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High voter activity, alleged minor irregularities as mayoral vote

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  • High voter activity, alleged minor irregularities as mayoral vote

    High voter activity, alleged minor irregularities as mayoral vote
    progresses in Hrazdan


    News | 12.02.12 | 16:31

    Photolure



    By Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow reporter,

    Election officials report a high voter turnout midway through a
    continuing mayoral poll in Hrazdan where supporters of the two rival
    candidates have alleged only few separate irregularities in the
    process so far.


    The Election Commission in District 25 says more than a third of
    Hrazdan's nearly 44,000 eligible voters cast their ballots by 2 pm - a
    fairly high voter activity for a local election, especially
    considering the cold weather conditions and icy roads in most parts of
    the town.

    At least the early figures from Hrazdan appear to favorably compare to
    those reported from some other communities where local elections are
    being held today.

    This situation, perhaps, reflects the keen competition in the town,
    some 50 kilometers to the north-east of capital Yerevan, where the
    incumbent mayor, Aram Danielyan, who has the ruling Republican Party
    of Armenia behind him, is being challenged by Sasun Mikayelyan, a
    charismatic Karabakh war veteran, former Hrazdan mayor and ex-lawmaker
    now affiliated with the main opposition Armenian National Congress.

    ArmeniaNow's reporter spent some time at polling station 25/15 where
    Mikayelyan's proxy Myasnik Malkhasyan spoke about some irregularities
    during the vote, but acknowledged that at least until early afternoon
    the voting was proceeding calmly.

    He, in particular, mentioned an incident in which some of the unused
    ballot papers had to be canceled after certain marks were noticed on
    them. In another case an election official `assisted' a voter in
    marking a ballot after the latter claimed to be experiencing some
    sight problems. That ballot was canceled, however, and the voter was
    allowed to vote again, this time marking the ballot paper and casting
    it by himself. Malkhasyan also repeated the earlier complaints
    connected with some of the ink pads and stamps that appeared to have
    been used before (but should be new, according to what the law says).
    The opposition candidate's proxy was not satisfied with the replaced
    ink pads, either.

    Hrach Husikyan, the head of the polling precinct commission in
    question, explained that the problem with some of the ink pads was
    connected with low air temperature rather than their being used
    before. On the whole, he said, the voting in his station was
    proceeding well, without any extraordinary incidents.

    Meanwhile, Kotayk governor Kovalenko Shahgeldyan, who has openly
    backed the incumbent mayor in the race, claimed that a man attempted
    to vote with someone else's passport at polling station 25/19 and that
    this man was a Mikayelyan supporter. The head of the election
    commission in the mentioned precinct denied any such incident, as did
    the representative of Mikayelyan at the precinct.

    The current local elections and, in particular, the mayoral vote in
    Hrazdan are viewed by many as a litmus test for the Armenian political
    leadership's commitment to hold a clean vote in the parliamentary
    elections due in May.

    While the process monitored by several observer groups and held amid
    close media attention in Hrazdan appears to be going well so far, some
    in the opposition and also among ordinary people in the street fear
    lest the fairness of the vote be jeopardized by the vote counting that
    is due to start after polling stations close at 8:00 pm.

    The preliminary results in the vote are expected to become available
    on Monday morning.

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