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Armenian PM Leads in Presidential Count

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  • Armenian PM Leads in Presidential Count

    The Associated Press
    Feb 19 2008


    Armenian PM Leads in Presidential Count
    By MARIA DANILOVA - 1 hour ago

    YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) - Early results in Armenia's presidential
    election Tuesday gave a strong lead to Prime Minister Serge
    Sarkisian, officials said, but the tally suggested he might not be
    able to avoid a runoff with his top challenger.

    With 28 percent of ballots counted, Sarkisian had 42 percent of the
    votes, the Central Election Commission said. Former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian, was second in the field of nine, with 11 percent. A
    candidate needs more than 50 percent for an outright victory and
    avoid a runoff.

    Election officials were expected to continue counting ballots through
    the night and full preliminary results were not expected before
    Wednesday evening.

    The contest was marred by allegations from Ter-Petrosian that
    authorities had rigged the vote and harassed his supporters. He
    asserted he was the real victor and urged supporters to rally in the
    capital Wednesday to protest the vote count.

    The allegations of fraud and threats of mass protests raised concerns
    over instability in the volatile country at the juncture of the
    energy-rich Caspian Sea region and southern Europe and bordering
    Iran.

    Sarkisian and Ter-Petrosian - Armenia's first president after the
    Soviet collapse - were the two top contenders among nine contenders
    vying to lead the South Caucasus nation, where more than a quarter of
    its 3.2 million people live in poverty despite some economic progress
    in recent years.

    Tension with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region was
    one of the main issues of the campaign. Armenia's government says the
    mostly ethnic Armenian territory should be recognized as a sovereign
    state, while Azerbaijan says it will never give the region up.

    Kosovo's declaration of independence from Serbia on Sunday added an
    element of uncertainty for Armenians, many of whom see clear
    analogies between Kosovo and Nagorno-Karabakh - a mountainous region
    in Azerbaijan that has been under the control of ethnic Armenian
    forces since a 1994 cease-fire ended a bloody six-year conflict.

    The two presidential candidates differ on how to handle
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Sarkisian, a native of the region, appears less likely to compromise
    than Ter-Petrosian, who was forced to resign as president in 1998
    after advocating concessions in the dispute.
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