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  • She'll monitor different election

    Jacksonville.com
    Last modified Tue., October 26, 2004 - 02:23 AM

    Originally created Tuesday, October 26, 2004

    She'll monitor different election

    Nassau woman will watch vote in Ukraine

    By CHARLIE PATTON
    The Times-Union

    Even as candidates criss-cross Florida and nation in the last week
    of campaigning, Doris Willey of Fernandina Beach is preoccupied with
    a different election.

    She departed Monday on a trip to the Ukraine, where she'll monitor
    Sunday's elections on behalf of the Organization for Security and
    Co-operation in Europe, a regional security organization with 55
    participating members.

    She'll be one of 600 short-term observers deployed in teams of two to
    various polling places throughout Ukraine, an Eastern European nation
    once part of the Soviet Union. The capital of Ukraine is Kiev and
    it has several famous seaports on the Black Sea, including Odessa,
    Sevastopol and Yalta.

    This will be the third time Willey, 58, a retired accountant and
    grandmother of five, has monitored an international election. She
    has twice monitored elections in Armenia. She also helped staff a
    polling station in Fernandina Beach during the 2000 elections.

    She said she learned about the opportunity to be an election monitor
    and registered with OSCE (the Web site is listed below), which then
    contacted her. She isn't paid to be a monitor but the organization
    does pay her expenses.

    All poll monitors -- the 600 going to Ukraine come from 14 countries
    -- are expected to speak English and are provided with a driver and
    a translator while in the country where they are doing the monitoring.

    As a poll monitor, Willey is expected to observe procedures and offer
    a written report of any violations she sees.

    She said she never felt threatened during the two Armenian elections.

    "There were a lot of young people there who were very, very adamant
    they wanted their elections done fairly," she said. "They were very
    friendly, very accommodating."

    However, she did see "a lot of men lurking near the polls in black
    leather jackets," a violation of election law that she suspected was
    intended to intimidate voters.

    Reports from Ukraine, she said, indicate "it's going to be a very,
    very hot election, very divided. We expect a lot of irregularities."

    Already, she said, she has seen newspaper reports claiming that all
    international observers are spies.

    "If I end up in the Gulag, please send me wine and cookies," she joked.

    Willey will be back in Fernandina Beach on Nov. 3, the day after the
    U.S. elections -- she's already voted by absentee ballot. She said
    her experiences as an election monitor have made her appreciate how
    smooth and well-organized American elections are by comparison.

    "I think it should be mandatory for students in their last year in
    high school to go abroad for three weeks and observe elections so
    they'll appreciate our system," she said.


    charlie.pattonjacksonville.com, (904) 359-4413
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