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Yerevan Admits Unease Over OSCE Election Mission

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  • Yerevan Admits Unease Over OSCE Election Mission

    YEREVAN ADMITS UNEASE OVER OSCE ELECTION MISSION
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 27 2007

    Armenia's government questioned the impartiality of the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe before formally asking it to
    monitor the approaching parliamentary elections, it emerged on Friday.

    The administration of President Robert Kocharian had taken issue with
    the OSCE's highly critical assessment of its handling of the last
    presidential and parliamentary elections held in 2003. The findings of
    the mainly Western observers acting under the OSCE aegis gave weight
    to opposition allegations of massive vote rigging.

    Kocharian exposed his government's discontent with their activities
    on Friday when he said official Yerevan has sought assurances that
    the OSCE mission deployed for the May 12 parliamentary elections will
    not be a "tool" in the hands of unspecified external powers.

    "We always intended to invite observers," he said. "We just wanted
    to negotiate and make sure the observer mission is free of various
    political pressures and does not cater for various political
    interests."

    "This is our goal, and I think we have had held quite effective
    negotiations and reached agreements with the OSCE leadership,"
    added Kocharian.

    Reports in the Armenian press late last year said official Yerevan is
    trying to make sure that the OSCE mission is not headed by U.S. or
    British officials and includes more representatives of France and
    Russia, countries that have been less critical of the Kocharian
    administration's democracy record. The head of the mission, Boris
    Frlec, comes from the former Yugoslav republic of Slovenia.

    Frlec told RFE/RL that he has discussed Yerevan's concerns with
    Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian. "Mr. Oskanian expressed the wish
    of the Armenian side that the election observation mission should be,
    as far the national composition is concerned, as broad as possible,"
    he said.

    "In the [mission's] core team, including long-term observers, 24
    different nations are represented among 40 people," argued Frlec. "In
    addition to that, countries of the OSCE responded to the call of the
    [OSCE's] Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights and sent
    300 short-term observers that cover an extremely wide spectrum of
    different nationalities."
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