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Kocharian Loyalist Wins Key Election In Yerevan

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  • Kocharian Loyalist Wins Key Election In Yerevan

    KOCHARIAN LOYALIST WINS KEY ELECTION IN YEREVAN
    By Shakeh Avoyan

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
    Sept 27 2005

    A businessman close to President Robert Kocharian was declared on
    Monday the winner of Sunday's local election in Yerevan's central
    administrative district, but his opposition challenger refused to
    conceder defeat, alleging serious fraud.

    Preliminary official results of the vote showed Gagik Beglarian,
    the incumbent prefect of the Kentron district, winning 86 percent of
    the vote. Ruzan Khachatrian, the opposition candidate representing
    the Artarutyun (Justice), alliance had only 12 percent, according to
    the local election commission.

    `The election in Kentron proceeded peacefully and there were no
    serious incidents,' its chairman, Yeghishe Terterian, told RFE/RL.

    The election was monitored by representatives of the Council of Europe.

    They said they visited 50 polling stations and witnessed no serious
    irregularities. Still, their preliminary statement stopped short of
    calling the vote free and fair.

    Khachatrian, for her part, accused the authorities of rigging the
    ballot by inflating voter lists and allowing Beglarian supporters to
    vote more than once. `My proxies and commission members insist that
    there were people who went to polling stations and voted for four or
    even five times,' she told RFE/RL. `They couldn't do anything because
    they were not allowed to check passports and write down their numbers.'

    The opposition candidate earlier accused Beglarian of attempting
    to bribe her proxies and the few election officials representing
    Artarutyun. The prefect's campaign chief denied the claims.

    The vote in Kentron, Armenia's biggest and wealthiest community,
    was the most politicized of local elections that are being held
    across the country. Artarutyun has not fielded any candidates
    in other constituencies, highlighting the lack of opposition
    interest in the polls. Its leaders avoided direct participation in
    Khachatrian's campaign and are now preparing for another showdown
    with the government during the upcoming referendum on Kocharian's
    constitutional amendments.

    Khachatrian claimed that the authorities tested in Kentron `new
    mechanisms for electoral fraud which will be used during the
    referendum.' `It's now harder to resort to ballot box stuffing,
    but there are other pitfalls in this electoral code,' she said,
    adding that multiple voting will be the main vote rigging technique
    at the referendum.

    Sunday also saw an election in Yerevan's second largest district,
    Arabkir. Its acting prefect, Hovannes Shahinian, held off a challenge
    from another pro-establishment candidate and won 70 percent of the
    vote. Less than one third of Arabkir's 87,960 eligible voters cast
    their ballots. The voter turnout in Kentron was 43 percent, according
    to official figures.
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