Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia on the brink of confrontation

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia on the brink of confrontation

    What the Papers Say (Russia)
    February 20, 2008 Wednesday


    ARMENIA ON THE BRINK OF CONFRONTATION;
    Presidential candidates call on supporters to protest

    by Yuri Simonian

    Reports from the presidential election in Armenia; A presidential
    election took place in Armenia yesterday. There were nine candidates
    in all, with two favorites: Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian and former
    president Levon Ter-Petrosian. The election outcome may be decided in
    the first round of voting.




    A presidential election took place in Armenia yesterday. There were
    nine candidates in all, with two favorites: Prime Minister Serge
    Sarkisian and former president Levon Ter-Petrosian. The Armenian
    Central Electoral Commission will announce the preliminary results
    today.

    Commentators in Yerevan aren't ruling out the possibility that the
    election outcome may be decided in the first round of voting - if
    Sarkisian gets 50% plus one vote. His main rival, Ter-Petrosian,
    might even finish third or fourth rather than second. In that event,
    given that the other candidates who finish ahead of Ter-Petrosian are
    unlikely to challenge the results, any protests from Ter-Petrosian
    could be dismissed as groundless.

    Ter-Petrosian himself, who voted early yesterday morning, is
    confident of victory - if not in the first round, then certainly in
    the second. He told us: "I have no doubt that I will succeed. My
    people are keeping an eye on the situation at polling-stations, and
    the authorities won't be able to manipulate ballot-papers in any
    blatant or large-scale way."

    Outgoing President Robert Kocharian and his preferred candidate,
    Sarkisian, are also confident. They're planning to celebrate
    Sarkisian's victory with a large rally. Armenia's capital has also
    been swept by rumors of special task force soldiers being transferred
    >From Nagorno-Karabakh to Yerevan just before the election; both
    Kocharian and Sarkisian are originally from the unrecognized
    republic. And rumor has it that the Yerkrapa (Defender of the
    Fatherland) volunteer militia is prepared to support Ter-Petrosian.

    Before the election, President Kocharian warned that any attempt to
    destabilize the situation would be prevented. Ter-Petrosian parried
    this unambiguous threat with a compliment: "That's right. If I were
    president, I'd say the same. We have no intention of breaking the
    law."

    Numerous international observers, including observers from CIS
    countries, have been present in Armenia for the presidential
    election; they have not recorded any significant violations capable
    of affecting the election outcome - at least, none had been reported
    as we went to print. The same cannot be said of Armenian activists.

    As we reported earlier, it was decided that no exit polls would be
    done, in order to avoid raising tension. At the last moment, however,
    it was revealed that two non-governmental organizations would be
    approaching voters after all. Armenian analysts maintain that these
    surveys can be dismissed, since neither of the NGOs in question has
    the experience or resources to do proper exit polls; and one of them
    has been commissioned by the pro-government Public Television and
    Radio Corporation, making its results predictable.

    Ashot Melikian, chairman of the Free Speech Protection Committee: "We
    can't say anything for certain. Even in our organization, for
    example, voter preferences turned out to be divided. How Yerevan
    votes is very important - but I think the fate of this election will
    largely be decided in the regions."

    The Armenian Central Electoral Commission is scheduled to announce
    preliminary results no later than 8 p.m. today, and final results by
    February 26.

    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, No. 33, February 20, 2008, p. 8

    Translated by Elena Leonova
Working...
X