks
of street protests followed until 1 March when the tense post-election
standoff ended in clashes which left 10 dead and a 20-day state of
emergency declared in the country.

In a written statement issued on 17 March, Ter Petrossian’s Armenian
National Congress (ANC) officially announced its decision. `With this
move, we are sending a very clear political message to society. We
regard the election of Yerevan’s mayor as a very serious opportunity to
change the existing dictatorial system and […] as a second round to the
2008 presidential elections,’ it read.

"This will be a struggle for lawfulness," added ANC office coordinator
Levon Zurabian during a press conference held in Yerevan the same day.
"We have come to combat this tyrannical, criminal and oligarchic system
to establish democracy in the country. This will not be a struggle
against Beglarian — our main rival is the regime."

In response, the RPA has been quick to accuse the extra-parliamentary
opposition of planning to use the municipal vote to ignite a new series
of street protests aimed at enacting regime change. `We won’t allow the
opposition to organize disturbances and provoke another `1st of March’,’
said RPA deputy leader Razmik Zohrabian the following day.

But, with two reports from Human Rights Watch and the U.S. State
Department criticizing the government’s handling of last year’s
post-election unrest, it is unlikely that it could survive any
potentially embarrassing crackdown either. Moreover, in a rally to mark
the first anniversary of the 1 March disorders, Ter-Petrossian also
ruled out hopes among his supporters for a `popular uprising.’

`The old-fashioned ideas of revolution or uprising must be finally
driven out of our country’s political agenda,’ he told a crowd of
between 10-20,000 people. `As long as that hasn’t happened, Armenia can
have no chance of becoming a rule-of-law and democratic state. History
knows virtually no revolutions that engendered democracy and welfare.’

Instead, with the recent collapse of the dram adding to existing
political tensions in the country, the opposition hopes public
discontent will turn the election into a vote of confidence in the
authorities. As a result, many suspect the pre-election campaign will be
tense, with vote-buying and other electoral code violations defining the
campaign period as well as polling day itself.

Given dwindling attendances at previous rallies and demonstrations, it
is uncertain whether Ter-Petrossian can attract enough votes to win
outright, but there are few who believe Beglarian can sweep to victory
either. Indeed, it is for this reason that the head of one international
organization monitoring elections in Armenia says that the new
legislation is cause for some concern.

`The law specifies that if political party receives more than 40 percent
of seats on the city council, but does not have the absolute majority,
then extra seats are automatically allocated to it at the expense of
others,’ the source told Osservatorio Caucaso on the condition of
anonymity. `This `bonus system’ under local circumstances is extra
leverage to gain absolute power.’

`The motivation for this becomes clearer if we look at the results of
the National Assembly election in 2007 when the Republican Party
received only 33 percent of votes through the proportional system,’ he
explains. `Basically, [after the events of last year] the ruling party
can no longer manipulate the results of elections as obviously as before.’

Meanwhile, in the hope that forming a united front could counter the
administrative resources at the disposal of the incumbent, discussions
to form an electoral bloc between the ANC and the parliamentary
opposition Heritage party had been underway. On 17 March, however,
Heritage spokesperson Hovsep Khurshudian informed journalists that talks
had collapsed.

Regardless, the 31 May election looks likely to be the first real test
of Armenia’s fledgling democracy since last year’s disputed and highly
controversial presidential election. However, with both sides convinced
of their own sweeping victory, Yerevan looks set to experience yet
another potentially volatile period along its path to democracy.

icle/articleview/11101/1/404

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.osservatoriobalcani.org/art

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