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Polls open in Armenian presidential elections

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  • Polls open in Armenian presidential elections

    Monsters and Critics.com
    Feb 19 2008


    Polls open in Armenian presidential elections


    Feb 19, 2008, 12:51 GMT


    Yerevan, Armenia - Polls opened across Armenia Tuesday morning in an
    election that is as much a judgment of outgoing President Robert
    Kocharian's decade at the helm of the small Caucasus state as they
    are about electing a successor.

    While Kocharian's preferred successor, Prime Minister Serzh
    Sarkisian, 53, led in pre-election surveys, there were strong
    questions about whether he would be able to win a first round
    outright for which he would need more than 50 per cent of the vote.

    Armenia's current construction boom and steady growth in recent years
    speak for the powerful prime minister, whose party swept recent
    parliamentary elections in the country.

    Speaking to journalists after casting his ballot 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.'

    Kocharian, who voted minutes before at the same polling stations,
    underlined, 'Each elections is a test which will leave us stronger. I
    would like everything to be decided in the first round.'

    'I voted for the stability and growth of Armenia. We are registering
    a very important progress,' the president added.

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

    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
    thirties, pointed to cranes overhanging the street and said 'the
    country is growing.'

    The most prominent challenge comes from Armenia's first president,
    Levon Ter-Petrosian, 63, who made a dramatic comeback from hermetic
    retirement as a widely unpopular leader associated with the country's
    post-Soviet economic collapse.

    'We will fight to the end,' Ter-Petrosian said Tuesday, repeating the
    phrase from his campaign speech Saturday that drew about 30,000 to
    Yerevan's theatre square.

    'Many dirty things are happening. There have been many violations in
    this election,' the former president said after voting Tuesday.

    Ter-Petrosian has already called a mass meeting on Wednesday, raising
    fears of post-election unrest in the streets. Students in Yerevan
    announced last minute closures at their universities Wednesday.

    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 phrased repeated by
    voters on election day.

    Former parliamentary speaker Artur Baghdasarian, a 39-year-old
    populist politician calling for Armenia's accession to the EU and
    NATO, is expected to finish second in the polls with about 20 per
    cent of the vote.

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

    But in the battle between Kocharian's predecessor and successor, the
    frozen conflict with neighbouring Azerbaijan over the territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh has emerged as the most sensitive issue.

    Ter-Petrosian maintains the conciliatory stand that was the main
    cause of his resignation in 1998 at the end of a full-scale, six-year
    war, while war hero Sarkisian has upheld Kocharian's hawkish stance.

    The government candidate sees the country's foreign policy as being
    closely tied to Moscow, which lends him its backing.

    Armenia has been pushed to look for allies out of the region, facing
    blockades along its border with Azerbaijan and Turkey, which rejects
    Yerevan's lobbying for international recognition of the killings of
    Armenians by the Turkish Ottoman Empire in 1915 as genocide.

    The small Caucasus state of 2.3 million has emerged as strategically
    important, lying along gas routed from the energy-rich Caspian Sea
    region to Europe and a close partner of Iran. Western powers fear
    that tensions along its border could disrupt gas routes.

    Three hours after polling stations opened at 800 (400 GMT), 11.2 per
    cent of voters had cast their ballot.

    The voting will last 12 hours and the first official results are
    expected from midnight. A new election law passed last year forbids
    voting by Armenian nationals living abroad.

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

    Opposition candidates have criticized Sarkisian for abusing his
    government post to secure television coverage and blanket advertising
    across the country.

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