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Voting ends in Armenian presidential election - Summary

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  • Voting ends in Armenian presidential election - Summary

    Earthtimes, UK
    Feb 19 2008



    Voting ends in Armenian presidential election - Summary
    Posted : Tue, 19 Feb 2008 16:15:08 GMT
    Author : DPA


    Yerevan, Armenia - Voting ended in Armenia's presidential elections
    Tuesday that are expected to go to Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian,
    the preferred successor of incumbent Robert Kocharian, amid
    opposition allegations of widespread vote-rigging. Forty minutes
    before the close of voting at 8 pm (1600 GMT) in the small
    post-Soviet republic turnout was reported to be a high 57.14 per
    cent, according to the Central Election Commission.

    Analysts said that while Sarkisian, 53, led in pre-election surveys,
    there were strong doubts about whether he would garner the more than
    50 per cent needed to win a first round outright.

    The frontrunner's fiercest challenger, former president Levon Ter-
    Petrosian, 63, meanwhile accused the government of "mass bribing,
    ballot stuffing, voting list falsifications" among a slew of
    violations, including the beating and kidnapping of his supporters.

    "Many dirty things are happening. There have been many concrete
    violations," the former president told journalists after casting his
    ballot Tuesday.

    "This is the last convulsion of a dying power, but it will not help:
    We will show proof of violations," Ter-Petrossian spokesman Arman
    Musinyan told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.

    Ter-Petrosian had already called a mass meeting "to celebrate his
    true victory" Wednesday afternoon, raising fears of post-election
    unrest in the streets.

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

    The elections in Armenia, a landlocked state nestled high in the
    Caucasus Mountains, were seen as much as a judgment of outgoing
    President Kocharian's decade at the helm as a question mark over the
    state's future foreign policy direction.

    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 aid
    and on economic ties to Russia.

    Moscow, which has a firm hold, including a military base, in the
    post-Soviet state, has tacitly lent its backing to the current
    leadership.

    A current construction boom and steady growth in recent years speak
    for the powerful prime minister, whose Republican Party of Armenia
    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."

    President Kocharian, who voted minutes before at the same polling
    station, said: "I voted for the stability and growth of Armenia."

    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
    30s, pointed to cranes towering over the street: "The country is
    growing."

    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.

    Such sentiment benefited former parliamentary speaker Artur
    Baghdasarian, a 39-year-old populist politician who is calling for
    Armenia's accession to the EU and NATO. He pulled even with Ter-
    Petrosian in pre-election polls, with about 10-15 per cent each.

    In all, nine candidates appear on Tuesday's ballot. The first
    official election results were expected from midnight (20.00 GMT).

    The United States 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 was monitored
    by 620 international observers.

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