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There is no alternative to fair elections

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  • There is no alternative to fair elections

    There is no alternative to fair elections

    Aghavni Yeghiazarian - HETQ

    Stepanakert

    June 8, 2005

    "I will definitely participate in the elections. I've already decided
    whom I will vote for," said the 23-year-old Nelly Galstyan.

    "To vote or not...there's no difference. Alone I cannot make a change,"
    replies 67-year-old Greta.

    "I won't go to vote. I don't believe in what they say and I advise
    everybody to boycott the elections because everybody lies," said
    46-year-old Vlad Hagopian.

    "I will vote for nobody. Elections are a show. Workers vote for the
    sake of some upper-class people," said 41-year-old Flora Ohanian,
    in anger.

    "I will vote for a neighbor of mine. He's a nice, humble, good-looking
    guy. Probably he needs my vote," said 76-year-old Gena Balian.

    The Nagorno Karabagh Republic (NKR) will hold parliamentary elections
    on June 19. For the first time, the parliament will consist of deputies
    based on proportional representation of parties, as well as directly
    elected candidates.

    This is based on the new NKR election law, established in December
    2004, which formally allows parties, as such, to participate in the
    elections. Under this system, the new parliament's 33 deputies will
    include 22 from party lists, and 11 who are directly elected. "We have
    formed 274 local electoral commissions, and every step has been taken
    to ensure this is done according to the law," said Sergei Nassibyan,
    Chairman of the NKR Central Electoral Commission (CEC).

    "These commissions, as well as the CEC, each consist of 5 members,
    3 of which are appointed by the President, 2 of which are appointed
    by the National Assembly's parliamentary factions."

    Eight parties are competing in the system of proportional
    representation. These consist of six individual groups - the "Azad
    Hayrenik" party, the "Artsakh Democratic Party (AZhG)," the "Moral
    Rebirth" party, the NKR Communist Party, the "Our Home is Armenia"
    party, and the "Social Justice" party - as well as the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation-"Movement '88" coalition. Those actively
    carrying out propaganda work are Azad Hayrenik, AZhG, and the
    ARF-Movement '88 coalition.

    The remaining parties, it may be said, are not really participants. For
    example, it proved impossible to meet with Moral Rebirth chairman
    Murat Petrosyan, as he had traveled to the US for five days and there
    was no one else from the party able to meet with journalists. Instead
    of an interview, Mr.

    Petrosyan suggested the reading of excerpts from an earlier
    interview he'd given to the press. Meanwhile, the Communist Party
    and Social Justice did not even answer phone calls placed to their
    offices. Meeting with Our Home is Armenia chair Ararat Petrosyan
    was also a major production, because the party's offices were
    always closed, and the girl who answered the phone told that he was
    unavailable because he was constantly in meetings with the electorate
    and could be found out on the streets. And, in fact, that's what
    happened: I found Ararat Petrosyan on the street, but he had nothing
    to say; he showed me his campaign booklets, told of some election
    bribes and pressure tactics, then asked that I not publicize these.

    In reality, this contest is between Azad Hayrenik, AZhG, and the
    ARF-Movement '88 coalition. The AZhG (Formerly ZhAM - Artsakh
    Popular Union) has a 5-year history and currently holds a majority
    in parliament. "We were founded in Karabakh more than 5 years ago,
    and we hold the majority of seats in the parliament. We serve for our
    country, our people, and democratic and political reforms." said the
    party's current chairman and NKR Minister of Education Ashot Ghulyan.

    The Azad Hayrenik party was established in January 2005, but in
    principles and programmatic outlook hardly differs from AZhG. Other
    participants in this election say that Azad Hayrenik was established,
    in fact, by the ruling authorities, who understand that AZhG, on
    its own, will probably not succeed in gaining a majority in the
    new parliament.

    "Azad Hayrenik was established by a group of intellectuals, and this
    election will be our first trial. Our top issue is to reconstitute
    civil society, and regardless of the outcome our goal is to bring
    about free, fair, and transparent elections,"' said the party's leader,
    Artur Tovmasyan.

    The Movement '88 public-political movement was established in
    February 2004.

    During the local elections of summer 2004, and despite the efforts
    of the ruling authorities, they succeeded in electing their chairman,
    Edik Aghabegyan, as Mayor of Stepanakert.

