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U.S. Wants 'Best Elections Ever' In Armenia

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  • U.S. Wants 'Best Elections Ever' In Armenia

    U.S. WANTS 'BEST ELECTIONS EVER' IN ARMENIA
    Tigran Avetisian

    Armenialiberty.org
    Oct 18 2011

    The United States expects Armenia to hold parliamentary and
    presidential elections that will be widely regarded as democratic,
    according to John Heffern, the new U.S. ambassador in Yerevan.

    "We are working together so that Armenia's important national elections
    2012 and 2013 are the best elections ever and fully consistent with
    international standards," Heffern told journalists late on Monday
    just hours after handing his credentials to President Serzh Sarkisian.

    He said the issue was on the agenda of his "very good" meetings with
    Sarkisian and Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

    Washington has been very critical of the Armenian authorities' handling
    of just about every major election held in the country since 1995. In
    particular, it considers the last presidential ballot held in 2008
    "significantly flawed."

    Heffern's predecessor, Marie Yovanovitch, stressed the importance of
    ending Armenian's post-Soviet culture of electoral fraud and effecting
    other "deep and difficult changes" in a speech last February.

    Heffern, who was confirmed as ambassador by the U.S. Senate late last
    month, cited Yovanovitch as reporting "some important progress here
    in Armenia in the last six months."

    "So we hope and expect that Armenia will build on those favorable
    decisions that were made earlier this year to create a climate of
    fairness for the upcoming elections in 2012 and 2013," he said. "And
    the United States will do all that it can to help make these the best
    elections ever."

    The diplomat appeared to refer to a series of concessions made by
    Sarkisian to the main opposition Armenian National Congress (HAK)
    last spring. Those included the release of the last opposition members
    remaining in jail.

    The concessions led to several rounds of negotiations between the
    HAK and Armenian's ruling coalition. The dialogue collapsed in late
    August following the controversial arrest of an opposition activist.

    Addressing the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly (PACE)
    in June, Sarkisian said his administration "will spare no effort"
    to ensure the proper conduct of next year's parliamentary elections
    and the 2013 presidential vote. The HAK and other major opposition
    groups dismissed those assurances.

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