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Observers From Caucasus, Central Asia Invited To Monitor Norway'SEle

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  • Observers From Caucasus, Central Asia Invited To Monitor Norway'SEle

    OBSERVERS FROM CAUCASUS, CENTRAL ASIA INVITED TO MONITOR NORWAY'S ELECTIONS

    The Associated Press
    08/25/05 10:37 EDT

    OSLO, Norway (AP) - The watched will become the watchers next month
    when election observers from eight former Soviet republics monitor
    Norway's national elections, officials said Thursday.

    Observers from countries in Central Asia and Eastern Europe have
    been invited to monitor the Sept. 12 vote in Norway, which has a long
    tradition of nurturing democracy worldwide.

    Helge Blakkisrud, of the Norwegian Institute of Foreign Affairs,
    said it would be the largest international observer team - with 26
    members - ever invited to a Norwegian election. It would also be one
    of the first cases of observers from the former Soviet republics,
    many of which are still struggling with the transition to democracy,
    monitoring an election in the West.

    Countries represented on the team would be Azerbaijan, Georgia,
    Moldova, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan,
    he said.

    "It is unusual that election observers would come from those areas,"
    said Blakkisrud.

    He said in some of the countries there is a feeling that the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which often sends
    election observers, has singled out the former Soviet bloc countries
    for scrutiny.

    "We wanted them to see that it is a two-way street," he said. "We
    also wanted them to see the Norwegian election culture. Many of them
    come from countries with a fundamental lack of confidence in the
    electoral process."

    Norway, like the other Nordic countries, has a highly developed
    democracy and a strong tradition of free and fair elections.

    Blakkisrud said they had wanted the OSCE to organize the election
    monitoring, but the group did not have the capacity to do it. So they
    decided to invite observers themselves to monitor that the election
    meets OSCE standards, and then file a report.

    The observers will be deployed in the Oslo region, and in Norway's
    second largest city Bergen, on the west coast.

    Blakkisrud said many of the observers have experience monitoring
    elections in their own region.
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