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Moscow: Exit Polls Point to Victory for Sarksyan

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  • Moscow: Exit Polls Point to Victory for Sarksyan

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    Feb 20 2008


    Exit Polls Point to Victory for Sarksyan

    By Hasmik Lazarian and Margarita Antidze
    Reuters


    YEREVAN, Armenia -- Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan won Armenia's
    presidential election in the first round, an exit poll showed on
    Tuesday, but the opposition said voting was marred by beatings and
    ballot-stuffing.

    Most observers say Sarksyan would pursue policies followed by
    President Robert Kocharyan during his decade in office. Poor and
    landlocked, Armenia relies heavily on a long-standing alliance with
    Moscow.

    Sarksyan won 57 percent of the vote, way ahead of his nearest
    opposition challenger, former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan,
    according to an exit poll by Britain's Populus pollster for Armenian
    public television.

    Populus said Ter-Petrosyan scored 17.04 percent.

    But Ter-Petrosyan's campaign office said staff had been beaten and
    even kidnapped at polling stations and vowed to hold a protest rally
    in Yerevan on Wednesday, opening the specter of mass protests that
    have followed previous elections.

    Polling stations closed at 8 p.m. in the mountainous, impoverished
    country of 3.2 million people, and the first official results were
    expected on Wednesday.

    Armenia is squeezed between Turkey and Azerbaijan in a region that is
    emerging as an important transit route for oil exports from the
    Caspian Sea to European and world markets.



    Misha Japaridze / AP
    Serzh Sarksyan

    Sarksyan, after voting in a Yerevan school, said the priority was for
    Armenia to conduct a free and fair election.

    "It's not important whether the election will be held in one or two
    rounds. The most important point is that our election be
    trustworthy," Sarksyan said. The top two candidates will contest a
    runoff if no one tops 50 percent in the first round vote.

    The rest of the field is led by former speaker of parliament Artur
    Baghdasaryan, as well as Ter-Petrosyan, a former president who was
    forced to resign in 1998 and is now seeking a comeback.

    "I'm confident that I'll win in the first round ... I've voted for
    freedom," Ter-Petrosyan said after casting his ballot.

    "There are some 'dirty things' already going on," he said, but
    declined to give details on specific cases.

    Previous elections in Armenia have been followed by mass opposition
    protests alleging ballot fraud.



    Misha Japaridze / AP
    Levon Ter-Petrosian

    Baghdasaryan also said there had been violations. "There is absolute
    chaos at one polling station in Yerevan ... which is impeding the
    voting process," said a spokeswoman for his campaign.

    "At another polling station people were distributing ballots that
    were already filled in favor of one candidate."

    Kocharyan, 53, is barred by the constitution from serving a third
    consecutive term. He is expected to remain influential but has
    refused to disclose what role he wants until his replacement is
    inaugurated.

    "I think no one has any doubt about whom I would be voting for. I
    voted for stability and prosperity in Armenia," Kocharyan said, after
    casting a ballot at the same polling station as his prime minister.

    "I voted for Sarksyan because I don't want Armenia to be plunged into
    chaos again," said Khachatur Babayan, 63, a doctor. Many Armenians
    associate Ter-Petrosyan's time in office with economic meltdown and
    power blackouts.

    But others said they wanted change.

    "I think that Levon Ter-Petrosyan will be able to help people, to
    make our country really prosperous," said schoolteacher Hasmik
    Hovannesyan, 54, as she cast her ballot.

    Armenia is still officially at war with Azerbaijan over the breakaway
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Yerevan has frosty relations with Turkey,
    in part because of a bitter dispute over the killing of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks during World War I.

    Armenia at a Glance

    Population: 3.22 million as of January 2007, according to the
    National Statistics Service.Ethnic Composition: More than 97 percent
    of the population is Armenian. There are small minorities of
    Russians, Kurds and Greeks.Geography: Landlocked, bordering
    Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran and Turkey, with a total area of 29,800
    square kilometers.Language: Armenian is the official language.
    Russian and Kurdish are also spoken. Armenian belongs to a branch of
    the Indo-European family of languages and has a unique 39-character
    script.
    Religion: Most Armenians belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church, an
    ancient, independent branch of Christianity. Armenia was the first
    country in the world to adopt Christianity as its state religion, in
    301.
    Economy: Armenia's gross domestic product grew 13.7 percent in 2007,
    and annual inflation was 6.6 percent. Armenia joined the World Trade
    Organization in January 2003. Its national currency is the dram.
    Key Industries: Agriculture, textiles, food processing, construction
    materials, diamond cutting, mining and chemicals are all major
    industries. Gold and molybdenum, a metal used to toughen steel, are
    mined, mainly for export.
    History: Armenia says 1.5 million ethnic Armenians were killed in
    what it calls a genocide by Ottoman Turks in 1915-23. Turkey denies
    that the killings were a genocide. It says the Armenians were victims
    of a partisan war that also claimed many Muslim Turkish lives.An
    independent Armenian state existed from 1918 to 1921 but was
    swallowed up by Communist Russia in 1921, later becoming a republic
    of the Soviet Union, and once more gaining independence in 1991.As
    the Soviet Union disintegrated, Armenia became involved in a conflict
    with neighboring Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. About
    35,000 people died in the conflict; hundreds of thousands fled. Most
    have been unable to return to the territory, which is part of
    Azerbaijan but has been controlled by Armenian forces since the
    fighting.
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