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  • Armenia: Violence At Polling Stations Mars Elections

    ARMENIA: VIOLENCE AT POLLING STATIONS MARS ELECTIONS

    Human Rights Watch
    22 Feb 2008 00:33:48 GMT

    Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this
    article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are
    the author's alone.

    (New York, February 22, 2008)The Armenian government should
    investigate alleged assaults on election observers and journalists
    that marred the presidential election on February 19, 2008, Human
    Rights Watch said today. According to victim testimonies taken by
    Human Rights Watch, assailants beat and threatened opposition party
    activists, domestic observers, and journalists who attempted to
    document election fraud at polling stations during the presidential
    vote. "These election-day attacks targeted the very people trying to
    ensure the integrity of Armenia's vote," said Holly Cartner, Europe
    and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

    "The Armenian government should carry out independent and speedy
    investigations to ensure justice is served and to send the message
    that intimidation won't be tolerated."

    On February 20, the Central Election Commission declared Prime
    Minister Serzh Sargsian the winner of the elections with 52.8 percent
    of the vote.

    Sargsian had the backing of current president Robert
    Kocharian. Armenia's first president Levon Ter-Petrosian was the main
    opposition challenger and won 21.5 percent, according to official
    tallies.

    In nine cases documented by Human Rights Watch, assailants intimidated,
    threatened, and even violently attacked opposition party activists,
    domestic observers and journalists at eight polling stations
    in and around the capital, Yerevan. Victims variously described
    their assailants as "big guys," "athletic," "tough," and apparently
    supporters of Sargsian. Most victims had been attempting to expose what
    they believed to be violations of electoral rules, such as incorrect
    voters' lists, intimidation of voters, violations of the right to a
    secret ballot, and ballot-box stuffing. None of the victims was able
    or willing to return to the polling station to continue observing
    the voting.

    In several incidents, the assaults took place in the presence of
    police and polling station officials who did not intervene, and in
    one case a police officer appeared to assist the assailants. Some
    victims reported the attacks to police, who are investigating.

    Human Rights Watch called on the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to look into election-related violence
    and ensure that its final report on the vote records these incidents.

    In one case documented by Human Rights Watch, assailants grabbed a
    Ter-Petrosian proxy (a candidate's authorized representative) at a
    polling station in Yerevan, forced her into a car and drove her to
    a remote area.

    There, they beat her in the head and face, threatened to rape her and
    attack her family, and abandoned her. She eventually made her way to
    a police station where she filed a complaint. She is still suffering
    from headaches and other medical repercussions of the attack.

    At least three journalists were attacked. Lusine Barsegian of the
    newspaper Haikakan Zhamankak was beaten, and had her camera and voice
    recorder stolen, when she attempted to document what she believed to
    be intimidation of voters at a polling station in Yerevan's Erebuni
    district. A cameraman from the independent A1+ television station
    was beaten and had his camera taken at the same polling station. Two
    domestic election observers, Armen Matirosian, a member of parliament
    from the opposition Heritage party, and Zarui Postandjian, an observer
    from a nongovernmental organization, were also attacked at this polling
    station after they tried to raise alleged election violations with
    polling station officials.

    The OSCE election monitors stated that the elections were held
    "mostly in line" with international commitments.

    Tens of thousands of Ter-Petrosian supporters took to the streets in
    downtown Yerevan on February 20 and 21 to protest the outcome of the
    elections and what they believe to be widespread electoral fraud.

    "The Armenian authorities should ensure that no harm is done to
    peaceful demonstrators," said Cartner. "Armenia claims to be a
    democratic country, and that means allowing people to exercise their
    right to freedom of assembly."

    Armenia has a history of flawed elections and harassment of opposition
    parties. In March 2003, Human Rights Watch documented widespread
    ballot stuffing and intimidation during Armenia's presidential
    election runoff.

    Human Rights Watch documented mass arrests of opposition supporters,
    violent dispersals of demonstrations, and raids on opposition party
    headquarters in April 2004. The protests derived from the government's
    failure to address the many violations of electoral rules documented
    in the 2003 presidential election.

    Details of Assaults

    Yerevan Polling station 13/16 Lusine Barsegian, a journalist for
    Haikakan Zhamankak told Human Rights Watch she went to polling station
    13/16 in the Erebuni district of Yerevan at approximately 2 p.m. on
    February 19. When she arrived, she saw that the polling station was
    very overcrowded. Some unidentified people were talking to voters
    in what she believed to be an attempt to influence their votes,
    and other people were observing the voters closely as they cast
    their ballots. Barsegian attempted to interview the central election
    commission representative responsible for the polling station about the
    apparent violations. At that point, policemen and a few unidentified
    men forced her out of the polling station. Barsegian protested, saying,
    "I have the right to be here. I have the right to take photographs."

    With the assistance of Armen Matirosian, a member of parliament from
    the Heritage party, who was an authorized election observer, Barsegian
    again entered to the polling station. When she again attempted to
    take photographs, an unidentified man in plainclothes kicked her in
    the stomach and grabbed her camera and voice recorder. Other men also
    punched and kicked Matirosian. According to Barsegian, police stood
    by and did not intervene.

    After this attack, Barsegian and Matirosian fled the station and
    filed a complaint with the prosecutor's office.

