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OSCE Not To Monitor Yerevan Polls

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  • OSCE Not To Monitor Yerevan Polls

    OSCE NOT TO MONITOR YEREVAN POLLS

    www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=4126 2_4/8/2009_1
    Wednesday, April 8, 2009

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--Armenian authorities will not invite the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe to monitor next month's mayoral
    elections in Yerevan, officials said on Wednesday.

    The Central Election Commission (CEC) confirmed that such invitations
    have only been sent to the heads of foreign diplomatic missions in
    Armenia as well as the Council of Europe's Congress of Local and
    Regional Administrations.

    The OSCE and its Warsaw-based Office of Democratic Institutions
    and Human Rights (ODIHR) have been the main international body to
    monitor just about every presidential and parliamentary election held
    in Armenia since independence. The findings of hundreds of observers
    deployed by the OSCE/ODIHR have greatly influenced the international
    and domestic legitimacy of those elections.

    "In general, the ODIHR carries out monitoring missions during national
    elections," Tatev Ohanian, a spokesman for the CEC, said, explaining
    its decision not to invite OSCE observes for the May 31 elections of
    Yerevan's new municipal assembly. "That is true for not only Armenia
    but also other countries."

    "Local elections are usually monitored by the Council of Europe's
    Congress of Local and Regional Administrations," Ohanian told RFE/RL.

    The OSCE monitored local polls held in Albania and Moldova in 2007.

    "No invitation has been sent to the OSCE as a whole or the ODIHR,"
    said Sergey Kapinos, head of the OSCE office in Yerevan. "That is
    why we will confine ourselves to the kind of monitoring which we
    carried out during recent local elections in Armenia. Namely, with
    the personnel of the OSCE office in Yerevan."

    The forthcoming polls in Yerevan will be different from those
    elections in that they will involve at least one third of the country's
    electorate. The main opposition Armenian National Congress (HAK) has
    pledged to turn them into a "second round" of last year's disputed
    presidential election that triggered massive anti-government protests
    in the capital. The HAK on Wednesday declined to comment on the
    authorities' decision not to invite OSCE observers this time around.

    Kapinos said that the proper conduct of the municipal elections
    is "very important" for the OSCE and the broader international
    community. "I sincerely hope that the elections will take place
    in accordance with the letter of the law, that there will be no
    violations and that all election contenders will be guided by legal
    norms," he told RFE/RL.
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