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Sargsyan on track to win election in Armenia

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  • Sargsyan on track to win election in Armenia

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Feb 19 2008



    Sargsyan on track to win election in Armenia; opposition cries foul.
    Reuters, The Associated PressPublished: February 19, 2008


    YEREVAN, Armenia: Preliminary results showed the current prime
    minister of Armenia on track Tuesday to win the presidential election
    in the first round, election officials said, while the main
    opposition candidate alleged widespread violations.

    With ballots from more than 10 percent of precincts counted, Prime
    Minister Serge Sargsyan captured 53 percent of votes, while his main
    opponent, Levon Ter-Petrosian, had 11 percent.

    Sargsyan, 53, who was groomed by the departing president, Robert
    Kocharian, was widely considered to be the front-runner in the race.
    His opponent, Ter-Petrosian, 63, was president after Armenia gained
    independence with the breakup of the Soviet Union.

    After casting his vote in central Yerevan on Tuesday, Ter-Petrosian
    asserted that there were "hundreds, thousands of violations."

    He added: "According to my information, very dirty things are being
    done."

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    Arman Museian, a spokesman for Ter-Petrosian, said that dozens of
    opposition supporters in various parts of the country had been beaten
    by supporters of the government. He also claimed that there were many
    reported cases of ballot-stuffing and vote-buying.

    Larisa Torosian, a supporter of Ter-Petrosian who monitored voting in
    the town of Abuvian, said that after she flagged violations at a
    polling station she was beaten by a group of people who identified
    themselves as Sargsyan campaigners. "It is not an election, it's a
    seizure of power," said Torosian, who had bruises around her left
    eye.

    The allegations raised concerns of instability and violence in
    Armenia, where weeks of opposition rallies followed the re-election
    of Kocharian in 2003. The opposition announced that it would hold a
    rally in Yerevan on Wednesday to protest the violations and beatings.

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

    The two presidential candidates have differing views on the future of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Sargsyan, a native of the region and a decorated
    war hero, appears less likely to compromise than Ter-Petrosian, who
    was forced to resign in 1998 after advocating concessions there.
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