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Opposition allegations mar Armenian presidential vote - Summary

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  • Opposition allegations mar Armenian presidential vote - Summary

    Earthtimes, UK
    Feb 19 2008


    Opposition allegations mar Armenian presidential vote - Summary
    Posted : Tue, 19 Feb 2008 22:34:20 GMT
    Author : DPA

    Yerevan, Armenia - Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian led in early vote
    tallies in Armenia's presidential elections Tuesday, but it was
    unclear if he would make the 50-per-cent barrier needed to win
    outright. With just over 36 per cent of the votes counted six hours
    after polls closed, Sarkisian lead the race with 41 per cent of the
    vote, according to the Central Election Committee (CEC).

    But the official results put Sarkisian, the favoured successor of
    incumbent Robert Kocharian, under the 50 per cent needed to avoid a
    run-off with the second-place finisher after a bitterly contested
    election campaign.

    Local media widely announced Sarkisian's outright victory at the
    close of voting Tuesday based on a survey by British pollster
    Populus, which showed Sarkisian winning with 57.1 per cent, provoking
    opposition cries of vote rigging.

    The CEC reported a high 69.26-per-cent voter turnout in the small
    Caucasus state of 3.2 million.

    Sarkisian's fiercest challenger, former president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian, accused the government of "mass bribing, ballot
    stuffing, voting list falsifications" and a slew of other violations,
    including the beating and kidnapping of his supporters.

    "Many dirty things are happening. There have been many concrete
    violations," Ter-Petrosian told journalists after casting his ballot
    Tuesday afternoon.

    Ter-Petrosian was running even with another opposition candidate,
    Artur Baghdasarian. Both had 10-12 per cent of the vote, according to
    the CEC's preliminary results.

    Ter-Petrosian, who made a dramatic comeback after his resignation in
    1998, pledged to hold a protest rally in Yerevan on Wednesday,
    raising fears of mass post-election protests.

    The opposition candidate's final campaign rally Saturday drew a crowd
    of about 30,000 people to the capital Yerevan's theatre square.

    Earlier in the day, Sarkisian downplayed the chances of a run-off
    election.

    "I believe that the most important thing is not the number of
    rounds," he told reporters. It is "to end the elections today and to
    have a lot of trust in the election results."

    Sarkisian is expected to keep the line set by Kocharian during his
    decade at the helm, particularly his hawkish foreign stance and close
    strategic partnership with Russia.

    Armenia has emerged as a strategically important region, lying as it
    does along gas routes from the energy-rich Caspian Sea region to
    Europe and being a close partner of Iran. Western powers fear
    instability in the region could disrupt gas routes.

    Facing blockades along two of its borders over a territorial conflict
    with Azerbaijan, and with Turkey angered by Yerevan's lobbying for
    international recognition of the killings of Armenians by the Turkish
    Ottoman Empire as genocide, Armenia is reliant both on Western and
    Russian aid.

    But a current construction boom and steady growth in the small
    post-Soviet state were seen as the main factors in favor of the
    powerful prime minister, whose Republican Party of Armenia swept
    recent parliamentary elections in the country.

    Outside his polling station Tuesday Sarkisian said, "The government
    was formed nine months ago and we have since then achieved good
    results. I do not know of any need for essential changes."

    His words were echoed by voters outside polling stations in the
    capital.

    Vladimir, a 75-year-old pensioner, said simply he was voting to "keep
    the old power, to keep stability," while Arar, an architect in his
    30s, pointed to cranes towering over the street: "The country is
    growing."

    Kocharian, 53, who is barred from a third term, is expected to retain
    power, but when asked about his future plans Tuesday said "that is
    the biggest secret in Armenia today."

    Despite progress, over a quarter of Armenians live below the poverty
    line and widespread perceptions of corruption dog the top candidates.


    "Our choice is between bad and worse," was a phrase repeated by
    voters on election day.

    Such sentiment benefited former parliamentary speaker Baghdasarian, a
    39-year-old populist politician who is calling for Armenia's
    accession to the EU and NATO.

    In all, nine candidates appear on Tuesday's ballot.

    The United States has threatened to withhold 235 million dollars in
    aid and further diplomatic relations with the European Union may also
    be contingent on the fairness of Tuesday's vote, which was monitored
    by 620 international observers.

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's monitoring
    mission was to deliver its assessment on Wednesday afternoon.
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