    "That was a major victory. The present authorities discovered that the
    people don't accept them, and didn't elect their candidate. Meanwhile,
    the people began to feel that their vote actually has value,"
    said Movement '88 vice-chairman Gegham Baghdasaryan. "The people of
    Stepanakert were freed of that complex in which 'it's all the same -
    the authorities win no matter what you do.' During that election,
    the only real force was the ARF, and it was the ARF's cooperation
    that secured our victory. We found that the ARF's goals were very
    close to ours; the ARF was also struggling for free elections -
    and thence the coalition was born."

    Election Bribery in Karabagh The parties meet with the electorate,
    they used paid air-time on TV, they publish their pre-election
    platforms and place them in newspapers. And yet, the pre-election
    "customs" of Armenia have unfortunately infiltrated Karabagh as well -
    i.e. pressure tactics and various forms of election-bribery.

    "Whatever they're handing out, I'm taking. Why shouldn't I?" said
    one woman from the village of Chanakh. "But I'm unable to vote for
    all of them, so I'll end up voting for one of them."

    "Throughout all of Karabagh, they're handing out election bribes -
    in different forms and sizes. In Hadrut, they're distributing sacks
    of flour with receipts.

    If the distributor's favored candidate wins, then the recipient
    villager doesn't have to pay; if the candidate doesn't win, then
    they have to return their receipt with payment," said parliamentary
    deputy Albert Hambartumyan, who is also an ARF Central Committee
    member. "They're distributing heating fuel, and there's talk that
    it comes from the army. We have information that in Jardar, the
    pro-government candidate has distributed wheat to the electorate."

    While complaints over such violations are common, not one party has
    appealed officially to the courts or to the CEC, in accordance with
    NKR election law.

    The apparent reason is that citizens who have accepted bribes are
    fearful of pressure from above and will likely say nothing about
    what they've received, or from whom. So the political parties say
    they cannot offer clear proof.

    Meanwhile, inhabitants act in the following fashion: "If they're
    giving it, why not take it?"

    "We don't live well, our living standards are poor, there aren't
    any jobs. What are we supposed to do, when these deputies think of
    us only around election time? If they're giving us something, we're
    not going to shrink. Why not take something?" says Armik, a mother
    with several children.

    "To date, there have been no election violations recorded. I, too,
    hear of election bribes, but no one has yet offered any written protest
    or proof regarding such acts," said CEC Chairman Nassibyan. "And if,
    on May 9 [Shushi liberation day] or on international children's day,
    some candidates wish to give something to families of fallen fighters,
    I don't want to characterize that as bribery; it's something that
    happens here frequently."

    The word in Stepanakert is that graduating 10th graders held a
    sumptuous feast at Amaras, for which financial support came from
    Azad Hayrenik's leading candidate Arayig Harutyunyan. "We organized
    the outing ourselves, the students brought food from home, and
    each teacher contributed 2000 dram for the occasion," said school
    principal Mrs. Minasyan. "Arayig Harutyunyan simply provided buses
    for transportation. And he did so as a benefactor, for the sake
    of the children. Why does it have to be interpreted as something
    election-related?" Despite her repeated assertions, when I asked her
    if Mr.

    Harutyunyan provided such assistance every year, she honestly replied,
    "No."

    Other pre-election violations come in the form of administrative
    pressures placed upon candidates. "One of our party candidates works
    at Karabakh Telecom.

    During one of his campaign speeches, he subjected the authorities
    to sharp criticism, after which he was warned that he'd lose his job
    if he didn't calm down, and that it would be a good idea for him to
    resign from the party," commented Ararat Petrosyan.

    It is clear that Karabagh's ruling authorities are assisting the
    AZhG in this election. Aram Sarukhanyan, mayor of the village of
    Nakhijevanik, says that during a meeting of village heads convened by
    the district governor, attendees were warned that they must support
    the AZhG's candidates. He says that during previous such meetings,
    he was usually complimented for his exemplary work; now, by decision
    of the district governor, he has been relieved of his post.

    The governor's decision is based upon the investigation of the
    district prosecutor, who has questioned the dealings of a flour-mill
    Sarukhanyan owns.

