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U.S. Envoy Dismayed By Kocharian Snub

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  • U.S. Envoy Dismayed By Kocharian Snub

    U.S. ENVOY DISMAYED BY KOCHARIAN SNUB
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 18 2006

    The U.S. ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe expressed on Wednesday dismay at President Robert Kocharian's
    refusal to meet her on her first-ever visit to Armenia that focused
    on democratization and other political reforms.

    Ambassador Julie Finley, who arrived in Yerevan on Tuesday, said she
    received assurances from other Armenian officials that next year's
    Armenian parliamentary elections will be free and fair. She also urged
    Yerevan to allow the OSCE to monitor the entire electoral process.

    "I am very, very disappointed I did not have even a brief meeting
    with your president," Finley said. "Usually in my travels [to OSCE
    member states] I do meet with the head of state."

    Asked about the official reason for Kocharian's apparent snub, she
    said: "His schedule was full. I asked."

    Kocharian, according to his press service, held two meetings on
    Wednesday, receiving a delegation of Russian parliamentarians and the
    outgoing head of the World Bank office in Yerevan, Roger Robison. He
    similarly failed to meet Britain's visiting Minister for Europe Geoff
    Hoon last week. Both Britain and the United States had declined to
    officially congratulate Kocharian on his hotly disputed victory in
    the last Armenian presidential election criticized as undemocratic
    by OSCE observers.

    Finley spoke to RFE/RL and the Mediamax news agency after meeting
    with other senior Armenian officials, including Justice Minister
    David Harutiunian, Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian, Deputy
    Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosian and the chairman of the Central
    Election Commission, Garegin Azarian. She also met civil society
    representatives campaigning for political reform in the country.

    The diplomat said the officials assured her that the Armenian
    authorities will do their best to ensure the freedom and fairness
    of the 2007 elections. "I am willing to accept in good faith what
    certain people in the government so far have told me, just as I am
    perfectly willing to take in good faith what certain people outside
    of the government have been telling me," she said. "I am trying to
    balance everything."

    "We all want these elections to run right because these elections
    are one of the four main pillars of a democracy," Finley said. "And
    I am assuming that I am in a country that has decided it wants to be
    a true democracy."

    Officials from the European Union have already warned that a repeat
    of serious vote irregularities would seriously undermine Armenia's
    efforts to forge closer links with the EU and its participation in
    the bloc's European Neighborhood Policy program in particular .

    Finley, who worked for the U.S. National Endowment for Democracy
    before taking over the U.S. mission at the OSCE's Vienna headquarters
    last year, would not be drawn on what the consequences would be for
    U.S.-Armenian relations. She seemed worried about the fact that the
    authorities in Yerevan have yet to officially invite the OSCE to
    monitor the 2007 elections.

    "The assurance that the government of Armenia has been elected freely
    and fairly to the international community is very, very important for
    Armenia," Finley said. "The OSCE is the gold standard for monitoring
    elections.

    "They are coming to the United States to monitor our mid-term elections
    in November. Why the heck shouldn't they be over here to monitor the
    Armenian elections?"

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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