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OSCE To Start Armenian Vote Monitoring In Mid-March

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  • OSCE To Start Armenian Vote Monitoring In Mid-March

    OSCE TO START ARMENIAN VOTE MONITORING IN MID-MARCH
    By Ruben Meloyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 22 2007

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe plans to
    start next month observing preparations for and conduct of Armenia's
    May 12 parliamentary elections, the OSCE's vote-monitoring arm said
    on Thursday.

    The findings of OSCE observers will be crucial for the domestic and
    international legitimacy of the polls which Western powers say will
    put the Armenian leadership's democratic credentials to the greatest
    test yet. Official Yerevan has already formally asked the Warsaw-based
    Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) to monitor
    the entire electoral process.

    The ODIHR spokeswoman, Urdur Gunnarsdottir, told RFE/RL that the
    monitoring mission is due to get underway in late March with the
    deployment in Yerevan of a "core team" of at least a dozen Western
    election experts and 24 long-term observers.

    "We hope that the first observers will be there around mid-March,"
    Gunnarsdottir said. "That is the plan now. And the long-term observers
    will be arriving a week later. Before the end of March we should have
    a full long-term mission in place."

    She added that the ODIHR will also ask OSCE member states to send in
    some 300 short-term observers that will visit polling stations across
    Armenia on voting day and watch the counting and tabulation of ballots.

    The organization dispatched a similar number of observers, most of
    them from Western Europe and the United States, during the previous
    Armenian presidential and parliamentary elections. The elections were
    judged to have failed to meet democratic standards due to serious fraud
    reported by those observers. The Armenian authorities disagreed with
    their critical assessments, saying that the reported irregularities
    did not significantly affect vote results.

    A Armenian newspaper report claimed last week that President
    Robert Kocharian has told Western diplomats in Yerevan that the OSCE
    monitoring mission should not be headed by U.S. or British officials,
    as has been the case until now. Kocharian allegedly suggested that
    the job be given to a representative of France or Russia, countries
    that have been far less critical of his administration's electoral
    record. According to Gunnarsdottir, the mission chief has not yet
    been selected by the OSCE.

    The ODIHR director, Christian Strohal, visited Armenia last month to
    discuss preparations for the upcoming polls with Kocharian and other
    senior Armenian officials. Shortly afterwards the ODIHR dispatched a
    "needs assessment mission" that looked into those preparations and
    the overall pre-election situation in the country in greater detail.

    "The authorities and other interlocutors met by [the Needs Assessment
    Mission] acknowledged problems with past elections and assured that
    the upcoming will be conducted in line with OSCE commitments and
    other international standards," mission members said in a reported
    released on February 15.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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