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News / Nation & World

Armenian parliament elects Pashinian

Putin rushes to congratulate new prime minister

By Amie Ferris-Rotman, The Washington Post
Published: May 8, 2018, 8:53pm
3 Photos
People cheer in Republic Square in Yerevan, Armenia, Tuesday, May 8, 2018. Tens of thousands of supporters of Nikol Pashinian are celebrating on the central square of Armenia’s capital after the protest leader was elected the country’s prime minister. Many of the supporters are wearing white clothes, symbolizing their hopes that Pashinian’s election will bring a new page in Armenia.
People cheer in Republic Square in Yerevan, Armenia, Tuesday, May 8, 2018. Tens of thousands of supporters of Nikol Pashinian are celebrating on the central square of Armenia’s capital after the protest leader was elected the country’s prime minister. Many of the supporters are wearing white clothes, symbolizing their hopes that Pashinian’s election will bring a new page in Armenia. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis) Photo Gallery

MOSCOW — After weeks of rallies and unrest, Armenia’s bloodless revolution secured victory on Tuesday when parliament selected protest leader Nikol Pashinian as prime minister, making a dramatic break with the ruling elite in the former Soviet country.

Upon hearing the news, a huge crowd of around 100,000 in the main square of the capital, Yerevan, burst into cheers, Armenian news outlet CivilNet showed on its live feed. A large truck carrying ice joined in, dumping a frozen mound among the revellers, who turned it into flying snowballs. Rock musicians took to a central stage, where they played to jubilant crowds of mostly young people waving the tricolor Armenian flag and photos of Pashinian.

The 42-year-old secured the vote after his pro-democracy movement ousted former prime minister Serzh Sargsyan after more than a decade in power. A previous vote on May 1 failed to elect Pashinian.

Capping weeks of nationwide strikes, protests and carnivalesque street parties, parliament voted 59 to 42 in favor of Pashinian. Charismatic and fiery, Pashinian had convinced some lawmakers from the ruling Republican Party to cross party lines and vote for him — something unthinkable just a short while ago.

Pashinian’s rise from a fringe opposition lawmaker to prime minister has been meteoric: Six weeks ago, he was walking through the Armenian countryside, Gandhi-style, protesting what he said was cronyism in the small country of 3 million amid accusations that Sargsyan had altered the constitution to stay in power. Attempting to drum up support in villages, Pashinian camped in tents along the way, attracting followers and growing a salt and pepper beard that he still sports.

At first, his quest to overthrow the government whose leaders have ruled Armenia since the 1990s felt quixotic. But then he garnered an enormous amount of support from the streets, surprising just about everyone, including, initially, his own people.

Russian President Vladimir Putin — who was inaugurated a day earlier for his fourth term as president — rushed to congratulate Pashinian, in what felt like part approval, part caution. “I hope that your work as head of government will promote stronger friendly and allied relations between our countries,” Putin wrote in a telegram, saying this should take place within the framework of various security and trade agreements Armenia has already established with Russia.

Honoring Armenia’s bond to the Kremlin, Russian media said Pashinian will visit Sochi next week for a meeting of the Eurasian Economic Union, a Russian-backed alternative to the European Union comprising a small group of former Soviet states.

Impoverished and landlocked, Armenia relies on Moscow for economic backing and keeping a simmering conflict with neighboring Azerbaijan at bay. Moscow operates two military bases in the country, which also borders Turkey and Iran. Pashinian has insisted he wants to maintain relations with both Russia and the West, in particular the European Union, and balancing the two will be key to his tenure going forward.

Temptation exists on both sides.

“For the new Armenian leadership, there is a unique opportunity to pursue a greater degree of strategic significance for the EU,” said Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Center in Yerevan, an independent think tank. “The victory of the opposition in Armenia is also a victory of the EU, in terms of ideals and ideas.”

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