Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia To Invite Western Vote Monitors

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia To Invite Western Vote Monitors

    ARMENIA TO INVITE WESTERN VOTE MONITORS
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 11 2007

    Armenia will ask the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe to monitor its upcoming presidential election despite misgivings
    about the work of Western-led observer missions, officials in Yerevan
    said on Tuesday.

    "We have long cooperated with the OSCE's Office of Democratic
    Institutions and Human Rights and maintain contacts with its
    representatives with regard to election monitoring," Vladimir
    Karapetian, the Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman, told RFE/RL.

    "We will extend an invitation to observe the presidential elections
    in due course," he said.

    Armenia joined Russia, Belarus and four Central Asian states last
    October in demanding serious restrictions on the activities of mainly
    Western observers acting under the aegis of the OSCE/ODIHR. Under their
    Russian-drafted proposals submitted to the OSCE, observer missions
    deployed in OSCE member states would comprise no more than 50 people
    and would be barred from assessing the conduct of a particular election
    before the announcement of its official results.

    Although the OSCE has criticized as deeply flawed virtually all
    elections held in Armenia until now, Yerevan's decision to back the
    Russian proposals was somewhat unexpected given Western observers
    largely positive assessment of last May's Armenian parliamentary
    polls. The ODIHR said it is bewildered by the move.

    Under Armenian law, international observer missions can be invited by
    the president of the republic, the government, the Foreign Ministry,
    the National Assembly and the Central Election Commission (CEC). The
    CEC chairman, Garegin Azarian, said on Tuesday that the electoral
    authority will only ask the OSCE to dispatch short-term observers,
    who only watch polling and the vote count. It is the Foreign Ministry
    that will invite long-term observers, he said.

    The presidential election slated for February 19 is also expected to
    monitored by parliamentarians from the OSCE, the Council of Europe
    and the European Union. The leadership of the Armenian parliament
    will extend formal invitations to them soon, a spokeswoman for the
    National Assembly said.

    The ODIHR, meanwhile, said it is already making preparations
    for Armenian vote monitoring. A spokeswoman for the Warsaw-based
    watchdog, Urdur Gunnarsdottir, told RFE/RL that an ODIHR has sent a
    "needs assessment" team to Yerevan and is awaiting its report on how
    to organize the process. She could not say when the observer mission
    will likely kick off its work in Armenia.
Working...
X