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Pro-Regime Parties Lead Vote In Rebel Karabakh

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  • Pro-Regime Parties Lead Vote In Rebel Karabakh

    PRO-REGIME PARTIES LEAD VOTE IN REBEL KARABAKH

    Agence France Presse
    May 24, 2010 Monday 2:00 PM GMT

    Two parties close to the separatist leadership of Nagorny Karabakh,
    a rebel region of Azerbaijan, have come out ahead in parliamentary
    elections, according to preliminary results on Monday.

    Azerbaijan denounced the election in the rebel region, which has been
    controlled by ethnic Armenians since it broke free of Baku's control
    after a fierce war in the early 1990s that killed 30,000 people.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan remain officially at war over Karabakh, and
    the dispute is a major source of tension in the South Caucasus region
    wedged between Iran, Russia and Turkey.

    No country -- not even Armenia -- officially recognises Karabakh as
    an independent state.

    All of the parties that took part in Sunday's election oppose
    reunification with Azerbaijan.

    "With more than half the ballots counted, Prime Minister Ara
    Harutiunian's Free Fatherland party was winning with 46.4 percent and
    the Democratic Party of Artsakh with 28.6 percent," Mikael Hajian,
    a spokesman for Karabakh's central elections commission, told AFP.

    Two other parties running for the 33 seats in the region's tiny
    legislature, Dashnaktsutyun and the Communists, got 20.2 and 4.8
    percent, respectively. The parties need to clear a 6 percent threshold
    to enter parliament.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Edvard Nalbandian said in a statement that
    the vote was further proof of Karabakh's "determination to live in
    freedom and independence".

    Azerbaijan, which has vowed to return Karabakh under its control,
    called the elections illegitimate and pointed out that ethnic Azeris
    forced to flee the region had not participated in the vote.

    "The elections cannot be considered legitimate until an agreement on
    Karabakh's status is reached between Armenia and Azerbaijan and...

    until Karabakh's Azeri community is given the possibility of
    participating in the vote," Ali Gasanov, a senior official in the
    Azerbaijani presidency, told journalists.

    More than one million people on both sides were forced to flee their
    homes as a result of the Karabakh conflict, which ended with a truce
    in 1994 though tensions remain and fatal shootings along the ceasefire
    line are common.

    EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton said last week that the
    European Union did not recognise the election in Karabakh and called
    for a negotiated end to the long-running conflict.




    From: A. Papazian
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