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World

Post-war Armenia holds snap parliamentary election

  • More than 6,500 people were killed in the war, according to the latest estimates from Armenia and Azerbaijan.
Published June 20, 2021

YEREVAN: Polls opened in Armenia on Sunday for early parliamentary elections which were called in an attempt to heal divisions after a disastrous war with Azerbaijan, but could spark post-election protests.

Reformist Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who has lost much of his lustre after a military defeat last year to arch foe Azerbaijan, is hoping to renew his mandate but is in a tight race with former president Robert Kocharyan.

During an aggressive campaign marred by polarising rhetoric, Pashinyan said he expected his Civil Contract party to secure 60 percent of the vote, though some pollsters say those estimates are far-fetched.

The election in the South Caucasus country of around three million people will be watched by Armenia's Soviet-era master Russia as well as Turkey, which backed Azerbaijan in last year's six-week war over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Political observers say the election result is hard to predict with voter apathy running high and both Pashinyan and Kocharyan drawing massive crowds in the final days of the race.

Besides Kocharyan, who hails from Karabakh and was in power between 1998 and 2008, two other leaders of post-Soviet Armenia are backing parties in the race. All three are in opposition to Pashinyan.

A venomous campaign saw candidates exchange insults and threats and both frontrunners are expected to stage demonstrations after the election.

Pashinyan, 46, brandished a hammer at rallies, while Kocharyan, 66, said he would be ready to fight the prime minister in a duel and claimed he was planning to rig the vote.

'Time for change'

Armenian President Armen Sarkisian, largely a ceremonial figure, decried attempts "to incite hatred and enmity" and urged law enforcement to prevent any violations.

"These elections are taking place in a difficult situation," he said on Saturday. "They are of crucial importance for our state and people."

Pashinyan supporters fear the return of the old guard and say the former newspaper editor, who swept to power in 2018, deserves another chance.

"We need to support this man, the leader who has found himself in a difficult situation due to objective reasons -- the war, depressed people, and enemy countries' everyday aggression," said one voter, 29-year-old Ani Sargsyan.

The prime minister's critics accuse him of ceding swathes of territory in and around Karabakh to Azerbaijan in a truce agreement that ended last year's fighting and of failing to deliver on reform promises.

"We are tired of the current government," said Ashot Hagopyan, 63. "There has been too much lying to our people so we have decided it's time for a change."

More than 6,500 people were killed in the war, according to the latest estimates from Armenia and Azerbaijan.

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