    When Zarui Postandjian, an observer from the nongovernmental
    organization Against State Violence, heard about the incident, she went
    to polling station 13/16. Upon arriving, she saw a severely overcrowded
    polling station and police and unidentified people observing voters
    as they marked their ballots. Postandjian has stated that she tried
    to take photos of the polling station when a policeman came up from
    behind her and hit her. At the same time, an unidentified man tried to
    grab her camera, and both he and the policeman punched her. Another
    observer came to assist her, and they both fled. Postandjian did not
    return to the polling station. Postandjian filed a complaint with
    the prosecutor's office, which opened a criminal investigation.

    Arabkir district Reuben Armanian, a proxy for Ter-Petrosian, went
    to polling station 4/26 in Arabkir at approximately 7:30 p.m. to
    replace some of his colleagues who had been observing the conduct of
    the voting during the day.

    He told Human Rights Watch that when he arrived, a group of 40 to 50
    athletic-looking men were standing in and near the polling station.

    Approximately 10 of these men attacked Armanian, punching him on
    the head and body. "What could I do but look for a way to escape
    them?" Armanian told Human Rights Watch. "I ran 10-20 meters and no
    one followed me. But I couldn't return to the polling station because
    these guys were still there."

    Photos, obtained by Human Rights Watch, of Armanian two days after
    the attack show him with a severely black and swollen right eye.

    Human Rights Watch also received reports that at least two other
    proxies and observers were attacked at polling stations in Arabkir. One
    victim was too afraid to speak to Human Rights Watch out of fear
    of repercussions.

    Kentron district Hovsep Hovsepian, a cameraman with the independent
    A1+ television station heard about election violations at polling
    station 9/6 in the Kentron district of Yerevan. Hovsepian told Human
    Rights Watch that when he got out of his car at the polling station,
    a large group of unidentified men who had gathered outside the polling
    station attacked him and attempted to take his camera. When Hovsepian
    resisted, one of the men kicked him in the stomach and grabbed the
    camera. The assailants took the video cassette out of the camera,
    smashed it, and prepared to destroy the camera as well.

    At that moment, the driver of the car came out and the men began
    to attack him instead. Hovsepian and the driver broke free of the
    attackers, returned to the car and left the polling station.

    Unidentified district #1 An opposition party proxy who did not want to
    be identified out of concerns for his safety told Human Rights Watch
    that at a polling station in one Yerevan district he saw violations of
    election regulations and asked that the election commission officials
    respond. After a few minutes, a group of 15 to 20 people attacked
    him, punching and kicking him until he lost consciousness. He was
    then taken to the hospital in an ambulance. He suffered broken ribs
    and pain in his kidneys as a result of the beating.

    Unidentified district #2 One Ter-Petrosian supporter who asked not
    to be identified also described to Human Rights Watch how assailants
    removed him from a polling station, forced him into a car and drove
    him away. At a location unknown to the victim, a large group of
    men beat him severely in the head and body, saying that they were
    beating him because of his support of the opposition. As a result,
    the victim suffered several broken ribs.

    Abovian, about 20 kilometers from Yerevan Larissa Tadevosian, a
    proxy for Ter-Petrosian, has told Human Rights Watch that she went
    to polling station 28/7 in Abovian at approximately 7:30 a.m. Three
    large, athletic men approached her, and two of them dragged her out
    of the polling station.

    Tadevosian struggled to free herself, but was dragged across the yard
    and shoved into a car. The three men drove Tadevosian to a deserted
    area outside the town. After taking her out of the car, one man beat
    her on the head and face. "They told me that I should be silent and
    not say anything more about the elections," she told Human Rights
    Watch. "They threatened to rape me.

    They threatened to harm my family." The men then left Tadevosian in
    the deserted area and drove away.

    Tadevosian was unable to return to the polling station because of her
    condition. She went directly to the police, who ordered a forensic
    medical examination. Two days after the attack, she complained of
    headaches, dizziness, and other medical problems.

    Gurgen Eghizarian, a proxy for Ter-Petrosian and a former deputy head
    of the National Security Service, received information that election
    observers at polling station 28/6 in Abovian had been kidnapped and
    beaten. He has stated that he went to the polling station together
    with Erjan Abgarian, a 68-year-old Ter-Petrosian proxy and former
    head of the customs service.

    Election commission representatives and observers there denied that
    they had seen anything happen to the observers, but Eghizarian demanded
    that the senior election commission representative sign a statement
    about what had happened. While at the polling station, a group of
    seven or eight men armed with pistols attacked Eghizarian, his son,
    and Abgarian, beating them on the kidneys, ribs, and back. Eghizarian
    told Human Rights Watch that the men also threatened him and the
    others saying, "Sargsian will be president, and if you go against
    him, you will be killed." He suffers headaches and has a bruise on
    his forehead as a result of the assault.

    A senior official for Ter-Petrosian told Human Rights Watch that at
    least three other proxies were beaten in Abovian on election day.

    Another Ter-Petrosian proxy who wished to remain anonymous told Human
    Rights Watch that large, athletic men would arrive periodically at
    another polling station in Abovian and would take prospective voters
    aside "for a little chat," apparently in order to influence their
    votes. These same men also spoke to election commission officials,
    observers, and candidates' proxies, and threatened them should they
    speak out about any violations. This same proxy told Human Rights Watch
    that in mid-afternoon some men took him aside and threatened him and
    told him, "You didn't see anything." He claimed that these men were
    responsible for stealing and falsifying ballots and stuffing the ballot
    box at this polling station. Police stood by and did not respond.

    This proxy stated that he continued to fear for his safety and had
    sent his children to another location and was reluctant to leave his
    own apartment.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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