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Armenian president's party set to keep power: exit poll

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  • Armenian president's party set to keep power: exit poll

    WAMC
    May 6 2012


    Armenian president's party set to keep power: exit poll

    (REUTERS) -
    By Hasmik Lazarian and Margarita Antidze

    YEREVAN (Reuters) - President Serzh Sarksyan's Republican Party will
    keep its grip on power after a parliamentary election in Armenia on
    Sunday, an exit poll showed after voting ended in the South Caucasus
    country.

    The exit poll released by Gallup International Association put the
    party on course to win more than 44 percent of the votes in an
    election that passed off without any of the violence that marred the
    last national poll in 2008.

    Its main partner in the previous coalition, the Prosperous Armenia
    party led by businessman Gagik Tsarukyan, was trailing in second place
    on nearly 29 percent of the votes, it showed.

    "It's clear who has won," Gallup's Andrey Raychev told Armenia TV
    channel, which published the exit poll.

    He said the exit poll would be updated within two hours, and the
    Central Election Commission is expected to start receiving the first
    results from regional polling stations across the country of 3.3
    million by midnight (2000 GMT).

    Many voters and Armenian leaders had hoped the election would be a
    landmark for democracy after voting irregularities marred the last
    parliamentary election in 2007 and clashes killed 10 people after the
    presidential vote in 2008.

    More than 300 international observers from the Organisation for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe monitored voting and will give
    their initial verdict on Monday.

    One observer said privately there had been some violations, but it was
    clear how widespread or serious they were.

    Ink stamps on the passports of people who had already voted had
    disappeared within 15 minutes, giving them the chance to vote again,
    the observer, who did not want to be named, said, citing several such
    reports.

    The exit poll suggested three parties apart from the big two were
    likely to win the five percent of votes needed to enter parliament.

    The Armenian National Congress, an opposition coalition led by former
    President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, might also cross the seven-percent
    threshold set for blocs of parties to win seats, it showed.

    The Central Election Commission said turnout had passed 51.53 percent
    three hours before the polls close.

    There were no reports of violence, an encouraging sign for a country
    that wants stability to boost the economy, devastated by a war with
    neighboring Azerbaijan in the 1990s and then the 2008-2009 global
    financial crisis.

    Voters trickling to the polls in bright sunshine hoped the election
    would be a landmark for democracy after criticism by international
    observers over Armenia's elections since the end of communist rule.

    "I hope that not one or two, but several parties will be elected. It
    will help there to be discussions in the new parliament and laws
    adopted for the sake of people," Gohar Karapetyan, a 48-year-old
    teacher, said after voting at a school built in the Soviet-era and
    decorated with the national flag.

    The parties have made social problems and economic issues the main
    slogans of an election campaign that has been unusually active for
    Armenia, Russia's main ally in the region.

    There are no major differences in their economic programs, which call
    for more active development of domestic industry and continuation in
    cooperation with Russia as well as international financial
    organizations.

    A blast at a campaign rally injured about 150 people on Friday,
    briefly raising fears of violence, but emergency officials said it was
    caused by gas-filled balloons exploding.

    Armenia nestles high in the mountains of a region that is emerging as
    an important transit route for oil and gas exports from the Caspian
    Sea to energy-hungry world markets, although it has no pipelines of
    its own.

    Although a ceasefire was reached in 1994, its conflict with Azerbaijan
    over the tiny Nagorno-Karabakh region remains unresolved and a threat
    to stability.

    Relations with another of its neighbors, Turkey, are also fraught
    because Ankara does not recognize the killing of Armenians in Ottoman
    Turkey during World War One as genocide.

    http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/wamc/news.newsmain/article/0/0/1927090/World.News/Armenian.president's.party.set.to.keep.power.exit. poll

    Also in http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/-/world/13615367/armenian-presidents-party-set-to-keep-power-exit-poll/

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