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BAKU: Armenian Opposition Slams Western Election Observers

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  • BAKU: Armenian Opposition Slams Western Election Observers

    ARMENIAN OPPOSITION SLAMS WESTERN ELECTION OBSERVERS

    AzerNews Weekly
    June 3 2009
    Azerbaijan

    Armenian ex-president, opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian has
    directed pounding criticism at the international observers who have
    positively assessed Sunday`s municipal polls held in the capital,
    Yerevan.

    "Council of Europe observers who say the election complied with
    European standards are ridiculing either themselves or the Armenian
    people," Ter-Petrosian argued.

    With nearly all votes counted, the Central Election Commission
    announced that Armenia`s ruling Republican Party has won, gaining 46%
    of the vote, while Ter-Petrosian, who heads the opposition Armenian
    National Congress, came third, winning only 17%. This enables the
    Republican Party`s incumbent to retain his post as mayor of Yerevan,
    dashing the opposition`s hopes to win enough seats for Ter-Petrosian
    to be elected.

    Ter-Petrosian claimed the fact that Western countries had delegated
    only 15 observers clearly shows that they did not take the elections
    seriously.

    "If bribes, beatings and kidnappings of local observers, bringing
    masses of people from the regions to vote in lieu of Yerevan residents
    and rigging the election outcomes are European standards, then we
    don`t need them," the opposition leader said ironically. "Let them
    apply those standards in their own countries."

    The opposition is riled the most by the feedback from the CE Congress
    of Local and Regional Authorities, which was the only international
    group that observed the poll. The 12-people-strong mission that
    monitored the polling in about 200 ballot stations in Yerevan, told
    a news conference following the election that it was a commendable
    step forward in comparison with the 2008 presidential election in
    Armenia. They pointed to some violations, but said they were not
    serious enough to influence the overall outcome of the elections.

    We recall that violence escalated in the South Caucasus republic
    following the February 2008 poll. The opposition refused to recognize
    the outcome of the presidential election won by former Prime Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian, taking to the streets. Scores of people were killed,
    injured and arrested during the putdown of the mass protests on
    March 1-2.

    Journalists labeled the mayoral election as one "in which media
    representatives were subjected to pressure the most." Commenting on
    the statement, the head of the Congress observation delegation to
    Yerevan, Nigel Mermagen, said the allegations would be taken into
    account in its final assessment to be announced during the Congress`
    fall session in mid-October.

    The election was the first local poll for Yerevan`s mayor`s office
    in the South Caucasus republic`s history. Mayors had previously been
    appointed by the president.

    The final election outcomes will be announced in a week.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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