Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Voters go to polls in Nagorno Karabakh enclave

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Voters go to polls in Nagorno Karabakh enclave

    Voters go to polls in Nagorno Karabakh enclave

    Tehran Times
    June 20 2005

    STEPANAKERT, Azerbaijan (AFP) - Voters went to parliamentary polls
    Sunday in the self-proclaimed republic of Nagorno Karabakh, a mostly
    ethnic Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan, amid strong opposition
    from Azeri authorities.

    Seven parties and 185 candidates were vying for places in Nagorno
    Karabakh's fourth parliament, with two thirds of the parliament's 33
    seats to be elected directly and one third under a proportional system.

    Nagorno Karabakh's authorities have said the vote is a chance to
    prove to the world the territory's independence.

    "I voted for stability, independence and prosperity," Nagorno
    Karabakh's leader, Arkady Gukasyan, said after casting his ballot.

    It was essential, Gukasyan said earlier, that the vote come up to
    European standards in order to avoid harming Nagorno Karabakh's image
    and "the process of peaceful settlement with Azerbaijan".

    But Azerbaijan, which claims the territory, said any vote in the
    region would remain illegal until hundreds of thousands of Azeris
    banished from Nagorno Karabakh and seven surrounding regions were
    allowed to return.

    "Armenia is zealous to legalize the occupation... elections and
    referenda on the occupied territories must be conducted only after
    the territory's restoration to Azerbaijan," Azerbaijan's election
    commission said in a written statement on Saturday.

    Nagorno Karabakh is widely seen as propped up by Armenia, which fought
    a war with Azerbaijan over the territory in 1993 and 1994 that left
    an estimated 25,000 people dead and forced a million people from
    their homes, three quarters of them Azeri.

    On Friday, Turkey, long at odds with Armenia and a staunch supporter
    of Azerbaijan, joined its ally in criticizing the poll.

    No foreign governments have sent observer missions, reflecting the
    territory's unresolved status.

    But as voting got under way Sunday, monitors from non-governmental
    organizations reported a number of minor violations.

    Supporters of Araig Horutyunyan, a candidate closely linked to Nagorno
    Karabakh's leader, "were actively proselytizing" near polling stations,
    said Antranig Kasabarian, local representative of the Tufenkian
    foundation, a New York-based aid group.

    Earlier, Gukasyan had rounded on opposition parties, accusing them of
    "insinuations" and "libel" after they accused senior Karabakh officials
    of abusing their positions in order to win support.

    "False rumors were circulated that the authorities sanctioned pressure
    on the electorate, threatened people... this didn't and couldn't
    happen," Gukasyan said.

    Turnout was steady, with 21.8 percent of voters casting ballots by
    11:00 am (0600 GMT), according to elections chief Sergey Nasibyan,
    bringing the turnout close to the 25 percent threshold for the results
    to be declared valid.

    The unrecognized Nagorno Karabakh Republic has a population of
    145,000. It is spread over eight regions of Azerbaijan including
    Karabakh itself and comprises 14 percent of Azerbaijan's overall
    territory.

    Preliminary poll results are expected late Monday or early Tuesday.

    The parliament is elected for a five-year term.
Working...
X