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Mixed Reactions To Nagorno-Karabakh Poll

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  • Mixed Reactions To Nagorno-Karabakh Poll

    MIXED REACTIONS TO NAGORNO-KARABAKH POLL

    United Press International UPI
    May 25 2010

    ArticlePhotosListenComments.Share YEREVAN, Armenia, May 25 (UPI)
    -- Official government reactions to the parliamentary contest in
    the breakaway republic of Nagorno-Karabakh were mixed, election
    groups said.

    The Azeri central election commission characterized the weekend
    parliamentary contest as a "farce," the Armenia bureau of Radio Free
    Liberty/Radio Europe reports.

    More than half of the nearly 100,000 eligible voters in the region
    took part in the poll, the Azeri election commission said. Four
    parties were competing for seats in the 33-member Parliament.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia have complained of violations to a 1994
    cease-fire related to conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, an area of
    dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, which declared independence in 1991, lies inside
    Azerbaijan but has a population that is predominantly ethnic Armenian.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian told the state-run news
    service that the vote meant that "the citizens of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    republic once again have proved their resolve to express their will
    to live freely and independently."

    Elections officials in the region said the Free Fatherland slate of
    self-appointed Prime Minister Ara Harutiunian was leading with about
    47 percent of the vote.

    Moscow, for its part, said it didn't believe the peace process "could
    depend on the holding of elections," said the RFE/RL report.

    The United States, Russia and France have been trying to mediate the
    territorial dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia that has resulted
    in the deaths of some 30,000 people.

    Catherine Ashton, high representative of the European Union for
    foreign affairs and security policy, last week characterized the
    elections as illegal.




    From: A. Papazian
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