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Feature: Armenians enthusiastic about presidential elections

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  • Feature: Armenians enthusiastic about presidential elections

    Xinhua, China
    Feb 19 2008


    Feature: Armenians enthusiastic about presidential elections


    www.chinaview.cn 2008-02-20 00:50:20
    By Liu Yifang

    YEREVAN, Feb. 19 (Xinhua) -- Armenians on Tuesday crowded into
    polling stations and queued to cast votes to choose the country's new
    president from nine candidates.

    As early as 6:45 a.m. local time (0245 GMT), an hour and a
    quarter earlier than the official opening time, working staff at a
    polling station in the No. 24 school in downtown Yerevan began their
    preparations. Several voters waited quietly in the room.

    In the street outside the school, a big orange plastic board
    emblazoned with "9/11" was noticeable, indicating the 9th electoral
    district and the 11th polling station.

    Voters could find their numbers on the list posted on the right
    side of the glass wall. On the left side was a poster with photos and
    brief profiles of the nine rivals in the Armenian language.

    The quiet inside the room was broken by reporters. Dozens of
    cameramen, photographers and other journalists crowded into the small
    room and waited. Outgoing President Robert Kocharian and two
    frontrunners, Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan and former President
    Levon Ter-Petrosyan, were expected to cast their ballots here.

    As time passed, more and more voters came and formed a queue in
    front of the polling station.

    Vanran Guroglyan took his 9-year-old son along and let his little
    boy do the last step for him -- inserting the folded ballot paper
    into the box. "It's an important day in Armenia, I'd like my son to
    experience it," he said.

    A 62-year-old woman who gave her name as Aida told Xinhua that
    her family has six eligible voters who support different candidates.
    Another elderly lady, Armaya, said she and her son both voted for the
    prime minister "because he is the best choice."

    "We have made our choice for a long time. I get to know my
    favorite from the TV and newspapers, but it's a secret and I'll not
    tell anybody," a girl said on condition of anonymity when walking out
    of the polling room, adding that "my ballot is very important."

    However, some people do not care that much about the elections."I
    haven't decided yet. It's the same to me no matter who is elected
    because I don't trust anybody," Susan, a hotel receptionist, said at
    her work place in the morning.

    "Until now everything is normal, but I'll continue to keep an eye
    on it," Salik Tonoyan, an observer at the No. 11 station, told Xinhua
    at noon.

    At another polling station in the Chekhov English Specialized
    School in the north of the city, dozens of people were waiting
    outside in clear but cold weather.

    "Why we are waiting here? We believe that everything will be
    good," said Grigor, a Ter-Petrosyan supporter who moved back from
    abroad 10 years ago. "Levon will bring us change."

    Kristina Gevorkyan, an Armenian-Georgian from the observation
    group "Against Violation of Law," was carefully counting voters while
    they entered the room.

    "We are here to see whether it's smooth and transparent. I came
    before 8 a.m., and after the polling station is closed at 8 p.m., we
    will stay until ballot counting is finished," she said.

    At the nearby No. 22 polling station, a bit smaller than the
    others, the ballot box was one-third full by 3 p.m. and voters were
    still trickling in to cast ballots.

    "Voters are very active. People came early in the morning and you
    can see how many people are still waiting outside," a regional
    electoral official said.


    Editor: Mu Xuequan
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