Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Baghdasarian Warns Of Vote Rigging

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

  • Baghdasarian Warns Of Vote Rigging

    BAGHDASARIAN WARNS OF VOTE RIGGING
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 21 2007

    Former parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian on Wednesday urged the
    West not to turn a blind eye to serious fraud which he believes could
    mar Armenia's upcoming parliamentary elections.

    "Unfortunately, there are forces in the Armenian government that
    might try to steal the upcoming elections," he said in an article
    published by "The Wall Street Journal." "And there are those abroad
    who might turn a blind eye to such a scam in the name of stability."

    "But stability will only come to Armenia and the region through
    governments supported and elected by the people," he added. "That's
    why we need international election monitors. The OSCE mission in
    Armenia must be supported so that it can do its job."

    Baghdasarian's Orinats Yerkir Party will be a major opposition
    contender during the elections. His comments expose opposition fears
    that the United States and the European Union will more lenient towards
    Armenia's leadership now that it seems close to cutting a peace deal
    with Azerbaijan. The Western powers expect the two states take the
    final step towards resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict after the
    Armenian elections slated for May 12.

    Baghdasarian repeated in that regard opposition arguments that only
    democratically elected governments in Yerevan and Baku would the
    have the mandate to make painful mutual concessions. "The way to
    resolve in Nagorno-Karabakh the conflict is through elections that
    produce legitimate governments -- first in Armenia but eventually
    in Azerbaijan as well. This popular legitimacy will give the next
    governments the authority to make the necessary concessions," he wrote.

    President Robert Kocharian and other Armenian leaders have assured
    the West that the approaching elections will be more democratic that
    the ones held until now. But their political opponents dismiss these
    assurances, saying that the authorities will lose power if the vote
    is free and fair.

    In a separate interview with RFE/RL on Wednesday, Baghdasarian
    stressed that the Armenian opposition can play a serious role in
    ensuring its proper conduct. "We must primarily rely on ourselves,"
    he said. "We must fight for a democratic Armenia. But if there are
    big falsifications, there will be big upheavals."

    Visiting Washington last week, the ambitious ex-speaker, who favors
    a pro-Western foreign policy agenda, likewise warned that a repeat of
    serious vote irregularities could spark opposition demonstrations in
    Yerevan. The Kocharian administration already faced street protests in
    2003 and 2004 over its hotly disputed handling of the last Armenian
    presidential election . Baghdasarian and his party were part of the
    governing coalition at the time.

    In his article, the Orinats Yerkir leader described Armenia as an
    "undemocratic country" mired in government corruption. "The citizens
    of Armenia are not free," he said. "Our media is state-controlled and
    TV airtime for opposition parties during the parliamentary campaign
    is severely limited."

    Baghdasarian, whose is often branded a populist by his detractors,
    would not say if he raised his concerns with Kocharian before Orinats
    Yerkir was forced out of Kocharian's coalition government in May last
    year. He claimed that the situation with press freedom in Armenia
    has since deteriorated. "Never before has there been such total
    [government] control of television before," he told RFE/RL.
Working...
X