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Events In October 2013 In Baku Reveal A Broken System For Internatio

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  • Events In October 2013 In Baku Reveal A Broken System For Internatio

    EVENTS IN OCTOBER 2013 IN BAKU REVEAL A BROKEN SYSTEM FOR INTERNATIONAL ELECTION OBSERVATION

    19:11 06/11/2013 " SOCIETY

    European Stability Initiative think tank, which had previously
    published two reports exposing the bias of international observers
    regarding democracy and human rights assessment in Azerbaijan, has
    issued a new report on the latest presidential elections in Azerbaijan
    titled DISGRACED: AZERBAIJAN AND THE END OF ELECTION MONITORING AS
    WE KNOW IT

    The report brings up the question of controversial assessments
    given by 50 election monitoring organizations, 49 out of which gave
    a positive assessment to the elections, terming them as "free and
    fair", while only one organization - OSCE/ODIHR harshly criticized
    it bringing up cases of "systemic fraud". The authors of the report
    question the methodology employed by international election monitoring
    groups in general, calling for the review of these mechanisms. The
    report also raises the question as to what the election observers
    who gave positive assessments were motivated by. By examining these
    persons' prior activities the report reveals that many of them either
    had connections with Azerbaijani elite and Azerbaijani lobbying
    organizations or had some other vested interest in "whitewashing"
    the fraudulent elections in Azerbaijan.

    Below are extracts from the summary of the report.

    "Forty-nine monitoring groups praised the elections as free and
    fair, meeting European standards. One group of international election
    monitors refused to go along with the praise: the election monitoring
    mission of ODIHR, the OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and
    Human Rights.

    Only ODIHR employed a core team of experts and long-term observers,
    who arrived in the country many weeks before the day of elections. In
    addition ODIHR mobilized a large number of short-term observers for the
    elections themselves. ODIHR monitors observed voting in 1,151 of the
    5,273 polling stations across the country. The evidence of systemic
    fraud was overwhelming. ODIHR also observed 105 vote counts out of
    125 constituency election commissions. While voting was problematic,
    the counting of ballots was catastrophic, with 58 per cent of observed
    polling stations assessed as bad or very bad. It may have been the
    worst vote count ever observed by an ODIHR election observation
    mission anywhere.

    The events in October 2013 in Baku reveal a broken system for
    international election observation.

    This report argues that the future of election monitoring on the
    European continent depends on how decision makers - in the European
    Parliament, in the Council of Europe, in the OSCE Parliamentary
    Assembly and in European governments - react now. It is vital to
    revisit the facts and analyses behind the different assessments,
    and to retrace how different groups of observers could arrive at
    radically diverging conclusions. The relationship between long-
    and short-term election observers needs to be rethought.

    Aliyev's victory and its scandalous endorsement by most international
    monitors offer an opportunity to fix a broken system. Doing so
    would benefit not just Azerbaijanis, but all those who believe that
    democratic elections are celebrations of basic human rights, in Europe
    and around the world."

    http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2013/11/06/report/

    http://www.esiweb.org/pdf/esi_document_id_131.pdf

    http://www.esiweb.org/pdf/esi_document_id_134.pdf

    http://www.esiweb.org/pdf/esi_document_id_145.pdf

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