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Prosecutors Pledge 'Swift' Action On Fraud Reports

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  • Prosecutors Pledge 'Swift' Action On Fraud Reports

    PROSECUTORS PLEDGE 'SWIFT' ACTION ON FRAUD REPORTS
    By Karine Kalantarian and Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 23 2008

    Armenia's Office of the Prosecutor-General said on Wednesday that it
    has formed an hoc unit tasked with preventing and reacting to possible
    instances of fraud in the upcoming presidential election.

    "I have reason to state that we are in a position to again swiftly
    react to and investigate reports of elections violations," said Aram
    Tamazian, a deputy prosecutor-general overseeing the unit's work.

    A similar team of prosecutors already operated before and during last
    May's parliamentary elections. The law-enforcement agency says it
    opened and sent to court 17 criminal cases against individuals accused
    of committing various vote irregularities. None of them are known to
    be senior government officials or heads of election commissions.

    According to Tamazian, the unit's main source of information is fraud
    reports and allegations appearing in the Armenian press. He said it
    has seen no evidence of serious violations so far, complaining that
    most of them are too "general" to warrant criminal proceedings against
    individuals involved in the conduct of the February 19 election.

    "I hope that reports by our media outlets will be more substantive
    so that we are able to display a more concrete approach," he told
    journalists.

    The senior prosecutor said the anti-fraud task force is also ready to
    look into similar reports by election observers and candidates. "We
    will investigate a report or complaint from any party," he said.

    The upcoming ballot is expected to be closely watched by more than
    300 foreign observers and an even larger number of local monitors.

    The head of Armenia's largest vote-monitoring group, It's Your Choice,
    said on Wednesday that it plans to deploy observers in each of the
    1,923 polling stations across the country.

    Harutiun Hambartsumian told RFE/RL that his organization has
    already launched its observation mission and has found only minor
    election-related violations so far. He said It's Your Choice observers
    found, in particular, serious inaccuracies in voter lists in the
    northern town of Stepanavan.

    So far Hambartsumian's observers have not reported any case of vote
    buying, which is believed to have been widespread in the May 2007
    elections. "It is very hard to prove vote buying because people
    accepting vote bribes won't say who paid them," he told RFE/RL.

    Even those refusing to sell their votes will not necessarily make
    such revelations. RFE/RL received on Wednesday a phone call from a
    Yerevan resident who claimed to have been offered 5,000 drams ($16)
    in return for voting for Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian. The man
    identified himself as Aharon Yesayan but refused to name the person
    who allegedly offered him a bribe.
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