Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Georgia: Opposition Threatens To Overturn Presidential Election Amid

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

  • Georgia: Opposition Threatens To Overturn Presidential Election Amid

    GEORGIA: OPPOSITION THREATENS TO OVERTURN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION AMID GROWING INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION OF THE RESULTS
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Jan 9 2008

    On January 8 the runner-up presidential candidate Levan Gachechiladze
    (with 27% of the votes cast, according to the provisional final
    returns) headed a group of opposition leaders that burst into Central
    Electoral Commission (CEC) offices and encircled CEC chairman Levan
    Tarkhnishvili. They threatened to evict Tarkhnishvili physically and
    -- in Gachechiladze's words -- to "punish" him as a "criminal" if
    the opposition comes to power. Leaders of the nine groups supporting
    Gachechiladze joined him in the jostling and shouting. Gachechiladze
    resorted to obscenities not for the first time. The incident occurred
    in the presence of journalists (Civil Georgia, EurasiaNet, Rustavi-2,
    January 8).

    Opposition leaders accuse the CEC of "rigging" the January
    5 presidential election. They are threatening to call protest
    demonstrations unless the CEC and the courts invalidate or revise the
    election's results. Western observers -- present in record-high numbers
    throughout the country -- have validated the election, the provisional
    final returns of which show Mikheil Saakashvili winning re-election
    with close to 53% of the votes cast. The remainder is divided among
    six other candidates. However, opposition leaders reject the Western
    observers' essentially positive assessment of the election and are
    calling for a runoff or a rerun.

    Meanwhile, many institutions and groups of international observers are
    validating the election, alongside the four main observer delegations
    -- OSCE/ODIHR (Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights),
    OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly
    (PACE), and European Parliament -- which did so jointly on January 6
    (see EDM, January 7). All of these institutions and groups are urging
    the opposition to recognize the legitimacy of the election just held.

    The European Union's Presidency -- held by Slovenia since January
    1 -- supports the Western observers' conclusion that "the election
    was in essence consistent with most of the OSCE and Council of
    Europe commitments and standards for democratic elections." It also
    expects Georgia to "address the shortcomings that were identified"
    (EU Presidency press release, January 7).

    The Washington-based National Democratic Institute (NDI) and
    International Republican Institute (IRI) have issued basically positive
    assessments of the election. Significantly, both institutes have for
    many years been working with opposition parties in Georgia and continue
    to do so. According to NDI's preliminary conclusion, the election
    "met basic democratic principles," while problems encountered in the
    process of balloting were irregularities, not rigging and not affecting
    the expression of people's will (Rustavi-2, January 7). The IRI, which
    led an international delegation of observers, similarly concluded,
    "The election broadly met international standards. However, technical
    problems continue to affect the electoral process" (IRI press release,
    January 6). Both institutes are recommending to the government and
    opposition to work cooperatively to resolve these issues.

    Presidents Toomas Ilves of Estonia, Valdis Zatlers of Latvia, Lech
    Kaczynski of Poland, Viktor Yushchenko of Ukraine, Ilham Aliyev
    of Azerbaijan, Robert Kocharian of Armenia, Nursultan Nazarbayev
    of Kazakhstan, and Nicolas Sarkozy of France as well as Ukrainian
    Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko have variously telephoned or written
    to Saakashvili with congratulations on his reelection. Ilves also
    cited the Western observers' recommendations to Georgia to correct
    remaining flaws and continually improve the quality of the electoral
    process. Ukraine's Ministry of Foreign Affairs cited Ukrainian and
    international observers saying that the openness of the voting and
    large presence of observers made it impossible to rig the election
    (BNS, UNIAN, January 6, 7, 8; Turan, Agence France Presse, January
    8). Estonian observers (including 10 members of parliament) and
    Lithuanian delegation (totaling 131 members, the largest delegation
    proportionate to the nation's size) supported the Western positive
    assessment of the election, despite "minor irregularities that do not
    influence the outcome." Latvia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued
    a similar opinion, citing the Latvian delegation of observers.

    U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack and NATO spokesman James
    Appathurai each issued statements endorsing the Western observers'
    validation of the election (press releases, January 7, 8).

    At the moment, the EU in Brussels seems rather disengaged from
    the ongoing Georgian events. The EU's High Representative for the
    Common Foreign and Security Policy, Javier Solana, issued a brief,
    vague statement, recognizing at least that the Georgian election was
    "truly competitive." The EU's External Affairs and Neighborhood Policy
    Commissioner, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, issued a belated statement on
    January 8 in which she cited the international observers' essentially
    positive evaluation of the election, urged the Georgian government
    to address the shortcomings quickly, and called on the opposition
    to use only peaceful and legal means (Council of the European Union
    and European Commission press releases, January 7, 8). Solana and
    Ferrero-Waldner are about to finish their terms of office. The EU's
    envoy for the South Caucasus, Peter Semneby, apparently could not
    take a position on the Georgian elections in the absence of a clear
    message from the top level in Brussels. Such a weak engagement in
    Brussels reflects the broader inadequacies of the EU's Neighborhood
    Policy generally and in this region particularly.

    Gachechiladze and the other presidential contenders cannot
    realistically hope to overturn the election's outcome. Their moves
    seem designed at this stage simply to prolong the uncertainty and
    look for new tactical openings. Some of them may also look for a
    face-saving solution, after staking so heavily on toppling Saakashvili
    and the government. Their main demand, before and during the election
    campaign, was a Georgia without Saakashvili. Program and tactics were
    subordinated to that goal.

    The Gachechiladze camp's Mephisto bargain with billionaire Badri
    Patarkatsishvili showed that this camp was prepared to destabilize
    the country for the sake of toppling the president. The other
    presidential contenders stopped short of making that bargain for
    funds, but used the same brinkmanship tactics. At the moment, they
    all seem to be preparing to refuse to recognize the legitimacy of
    the re-elected president and possibly boycotting him in the run-up
    to the April parliamentary elections. Such a development could
    bring with it another political crisis, fraught with artificially
    induced polarization. Unburdened by the responsibilities of governing
    and untrained for such responsibilities, the leaders of these small
    parties see their chance of gaining de facto political influence in
    a climate of political confrontation.
Working...
X