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U.S. Trains Armenian Officials To Combat Election Fraud

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  • U.S. Trains Armenian Officials To Combat Election Fraud

    U.S. TRAINS ARMENIAN OFFICIALS TO COMBAT ELECTION FRAUD
    By Ruben Meloyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 27 2007

    The U.S. embassy in Yerevan organized on Tuesday a training course
    for dozens of Armenian officials, which is aimed at preventing and
    combating fraud in the upcoming parliamentary elections.

    The three-day seminar is attended by some 70 judges, prosecutors,
    senior police officers, election commission members, and state human
    rights officials. They will be trained to by officials from the U.S.
    Department of Justice and the FBI as well as law-enforcement officials
    from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

    "The participation of the Armenian government in this seminar
    demonstrates that they acknowledge that there are problems, that they
    are willing to take them on," the U.S. charge d'affairs, Anthony
    Godfrey, told journalists. "The seminar is part of my government's
    democracy promotion strategy," he said, referring to a $6 million
    program designed to foster proper conduct of the May 12 elections.

    A separate statement by the U.S. embassy said that six Armenian
    prosecutors and two members of the Central Election Commission will
    be sent to the United States for "additional training on combating
    election fraud."

    U.S. officials have said that a clean vote is a key condition for the
    provision of $235 million in additional U.S. economic assistance to
    Armenia. The Armenian government has assured Washington and other
    Western government that it will do its best to rule out serious
    vote irregularities. However, its domestic political opponents have
    dismissed such assurances, saying that the authorities will try to
    cling to power at any cost.

    Addressing the seminar, Godfrey drew the participants' attention
    to a widespread skepticism about the freedom and fairness of the
    elections. "Recent polling shows that while most Armenians plan to
    vote in the upcoming elections, they lack confidence that the process
    will be fair," he said. "Part of this lack of confidence comes from
    their belief that election fraud goes unpunished here. Vigilant
    enforcement and prosecution of election fraud will deter future
    fraudulent behavior."

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the
    Council of Europe have repeatedly urged the Armenian authorities to
    punish individuals guilty of ballot box stuffing and other serious
    fraud. But nobody is known to have been prosecuted for such violations.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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