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OSCE Worried About Armenian Election Campaign

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  • OSCE Worried About Armenian Election Campaign

    OSCE WORRIED ABOUT ARMENIAN ELECTION CAMPAIGN
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Feb 7 2008

    International observers indicated Thursday their concerns about Prime
    Minister Serzh Sarkisian's heavy reliance on his government levers in
    the Armenian presidential race and pledged to investigate a violent
    incident that nearly disrupted a campaign rally by opposition candidate
    Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    Geert Ahrens, head of the main international vote-monitoring mission
    deployed in Armenia by the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe, said Sarkisian's "use of the position of prime minister
    in the election campaign" could hamper the proper conduct of the
    February 19 vote.

    "There is no international rule that would prevent a prime minister
    from participating as a candidate in a presidential race," Ahrens
    told RFE/RL in an interview. "But such a situation, of course, puts
    a heavy responsibility on the shoulders of the prime minister not to
    use his office to promote his candidacy."

    "Of course, it is a matter of concern when the line that should not
    be overstepped is being overstepped," he said.

    Sarkisian has come under opposition fire for capitalizing on his and
    his Republican Party's grip on many government bodies to gain extensive
    coverage by Armenia's leading TV stations and ensure high turnout
    at his campaign rallies across the country. Speaking in parliament
    on Wednesday, he argued that the Armenian Electoral Code does not
    explicitly bar him from combining his prime-ministerial duties with
    election-related activities.

    "As you know elections in Armenia are monitored by numerous
    observers," Sarkisian said in response to a question from an opposition
    parliamentarian. "And if the observers say that I, as you claim, have
    blatantly violated the law and inflicted great damage on the country,
    I will think about this issue."

    The prime minister also claimed that schoolteachers, students and other
    public sector employees are not forced to attend his campaign rallies
    as has been reported by the local press. "You can try and meet those
    people [attending Sarkisian's rallies] and ask whether they are kept
    there by police or army cordons," he said. "The reputation of Armenia's
    future president is very dear to me and I will do everything in my
    power to ensure that Armenia's future president has a good reputation."

    Sarkisian's campaign spending is another source of controversy.

    According to the Central Election Commission, it totaled 26.3 million
    drams ($85,000) as of January 31, well below the 70 million-dram limit
    set by the Electoral Code. Opposition politicians dismiss the figure
    as fraudulent, saying that Sarkisian could not have flooded Yerevan
    and just about every Armenian town and village with his campaign
    billboards and posters with that much money.

    The Ter-Petrosian campaign has also cried foul over Sarkisian's
    December 4 decision to form a special government commission dealing
    with citizens' grievances, saying that its activities amount to vote
    buying. The opposition candidates' aide claim that voters needing
    financial and other assistance are being referred to the commission
    by Sarkisian's campaign offices.

    Ter-Petrosian on Tuesday accused the OSCE observers of turning a blind
    eye to this and other alleged violations. "They don't see or don't
    want to see that," he said. "At least, there have been no preventive
    steps, no statements on their part."

    "We are dealing with this," Ahrens said, responding to the former
    Armenian president's claims. "If this is the case, then this would
    of course be a way of using administrative resources that would not
    be acceptable."

    The OSCE mission chief also expressed concern about violence that
    marred Ter-Petrosian's Wednesday in Artashat, a town 30 kilometers
    south of Yerevan. A group of pro-government youths there scuffled with
    Ter-Petrosian's loyalists and pelted them with stones in an apparent
    attempt to disrupt the gathering. The ex-president condemned the
    incident witnessed by two OSCE observers as a government "provocation"
    aimed at derailing his campaign. Law-enforcement authorities claimed,
    however, that Ter-Petrosian and his allies themselves provoked it
    by making "offensive" remarks about Deputy Prime Minister Hovik
    Abrahamian, Sarkisian's Artashat-based campaign manager.

    "We will certainly investigate this incident," Ahrens said. "We have
    long-term observers everywhere in the country. They will talk to all
    those involved and then submit a report to us. Then on that basis we
    can form our judgment on this incident."

    "Whoever is to blame, any such incident is deplorable," he added.
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