    In his defense, Sarukhanyan says that he is being unfairly treated
    for expressing his anger over being pressured to support the AZhG
    candidate, and that this is his punishment. "I said before, and I
    say again, that I'm simply incapable of lending my voice to their
    candidate, because at the same time candidacy has been put forth by my
    [one-time] military commander. I've been his soldier, and I cannot go
    against him now. I'm a clean, just, patriotic Karabaghtsi. I simply
    can't go against my commander, with whom I've fought and defeated
    our enemy. And for going against the authorities' candidate, I'm now
    labeled anti-republic. Meanwhile they, who pass out bribes... aren't
    they anti-republic?"

    The main electioneering parties each have their own newspaper, and
    through their papers present their campaign issues. Azad Hayrenik
    has its "Agounk" newspaper, AZhG has its "Hairenik" newspaper,
    and the ARF has its "Abaraj." The so-called "non-partisan" press
    includes "Azad Artsakh" (a government newspaper), and "Demo," which
    seek to present the pre-election environment objectively. Although
    "Demo"s editor is Gegham Baghdasaryan - a leader of Movement '88 and a
    candidate himself - Baghdasaryan says that the newspaper is trying to
    maintain its neutral posture. "At present, I'm not working as editor -
    that's demanded by law. But all the same, people think I'm playing
    both sides. On one hand, I try to maintain the paper's neutrality,
    so that it doesn't become partisan. But on the other hand, I live in
    this republic, and I can't completely disappear and shy away from
    contact. Our paper prints paid ads, but it also features interview
    with candidates of multiple parties; this is not electioneering,
    but rather, journalism," he says. "I realize that right now, I'm
    not doing my job 100 percent, and after the elections I will have to
    choose - either I'm a journalist or I'm a politician. In the long run,
    it won't be possible to maintain both postures, because the reader's
    confidence toward our newspaper's reliability will diminish."

    All parties say their overriding concern is to strengthen democracy,
    and that they expect elections to be fair. In their election platforms,
    the main difference concerns the negotiated settlement of the Karabagh
    issue. "The NKR parliament should, at its first opportunity, delineate
    our boundaries, then appeal to Armenia and the international community
    for recognition as a free and independent republic," states Albert
    Hambardzumyan of the ARF. "Armenia should be the first to recognize
    Karabagh's independence."

    "Karabagh should always be with Armenia, at its side," said Azad
    Hayrenik's Artur Tovmasyan. "I see no other path for Karabagh."

    "I consider the Karabagh problem solved," says Education Minister
    and AZhG chairman Ashot Ghulyan. "Now we must, through international
    mediators, solve the remaining areas of dispute between Karabagh and
    Azerbaijan. Our top issue is to gain recognition for Karabagh as a
    free and independent republic."

    Each of the leading parties believes it will carry the day in the
    upcoming elections. "We will undoubtedly claim the top position, I'm
    certain," says Ashot Ghulyan. Of course, all political forces should be
    represented in parliament, in order to create an appropriate political
    environment, but this doesn't mean all should have equal weight,
    because all do not have the corresponding political sophistication. In
    our current reality, it's most appropriate for one party to have
    control over parliament."

    I believe our party undoubtedly will enter parliament, but I'm ready
    to enter without a mandate as long as democracy is established within
    Karabagh," says Azad Hayrenik's Rudik Hyusnyunts.

    The fairness and transparency of these elections will be determined
    by the wisdom of the people," says Stepanakert's Mayor and Movement
    '88 candidate Edik Aghabegyan. "Unfortunately, the ruling authorities
    - who should be the guarantor of fair elections - have done nothing
    in this regard. All parties should focus their resources on securing
    fair elections, regardless of the outcome."

    Aghabegyan's assertions are countered by Ashot Ghulyan, who says
    that "the guarantor of free elections is the political atmosphere
    established during the past five years, during which everyone has been
    free not only to speak as he pleases, but to act as he pleases. Our
    party takes on the responsibility of ensuring fair elections;
    but other parties with smaller biographies should take on the same
    responsibility. Securing Karabagh's appraisal before the international
    community should not be the concern of only one political force."

    The leaders of all parties acknowledge that the outside world
    attentively follows these elections, and these leaders seem to
    understand that unfair elections could carry heavy consequences
    for Karabagh.
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