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Observers Say Azerbaijan Vote 'Seriously Flawed,' Opposition Plans C

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  • Observers Say Azerbaijan Vote 'Seriously Flawed,' Opposition Plans C

    OBSERVERS SAY AZERBAIJAN VOTE 'SERIOUSLY FLAWED,' OPPOSITION PLANS CHALLENGE

    Ilham Aliyev submits his ballot

    BAKU-Opponents of Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev said Thursday
    they would go to court to challenge his election for a third term,
    rejecting the result of a vote that international monitors said was
    seriously flawed.

    Aliyev, who succeeded his father a decade ago as leader of the
    oil-producing nation on the Caspian Sea, won a third five-year term
    with nearly 85 percent of the vote in Wednesday's election.

    Standing before a national flag on state television, he thanked
    Azeris for their support and said he would ensure security in the
    South Caucasus, where tensions still simmer with neighboring Armenia
    over a disputed territory.

    Opposition candidate Jamal Hasanli said he would seek to challenge
    the official result in the country's Constitutional Court, alleging
    violations including ballot stuffing and multiple voting. "This
    election was neither free nor fair," he said.

    On Wednesday, the day of the elections, the Washington Post revealed
    that the Azeri authorities had inadvertently released predetermined
    election results a full day before voting had even begun.

    Aliyev, 51, has overseen an economic boom that has raised living
    standards in the country, which pumps oil and gas to Europe, bypassing
    Russia. He has allowed Washington to use it as a transit point for
    sending troops to Afghanistan.

    But he has faced criticism at home and abroad over his treatment
    of opponents. The media is tightly controlled, protests quashed,
    and one rights group said a pre-election crackdown had doubled the
    number of political prisoners.

    International monitors from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, or OSCE, said the vote was marred by a
    "restrictive media environment" and allegations of intimidation of
    candidates and voters.

    "The limitations placed on the fundamental freedoms of assembly,
    association and expression; the lack of a level playing field; the
    allegations of intimidation, all came in the lead-up to an election
    day that our observers found to be seriously flawed," OSCE official
    Tana de Zulueta said.

    Monitors reported clear indications of ballot stuffing at 37 polling
    stations, and said the counting was assessed negatively at an
    unprecedented 58 percent of stations observed.

    An OSCE news conference degenerated into chaos as journalists from
    pro-government media drowned out the observers and shouted "The OSCE
    is biased."

    Hasanly, 61, a former lawmaker who has united Azerbaijan's fractured
    opposition for the first time in a presidential election, told
    journalists: "When [officials] announce the final official results of
    the election and declare Ilham Aliyev as the president, we will address
    the Constitutional Court with a demand to cancel the election results."

    A gaping divide between the rich and poor and allegations of
    corruption, which Azeris say pervades many aspects of life, has led
    to an increase in protests, and the opposition is planning a rally
    Saturday.

    But few expect sustained protests over a vote whose results many
    saw as a foregone conclusion because of Aliyev's tight grip over the
    South Caucasus nation of 9 million.

    http://asbarez.com/114897/observers-say-azerbaijan-vote-%E2%80%98seriously-flawed%E2%80%99-opposition-plans-challenge/

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