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High Court Refuses To Delay Armenian Vote

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  • High Court Refuses To Delay Armenian Vote

    HIGH COURT REFUSES TO DELAY ARMENIAN VOTE
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Feb 11 2008

    The Constitutional Court on Monday rejected former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian's demand to postpone Armenia's presidential election
    by two weeks because of state television's perceived biased coverage
    of his election campaign.

    Under the Armenian Electoral Code, a presidential election can be put
    off if one of the candidates is deemed to be facing "insurmountable
    obstacles" during the campaign. If those obstacles are not eliminated
    by authorities within two weeks, the vote must be cancelled and held
    anew 40 days later.

    In its appeal to the country's highest judicial body, the Ter-Petrosian
    campaign claimed that the election coverage by the state-controlled
    Armenian Public Television, which has been highly critical of the
    ex-president, constitutes such an obstacle.

    Ter-Petrosian's representatives spent more than an hour trying to
    substantiate the claim before the panel of nine judges headed by
    Gagik Harutiunian.

    In particular, they cited examples of what they consider violations of
    legal provisions obligating Public Television to be impartial in its
    news coverage. One of them, Artak Zeynalian, said the Ter-Petrosian
    complained to the regulatory National Commission on Television and
    Radio (NCTR) but never received a reply.

    In its verdict read out by Harutiunian, the Constitutional Court ruled
    that the alleged obstacles are not serious enough to be considered
    insurmountable. At the same time the court said after four-hour
    deliberations that Ter-Petrosian's complaints are "legitimate" and
    should be addressed by the NCTR, the Central Election Commission
    and lower-level courts. It warned that their failure to do so could
    "generate distrust in the election process."
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